and Hardy County News

Transcription

and Hardy County News
SPORTS
SCHOOL DAYS
East Hardy Early Middle School
Announces Honor Roll
See Page 6
East Hardy and Moorefield in
Softball Showdown See Page 1B
E S T A B L I S H E D
1 8 4 5
and Hardy County News
VOLUME 121 - NUMBER 13
USPS 362-300
TWO SECTIONS - 16 PAGES 94¢
www.moorefieldexaminer.com
MOOREFIELD, HARDY COUNTY, W.VA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 2012
Still No
Contingency
Plan for East
County
Ambulance
Service
Spring is in Bloom
By Jean A. Flanagan
Moorefield Examiner
ambulance service currently operating in central West Virginia and
Ohio.
Commissioner A. J. Wade said he
thinks local people should provide
the service because of the rural
nature of the county.
Keplinger said the Wardensville
Rescue Squad was idle during the
day because of lack of a driver.
“We still haven’t ruled out an
opportunity for the volunteers to step
up to the plate,” he said.
While MBRS has submitted
financial statements as requested,
they are cryptic and incomplete.
In addition, the company takes
offense at the financial statements
being made public.
“After the Feb. 7 meeting, I
received a fax from Scott Chaney
expressing indignation that the document he submitted was distributed,”
Wade said. “To me, when the Mathias-Baker Rescue Squad came here
literally begging for money and then
Three months after the ambulance service operating on the east
side of Hardy County threatened to
shut its doors, Hardy County Commissioners have not put a contingency plan in place should the service
be interrupted.
The Mathias Baker Rescue
Squad told the county commission in
Photo by Jean Flanagan
December 2011 it would be forced to
The magnolia tree in Steve Wilson’s yard is more than 100 years old. Wilson said it only blooms completely every five or six years
cease operations if it didn’t get
because conditions have to be just right. With this year’s early spring, the conditions were perfect for a full bloom that lasted
$300,000 to pay its bills. The commisalmost two weeks. Weather reports indicate this week’s temperatures are going to be more seasonal with highs in the 60s and
sion gave the company the funds,
lows in the 40s.
asking only that a financial statement
be presented to the commission
every month.
“We’ve made some calls,” said
Commissioner
William
“JR”
Keplinger. “Both Lambert and Fraleys said they would help if we
needed it. We’re going to talk to the
exposure of 10 years imprisonment methamphetamine from April to
Fourteen individuals were named County.
company Senator Manchin sugCount Two charges Bosley with and a fine of $250,000 as to count Sept. 7, 2011, in Hardy County.
in five indictments returned on
Count two charges Martin and gested.”
March 20, by a Federal Grand Jury maintaining a drug-involved premise one, 20 years imprisonment and a
Continued on page 8
Manchin suggested contacting an
fine of $500,000 as to count two; and, Lipscomb with manufacturing
in Grant County.
sitting in Martinsburg.
Counts three through 13 charge 20 years imprisonment and a fine of methamphetamine on Sept. 7, 2011.
United States Attorney William J.
Count three charges Martin and
Ihlenfeld, II, announced the follow- Bosley with the possession of pseu- $250,000 as to each of counts three
Lipscomb with the possession of
doephedrine to be used in the manu- through 13.
ing:
• Larry James Martin, 34 and material used in the manufacture of
• Consuelo Rose Bosley, age 41, facture of methamphetamine on
of Maysville, West Virginia, was April 17, April 24, June 5, June 24, Amanda Lynn Lipscomb, 26, both of methamphetamine on Sept. 7, 2011.
Count four charges Martin and
named in a 13-count Indictment. 2011 in Petersburg, and on July 5, Moorefield, were named in a 12Count one charges Bosley with the Aug. 23, Sept. 20, Oct. 15, Oct. 16, count indictment. Count one charges Lipscomb with maintaining a drugpossession of material used in the and Oct. 22, 2011, in Keyser, and, on Martin and Lipscomb with conspir- involved premise during the Spring
manufacture of methamphetamine July 24, 2011, in Moorefield. If con- acy to manufacture, possess with and Summer of 2011.
The Potomac Highlands Sub- the DEA for incineration.
Continued on page 8
on October 25, 2011, in Grant victed, Bosley faces a maximum Intent to distribute and to Distribute
“These are two of only six boxes
stance Abuse Prevention Program is
pleased to be working in collabora- available in the state,” said Tiffany
tion with the Moorefield and War- Parker with the PH Substance Abuse
densville Police Departments for the Prevention Task Force. “We are very
placement of two permanent medica- excited that Hardy County is one of
only three counties in the state that
tion drop-off boxes.
The Hardy County Substance can offer this option to the commuAbuse Prevention Coalition recently nity. By properly disposing of our
received a grant from the Hardy medications we can help prevent
“Since we fit closer to the Capon
Currently, municipal elections are Town Hall parking lot. Children 12 County Community Foundation to break-ins and the stealing of medicaBy Jean A. Flanagan
Bridge and Franklin communities, held every two years in June. “Plac- and younger will learn the impor- provide funding for the purchase of tion from family members or
Moorefield Examiner
we decided to increase the salaries ing them on the primary ballot will tance of bicycle safety and see a Bicy- the boxes.
friends.”
save us about $1,000 to $1,200 every cle Rodeo. Participants will receive a
The Wardensville Council voted accordingly,” he said.
Acceptable items include all
In an effort to address the factors
The salary increase will not take two years,” Sayers said.
certificate and a free bicycle helmet. in our community that increase the expired, unused or unwanted preto increase the salaries of the council
Currently, terms of office for the The event is sponsored by the Capon risk of abuse of prescription medica- scription and over the counter medmembers from $40 to $75 per meet- effect until after the 2012 elections.
ing. The vote was taken following a Town code prohibits council from mayor, recorder and council are two VFW Post 2102 and the Ladies Aux- tion and the importance of proper ications, including pet medications.
years. Sayers told the council most of iliary of Post 2102.
public meeting where no one from increasing their own salaries.
disposal, the PHSAPP has purchased Unacceptable items include syringes
The Wardensville Council also the town’s elected officials hold
•The council approved an annual two permanent drop–off boxes for and inhalers. The PH Substance
the public commented.
Council had approved the approved amendments to change office for more than one term. “Most operating budget for FY2013. It will Hardy County. One box is located in Abuse Prevention Task Force
amendment to the town code #12-02 town elections to coincide with state are re-elected more than two terms,” be sent to the state. Budgets for the the Moorefield Police Department in encourages all citizens to take advanwater and sewer accounts and the Moorefield, and the other is located tage of this opportunity to help proafter a survey of surrounding munici- and local primary elections and to he said.
change the terms of office for the
park, pool and community center will in the Wardensville Town Office in tect themselves.
palities’ council salaries.
be discussed at the next meeting.
According to Recorder John Say- Mayor, Recorder and Council from Other Business
They would also like extend their
Wardensville.
ers, Moorefield and Romney Council two years to four years.
The next regular meeting of the
The police departments will be appreciation to Chief Steve Reckart
•The
Wardensville
Police
members are paid $100 per meeting.
Those amendments will be placed Department will host a Pedaling for Wardensville Council will be held on monitoring both boxes. Once the and Chief Bradley Dyer for their willCapon Bridge and Franklin Council on the ballot for the municipal elec- Safety Day on Saturday, April 21 Monday, April 9 beginning at 6:30 medication is collected from the per- ingness to maintain these boxes and
manent box, it will be turned over to moving this project forward.
members are paid $75 per meeting. tion scheduled for Tuesday, June 12. from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the p.m.
Federal Grand Jury Indicts Fourteen
Town Police Departments
Install Rx Drop-Off Boxes
Wardensville Council Votes to Change Date
Of Elections, Terms and Salaries of Council
INSIDE
Opinion....................2
Obituaries ................4
Social ........................5
Hardy Heritage ........7
Library Windows .....7
Classifieds ...............4B
Legals ......................6B
HARDY TIMES
day, April 1, 6 p.m. at Moorefield
Moorefield High School will host Church of God, 217 S. Elm St. in
an Open House on Saturday, March Moorefield
• Easter Sunrise Service Sunday,
31 from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. East Hardy
April 8, 7 a.m. at Mt. Olivet CemeHigh School will also have an Open
tery with breakfast following at
House on Saturday, March 31, from
Moorefield Church of the Brethren,
10 a.m. - 2 p.m. The staff asks that Winchester and Clay Streets
you visit both schools and examine
All are welcome.
their current condition before voting
on the school bond in May.
Open House
PVCD to Meet
Holy Week Events
Moorefield Ministerial Association Holy Week Events and Services
are as follows:
• Palm Sunday Parade -Sunday,
April 1, 11:45 a.m. on Winchester
Avenue
• Palm Sunday Gospel Sing Sun-
The Potomac Valley Conservation District Board meeting will be
held on Wednesday, April 4, at 7 p.m.
The meeting will be held at the
USDA Service Center in Moorefield.
A copy of the agenda will be available
three days prior to the meeting and
may be obtained at the District
office, 500 East Main St., Romney, or
by calling 304-822-5174. The public is seen either at Moorefield Elemeninvited to attend.
tary School or East Hardy Early Middle School at the appointed time.
There are several documents
Easter Crafts
On Saturday, April 7, the Moore- required for registration. Ask for
field library will be hosting an Easter details.
Craft event for kids of all ages. It will
Alumni Basketball
be held from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. There
Moorefield High School will host
are rumors that there might be a
an Alumni Basketball game on Sattreat from the Easter Bunny!
urday, April 14 at 7 p.m. All alumni
Pre-K Registration interested in participating should
If your child will be 4 years old by contact Charlotte Hill at 304-530Sept. 1, 2012, and you would like 6034.
your child to attend Pre-K, registraGenealogy Class
tion will be by appointment only.
The Computer Center at the
Please contact 304-538-7787 between
8 a.m. – 4 p.m. to make an appoint- Moorefield Volunteer Fire Department. On April 13, parents will be ment will be holding a free genealogy
class Saturday, April 14 from 8 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Only 10 spaces are available. To register, call 304-749-8975.
Hunter Safety Class
There will be a Hunter Education
Class on April 14 and 15 at the
Hardy County 4-H Camp on Pinnacle Drive in the Mathias/Baker area.
The class is mandatory for anyone
born on or after Jan. 1, 1975 prior to
purchasing a hunting license in West
Virginia.
Time for the class is 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
on Saturday and 1 - 5 p.m. on Sunday.
These classes are free. To register
on-line go to www.wvdnr.gov or call
phone 304-822-3551.
Page 2 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
OPINION
The Bond Issue
On May 8, 2012, the citizens of Hardy County will go to
the polls to do several things. They will help choose individuals to run in the general election in November. They will
vote on an amendment to the West Virginia Constitution
repealing the two-term limitation for sheriffs. They will vote
on a $21.5 million dollar school bond issue.
All three aspects of the primary ballot are important, but
this week we’re writing about the bond issue.
A portion of Moorefield High School is 71 years old. In
people age, that’s not so bad, although we are pretty much
the same age as MHS and we can tell you that school needs
help, just like we do on some days.
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt came to Moorefield in May of
1941 to dedicate the new high school. Since that time the
building has been home to thousands of students. It has survived all those students, a couple of floods, a fire which
destroyed the biology lab, and vandalism.
The old part of MHS could tell tales that some of us
wouldn’t want repeated. But that oldest part of the building
is not particularly safe. It needs more than a face lift, it needs
replacing. And that’s what part of the bond issue will do. The
money will be used to tear down and rebuild the 1941 section
of Moorefield High School with a structure that is safer,
cleaner, air conditioned and much more conducive to a
learning environment.
East Hardy High School, although much younger, has
structural problems and more space is needed. The cost for
the proposed addition and improvements at Baker will be
nearly half the total project.
The bond issue is set at $21.5 million which is half the total
project. With the anticipated grants from the SBA of an
additional $21.5 million, the total cost for the two school
projects is slightly over $43 million. That may sound like a lot
of money, but we are talking about our children’s education.
School bond issues are hot button topics. We have teachers who aren’t happy with their salaries. We have parents
who aren’t happy with the administration. We have citizens
who aren’t happy with paying more taxes. On the other hand,
we have children who are expected to learn in buildings with
water leaking through the walls and ceilings, peeling paint,
poor heating and no cooling, and sometimes a smell not
identifiable, but probably related to prior flooding events.
In the last three years Hardy County has lost a number of
jobs. One manufacturing plant has closed and another is
anticipated to close the end of April. So you say you can’t
afford to pay more taxes. We say you can’t afford not to.
If Hardy County is going to attract new businesses to the
area, we need to have good schools. If young families are
going to move to Hardy County, they want to know that their
children will have safe, modern facilities.
Passage of this school bond says we care. Passage says we
care enough to commit our hard-earned tax dollars to
improving our educational facilities. Passage says we care
enough to put aside our petty gripes and differences.
So what happens if we don’t pass the bond issue? The
buildings will continue to deteriorate. We will have to continue spending our tax dollars on band-aid repairs. And
there’s a good chance the state fire marshall will say the
schools are unfit and force us to find an alternative. No one
wants that to happen.
What we all do want is a quality education for our children. We want them to learn in an environment that doesn’t
detract them from learning. We want this county to entice
businesses to locate here and bring jobs.
Finally, we want the citizens of Hardy County to vote
“yes” for the bond issue.
MY UNBASED OPINION
I saw it wobble. Solid as a rock all
my life and most of Pap’s. He remembered it standing strong when he was
a boy on our farm.
A barn yard gate post. Red Cedar
heartwood, roughly ten inches in
diameter. I remember when twin
twelve foot gates swung from it.
Holes bored on various sides at various levels attest to numerous barnyard remodelings over at least a hundred years of service. Now gates are
hinged at far ends and bang against
it. A necklace of old stapled chains
hold them fast.
I shot a groundhog off its top one
time. Farm dog put him up there and
Pap’s old .22 rifle brought him down.
Thousands of old cows have
scratched their necks and butts on it.
Besides Big House, that old post is
oldest standing useful construction
on my farm.
But it wobbled. The other day I
straightened from latching pallet
forks to Kubota’s loader frame,
glanced down barn hill (no barn any
longer, but still the “barn hill”), saw
an old Hereford rubbing her neck up
and down and noticed post top moving against the background. I
dropped the loader, shut off Kubota,
walked down barn hill, laid right
hand on post and sure enough, I
could shake it. Never before. Always
solid, dependable.
Now weak
enough to be dangerous.
Men who build things wonder
how long they’ll last. In nearly sixty
years I’ve been working size and age,
I’ve helped build fences all over this
farm. Most fences now standing I
built myself. Doubt I’ve ever tamped
a post or stretched a wire that I didn’t
wonder how long before I’d have to
do it all again. Always the eternal
BY
DAVID O.
HEISHMAN
hope that “ it’ll last my life time and
then it’ll be somebody else’s worry”.
Pap, veterinarian, conducted
most private practice from his old
Studebaker cars on farm visits. He’d
come home from regular job at Reymann Memorial Farm, milk the cow,
eat supper and head off for Kimsey’s
Run or Rock Oak or Sauerkraut Hollow to tend ailing hogs, sheep or
cows. Invariably after particularly
good or bad experiences holding and
restraining animals, he’d comment
on handling facilities.
When his home place became
mine, I stopped raising hogs, which
needed feeding morning and
evening, sold the sheep flock, which
eliminated Mom’s temptation to
spend nights in the barn during lambing season, gave Marybelle, his milk
cow to neighbor, Tommy Rinard and
concentrated on raising beef cattle
which generally need less protection
and care.
Based on Paps comments, drawings in farm magazines and my old
agriculture text books, I built pens for
holding, sorting, and loading cattle.
New oak lumber, solid round or split
locust posts, heavy duty steel pipe
gates and pressure treated four by
four loading ramp floors handled
placid old Herefords handily.
Changes came. I sold myself out
of farming business. Tommy bought
my herd, rented my land and main-
tains them still. Attrition and purchase switched herd to Angus and
Angus/Hereford crosses, more efficient breeds perhaps, but generally a
little harder to hold and handle.
Age and more active animals
have taken their toll on my proud,
careful constructions. New higher,
stronger lumber fence panels and
pressure treated posts are replacing
old weathered, split and shaky. One
section of three posts holding boards
five high was replaced before work-
ing cattle last week. I’d seen that section flopping back and forth in high
wind this winter.
As I sat writing this column at Big
House’s front window, I saw Tommy
and his wife, Shirley drive in for a
morning inspection. I put on my
shoes, went out and caught him
before he left. My quiet request to
save Old Post for me when he
replaced it was met with a knowing
smile.
enemy casualties and took out a
sniper.
Postmaster W. J. Teets announced
that post cards would now sell for 2
cents without the additional ten percent charge on 50 or more cards.
The Bronze Star Medal for meritorious service in Korea was awarded
to Master Sergeant Marvin B.
Helmick.
Natural gas in “commercially paying quantities” was found in a well on
property owned by H. Kenna and
Bryan Moyers. It was the second well
to hit natural gas in the Crab Run
section.
George Abraham Judy, 16, died
March 25 at his home...Sarah Harless
Gochenour, 87, Lost River, died
March 23...George M. Mallow, 80,
Whitmer, died March 18...William
Clarence Harman, 85, Petersburg,
died March 23...William Robert
Heltzel, 67, Wardensville, died
March 17.
Evelyn Madalena Sousa and
Robert Franklin Seldon were married February 17...Betty Riggleman
and Harlan G. Orndorff were married on Feb. 29.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Ervin
Souder, a daughter...to Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Ricedorff, a son...to Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Saville, a son.
Pat Kern of Moorefield’s Yellow
Jackets was named to the State AllTournament Basketball Team.
tains. The other locations were
Elkins, Weston, Charleston and
Huntington.
Sportsmen of four counties met
to organize the South Branch Valley
Game and Fish Association to secure
more game fish for the South Branch
of the Potomac and a rearing pond
for bass.
Martha Rebecca Duvall, 75, had
died...Joseph L. Sindy, 83, Fisher,
died March 27...Fannie Kline Brill,
78, Romney, died March 25.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Lockridge, a daughter...to Mr. and Mrs. E.
B. Southerly, a daughter.
GLANCING BACKWARD
Fifteen Years Ago
March 26, 1997
Amanda Kaye Combs and Calvin
Woodrow Keller were selected to
attend the Governors Honors Academy.
WLR Foods announced a stock
dividend and an increase of its total
chicken output by 10 percent by
expanding its Goldsboro, NC chicken
complex.
Jennifer Davis of Romney won
the regional spelling bee and a
chance to compete in the Scripps
Howard National Spelling Bee.
Charles W. Keplinger, 75, Petersburg, died March 20...Mary Pancake
Hicks, 50, Romney, died March
21...Winfred Howard Funk, 78, Strasburg, died March 21...Mary “Ruth”
Hutter, 94, Hutter Road died March
19... Eveline Miller Wilkins, 84, Purgitsville, died March 23... William E.
Thorne, 89, Jenkins Run Road, died
March 23.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Merrill, a daughter, Rebecca Lauren...to Mr. and Mrs. John Tharp, a
son, Dylan Kent...to Bev Vetter and
Jared Funk, a son, Keaton Jared.
It took two overtimes, but Gilmer
defeated Moorefield 78-70 in state
tournament play.
FROM
MOOREFIELD
EXAMINER
ARCHIVES
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Denny
Hott, a son, Aaron Eugene.
East Hardy beat Musselman 12-0
and lost to Circleville 8-1.
Forty-five Years Ago
March 29, 1967
Wardensville broke ground for
the new public water system financed
with a $125,000 FHA grant and loan.
The county was conducting a comprehensive water and sewer study
also funded by the FHA.
The Board of Education was
considering consolidation of the
county schools and authorized the
superintendent to investigate a consulting firm to conduct a study and
make recommendations.
School officials announced that
additional immunizations were
required for children entering West
Virginia schools for the first time. In
addition to smallpox and diphtheria,
shots for measles, tetanus, whooping
cough and polio would also be
required.
Thirty Years Ago
Randolph Cleveland Webster, 81,
Week of March 31, 1982
Winchester, died March 21.
Miriam Leatherman assumed the
Suzanne Denney and Lt. Frank
position of county extension home Mezzadri were married on March 14. Seventy-five Years Ago
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Olin Dove, March 31, 1937
economist filling the position left by
a daughter.
Gloria Phares.
Hardy County was the first county
The Board of Education was
in West Virginia to apply for money
given the results of the Management Sixty Years Ago
from the Rural Electrification
Administration. E. A. Kessel was
To
register
online,
visit Audit of the Central Office Organi- March 26, 1952
Mrs. Estella M. Alt was to receive elected president of the local associawww.resa8.org. For more informa- zation.
Attorneys Lary D. Garrett and the Silver Star Medal awarded tion. The loan of $172,000 was not to
tion contact Dave Plume at
Karen L. Garrett opened a law office posthumously to her son, Pfc. Dwain exceed $1 million. Work was to begin
304-267-3595, ext. 112, or at
on Rosemary Lane.
K. Alt. Pfc. Alt was a member of Co. on the 163 miles of lines which would
dplume@access.k12.wv.us
A number of citizens attended a B, 28th Regiment, 2nd Infantry Divi- serve 573 customers.
To learn more about RESA 8’s public meeting to discuss the replace- sion, in a Sept. 1951 at Mandae-ri
Rep. Jennings Randolph listed 5
educational programs in Berkeley, ment of Buzzard Ford Bridge.
when his unit was halted by intense cities, including Moorefield, as sites
Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson,
Gladys Wilson Bowman, 75, died hostile fire. With ammunition run- for radio beam stations to guide
Mineral, Morgan and Pendleton March 29.
ning low, Alt inflicted numerous planes over the Allegheny Mouncounties, call 304-267-3595 or visit
their website resa8.org.
RESA 8 Offers EMT Class
RESA 8 will offer an EMT, Emergency Medical Technician (128-hour
program) course starting Monday,
April 9, at Petersburg Volunteer Fire
Department. The class will be
selected weeknights 6 - 10 p.m. and
weekends 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. The instructor will be Mike Alt.
There is a tuition fee and additional charges for books and CPR
materials. There is also an application fee is payable to WVOEMS.
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 news@moorefieldexaminer.com. 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.
ESTABLISHED
1845
MOOREFIELD EXAMINER
and Hardy County News
132 South Main Street, P.O. Box 380, Moorefield, West Virginia 26836
Telephone: (304) 530-NEWS • Fax: (304) 530-6400 • www.moorefieldexaminer.com
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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.
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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; Staff: Kathy Bobo, Tara Booth,
D.J. Bosley, Carolyn Burge, Lisa Duan, Sam R. Fisher, Carl Holcomb, Diane Hypes, Sharon
Martin, Faye Staley, Peggy Wratchford.
Ninety Years Ago
March 30, 1922
The State Tax Department had
devised a new uniform tax ticket
which showed for the first time how
taxes were distributed to the city,
county and state.
West Virginia’s total population,
according to the 1920 Census, was
1,463,701.
In Hampshire County the County
Court ordered the Court House
moved from the Literary Hall to the
new building.
Bean’s Garage advertised a Fordson Tractor with accessories at
$582.45. Burch and Frye had an
International 8-16 tractor with 2-furrow plow for $607.
George C. Smith, Flats, died
March 21...Jack Ratliff had died...
Mrs. Belle Payne, 64, had died...H.
H. Mathias, 41, died March 2...the
infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Beam, Marlboro, VA, had died from
the flu...Mrs. Frank. L. Harmison,
Romney, died March 26...Mrs.
Wilbur Southerly, 18, Fisher, died
March 29...George W. Mullin, Flats,
died March 29.
Connie Lee Kite and Conway G.
Brake were married.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. R. E.
Wilkins, a son.
EXAMINER SAYS
Auditions
mileage gasoline cars...or something.
Sunday 4-6 p.m.
The Winchester Star reported
recently that the Winchester Medical
Center was named to the U.S. News
and World Report’s list of Best
Regional Hospitals for 2011-12. To
be listed, a hospital must be rated as
high performing in at least one of 16
specialties. The WMC was recognized in five areas: diabetes &
endocrinology; ear, nose and throat;
geriatrics; pulmonology; and urology.
Thanks to Mike Foreman for calling
this to our attention.
Saturday 6-8 p.m.
How come it was OK for the City
of Chicago to dump a dye mixture
into their river to turn it green for St.
Patrick’s Day but it isn’t OK for farmers to dump bio-degradable materials
onto the land because it might pollute watersheds? Just asking.
Volt was to be the answer to the gas
guzzlers. And President Obama
seemed to think it would be the
answer to GM’s financial issues. Only
problem, buyers didn’t want to spend
$40,000 for a hybrid, particularly one
that apparently had some unsolved
glitches, like batteries catching fire.
We aren’t big into knowing about
cars, but we were a bit non-plussed
For “Fiddler on the Roof”
when we learned that GM tried
Chevy announced recently it was something similar back in 1990. It
halting production of its hybrid car, didn’t fly then, either. Maybe GM
the Volt. Remember? The electric should stick to developing regular
Back in 1967 Sen. Robert Byrd
was trying to get Congress to approve
an amendment to lower the retirement age for Social Security from 65
to 60 for those who wanted to retire
voluntarily. Byrd noted that citizens
didn’t age at the same rate while
some were able to work past 60. He
said the effects of aging and a lifetime of hard work was greater on
some. Those who continued to work
would benefit proportionately and
employers would have no new costs
for those who retired early. This said
by a man who continued to work in
the halls of the Senate for another 43
years.
At McCoy Theatre
We missed sending birthday
greetings to Naomi Kohne, a resident
at E. A. Hawse Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. She celebrated her
101st birthday on March 2. We send
her our best wishes for living a full
century. Forgive us for missing her
important date.
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MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - Page 3
NEWS
News@MoorefieldExaminer.com
CVB Gets Marketing Plan and
Recommendations from Consultant
By Jean A. Flanagan
Moorefield Examiner
•Trout Pond is the only natural
lake in the state of West Virginia.
