All signs of a big day in recruiting Tennessee Vols bring in another Top 5 class. 1B BLOUNT COUNTY’S THURSDAY N E WS PA P E R February 5, 2015 OF RECORD SINCE Maryville, TN ‘No clear answers’ 1883 Airport makes meth arrest. 2A CONTRIBUTED PHOTO BY WES WADE Governor’s Medicaid plan fails [email protected] Braylee Brown was born in October on the side of a Blount County road, dependent on opiates. But Kevin Brown said his 3-month-old daughter is now healthy and happy, a child you’d never know spent three weeks in the hospital after her birth. Brown’s ex-girlfriend, 24-year-old Brittany Nicole Hudson, is facing child abuse and simple assault charges after giving birth to the child in a vehicle off William Blount Drive on Oct. 24. But Brown said the terrible circumstances of Braylee’s birth didn’t have to be, and it doesn’t have to be the case for others in Hudson’s situation. While bad friends were part of the equation, a new state law allowing for criminal charges against mothers with drug abuse problems is another issue, Brown said. The new father, who turns 30 next week, said that while the state’s new fetal drug law is a good idea, its implementation last July has come sans any infrastructure or support network for mothersto-be with drug problems. It puts them in a veritable “Catch-22” situation. And in Hudson’s case, Brown has seen all too well how it plays out. He’s spent the last several months helping Hudson and her mother in their attempts to find a treatment facility to accept her as a patient. Brown said he wasn’t aware Hudson was using opiates until about seven months into her pregnancy. He started helping her look for treatment $1.00 thedailytimes.com BRAYLEE BROWN, DAUGHTER OF BRITTANY NICOLE HUDSON, is now in the custody of her father, Kevin Brown. Child’s father says new fetal drug law puts mothers in impossible situation Busy signing day for area preps. 1B RED SHIRTS credited for Insure Tennessee’s demise. 6A BY LUCAS L. JOHNSON II The Associated Press TOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES BRITTANY NICOLE HUDSON, 24, appears in Blount County General Sessions Court Wednesday afternoon for a hearing on charges of child abuse, simple assault and aggravated burglary. She was charged under a new state law after giving birth to a drug-dependent baby. options, but she’d been seeking treatment long before that, he said. Several treatment facilities turned her down because she was preg- nant, he said, while others that would accept her had waiting lists up to eight or nine months long. If she had tried to detox on her own and the baby NASHVILLE — Gov. Bill Haslam’s proposal to extend health coverage to 280,000 low-income Tennesseans has failed during a special legislative session after nearly two years of negotiating with federal officials. The Senate Health Committee defeated the Republican governor’s Insure Tennessee plan on a 7-4 vote Wednesday. Even though lawmakers who voted against the plan said their decision was more policy-related than personal, the defeat was nonetheless a stinging rebuke to the governor, who breezed to reelection with 70 percent of the vote. He had toured the state touting the plan and opened the special session Monday evening with an impassioned plea for its passage. “ I ’ m d i sa p p o i n te d ,” Haslam told reporters after the vote. “We made a decision today, but we didn’t do anything to answer the problem; and the problem is there are hundreds of thousands of Tennesseans who need health care.” Haslam spent 21 months talking with federal officials for a special deal for Tennessee that included market-based elements such as vouchers to buy private insurance, copays and assurances that the state could pull out of the deal if it ended up being more expensive than expected. Hospitals pledged to cover the $74 million state SEE MEDICAID, 5A died, she could be facing even harsher criminal charges, Brown said. “This law, I think it’s SEE LAW, 5A Grand jury indicts man in domestic violence case From Staff Reports A Blount County grand jury returned indictments on six people Monday, including two area residents accused of violent crimes. Jeffrey A. Mansir, 33, of Sevierville, was arrested in November of last year after he allegedly slammed his girlfriend’s head against a wall and a sofa during an argument at her home. Mansir was living in Maryville at the time. When the victim came forward, reports said police catalogued a host of bruises on her face, arms and legs. Mansir was indicted on charges of aggravated kidnapping and aggravated assault in connection with the Oct. 18 incident. Jason Paul Willis, 26, Palamino Way, Seymour, was arrested on Feb. Blount Records . . . . 4A Bridge . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7B Classified . . . . . . . . . 6B Comics . . . . . . . . . . . 10B Crossword . . . . . . . . .11B Dear Abby . . . . . . . . . 8A Deaths . . . . . . . . . . . . 4A Horoscope . . . . . . . .11B 12, 2014, after a 2-year-old Alcoa boy was brought to the hospital with bruises and bite marks on his body. The woman who brought the child to Blount Memorial Hospital on Feb. 6, 2014, was baby-sitting the boy, and she said the child had a black eye as well as bruises and bite SEE INDICTS, 5A Lotteries . . . . . . . . . . 2A Money & Markets . 7A Nation & World. . . . 8A Newsmakers . . . . . .11B Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . 6A Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . .1B Sudoku . . . . . . . . . . . .11B Weekend . . . . . . .Inside ERIK SCHELZIG | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SEN. DOUG OVERBEY, R-MARYVILLE, the sponsor of Gov. Bill Haslam’s Insure Tennessee proposal, attends a Senate Health Committee hearing Wednesday on the measure in Nashville. Partly cloudy skies today High 34 | Low 16 1781 W. Broadway Ave Maryville, TN 37803 (865) 983-9330 11B Get The Daily Times sent to your email box every day with a digital subscription at TheDailyTimes.com. CODORNIU CHAMPAGNE $ 10.99 FREE ROSE WITH PURCHASE BEGINNING 2/12/15 2A | BLOUNT COUNTY THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Thursday, February 5, 2015 Maryville woman seized at airport on meth charge Tammy Jean Dorsey From Staff Reports Aut h o r i t i e s to o k a Maryville woman into custody moments before she would have boarded a plane at McGhee Tyson Airport carrying an ounce and a half of crystal meth, according to a Blount County Sheriff ’s Office release. Tammy Jean Dorsey, 46, Michelle Place, Maryville, was charged with possession of a Schedule II controlled substance with intent to resell. She was held at the Blount County jail on a $25,000 bond pending a Feb. 11 hearing. Dorsey’s arrest was not a random airport search and seizure — officials said they had some informa- Dorsey was charged with possession of meth with intent to resell. tion about her activities, though they would not elaborate further. The arrest was carried out by the 5th Judicial Drug Task Force, which includes members of the Blount County Sheriff ’s Office and Maryville and Alcoa Police Departments, working in conjunction with the Metropolitan Knoxville Airport Authority and the federal Drug Enforcement Agency. Reports said Dorsey was waiting for a flight when she was arrested. BRIEFS Open House on Feb. 19 to welcome new Park superintendent An Open House to welcome the new superintendent of Great Smoky Mountains National Park will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 19, at the Barn Event Center in Townsend. The public is invited to meet new Superintendent Cassius Cash, who will begin working at the national park on Monday. Cash most recently Cassius served as Cash superintendent of Boston African American National Historic Site and Boston National Historical Park. The event is hosted by Friends of the Smokies, Great Smoky Mountains Association, the Townsend-Walland Business Alliance and the City of Townsend. Five join lawsuit over prison strip search NASHVILLE — Two women and three children have joined a law- PUBLIC MEETING Alcoa CITY COMMISSION will meet in regular session at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the commission chambers of the Alcoa Municipal Building. THIS WEEK IN HISTORY From The Daily Times on Feb. 3, 1990: Airman First Class Dean Irwin stopped in Blount County to get some of his mom’s homemade brownies. He brought along President George Bush’s limousine. suit that claims female visitors at a private Tennessee prison were forced to undergo strip searches because they were menstruating. The lawsuit against Corrections Corporation of America was first filed two weeks ago in federal court in Nashville. The original plaintiff claims prison guards forced her to expose her genitals to prove she was menstruating when she tried to take a sanitary napkin into the facility. Since then, two more women have come forward claiming similar treatment at the prison about 85 miles southwest of Nashville. TENNESSEE LOTTERY NUMBERS Cash 3 Evening 6-4-5, Lucky Sum: 15 (six, four, five; Lucky Sum: fifteen) Cash 3 Midday 2-9-5, Lucky Sum: 16 (two, nine, five; Lucky Sum: sixteen) Cash 3 Morning 9-4-6 (nine, four, six) Cash 4 Evening 8-4-3-0, Lucky Sum: 15 (eight, four, three, zero; Lucky Sum: fifteen) Cash 4 Midday 0-0-5-5, Lucky Sum: 10 (zero, zero, five, five; Lucky Sum: ten) Cash 4 Morning 3-1-2-6 (three, one, two, six) Mega Millions 11-22-25-58-69, Mega Ball: 13 (eleven, twenty-two, twenty-five, fifty-eight, sixtynine; Mega Ball: thirteen) Estimated jackpot: $40 million Powerball 24-36-51-52-56; Powerball: 22; Multiplier: 2 (twenty-four, thirty-six, fifty-one, fifty-two, fiftysix, Powerball: twenty-two; Multiplier: two) THE DAILY TIMES Blount County’s only daily newspaper, serving our readers since 1883. Your Life. Your Times. Vol. 71 No. 311 The Daily Times (USPS# 332-320) is published daily by Blount County Publishers LLC, 307 E. Harper Ave., Maryville, TN, 37804. Periodical postage paid at Maryville TN 37804. Send correspondence to: The Daily Times 307 E. Harper Ave., Maryville, TN, 37804. DARYL SULLIVAN | THE DAILY TIMES FAMILY PROMISE OF BLOUNT COUNTY will soon put this fourplex on Grant Street into operation as transition housing for homeless families. A ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Grant Street fourplex is scheduled for Feb. 12. Family Promise to open new facility BY JOEL DAVIS [email protected] Family Promise of Blount County will soon cut the ribbon on its new transitional housing for homeless families. In 2014, the organization purchased a fourplex on Grant Street in Alcoa to allow families who graduate from its family emergency shelter program a place to continue working toward independence. After a lengthy renovation, the property is ready for occupancy. There will be a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Feb. 12 and then the first family in residence will sleep their first night in the facility. “The community effort has been incredible,” said Executive Director Kathi Parkins. “Because we were relying on a lot of volunteer hours sometimes we had to wait, but in the end so many people have had an investment in this project.” Family Promise bought the property for $95,025 in cash, of which $46,946 had been raised at the 2014 Heart for the Homeless Banquet. The organization is a network of local congregations and volunteers that provide temporary shelter, meals and support services to families without homes to help A KITCHEN in the Family Promise transitional housing complex is being remodeled. them achieve lasting independence. Usually, the families in the program are facing homelessness for the first time in their lives due to job loss, medical conditions, financial problems or other tough circumstances. Ideally, the families are in the program for no more than three months. The families are required to seek employment and housing. Failure to work toward independence means termination from the program. Family Promise isn’t stopping with the transitional housing program. “That property will house four families, but we are writing a grant for rapid rehousing,’ Parkins said. “We’re going to apply for $100,000. That will allow us to help an additional 50-60 families in the community and get them into housing. It’s families that don’t qualify for Family Promise.” Through a $68, 200 Emergency Solutions Grant from the Tennessee Housing Development Agency in 2014, Family Promise has been able to help homeless individuals, couples and families attain permanent housing as quickly as possible, moving them out of shelters or avoiding shelter stays altogether. The organization will hold its annual Heart for the Homeless banquet fundraiser on Feb. 19 at the Airport Hilton in Alcoa. There are still a few tickets left. For information, email director@blount familypromise.org or call Family Promise of Blount County at 865-233-4737. Maryville police probe switched license plates From Staff Reports Tuesday morning was a surreal one for Maryville resident John Pillman, who awoke to find a Knox County license plate attached to his car parked in his Cates Street, Maryville, driveway. To be sure, the car — a 2000 Chrysler Concord — belonged to Pillman. But the plate did not. An astute neighbor pointed out the discrepancy when he noticed the Knox County name printed on the bottom of the tag. Pillman determined that his proper plate — 328VGY — was missing, replaced at some yet undetermined point by the impostor tag. And upon checking with Maryville Police, he learned that the Knox County tag — M6813C — had no history on file. Maryville Police Chief Tony Crisp said that though Pillman’s experience may seem strange, it’s not unusual. He said criminals sometimes switch plates with unsuspecting auto owners in order to commit crimes with stolen car tags. The original tag owner, meanwhile, may not even notice the tag missing until long after the theft takes place. Paid-in-advance 7-day print delivery: Monthly (via auto draft): $12 13 weeks: $44 26 weeks: $81 52 weeks: $152 Electronic (E-edition) subscriptions: $5.95 per month Other subscription packages available Administration President: Gregg K. Jones Publisher: Carl Esposito 865-981-1137 [email protected] Executive Editor: Larry Aldridge 865-981-1115 [email protected] Managing Editor: Frank “Buzz” Trexler 865-981-1139 [email protected] Circulation: 981-1160 Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. If you have any delivery concerns, you can call from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. Monday through Friday and 7 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Advertising Classified Marketplace: 865-981-1170; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday Retail: 865-981-1152; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday tain Sharon Moore said the Knox County plate may have fallen through the cracks by any of several means. “It was maybe entered incorrectly, or maybe entered very recently,” she said. “But at the moment, we haven’t figured out who it might have belonged to.” United Ink Tattoo & Clear’s Silat Street Kung Fu $ 219 value for $100 Subscriptions: 981-1160 “We saw a bank robbery once, where the license plate on the getaway car came back registered to one of our officer’s brothers,” he said. “We eventually caught up to the guy that did it, but that threw us off the track at first.” In the meantime, Maryville Police Cap- Advertising Director: Evelyn Sandlin 865-981-1152 [email protected] Circulation Director: Bryan Sandmeier 865-981-1196 [email protected] Newsroom Arts & Entertainment: 981-1144 Business: 981-1143 LifeTimes: 981-1149 News: 981-1143 Photography: 981-1167 Sports: 981-1145 Blount Life: 981-1168 Web: 981-1131 Deadlines Obituaries: 6 p.m. for paid funeral notices to be published in next day’s edition. Weddings/Engagements: Tuesday prior to Sunday publication. Anniversaries/Birthday: Monday prior to Wednesday or Thursday publication in Applause. Other Applause items: No deadline, but published on space-available basis. Submitting News To have your story considered for publication in The Daily Times, email it to the appropriate department editor under the Newsroom listing in this index, fax it to 865-981-1175, or mail it using our postal address. If you are not sure where to send your idea, email it to editor@ thedailytimes.com. Please be sure to include a contact name and phone number in case we need to get in touch with you. If you have a news tip, call 865-981-1115 in the daytime, or 865-9811143 in the evening. Corrections The Daily Times strives for accuracy. If you see an error in the newspaper, call Larry Aldridge at 865-981-1115, or Frank “Buzz” Trexler at 865-981-1139. Check us online for updates throughout the day: thedailytimes.com BLOUNT COUNTY | 3A THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com TDOT sets meeting on Alcoa Highway project From Staff Reports The Tennessee Department of Transportation will conduct a public meeting on Thursday, Feb. 12, to discuss plans for the relocated Alcoa Highway project from Hall Road to the proposed interchange serving McGhee Tyson Airport. The meeting will be held from Event will have design plans, aerial displays for viewing 5-7 p.m. in the lunchroom of Alcoa Public Works, 233 Associates Blvd., Alcoa. The meeting will be informal with design plans and aerial displays available for viewing. The public will be encouraged to pro- vide comments, and representatives of TDOT will be able to answer questions regarding any aspect of the project. A court reporter will also be available to take comments. Under discussion is one of three sections of a proposal to construct segments of limitedaccess highway on new alignment from near Hall Road to South Singleton Station Road. According to TDOT, the purpose of the project is to pro- vide a balanced solution for the safety and capacity issues of the existing section of Alcoa Highway. The new section would mainly serve commuter traffic to and from Knoxville and traffic to and from McGhee Tyson Airport, while the existing highway would continue to provide access to local businesses. Ex-WGAP owner Corbett dies at 74 From Staff Reports TOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES MARYVILLE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL ninth-graders Chad Carrell, Seth Casteel, Chance Porter, Sam Pankratz, Brandon Arceneaux and Cole Shuler (from left) sand two Adirondack chairs that will be in competition at the Battle of the Build. It is part of the Maryville Alcoa Home Builders Association’s Home and Remodeling Show, which will be held Friday through Sunday at Foothills Mall. Battle of the Build Three local schools to compete in trade competition this weekend BY MATTHEW STEWART [email protected] Heritage High, Maryville High and