•Lost River is already known
regionally as a tourist destination.
•The 150th anniversary of the
Battle of Moorefield will be in 2014.
•171 buildings in Moorefield are
included in the town’s Historic District.
Tourism consultant Gail Price has
spent the past year studying tourism
in Hardy County and discovered the
above, perhaps little-known facts.
Price presented a Situation
Analysis and Marketing Plan to the
Hardy County Convention and Visitors Bureau on Friday, March 16.
“We have waited a long time for
this,” said CVB President Judy Patterson. “This is a massive and marvelous work.”
The CVB was created three years
ago to take advantage of proceeds
from the hotel/motel tax collected in
the county. A percentage of the tax is
returned to the local CVB to further
promote tourism.
Price recommended the CVB
make use of the Internet and create a
dynamic web site to promote Hardy
County.
“The Internet is how people find
out about the area,” she said. “They
also use Facebook and Twitter. Keep
those things up to date. The best part
is, it’s free.”
Price said a tourism survey
revealed the busiest month for
tourism in Hardy County is October.
She recommended tourism packages
with itineraries.
“People want directions to activities and points of interest,” she said.
“Put together a driving itinerary, but
make sure someone has driven the
route.”
Some of the other recommendations Price presented included capitalizing on the three major festivals in
the county — the Fiber Festival, the
Poultry Festival and Heritage Weekend. “You already have the means to
draw people to the area three times a
year, spring, summer and fall,” she
said.
Price also suggested “hospitality
training” for the community. “When
people stop and ask for directions or
where is the best place to get lunch,
you want them to come away with a
positive experience,” she said.
The CVB should hire a full-time
person to staff the office. They
should monitor surrounding counties
and look for ways to partner with
them.
“I suggest you apply for a Scenic
By-Way designation,” Price said.
“Partner with Shenandoah County in
Virginia on a Route 11 or a Route 55
loop. If you work with another state,
it elevates your ability to get federal
grant funding.”
Price suggested the CVB seek
accreditation with the West Virginia
Association of Convention and Visitors Bureaus. “It raises you to a
higher standard,” she said.
Contact travel writers and supply
them with familiarization tours, she
said. Make presentations to local and
regional groups, so they know what
resources exist in Hardy County.
Gather data, “from everyone who
steps through the door,” she said.
“Make sure everyone who visits gets
a survey and to make sure they fill it
out, tie it to a contest. Once a year
give away a weekend for two. It will
more than pay for itself.”
Board members indicated the
Wardensville Visitors Center was
already collecting data on visitors’
point of origin.
According to data from the West
Continued on page 7
NEWS BRIEFS
WVU Extension will hold a program in Tucker County on April 26 to
help educate communities about
issues surrounding marcellus shale
gas drilling. Representatives of the
state health department, the Department of Environmental Protection
and a fisheries biologist are among
the presenters. Topics will range
from who handles drilling permits to
road damage and who handles
repairs. The Tucker event will be
held at the Parsons Volunteer Fire
Department beginning at 6 p.m.
**********
West Virginia exports reached a
record $9 billion in 2011. With an
increase of 39.5 percent over 2010’s
level of $6.4 billion, West Virginia led
the nation in the percentage of
growth. Overall, U.S. exports grew
15.8 percent during this period. West
Virginia’s top five product sectors for
2011 are coal, plastics, machinery,
optical/medical products and organic
chemicals. The state’s top five export
partners for 2011 are Canada, Brazil,
Netherlands, India and Italy.
**********
The WV Strawberry Festival in
Buckhannon has expanded to two
weekends. May 12-13 include the
new Festival Show Choir Invitational
and a Horse and Carriage Parade on
Saturday and on Sunday afternoon
praise and worship teams will perform followed by a Mothers Day
salute. The regular Strawberry Festival runs May 16-20 with parades,
coronation, competitions, art, photography and quilt shows, and other
activities showcasing the strawberry.
For more information, call 304-4729036
or
go
to
www.wvstrawberryfestival.com
**********
WVU’s College of Business and
Economics released a report recently
which says the thoroughbred racing
industry has had an economic impact
of $191 million on Jefferson County.
Horse racing supported 1,450 jobs,
$36.3 million in wages, and $1.9 million in state taxes during 2010.
Researchers said the estimates are
conservative and don’t include the
operational impacts of the Hollywood Casino at Charles Town Races.
Nor do the numbers include money
visitors spend on racing, concessions,
hotel rooms, restaurants and gasoline.
**********
AAA Fuel Gauge reported last
week that prices for a gallon of
unleaded regular gas increased 1.9
cents in West Virginia to $3.889.
Nationally the average price was
$3.846. In West Virginia prices
ranged from a high of $3.957 in
Clarksburg to a low of $3.821 in
Huntington. In Hardy County, the
Moorefield Sheetz joined Baker at
$3.99.
**********
The need for accurate information regarding the school bond proposal is very important for individuals to make an informed decision
regarding what is best for their family
and their schools. A schedule of
community meetings will be held to
provide information regarding the
Hardy County Schools’ proposed
bond for the citizens of Hardy
County. The meetings will be held at
the following locations and times.
• Moorefield High School
Library, April 10 - 6 p.m.
• Old Fields Baptist Church,
April 12 - p.m.
• Rig Community Center, April
17 - 6 p.m.
• Baker Fire Hall, April 18 - 6
p.m.
• Peru Community Center, April
24 - 7 p.m.
• Mathias School Cafeteria, April
26 - 7 p.m.
• Wardensville War Memorial
Building, April 30 - 6 p.m.
In addition, Moorefield High
School will hold an open house for
visiting their school facility on March
31, beginning at 9 a.m. through 2 p.m.
East Hardy High School will also
have an open house on March 31,
beginning at 10 a.m. through 2 p.m.
All citizens wishing to visit the
schools are encouraged to visit to do
so in order to become familiar with
the issues the school bond will
address.
Any groups wishing a presentation to their members should contact
Kathy Hardy at 304-530-2348 extension 222 or Barbara Whitecotton at
extension 232.
Keplinger Announces Bid for Re-Election
Hello, I am William “JR”
Keplinger and I am a candidate for
Hardy County Commissioner. My
wife Stacy Lee, daughter Makenzie
Ryan, son William Edward III, and I
live at the family farm on South Fork
Road. I am the son of William E. and
Rosemary Keplinger of Moorefield.
After graduation from Moorefield High School, I attended
Potomac State College. I continued
my studies at West Virginia University where I completed a Bachelor of
Science in Resource Management
and Economics.
In 1991, I formed Keplinger Shavings, a company which provides bedding for poultry and other farm animals. I currently have a contract with
Pilgrim’s Pride, Corp. for the production of broiler chickens.
Like many of you, my wife and I
are raising our children here in
Hardy County. We care deeply about
the future of families, friends, neighbors, and citizens who are also fortunate enough to call Hardy County
home. Without growth and infrastructure in our county, our children
will not be able to stay and raise families and future generations.
My promise to you is to continue
to provide honest, straight forward
leadership and work as hard as I can
to make Hardy County the very best
place to live.
With your vote and support, I
believe we can keep our county beautiful and grow a stronger local economy. In order to support our county’s
bright future, I have and will continue to endorse:
• The building of facilities and
services that better serve you.
• Better infrastructure in the
county (water, sewer, roads, communication).
• The protection of landowners
from urban sprawl.
• Emergency services to help
those in need.
• Better education for our future.
As a member of the Hardy
County Commission for the past 12
years, I have served on the State
Board for the County Commission
Association of West Virginia for the
last 10 years.
This board advises county commissions across the state and acts on
advisements from commissions to
provide better service to citizens in
our respective counties.
I also serve on:
• Region 8 Development Authority
• Hardy County Planning Commission
• Hardy County Parks and Recreation
• WVU Extension Service
• Hardy County Convention &
Visitors Bureau Board
• WV Resources Advisory Committee — appointed
• WV Counties Risk Pool Boardelected
• County Commission Association Board — elected
I’m also affiliated with:
• West Virginia Farm Bureau
• West Virginia Poultry Association
• Hardy County Rod and Gun
2 locations to better serve you:
William “JR” Keplinger
Club
• Moorefield Lions Club
• Sponsor of: Little League Baseball and Adult Softball
• National Rifle Association
Keplinger Bluegrass – N2Pick’n –
has been the family bluegrass band
for many years. We have traveled
throughout the area performing at
community events and special benefits to help those in an hour of need.
The opportunity to meet and talk
with so many people throughout our
county allows me to see and hear the
needs and concerns in our community. These experiences have inspired
me to use music to build community
and educate our youth.
Visit me at www.keplinger.info
for more information, county news,
and upcoming events. You can also
find me on Facebook.
25yrs
•Rig Road, Moorefield
•Shirley Lane, Burlington
•State certified Truck & Platform Scales
for accuracy at both sites.
•Aluminum cans, Aluminum scrap such as siding,
gutter, window frames, sheet aluminum, etc.
•Aluminum wheels •Radiators •Stainless Steel
•Brass, Coppers •Electric motors •Starters •Alternators •Lead
•Auto batteries •Farm Machinery •Dozers •Junk cars
•Computer modems/towers (sorry - no monitors) •Scrap Metals
such as appliances, tin, metal bed springs, gates, air conditioners,
and other misc. light metal •Gas and Diesel Motors
•Unprepared Heavy Metal – 1/4” thick or more and over 3 feet
•Prepared Steel 1/4” thick or more and under 3 feet
Now Accepting: cardboard, newspapers/magazines/catalogs,
office paper/shredded paper/envelopes/junk mail
Please check us out online at www.candksalvage.com or call for current prices or any questions.
304-434-2485 (Moorefield office) • 304-289-3805 (Burlington office)
Page 4 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
OBITUARIES
LOLA MARIE FUNKHOUSER
Lola Marie Funkhouser, 93, of
Baker, W.Va., passed away on Thursday, March 15, 2012 at her home.
She was born on November 6,
1918 in Wardensville, W.Va., and was
the daughter of the late John S. and
Lucy E. (Dellinger) Kaufman.
She was a homemaker, loving
mother and grandmother.
Mrs. Funkhouser was preceded in
death by her first husband, Don Landacre, her second husband, Jonah
Funkhouser, in 1989, a son, Danny
Landacre, a daughter, Mary Cubbage, two brothers and three sisters.
Surviving is a daughter, Joyce M.
Funkhouser, of Baker, W.Va.; two sisters, Betty Merriman and Peg Kerr,
both of Wardensville, W.Va.; eight
grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.
A memorial service was held Sunday, March 25, 2012, at the McKee
Funeral Home, Baker, W.Va.
All arrangements were handled
by McKee Funeral Home, Baker,
W.Va.
Service
Addresses
1LT Travis Pratt
HHC 82nd CAB
TF Poseidon
BAF
APO, AE 09354
Chad Sais
USS Milius DDG 69
FPO, AP 96672
Note: If any of the overseas soldiers have returned home, please call
the office to have their name
removed from the list or if you would
like to add a name to the list, please
send the information to the Examiner office.
LUCAS J. KREMER
Lucas J. Kremer, age 10, of
Baker, W.Va., passed away on Friday,
March 16, 2012, at his home.
He was born on March 4, 2002 in
Winchester, Va., and was the son of
Daniel J. and Uraina (Brown) Kremer.
Lucas was a fourth grade student
at East Hardy Elementary School.
He was a member of the Agape Family Fellowship Church, a member of
East Hardy Youth Mats Club, East
Hardy Little League, South Branch
Youth Football League and East
Hardy Little League Basketball mer, Tyler Morgan and Abijah MorLeague.
gan.
Surviving with his parents, is a
A memorial service was held on
brother, Zachary Kremer at home; Friday, March 23, 2012 at 12:00 P.M.
paternal grandparents, Tom and at the East Hardy High School AthMadeline Kremer of Montgomery letic Complex with Pastor Rob Kerr
City, Missouri; maternal grandpar- officiating,
ents, Jimmy Combs of Baker, W.Va.
Memorials may be sent to Lucas
and Patricia Combs of California; J. Kremer Trust Fund, c/o Capon Valaunt, Karen Kremer of Jefferson ley Bank, Baker Branch, Baker, WV.
City, Missouri; uncle and aunt Jesse
Arrangements were under the
and Cherlyn Morgan of Goldsbor- direction of the McKee Funeral
ough, N.C.; and cousins, Adam Kre- Home, Baker, W.Va.
MABEL LEE ZIRK STANTURF
Mabel Lee Zirk Stanturf died on
Sunday, March 18, 2012, at Spring
Meadows from complications of
Alzheimer’s Disease.
She was born on September 18,
1927 in Moorefield, W. Va. to Grover
C. and Mary Mae Zirk.
She was the ninth child of a family of ten children. Mabel grew up in
the town of Moorefield, W. Va. She
attended Toll Gate elementary
school and Moorefield High School.
In 1943 Mabel and her family
moved to Baltimore, Md. Her father
worked for Martin Douglas as part of
the war effort during WWII. She
graduated from Kenwood High
School at age 16. Later she went to
work for Social Security in downtown
Baltimore near what is now considered the Inner Harbor. She was
working there when she met the love
of her life, Jack Stanturf, on July 4,
1946. Upon meeting her, Jack said to
her “You’ve got muscles, let’s go rowing”. This courtship led to almost 50
years of marriage. They married at
Ft. Holabird, Md. on September 21,
1946. Mabel used to say that she
JAMES RICHARD “PUD” EVANS
spent her honeymoon in Houston,
James Richard “Pud” Evans, age
Tex. and Jack went to Italy. Jack died
84 of Rohrbaugh Lane, Moorefield,
on April 14, 1996.
W.Va., passed away Tuesday evening,
Growing up in a family with ten
March 20, 2012 at his residence surchildren, Mabel learned how to bake
rounded by his loving family and
at a young age, work well with others
friends.
and to cherish family and friends. She
He was born November 14, 1927
grew up surrounded by aunts, uncles,
at Rig, W.Va., and was the son of the
grand-parents and even a greatgrandmother. She learned how to
late James Franklin “Ted” and Suella
deal with adversity, especially growB. (Henry) Evans. Two sisters, a
ing up during the depression and
brother and a grandson preceded
WWII. Her father believed educahim in death. He was a member of
tion was very important. When the
the Moorefield Church of the
school couldn’t afford a teacher for
Brethren.
the school, he hired a tutor for his
Surviving is his wife of 66 years,
children. Mabel believed that showAgnes E. (Hawse) Evans; three
ing love, having a sense of humor,
daughters, Nancy (Jack) Taylor and
and respecting others were values
Debbie (Dan) Poling of Moorefield,
W.Va. and Kathy (Michael) Snyder of daily until just weeks ago. Pud for the essential to living a fulfilling life.
Fisher, W.Va.; a sister, Barbara Sue most part has spent his life around Mabel’s faith was very important to
her. Growing up in Moorefield, West
Cornell of Laurel, Md.; five grand- cars.
Virginia, she attended church at the
children; and twelve great-grandchilFuneral services were conducted
First Presbyterian Church. Throughdren.
Friday, March 23, 2012 at the Fraley
Pud was a car salesman known to Funeral Home Chapel, with Pastors
all, but began his working career at Russel and Lucy Webster and
the Potomac Farms Cheese Plant in Michael Snyder officiating. InterMoorefield and later became a milk ment was at the Newhouse Cemetruck driver. He left the milk truck to tery, Rig, W,Va.
work for Frosty McAdams then on to
Memorials may be directed to the
“Lefty” Schell’s garage. In 1955 he Moorefield Church of the Brethren,
Food School will be held Monday,
found a home with A. J. Ludwick P O Box 656, Moorefield, WV 26836
April 2 at Hardy County Health
selling cars and stayed there until or the Calvary Baptist Temple, P O
Dept. at 9 a.m., and the Mathias
1972. He then had terms selling cars Box 783, Moorefield, WV 26836.
Community Center at 7 p.m. Please
for Hine’s & Malcolm Chevrolet,
Condolences to the family may be phone 304-530-6355 to register for
Trenton Motors and Veach’s Motors left
at
Pud’s
obituary
at the class you are planning to attend.
returning to work with A. J. Ludwick www.fraleyfuneralhome.com.
in 1993 through 2003. His last stop
Arrangements were under the
was with Roy Haggerty and then direction of the Fraley Funeral
Debbie Crites where he would be Home.
Food School
Scheduled
Epiphany of the Lord
Catholic Church
Hearing Screening vs. Hearing Testing
When children start school, or
most preschool programs, it is typical
for their hearing to be screened. If they
do not pass the screening test they get
referred on for a complete hearing
test. So what’s the difference between
these two?
Hearing screening is a quick check
of a child’s hearing to see if it falls in
the normal range for the sounds that
are most important for speech. If a
child does not pass a screening test – it
does not mean that they have a hearing
problem. There are many reasons why
a child may not pass a screening test
other than having a hearing problem.
Some of these reasons may be: the
child did not understand the test
instructions, the test room was noisy or
contained distractions, the child was
not feeling well, etc. Screening tests
are designed so that, if the child passes
we can be reasonably certain that they
have normal hearing. If they do not
pass, it simply means that we need to
spend a little more time testing them to
see if they really do have a problem.
A diagnostic hearing test is
designed to determine how much hearing loss the child may have and what
type of loss it is. Testing is done by an
audiologist, who has extensive training
in performing evaluations. The test
environment is designed to be quiet
and free of outside distractions.
Different types of equipment are
available to test different aspects of the
hearing system. If the child is reasonably co-operative, the audiologist
should be able to determine if there is
a hearing problem present, how much
hearing loss there is, and what type of
loss. The type of loss would determine
the course of treatment necessary to
correct the problem.
For further information contact
Michael
Zagarella
at
the
RESA 8 office 304-267-3595 or
mzagarel@access.k12.wv.us.
New Life Tabernacle
Th
ew
hole
gospel to the whol
out her life she attended the Presbyterian Church other than when she
attended Protestant services while
living in Germany. Mabel loved
being an Army wife, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother.
As an Army wife, Mabel lived
throughout the United States and
Germany. There were times she was
left to maintain the household and
care for the children while Jack was
in the Korean War and serving in
Berlin, Germany during the Cold
War. She willingly did this even if it
meant traveling with an infant and a
toddler by herself. Mabel was ready
for the challenge and the adventure
no matter what it entailed her doing.
Throughout Jack’s Army career she
supported him. Mabel was well
known among the troops supervised
by Jack for making wonderful homecooked meals. In June 1966, Jack
retired from the Army and moved
the family from San Francisco, California to Pocatello, Idaho. They lived
in Pocatello and American Falls,
Idaho until Jack’s death. Mabel lived
in Pocatello, Idaho until May 1998.
She then moved to Bozeman, Montana to be near her daughter, Karen,
and her family. In April 2000 she
moved in with her daughter, Karen,
and son-in-law, Bob. She lived with
them until October 2008. At that
time Mabel moved into Spring
Meadows in Bozeman, Montana.
She resided in Spring Meadows until
Celebrate Easter April 8
Walnut Grove
her death.
Mabel and Jack had four children. She was beloved step-mother
to Terry Stanturf (Joan). The children are John A. Stanturf (Eileen) of
Athens, Ga., Karen Furu (Bob) of
West Yellowstone, Mont, Mari
Koorhan of Bally, Pa., and Grover
Stanturf (Fayth) of Portland, Ore.
She has 11 grandchildren and 19
great-grandchildren.
Mabel is a member of the Order
of Eastern Star, Daughters of the
Nile, and Alpha Omicron Pi fraternal
organization. She was a past Worthy
Matron, Ruth Chapter, Pocatello,
Idaho and Grand Representative for
the State of Nebraska from the State
of Idaho.
Mabel was preceded in death by
Jack Stanturf (husband), Grover C.
Zirk (father), Mary Mae Zirk
(mother), Woodrow Zirk (brother),
Wilson Zirk (brother), Grover Zirk
(brother), Ralph Zirk (brother),
Mary Catherine Gibbs (sister), Jean
Lamm (sister), Alma Hametz (sister), Helen Basham (sister), Terry
Stanturf (stepson) and Jeremy Stanturf (grandson).
Mabel is survived by her four children; sister, Margaret (Margie) Zirk;
numerous grandchildren; greatgrandchildren; nephews; nieces; and
very special friends.
Services were on March 22, 2012
at First Presbyterian Church in Bozeman, Mont. There was a reception
following in the church fellowship
hall. If desired, donations may be
given to the Alzheimer’s Association
or Shriners Hospital or the charity of
your choice. Alzheimer’s Association: 3010 11th Ave N. Billings, MT
59101. Shriners Hospital: 911 W. 5th
Ave. Spokane, WA 99204.
Interment will be held at Arlington National Cemetery in September.
Arrangements were in the care of
Dokken-Nelson Funeral Service.
www.dokkennelson.com
Moorefield
Assembly of God
Church of the Brethren
Rt. 55 East, Moorefield
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Church Service 11 a.m.
Children’s Midweek Service,
Ages 2–18, Wed., 6:00 p.m.
Pastor Donnie Knotts
1-877-371-9928
EVERYONE WELCOME!
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”
Rt. 55, Moorefield, WV
304-434-2547
Saturday Evening 6 PM
Sunday Mass 8:00 AM
Moorefield Seventh-day
Adventist Church
Trough Road, Moorefield
Sabbath School – 9:30 a.m.
Worship – 11:00 a.m.
All services English & Español
304-538-3309
Rig
Rev. Brad Taylor
Sunday School: 10:00 AM
Praise & Worship: 10:45 AM
Bible Study Wednesday: 7:00 PM
Youth Service every
1st & 3rd Tuesday: 7:00 PM
• Sunday Morning
Service at 10 a.m.
• Sunday Night
Service at 6 p.m.
• Wednesday Night
Service at 7:00 p.m.
Call if you need transportation
1-1/2 mi. W. new Corridor H
Phone 304-703-2202
Pastor: Eugene Whetzel
APRIL 1, 11:45 A.M.
On Winchester Avenue
Palm Sunday Gospel Sing APRIL 1, 6:00 P.M.
Moorefield Church of God, 217 S. Elm St., Moorefield
Easter Sunrise Service APRIL 8, 7:00 A.M.
Mt. Olivet Cemetery
with breakfast following
Moorefield Church of the Brethren, Winchester & Clay Sts.
SPECIAL HOLY WEEK SERVICES
April 1 Palm Sunday Children’s Program 11:00 a.m.
24 HOURS THAT CHANGED THE WORLD
April 5 Maundy Thursday Service
7:00 p.m. Living Last Supper
April 6 Good Friday Service 7:00 p.m.
“The Way to the Cross in Word & Song”
10 Queens Drive
Rig, WV 26836
(304) 434-2073
www.rigassemblyofgod.org
A member of the United Pentecostal
Church International
Palm Sunday Parade
Presented by the Moorefield Ministerial Association
Assembly of
God Church
rld
e wo
!
ETTA P. MULLINS
FINCHAM WHITEMAN
Etta P. Mullins Fincham Whiteman, 63, of Romney, W.Va., passed
away on Tuesday, March 20, 2012 at
Hampshire Center, Romney, W.Va.
She was born on August 7, 1948 in
Tennessee, and was the daughter of
Pauline (Wagoner) Mullins of Midland, Va. and the late James Mullins.
She worked at Wal-Mart in
Moorefield, W.Va. She was a member of the Bible Baptist Church in
Moorefield. Etta touched many lives
and never met a stranger. She was a
very special woman with a heart of
gold.
Along with her father, she was
preceded in death by her second husband, Lawrence Whiteman and a
son, Nathan Fincham.
Surviving along with her mother,
are five sons, Lee Fincham, Toby Fincham and Matt Fincham, all of Romney, W.Va., Dion Fincham and Brian
Fincham, both of Culpepper, Va.; a
brother, James Mullins Jr.; a sister,
Wima Gayheart; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren;
and her first husband, Roger Fincham, Sr.
Etta donated her body to medical
science.
A Celebration of Life will be held
on Saturday, March 31, 2012 at 3:00
p.m. at the Bible Baptist Church,
Frosty Hollow Rd., Moorefield,
W.Va., with Pastor Patch officiating.
The family will receive friends on
Saturday 1:00-3:00 p.m. at the
church.
Memorials may be made to Etta
Whiteman Memorial Fund, c/o
Grant Co. Bank, 500 S. Main St.,
Moorefield, WV 26836.
Arrangements are being handled
by McKee Funeral Home, Romney,
W.Va.
April 8 Resurrection Celebration
11:00 a.m.
Duffey Memorial United Methodist Church
100 North Elm Street, Moorefield, WV
“We Work For Those Who Love and Remember”
Granite • Marble • Bronze
Presented by the Moorefield Ministerial Association
April 1, Palm Sunday Parade, 11:45 a.m., on Winchester
Avenue
April 1, Palm Sunday Gospel Sing April 1, 6:00 p.m.,
Moorefield Church of God, 217 S. Elm St., Moorefield
W.A. Hartman
IMPERISHABLE
MEMORials
Duffey Memorial United Methodist Church
100 N. Elm St., Moorefield
April 1, Palm Sunday Children’s Program 11:00 a.m.
(Opposite the Plaza Shopping Center)
Harrisonburg, Virginia 22802
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, forever.
Sunday School – 10 a.m.
Worship – 11 a.m.
Katherine C. Jackson Pastor
Moorefield
Presbyterian
Church
109 S. MAIN STREET
MOOREFIELD
304-530-2307
www.moorefieldchurch.org
Tannery Chapel
S. Fork Rd.
Worship 9 a.m.
SS – 9:45 a.m.
Oak Dale Chapel
Rig
Worship 10 a.m.
SS – 10:45 a.m.
BECOME INVOLVED
AND FEEL THE SPIRIT
...for the Lord your God is a merciful God...
Stop in and find out.
Oak Dale Christian Church
3989 Rig Rd., Rig, on the hill just above the Rig store
Pre-Easter Services – Sunday, April 1 at 6:30 p.m.,
Monday, April 2 through Thursday, April 5, 7:00 p.m.
Guest speakers each night with special music each night.
Sunday night – John Vetter
Monday night – John Moyers
Tuesday and Wednesday nights – Dan Sterns
Thursday evening – Communion
“If Roses Grow in Heaven”
540-434-2573 • 459 Noll Drive
BRANCH: E. Market St. Charlottesville, VA 22902 • 434-293-2570
Why study and worship?
Emmanuel Episcopal Church
Corner of Winchester Ave and South Fork Rd., Moorefield
April 1, Palm Sunday Eucharist at 11:00 a.m.
Happy Birthday Mom
Memorials, L.L.C.
MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - Page 5
SOCIAL
Birth Announcement
John Jarrett Smouse
Jason and Sara Smouse of Baker,
W.Va., are delighted to announce the
birth of their baby, John Jarrett
Smouse, born December 22, 2011 at
Winchester Medical Center, Winchester, Va. Jarrett was born at 9:20
p.m. and weighed 6 pounds 12
ounces and was 20.5 inches in
length.
Proud paternal grandparents are
John and Gail Smouse of Baker,
W.Va., and maternal grandparents
are Rickey and Cindy Strother of
Augusta, W.Va. Zanna Mathias of
Augusta is the proud maternal greatgrandmother.
AGE IN ACTION
Five Generations: Nancy Hambleton holding Abby
Elizabeth Alt, Adrian Hambleton, Jr., Tanya Crites and Jessica
Crites
Duplicate Bridge
Club Report
104 N. Main Street
Moorefield, WV 26836
PHONE: 304-538-6354
When Words Fail,
Send Jewelry
Your One Stop Variety Shop
corner of
SR 55 and Ft. Run/Dover Hollow Rd.
304-261-3935
Buy/Sell/Trade
anything of value
Game Systems/games, DVDs,
CDs, iPods, cell phones, jewelry,
clothes, antiques and more!
A Howell game was played on
March 21 with five tables in play in the
South Branch Duplicate Bridge Club
held at the Hardy County Public
Library. There were ten pairs playing
27 boards with an average match-point
score of 54.
Overall winners were John Childs
and Bill Long, 67 1/2; Sandra Evans
and Kathryn Moomau, 61 1/2; Rachael
Welton and Bill Fisher, 59 1/2; Fernando Indacochea and Jim Kelly, 59
1/2; and Lary Garrett and George
Ours, 59.
ns 50
Look Who Tur
on March 30!
OPEN:
Wednesday – Sunday
10 – 5
We would like to thank
everyone for the flowers and
all the cards we received for
our 64th Anniversary.
Thanks to Linda and Pete
Funk for the card shower,
and each of you made our
day very special.
Eston Cullers II
A!
GOTCH From your sister
and her husband
April 2 - 6, 2012
Mathias, Moorefield,
Wardensville (Home Delivered)
Nutrition Sites
Monday, April 2 - Breaded Pork
Patty, Augratin Potatoes, Spinach,
Fruit Cocktail
Tuesday, April 3 - Beef Barbecue,
Cole Slaw, Baked Beans, Apricots
Wednesday, April 4 - “Easter
Meal”: Ham, Potato Salad, Green
Beans, Pineapple Cobbler
Thursday, April 5 - Fish Sticks,
Macaroni & Cheese, Stewed Tomatoes, Plums
Friday, April 6 - “Good Friday”Center Closed
Mathias Site Closed on Fridays
ACTIVITIES AT MOOREFIELD
SENIOR CENTER
Monday, April 2 Tuesday, April 3 - Senior Meeting, 1:00
Wednesday, April 4 - Blood Pressure, 10:30 - 12:00; Easter Egg Bingo,
11:00
Thursday, April 5 - Bowling, 1:00;
Friday, April 6 - “Good Friday: Center Closed
REMINDERS
•Anyone wishing to pick up a
meal at the Mathias Nutrition Site,
please call by 9:30 a.m. and for the
Moorefield Nutrition Site, please call
by 10:00 a.m. Due to the availability
of food, substitutions are sometimes
necessary. Anyone under the age of
60 is welcome to come and eat with
us and there is a cost. If you are age
60 or older and live in the Moorefield, Rig, Fisher, Frosty Hollow,
Fort Run, or Old Fields areas and
would like to come into the Senior
Center for lunch and/or activities,
and need a ride, please call us at 304530-2256 and the van will pick you
up. Please call by 10:00 a.m.
•We would like to start delivering
meals to the Fisher Keller, Walnut
Bottom and Dooley areas. If you are
60 or older and not able to prepare a
meal or have medical problems,
please call the office at 304-530-2256
for more information. We would like
to start delivery service in that area as
soon as possible.
•HCCOA receives funding from
federal and state entities including
WV Bureau of Senior Services and
Upper Potomac AAA, local government, donations and memorial contributions.
•The Moorefield Senior Center
has Ensure. It is available by the case
(24 cans), half case (12 cans) or six
pack. Flavors available are strawberry, chocolate, butter pecan and
vanilla. The same flavors are available in Plus. Call the center for the
price.
•The Moorefield Seniors are
making dried potato necklaces to
sell. If you would like to see them,
come by the Center, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
Monday - Friday.
•Medicare Part-D: If you need
help with Medicare Part-D, call the
Senior Center at 304-530-2256. Open
enrollment is now closed.
• AARP Tax Aide: The last day
will be March 29. We are booked for
the day. If you need your taxes done,
you need to call the library at 304538-6560.
•Wardensville Home Delivered
Meals: If you are not receiving a regular home delivered meal and you
want to get a meal on any day, Monday-Friday, please call the Moorefield Nutrition Site by 9:30 a.m. at
304-530-2256.
DONATIONS
Those making donations were
Jim Weeks, Betty Wilkins, Lona
Sherman, Jean Sites, Charlie Hefner,
Geraldine Hefner, Lola Crider, Mary
Wolfe, Polly Miller, Ida Staggs, Kay
Lyter, Eleanor Orndorff, Shirley
Waddell, Louise Worner, Food Lion,
and the Moorefield Examiner. Donations are greatly appreciated.
Engagement Announced
On a cruise to the Bahamas in
December of 2011, Russel Swayne
Franklin asked Kelly Jo Hinkle for
her hand in marriage.
The couple’s families now join
them in announcing their engagement.
Kelly is the daughter of Sam and
Yvonne Hinkle of Moorefield, W.Va.
She is a 2002 graduate of Moorefield
High School, 2006 graduate of Shepherd University, and earned a Master’s Degree in Criminal Justice from
American Public University in 2011.
Kelly is employed as the Northeast-
ern Regional Director for Parole and
Probation in Martinsburg.
Russ is the son of Kenneth and
Stacy Lawing of Hedgesville, W.Va.
He is a 2001 graduate of Martinsburg
High School, and is pursuing a
degree in Criminal Justice. He is
employed as a Correctional Officer
for the West Virginia Division of
Corrections, and with the WV Air
National Guard, 167th Airlift Wing
in Martinsburg.
Formal invitations will be sent to
family and friends for an early 2013
wedding.
Dorcas 4-H Club
Sponsors Recycling Day
The Docras 4-H Club announces
their annual recycling drive to be
held Friday, April 13 from 3 - 7 p.m.
and Saturday April 14 from 8 a.m. noon. It will be held at the Tri-County
Fairgrounds livestock barn in Petersburg.
Club members will be accepting
paper (newspaper, magazines, catalogs, office paper), cardboard, aluminum cans, and #1 and #2 plastic
bottles. The club cannot accept glass
bottles this year. No plastic grocery
bags, pesticide bottles or plastic oil
bottles will be accepted. Club members would appreciate lids on plastic
bottles be removed. Labels need not
be removed.
This is a community service project of the Dorcas 4-H Club and not a
fundraiser. For more information
about the event, call 304-257-2459.
Commissioners Sign Proclamation
Friends are like angels, you
can’t see them, but you
know they are there.
-Gordon and Elva Combs
The SCV (Sons of Confederate Veterans) Camp 582, McNeill’s Rangers, asked the Hardy County
Commission on Feb. 7 to designate April as Confederate History and Heritage Month. Pictured
seated are Hardy County Commissioners JR Keplinger, Mike Teets, and AJ Wade. Standing David
Judy, SCV Commander; Clarence Spiker, Adjutant; and Kenneth Shobe, Historian.
When they heard that Jesus was
coming…took branches of palm
trees and went out to meet Him, and
cried out: “Hosanna! ‘Blessed is He
who comes in the name of the Lord!’
The King of Israel!” JOHN 12:12,13 (NKJV)
VIDEO IMPRESSIONS
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Now until March 31st
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Saturday, March 31 • 1:00–3:00 p.m.
at Ivanhoe Presbyterian Church
Food, games, face painting, an Easter Bonnet parade and
contest, and an Easter egg hunt at 2:30 pm. There will be
plenty of fun for the whole family. Come and join us!
New Lotions Just Arrived!
304-257-4483
415 Virginia Ave.
Petersburg
N O R T H R I V E R V A L L E Y V O L U N T E E R F I R E C O M PA N Y
BBQ Chicken
OR
Country Ham
D•I•N•N•E•R
Saturday, March 31, 2012
5:00 p.m. at the Old Rio School House
Everyone Welcome!
There will be
NO COMPUTER /
INTERNET ACCESS
on Wednesday, March 28th
at the Moorefield Library
due to scheduled
maintenance
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
Happy Birthday
to a sweet little girl turning 5 on
March 28th
Love,
Mommy & Daddy
Page 6 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
SCHOOL DAYS
MMS Starts SADD Chapter
Isaac Reel holding the WV branding emblem on one of the bulls.
Serena Redman showing that girls can freeze brand as well as the
boys.
Moorefield Middle School FFA Attends WVU’s
Performance Testing & Freeze Branding Workshop
On March 12, 2012, the Moorefield Middle FFA Chapter took 11 of
its FFA members to the WVU Reymann Memorial Farm at Wardensville to attend the WV Performance Testing and Freeze Branding
workshop. Dave Workman, WVU
Extension Agent in Hardy County,
spoke to the group about the importance of the cattle producer improving his/her herd through the use of
better genetics. The bulls on test at
the WVU farm are cosigned from
individual farms around the region
and are fed and tested over several
months. Many factors are measured
and are included in the bull being
selected as a bull to sell. The students discussed what one should look
for when choosing a bull for their
own herd.
The students then had the opportunity to freeze brand the emblem of
West Virginia on the right hip of the
bull. First the students had to clip the
hair from the area of the hip to be
branded. Next, using liquid nitrogen
and branding irons, the students had
to hold the WV emblem brand on
the animal for 45 seconds and then
place a number “2” on the hip under
the eastern panhandle of the WV
emblem for 45 seconds. The process
affects the pigment producing cells in
the hair follicle. The hair in this area
will continue to grow, but will be
white instead of color of the animals
hair. Every student took advantage of
the opportunity to freeze brand a
bull. Freeze branding the WV
emblem and the number “2” on the
animal shows that the bull successfully completed and passed all the
tests required during the performance test to qualify for the sale in
2012. These bulls will be heading for
cow herds here in WV and in many
other states as well.
The Moorefield Middle FFA
members attending the workshop
were: Trena Conner, Austin Duncan,
Adam Harper, Bryson Hedrick, Isaac
Hesse, Mitch Martin, Joseph Parker,
Serena Redman, Isaac Reel, Danny
Taylor and Logan Taylor.
The Moorefield Middle FFA and
the Moorefield High FFA would like
to thank Dave Workman, Andy
Walker, Brad Smith and WVU Farm
Manager Jerry Yates for their time in
allowing our students this unique
learning opportunity.
Moorefield Intermediate School
For more information on the WV is proud to announce the Honor Roll
Performance Bull test program con- and Superior Honor Roll recipients
for the fourth six weeks grading
tact the WVU Extension Service.
period.
SUPERIOR ACADEMIC
ACHIEVEMENT
Grade 4
Adam R. Baker, Haydon W.
Caldwell, Elizabeth R. Dove, Aaron
A. Fishel, Kristin G. Heishman,
Isabella G. Henderson, Chelsea D.
Keller, Tapanga L. May, Hannah E.
Merritt, Colten J. Spaid, Madison P.
Strawderman, William E. Strawderman, Rebecca L. Whetzel, Emily E.
Yates.
Grade 5
Jasmine K. Abrell, Jade E. Baker,
Jessica L. Campos-Smith, Ethan W.
Combs, Aden S. Funkhouser, Adam
C. Larson, Marina L. Stotelmyer,
Logan H. Whetzel, Makayla D.
Wilkins.
Grade 6:
Leanna J. Basye, Maxine R. Cassell, Justin L. Gartin, Skye J. Metzer,
Brooke R. Miller, Cheyenna B.
Miller, Dalton R. Miller, Phillip M.
Mullin, Mariah A. Payne, Jacob T.
Rudolph, Holly M. Williams.
Grade 7:
Blake C. Caldwell, Ashton B.
Mathias
Grade 8
Sarah E. Baker, Hanna R. Carpenter, Sardana G. Coyle, Amber S.
Fields, Raeann D. Orndorff
HONOR ROLL
Grade 4
Victoria L. Allamong, Madison
S. Barton, Brooke Dingus, Emmie J.
Fulk, Jeffrey F. Goldsmith, Tyler J.
Harmon, Katelyn R. Kytle, Haley M.
McDonaldson, Clarissa D. Miller,
Noah R. Miller, Cole A. Pusl, Elizabeth S. Seals, Hinton B. Shifflet, Seth
P. Smith, Adam G. Yeater, John A.
Zaccaro.
Grade 5
Kiara S. Bowers, Jakob D. Brittingham, Olivia H. Combs, Hannah
L. Fogel, Zachary M. Franks,
Christoper Helsley, Alexa N. Jewell,
Jasmine D. Martinez, Blake A.
Miller, Star C. Moton, Brooklynn T.
Parker, Benjamin T. Pyles, Dalton R.
Seals, Andrew E. Smith, Caitlin M.
Strickler, Brookly H. Swanson, Summer D. Whetzel, Hunter B. Yoder.
Grade 6
Emma L. Baker, Jesse A. Dove,
Kayla L. Hill, Cara L. Hinkle, Lexi K
with the SADD logo and tied it to
each of the lockers. They worked
on this project when there was no
school and when the students came
back, they were ambushed by
SADD facts everywhere. They even
began seeing students putting the
ribbons on their backpacks and
other items.
The SADD students are hoping
to find more classmates to join
them in their efforts. The new
group is also exploring ways to get
support and funding from the community.
Founded as Students Against
Driving Drunk in 1981 in Wayland,
Massachusetts, SADD has grown
to become the nation’s premier
peer-led youth education and prevention organization, with 10,000
chapters in middle schools, high
schools, and colleges. In 1997, in
response to requests from SADD
students themselves, SADD
expanded its mission and now
sponsors chapters called Students
Against Destructive Decisions.
More information about SADD is
available at www.sadd.org.
Fourth Six Weeks Honors
Announced for MIS
EHEMS Announces Fourth Six Weeks Honors
The faculty of East Hardy Early
Middle School announces students
that have received Superior Academic Achievement and Honor Roll
for the fourth six weeks grading
period.
Students at Moorefield Middle
School have joined SADD (Students Against Destructive Decisions), a peer leadership organization dedicated to preventing
destructive decisions, particularly
underage drinking, other drug use,
impaired driving, and teen violence
and suicide. Ethan Slack became
interested in forming a SADD
chapter, so Ethan enlisted the help
of his friends Donovan Wratchford,
Hunter Miller and Tim Luttrell to
ask Mr. Pat McGregor, Principal of
MMS to serve as the SADD advisor.
“Teens sometimes make poor
choices when it comes to drugs and
alcohol, without realizing the harmful consequences,” said Ethan “I’m
hoping our SADD chapter will be a
positive influence on our school
and community. We’ll be participating in campaigns and activities
throughout the school year to
spread our message.”
Their first campaign was a
locker ambush on all the sixth
grade students. They took a red ribbon, tied a SADD fact on it, along
Strawderman, Abigail R. Wilson.
Grade 7
Jacob W. Atkinson, Abraham E.
Dunsmore, Timothy L. French,
Dylan A. Hardy, Matthew J. Lazo,
Corey M. McDonald, Madison M.
Mitchell, Shawna L. Nesselrodt, Jessica D. Parker, Dylan E. Reel, Leah
M. Ruffner, Haley N. Sager, Sierra
D. Sager, Austin L. Smith, Sierra C.
Strawderman, Austin R. Whetzel.
Grade 8
Justine E. Abrell, Allison C.
Basye, Dakota M. Dove, Allison P.
Dyer, Blair N. East, Tnisha D. Heishman, Breanna M. Hinkle, Jesse L.
Miller, Amanda L. Pippin, Felicite D.
Rowe, Tara B. Teets.
Haley Hose, Adam Howard, Derek
Hoyt, Grant Keller, Carmen Ketterman, Erica Kile, Allyson Loften,
Cara Long, Darian McCauley, Destiny Mongold, Jasmine Montoya,
Matthew Mullins, Bailey Newhouse,
Honor Roll
Kaly Newhouse, Ben O’Neill, Carter
GPA 3.0 – 3.79
Phares, Ciara Smith, Hayden Ston4th Grade
estreet, Philip Thompson, Victor
Skylar Alt, Mediah Ault, David Walker, Simon Wilkins, Logan
Bishoff, Preyonna Blacka, Makala Wolfe, Macie Zirk
Bobo, Ethan Brake, Stepahnie CalesMatos, Rebecca Crites, Simon
Superior Honor Roll
Dolby, Gianna Fair, Sydney Gribble,
GPA 3.80 – 4.0
Riley Hedrick, Rachel Hesse, Bryan
4th Grade
Hott, Jordan Mongold, Cassie
Julie Bowen, Mark Bowen,
Mooney, Brent Moran, Tayla Ours,
Hanna Carlson, Paxton Coby, AbiAnna Riggleman, Lindsey Rinker,
gail Eye, Sydney Hardy, Kennedie
Madison Rinker, Rilei Rutherford,
Hayden See, Joshua See, Laila Hinger, Grant Keplinger, Taylor
Spitzer, Jake Sullivan, Kaelob Lyons, Madison McGregor, Destiny
Nicholas
Myers,
Thomas, Jonathan Smith, Laila McWhorter,
Spitzer, Emmanuel Tucker, Ryan Isabelle Nesbit, Lane Ours, Isaac
Whetzel, Seth Wilson, Makenzie Raines, Leticia Rico, Johna Thompson, Matthew Weatherholt, Hannah
Wratchford
Whetzel, Thomas Williams
5th Grade
5th Grade
Zachary Arbaugh, Hope AristiKristin Duncan, Eric Eye, Caden
dou, Emma Baker, Ean Carr, Noah
Coby, Kiersten Coleman, Rebekah Kimble, Trevor Ours, Adam See,
Cook, Michael Eure Jr., Emily Tyler Shewbridge, Isaiah Smith,
Fahey, Alexis Fertig, Haley Gallahan, Alyssa Vetter, Joseph Wilkins, Nikki
Victoria Gomez, Noah Freenwalt, Wolfe, Matthew Wright, Meghan
Autumn Heap, Kailey Heavner, Wright, Colton Young
East Hardy Early Middle School
Announces January and February Star Students
The teachers and principals at
EHEMS have given STAR student
awards to several well deserving students in both January and February.
These students receive Savings
Bonds from Capon Valley Bank,
Summit Community Bank, and Wardensville Lions Club.
In January, STAR STUDENT
honors went to Sierra Strawderman,
Brooke Miller, Tapanga May, Gage Herbrandt.
Sherman, and Joanna Deck.
EHEMS is proud of not only
In February, STAR STUDENT
honors went to Sierra Miller, Mariah these students, but also, all of our stuPayne, Skye Metzer, and Cheyenne dents.
Amy Silvious, Summit Community Bank and Sierra Strawderman
Don Henderson, Capon Valley Bank and Sierra Miller
Kent Shipe, Summit Community Bank and Cheyenne Herbrandt
Cheryl Sherman with her son Gage and Becky Deck with her
daughter, Joanna
Mariah Payne and Skye Metzer
Tapanga May and Brooke Miller
See page 2B for EHHS and MHS School Calendars
Making a Forest: Students in Mrs. Shields K-1 class
make a forest from scraps they picked up in the forest. This was a
project to go along with their story, “The Forest”.
MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - Page 7
THE HARDY HERITAGE
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I hope that no one will be
offended by the picture I’m sharing
this week. Yes, it is a privy, or more in
keeping with our South Branch Valley vocabulary—an outhouse. Where
did I discover this picture? It is
included in a website of The Library
of Congress called “American Memory,” and more specifically “Built in
America.”
In reading the history of the Historic American Buildings Survey
(HABS), it was begun “during the
Great Depression in December 1933,
when Charles E. Peterson of the
National Park Service submitted a
proposal for one thousand out-ofwork architects to spend ten weeks
documenting ‘America’s antique
buildings.’ Having operated under
various administrative authorities for
its first two years, HABS became a
permanent program of the National
Park Service in 1934 and was formally authorized by Congress as a
part of the Historic Sites Act of 1935.
The Historic American Engineering
Record (HAER) was founded in
1969 to parallel HABS, providing for
documentation of engineering works
and industrial sites. In October 2000,
the Historic American Landscape
Survey (HALS) was permanently
established to document historic
landscapes. The HABS/HAER/
HALS collections at the Library of
Congress have grown to constitute a
unique, valuable and extensive repository of knowledge about American
buildings, industries, engineering
works, and landscapes. Today’s documentation is produced primarily by
students pursuing degrees in architecture and in history, and the
HABS, HAER and HALS programs
have proven to be important training
ground for several generations of
architects, engineers, and historians.”
I thought it interesting for what it
includes, especially our outhouse.
Apparently there are ten “Item
Titles” included for “WEST VIRGINIA Hardy.” Nine of these focus
on “Wilkins Farm, South side of
Dove Hollow Road, 6000 feet east of
State Route 259, Lost River vicinity,
Hardy, WV.” The nine include
“Barn, Barn, Cemetery, House, Ice
House, Privy, Secondary Barn, Workshop-Storage Building,” and one
general view.
What would be your guess as to
BY
HAROLD D.
GARBER
the tenth item selected from Hardy
County? Willow Wall. Photographers
credited for the series about Wilkins
Farm were Robert Hughes and
Emory Kemp and the photos were
taken just over twenty years ago—
November 30 and December 1,
1991.
Please rest assured that I am not
ridiculing either the collection or the
photograph. It just surprised me a little. I think I should also reprint the
official description included to properly document the photograph, in the
Notes:
“Survey number HABS WV-264F. Significance: A domestic outbuilding, this small wood frame structure
is constructed with mid 20th century
materials. In the absence of modern
flush toilets and running water, it was
necessary to construct pit toilets
referred to as privies. Apparently the
privy was used in 1976 when the
property was bought by the BDM
Corporation and turned into a hunting lodge. At that time some modernization took place, presumably
including the construction of a toilet
facility on the side porch of the farm
house.”
There you have it. Perhaps not
the greatest history that you’ll ever
read, but certainly significant to
many of us senior citizens. And who
would guess that our humble privy
would achieve such documentation
in our history.
I hope that it is not too inappropriate to include a few jottings from
other things I’ve been reading in the
past week. I’ve been reviewing a
great volume of local history entitled
The Romance of Greenland Gap—
An Ancestor’s Biography by Mark
Hale, Sources Publishing, Norfolk,
VA, c. 1984. Although Mr. Hale says
the focus of the book is “Abijah
Dolly, his community and his times,”
there is much more to glean about
the Civil War era in our locality. In
Hale’s well researched and anno-
A Hardy County privy as documented by the Library of Congress.
tated book, the index lists nine referThe foundation of the book’s covences to Moorefield. Of course, the erage is set on page 19 where Hale
attention to the areas around Scherr discusses growing sectionalism of the
and Maysville, now part of Grant area: “The opening of the 1860s
County, were all Hardy County in the found the chasm dividing the county
Civil War era.
deepened, and Abijah (Dolly) deterMark Hale turns a phrase very mined to become the voice of the
well. One of his best quotes is found west in Moorefield, the county seat
on page 22: “Hardy and her neigh- twenty miles from Greenland. The
boring counties to the north and real power in ante-bellum Virginia
south were on the very cutting edge lay not in townships, but with the
of the struggle, and the enemy was county court. To a degree it exercised
neither anonymous nor far away. The legislative, judicial and executive
war was nowhere more cruel and powers. On the threshold of crisis,
treacherous than there in the the court convened in a series of spePotomac highlands. The hostilities cial sessions, and Abijah and John
were truly a civil war and the old saw Michael were elected as justices.
of brother-against-brothers and
Decisions were about to be made
neighbor-against-neighbor was literwhich would forever influence the
ally true. Family feuds and old antagcommunity’s role in a nation which
onisms between neighbors made
was coming apart. If Abijah chafed at
them intimate enemies. Spiteful prejudices of the eastern valley and the first at the sluggish proceedings of
western hills grew into the ugliest of the court, his need for activism would
soon be satisfied.
warfare.”
Thomas Maslin had been a ‘GenWith the focus of this book on
tleman
Justice’ of Hardy County
pro-Union residents of Hardy
County and the eventual creation of since 1850. One of the Moorefield
Grant County, several times the book elite, he was presiding officer most of
makes references to the “Moorefield the time. As the Commonwealth of
elite.” The first reference to Moore- Virginia was excitedly talking loyalty
field is simply geographical, as the and rebellion, Union and disunion,
author discusses the Indian groups Maslin went to Richmond to reprewho were the first residents of the sent Hardy at the Secession ConvenValley. “Three paths converged near tion.”