Maryville Junior High will battle this weekend for the crown. Students will compete in the Battle of the Build. It is part of the Maryville Alcoa Home Builders Association’s Home and Remodeling Show, which will be held Friday through Sunday at Foothills Mall. “Students love competitions whether it’s academics, athletics or extracurriculars,” said Heritage High School teacher Lee Martin. “It’s all they’ve talked about in class for several weeks. They love competing against other schools in the county.” “It’s a great opportunity for us,” said Sam Pankratz, a Maryville Junior High School ninth-grader. “It gives us an objective to work toward, opens our eyes to the possibilities in this field and provides us with the skills to build things for our career and our own homes. Not to mention, who doesn’t want to win?” Battle of the Build is an effort to get students more involved in the professional trade association, said Jamie Hunt, Denver Hunt Company’s assistant manager and Home and Remodeling Show Committee’s cochairman. “We wanted to create something that aligns with our work force development program, Tees for Tools. We hope it provides students with initial management and team-building experiences. We also want them to have fun with it. They’re supporting their school and themselves.” MARYVILLE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER BRIAN WATERS, Seth Casteel, Chance Porter, Chad Carrell, Sam Pankratz, Brandon Arceneaux and Cole Shuler (from left) stand in front of two Adirondack chairs that will be in competition at the Battle of the Build. MARYVILLE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL ninth-graders constructed three Adirondack chairs, including this one that signed by University of Tennessee head football coach Butch Jones. Anderson Lumber Company, which is sponsoring the Battle of the Build, will award $350 instore credit on supplies and tools to the winning school. It will award $200 in-store credit to the second-place school and $100 to the third-place school. SCHOOLS COMPETE Heritage High School will enter a bench seat made out of reclaimed wood in the competition, Martin said. The students used classroom doors that had been stored on campus since the late 1970s. “I challenged my class to be creative and think outside the box,” he said. “We didn’t want to make a cabinet, clock or something standard. We also wanted to utilize what was available and not spend a lot of extra money, because it’s more relevant. You use what you have available.” Ten carpentry students spent several weeks building the bench and making it look like an antique piece of furniture, Martin said. They distressed the wood, which was apparently salvaged from Everett High School when it closed in 1977. Maryville High School will enter folding, rocking chairs and a valet, said teacher Tom Stinnett. Students will enter items completed last semester, because the educator is currently teaching carpentry offcampus. Maryville Junior High School will enter three Adirondack chairs, said teacher Brian Waters. One chair, which bears black paint and the Power T, is signed by the University of Tennessee head football coach Butch Jones. Seven freshmen constructed the chairs, Waters said. They spent six weeks building the chairs during class and lunch periods. Students have built Adirondack chairs for several years, he said. The capstone experience allows students to exhibit all the skills developed in earlier work. “We’re developing the next generation of tradespeople,” Waters said. “We’re teaching them trade skills, then coupling it with business skills. Our goal is they’ll know everything they need to know to open their own business.” TIMELESS EVENT Stinnett praised MAHBA’s efforts. “They’re on the front end of helping students. They’re looking for young students who are interested in the carpentry field. They’re also helping us to do a better job training our kids.” The professional trade association, which rep- resents individuals and firms committed to providing quality housing, plans to expand the competition next year if it’s successful, Hunt said. “We have ideas to expand it to two other classes and involve more industry in it.” Hunt, who graduated from William Blount High School in 1998, hopes to see the competition evolve into something students remember for years to come. “When I was a senior, (current Maryville Junior High School teacher) Sherri McCall put us in groups and told us we were businesses. She made it feel like the real thing and made us feel like we were worth something. It’s something I’ll always remember, discovering I was excited about the work and feeling like I could do anything.” Students, such as Pankratz, are already building those memories. “I hope it continues, because I’m looking forward to entering original designs in the next couple years. We followed blueprints this year, and I can’t wait to build something I’ve designed.” Maryville businessman Stephen Y. Corbett, former owner of WGAP radio station, died Tuesday at his home. He was 74. Corbett’s family owned WGAP beginning in the early 1950s, according to Harry Plumlee, who worked for the station for many years. “Steve grew up hanging around the station,” he said. “Eventually, Steve became a paid employee doing on air work.” Corbett became the sales manager in 1967, and Plumlee became the program director. Freida Corbett. Steve Corbett’s widow, said that after his father died, Steve Corbett, about 27 at the time, continued to work at the station with his mother, Virginia, and sisters Lynn Wright and Mary Corbett. Plumlee said Steve Corbett quickly saw the value of putting an emphasis on local news coverage, developing and expanding the news department to as many as four employees. That was unheard of for a station as small as WGAP, which won a number of Associated Press awards for news and sports. Plumlee said Corbett sold the station in 1982 to W. Dale Young and Jim Calkin Jr. Corbett also was a cofounder of Corbett Rose Music, along with Fred Rose and Armon McKeen, when it was established Feb. 19, 1964, according to an article in The Daily Times. The business, later called Rose Music Co., and solely owned by Sue Rose Gibson, closed in November 2014. Coach charged with statutory rape of girl, 15 The Associated Press MANCHESTER — The head baseball coach at a Middle Tennessee high school has been charged with having a sexual relationship with a 15-yearold girl. The Times Free Press reports Coffee County Central coach Bradley Newton Weir has been charged with statutory rape by an authority figure. Police say the charge is related to an incident that happened at his home on Jan. 29. The 43-year-old was arrested at his home Tuesday morning. He is free on a $100,000 bond. Manchester Police Department investigator Billy Butler says the victim told a friend and then word spread to a parent and then to police. Coffee County school officials could not be reached for comment late Tuesday. 4A | BLOUNT COUNTY THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Guests report feeling sick at Opryland BLOUNT RECORDS COURT RECORDS Charged with driving under the influence of an intoxicant: Blount County Joshua Michael England, 25, Guadal Canal Drive, Maryville Shane Robert Schlamann, 50, Cripple Creek Lane, Maryville Case filed Feb. 3 in Blount County General Sessions Court: Emily Queen Cox vs. Charles Bradshaw Cox, divorce Case filed Feb. 4 in Blount County General Sessions Court: Traci L. Wheeler vs. Michael David Wheeler, divorce Case filed Feb. 4 in Blount County Chancery Court: Bank of America, N.A. et al vs. Michael Garner et al Case filed Feb. 3 in the Equity Division of Blount County Circuit Court: Benjamin Gerald Cutting vs. Elizabeth Kristine Herron, divorce Case filed Feb. 4 in the Equity Division of Blount County Circuit Court: Shawn Michael Purdy vs. Danette Hamrick, divorce Case filed Feb. 3 in Blount County Probate Court: Regarding: Stanley Lee Ellis, small estate ARRESTS Coy Lee Best, 28, South Farnum Street, Friendsville, was arrested on Feb. 4 by Blount County Sheriff’s Office on a charge of theft. He was released pending a hearing, the date to be determined. James Matthew Kiser, 21, Loudon, was arrested Feb. 3 by Blount County Sheriff’s Office on a charge of theft. He was released on a $5,000 bond pending a 9 a.m. Feb. 10 hearing. Michael Anthony Kettini, 27, South Court Street, Alcoa, was arrested Feb. 9 by Blount County Sheriff ’s Office on a charge of felony violation of probation. He was held pending a 9 a.m. Feb. 9 hearing. Robert Matthew Stroud, 32, Kian Court, Maryville, was arrested Feb. 3 by Blount County Sheriff ’s Office on a charge of prescription fraud. He was released on a $3,500 bond pending a 9 a.m. Feb. 11 hearing. Thursday, February 5, 2015 Arrested for contempt of court: Kimberly Renaye Kirby, 46, Scenic Drive, Maryville Shirley Beatrice Ray, 50, Villa Court, Maryville THEFTS Maryville Freddie G. Harrell, Maryville, reported at 10:46 a.m. Feb. 3 that someone stole a 9 mm handgun and holster from his vehicle. The items were valued at a total $295. VANDALISM Blount County Kevin W. Headrick, Sam Houston School Road, Maryville, reported at 5:47 p.m. Feb. 3 that someone threw a brick through a window at his residence. Nothing was stolen and nothing inside the residence was disturbed. Damage was estimated at $500. Maryville An employee of Coldwell Banker Commercial reported at 11:31 a.m. Feb. 3 that between Jan. 30 and Feb. 2, someone broke the real estate sign for the business located on the corner of South Washington Street and Neff Street. The sign was valued at $100. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Blount County A 45-year-old Louisville woman reported at 7:02 p.m. Feb. 3 that she and her 45-year-old husband were arguing over bills when he pushed her to the ground and slapped her face. Deputies observed redness on the woman’s upper chest and face. The husband admitted to striking his wife with an open hand, according to the police report. He was arrested on a charge of domestic assault. The woman declined medical treatment. Alcoa Officers were called to Blount Memorial Hospital at 11:23 p.m. Feb. 3 about an assault that occurred at an Alcoa residence. An 18-year-old woman told officers she and her 20-year-old boyfriend live at the Alcoa home of her boyfriend’s mother, a 39-year-old woman. The woman said she and her boyfriend were packing up to move when she and her boyfriend’s mother started arguing over money. The woman said she accused her boyfriend’s mom of taking the money. The older woman shoved her and she responded by punching the older woman. The two then started shoving and punching each other until they were separated. The 18-year-old woman had a swollen wrist, officers reported. Officers responded to the residence where the fight occurred and spoke to the boyfriend’s mother. She said she and her son’s girlfriend were arguing when the young woman attempted to grab her hair, according to the report. She told officers she then started punching the young woman. The two then started shoving and punching each other. The woman had an abrasion on her knuckles. Officers were unable to determine who started the fight. OTHER REPORTS Blount County Matthew D. McKeehan, Cecilia Avenue, Maryville, reported at 3:09 p.m. Feb. 3 that someone entered his vehicle and rummaged through it during the night, but nothing was taken. Maryville Carol E. Bettis, Maryville, reported at 10:24 a.m. Feb. 3 that she received a letter from the IRS saying that someone had filed a false tax return using her Social Security number. TRAFFIC Blount County Jessica L.A. Muncy, Cherokee Street, Maryville, was driving a Chevrolet Camaro east on Russell Road at 9:30 p.m. Feb. 3 when she failed to stop at a stop sign at the intersection of Williams Mill Road, according to a crash report. Her vehicle traveled across Williams Mill Road and struck a tree. Muncy, 28, and two passengers — Andrew Muncy, 3, and Bruce Muncy, 5, both of Cherokee Street, Maryville — were taken by Rural/Metro Ambulance Service to Blount Memorial Hospital, where they were treated and released. Muncy was cited on charges of proof of insurance violation, using a child restraint improperly and failing to stop at a stop sign. Garney E. White, Madisonville, was traveling west on Flats Road near Happy Valley Road at 5:22 p.m. Feb. 3 when the passenger-side tires of his truck dropped off the road while he was rounding a curve. The truck rolled over on its side, coming to rest partially in the road. White was taken by Rural/Metro to Blount Memorial Hospital, where there was no patient information available. The Associated Press NASHVILLE — A hotel spokeswoman says guests at Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center are reporting feeling ill. The hotel is working with the local health department to prevent the spread of illness after a norovirus outbreak at the hotel last month. In an email message to The Tennessean, hotel spokeswoman Jenny Bark- er did not say how many guests were affected. Barker says a number of guests have notified them that they were feeling unwell upon arrival to the hotel or during their stay. Tenn. gas tax increase unlikely this year The Associated Press NASHVILLE — House Speaker Beth Harwell says that Tennessee lawmakers are unlikely to take up a gas tax increase during this year’s legislative session. Speaking to a joint conference by the National Federation of Independent Business and the Tennessee Grocers and Convenience Store Association on Tuesday, Harwell said lawmakers are interested in discussing ways to “broaden the base” of transportation funding to make up for losses from vehicles with better fuel mileage and electric cars. But the Nashville Republican said she doesn’t expect an increase to be enacted this year. A recent report from the state comptroller’s office found Tennessee’s fuel taxes are insufficient to maintain existing infrastructure and meet long-term transportation needs. The state’s 21 .4-cents-per- gallon gas tax hasn’t been raised since 1989. FUNERAL NOTICES PATRICK BOYD COFFEE Patrick Boyd Coffee, age 76, departed this life on Saturday, Jan. 31, 2015. A memorial service celebrating his life will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7, 2015, in the East Chapel at Smith Funeral and Cremation. The family will receive friends in the chapel following the service. Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, Maryville, 865-983-1000, www.Smith FuneralandCremation. com BOBBIE I. MATTHEWS Bobbie I. Matthews, 81, of Knoxville, went to be with the Lord on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2015. She was a member of First Baptist Church of Maryville. She retired from Regas Restaurant with 30 years of service. She is preceded in death by parents, John and Elizabeth Buckingham; and brother, Horace Buckingham, all of Memphis, Tenn. Survived by children, Pamela Lane Burbank and husband Bob, Edward Foley and wife Christine; grandchildren, Jake, Halle and Jett Foley. Service will be at noon Friday, Feb. 6, 2015, at Sherwood Chapel. Visitation will be from 11 a.m.-noon prior to the service. Interment to follow in Sherwood Memorial Gardens. Condolences may be offered at www. sherwoodchapel.net. PETER PERRY, SR. Peter Perry, Sr., 75, of Maryville, and South China, Maine, passed away Jan. 28, 2015, at Asbury Place. He was born July 24, 1939, and graduated from Erskine Academy, New England Conservatory of Music. He was preceded in death by parents, Arthur and Hope Walsh; and grandparents, Roy and Hazel Grindle. Survivors include wife of 27 years, Dot Belanger Perry; sons, Michael, Peter Jr., and Donald; daughters, Caroline, Terri, Robin, Nicole; and stepson, Frank Lajoie. Mr. Perry will be laid to rest in Chadwick Hill Cemetery, South China, Maine, at a later date. OWEN MATTHEW RIDGE Owen Matthew Ridge, age 64, of Maryville, passed away Monday, Feb. 2, 2015. Owen was born in Maryville. He was preceded in death by father, Arthur Ridge; and mother, Bernice Ridge. He is survived by his wife of 41 years, Vickie Ridge; stepmother, Zetta Ridge; sisters, Jean Kagley and Joyce Ridge; brothers, Brent and Harold Ridge; sons, Jason Ridge and wife Ashley and Justin Ridge and wife Jennie; and grandchildren, Abe, Kamryn and Carson Ridge. Family will receive friends from 1-2:30 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 8, 2015, at Smith Trinity Chapel with service to follow at 2:30 p.m. with Pastor Tommy Boring officiating. Family and friends will assemble for interment at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 8, 2015, at Four Mile Baptist Church Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, 1402 Tuckaleechee Pike, Maryville, TN 37803, to help with funeral expenses. Smith Funeral and Cremation Service, Maryville, 865-983-1000, www.Smith FuneralandCremation. com RICHARD GERALD ROSE Program to be presented at ‘Soup and SMiles’ From Staff Reports Blount County Office on Aging is hosting “Soup & SMiles” to acquaint the public about its transportation program for seniors. The event will be held between 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. Feb. 12 at the Martin Luther King Jr. Center, 209 East Franklin Street, Alcoa. Those interested in volunteering as drivers or becoming riders are especially urged to come by for a serving a soup and some information about SMiles. SMiles has successfully provided senior-friendly transportation in Blount County since October 2013. The program has received a national award for its team of volunteers who have given over 4,500 rides to local seniors. Members, who are 60 and older, arrange transportation by calling the SMiles number, 724-1331. Each trip costs $6 and can include two stops. Most destinations are medical appointments, but many use SMiles to participate in activities they enjoy such as shopping, socializing and volunteering in the community. The key to SMiles’ success has been the volunteer drivers who provide the rides. They assign themselves to rides by using Assisted Rides, a software program specifically designed for volunteer transportation. Drivers give rides when it is convenient for them, not on a regular schedule. Those who live here part of the year drive seniors when in town. For more information, call SMiles at 724-1331 or email arimmer@blountcaa. org. DEATHS BAKER, MARY ETHEL, 75, of Louisville, died Feb. 4, 2015. No services are planned at this time. Memorial Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. CORBETT, STEPHEN Y., 74, of Maryville, died Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2015, at his home. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Smith Funeral & Cremation Service. Richard Gerald Rose, of Maryville, passed away Thursday, Jan. 23, 2015. He was a veteran of the United States Army. Preceded in death by parents, Walter Gerald and Edna Rose; brother, Kenneth Rose Sr.; nephews, Richard, Jimbo, Terry and Danny Lee. Survived by wife, Dorothy Rose; sons, Patrick and Jerry Rose; grandchildren, Kailee, Tenzin and Francis Riley Rose; brother, Jimmy (Gayle) Rose; four sisters, Elizabeth Jones, Sue Niebert, Linda Hill and Pat Rose. A memorial service will be held at 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 6, at Third Street Baptist Church in Maryville. JERALD L. SWANEY Jerald L. Swaney, 71, of Maryville, passed away Tuesday, Feb. 2, 2015. Jerald attended Maryville Baptist Tabernacle Church, he was a veteran of the U.S. Army, and a carpenter by trade. He is preceded in death by his parents, Charles and Nora Mae Costner Swaney; one sister and four brothers. Survivors include his daughter, Bobbie Lynn and Richard OBITUARY POLICY A funeral notice in The Daily Times costs 55 cents per word plus $18 for a photo. For anyone who does not wish to purchase a funeral notice, The Daily Times will run a free death notice as a public service, containing basic information. For more information, call 981-1166. Thomas; sons, Gary and Karen Swaney, Christopher and Michelle Swaney; sister, Barbara Vogle; brothers, Wayne Swaney, and Tommy Joe Swaney; seven grandchildren, six great-grandchildren. Family and friends will meet at 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7, 2015, at Maryville Baptist Church Cemetery for a 2 p.m. graveside funeral service. The family will receive friends from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, Feb. 6, 2015, at Memorial Funeral Home in Maryville. Condolences may be expressed by visiting www.maryvillememo rialfuneralhome.com. MILLER FUNERAL HOME “The Business That Service Built” Pre-Arrangement Funeral Planning www.millerfuneralhome.org 915 W. BROADWAY 65061817 982-6041 BLOUNT COUNTY | 5A THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com Republicans challenge Obama on all fronts BY DAVID ESPO AND ALAN FRAM The Associated Press WASHINGTON — Newly empowered congressional Republicans challenged President Barack Obama at both ends of the Capitol on Tuesday, voting in the House to repeal the health care program he signed into law but faltering in an initial Senate attempt to roll back immigration policies he issued on his own. There was a third challenge as well, as Republican leaders announced the House would give final approval next week on legislation clearing the way for construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline. That would trigger Obama’s threatened veto, the first in a new era of divided government. The skirmishes all seemed likely to end in eventual defeat for Republicans, but served as a potent reminder of their power after Obama challenged them bluntly last month with his State of the Union address and a no-balance budget on Monday calling for higher taxes and new spending. The GOP won control of the Senate in last fall’s elections, and has its largest House majority in nearly 70 years. Badly beaten in last fall’s elections, Democrats were defiant. “They’re baying at the moon, something that is not going to work,” said the party’s leader in the House, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, referring to Republicans as the health care vote neared. The vote was 239-186 to repeal the health care law known as Obamacare. Similar votes have been held more than 50 times in the four years, but the day gave newcomers to Congress their first opportunity to vote to uproot the health care law they campaigned against last fall. “Today, I am making good on my commitment to support a full repeal of Obamacare,” said Rep. Alex Mooney, a West Virginia Republican who took his seat in Congress last month. The day’s vote was marked by a second difference. The bill included instructions to key committees to begin work on a replacement that the party promised in the 2010 political campaign. Officials described that as a measure of preparation in case the Supreme Court overturns a key portion of the existing program in a ruling expected this June. Only three Republicans opposed repeal of the program, Reps. Bob Dold of Illinois and first-termers John Katko of New York and Bruce Poliquin of Maine. Across the Capitol, Democrats blocked debate on legislation to fund the Department of Homeland Security and simultaneously overturn presidential executive orders that have spared an estimated four million immigrants in the country illegally from the threat of deportation. The vote was 51-48, nine shy of the 60 needed to begin work on the measure. Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid said his rank and file would continue to block action on the measure until Republicans agree to strip out the immigration provisions. ‘PLAYING POLITICS’ Echoed by other Democrats, he said Republicans were “playing politics with national security,” citing the execution-by-burning earlier in the day of a Jordanian pilot held hostage by Islamic terrorists in the Middle East as evidence of a threat. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said that by issuing his immigration policy by executive order, Obama had committed a “power grab” that exceeded his authority as president. “So I’m calling on Democrats to vote with us now to fund the Department of Homeland Security. I’m calling on Democrats to join us and stand up for core democratic principles like the rule of law and separation of powers,” he said. It was an offer they refused, unanimously. A total of 51 Republicans voted to advance the bill, while all 44 Democrats, two independents and two Republicans were opposed. The two GOP opponents included Sen. Dean Heller of Nevada, whose state is home to a large Hispanic population, and McConnell, whose vote will permit him to call for a revote in the future. The Department of Homeland Security will lose a portion of its funding on Feb. 27 unless Congress has acted by then. LAW: Mother’s case reset FROM 1A good,” Brown said. “But if they’re going to have this law, there has got to be somewhere for people to go to or reach out to get the help they need.” ‘NO CLEAR ANSWER’ ERIK SCHELZIG | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SENS. BECKY DUNCAN MASSEY, R-Knoxville, and Jeff Yarbro, D-Nashville, await a vote in the Senate Health Committee on Wednesday on Gov. Bill Haslam’s Medicaid expansion proposal. They both voted in favor of the measure that ultimately failed. MEDICAID: Overbey said Haslam had ‘very good plan’ FROM 1A share, meaning taxpayers wouldn’t be on the hook for extra health insurance costs. State Sen. Doug Overbey, R-Maryville, who sponsored the Senate bill, said he was disappointed in the outcome. “I felt that Gov. Haslam has put together a very good plan in Insure Tennessee based on conservative principles that was not a Medicaid expansion but was a way of providing the opportunity for health care and health insurance for Tennesseans caught in the gap,” he said in a statement. “Gov. Haslam and his team will need to assess what happened today and make some decision as to whether to present something else during the regular session or to continue negotiations with the federal government and perhaps call us back into special session later in the summer.” Te n n e ss e e Ho s p i t a l Association President and CEO Craig Becker said the group is “extremely disappointed” in the failed vote, ‘We are hopeful that members of the General Assembly will continue to consider ways for Tennessee to provide coverage to the hundreds of thousands of uninsured in our state who have no option for coverage.’ Craig Becker president and CEO of Tennessee Hospital Association but remain optimistic that lawmakers will continue to look for ways to help Tennesseans who need insurance. Haslam told reporters he’s not sure what his next step will be. “We are hopeful that members of the General Assembly will continue to consider ways for Tennessee to provide coverage to the hundreds of thousands of uninsured in our state who have no option for coverage,” Becker said in a statement. “Hospitals believe this is right for our state and will continue to work with the Haslam administration and General Assembly to find coverage solutions for Tennessee’s uninsured.” DEBT OBJECTIONS Opponents of the Insure Te n n e s s e e p r o p o s a l objected to adding to the federal debt by having the state draw down $2.8 billion in federal money under President Barack Obama’s health care law. Others said they don’t trust the federal government to keep promises to allow Tennessee to withdraw from the plan. “Ultimately, the absence of a clear, written agreement between the federal government and the state of Tennessee made passage impossible,” Sen. Speaker Ron Ramsey, R-Blountville, said in a statement. Republican Sen. Kerry Roberts of Springfield said one of the reasons he voted against the measure is because he wanted to see more details about the consequences for the state if it pulled out of the plan. “This was a very agonizing decision for everyone on that committee,” he said. TIED TO OBAMA With the plan’s failure in the Senate, it appeared unlikely that the House would move forward with its version of the proposal. “ I t h i n k eve r y b o dy heard from every side of this, and the members just weren’t comfortable voting for it,” said