I urge the study of this well
what are now Moorefield and Petersburg, West Virginia, and when com- researched and documented book to
petition for this excellent hunting any person desiring to understand
ground was fiercest, they became the deeply felt tensions present in
Hardy County in 1861.
bloody warpaths.” (page 11)
LIBRARY WINDOWS
Easter Craft at the Library
the worldwide medical community
On Saturday, April 7th, the races to find a vaccine and stop the
Moorefield library will be hosting an panic from spreading.
Easter craft for kids of all ages. It will
run from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. And
New Fiction & Mysteries
we’re hearing rumors that there
Guilty Wives by James Patterson
might just be a treat from the Easter (Reg. Print, Large Print, Audiobook)
Bunny! So parents, stop by with your – The vacation of a lifetime becomes
little ones for some Easter fun!
a fight for survival when Abbie Elliot
and her three friends are arrested
New DVDs
and accused of the foulest crime
The Ides of March (R) – During imaginable.
the frantic last days before a heavily
Poison Flower by Thomas Perry –
contested Ohio presidential primary, When Jane Whitefield spirits James
an up-and-coming campaign press Shelby, a man unjustly convicted of
secretary finds himself involved in a his wife’s murder, out of the heavily
political scandal that threatens to guarded criminal court building in
upend his candidate’s shot at the downtown Los Angeles, she finds
presidency.
that the price of Shelby’s freedom is
J. Edgar (R) – J. Edgar Hoover high and her life is on the line.
was head of the Federal Bureau of
That’s How I Roll by Andrew
Investigation for nearly 50 years. Vachss – Esau Till’s race is almost
Hoover was feared, admired, reviled run. After pleading guilty to a series
and revered, a man who could distort of homicides, he sits on death row,
the truth as easily as he upheld it. His awaiting lethal injection. And writing
methods were at once ruthless and his life story. But his memoir is no
heroic, with the admiration of the case study in tragedy—it’s his one last
world his most coveted prize. But chance to protect his brother, Tory,
behind closed doors, he held secrets after he’s gone. And, as too many
that would have destroyed his image, have learned, when it comes to prohis career and his life.
tecting his baby brother, Esau Till is a
Moneyball (PG-13) (DVD, Blu- man without boundaries.
ray) – The story of Oakland A’s genPhantom by Ted Bell – Countereral manager Billy Beane’s successful spy Alex Hawke hunts a madman
attempt to put together a baseball about to unleash a new super
club on a budget by employing com- weapon—one powered by Artificial
puter-generated analysis to draft his Intelligence.
players.
Stay Close by Harlan Coben –
Paranormal Activity 3 (R) (DVD, Three people—a suburban houseBlu-ray) – After experiencing a series wife, a talented documentary photogof unexplainable events, a wedding rapher, and a detective—living lives
videographer sets up surveillance they never wanted, hiding secrets
cameras to find out who is threaten- that even those closest to them would
ing his family.
never suspect, will find that the past
Contagion (PG-13) – When a doesn’t recede ... and that desperalethal airborne virus with the power tion and hunger can lurk behind even
to wipe out humanity is unleashed, the prettiest facades.
Wednesday, April 11
5:30–8:00 p.m.
Moorefield Middle School
303 Caldonia Heights Road
Broadcast on WELD
Jim B. Wratchford, Assessor
Loy Kesner, Board of Education
Max E. Park, Board of Education
Nancy Hahn, Board of Education
Delmas See, County Commission
Hunter Williams, County Commission
Steven D. Weese, County Commission
William “JR” Keplinger, County
Commission
Isaac Sponaugle, House of Delegates
John Treadway, House of Delegates
Steve Smith, House of Delegates
Craig A. Hose, Magistrate
Shawna M. Crites, Magistrate
William Koontz, Magistrate
Clyde See, School Bond
Bryan C. Ward, Sheriff
Jerry Moore, Sheriff
George Leatherman, Potomac Valley
Conservation District Supervisor
Sponsored by FirstEnergy, WELD AM/FM and
Hardy County Chamber of Commerce
Call the HCC at 304-530-1786 for more information
The Woman in Black by Susan
Hill – The chilling tale of a menacing
specter haunting a small English
town.
Fall from Grace by Richard North
Patterson – After arriving at the
funeral of his estranged father, Adam
Blaine must use his training as a CIA
operative to find the truth of his
father’s death, even if it means exposing one or more of his own family
members as the killer and discovering secrets about himself that he was
never supposed to know.
The Wedding Dress by Rachel
Hauck – When Charlotte discovers a
vintage dress in a battered trunk at an
estate sale, her search for the gown’s
history takes on a life of its own as
she comes to know the women who
have worn the dress.
Born to Darkness by Suzanne
Brockman – Michelle “Mac”
Mackenzie,
a
super-human
“Greater-Than” with unique abilities, teams up with a former Navy
SEAL Shane Laughlin to stop the
spread of a highly addictive drug
called Destiny.
Softly Tenderly by Sara Evans –
Jade longs to begin a family with her
husband Max. When she discovers
that Max has an illegitimate son, her
life is turned upside down. She flees
to her Iowa childhood home, and
questions everything she thought she
knew about family, love, and motherhood.
Dawn Comes Early by Margaret
Brownley – Disgraced dime novelist
Kate Tenney flees the city that
banned her latest book for a fresh
start at a cattle ranch in the Arizona
Territory, vowing never to marry. As
her faith is put to the test, she
encounters a handsome blacksmith
and his two matchmaking aunts.
Buried in Buttercream by G.A.
McKevett – When she discovers the
body of her opinionated wedding
planner face down in the pool, P.I.
and bride-to-be Savannah Reid must
put her impending nuptials on hold
to discover who else wanted this diva
to make a hasty departure.
New Non-Fiction & Bios
Is This Thing On?: A Computer
Handbook for Late Bloomers, Technophobes, and the Kicking & Screaming
by Abby Stokes – A reassuring, jargon-free, and totally straightforward
guide that introduces late bloomers,
grandparents, and technophobes to
all the wonders of using a computer.
Devil in the Grove: Thurgood Marshall, the Groveland Boys, and the
Dawn of a New America by Gilbert
King – A true story of racism, murder, rape, and the law that brings to
light one of the most dramatic court
cases in American history.
Anatomy of Injustice: A Murder
Case Gone Wrong by Raymond Bonner – An impassioned and incisive
investigation into the many shortcomings of the justice system brought
to light in the story of a grievously
mishandled murder case in South
Carolina that left an innocent man
facing execution.
The Captain: The Journey of Derek
Jeter by Ian O’Connor – O’Connor
draws on unique access to Derek
Jeter and more than 200 new interviews to reveal how a biracial kid
from Michigan became New York’s
most beloved sports figure and the
face of the steroid-free athlete.
Clover Adams: A Guilded and
Heartbreaking Life by Natalie Dykstra
– A revelatory life of Clover Adams,
casting a lens on her iconic marriage
to historian Henry Adams and her
fatal embrace of photography in her
last months.
Candidate Miller to
Host Meeting
Delegate Jonathan Miller, a
Republican running for US Congress
in West Virginia’s 2nd Congressional
District, will host a meeting with local
voters in Hardy County next week.
The event will take place on
Wednesday, March 28 at 7 p.m. It will
be held at the South Branch Inn
located at 1500 US Highway 220
North in Moorefield.
“Please stop by the meeting to
share your issues with me, learn more
about our campaign, or to ask any
questions you have for me,” said Delegate Jonathan Miller.
The event is free and open to the
public. For more information, visit
www.votejonathanmiller.com/events
or call 304-240-5452.
CVB Gets
Continued from page 3
Virginia Division of Tourism, in 2010,
tourism in Hardy County generated
$23.1 million in direct spending.
More than 300 jobs are related to
tourism and travel.
“This was a tremendous amount
of work,” Patterson said of the analysis and recommendations. “But it
lifted a tremendous burden. It tells us
we have a lot of tourism (opportunities), we should use them.”
Board members asked about the
viability of a train depot in Moorefield.
“You can use CVB grant funding
if the building is open to the public
and a Visitor’s Center is located
there,” she said. “You are already in
talks with the railroad authority and
that’s where you need to start.”
Members of the CVB Board of
Directors will cull through the 27page report Price provided and
determine their priorities and direction.
Page 8 - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Still No Contingency
Continued from page 1
accepted $300,000 of the people’s
money, they waived any kind of confidentiality. I’m amazed at the sheer
arrogance of Chaney to question
making this public.”
Wade said Chaney, who was
introduced as the MBRS bookkeeper, said the statements were
exempt from state’s public document
laws.
“I understand the only exemptions are relative to trade secrets or
competition,” Wade said. “There are
certainly no trade secrets and there is
no competition. The areas of responsibility are clearly marked.”
Commission President J. Michael
Teets agreed. “When they accepted
$300,000 of taxpayers money, everyone in this county has a right to be
involved.”
All of the commissioners
expressed disappointment in the
February statement submitted. It
clearly showed more expenses than
income.
According to the statement, the
beginning balance was $27,433.19
and net income was $39,368.50.
Expenses for accounts payable,
payroll and a note payment totaled
$58,696.83, leaving a balance of
$8,104.68.
“I think it would be a good idea to
contact alternatives,” Wade said.
Keplinger continued to press for
utilizing local volunteers. “When
there was no service, the volunteers
in the community stepped up and
provided good service,” he said. “The
problem is not with the service, it’s a
cash flow problem.”
Keplinger was reminded that the
buildings and equipment owned by
the MBRS is mortgaged and if the
company closes its doors, the bank
will own them. “I’m sure we can work
something out with the bank,” he
said.
“The county commission has the
responsibility for providing service,”
Wade said.
equitable and added some definitions,” Lehman said.
Teets suggested the public hearing be held on April 17 at 9 a.m. and
the commissioners concurred.
Notices will be printed in the newspaper as required by law.
Forest Service Grants
County
Coordinator
Rose
Helmick announced a grant from the
U.S. Forestry Service for Secure
Rural Schools. The $70,054.73 grant,
proceeds from timbering in the
George Washington National Forest,
will go to the Hardy County Public
Schools.
The Hardy County Commission
voted several years ago that the funds
should go to the schools.
Commissioner Wade balked at a
grant from the Forest Service for
$21,500 for assistance from the
Hardy County Sheriff’s Office in
patrolling Wolf Gap, Trout Pond and
Squirrel Gap.
“We had this before and we
ended up tearing up our cars,” he
said. “It doesn’t even come close to
enough money.”
Sheriff Robert Ferrell said Hardy
County deputies would not be doing
any more patrols than they normally
do.
“The Forest Rangers are doing
the patrols,” he said “If they make an
arrest, the perpetrators can be
arraigned in our Magistrate Count
and the rangers don’t have to take
them to Richmond.
“If they need us they will call us. If
we go out, our expenses will be covered by this grant.”
Ferrell said Hardy County
deputies gain a great deal of experience working with federal officers.
“It’s always good to cooperate with
federal authorities,” he said.
Acceptance of the grant was
tabled until the next meeting so an
accurate agreement could be put in
writing.
Regional Sewer
ILP Ordinance
Planning Commission President
Lee Lehman, Vice President Greg
Greenwalt and commission member
Roger Saville presented the commission with an update to the Improvement Location Permit Ordinance.
“We started working on this last
fall,” Lehman said. “We held a public
hearing on March 6 and nobody
came.”
Lehman said the “slight” changes
are to align the ILP with state code
and the county’s subdivision ordinance.
The commission is required by
code to hold a public hearing before
voting on the ordinance revision,
Greenwalt said.
“We made the fee structure more
Protection) and IJDC (Infrastructure
and Jobs Development Council) and
approved one year of debt service
and operation and maintenance costs
as a surety. The money they would
have spent on a bond will be held in
escrow.”
Teets signed the agreement.
Lucas Gagnon and Steve Wilson,
representatives from the Moorefield
Hardy County Wastewater Authority
approached the commission to sign
an Agreement for the Transportation
and Treatment of Wastewater. “Since
the county is listed as a party on the
sewer project, we need your signature,” Gagnon said.
Wade questioned a series of emails from Pilgrim’s Pride, also a
party in the sewer project. The emails indicate Pilgrim’s would not
agree to a surety bond.
A surety bond would protect the
authority if Pilgrim’s were to go out
of business or leave the county.
“A surety bond is unobtainable,”
Gagnon said. “Pilgrim’s worked with
DEP (Department of Environmental
Community Corrections
Cary Ours, director of the South
Branch Valley Day Report Center
requested the commission continue
the Community Corrections Grant
for next year. The county’s match will
be $16,667 of a $115,000 grant.
Ours also requested the county
relieve the SBVDRC from paying
utilities at the HazMat Center, where
their offices are located.
Hardy is one of three counties
who participate in the SBVDRC.
Ours said Pendleton County provides
space and utilities at no charge.
Hampshire County helps with office
supplies and furniture.
Hardy County has been providing
space, but requested the SBVDRC
pay utilities and phone/DSL
expenses.
The commission agreed and
signed an Inter-County Agreement
with Pendleton and Hampshire
counties.
Other Business
•The payroll register for March 1
- 16 was $53,644.32
•The regional jail bill for February was $38,893.60.
•The commission approved two
grants of $5,000 each for the spaying
and neutering of dogs and cats rescued by the Potomac Highlands Animal Rescue.
•The commission approved a
$10,000 grant for the new computer
system in the Circuit Clerk’s office.
•The commission passed a Fair
Housing Resolution.
•The commission said they would
consider continued support of the
Potomac Valley Resource, Conservation and Development Council. Federal funding has been eliminated and
the service operates on donations
and grants.
Volunteer Ed Kesecker said the
RC&D has put more than $10,000
into Baker Park and will spend
another $3,000 in the near future to
hook to public water.
•Commissioner Keplinger said
he received a note from some Mathias residents who want additional signage to alert drivers of the 45-mileper-hour speed limit in town.
Residents said they are circulating a
petition to request the Division of
Highways install a flashing light at
both ends of town.
•County Clerk Gregg Ely said
beginning April 1, the amount county
deputies charge the county for meals
Absentee Ballots For Military
Voters Begins Primary Voting
Friday, March 23 is the deadline for county clerks to send previously requested absentee ballots
to military and overseas voters,
West Virginia Secretary of State
Natalie E. Tennant said today.
Military and overseas voters
have until May 2, 2012 to request
an absentee ballot.
West Virginia state code
requires the ballots be sent out 46
days before the election. West
Virginia code is stricter in this
regard than federal code, which
requires ballots be sent to absentee voters 45 days before an election.
Sending absentee ballots so far
ahead of Election Day ensures
that absentee voters — especially
deployed military, their families,
and other overseas citizens —
have time to mark his or her ballot, and that the ballot has the
opportunity to make it back to the
county clerk’s office in time to be
counted.
Voters who request an absentee ballot can track the status of
their ballot on the Secretary of
State’s website. After entering
their name and birthdate an
absentee voter can see when their
ballot request was received, when
their ballot was sent, and when
the voted ballot was received by
their county clerk.
A new law passed this year in
West Virginia allows voters covered under the Uniformed and
Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act (UOCAVA) of 1986 to
register to vote in the 20 days
prior to an election. Other citizens not covered under this provision must register to vote by April
17, 2012 if they wish to vote in the
May primary.
Secretary Tennant also wanted
to remind some 17-year-olds that
they are eligible to vote in the primary.
“If you are 17 at the time of
the primary but will turn 18 by the
time of the general election on
November 6, you are eligible to
vote in the primary,” Secretary
Tennant said. “I urge all West Virginians, not just teenagers, to
make sure they are registered to
vote and know where their polling
place is.”
Early voting for the primary
election begins on April 25 and
ends on May 5. Voters can cast
their ballot at their county courthouse or courthouse annex during
regular business hours. Early voting will also be available on Saturday, April 28 and May 5. May 5 is
also the final day or early voting.
More information on the primary election can be found on the
Secretary of State’s website at
www.wvsos.com.
Federal Grand Jury Indicts
Counts five through nine charge
Martin with the possession of pseudoephedrine to be used in the manufacture of methamphetamine on
May 12, 2011, in Petersburg, and on
May 27, June 6, July 13, and Aug. 8,
2011, in Moorefield.
Counts 10 through 12 charge Lipscomb with possession of pseudoephedrine to be used in the manufacture of methamphetamine on
April 10, and April 15, 2011, in
Moorefield and, on June 26, 2011 in
Petersburg.
If convicted, Martin and Lipscomb face a maximum exposure of
20 years imprisonment and a fine of
$1,000,000 as to Counts one and two,
10 years imprisonment and a fine of
$250,000 as to count three, 20 years
imprisonment and a fine of $500,000
as to count four and, 20 years impris-
onment and a fine of $250,000 as to
each of counts five through 12.
• Darl E. Vanmeter, age 29,
Tomma J. Kile, age 40, Jeremy L.
Jones, age 31 and Ty H. Vanmeter,
age 19, all of Petersburg were named
in an nine-count indictment.
• Nathaniel L. Fawley, age 21, of
Petersburg, Roni N. Nicely, age 21 of
Cabins, Derick E. Wilson, age 30 of
Petersburg, Garrett A. Sites, age 28
of Petersburg and Kevin G. Thompson Jr., age 20 of Petersburg were
named in a 13-count indictment.
These cases will be prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorneys
Stephen D. Warner and Robert H.
McWilliams, Jr. and were investigated by the United States Forest
Service, Homeland Security Investigations, West Virginia State Police,
Pendleton County Sheriff’s Depart-
ment, Grant County Sheriff’s
Department and the Petersburg
Police Department.
• Marvin Christopher Stevenson,
age 27 was named in a one-count
indictment charging him with possession of ammunition on Dec. 5, 2009,
after having previously been convicted of a crime punishable by
imprisonment for a term exceeding
one year.
The case will be prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorney
Erin K. Reisenweber and was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
It should be noted that the
charges contained in the Indictment
are merely accusations and not evidence of guilt, and that each defendant is presumed innocent until and
unless proven guilty.
when transporting suspects to and
from regional jail must be included as
income for tax purposes.
•SBA, Inc. leases the land upon
which the 911 tower is located. They
pay $4,000 per year and the county
gets a portion of any revenue from
cell phone companies who locate on
the tower.
SBA submitted an option to buy
the land for $47,500, which the commission rejected. “If we get $4,000 a
year with the current lease of 99
years, why would we accept
$47,500?” Keplinger asked.
•Wardensville resident Jo Statts
reported the Federation of Humane
Organizations was hosting a workshop on animal abuse and fighting
for law enforcement on Friday, May
4. She requested someone from the
Hardy County Sheriff’s Office
attend.
The next meeting of the Hardy
County Commission will be held on
Tuesday, April 3 beginning at 9 a.m.
Anyone wishing to be included on
the agenda should call the County
Clerk’s office at 304-530-0250.
Continued from page 1
MOOR E FI E LD VOLU NT EER FI R E COM PA N Y -46
Location: Tri-County Fair Grounds, Petersburg WV
Gates open Friday, August 31, 2012 for camping
(First Come First Serve Camping). No electric or sewer hookups
Winners Need Not Be Present To Win!
ALL PROCEEDS BENEFIT
MOOREFIELD VOLUNTEER FIRE COMPANY 46
APPROXIMATELY
$300,000.00
IN PRIZES!
(subject to sale of 7500 tickets)
Tickets $50.00 each
(ONLY 10,000 tickets sold)
To order tickets make check payable to:
Moorefield Vol. Fire Co. 46, P.O. Box 1024, Moorefield, WV 26836
September 1, 2012
12:00 Noon...............$20,000 Cash
12:05.........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
12:10..................................Gun Safe
12:15..............................$2,000 cash
12:20.........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
12:25..............................$2,000 cash
12:30..............................$3,000 cash
12:35..............................$2,000 cash
12:40...............$1,000 Visa Gift Card
12:45.........................4x4 4-Wheeler
12:50........$2,000 Cabela’s Gift Card
12:55..............................$2,000 cash
1:00................................$2,000 cash
1:05...........BBQ Grill & Accessories
1:10. $2,000 Cabela’s Gift Certificate
1:15................................$3,000 cash
1:20..........$2,000 Cabela’s Gift Card
1:25...........................BIG Screen TV
1:30..........................$10,000 CASH
1:35................................$2,000 cash
1:40..............Ruger M77 with scope,
sling and case
1:45................................$3,000 cash
We also except Credit Card orders by phone 304-257-3997 or 304-257-8914. If no answer, leave
name and phone number. We will return your call! (There will be a $2.00 processing fee per ticket)
1:50...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
1:55................................$2,000 cash
2:00................................$2,000 cash
2:05................................$2,500 cash
2:10..........$2,000 Cabela’s Gift Card
2:15................................$3,000 cash
2:20..............Ruger M77 with scope,
sling and case
2:25................................$2,000 cash
2:30...........................4x4 4-wheeler
2:35................................$2,000 cash
2:40...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
2:45................................$3,000 cash
2:50. $2,000 Cabela’s Gift Certificate
2:55................................$2,000 cash
3:00............................$15,000 Cash
3:05...........................BIG Screen TV
3:10.................$1,000 Visa Gift Card
3:15................................$3,000 cash
3:20...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
3:25..........................4x4 4-Wheeler
3:30.....................Camper w/slideout
3:35..........$2,000 Cabela’s Gift Card
3:40................................$2,000 cash
3:45................................$2,000 cash
3:50...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
3:55................................$2,000 cash
4:00................................$3,000 cash
4:05..........$2,000 Cabela’s Gift Card
4:10..........................4x4 4-Wheeler
4:15................................$4,000 cash
4:20...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
4:25...........................BIG Screen TV
4:30................................$2,500 cash
4:35..........$2,000 Cabela’s Gift Card
4:40..........Diamond Ring (1/2 Carat)
4:45................................$3,000 cash
4:50..............Ruger M77 with scope,
sling and case
4:55................................$2,000 cash
5:00...........................$12,000 Cash
5:05................................$2,000 cash
5:10.................$1,000 Visa Gift Card
5:15................................$3,000 cash
5:20...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
5:25...............................$2,000 Cash
5:30...........................4x4 4-Wheeler
5:35................................$2,000 cash
5:40....................................Gun Safe
5:45...........................BIG Screen TV
5:50...........Remington 700 BDL with
scope, sling and case
5:55................................$2,000 cash
6:00................................$3,000 cash
6:05................................$2,000 cash
6:10. $2,000 Cabela’s Gift Certificate
6:15................................$3,000 cash
6:20.............................SPA Package
6:25................................$2,000 cash
6:30...........................4x4 4-Wheeler
6:35................................$2,000 cash
6:40................................$2,500 cash
6:45................................$2,000 cash
6:50................................$2,000 cash
6:55................................$2,000 cash
7:00............................$50,000 Cash
•••• EARLY BIRD SPECIAL ••••
Purchase your Bash Tickets before June 1, 2012 to be in the Early Bird Special drawings of
$5000.00 and $2500.00 and (three) $1000.00 prizes to be drawn at 11:30 AM on the day of the Bash.
TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS:
A&A Express Mart (Moorefield); Capon Valley Bank (Moorefield, Baker, Wardensville, Gore, and Stevens City, VA); Fertig Cabinet Co. Stores (Moorefield, Winchester, VA &
Harrisonburg, VA); NAPA Auto Parts (Moorefield & Petersburg); Old Fields Grocery (220 N. of Moorefield); South Branch Inn (Moorefield & Romney); Fort Ashby Camper Sales (Fort
Ashby); Culler’s Body Shop (Rt 259 Outside of Broadway, VA); Shultz Realty (Moorefield, Charles Town); Pendleton Community Bank (Moorefield, Franklin, Marlinton, Harrisonburg,
VA); Doug’s Sport Shop (Moorefield); Romney Cycle Center (Romney); Radio Shack (Petersburg); Mayhew Chevrolet (Romney); A Corner Mart (Baker);
Kimble’s BP (Moorefield); Zeerow Dist (Winchester, VA); Round Hill Shopping Center (Round Hill, VA)
For additional information, please call: (304) 257-3965, (304)-257-8914, (304) 257-7006, (304) 257-3997, (304) 257-3966 or (304) 538-6496
SPORTS
SECTION B
WEDNESDAY, March 28, 2012
Sports@MoorefieldExaminer.com
Arrows Fly in the Civic Center
Story & Photos
By Carl Holcomb
Moorefield WV
East Hardy Early Middle School Archery specialist Cheyenne
Herbrandt prepared to shoot an arrow at the 7th Annual State
Tournament in Charleston last Saturday.
There were more arrows than rain drops in
Charleston last Saturday.
The 7th Annual Archery in the Schools State
Archery Tournament was held in the Charleston
Civic Center with 50 schools participating and 65
divisional teams.
East Hardy Early Middle School sent its first
full archery team to the event in school history.
“We’re so happy to have all you guys here.
We are very excited about how many kids; we are
at 658 participating this year. We love the commitment, it’s just amazing when you can look
across this floor today and you see all the kids in
their team shirts very eager to get out here to
shoot,” DNR AIS Program Coordinator and
Public Information Specialist Krista Snodgrass
commented.
Last year, the Cougars sent seven individual
archers.
Three members of last season’s representatives returned this year: Cheyenne Herbrandt,
Dakota Zirkle, and Bryce Strawderman.
There were 65 divisional teams and 658
archers at the competition.
Every archer used five arrows for one practice round at 10 meters, five arrows for three
scoring rounds at 10 meters, plus the same at 15
meters.
There were approximately 30,000 arrows shot
at targets which were lined up along the floor.
This can be a very intimidating place to shoot
an arrow for the first time as EHEMS archers
stood among a line of 53 for flight A and 51 for
flight B taking aim at targets.
EHEMS placed 11th in the middle school
division out of 20 with a team score of 2,598.
“I am happy with how we did for our first
time here at the state tournament as a team. Perhaps someday we will be a Ripley,” EHEMS
Archery Coach Kathy Strawderman stated.