House Majority Leader Gerald McCormick, R-Chattanooga. Haslam and other supporters said one reason for the plan’s failure was that opponents couldn’t disassociate it from Obama and his health care law. “Those who oppose it associate everything with President Obama. That’s what has killed this,” said state Rep. Johnnie Turner, D-Memphis. INDICTS: Blount grand jury returns six indictments FROM 1A marks all over his body when he was dropped off by his mother. An Alcoa Police investigation identified Willis as the alleged perpetrator, as Willis had recently begun dating the child’s mother. Willis was indicted on a charge of child abuse Monday. Other indictments from this week included: =iXebc`e;\cXi[B`ib$ land, Jr., 39, Salem Road, Greenback, indicted on a charge of possession of a Schedule VI controlled substance for resale, stemming from an Oct. 29, 2013, incident. ;Xm`[ 8ccXe D`cc\i# 58, Jackson, indicted on a charge of driving under the influence, with an implied consent citation, stemming from an August 2014 incident. IfY`e<l^\e\<e^cXe[# 50, Shelby Drive, Maryville, indicted on a charge of driving under the influence (second offense), with citations for implied consent, speeding, proof of insurance, and proof of a driver’s license, stemming from a March 14, 2014, incident. >c\e[feCXdXiGc\d$ ons, 74, Channel Drive, Lou- isville, indicted on charges of carrying a weapon, theft by possession, with citations for expired tags, no driver’s license, and failure to display car tags. Webster Bailey, director of new business development at Cornerstone of Recovery, said many treatment centers won’t treat pregnant women because of potential liability issues. Additionally, there are still questions concerning whether it’s safer to detox during pregnancy, or after the child’s birth. “It’s still kind of a controversial issue,” Bailey said, adding that research and studies have come down in support of both sides. “It’s really looking at what’s the safest for the baby and what’s the safest for the mother,” Bailey said. “There’s no clear answer.” Bailey said there is a treatment facility in Knoxville with a program specifically for pregnant women. There is a waiting list, but pregnant patients are prioritized and moved to the top of the list, he said. Brown said they tried to get Hudson into that facility, but there were several other pregnant patients ahead of Hudson, and the residential treatment program lasts about three months. BAD SITUATION Brown said the day Hudson gave birth, he spoke to her briefly on the phone. They knew the baby was coming, and Brown was trying to make plans to meet and drive her to the hospital. At the time, Hudson was with two other women, one of whom authorities have identified as 27-year-old Bailey McCay Propst, Big Gully Road, Maryville. They took Hudson’s phone away, Brown said, and he repeatedly called it back, but never got an answer. Hudson was a passenger in a vehicle Propst was driving when she went into labor. Hudson passed out during the birth, and Propst and the other woman delivered the baby while the vehicle was parked on the side of the road. Propst was also later arrested in connection with the incident, and charged with child abuse and lying to investigators. While she still faces a charge of filing false reports, the child abuse charge was dismissed Jan. 20 during a hearing in Blount County General Sessions Court. Brown said the day after the birth, detectives with the Blount County Sheriff’s Office showed up at his door looking for Hudson and the child. They found Hudson later that day, and they all went to Blount Memorial Hospital, Brown said. BABY ‘HAPPY’ Braylee was transferred to University of Tennessee Medical Center, where she spent three weeks in the hospital’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU). Brown now has custody of the child, and Hudson is allowed supervised visitation rights. “Braylee, she’s doing great,” Brown said. “There’s no delays in her progression. She’s a very happy baby. She smiles a lot.” Brown said they are still working on trying to find a treatment facility for Hudson, who’s been off the drugs for just over a month. But since she’s now clean, that’s proved to be another difficulty in finding a treatment facility, Brown said. The child abuse and assault charges against Hudson are still pending, as is an aggravated burglary charge she picked in a Dec. 30 break-in at a Maryville residence on Fowler Drive. That incident occurred just before she got clean, Brown said. Hudson appeared in Blount County General Sessions Court Wednesday for a hearing on all three charges. Maryville defense attorney Joe Costner was recently hired to represent her, and the case was rescheduled for March 3. Brown said he feels Hudson was put in an impossible situation, and hopes changes in the law or the way it’s approached can keep others from the same fate. “There’s going to be more people like Brittany doing this on the side of the road because they’re scared,” Brown said. “All this law is really going to do is throw more people in jail and cause things like this to happen.” & Greenhouses 4FWJFSWJMMF3Er Serving Blount County for over 119 years with flower arrangements of distinction and personal service. 15014393DT ON THE WEB: Editorials, letters and other opinions, archived for your review. www.thedailytmes.com/opinion Scan this QR code to go to the Web page 6A THE DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2015 OUR VOICE W Insure Tennessee is dead; long live the red shirts? hy did Insure Tennessee die Wednesday before the state Senate Health Committee? Let the organization that claims credit for the deed speak for itself. “A sea of red shirts in committees and the halls of Legislative Plaza turned the tide against the Insure Tennessee Medicaid expansion proposal.” With those words, Americans for Prosperity pronounced their success Wednesday in cowing seven members of the Senate Health Committee into killing a plan that — as Gov. Bill Haslam said — is a market-based, Tennessee specific approach to provide more Tennesseans with access to health care coverage while promoting personal responsibility and working to control the overall cost of health care. So now, thanks to seven Tennessee legislators, the red shirts have won the day. As this prosperous out-of-state group boasts, thanks to their “grass roots activists showing up to hold their legislators accountable.” Oh, really? Accountable to whom? The group that takes responsibility for organizing the red shirts, states this: “We’re leading the way in engaging with elected officials to make change for our friends and neighbors.” Just who are the friends and neighbors of this group funded with multi-millions of dollars and headquartered just outside of Washington, D.C.? This group that after Insure Tennessee died in the Senate, congratulated the Health Committee seven in an Internet message stating: “Thank you for listening to your constituents and voting to stop Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion in Tennessee.” Let’s stick to the truth, if that’s not too much to ask in this era when spin mastery masquerades as fact. In this political climate manipulated by special interests, a governor who speaks to his faith and appeals to the morality of legislators is turned away. Turned away by seven who pledged in their oath of office to “not propose or assent to any bill, vote or resolution, which shall appear to me injurious to the people ...” How is the refusal to accept taxpayers’ money from Washington, D.C., including Tennessee tax dollars, that would extend health coverage to 280,000 low-income Tennesseans — how is that not injurious to the people? Speaking of the people, organizers of the red shirts would have us believe they represent the will of the people of Tennessee. Again, facts get in the way. The MTSU Poll taken shortly before the special legislative session found two-thirds of Tennesseans hadn’t heard much about the governor’s Insure Tennessee health care proposal, but among the third who had, support substantially outweighed opposition. Among the 33 percent who had at least some information, 49 percent favored the proposal, 11 percent opposed it, and 40 percent were unsure or hadn’t made up their minds. Overall, regardless of how much they had read or heard about the measure, 34 percent favored Insure Tennessee, 7 percent opposed it, and 59 percent remained uncertain. Hardly evidence that the Health Committee seven were listening to their constituents when they voted nay, nay, nay, nay, nay, nay, nay. The final tally on Insure Tennessee: seven winners, 280,000 losers. Sticking to truth. Insure Tennessee is not Obamacare. Insure Tennessee is not a traditional expansion of Medicaid. It is a way to ensure that Tennessee tax dollars sent to Washington are returned to the state rather than to other states across the country. It is a way to help pay to provide efficient health care for poor, sick Tennesseans who don’t have the means to avoid trips to the emergency room. It is a way to protect Tennessee’s rural hospitals from having to close under the burden of costs they cannot absorb. So instead of recouping the state’s fair share of federal tax dollars through Insure Tennessee, Tennessee taxpayers will help fund health care for people in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia. According to a study by the University of Tennessee Center for Business and Economic Research, $1.4 billion will be lost by Tennessee. Don’t forget to thank the red shirts. Organizers of the red shirts would have us believe they represent the will of the people of Tennessee. Public good vs. individual freedom T he measles outbreak at California’s Disneyland — which has spread like pixie dust — along with several other smaller flare-ups, has health officials warning of worse to come. Preventable infectious disease is making its return to the developed world — this time by invitation. The scientific consensus on measles is effectively unanimous: (1) It is not trivial. Children with measles can get seriously ill, and there is chance of complications such as middle ear infections, pneumonia and encephalitis. (2) Measles is highly transmissible — one of the easiest viruses to get or give. (3) The measles vaccine is highly effective — one of the most successful against any virus or microbe. I’ll turn “(4)” over to Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases: “The ‘evidence’ that measles vaccination is associated with serious adverse events such as autism and other afflictions, “ Fauci told me, “has been completely discredited by a number of independent scientific bodies.” Yet, a significant minority of parents — often well-educated parents — are opting out of vaccination. Many states (including California) make it relatively easy to refuse vaccination for “philosophic” reasons. This does not, I suspect, mean that people are reading Immanuel Kant or John Stuart Mill; it means they are consuming dodgy sources on the Internet. Resistance to vaccination on the left often reflects an obsession with purity. Vaccines are placed in the same mental category as GMOs, DDT and gluten. But the problem with organic health care is that the “natural” rate of child mortality is unacceptably high. Organically raised children can get some very nasty diseases. Opposition to vaccination on the right often reflects an obsession with liberty — in this case, freedom from intrusive state mandates. It has always struck me as odd that a parent would defend his or her children with a gun but leave them vulnerable to a microbe. Some conservatives get especially exercised when vaccination has anything to do with sex — as with the HPV vaccine — on the questionable theory that teenagers are more likely to fornicate if they have a medical permission slip (or less likely to without it). Whether hipsters or homeschoolers, parents who don’t vaccinate are free riders. Their children benefit from herd immunity without assuming the very small risk of adverse reaction to vaccination. It is a game that works — until The scientific consensus on measles is effectively unanimous. too many play it. Herd immunity requires about 90 percent vaccine coverage. Some children with highly vulnerable immune systems — say, a child being treated for leukemia — can’t be vaccinated for medical reasons. When the number of non-medical exemptions from vaccination gets large enough, the child with leukemia becomes the most vulnerable to the spread of disease. The government (in this case, state governments) has the responsibility to keep vaccination rates above 90 percent, which benefits everyone. This requires burdening the freedom of parents in a variety of ways not putting them in jail if they refuse to vaccinate, but denying them some public good (like public education) and subjecting them to stigma (which they generally deserve). As the rate of vaccination goes lower, the level of coercion must increase — making exemptions more difficult and burdensome to secure (as California needs to do). This issue is important in itself. It also demonstrates a point that is properly called “philosophic.” Vaccination is communitarianism in its purest, laboratory form. The choices of citizens are restricted for a clearly (even mathematically) defined social good. Things get murkier with other kinds of goods. Does the same coercive power apply to chronic diseases involving lifestyle choices? Government has taken a position against the use of tobacco. What of substances such as sugar, salt and saturated fat? Does the common good extend to the moral and social health of a community? Maybe just to the moral health of people under 21 or 18 who can’t buy or consume certain things? How about prostitution, which degrades women and men (even as willing participants) and results in a squalid social atmosphere? How about the legal availability of concentrated forms of THC? In all these matters, there is a balance between individual rights and the common good. This may sound commonplace. But some Americans seem to believe that the mere assertion of a right is sufficient to end a public argument. It is not, when the exercise of that right has unacceptable public consequences, or when the sum of likely choices is dangerous to a community. Sometimes we need 90 percent of the public to make the right choice, or innocent people suffer. MICHAEL GERSON MICHAEL GERSON’S email address: michaelgerson@ washpost.com YOUR VOICE Letters to the Editor reflect the opinions of the writers and are not necessarily those of The Daily Times. TODAY’S BIBLE VERSE Set out rubbish when pickup is scheduled SUBMITTED BY REBA ORR, MARYVILLE And ye shall seek me, and find me, when ye shall search for me with all your heart. Jeremiah 29:13 THE DAILY TIMES Blount County’s only daily newspaper, serving our readers since 1883 Published by Blount County Publishers LLC Dear Editor: A prosecuting attorney just could not believe that a jury had found the defendant not guilty. Astonished, he asked the jury foreman, “How could you possibly have found this man innocent?” The foreman replied, “Insanity.” The perplexed prosecutor asked, “All 12 of you?” I would like to weigh in on recent letters to the editor of The Daily Times regarding bulk rubbish in the city of Maryville. There is an old saying that “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” Many of these treasure hunters are looking for metal or items for resale in the bulk rubbish, but in the process they scatter what they don’t want all over the place. One neighbor put up a sign beside his neatly bagged rubbish that read, “Do not go through this rubbish.” It didn’t work and the bags were ripped open and the wind blew it all over. Also in my neighborhood there are deep ditches and bulk rubbish is thrown in them and when it rains the water backs up into yards and the street. People move or remodel during the month between pickups by the city, but some able-bodied residents should be reminded by the city of Maryville when and only when bulk rubbish will be picked up. Yours Truly, Sylvia Fagg 2049 Bittle Road Maryville, TN 37804 Gregg K. Jones President Carl Esposito Publisher Frank Trexler Managing Editor Richard Dodson News Editor Dean Stone Editor Melanie Tucker LifeTimes Editor Robert Norris City Editor Larry Aldridge Executive Editor Marcus Fitzsimmons Sports Editor Daryl Sullivan Photo Editor VOICE YOUR OPINIONS Letters to the editor are welcome. All letters must be signed and include your address and a telephone number where the writer may be reached. Those longer than 300 words normally will not be considered for publication. Address letters: Editor, The Daily Times, 307 E. Harper Ave. Maryville, Tenn., 37804. Letters may be submitted via email to [email protected] with verification included. In addition, a signed copy of the email must be forwarded to the above postal address. We do not accept letters via fax or by comments posted to our websites or Facebook page. | 7A THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com q S&P 500 2,041.51 NASDAQ 4,716.70 -8.52 Today Retweet this q -11.04 p +6.62 U.S. stock indexes closed mixed on Wednesday as oil resumed its slide lower. An Energy Department report showed U.S. inventories jumped last week more than expected. Six of the 10 sectors of the Standard and Poor’s 500 fell, led by energy shares. General Motors GM Close: $35.83 1.85 or 5.4% The automaker reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit despite the high cost of recalled vehicles and claims. $40 30 N D 52-week range $28.82 J $38.15 Vol.: 49.3m (3.4x avg.) PE: 52.7 Mkt. Cap: $57.57 b Yield: 3.3% TICKER CLOSE CHG Alcoa AllegTch AlumChina ArcelorMit Cameco g CarpTech CentAl FrptMcM Gerdau Nucor POSCO RelStlAl SiderurNac SthnCopper StlDynam TeckRes g Tenaris Ternium TurqHillRs USSteel AA ATI ACH MT CCJ CRS CENX FCX GGB NUE PKX RS SID SCCO STLD TCK TS TX TRQ X 16.42 30.21 11.72 9.85 14.98 39.32 25.31 18.29 3.50 45.50 59.11 53.16 1.60 29.22 18.01 14.31 29.62 17.51 3.08 24.23 -.16 -.62 +.49 -.48 -.31 -.63 +.19 -.69 -.12 -.23 +.39 -1.35 -.05 +.32 -.08 -.51 -1.53 -.43 -.15 -1.47 q -.03 CRUDE OIL $48.45 5 37.48 2 39.30 1 76.28 6 4.51 9 17.75 0 55.18 3 11.12 7 173.14 6 47.52 0 123.16 9 59.35 9 627.30 3 41.04 4 18.21 6 38.22 3 21.45 9 11.48 9 152.94 9 146.07 0 55.77 2 74.89 8 95.38 4 25.75 3 135.10 8 68.72 8 59.30 8 58.94 9 37.46 0 35.81 3 82.00 6 69.79 9 126.83 9 22.70 2 90.55 2 69.94 3 17.06 9 92.02 3 104.76 9 13.99 4 69.87 8 19.77 2 27.53 6 109.00 3 56.73 1 15.17 0 73.59 0 107.74 9 103.92 9 13.86 8 85.54 2 15.91 9 83.72 9 55.73 0 70.75 8 48.85 1 6.85 9 198.88 0 71.11 6 5.50 3 17.51 3 68.43 3 37.34 9 38.77 0 161.72 2 58.76 2 79.05 4 11.03 9 63.70 4 21.80 5 11.30 2 13.68 0 27.92 8 33.50 9 41.09 3 19.10 2 12.67 6 80.22 2 11.54 1 2.75 4 8.57 7 43.22 0 47.17 2 49.16 7 43.06 2 50.77 5 44.24 9 30.51 0 123.61 7 76.89 8 30.97 3 3.85 0 72.00 8 90.97 0 38.48 9 37.04 0 207.15 s s s s s s s t s s t s s s s s t s s r s s t s s s s s s s s s t s s s r s s s s s s s s s s s s s t t s s t s s s t s s s s s s s s t s s s t s s t t s s t s s t s s s s s s t s s s s s t s s t t s s s s t t s s t t t t s t t s s t s s s s s s s s s t t s t t s t s s s s s t s t s s s t s t s s s s t s s s t s t s s t t t s s t t s s s s t t t s t t s s s s t s s t s t s t s t s s t t s s s t t t s s t t t t s t t s s t s t t t t t t s t t t s t t s r t t s s t t s t s s s s t t s s s s t t s s t t t t s t t t s s s t s s s s t t t s t t s t t t t t s t s t s s s t s q -4.60 EURO $1.1418 Interestrates q TREASURIES 3-month T-bill GOLD $1,263.80 -.0069 p +4.10 NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO .01 0.01 ... r t t .05 29 1.88f 6-month T-bill .06 0.07 -0.01 t t s .06 dd ... .10 52-wk T-bill .19 0.20 -0.01 s t s 23 1.10 ... 