Ripley schools have consistently been in the
top tier of the competition and won top honors
in each division this year: Ripley High 3,369,
Jackettes Stuff Cougars
Ripley Middle 3,269, and Ripley Middle (Elementary)2,935.
Individual top three scores for the competition ranged from 266 (elementary girls) to 288
(middle boys).
The top high school shooters had 287.
This year the Archery in the Schools tournament setup like the national tournament with
alternating team members sharing targets in
addition to having the shooters pulling the
arrows.
Each school provided its own arrows for the
competition.
EHEMS donned pink archery shirts for the
state competition as voted on by the team.
“We got many compliments on those pink
shirts. One of the program directors said we
were the most noticeable group,” Coach Strawderman noted.
Bryce Strawderman led the Cougars with 266
points, which was a 50 point increase from his
2011 total.
Strawderman notched a team-best eight 10’s
and 11 9’s this year.
Strawderman was the only EHEMS member
needing new arrows during his flight.
The EHEMS record for points at 270 and
10’s (12) is held by current East Hardy freshman
Clarissa Thomas.
“I really liked the people at the state tournament. I had a good time there and it was fun to
shoot,” Bryce Strawderman said.
Dakota Zirkle improved 21 points from his
2011 total with 255 this year for second place on
the Cougars squad.
Zirkle shot four 10’s and 14-9’s.
Hanna Carpenter was the top female shooter
for EHEMS and third overall on the team with
245 points including three 10’s and a dozen 9’s.
Cheyenne Herbrandt was the second best
female shooter and placed fourth with a score of
236, which was a slight decrease from last season
(241).
Herbrandt notched three 10’s and eight 9’s.
Travis Wilkins placed fifth with a score of 234
including three 10’s and six 9’s.
Janelle Staggs contributed 223 points for
EHEMS with one perfect 10 and nine 9’s.
Rachel Wilson netted 213 points with two
10’s and three 9’s.
Abraham Dunsmore and Dakota Martin
both scored 212 points for eighth and ninth
places, respectively.
Dunsmore and Martin scored three 10’s
apiece, but Dunsmore took a slight edge 5-3 with
9’s.
Dylan Fogel shot 208 points with two 10’s and
six 9’s.
Amanda Pippin notched 163 points with
three 10’s and two 9’s.
Dylan Zirkle rounded out the scoring for
EHEMS with 131 points with three 10’s and two
9’s.
Lexi Strawderman was an alternate for the
Cougars.
EHEMS had respectable scores this year and
the future is bright for these target specialists.
The ride to Charleston was filled with fun
including songs as this sportswriter was a passenger with the Strawderman family along with
Dylan Fogel and Abraham Dunsmore.
East Hardy High School didn’t participate
this year, despite placing third the
past four consecutive seasons.
“It isn’t an archery tournament without
East Hardy,” DNR
Archery Program Assistant
Scott Warner noted.
East Hardy Sinks
Vikings’ Ship
Story & Photo
By Carl Holcomb
Moorefield Examiner
Rivalry Game: Moorefield catcher Katelynn Wills caught the ball thrown by pitcher Danica Rogers
after East Hardy’s Morgan Basye swung and missed.
Story & Photo
By Carl Holcomb
Moorefield Examiner
Moorefield notched its third
consecutive shutout with a 3-0
blanking of cross-county rival East
Hardy last Tuesday night.
“We did the little things to win
tonight. We got key hits when we
needed them. It is always good to
get a win. Every time we play East
Hardy it is going to be a close game,
there is never a clear cut winner,”
Moorefield Coach Tim Crites
remarked.
The Lady Cougars never really
let Moorefield take the game away,
but couldn’t put anything into play
without the Yellow Jackettes making a stop.
“We didn’t hit the ball, plain and
simple. If we hit the ball next time,
then we will be fine,” East Hardy
Coach Calvin Mongold stated.
East Hardy has only struggled to
make contact against the Yellow
Jackettes in this young season thus
far.
Moorefield ace Danica Rogers
was the reason for the lack of hitting power by East Hardy with 64
strikes on 105 pitches during a com-
plete game outing.
Rogers notched a strikeout and
the defense took care of the next
two batters as Beth Cook fielded
hits by Autumn Mathias and Morgan Mongold to send Moorefield to
the plate.
In the bottom of the first inning
the Yellow Jackettes loaded the
bases against East Hardy pitcher
Jodie Funkhouser courtesy of a hit
batsman, a walk, then a two-out single by Taylor Zuber.
Katelynn Wills was patient at
the plate and gave Moorefield a 1-0
lead on a walk as Ashley Rexrode
scored.
In the third inning, Sarah Liller
singled and Jodie Funkhouser
moved her on a sacrifice bunt, and a
walk was issued to Rayann Foltz.
The Lady Cougars couldn’t produce a run.
Moorefield got a walk, then a
single by Beth Cook.
Zuber hit into a double play as
Morgan Mongold caught the line
drive hit and threw to third base for
the final out.
In the fourth inning, Marilyn
Cassell smashed a double into right
field, but was left stranded.
In the bottom half, Wills got
another walk, then after a ground-
out, Jayme Fraley singled.
McKenzie Weese executed a
perfect bunt to load the bases.
Rogers hit a sacrifice fly to plate
Rexrode who was running for Wills.
Michaela Regester hit a fly-out
to end the inning with Moorefield
leading 2-0.
Jodie Funkhouser and Rayann
Foltz both made two-out singles in
the fifth inning, but couldn’t be
brought home.
Zuber and Wills got things going
in the fifth inning with two singles.
Moorefield’s Kelsey Hines hit a
RBI double into left field, plating
Wills who slid underneath the
throw at home plate.
Cassell noticed Hines trying to
take third base and threw to Mathias for the last out.
East Hardy managed one base
runner over the last two inning via
walks, but nothing came to fruition.
Rogers threw three strikeouts in
the final inning to cap a 3-0 victory.
Moorefield improved to 3-0,
while East Hardy fell to 2-1.
This Hardy County Showdown
proved to be a battle and showed
the fans a glimpse of what may happen later in the season.
Hitting wasn’t an issue for East
Hardy or Petersburg last Wednesday during the Cougars’ 11-7 victory.
“When you score that many
runs, you are going to win some
games. We out-hit them, outscored
them. We held off the late rally, but
I’m glad it was only seven runs. It’s
good to get a win. They are not a
bad ball club. They are going to win
some games this year,” East Hardy
Coach Raymond Snapp commented.
In the first inning, after strikeout
by Petersburg Alex Eye, a walk was
issued to Jamie Miller.
Kollin Foltz stepped up to the
plate and smashed a RBI double,
then Tyler Mongold repeated that
feat.
Mongold moved to third on a
wild pitch and Shawn Skovron was
issued a walk.
An error created a third run for
the Cougars, then Justin Basye hit a
double.
The side was retired.
East Hardy’s Korey Foltz took
the mound and sandwiched two
strikeouts around a single and a flyout.
Korey Foltz was given a walk in
the second inning, then Miller singled.
Kollin Foltz hit into a fielder’s
choice which turned into a RBI as
his brother Korey crossed home
plate, but his fate at first base was
met with an out.
In other words, a sacrifice hit.
Petersburg stormed into the bottom of the second inning with a single and a double.
Ryan Colaw juiced the bases for
the Vikings on a little chopper
which fell just a short distance in
front of home plate.
East Hardy catcher Wyatt Basye
grabbed the ball and held the third
base runner at bay, but didn’t turn
in time to throw Colaw out.
Seth Thompson hit a sacrifice
fly, then Korey Foltz pitched out of
the jam with two strikeouts.
Justin Basye smashed a double
to the fence, but couldn’t be
East Hardy’s Korey Foltz focused on his wind-up and delivery from
the mound in Petersburg last Wednesday.
brought home in the third inning.
The Vikings loaded the bases in
the bottom half.
While the bases were loaded,
Seth Thompson showed enthusiasm and comic relief by uttering
several phrases including: three
trout in the hole (‘must have been a
small hole’ was hollered by a teammate), three ducks on the pond,
three birds in the nest, and three
turkeys on the roost.
Korey Foltz pitched out of trouble for the Cougars once again.
East Hardy led 4-1 entering the
fourth inning.
Korey Foltz hit double with one
out in the fourth inning and was
sent home on a RBI double by
Miller.
Kollin Foltz notched a RBI sin-
gle as Miller slid safely into home
plate.
Codie Rohrbaugh came in to
pitch for the Vikings
Tyler Mongold came in to pitch
in the bottom of the fourth inning,
garnering three pop outs and allowing one single to send the game to
the next frame.
Jesse Earle hit a RBI double in
the fifth inning for a 6-2 score.
East Hardy built a 10-2 advantage in the sixth inning with a four
run outing.
Seth Thompson came in to pitch
for Petersburg.
Cody Walker hit a single, but
was thrown out at third base.
Korey Foltz doubled, then
Kollin Foltz was walked.
Continued on page 3B
Jackets Defense was Strong at Strasburg Hardball Classic
final inning of a 6-5 victory over
East Rockingham last Friday.
Moorefield’s Garrett Keller
Moorefield Examiner
took the throw from Kolton Markwood and gunned it to home plate
The Yellow Jackets swarmed the where catcher John Starkey corfield with hits in the 8th Annual ralled it and swept down in front of
Ram Hardball Classic and created a the plate to stop the Eagles from
demonstrative defensive stop in the scoring.
Story & Photo
By Carl Holcomb
This act of teamwork helped to
seal the victory.
“Obviously, that was a big defensive play there in the seventh
inning. Working on that cutoff
throw, Keller had a nice throw and
Starkey did a nice job blocking the
plate. That’s big,” Moorefield
Coach Wade Armentrout stated.
“There are a lot of different ways
we’ve been winning. This one was
making some key defensive plays
and getting enough runs to support
the pitchers.”
Moorefield has been a regular
member of the Ram Hardball Classic and won the championship in
2007.
Defense wins championships is a
mantra quite often used in sports
and the Yellow Jackets certainly
made the stops needed to advance
this year.
Moorefield advanced to the
championship game, but it wasn’t
held due to torrential rain.
In the first inning of the game
against East Rockingham, Moorefield got a one-out double by
Kolton Markwood which was followed by a single hit by Adam Snyder.
East Rockingham pitcher
Hunter Hensley kept trying to
throw Snyder out at first base, but
Continued on page 3B
Page 2B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Moorefield High School Varsity Introducing EHEMS Archery
Tennis Team Match Report
Front row: Rachel Wilson, Dylan Zirkle, Dakota Zirkle, Cheyenne Herdrandt, Lexi Strawderman
(alternate), Abraham Dunsmore
Back row: Janelle Staggs, Amanda Pippin, Bryce Strawderman, Dylan Fogel, Dakota Martin, Travis
Wilkins
Moorefield #4-seed Laiken Shoemaker prepared to return a volley against Petersburg’s Jessica
Stickley during last Wednesday’s match at the Petersburg City Park. Shoemaker lost 8-4 in singles, but
emerged victorious in the #2 doubles with Emily Greenwalt in a tiebreaker (8-8, 7-1).
Moorefield vs. Petersburg at Peters3. Richard Davy/Trevor Wratch- Stickley 4-8
burg City Park, 3-21, 4 p.m.
ford v. Ankur Makani/Justin Mullenax 8-0
Doubles
Boys
1. Bradley/Combs v. Urich/Roby Potomac Highlands Soccer League Camp: Members of the U-9 Sun Devils team charged across the
pitch at the Moorefield Town Park. There are 198 soccer players in the camp this year.
Singles
Exhibition
6-8
1. Justin Fitzwater v. Dan Alt
Jared Beard/Brandon Champ v.
2. Greenwalt/Shoemaker v.
1-8
Austin Rogers/Nicholas Lomasney Malcolm/Stickley 8-8, Tie 7-1
2. Curtis Wolfe v. Thomas 8-0
Lomasney
6-8
Chet Sisler v. Chris Lomasney
3. Langley Salyers/Chelsea
3. Kevin Judy v. Alex Roth
8-3
Fitzwater v. Gabby Hanlin/Jennifer
4-8
Wilson 8-3
March 20
relief not allowing any hits with the Regester and Kelsey Hines with two
4. Travis Cleaver v. Brett Sites
Girls
Moorefield Baseball
help of a solid defense and two hits apiece.
8-1
Singles
Exhibition
Moorefield 6, Frankfort 5
strikeouts over the final three
Cook, Regester, Hines, Taylor
1. Mariah Bradley v. Jade Urich
Cheyene Bosserman v. Tiffany
innings.
Zuber,
Katelynn Wills, and Brooke
Doubles
8-5
Dodd 5-0
March 21
Shockey
each had at least one RBI.
1.
Fitzwater/Wolfe
v.
2. Emily Greenwalt v. Sierra
Stephanie Myers/Rebecca MerMoorefield Baseball
East Hardy Softball
Taylor
Zuber pitched 30 strikes
Alt/Lomasney
8 - 8 , Malcolm 8-3
rill v. Olivia Canoy/Madison
Moorefield 3, Turner Ashby 2
East Hardy 7, Petersburg 2
out of 45 total pitches.
Tie 2-7
3. Shannon Combs v. Kelsie George 3-8
Cook closed with 34 strikes on
2. Judy/Cleaver v. Roth/Sites
Roby
0-8
Makayla Miller/Tiffany Weese v.
Moorefield Cody Hose pitched
East Hardy garnered three RBI
8-1
4. Laiken Shoemaker v. Jessica Faith Smith/Chelsie Taylor 0-8
45
pitches.
four solid innings allowing only two doubles in the third inning courtesy
runs on three hits with three strike- of Autumn Mathias, Morgan MonMarch 24
outs.
gold, and Morgan Basye. Casey
Moorefield Softball
The Yellow Jackets took a 3-0 Showman added a RBI single for a
Musselman 6, Moorefield 5
lead in the third inning as John 4-1 lead.
The Yellow Jackettes traded the
Starkey started the attack with a
The defensive support for East
Sr., 19.0 ppg, 9.0 rpg
Levi Jordan, Buffalo, Jr., 16.8 double.
First team
Hardy pitcher Jodie Funkhouser lead seven times with Musselman
Daniel Collie, Parkersburg ppg, 10.1 rpg
Jordan Simpson, Man, Sr.
Jared Kite hit a RBI sngle.
was great including outfielder Jade before falling in the eighth inning
Catholic, Sr., 16.8 ppg, 6.0 rpg, 4.4
Tyler Snyder, Tucker County, Jr.,
(capt.), 25.6 ppg
Hose moved Kite on a sacrifice Foltz robbing a home run attempt on a single.
12.3 ppg
Clay Rokisky, Madonna, Sr., apg
grounder.
by Brittani Bible.
Moorefield led 2-0 after the first
Anthony Ghiardi, Trinity, Jr.,
16.5 ppg
Zach Laughlin reached base on
Funkhouser pitched a complete inning, but fell behind in the second
14.8 ppg, 8.0 rpg
Derek Renner, St. Marys, Sr., Second team
a single and Kite scored on a past game allowing five hits, two earned
Adam Snyder, Moorefield, Jr., 16.4
4-2.
17.1 ppg, 5.3 rpg, 4.5 apg
Isaac Lee, Wahama, Sr., 19.8
ball.
runs, and notched two strikeouts.
ppg, 5.3 apg, 3.5 spg
Cody Triplett, Trinity, Jr., 23.8 ppg, 9.0 rpg
Moorefield added one run in the
Two walks loaded the bases,
ppg, 9.0 rpg
K.D. Arnett, St. Marys, Sr.
third
and two in the fifth for a 5-4
March 22
then Garrett Keller hit a sacrifice
Josh Pierson, Huntington St. (capt.), 17.4 ppg, 8.1 rpg
Third team
lead
before
the Lady Appleman
Moorefield
Softball
fly.
Joe, Sr., 23.0 ppg
Nick
George,
Charleston
D.T. Meeker, Bishop Donahue,
tied it at 5-all in the bottom half.
Moorefield
9,
Pendleton
County
Turner
Ashby
managed
two
runs
Jordan Burdette, Midland Trail, Catholic, So., 13.8 ppg, 8.9 rpg
Sr., 17.4 ppg, 5.0 rpg
Danica Rogers pitched 149
Sr., 20.5 ppg, 3.2 rpg, 3.0 apg
Chris Gray, Meadow Bridge, Sr.,
Nick Battista, Madonna, Sr., in the fourth inning, but came up 2
times
with 84 strikes for the Yellow
Beth
Cook
led
Moorefield
with
empty
the
rest
of
the
way.
Casey Kessler, Midland Trail, 17.0 ppg, 11.0 rpg, 3.5 bpg
(capt.) 10.0 ppg, 6.0 apg
Jackettes.
four
hits,
followed
by
Michaela
Lance
Taylor
closed
the
game
in
Continued on page 7B
Hardy County Recap
CLASS A All-State Basketball
402 S. Main Street, Moorefield 304-538-7900
300 N. Main Street, Franklin 304-358-2311
219 8th Street, Marlinton 304-799-6700
MOOREFIELD HIGH SCHOOL • April 2012
EAST HARDY HIGH SCHOOL • April 2012
Principal: Avery Anderson (304) 530-6034
SUNDAY
MONDAY
1
TUESDAY
2
•Baseball (A)
Strasburg
•Sports Boosters
meets at 7:00
3
WEDNESDAY
4
THURSDAY
Principal: Brad Simmons (304) 897-5948
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
5
•Baseball
•Softball at
St.Mary’s (H) 2:00 Alleghany 4:30
6
SUNDAY
MONDAY
7
1
8
9
•Softball Frankfort
(H)
•Baseball Paw
Paw (H) 6:00
15
•Track at East
Hardy 4:00
22
23
•Tennis (H) 4:00
•Baseball Notre
Dame (H) 4:00
•Baseball (H)
7:00 Pendleton
•Track at
Petersburg 4:00
17
•Tennis at
Hampshire
•Baseball (H)
Frankfort
18 •Tennis
•Track (h) 4:00
•Tennis 4:00
Southern
•Softball 5:00 at
Petersburg
•Baseball (H)
Tucker Co. 7:00
•Track at 4:00
East Hardy
24 •Tennis at
•Baseball Tucker
Co.
30
12
•Best of the Best
Tournment
•Softball 4:30
Tgart. Valley
29
11
•Tennis (H) 3:30
Mussleman
16
•Softball (H) 5:00
Pendleton
10
Keyser
Frankfort 3:30
25
•Track Strasburg
•Softball East
Hardy 5:00
•Baseball (H) 4:30
2
13
14
8
•MHS Alumni
Basketball Game
7:00
•OSE Day –
No School
9
•BB at Tucker
4:30 p.m.
•SB – Tucker
4:30 p.m.
19 •Bub Riggleman 20
21
Tournment
•Track (A) Keyser
4:00
•Tennis A 4:00
Bath CO.
•Softball (H) 5:00
Alleghany
•Baseball
Petersburg 7:00
5
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
6
•SB at Elkins
•BB at Mingo
Central
7
•BB at Man
28
4:00
22
PROM
•BB – Musselman
7:00 p.m.
•SB – Musselman
4:00 p.m.
•Glenville State
College
Representative
10:15 a.m.
29
•SB – Berkeley
Springs 5:30 p.m.
18
•BB – Pendleton
7:00 p.m.
12
•BB – Petersburg
7:00 p.m.
•ACT Testing at
EHHS
14
•Baker Ruritan
Annual Dinner
19
20
•Freshman/
•NHS Induction
Banquet 6:00 p.m. Sophomore
Career Day
25 •8th grade
26
24 •BB at
Pendleton 7:00 p.m. night at EHHS
4:30 p.m.
•SB – Pendleton
•SB – Moorefield
5:00 p.m.
•SB – Jefferson
5:00 p.m.
•Track at EHHS w/
Moorefield, Tygart •Organ Donation
•CTE Technical
Valley, Union,
Core Assembly
Training
Petersburg 4:00 p.m. 9:45 a.m.
30
13
•BB – Moorefield
7:00 p.m.
•BB at
Pocahontas
21
•SB at Luray
•Mr/Miss East
Hardy Pageant
7:00 p.m.
•Track at Moorefield
4:00 p.m.
23 •BB at Union
•SB –
Martinsburg
5:00 p.m.
•Baseball (H)
Petersburg 7:00
•Track at Frankfort
4:30 p.m.
•BB – Union
11
10
4:30 p.m.
•SB at Petersburg
•SB at Pendleton
•Track at
5:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m.
Petersburg
•Track at EHHS
4:00 p.m.
•Navy ROTC
Union/Moorefield/
meet w/ Juniors
Pendleton
10:15 a.m.
– Berkeley 17
16 •BB
Springs 7:00 p.m.
15
•Spring Fling
“Legends Dinner”
& Raffle
26 •Tennis Bath Co.27
•Softball H
Mussleman 5:00
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
•BB at Berkeley
3 •BB at Paw Paw 4
Springs 7:00 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
•SB at Musselman
•SB at Berkeley
12:00 p.m.
Springs 5:30 p.m.
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––SPRING BREAK–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
•Softball H
Petersburg 5:00
No school
TUESDAY
•SB at Jefferson
5:30 p.m.
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––SPRING BREAK––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
•LSIC at board
office 6:00
•BB – St. Mary’s
•NHS Lunch
box social
28
27
•EHHS Prom
•BB – Paw Paw
7:00 p.m.
•SB – Washington
5:00 p.m.
•BB – Franfort
11:00
MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - Page 3B
Hitting Rampage
Lifts East Hardy
Jackets Defense
East Hardy catcher John Starkey prepared to throw an East Rockingham runner out at first base
during last Friday’s 8th Annual Rams Hardball Classic.
Continued from page 1B
wasn’t fast enough.
Moorefield junior Garrett
Keller smashed a two-run producing RBI double for a 2-0 edge
entering the second inning.
Jared Kite was on the hill for
Moorefield and despite allowing
the bases to get juiced, escaped the
inning without a scratch at home
plate.
John Starkey hit a double for the
Yellow Jackets and DaShawn
Brown came in as a pinch runner.
Brown was caught in a rundown
along the third base line and
Moorefield failed to score.
Kite fanned two batters in the
third inning, but did allow a RBI
single by East Rockingham’s Travis
Lugar.
Kolton Markwood was hit by a
pitch, then was sent back to first on
a steal attempt as Snyder was sent
to the dugout on an interference
call as he stepped in the path of the
catcher’s throw.
Mikey Pultz garnered a RBI single to give Moorefield a 3-1 edge.
The Yellow Jackets padded the
lead in the fourth inning with three
runs.
Zach Laughlin and Kolton
Markwood both hit tow-out singles.
Snyder smashed a RBI double
which brought home both base runners.
Keller followed with a RBI single for a 6-1 lead.
“When we scored those runs,
that was a good inning where it
looked like we were executing well
offensively. We did a good job making contact and running the bases,”
Coach Armentrout noted.
East Rockingham notched a run
on a bases loaded walk in the fifth
inning while Dakota Vetter was
pitching for Moorefield.
Joseph Gooden knocked home
two runs with a RBI double to close
the gap 6-4.
Lance Taylor almost hit a home
run in center field, but it fell several
feet shy of the 360-foot wall.
“If we had the old bats, the way
it looked to me it would have
cleared,” Coach Armentrout said.
Adam Snyder came in as the
closer in the sixth inning and the
defense helped collect three outs.
The Eagles went to work in the
seventh inning as Ryan Kite hit a
single and was brought home on a
RBI single by Lugar which eluded a
dive by Snyder and skirted past
Kite.
After an error put Caleb Shiflett
on base, Starkey made the huge
stop at home plate on the single by
Gooden.
John Dofflemyer hit a ground
out as the game ended.
Moorefield (4-0) survived the
rally attempt with defense.
East Hardy Sinks
Continued from page 1B
A fielder’s choice helped Mongold send one runner home while
getting to first base
Shawn Skovron was walked and
the last throw was in the dirt and
eluded the Vikings as Kollin Foltz
slid home.
After a walk to Justin Basye,
Ryan Colaw was sent to the mound
for Petersburg.
Wyatt Basye drew a bases
loaded walk for a run, then Cole
Collier plated another run on an
error.
Jamie Miller took his first trip to
the mound as the closer.
The Vikings’ bats started talking
with first base reach on an error
then a single.
During a walk, a past ball
occurred and Miller caught the
throw from Wyatt Basye and prevented a score.
A RBI double by Hunter
Warner plated two runs for a 10-4
score.
Petersburg notched two more
runs for a 10-6 score entering the
seventh inning including a RBI
triple by Eye.
East Hardy snatched one run
back in the seventh with a RBI single by Mongold.
Smith hit a leadoff double, but
Miller zeroed in and struck out the
next two batters.
“I was really surprised Jamie
gave up that many runs. It seemed
like everything they hit was in the
hole some place. It is always tough
your first day on the mound,”
Coach Snapp said.
Warner hit a RBI single, then
Korey Foltz fielded the last out.
East Hardy (2-0) had its next
game washed out on Saturday and
hosted Tygarts Valley yesterday.
East Hardy travels to Musselman tonight and visits Moorefield
on Friday.
The Cougars will be in the Central, Va. tournament this Saturday.
JUDY’S DRUG
STORE #2
“Your Hometown Pharmacy
and Gift Shop”
414 South Main St.,
Moorefield, WV 26836
(304) 530-1044
FREE POOL LIGHT WITH EVERY POOL
PURCHASED BY APRIL 1ST, 2012
(Complete Line of Above & In-Ground Pools)
Fax: (304) 530-2681
Mon.-Fri. 9:00AM – 7:00PM
Sat. 9:00AM – 2:00PM
Celebration TIme: East Hardy catcher Marilyn Cassell leapt in the air with abundant exuberance
after hitting her first home run of the season, a three-run shot against Strasburg at last Friday’s
inaugural Rams Softball Classic.
Story & Photo
By Carl Holcomb
Moorefield Examiner
A three-run dinger and an
inside-the-park home run helped
ignite East Hardy’s 18-6 drubbing
of Strasburg in the inaugural Rams
Softball Classic.
“We hit the ball well tonight. I
feel pretty confident in our situation,” East Hardy Coach Calvin
Mongold noted.
East Hardy (3-1) took a 2-0 lead
in the second inning on a past ball
and error which enabled Morgan
Basye and Sarah Liller to score.
Strasburg rallied in the bottom
half as Brittany Middleton and
Kierstyn Austin singled and Nicole
Killen hit a two-out RBI double off
of East Hardy pitcher Jodie
Funkhouser.
Strasburg took a 3-2 lead on a
two run producing RBI single by
Kasey Fauber.
The Lady Rams added another
run on an error to take a 4-2 edge
entering the third inning.
The Lady Cougars regained the
lead in the third inning with a seven
run outing against starting pitcher
Jordan Kump.
Rayann Foltz hit a leadoff dou-
ble, then Autumn Mathias singled
and advanced to second base on a
throw to third base which was
dropped.
East Hardy catcher Marilyn
Cassell connected for a three-run
home run and jump with excitement before reaching first base as
she saw it clear the fence to give the
Lady Cougars the lead.
This was Cassell’s first home
run.
“I have to get her the game
ball,” Coach Mongold stated.
Sarah Liller hit a two-out single,
then Casey Showman hit a RBI
double.
Jade Foltz singled on the next at
bat and Ruby Fridley hit a two run
RBI double for an 8-4 lead.
Rayann Foltz knocked in
another run for the Lady Cougars.
Strasburg got two of the runs
back in the bottom of the third
inning on a RBI double by Jordan
Kump which plated two runs.
East Hardy retired the side on a
double play by Morgan Mongold.
Morgan Basye sent Morgan
Mongold home with a RBI double
in the fourth inning.
Liller hit an inside-the-park
home run and garnered a RBI for a
12-6 advantage.
The Lady Cougars didn’t allow
any more runs by Strasburg.
Basye hit a two-run producing
single which was followed by a RBI
single from Liller for a 15-6 lead in
the fifth inning.
Jade Foltz hit a leadoff double in
the sixth inning.
Jackie Funkhouser pinch hit and
notched a RBI single.
The Lady Cougars loaded the
bases on two singles.
Cassell was called out on strikes
as the ball sailed inside and nearly
hit her elbow.
Cassell stood there puzzled and
was getting ready to swing thinking
the umpire was joking, but he was
serious.
Basye hit a two-out RBI double
bringing home two runs for an 18-6
score.
Liller hit a pop up and crashed
into first baseman as both were
dazed and an out was called
because of interference.
There was a long discussion to
the Strasburg team by coach
Suzanne Mathias after the game.
The Lady Cougars didn’t get to
play in the championship on Saturday due to rain.
– 48, Grant County Bank 67 – 53,
Pepsi Cola 65 – 55, Basye Construction 64 – 56, Vetter’s Mini Mart 62.5
– 57.5, Judy’s Drug Store 60 – 60,
Country Cars & Trucks 54 - 66,
Golden Lanes 48 – 72, Buddy’s Trophies 34.5 – 85.5;
HIGH GAME (SCRATCH):
Terry Wratchford 265, Johnny Berg
259, Clayton Laub 258, Noah Sites
244, Gary Pennington 241;
(HANDICAP): Noah Sites 265,
Terry Wratchford 265, Clayton
Laub 263, Johnny Berg 259, Gary
Pennington 241, Mike Kubina 241;
HIGH SERIES (SCRATCH):
Clayton Laub 683, Terry Wratchford 680, Gary Pennington 658,
Johnny Berg 652, Paul Ketterman
613; (HANDICAP): Clayton Laub
698, Terry Wratchford 680, David
Rogers 661, Gary Pennington 658,
Johnny Berg 652;
HIGH AVERAGE: Johnny
Berg 209.17, Charles Keplinger
207.29, Kevin Reed 201.07, Gary
Leatherman 200.77, Gary Pennington 200.75
BOWLING NEWS
THURSDAY NIGHT MENS
LEAGUE
03/22/2012
TEAM STANDINGS: Reed
Insurance 73 – 47, Leatherman’s 72
Moorefield
Athletic
Boosters
will be meeting April 3rd, 2012
for our monthly meeting.
7:00 PM • MHS Library
We welcome new and current members to attend.
Earth Day
COLORING CONTEST!
IT’S AN
Hardy County
Health &
Change the shape
of things this month ... Wellness
Center
Ages 10 and under may compete
to win a prize.
Look for the coloring page in the
April 18th Examiner when we
celebrate EARTH DAY .
Learn more about our Earth and
environment by checking out the
special features in the
April 18th issue.
Correction
In last week’s Moorefield Track
preview, sophomore Jesseca Walker
was omitted. Walker was a member
of the 4 x 800 meter relay team in the
state tournament last year. The
Examiner regrets this error.
Judy’s Mobile
Homes, Inc.
before
after
411 Spring Ave., Moorefield 304-538-7380•Open 7 days a week!
Dealer in Skyline
NEW & USED Homes
NEW Modular Homes
Affordable Housing
for Everyone
•Large Parts Inventory
•Transporters
P.O. Box 377, U.S. Rt. 50 E
Shanks, WV 26761
304-496-7777
U.S. Rt. 220
Moorefield, WV 26836
304-538-7066
Page 4B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
CLASSIFIEDS
Classifieds@MoorefieldExaminer.com
Get Your Classified Here, On the Web and in the Weekender for Only $6 for 25 Words or Less! (10¢ per additional word)
(304) 530-6397 • 132 S. Main Street, Moorefield, WV 26836 • Classifieds@MoorefieldExaminer.com
10 FOR SALE
Miscellaneous
30 FOR SALE
Houses
60 FOR SALE
Farm Equipment
MEADOW RIDGE Subdivision,
Petersburg, WV. 1849 square feet,
3BR, 2BA, on 2 acres with fenced
in rear yard. Central air/Heat
pump, Hard wood floors in Living
room and den. Roofed front porch
CONCESSION TRAILER, 8x12 and rear patio. With workshop,
with equipment. Call 304-897- appliances convey and Jotul wood
stove. Contact Mr. Hoffman 3048146.
257-6401.
$180,000.
NEW IN box, Model SG-7500D Photo:http://www.owners.com/W
Diesel powered generator, remote V/Petersburg/34-Meadow-Rdgcontrol, 418cc Direct injection. Lot-47/MMA7215/.
Remote/Electric start. $2,000.00 PETERSBURG THE POINT—
firm. 304-257-6803.
3BR, 3BA, brick ranch —1500 sq.
ALFALFA HAY--75 Square bales,
approximately 50 lbs per bale,
barn kept, easy access, near Wardensville. $5 per bale. 304-8743424.
TRUCKER’S GPS -Garmin Nuvi
456T. Like new with all accessories. $180. Call Lisa at 304-5306397.
20 FOR SALE
Mobile Homes
1984 LIBERTY MOBILE Home,
singlewide, 2BR, 1BA, furnished.
Selling “as is”. Buyer must move
home from current location.
$2,000 or make offer (flexible).
Call 304-538-3084.
2.86 PARTLY WOODED acres
near Baker, with 3BR, 2BA Doublewide. Well, septic, central air
and more. $85,000 or obo. Call
304-897-6842.
2BR MOBILE HOME, owner
financed low payment. 703-3981188.
KUBOTA, GEHL, BUSHHOG, WOODS and BEFCO.
15 Kubota Cab tractors in stock.
See Woodstock Equipment Company for Sales, Parts, and Service.
Woodstock VA. Call 540-459-3233.
100 FOR RENT
Mobile Homes
3 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, 1 study, 1
living, laundry, and roomy kitchen.
$525 per month with electric
included. Located at 229 N. Main
St. (adjacent from Summit Financial Group, Inc.) Parking available. Please contact Luke Kesner
at:
304-851-1900,
or
lkesner1@gmail.com for additional information.
120 FOR RENT
Houses
*PAINTING, ROOFS* 22 years
experience. Houses, Interior,
house roofs, barn roofs, church
roofs, poultry house roofs, outbuildings, mobile home roofs,
fences, staining log homes, businesses, pressure washing. Call
Ronald Kimble 304-358-7208. Lic.
and Insured.
COMPUTER REPAIR —remove
viruses, format (wipe clean) hard
drive, reinstall Windows and programs. $75.00.
Also replace
cracked laptop screens. House
calls $25.00. 304-851-6852.
3BR MOBILE Home located at
Fisher. Call 304-530-4881/304703-1573 leave message.
2BR HOUSE FOR rent, near WANTED TO do odd jobs, mowBaker. Available April 1. Call for ing, painting, wood cutting, gardening, cleaning attic and basemore info, 304-897-6164.
ment,
have
tools.
Call
ft. up and additional 1500 sq. ft. 3BR, 2BA mobile home, 3 miles
304-434-2309.
4BR,
2
1/2BA
FOR
rent,
Main
fully finished basement. Many cus- from Moorefield. Call anytime
Street, Moorefield. Walk to work.
tom features, garage, 1/2 acre park 304-538-2454.
205 LAWN SERVICES
like setting. $159,900. 304-257304-257-6935.
5702.
I HAVE for rent clean mobile
KESSLER’S LAWN Service.
130 FOR RENT
Mowing and Weedeating. Reasonhomes
in
Misty
Terrace,
at
lower
35 FOR SALE
Storage
able rates. Moorefield area resiprices
than
anywhere
else.
Call
Apartments
dents welcome. 304-897-6673.
Leslie Romero at 304-851-2222.
FOR RENT *OLD FIELDS
FOR SALE by owner 5-One bedSTORAGE* (Units 5x10) (10x10), WORK! WORK! WORK! Mowroom apartments, with coin oper- RV FOR Rent on private land,
ing, Trimming, Gardening, Land(10x20), located 4.5 miles on Rt.
ated Laundry in Moorefield. end of March. $325 plus propane.
scaping, Pressure Washing, Paint220 North of Moorefield. Call 538$200,000.00 Firm. 304-434-2805.
ing, Cleaning Attics, Basement,
Call 703-901-8446.
3300, 538-2346 or evenings 538- Buildings and Windows. No Job
6785.
40 FOR SALE
Too Small! You Name It, We’ll Do
110 FOR RENT
Land/Lots
It! JB Yard Dogs. Call 304Apartments
HARVEST STORAGE 5x10, 5386174 for Josh or Bonnie.
10x10, 10x20. Great location in
1/3 ACRE LOT on Paskell Hill,
2BR APARTMENT. Call 304-530- town. 304-703-2667.
210 HELP WANTED
Moorefield. Call 304-358-2423.
4881or 304-703-1573.
170 WANTED
DIESEL MECHANIC Must have
45 FOR SALE
2BR, APARTMENT for rent,
To Buy
experience and own tools. Call
Commercial Property
Main Street, Moorefield. Walk to
RMX Trans. 1-800-964-1778.
PROFESSIONAL
OFFICE work. 304-257-6935.
STONE MASONRY tools such as OFFICE STAFF. Trucking combuilding on Maple Avenue in
hammers of various sizes and pany in Petersburg seeks organMoorefield. Modular construction 2BR, APARTMENT, all utilities weights. Call 304-530-6748.
ized and dependable individual.
on elevated crawl space. Paved off except electric and trash. $400,
Must have strong computer and
street parking for 10 with two with 6 month lease, plus $200
knowledge of driver logs. Call
200
WANTED
entrances. Includes reception and deposit and references. Call 304Jeremy at RMX Trans. 800-964To Do
waiting room areas, 3 offices, and
1778.
409-9180,
Karen
Barb
2 baths. Multi line phone and net-
“$1 AND A deed is all you need,”
“New government loan packages,”
“Lay-a-Way plan on all homes,”
“New homes starting as low as
$37,999”. . . at CLAYTON
HOMES OF BUCKHANNON work computer wiring. Handicap
(304-472-8900). . . claytonhomesof access and central heat/air. 304530-6748.
buckhannon.com.
OTR DRIVERS $500 Sign-On
Bonus. Paid Vacation. Health
Benefits. New Rider Policy. Call
RMX Trans. 1-800-964-1778.
POTOMAC HIGHLANDS Guild
has a full-time regional Therapist
position available immediately
providing direct care to adolescents and adults with emotional
and/or substance abuse problems.
Work responsibilities include providing outpatient therapy, some
cases management and crisis services. Masters Degree in social
work or counseling psychology is
required. PHG offers a strong
benefit package. Please send
resume and letter of interest to
Executive Assistant, Potomac
Highlands, Guild, PO Box 1119,
Petersburg, WV 26847 or email to
BrendaC@phgmail.net
before
April 7, 2012. E.O.E. M/F/H.
THE BAKER Post Office has an
opening for a Temporary Carrier
(TRC). Salary: $13.05 Plus Vehicle Maintenance. Apply online at
www.ups.com/employment. You
must have a safe, reliable, vehicle
for use on rural route. You must
be available to work when needed,
even on short notice, and every
Saturday. For more information
about this position call the Postmaster at 304-897-6481.
220 NOTICE
DON’T PAY high heating bills.
Eliminate them with an OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE from
Central Boiler. Jake and Audrey’s
Farm and Garden Co. 304-8561115.
Now Taking Applications
Yellowbud Place: 1 BR garden apartments, 2 &
3 BR town homes. Rent includes water, trash and sewer.
1BR: $430.00. 2BR: $455.00 & 3BR: $555.00. Many
amenities include: dishwasher, stove, refrigerator &
garbage disposal. Laundry room on site and tot lot for
children. Security deposit equals 1 months rent.
Call 304-538-7082
NEW!
THIS WEEK!
•PAVING
Scott Liller
304-726-7292
NEW!
Sean Sicher
Lockouts,
Auto,
Commercial,
Residential,
Safes
Certified Registered Locksmith
(304) 257-6110
712 N. Main St., Ste 102, Moorefield
Precision
Overhead Doors
304-874-3685 Office
540-539-3200 Cell
Kenneth & Denise Dove, Owners
License #WV037343
M.R. HVAC
Electrical, LLC
YOUR
BUSINESS
TO
YOUR
COMMUNITY
Hours: M–F 8am–7pm;
Saturday 9–12
• HEATING & COOLING SYSTEMS
George Thomas......304-257-6296
Tom High...................304-813-8038
Danny Kuykendall.....304-851-0607
Serving the Eastern Panhandle Julie Swick................304-668-1658
Servicing All Brands of
Heat Pumps & Furnaces
• 24 Hour Service
• Servicing and Selling
Nordyne Equipment for
Manufactured Housing
•All Types Of Handyman Work
•
ROBERT DOLLY
(304) 538-7148
Cell (304) 257-0387
No Job
too Big
or Too
Small!
WV002326
HC 71 Box 92A,
Capon Bridge, WV 26711
•GUTTER SERVICE
Jerry Helmick
John J. Helmick
Licensed & Insured WV#043743
WV Manufactured Housing #01175
Seamless Aluminum Gutter
White & Brown Enamel Finish
FREE ESTIMATES
Call for free estimates
304-538-2828
304-434-2469
304-897-5094
304-257-8882
Welton Orch. Rd.,
Ptsb. $99,000.
www.CentralRealtyWV.com
Installing Luxaire
Equipment
Serving WV and VA since 1986
•SOLID WASTE HAULER
Moorefield, WV 26836
(304) 538-2100 116 N. MainLoisSt.,Groves
– BROKER
LOTS & LAND:
M119 – 10.3 acres, awesome views, privacy, wildlife. High Knob $45,000.
M066 – Royal Glen Mobile Home Park &
Storage, 7 acres, Presently 8 pads & 11
Storage Units. Make an offer. Ptsb.
M067 – 25.4 acres, good roads, beautiful
views, gated community. Ashton Woods,
Mfld. $93,000.
M984 – 40 acres, building sites, great
hunting, stream, private, easy access,
close S Branch River access. $110,000.
Trough Rd, Mfld.
M106 – 4 acres in Summit Oaks, beautiful area to build in the best s/d in the area.
$84,000. Mfld.
M093 – Building lot, easy access, great
location. Morningside Dr, Mfld. $14,900.
M092 – 3.5 acres, river-front, private,
only 5 mi. to Moorefield. S Fork $32,900
Sales • Service • Installation
304-856-3894
&
PROMOTE
M018 – Lovely
split-level Home,
4br 3ba, nice deck
w/privacy. Paskel Hill, Mfld. $199,900.
M992 – Modern 2br 1ba
Cabin, one acre, easy
access, good water, close
Nat’l Forest. Lost River $89,900.
M081 – Home, 3br
1ba, paved road,
stream, trees. Make an
offer. Cullers Run, Mathias $67,800.
M098 – Well-maintained
Home, 4br 2ba, 3 acres,
views, privacy, one mile
to Moorefield. $112,500.
M112 – Move-in
ready Home in town,
2br 1ba, fenced,
close schools, businesses. Mfld. $118,500.
M109 – Home, 3br 2ba, 2 acres, awesome views, public water, easy access.
Jim Teter, Owner
Residential
& Commercial
•ANIMAL HOSPITAL
304-530-7224 (SBAH)
5201 US Rt 220 S
Moorefield, WV 26836
southbranchanimalhospital@yahoo.com
www.southbranchanimalhospital.com
•GARAGE DOORS
Mountain
State Lock
We Take PRIDE in Your DRIVE!
•Paving, Seal Coating
•Driveways, Roads, Parking Lots
•Commercial & Residential
Free Estimates • Short Gap, WV
•ELECTRICAL
•LOCKSMITH
Owner Jeff Saville
www.envircoinc.com
Online Bill Pay
EnvircoNews
24 hour emergency service
(304) 434-3394
Licensed & Insured WV041077
•INSURANCE
W. VA. INSURANCE CO. •TAX SERVICES
Home, Farm,
Mobile Home, Cabin
Heritage Insurance, LLC
304-538-6677
Baker Rocks
Accounting Service
304-538-2830
6559 US Hwy 220 S
Moorefield, WV
•PLUMBING
J.T. PLUMBING
--- Service Calls ---
Drain Cleaning • Water Leaks
Moorefield Area
304-851-2967 • #PL03639
NOTARY STAMP?
ADDRESS STAMP?
MOOREFIELD EXAMINER
(304) 530-6397
304-897-6060
800-235-4044
West Virginia Certificated
Solid Waste Hauler
Serving Hardy & Grant
counties since 1990
Advertise in the
Business Directory —
Call 304-530-6397 to
reserve space today!
We are members of MRIS — a multi-list system available to over 27,000 real estate agents in WV, VA, DC, MD & PA.
Advertising rates in this section: $6.00 first 25 words. Ten cents per
word each additional word. Blind ads double the above rates. Display
ads on these pages, $7.60 per column inch. Legal rates governed by
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 adver-
tisements; 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
correctly classify, revise or reject any advertising. Employment: It shall
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 Vir-
ginia for an employer or employment agency to print or circulate or
cause to be printed or to use in any 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, familial 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, March 28, 2012 - Page 5B
IN ACCORDANCE with the
storage space rental agreement by
and between Hardmans Mini Storage and Etta Whiteman. The contents of these storage unit will be
sold at a public sale to the highest
bidder commencing at 11:00 am,
Monday, April 16th, with the viewing of the unit starting five minutes prior to bidding. Registration
will start at 10:30 am in the back
parking lot of Hardmans Hardware, 131 N. Main St. Moorefield,
WV. Fred C Hardman, Counsel
for Hardmans Mini Storage.
RIVERSIDE CABINS and RV
park. Open year round with full
hook-up and cabins along the
river, pool, mini-golf, gem mine,
fishing. Fisher, WV 304-538-6467.
FRIDAY, 30TH and Saturday, GARAGE/YARD SALE Satur31st at Armentrout Residence on
day, March 31st, 8-12. Something
Rig Rd, turn at C & K Salvage, go
for everyone! Rt. 220N, House
straight to top of hill.
ROHRBAUGH’S LIL RASCALS, (formally Davis Day Care
for 18 Years). We have openings
on dayshift, evenings, nights, and
weekends available. (It’s hard for
a parents to have a 9 to 5 job these
days). Mt. Heart and State
approved. Healthy meals and
snacks. 5 minutes from Petersburg
and Maysville schools, bus drop
off and pickup for both schools.
Only need daycare when school is
out or just need a weekend away,
give us a call soon 304-749-8942.
We are already reserving spots for
summer. (Like) our Facebook
page and check us out.
FRIDAY, MARCH 30th and Saturday March 31st 8:00am-? Nelson residence corner of 214 Sions
Street and Maple Avenue. Plus
size clothing, teens, scrubs, household items, furniture, and many
other items.
OLIVET CEMETERY lot owners. Mowing will begin in April.
All loose flowers and other items
will be gathered from graves
unless they are in a vase or
attached to the top of a stone. If
you have flowers, container, small
statuettes, or other items you
would like to keep, please pick SEPTIC TANKS PUMPED, M &
them up. Contact any member of M Septic Service. Call 304 538the Olivet Cemetery Board of 6467 or 304 257-3191.
Directors if you have questions or
270 YARD SALES
concerns.
RAINBOW EASTER Pageant.
April 22, Moorefield. $15.00 entry
fees.
304-263-1499
or
sandyscott@hughes.net.
DOT’S FLEA Market and Yard
Sale. Rt. 220 Purgitsville. Will be
open every Friday and Saturday,
8-4.
Highland Trace Realty, Inc.
PO Box 307, 200 E. Main Street, Wardensville, WV 26851
John B. Bowman, Broker
Charlotte Bowman, Assoc. Broker
Steve Bosley, Sales Agent 304-897-5700
Office 304-874-3030 • Toll Free 1-877-293-3643
E-MAIL: john@highlandtrace.com
WEBSITE: www.highlandtrace.com
HELP WANTED
The Moorefield Park and Recreation Commission is accepting
applications for the following positions:
POOL MANAGER:
Must be at least 18 years of age and be available for employment
May 27th through September 3rd, 2012. Applications are due by
4:00 P.M. April 16, 2012.
LIFEGUARDS:
Possessing a current lifesaving certificate or able to acquire one by
the beginning of the pool season. Must be at least 15 years of age
or older. Lifeguards will be required to wear a red or blue onepiece bathing suits while on duty. Applications are due by
4:00 P.M. April 16, 2012.
All applications may be obtained from the Town Office at
206 Winchester Avenue, Moorefield, WV 26836.
The Town of Moorefield is an equal opportunity employer.
All applicants are required to undergo drug testing prior to employment.
across from Old Fields Baptist
Good Friday’s Full
Moon and Astronomy Day
By Bob Doyle
Special to Moorefield Examiner
Church.
Acturus.
By April 13, the moon has shrunk
to half full in the morning dawn sky.
On April 15, the planet Saturn is
closest and brightest to the Earth, rising as the sun sets and hanging in the
sky all night long. Saturn is then 811
million miles from the Earth, so far
that its light takes over an hour for its
reflected sunlight to reach Earth.
You need a telescopic magnification
about 50 times to see Saturn’s rings
clearly.
In the morning sky, the planet
Mercury is at its greatest angle from
the sun on April 18; it can be seen
low in the east a half hour before sunrise.
The moon passes north of the sun
on April 21. On April 23 in the western dusk, the crescent
moon appears to the
left of the Pleiades or
Seven Sisters star cluster. On April 24, the
moon appears below
and to the right of the
Venus. On April 29,
the evening moon
appears half full (like a
tilted D). Along the
moon’s straight or left
edge, the sun is rising,
catching the rim of
craters and mountain
peaks. On the evening before, amateur astronomy clubs around the
country host public telescope viewing
on Astronomy Day. On April 30, the
planet Venus is at its greatest brilliance in the western dusk, owing to
its distance from Earth and portion
of its lighted disk seen from Earth.
In April, the Frostburg State University Planetarium’s free public sky
show on the second floor of the
Compton Science Center is “Predators of the African Plains and Their
Skies,” which includes lions, leopards, hyenas and wild cats. Also
included is a look at tropical skies,
where Orion crosses overhead, the
Southern Cross is stunning and the
Milky Way is better viewed. Programs start at 4 p.m. and end in the
Science Discovery Center, where
some remarkable specimens are on
display. There will be no program on
April 8, Easter. Compton is the large
building close to the Performing Art
Center. Parking is available in front
of the center (walk around it to the
right) or near Frampton Hall. The
full program will last less than an
hour.
On the evenings of April 2, 3 and
4, the brilliant planet Venus will
appear on the edge of the Seven Sishouse, 900 Lee Street. 7:30am-12 ters or Pleiades star cluster. On April
3, Venus will be less than a moon
noon. Saturday, March 31st, 2012. width away from the Pleiades cluster’s brightest star, Alcyone. Because
of the glare of Venus, one is advised
to use binoculars to see the star cluster well. Venus passes close by the
CDL Drivers
Pleiades cluster every eighth April.
The next such encounter will be in
Redi-Mix Concrete Dispatcher
April 2020. In April 2036, Venus will
pass over the center of the Pleiades
Moorefield Plant
cluster.
800-842-2807
The Pleiades cluster, or Seven
Sisters, is a young star cluster whose
stars formed about 50
million years ago. This
cluster lies at a distance
of about 400 light
years. In contrast,
Venus will then be 60
million miles away or
5.4 light minutes away.
The moon will
Saturday, April 7, 2012 • 1:00 p.m.
appear full on Friday
City Parking Lot in Petersburg
evening, April 6. This
will cause Easter to fall
212 John Deere 38" cut riding lawn mower (new battery)
on the next Sunday,
April 8. The rule for
1999 GMC 1 Ton Dump 454 engine with Snow Plow
Easter is: Wait till the
GEHL Power Box paver SS #100617339 Model 1448
first full moon on or after March 21
1987 Chev C70 10' Dump Bed (gas) good tires (65,445
and then Easter falls on the next Sunday. This means that the earliest
miles)
Easter can be is March 22, when
1987 Ford F250 3/4 Ton Pickup with camper top
there is a full moon on March 21.
1993 GMC Top Kick 10' Dump
The latest Easter occurs when
there is a full moon on March 20.
(2) light towers with Diesel engine with generator
Direct current welder on its own trailer 300 amp Diesel Motor Then there will be a wait of another
30 days for the next full moon, which
(6) rolls 1000' of Rope 9/16
can occur on April 20. If this is a
Monday, then the latest Easter will
Can be seen at parking lot anytime.
occur on April 25. So Easter this year
is in the middle of the range of possible Easter dates.
April 28 is National Astronomy
Day when astronomy clubs across the
U.S. have public telescope viewing
for the public. There will be telescopes set up in Frostburg University
Canaan Valley Institute is soliciting
for this event. This day is in late
spring on a Saturday when the moon
proposals from excavation contractors for a
is close to half full or first quarter,
stream restoration project to stabilize approx.
offering fine views of the moon’s
630 ft of stream bank using principles of
craters. Also viewed will be the planets Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Natural Stream Restoration on the Cacapon
The month opens with the moon
River near Wardensville in Hardy County, WV.
two-thirds full in the southwestern
Mandatory pre-submission meeting.
evening sky. On the evening of April
3, the moon appears underneath the
Submit proposals by April 9, 2012. For
yellow planet Mars. On April 6, the
complete RFP call 304-463-4739 x236 or
moon is full and close to the bright
download RFP at http://www.canaanvi.org/
star Spica of Virgo. Higher and to the
Note: Robert Doyle is a Professor of
right is the planet Saturn. High in the
and follow links from “About Us” to “RFPs”.
east is the sparkling orange star Astronomy at Frostburg University.
YARD SALE at Sharon Eye’s
HIRING
City Truck & Equipment Auction
REQUEST FOR
PROPOSALS
COMP-TEC LLC
PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, March 31st, 2012 • 9:00 a.m.
Cedar gun cabinet, desks, vanity, dressers, coffee tables and
stands, Pecan dining room set with hutch, CBs, VCR tapes, wall
pictures, tools, knife collection, Curio cabinet, vacuum pump,
recovery system, freon gauges, nice upright piano, chest of
drawers, file cabinets, floor lamps, guitars, drills, several TVs,
two generators-needs work, 2 dorm refrigerators, dust collectors
for wood shop, Sears doctors scales, old oak treadle sewing
machine, bookcases, electric water coolers, camel back trunk,
power saws, wine cooler, 40 metal folding chairs, vacuum
cleaners, wood kitchen table, baby crib, round oak coffee table,
electric 6" planer, 2 bench top grinders, electric wench for 4wheelers, different size pipe benders, Ridgid pipe stands, gas
bar-b-que, cast metal NASCAR collector cars, CB radios, 2
computers. Many more items too numerous to mention.
Moorefield Fire Co. Bingo Hall
Owner: Florence Turner
Inspection: Friday, March 30 after 3:30 p.m.
Auctioneer: Terry Buck Richardson WV#1817
Ronnie Crites
Computer Repair and Maintenance
304-530-3553
Email: comptec@hardynet.com
Opening:
PIPE FOREMAN
*Mt. Storm, WV
Call 724.452.8330 or
Apply at
www.mountaintop
team.com
EOE
EARLY DEADLINE NOTICE
The Moorefield Examiner offices will be
CLOSED on April 6 for Good Friday.
GORGEOUS WELL KEPT HOME!! Gorgeous New home,
immaculately well kept on 1.57- + acres. 3BR 2BA located in West View
Farms Subdivision 2 Car garage and front porch. Close to town but
private ! GREAT VIEWS! $179,900.00 GT7725684. Contact HD Coppe
304-257-3270.
BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY HOME! 5 acre home at 1767 Eston
Carr Rd. Well maintained 4BR 2BA ranch. Walk in closets, spacious rooms,
central air, heat pump, beautiful yard and garage. If you want country living,
this is your home !! GT7707449. $135,900.00 Contact Hunter Williams
304-257-3638.
BEAUTIFUL CABIN! If you have been searching for the perfect hunting,
getaway cabin then this is the place for you! Located in an extremely private area
with creek and fire pit. This is where you need to spend your summers for
years to come! It is even located near skiing and shopping. Don’t let this
opportunity pass you up!! $105,000.00 Call HD Coppe at 304-257-3270.
IMMACULATE CAPE COD! Well kept 4BR 2BA home on The
LOTS/LAND
Point. Cherry cabinets, hardwood floors, Jacuzzi. 1/1 acre lot landscaped
with two car garage and screened in back patio. One of a Kind ready for
you to move in home!! Contact Chuck Boggs at 304-668-5441.
SHOCKEY ROAD Old Fields, WV Ready for your development!! Perfect
for a Hunters cabin, getaway or Double wide. 0.99 acres. $10,000.00
Contact Hunter Williams 304-257-3638.
BEAUTIFUL LOTS! NEW LISTING! 2 adjoining lots in Potomac
Overlook Subdivision. With a total lot acreage of 236.55 this property
is the poster-child of Almost Heaven West Virginia. Looking for
peace, quiet and views for miles? You have found the perfect place.
Call Hunter Williams at 304-257-3638. $470,700.00. HD7787048
The deadline for the April 11th issue
of the Moorefield Examiner
will be Thursday, April 5th at noon.
All display advertising,
classified advertising,
legal advertising, articles, etc., must be in by
noon Thursday in order to appear in the
Examiner for that coming week.
ESTABLISHED 1845
MOOREFIELD EXAMINER
and Hardy County News
132 S. Main Street, Moorefield, WV 26836 • (304) 530-6397
Page 6B - MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS
FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2012 - JUNE 30, 2013
LEVY ESTIMATE - BUDGET DOCUMENT
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
MUNICIPALITY OF WARDENSVILLE, WET VIRGINIA
In accordance with Code §11-8-14, as amended, the Council proceeded to make an
estimate of the amounts necessary to be raised by a levy of taxes for the current fiscal year,
and does determine and estimate the several amounts to be as follows:
The amount due and the amount that will become due and collectible from every
source during the fiscal year INCLUDING THE LEVY OF TAXES, is as follows:
87.40 FEET TO A POINT; N 11 53 59 E,
153,97 FEET TO A POINT; THENCE N 22 46
35 E 130.00 FEET TO A POINT; THENCE 45
29 02 W, 106.49 FEET TO A POINT SET IN
THE CENTER OF A 30 FOOT RIGHT OF
WAY AND IN A LINE OF TRACT 14 OF
JOSEPH D. HEISKELL HEIRS; THENCE
WITH THE LINES OF AFORESAID TRACT
14 N 47 36 25 E, 157.83 FEET TO A POINT;
THENCE N 43 10 55 E, 80.57 FEET TO A
POINT AND A CORNER WITH TRACT 5 OF
BIG OAKS; THENCE WITH THE LINES OF
AFORESAID TRACT S 5 5 (also referred to
as 5 S S) 19 16 44 E, 41.08 FEET TO A 1/2
REBAR; THENCE S 22 43 49 E 143.87 FEET
TO A 1/2 REBAR; THENCE S 36 00 38 E,
647.83 FEET TO A 1/2 REBAR SET AT A
CORNER WITH TRACT 6 S 52 54 03 W,
370.63 FEET TO THE BEGINNING, AND
CONTAINING 5.100 ACRES, MORE OR
LESS.
ADDRESS: 125 BIG OAK DR.; MOOREFIELD, WV 26836 TAX MAP OR PARCEL ID
NO.: MAP 265 PARCEL 28
At the time of the execution of the Deed
of Trust, this property was reported to have
an address of: 125 Big Oak Dr., Moorefield,
WV 26836.
The referenced real estate will be conveyed with no covenants of warranty, and
subject to all covenants, restrictions, easements, rights of way and reservations which
may be a matter of record in the aforesaid
Clerk’s office or visible upon the ground, all
prior liens and encumbrances, including,
without limitation, liens for real estate taxes,
incinerator, sanitary and sewer charges. The
purchasers at the sale shall be responsible
for paying the recording costs and also the
tax on the privilege of transferring real property (the cost of the tax stamp to be affixed
to the deed). The purchasers shall be
responsible for payment of all real estate
taxes.
The subject property will be sold in AS
IS condition. The Substitute Trustee shall be
under no duty to cause any existing tenant
or person occupying the subject property to
vacate said property.
TERMS: $10,000.00 in cash and/or certified funds as deposit with the balance due
and payable within 30 days of the day of
sale.
FEDERAL TAX LIEN: In the event that
there are Federal Tax Liens against the property, the United States would have the right
to redeem the property within a period of
120 days fro the date of such sale or the
period allowable for redemption under local
law, whichever is longer.
Pursuant to the Deed of Trust, the
Trustee may postpone the sale by public
announcement at the time and place designated or by posting a notice of the same,
and act by agent in the execution of the
sale. The parties secured by the Deed of
Trust reserve the right to purchase the property at such sale.
SENECA TRUSTEES, INC.
6108 Mid Atlantic Drive
Morgantown, WV 26508
(304) 413-0044
(304) 292-2918
Toll free (888) 534-3132
Reference File No. 20-028257-11
3/21, 3/28 2c
———————————————
NOTICE OF CONTINUED
EXTRA-CURRICULAR SERVICE
PERSONNEL JOB POSTINGS
Which is subject to the preference
established by law and the testing required
by law and the State Board of Education
regulations. All applicants should meet state
and federal qualified standards.
Camp Echo, Petersburg, WV
XS12-001-002
Bus Operators – (2) Positions
Ashby Street, Moorefield, West Virginia
26836 or call 304-530-2348 or to the United
States Department of Education’s Director
of Civil Rights by calling 215-656-8541.
3/28 1c
—————————————————
property (the cost of the tax stamp to be
affixed to the deed). The purchasers shall
be responsible for payment of all real estate
taxes.
The subject property will be sold in AS
IS condition. The Substitute Trustee shall
be under no duty to cause any existing tenant or person occupying the subject property to vacate said property.
TERMS: $25,000.00 in cash and/or
certified funds as deposit with the balance
due and payable within 30 days of the day
of sale.
If the sale is set aside for any reason, the
Purchaser at the sale shall be entitled only
to a return of the deposit paid. The Purchaser shall have no further recourse
against the Mortgagor, the Mortgagee or the
Mortgagee’s attorney.
FEDERAL TAX LIEN: In the event that
there are Federal Tax Liens against the property, the United States would have the right
to redeem the property within a period of
120 days from the date of such sale or the
period allowable for redemption under local
law, whichever is longer.
Pursuant to the Deed of Trust, the
Trustee may postpone the sale by public
announcement at the time and place designated or by posting a notice of the same,
and act by agent in the execution of the
sale. The parties secured by the Deed of
Trust reserve the right to purchase the property at such sale.
SENECA TRUSTEES, INC.
6108 Mid Atlantic Drive
Morgantown, WV 26508
(304) 413-0044
(304) 292-2918
Toll free: (888) 534-3132
Reference File No. 42-002013-12
3/28, 4/4 2c
————————————————
REVENUE SOURCE
Unassigned Fund Balance
Property Taxes - Current Expense (Linked to Rate & Levy Tab)
Gas & Oil Severance Tax
Excise Tax on Utilities
Business and Occupation Tax
Wine and Liquor Tax
Animal Control Tax
Hotel Occupancy Tax
Fines, Fees and Court Costs
Licenses
Building Permit Fees
Miscellaneous Permits
IRP Fees (Interstate Registration Plan)
Private Liquor Club Fee
Rents and Concessions
Federal Governments Grants
Gaming Income
Video Lottery
TOTAL ESTIMATED REVENUE (GENERAL FUND)
$ 5,145
39,394
200
22,000
45,500
9,000
100
850
44,879
7,100
600
1,000
625
100
6,600
20,543
20,500
675
$ 224,811
COAL SEVERANCE TAX FUND
REVENUE SOURCE
Coal Severance Tax
TOTAL ESTIMATED REVENUE (COAL SEVERANCE FUND)
ESTIMATED CURRENT EXPENDITURES
$ 800
$ 800
GENERAL FUND
Mayor’s Office
City Council
Recorder’s Office
Police Judge’s Office
City Attorney
Regional Development Authority
Planning & Zoning
City Hall
Contingencies
Police Department
COPS Grants
Street and Highways
Street Lights
Visitor’s Bureau
Travel Council
TOTAL ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES
$ 5,167
3,230
5,167
6,459
1,500
123
350
70,175
1,000
95,764
20,543
5,750
6,000
3,158
425
$ 224,811
COAL SEV.
FUND
800
$ 800
MUNICIPALITY OF WARDENSVILLE, WEST VIRGINIA
FISCAL YEAR JULY 1, 2012 - JUNE 30,2013
Regular Current Expense Levy
Column E
Certificate of Valuation
Levy
Rate/$100
Taxes
Levied
Class II
Real Estate
Personal Property
Total Class II
$ 5,393,970
2,724
$ 5,396,694
25.000
$ 13,485
7
$ 13,492
Class IV
Real Estate
Personal Property
Public Utilities
Total Class IV
$ 3,640,710
1,225,209
1,053,619
$ 5,919,538
50.000
$ 18,204
6,126
5,268
$ 29,598
Total Value & Projected Revenue
$ 11,316,232
Less Delinquencies, Exonerations & Uncollectable Taxes
5.00%
Less Tax Discounts (use Total Projected Revenue to calculate) 2.00%
Total Projected Property Tax Collection
$ 43,090
2,155
819
40,116
Less Assessor Valuation Fund
1.80%
(Subtracted from regular current expense taxes levied only)
Net Amount to be Raised by Levy of Property Taxes
722
39,394
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA,
COUNTY OF HARDY
MUNICIPALITY OF WARDENSVILLE
I, John H. Sayers, Recording Officer of said municipality, do hereby certify that foregoing are true copies from the record of the orders made and entered by said municipality on the 12th day of March, 2012.
John H. Sayers, Recorder
3/21, 3/28 2c
_______________________________________________________________________
NOTICE TO VOTERS
TOWN OF WARDENSVILLE
2012 MUNICIPAL ELECTION
The regular Town General Election will
be held at the Wardensville Visitors and
Conference Center, 301 West Main Street,
Wardensville, W.Va., on Tuesday, June 12,
2012, at which time a mayor, a recorder, and
five members of council will be elected to
serve for a two-year term from July 1, 2012
to June 30, 2014.
Ballot Candidates: Candidates who
have filed for office by the Feb. 16 deadline
and who will appear on the ballot are as follows:
• For Mayor (one seat): Tracey S.
(Scotty) Miller and David Twedt
• For Recorder (one seat): John H.
Sayers
• For Council (five seats): Greg Alderman, Michael Funkhouser, Grace Garrett,
Karen Pappas and Chester Tharp
Write-in Candidates: Per W.Va. State
Code, any eligible candidate who seeks to
be elected by write-in votes to an office on
the June 12 municipal election must file a
Write-In
Candidate’s
Certificate
of
Announcement at the Town Hall prior to 4
p.m. on Tue., May 22. Write-in votes for candidates who fail to file this form will not be
counted. The forms on which to file may be
obtained by writing to the Recorder, Town of
Wardensville, PO Box 7, Wardensville WV
26851, or by appearing in person at Wardensville Town Hall, 25 Warrior Way, Wardensville, during business hours: Monday
through Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., phone 8743950. No filing fees are required.
Absentee and Early Voting: Applications for absentee ballots are now being
accepted in the office of the Recorder, Town
Hall, 25 Warrior Way, Wardensville W.Va.
Any person who is going to be absent from
the town, county, state, or the United States
on Town election day, Tuesday, June 12,
and who is duly registered to vote in this
Town, can now apply by mail or telephone
to the office of the Recorder, and receive an
application for an absentee ballot. Requests
will be accepted through Friday, June 8.
Absentee and early voting in person in the
office of the Recorder will be conducted
beginning May 23, and continue through
Saturday, June 9, at noon. You may obtain
more information about absentee or early
voting by calling the Wardensville Town Hall
at 874-3950. Regular office hours are Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. 4 p.m. Extended
hours will be held Saturday, June 2 and Saturday, June 9, from 9 a.m. until noon.
Voter Registration: All residents of the
Town of Wardensville interested in voting in
the June 12 municipal election must be duly
registered and qualified voters. To register to
vote, contact the Hardy County Clerk’s
office in the Courthouse in Moorefield at
530-0250. Deadline to register for the
2012 Wardensville Town Election is
Tuesday, May 22, 2012. PLEASE EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT TO VOTE!
John H. Sayers, Recorder
Town of Wardensville, W.Va.
3/21, 3/28 2c
———————————————
WEST VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORTATION
Division of Highways
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Bids will be received electronically by
the West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways through the Bid
Express Bidding Service (www.bidx.com)
and by the sealed proposals (only when
prequalification is waived) being received at
its office in Building 5, Room A-748, 1900
Kanawha Boulevard East, Charleston, West
Virginia until April 03, 2012 at 10:00
A.M.(Eastern Standard Time). The bids will
be downloaded and/or opened and publically thereafter for the construction of the following project (s):
—————————
Call: 017
Contract: 1130513
State Project: S316-0029/00-000.00 00
Federal Project:
Description:
RESURFACING
SPERRY’S RUN ROAD
JCT OF CR 55/20 - 0.84 MILES NORTH
OF CR 3/1
COUNTY: HARDY
—————————
Proposals will be received from prequalified and West Virginia licensed contractors
only except that on Federal-Aid Projects a
contractors’ license is not required at time of
bid, but will be required before work can
begin. Registration is required with the
HARDY COUNTY SCHOOLS
510 Ashby Street
Moorefield, WV 26836
Phone: 304-530-2348
NOTICE OF CONTINUED SERVICE
PERSONNEL JOB POSTING
Which is subject to the preference
established by law and the testing required
by law and the State Board of Education
regulations. All applicants should meet
state and federal qualified standards.
Hardy County Schools
SS11-001-006
Substitute Bus Operators – Countywide
Hardy County Schools
XS11-001-012
Extra-Curricular Bus Run – South
Branch Career and Technical Center
NOTICE OF CONTINUED
PROFESSIONAL EDUCATOR
JOB POSTINGS
Countywide
P12-001-009
Speech/Language Pathologist, Grades
PK-12
East Hardy High School
P12-501-010
School Librarian/Media
Grades 9-12
Specialist,
East Hardy High School
P12-501-007
Biological Science, Physical Science,
and General Science Teacher, Grades 9-12
Hardy County Schools
PS12-001-001
Substitute Teachers
NOTICE OF CONTINUED
ATHLETIC JOB POSTINGS
The following positions do not require or
include a regular employment position;
however, preference is given to those individuals with a professional educator’s certification. All applicants should meet state
and federal highly qualified standards.
Applicants are required to have a regular
teacher certification or certification through
WVSSAC.
East Hardy High School
A12-501-001
Athletic Trainer
Moorefield High School
A12-502-002
Athletic Trainer
More information regarding these Job
Postings can be found at:
www.hardycountyschools.com or on
the Job Line at (304) 530-2348, Ext. 777.
Reference and background checks are
required on all newly hired personnel. It is
the responsibility of the applicant to see that
all applications/bid sheets are received in
the Associate Superintendent’s Office within
the posting period noted.
Personnel interested in applying for the
above positions must notify the Personnel
Office by submitting an application by
Thursday, March 292012 by 4:00 p.m. The
above positions will be posted for a period
of at least 6 working days beginning Thursday, March 22, 2012. These positions will
remain open until a certified applicant is
chosen for recommendation or the position
is no longer posted as a vacancy. Job
Descriptions are available upon request at
the School Board Office and in each school.
Applicants should contact the Personnel
Office at 510 Ashby Street, Moorefield, West
Virginia 26836 or call (304) 530-2348, Ext.
222 or Ext. 236.
DISCRIMINATION PROHIBITED: As
required by federal and state laws and regulations, the Hardy County Board of Education does not discriminate on the basis of
sex, race, color, religion, disability, age, marital status, or national origin in employment,
or in its educational programs and activities.
Inquiries may be referred to the Title IX
Coordinator, or Section 504 Coordinator,
Hardy County Board of Education, 510
TRUSTEE’S SALE OF
VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
The undersigned Substitute Trustee, by
virtue of the authority vested in him by that
certain Deed of Trust, dated the 31st day of
October, 2007, and duly recorded in the
Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Trust
Deed Book 235, at page 149, Helen L. Mongold and Paul Mongold did convey unto
Richard (Rick) A. Pill, Trustee(s), certain real
property described in said Deed of Trust;
and the beneficiary has elected to appoint
Seneca Trustees, Inc., as Substitute Trustee
by a Substitution of Trustee dated February
7, 2012 and recorded in the aforesaid
Clerk’s office; and default having been
made under the aforementioned Deed of
Trust, and the undersigned Substitute
Trustee having been instructed by Bank of
America, N.A., successor by merger to BAC
Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide
Home Loans Servicing LP to foreclose
thereunder, will offer for sale at public auction at the front door of the Hardy County
Courthouse in Moorefield, West Virginia, on
April 12, 2012 at 12:30 o’clock pm
the following described real estate,
together with its improvements, easements
and appurtenances thereunto belonging,
situate in Moorefield District, Hardy County,
West Virginia, and more particularly
described as follows:
A CERTAIN TRACT OR PARCEL OF
REAL ESTATE, CONTAINING 8.48 ACRES,
MORE OR LESS, SITUATE ON COUNTY
ROAD #8 APPROXIMATELY 3 ? MILES
NORTH OF STATE ROUTE 55, IN MOOREFIELD DISTRICT, HARDY COUNTY, WEST
VIRGINIA, DESCRIBED BY COURSES AND
DISTANCES AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT AN IRON PIPE SET ON
SOUTH EAST SIDE OF COUNTY ROAD #8,
BEING ON AN ORIGINAL LINE AND LINE
OF CLYDE FRIDDLE, THENCE LEAVING
SAID ROAD AND WITH FRIDDLE FOR TWO
CALLS S 48° 11’ 10 E PASSING AN ORIGINAL CENTERLINE TREE AT 54.60 FEET
CONTINUING IN ALL 518.46 FEET TO A
STONE PILE FOUND WITH 2 GUMS AND 2
WHITE OAKS FOUND MARKED AS POINTERS, THENCE NEAR A FENCE LINE S 31°
20’ 10 W 589.54 FEET TO AN IRON PIPE
SET BY A 8 INCH CHESTNUT OAK AN
ORIGINAL LINE, A FENCE LINE AND LINE
OF CLYDE FRIDDLE, SAID PIPE BEING A
DIVISION CORNER TO PAUL BEAN,
THENCE LEAVING SAID FRIDDLE AND
WITH DIVISION LINES OF BEAN N 46° 13’
20 W 767.86 FEET TO A 14 WHITE OAK
ON THE SOUTH EAST SIDE OF COUNTY
ROAD #8, THENCE WITH SAID SOUTH
EAST SIDE OF COUNTY ROAD #8 N 53°
40’ 50 229.90 FEET TO AN IRON PIPE SET,
THENCE N 54° 13’ 10 E 215.16 FEET TO
A METAL FENCE POST BAR SET, THENCE
N 54° 13’ 10 E 215.16 FEET TO A METAL
FENCE POST BAR SET, THENCE N 64° 00’
20 E 127.73 FEET TO THE BEGINNING,
CONTAINING 8.48 ACRES, MORE OR
LESS.
At the time of the execution of the Deed
of Trust, this property was reported to have
an address of: 3562 Needmore Rd., Baker,
WV 26801.
The referenced real estate will be conveyed with no covenants of warranty, and
subject to all covenants, restrictions, easements, rights of way and reservations which
may be a matter of record in the aforesaid
Clerk’s Office or visible upon the ground, all
prior liens and encumbrances, including,
without limitation, liens for real estate taxes,
incinerator, sanitary and sewer charges.
The purchasers at the sale shall be responsible for paying the recording costs and also
the tax on the privilege of transferring real
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS –
WORKERS COMPENSATION
INSURANCE
The Potomac Valley Transit Authority
(PVTA) is requesting proposals from parties
interested in supplying Workers Compensation Insurance for the Authority for the
period July 1, 2012 to July 1, 2013, with
renewal options for two additional years of
coverage. Specifications may be obtained
by contacting PVTA at 185 Providence
Lane, Grant County Industrial Park, Petersburg, WV 26847 or calling (304) 257-1414.
Disadvantaged Business Enterprises and
Women’s Business Enterprises are encouraged to submit proposals. All proposals
must be received at the PVTA office by 2:00
p.m., June 6, 2012.
3/28, 4/4 2c
————————————————
NOTICE OF HARDY COUNTY
COMMISSION MEETING
The public and news media are hereby
notified that the Hardy County Commission
will hold a meeting in Room 101 at the
Hardy County Courthouse, 204 Washington
Street, Moorefield, WV on Tuesday, APRIL 3,
2012 at 9:00 A.M.
The County Commission meeting will
be open to all members of the public. A quorum of the County Commission is scheduled to meet and make decisions and take
official action on matters scheduled on the
meeting agenda.
Any person desiring to address the
County Commission should contact the
County Clerk’s Office at the telephone number and/or address below.
A copy of the meeting agenda is available, in advance, to any member of the public and/or news media at the Hardy County
Clerk’s Office, Room 111, 204 Washington
Street, Moorefield, WV 26836 or by contacting the Hardy County Clerk’s Office at telephone number 304-530-0250 or facsimile
number 304-530-0251.
3/28 1c
————————————————-
HARDY County Commission Levy Estimate (Budget)
2012–2013 Fiscal Year
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
County of: HARDY, West Virginia
HARDY COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA
LEVY PAGE
REGULAR CURRENT EXPENSE LEVY
2012–2013
Department of Administration, Division of
Purchasing, in accordance with Chapter 5A,
Article 3, Section 12 of the West Virginia
Code. All contractors submitting bids on
project (s) must include one of the following
forms properly executed with each proposal: Proposal Guaranty Bond, Cashier’s
Check, or Certified Check for $500.00 or 5%
of total bid, whichever is greater.
*These are projects on which any contractor with a Category W Prequalification
Rating may be eligible to bid.
The West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways reserves the
right to defer, delay or postpone the date for
receiving and publicly opening proposals
for any project designated in this advertisement, without the necessity of renewing
such advertisement. All bidders holding
valid bidding proposals will be notified of
such deferment, delay or postponement
and the date that proposals will be received
and publicly opened.
The West Virginia Department of Transportation, Division of Highways hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure
that in any contract entered into pursuant to
this advertisementminority business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to
submit bids in response to this invitation
and will not be discriminated against on the
grounds of race, color, religion, sex or
national origin in consideration for an
award.
WEST VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION, Division of Highways,
Robert L. Pennington, P.E., Director of Program Planning and Administration.
3/21, 3/28 2c
———————————————
In accordance with WV Code §11-8-10, as amended, the HARDY County Commission
proceeded to make an estimate of the amounts necessary to be raised by a levy of texes
for the current year, and doth determine and estimate the several amounts to be as follows:
Column E
Certificate of Valuation
Levy
Taxes
Current Year
Assessed Value for Tax Purposes Rate/$100
Levied
Class I
Personal Property ........................$___________________ 14.30 $__________________
Public Utility.................................. ____________________
___________________
Total Class I .......................................$___________________
$__________________
REQUEST FOR
INSURANCE PROPOSALS
The Potomac Valley Transit Authority
(PVTA) is requesting proposals from parties
interested
in
supplying
vehicle,
commercial general liability, commercial
property, and other insurance as specified
for the period July 1, 2012 to July 1, 2013
with renewal options for two additional years
of coverage.
Specifications may be
obtained by contacting PVTA at 185 Providence Lane, Grant County Industrial Park,
Petersburg, WV 26847 or calling (304) 2571414. Disadvantaged Business Enterprises
and Women’s Business Enterprises are
encouraged to submit proposals. All proposals must be received at the PVTA Office
by 2:00 p.m., June 6, 2012.
3/21, 3/28 2c
————————————————
Coal
Severance Tax
Fund
TRUSTEE’S SALE OF
VALUABLE REAL ESTATE
The undersigned Substitute Trustee, by
virtue of the authority vested in him by that
certain Deed of Trust, dated the 20th day of
September, 2007, and duly recorded in the
Office of the Clerk of the County Commission of Hardy County, West Virginia, in Trust
Deed Book 234, at page 174, George
Compton Jr. did convey unto Trevor T. Hyre,
Trustee(s), certain real property described in
said Deed of Trust; and the beneficiary has
elected to appoint Seneca Trustees, Inc., as
Substitute Trustee by a Substitution of
Trustee dated February 29, 2012 and
recorded in the aforesaid Clerk’s office; and
default having been made under the aforementioned Deed of Trust, and the undersigned Substitute Trustee having been
instructed by Wells Fargo Financial West
Virginia, Inc. to foreclose thereunder, will
offer for sale at public auction at the front
door of the Hardy County Courthouse in
Moorefield, West Virginia, on
April 5,2012 at 12:30 o’clock pm
the following described real estate,
together with its improvements, easements
and appurtenances thereunto belonging,
situate in Moorefield District, Hardy County,
West Virginia, and more particularly
described as follows:
ALL THAT CERTAIN LOT OR PARCEL
OF REAL ESTATE CONTAINING 5.10
ACRES, MORE OR LESS, AND DESIGNATED AS TRACT NO. 10 OF BIG OAKS
SUBDIVISION, LYING AND BEING SITUATE
NEAR CUNNINGHAM LANE, IN MOOREFIELD DISTRICT, HARDY COUNTY, WEST
VIRGINIA, AND BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED BY METES AND
BOUNDS SURVEYED DESCRIPTION
THEREOF AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT A POINT SET AT A
CORNER WITH TRACT 6 AND IN LINE OF
TRACT 7 OF BIG OAKS; THENCE WITH
THE LINES OF AFORESAID TRACT 7 N 31
03 36 W, 148.34 FEET TO A POINT;
THENCE N 43 57 19 W, 123.70 FEET TO A
POINT; THENCE N 28 30 19 W, 116.45
FEET TO A POINT; THENCE N 05 00 50 W,
Estimated
General Fund
Revenues
Fund Balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$ 908,476
Property Taxes Current year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3,226,606
Prior Year Taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .115,000
Tax Penalties, Interest & Publication Fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40,000
Property Transfer Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25,000
Gas and Oil Severance Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., 100
Wine & Liquor Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,500
Hotel Occupancy Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5,000
Miscellaneous Permits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7,500
Federal Payment in Lieu of Taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70,000
Sheriff’s Service of Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2,000
County Clerk’s Earnings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25,000
Circuit Clerk’s Earnings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15,000
Accident Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., 400
Rents & Concessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5,000
Franchise Agreement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2,000
IRP Fees (Interstate Registration Plan) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,000
Fines, Fees & Court Costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5,000
Regional Jail Operations Partial Reimbursement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,000
Interest Earned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5,000
Miscellaneous Revenue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., 500
Sheriff’s Commission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,000
Commissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,000
Gaming Income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55,000
Video Lottery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,000
Planning Commission Revenue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,200
General School Reimbursements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .100,000
Total Estimated General Fund Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,656,282
Class II
Real Estate....................................$ ..............428,858,360
Personal Property......................... ....................2,229,448
Total Class II ......................................$ ..............431,087,808
28.60 $.................1,226,535
..........................6,376
$.................1,232,911
Class III
Real Estate....................................$ ................90,080,290
Personal Property......................... ..................59,274,128
Public Utility .................................. ................154,267,716
Total Class III......................................$ ..............303,622,134
57.20 $ ...................515,259
.....................339,048
.....................882,411
$ ................1,736,719
Class IV
Real Estate....................................$ ................49,345,410
Personal Property......................... ..................42,670,756
Public Utility .................................. ....................5,823,028
Total Class IV .....................................$ ................97,839,194
57.20 $ ...................282,256
.....................244,077
.......................33,308
$ ...................559,640
Total Value & Projected Revenue$ ...........832,549,136
$ .............3,529,270
Less Delinquencies, Exonerations & Uncollectable Taxes
5.00%
176,463
Less Tax Discounts
2.00%
67,056
Less Allowance for Tax Increment Financing - see worksheet
(Subtracted from regular current expense taxes levied only)
Total Projected Property Tax Collection
Estimated
Coal Severance Tax
Revenues
Assigned Fund Balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,500
Coal Severance Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36,000
Total Coal Severance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$59,500
General
Fund
ESTIMATED EXPENDITURES
GENERAL GOVERNMENT
County Commission.............................................$1,030,134.........................................$ County Clerk ..............................................................340,928 ....................................9,000
Circuit Clerk ...............................................................148,355 ....................................4,700
Sheriff - Treasurer ......................................................233,243 ............................................Prosecuting Attorney.................................................223,012 ...................................1,200
Assessor.....................................................................257,278 ............................................Assessor’s Valuation Fund ................................................... - ...........................................Statewide Computer Network.....................................25,373 ............................................Agricultural Agent ......................................................110,317 ............................................Elections - County Clerk ...........................................187,633 ............................................Circuit Court ...................................................................7,000 ............................................County Administrator...................................................40,767 ............................................Custodial ......................................................................58,321 ............................................Courthouse ................................................................318,730 ....................................6,126
Other Buildings ............................................................32,400 ............................................Microfilm.......................................................................21,706 ....................................2,160
Regional Development Authority..................................5,605 ............................................Planning & Zoning.....................................................102,080 ....................................2,430
State Grants .................................................................63,348 ............................................Contributions to Comms/Authorities ..........................60,000 ............................................-
Less Assessor Valuation Fund
(Subtracted from regular current expense taxes levied only)
3,285,750
1.80%
Net Amount to be Raised by Levy of Property Taxes
For Budget Purposes (Transfer amount to
Worksheet GCRev - Account No. 301-01)
59,144
$ 3,226,607
HARDY COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA
ALLOWANCE FOR TAX INCREMENT FINANCING
REGULAR CURRENT EXPENSE LEVY
2012–2013
Column C
Roll Back
Levy
Taxes
Current Year
Value Form
Rate/$100
Levied
Class I
Personal Property ........................$___________________ 14.30 $__________________
Public Utility.................................. ____________________
___________________
Total Class I .......................................$___________________
$__________________
Class II
Real Estate ...................................$___________________ 28.60 $__________________
Personal Property ........................ ____________________
___________________
Total Class II ......................................$___________________
$__________________
Class III ..............................................
Real Estate ...................................$___________________ 57.20 $__________________
Personal Property ........................ ____________________
___________________
Public Utility.................................. ____________________
___________________
Total Class III .....................................$___________________
$__________________
TOTAL GENERAL GOVERNMENT ......................3,266,230 ..................................25,616
PUBLIC SAFETY ...................................................................- ...........................................Sheriff - Law Enforcement.........................................479,845 ............................................Sheriff - Service of Process.........................................27,980 ............................................Regional Jail...............................................................420,000 ............................................Civil Defense ..................................................................3,522 ............................................Emergency Services ...................................................72,374 ............................................Fire Department .................................................................... - .................................24,884
Ambulance Authority ............................................................ - ....................................9,000
Flood Control .................................................................9,200 ............................................Rapid Response ............................................................8,380 ............................................TOTAL PUBLIC SAFETY ..................................... 1,021,301..................................33,884
HEALTH AND SANITATION ................................................. - ...........................................Local Health Department ............................................65,000 ............................................Recycling Center ...........................................................5,000 ............................................TOTAL HEALTH & SANITATION .............................. 70,000 ............................................-
Class IV .............................................
Real Estate ...................................$___________________ 57.20 $__________________
Personal Property ........................, ___________________
___________________
Public Utility.................................., ___________________
___________________
Total Class IV.....................................$___________________
$__________________
Total Value & Projected Revenue __________________$ (Gross) $ _________________
Less Delinquencies, Exonerations & Uncollectable Taxes 5.00% ___________________
Less Tax Discounts
2.00% ___________________
Allowance For Tax Increment Financing
(Use this amount above for Tax Increment Financing)
3/28, 4/4 2c
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CULTURE AND RECREATION ............................................ - ...........................................Parks & Recreation....................................................159,770 ............................................Visitor’s Bureau..............................................................5,000 ............................................Travel Council......................................................................., - ...........................................Beautification................................................................33,226 ............................................Rails to Trails ......................................................................... - ...........................................Hotel/Motel Promotion of Tourism...............................5,000 ............................................Library...........................................................................83,755 ............................................-
Great
Deals!
TOTAL CULTURE & RECREATION ....................... 286,751 ............................................SOCIAL SERVICES .............................................................. - ...........................................Social Services...............................................................5,000 ............................................Human Resources ..............................................................., - ...........................................Senior Citizens...............................................................2,000 ............................................Public Transit..................................................................5,000 ............................................TOTAL SOCIAL SERVICES ...................................... 12,000 ............................................CAPITAL PROJECTS ........................................................... - ...........................................TOTAL CAPITAL OUTLAY ................................................... - ...........................................Total Expenditures.......................................$ 4,656,282 ..........................$ 59,500
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
HARDY COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA, WEST VIRGINIA
I, Gregory Ely, CLERK OF THE COUNTY COMMISSION OF SAID COUNTY, DO HEREBY
CERTIFY THAT THE FOREGOING ARE TRUE COPIES FROM THE RECORD OF ORDERS
MADE AND ENTERED BY SAID COMMSSION ON THE 20th DAY OF MARCH 2012.
Gregory Ely
Great News
Coverage!
MOOREFIELD EXAMINER
www.MoorefieldExaminer.com
MOOREFIELD (WV) EXAMINER, Wednesday, March 28, 2012 - Page 7B
CLASS A All-State
Continued from page 2B
Anthony Aviles, Gilmer County;
Kennedy Cain, Paden City; Cal Cistaro, Notre Dame; Andrew Cosper,
St. Marys; Austin Cunningham,
Gilmer County; Sidney Crist, Midland Trail; David Delawder, Paw
Paw; Casey Deskins, Midland Trail;
Case Edgar, Williamstown; Drazen
Frankovitch, Madonna; David
Godwin, Charleston Catholic;
Justin Goff, Notre Dame;
Nathaniel Goldstein, Tucker
County; Ryan Hughes, Cameron;
Honorable Mention
Jerid Jento, Trinity; Logan Kirby,
Corey Aichele, Doddridge South Harrison; Brandon Mathis,
County; Nick Alvaro, Notre Dame; Fayetteville; Michael Mayes, HuntAlex
Armentrout,
Harman; ington St. Joe; Spencer McPherson,
Michael Badgley, Williamstown,
Sr., 18.0 ppg, 7.0 apg
Haston Gerencir, Charleston
Catholic, Sr., 13.4 ppg
Dillon
Kelly,
Pocahontas
County, Sr., 18.0 ppg, 4.6 rpg
Jonathan Stokes, W.Va. School
for the Deaf, 27.6 ppg
Seth Hainer, Man, Sr., 16.5 ppg
Zach Chisler, Clay-Battelle, So.,
11.9 ppg
Richwood; Jamie Miller, East Hardy;
Tyler Mongold, East Hardy; Keith
Mullen, Greater Beckley Christian;
J.T. Nemeth, Wirth County; Ian
Nichols, Tucker County; Braxton
Nolte, Wheeling Central; Brandon
Pritt, Tygarts Valley; Aalex Redden,
Meadow Bridge; Jarrett Roush,
Clay-Battelle; Jed Sheets, Pocahontas County; Corey Simmons,
Pendleton County; Tyler Tabit,
Fayetteville; Clay Ueltschy, Valley
Wetzel; Mark Walker, Cameron;
Brett Wright, Parkersburg Catholic;
Garrett Yurisko, Bishop Donahue
January and February CEOS Report
Submitted by
Barbara J. Potter, County
Reporter
ARKANSAW CEOS
Beatrice Bennett, Reporter
Four members attended the
meeting held on February 7 at the
Community Center. Minutes and
roll call were read by our secretary
Deloris Link and the treasurer
Catherine Smith read her report. A
motion was approved to send a
donation to the scholarship fund at
East Hardy High School.
Catherine Smith led the lesson
Connecting with Others Using the
Five Love Languages. She stressed
to improve connections with others
is to learn to love and appreciate
others in such a way that they can
receive it. Good tools were to call
someone and praise them for something they did for you, compliment
someone for gifts; a symbol of caring. Acts of service is another way
to touch someone or send a card or
do an act of service to someone.
Giving a person a hug or just touching them shows that you care. She
shared some Hersheys Kisses with
members in keeping with Valentine’s day, a day of love and keeping
in touch with one another.
Deloris Link gave a reading
called “Where Did the Pills Go?”
A bit of humor and also truth! Beatrice Bennett read the devotion entitled “Realistic Expectations” taken
from Christ in the Home.
BAKER CEOS
Jean Erber, Reporter
The February meeting was
delayed due to bad weather but we
were finally able to meet on February 22 when eight members enjoyed
the hospitality of the Lost River
Grill.
Crystal Barney read a devotional. Pink Elephant was brought
by Reva and won by Crystal. News
of absent members was exchanged
as well as plans for trips. The next
meeting will be at the home of
Shirley Teets on March 21.
DURGON CEOS
Lyn Wilsonfrowine, Reporter
Helen Mathias was our hostess
at her home for the January 9 meeting with Margaret Pack serving as
co-hostess.
Betty Williams gave devotions
with the theme of “Being Thankful
- even for Velcro.” Minutes were
read by Ruth Ann Johnson and Jo
Oliver gave the treasurers report.
Carolyn Burge reported no cards
were sent in December. The following requests for cards were made:
Kathy King for Jonie Wolfe who is
ill, Cindy Allen for her step-mom
who had a stroke and Fran Welton
for Diane Kaufman who underwent
a total mastectomy.
Susan Garrett encouraged
everyone to read and members
were told Family Life Committee
needs a chairman. Becky Parkins
volunteered for the assignment.
Mary Harper was recognized for
continuing to do the Christmas Program. Our Health Motivation
Chair, Fran Welton, passed out
cards with helpful information for
women in abusive situations.
Discussion was held on service
workshops for March and Christmas. Receiving blankets for the
hospital nursery will be made in
March and lap robes at the Christmas workshop. It was reported that
Grant Memorial Hospital needs
two new infant car seats for maternity. Carolyn Burge moved, and
Barbara Markwood seconded, the
club spend up to $150.00 for purchase of the two seats. The motion
carried.
Our new member, Cheryl
Downing, was introduced and we
were informed Mary Katherine
needs help on Monday and
Wednesdays at noon at the middle
school. Our next meeting will be
February 13 at the home of Fran
Welton.
GREEN VALLEY CEOS
Mary Umstead, Reporter
Six members met at the home of
Theda Baker for the January 10
meeting. She served a tasty supper.
Naomi gave devotions using a “Seasons” theme and gave each
attendee a bag of candy. During
the business session Theda
reported on Miriam’s reception.
Theda’s lesson on “Living Your
Bucket List” was most interesting.
She presented each of us a bucket
with post-it notes and candy inside.
A piece of advice was on each postit note.
OLD FIELDS CEOS
Jo Fasig, Reporter
The club met January 9 at the
Moorefield Church of the Brethren
with 12 members present. Jo Fasig
opened the meeting with devotions
taken from Dr. Charles Stanley’s
book, “ I Lift Up My Soul,” followed by prayer.
Alice Eye, Treasurer, gave her
report and passed around her estimated budget for the year. All were
approved. The minutes of the previous meeting were read and
approved. Joan Hott, Sunshine
Chairman, presented her report
regarding funds and read the list of
cards she sent. The President gave
each member a copy of the 2012
membership roster and a list of
members’ birthdays.
Joan Hott reported 136 pounds
of food were given to the MAC
House by our club in November. It
was decided to give in November
again this year.
The President said as next
month is Valentine’s month, everyone should wear something red at
our next meeting.
President Geraldine thanked
the club for her Christmas gift and
also stated she appreciated the hard
work that Alice Eye and Joan Hott
had done for the club.
Alice Eye and Elda Painter were
our birthday girls for the month.
The “Happy Birthday” song was
sung to them. They each received a
box of candy.
February Report
On February 13 nine club members and one guest met at the
Moorefield Church of the
Brethren. Our guest was Helen
Redman’s daughter. Kathy Simmons opened the meeting with
prayer and a reading from “Then
Sings My Soul” which was a short
item on Susan and Anna Warner.
Anna was the author of the hymn
“Jesus Loves Me.”
Sunshine Chairman Joan Hott
gave her report on fund balance
and names of those sent cards during the month. She requested those
present give her names of people to
whom cards were to be sent. Our
birthday girls for the month are
Joan Hott and Ruth Heckman.
Ruth is in the Grant County Nursing Home. As is our custom, the
birthday song was sung.
In honor of Valentine’s Day
members all came wearing red and
pictures were taken. Next meeting
all are asked to wear green. We will
have a speaker from Grant Memorial Hospital at the March meeting
who will share information on help
for the elderly. Elda Painter gave a
lesson on “Connection with Others” using five love languages.
ROCK OAK CEOS
Judy Miller, Reporter
Lynn Moore hosted our meeting
on January 17 with six members in
attendance.
Our recent activities have
included collecting food for MAC
House, taking a box of food for
Christmas with Church, some members attended a county workshop in
November and we held a workshop
that same month for our club, dining out at Christmas, continued our
gifts to the Salt Box with $20.00 of
our contribution being designated
to Camp Pinnacle.
West Virginia Pursues a Waiver
From No Child Left Behind Legislation
It is the right thing to do for students. That is how the West Virginia Department of Education is
describing its decision to file for a
Flexibility Waiver to No Child Left
Behind (NCLB).
The WVDE announced it will
seek a NCLB Flexibility Waiver.
The waiver will provide West Virginia with the flexibility needed as it
continues to implement the Next
Generation Content Standards and
Objectives, expand the Teacher
Evaluation Pilot and establish a
high-quality accountability system
that values individual student academic growth and supports schools.
“We spent a lot of time working
with our state Board of Education,
teachers, parents and other education experts to determine if filing
for the Flexibility Waiver to NCLB
was the right thing to do for students,” said state Superintendent of
Schools Jorea Marple. “Without a
waiver, West Virginia would be
forced to continue to identify
schools with inappropriate measures and labels. What we value in
our education system is personalized learning. In other words, learning that engages students whether
it’s the arts, world languages or
career technical education, just to
name a few. We also value student
academic growth.”
While the writers of the NCLB
had the right goals in mind, the
laws’ one-size-fits-all approach has
proven ineffective as a mechanism
for accountability and, as a result,
has discouraged state efforts to
improve student achievement and
make progress in education. For
example, NCLB provides too simplistic a view of whether schools are
meeting children’s needs. The way
that NCLB measures proficiency is
flawed because it fails to account
for meaningful progress. NCLB
evaluates schools based on whether
students meet proficiency without
regard to growth or improvement
from year to year.
West Virginia fully expects that
by 2014 no school in the state will
meet the stringent NCLB requirement and therefore be labeled a
failing school ultimately at risk of
losing much needed federal funding. In addition, the U.S. Department of Education has been very
clear that any state that does not
apply or receive a NCLB waiver will
be held fully accountable under
NCLB requirements.
“We are already beginning the
work to convene educators and
other stakeholders to develop the
components of the NCLB Flexibility Waiver and we expect to file the
waiver by Sept. 6, 2012,” added
Marple. “Filing for the waiver will
allow our state to continue its work
on crafting a thoughtful, fair and
constructive state accountability
system. In addition, we fully expect
our state’s waiver to align with our
state’s long-range education priorities and goals.”
The new accountability system
will
• focus on assessing both student learning and growth, as well as
the learning strategies employed in
schools;
• build capacity in schools and
districts to provide evidence of
improvement and engage parents
and communities as key stakeholders in the improvement process;
• provide differentiated identification and support systems; and
•implement
data-driven
changes in order to improve the
learning of all students.
In addition to filing for the Flexibility Request, the WVDE will
request from the federal government that the current NLCB Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP) targets are frozen for one year so that
additional schools are not identified
as failing.
For more information, visit
http://wvde.state.wv.us/waiver/ or
contact the WVDE Communication Office at 304-558-2699.
DEP’s Office of Oil and Gas Launches Horizontal Drilling Page
The Department of Environmental Protection’s Office of Oil and Gas
has launched a webpage that contains
information specifically related to
horizontal drilling as defined by the
Horizontal Drilling Act that was
passed by the state Legislature in
December.
As part of the Act, the Legislature
required the DEP to create the page
so citizens could obtain information
about the location of proposed horizontal wells and give them the opportunity to comment on those permit
applications.
Currently, the page offers links to
items that will be further developed as
The following events happened
on these dates in West Virginia history. To read more about West Virginia’s people, places, history, arts,
science and culture, go to e-WV:
The West Virginia Encyclopedia at
www.wvencyclopedia.org.
March 28, 1870: State officials,
with state records and property,
boarded a steamboat called Mountain Boy, one of six steamboats that
moved West Virginia’s capital from
Wheeling to Charleston.
March 29, 1834: Henry Mason
Mathews, the fifth governor of West
Virginia, was born at Frankford,
Greenbrier County. There were
strikes and riots during much of his
administration, including the
national railroad strike of 1877,
which began at Martinsburg.
March 29, 1858: Clay County
was created from parts of Nicholas
and Braxton counties and named
for Henry Clay, the U.S. senator
from Kentucky.
Don’t resort to a message in a bottle.
permit applications are received by
the agency. Links to pages that allow
citizens to submit or review comments
about specific permit applications, as
well as a link to a tool that helps them
find the location of a proposed well,
are included.
“The page will continue to grow
and change as more permit applications are submitted to the agency,”
said James Martin, Chief of the Office
of Oil and Gas. “Soon, after we populate the site with applications that
have been received, people will be
able to see a list with information such
as the applicant, where the well is
located, the formation it targets,
Henry Mason Matthews
March 30, 1837: The Virginia
legislature granted a charter to
establish a private academy at West
Liberty, north of Wheeling in Ohio
County. The first class of 65 students met in the home of the Rev.
Nathan Shotwell in 1838. The
school is now known as West Liberty University.
March 31, 1919: Governor John
Jacob Cornwell signed legislation
that created the West Virginia State
Police. The governor appointed
Jackson Arnold, grand-nephew of
Gen. Thomas J. ‘‘Stonewall’’ Jack-
whether the well has been completed
and the date the permit was issued.”
Under the new legislation, one of
the first steps operators have to take is
placing a Class II Legal notice in local
newspapers at least 10 days prior to
submitting an application.
“As an added public notice option,
people can go to this page and sign up
for an email notification whenever a
permit is received or issued by the
Office of Oil and Gas,” Martin said.
The site can be found at
http://www.dep.wv.gov/oil-andgas/Horizontal-Permits/Pages/default.aspx
son and former executive officer of
the 1st West Virginia Infantry, as
first superintendent.
April 1, 1934: A sales tax went
into effect in West Virginia for the
first time. The tax of 2 percent
helped fill the revenue void caused
by the drop in property values during the Great Depression.
April 3, 1755: Frontier scout and
‘‘long hunter’’ Simon Kenton was
born in Fauquier County, Va. Upon
leaving home, Kenton first traveled
north through present West Virginia to Pittsburgh and then
explored, hunted, and trapped
through much of the Ohio Valley.
e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia, developed by the West
Virginia Humanities Council, is an
interactive reference site showcasing West Virginia’s history, culture,
and people. e-WV is free of charge
and available to anyone with access
to a computer and Internet connection. For more information contact
the West Virginia Humanities
Council, 1310 Kanawha Blvd. E.,
Charleston, WV 25301; (304) 3468500;
or
visit
www.wvencyclopedia.org.
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