2-year T-note .49 0.51 -0.02 t t t .32 The yield on the 86 0.12 5-year T-note 1.25 1.29 -0.04 s t t 1.47 10-year Trea21 2.08 33 0.40 sury fell to 1.75 10-year T-note 1.75 1.79 -0.04 s t t 2.63 23 3.16f percent on 30-year T-bond 2.35 2.38 -0.03 s t t 3.60 24 0.24 Wednesday. 60 1.36 Yields affect NET 1YR 19 1.56 rates on mortBONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 18 ... gages and other 13 0.96 consumer loans. Barclays LongT-BdIdx 2.27 2.26 +0.01 s t t 3.39 45 0.20 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.14 4.12 +0.02 s t t 4.89 24 0.52f 31 0.20 Barclays USAggregate 2.00 1.93 +0.07 t t t 2.29 PRIME FED cc ... Barclays US High Yield 6.37 6.45 -0.08 t t s 5.65 RATE FUNDS 17 ... Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.42 3.29 +0.13 r t t 4.35 50 2.60a YEST 3.25 .13 21 0.50 Barclays CompT-BdIdx 1.57 1.53 +0.04 s t t 1.70 12 ... 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.86 2.80 +0.06 t t t 3.05 22 1.00 1 YR AGO 3.25 .13 18 0.99f 11 4.28 6MO. 1YR. 23 0.80 Foreign MAJORS CLOSE CH. %CH. AGO AGO 18 0.90 Exchange USD per British Pound 1.5222 +.0054 +.35% 1.6854 1.6321 18 0.90 cc 1.00 The dollar rose Canadian Dollar 1.2566 +.0155 +1.23% 1.0909 1.1074 17 0.42 strongly against USD per Euro 1.1418 -.0069 -.60% 1.3419 1.3517 15 2.04 the Canadian Japanese Yen 117.36 -.24 -.20% 102.55 101.64 44 0.40 dollar, which 16 0.24 Mexican Peso 14.8332 +.1384 +.93%13.1982 13.3491 was hurt by the 36 0.68 tumbling price EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLE EAST 14 1.60f Israeli Shekel 3.8923 +.0016 +.04% 3.4163 3.5360 18 1.88 of crude oil. 30 0.70 The dollar was Norwegian Krone 7.5779 +.0663 +.87% 6.2617 6.2874 15 3.32 mixed against South African Rand 11.4673 +.0875 +.76%10.6703 11.0839 12 2.76 other Swedish Krona 8.2679 +.0595 +.72% 6.8823 6.5266 15 0.24f currencies. Swiss Franc .9237 +.0008 +.09% .9068 .9042 13 1.52f dd ... ASIA/PACIFIC 16 0.92f Australian Dollar 1.2852 +.0023 +.18% 1.0717 1.1194 21 2.30 Chinese Yuan 6.2463 -.0119 -.19% 6.1785 6.0605 2.46e Hong Kong Dollar 7.7520 -.0020 -.03% 7.7501 7.7645 ... 13 1.64f Indian Rupee 61.761 +.184 +.30% 60.930 62.545 25 1.88 Singapore Dollar 1.3477 +.0025 +.19% 1.2459 1.2683 19 2.07f South Korean Won 1088.29 -4.50 -.41%1032.41 1079.81 25 0.16 Taiwan Dollar 31.47 +.03 +.10% 30.04 30.34 26 0.84f dd ... 20 2.72 20 1.60 FUELS CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 22 0.74 Commodities Crude Oil (bbl) 48.45 53.05 -8.67 -9.1 25 2.04 The price of Ethanol (gal) 1.42 1.44 ... -12.6 dd ... crude oil Heating Oil (gal) 1.77 1.85 -4.33 -4.3 17 6.00 plunged by Natural Gas (mm btu) 2.66 2.75 -3.34 -7.9 28 0.92 more than $4 Unleaded Gas (gal) 1.48 1.60 -7.47 +3.2 cc ... per barrel, giv5 ... METALS CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 10 1.40 ing up more Gold (oz) 1263.80 1259.70 +0.33 +6.8 ... than half of the 28 0.68 big gains it had Silver (oz) 17.38 17.31 +0.43 +11.7 17 2.80 made in the priPlatinum (oz) 1238.90 1235.20 +0.30 +2.5 20 1.49f or four days. Copper (lb) 2.61 2.60 +0.46 -8.0 14 1.08 Natural gas also Palladium (oz) 790.50 786.30 +0.53 -1.0 26 ... fell. 36 ... AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD dd 0.75 Cattle (lb) 1.53 1.54 -0.49 -7.7 dd ... Coffee (lb) 1.65 1.61 +2.58 -1.0 ... Corn (bu) 3.84 3.86 -0.58 -3.4 23 1.08 Cotton (lb) 0.61 0.61 -0.36 +1.6 23 1.12f Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 309.60 313.70 -1.31 -6.5 22 1.28 q 1.56a Orange Juice (lb) 1.38 1.40 -1.39 -1.5 q 1.08a Soybeans (bu) 9.72 9.87 -1.52 -4.6 16 0.88 Wheat (bu) 5.11 5.14 -0.54 -13.4 12 0.20 59 ... dd ... 18 0.88 PERCENT RETURN FUND CAT NAV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR 5YR 27 0.24 FAMILY 11 ... American Funds GrthAmA m LG 42.86 -.21 +0.4 +13.6 +17.2 +14.8 12 0.80 IncAmerA m MA 21.76 -.07 +0.8 +12.4 +11.9 +12.0 7 0.40 InvCoAmA m LB 37.01 -.37 -0.2 +16.9 +17.0 +14.4 13 0.40 GrowA m LG 40.88 -.08 +0.2 +12.4 +12.4 +13.5 dd ... Calamos NYVentA m LB 36.63 -.11 -0.6 +12.3 +14.0 +12.5 21 2.00 Davis IntlStk FB 42.78 -.18 +1.6 +8.2 +12.1 +9.3 24 1.28f Dodge & Cox 38 ... Dupree TNTxFInc SI 11.81 ... +1.0 +7.8 +3.7 +4.8 dd ... Fidelity Contra LG 98.23 -.30 +0.3 +14.1 +16.8 +16.2 52 0.24 DivrIntl d FG 35.26 -.09 +2.4 +5.1 +10.5 +8.5 18 1.92 IntlSmCp d FR 21.87 -.02 +1.0 +0.4 +11.4 +10.9 24 1.30a Magellan LG 91.90 -.40 -0.7 +17.4 +18.2 +13.7 27 1.16 Nicholas Nichol MG 67.98 -.45 -0.6 +19.3 +20.5 +19.8 23 3.00 Oppenheimer CapApA m LG 59.33 -.41 0.0 +20.0 +16.0 +14.2 Dividend footnotes: a- extra dividends were paid, but are not included b- annual rate plus stock c- liquidating dividend e- amount GlobA m WS 77.10 -.30 +1.4 +8.8 +13.4 +11.8 declared or paid in last 12 months f- current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement i- sum of div- PIMCO HiYldA m HY 9.22 ... +1.3 +3.8 +6.6 +7.8 idends paid after stock split, no regular rate k- declared or paid this year - a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears m- current TotRetAdm b CI 10.87 ... +2.1 +4.9 +3.9 +5.0 annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement p- initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown r- declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend t- paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date Putnam DynAstAlBalA m MA 14.64 ... +1.2 +14.1 +12.3 +11.4 DynAstAlConA m CA 10.88 ... +1.6 +10.6 +8.6 +8.2 2,080 4,800 DynAstAlGrA m AL 15.97 ... +1.3 +15.4 +14.1 +12.4 S&P 500 Nasdaq composite Thrivent BalIncPlsA m MA 12.96 -.03 +1.0 +8.8 +10.3 +10.7 Close: 2,041.51 Close: 4,716.70 2,020 4,680 Change: -8.52 (-0.4%) Change: -11.04 (-0.2%) MidCapA m MB 21.27 -.05 -0.2 +15.2 +15.6 +15.9 1,960 4,560 MuniBdA m ML 11.86 -.01 +1.6 +9.1 +4.1 +5.1 10 DAYS 10 DAYS OpIncPlsA m MU 10.32 ... +0.9 +3.6 +3.0 +4.8 2,160 5,000 SmCapStkA m SB 18.05 -.10 -0.9 +9.0 +11.0 +13.5 Vanguard 500Inv LB 188.52 -.73 -0.7 +18.6 +17.2 +16.2 2,080 4,800 Explr SG 92.36 -.22 -0.7 +8.5 +15.2 +17.6 ExtndIdx MB 66.81 -.23 +0.3 +12.1 +16.2 +17.8 2,000 4,600 GrowthIdx LG 53.92 -.19 +0.4 +18.8 +17.3 +17.2 ITTsry GI 11.60 +.02 +2.2 +4.6 +1.8 +4.1 1,920 4,400 InflaPro IP 13.53 +.02 +2.7 +4.2 +0.7 +4.2 IntlGr FG 21.98 -.18 +2.0 +3.6 +8.2 +8.7 Prmcp LG 102.92 +.06 +0.1 +21.9 +20.8 +17.5 1,840 4,200 A S O N D J A S O N D J REITIdx SR 28.80 -.12 +7.0 +34.3 +15.3 +20.3 HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD SmCapIdx SB 55.92 -.25 +0.1 +12.4 +16.0 +17.9 TotBdMkInv CI 11.05 +.01 +1.9 +5.9 +2.9 +4.3 DOW 17782.22 17603.21 17673.02 +6.62 +0.04% s s s -0.84% NYSE NASD USGro LG 29.95 -.13 +0.1 +18.1 +18.0 +16.7 DOW Trans. 8934.35 8820.34 8884.94 -17.22 -0.19% s s s -2.79% Vol. (in mil.) 4,005 2,084 DOW Util. 642.39 632.71 633.85 -7.55 -1.18% t s s +2.55% ValueIdx LV 32.48 -.13 -1.4 +17.8 +17.0 +15.3 10753.98 10775.04 -72.37 -0.67% s s t -0.59% Pvs. Volume 4,532 2,090 NYSE Comp. 10843.85 Welltn MA 39.20 -.08 +0.1 +12.8 +12.2 +11.8 NASDAQ 4744.33 4697.79 4716.70 -11.04 -0.23% s s s -0.41% WndsrII LV 36.84 -.15 -1.3 +15.6 +16.2 +14.6 Advanced 1109 1042 S&P 500 2054.74 2036.72 2041.51 -8.52 -0.42% s s s -0.84% Declined 2031 1677 S&P 400 AdvCoBdAd CI 13.00 +.01 +1.8 +5.9 +3.5 +5.0 1474.74 1465.31 1467.44 -6.50 -0.44% s s s +1.03% Wells Fargo New Highs 135 75 Wilshire 5000 21666.16 SCpValInv SB 28.83 +.01 -0.7 +3.0 +5.9 +9.2 21490.62 21536.44 -88.34 -0.41% s s s -0.62% New Lows 22 38 Russell 2000 1198.95 1189.34 1191.44 -5.55 -0.46% s s s -1.10% SpMdCpValIv MV 32.25 -.08 +0.4 +17.4 +19.0 +17.6 Industrial Metals 20 NAME 30-YR T-BONDS 2.35% 34.41 19.28 48.85 3.61 16.42 54.03 8.81 151.45 39.08 124.04 56.76 601.63 36.37 15.79 33.78 12.91 10.75 147.53 141.13 54.28 46.21 90.54 22.80 108.35 63.95 56.90 56.39 36.26 35.51 66.15 64.23 118.05 21.74 71.81 57.33 13.58 87.47 91.46 13.52 58.81 18.48 24.16 95.50 44.95 8.43 72.02 108.41 100.75 13.38 82.00 12.98 80.54 54.36 71.35 46.10 2.17 192.28 70.67 4.52 12.69 49.17 26.62 37.66 161.84 45.50 53.97 7.35 56.45 18.42 7.83 8.66 27.33 32.07 40.05 16.69 11.62 71.26 9.04 1.17 6.17 38.93 44.64 25.92 39.59 27.81 39.25 28.13 120.44 68.88 27.40 2.42 71.47 86.65 37.50 35.29 214.88 +.07 -.03 -.53 +.03 -.16 -.23 -.32 -.78 -1.40 +1.11 -1.16 -6.21 -.11 -.10 +.06 +.23 -.09 -.76 -.68 -.66 -1.76 -1.12 -.04 -1.18 -.66 +1.49 +1.38 +.28 +.50 -1.38 -.53 +.61 -.15 -1.31 -2.11 -.03 -1.95 -.79 +.01 -1.46 +.31 -.31 -2.42 +.69 -.11 +.40 +1.17 -.52 +.13 ... -.02 -.73 +.63 +.85 -.53 +.03 +.28 +1.04 -.04 -.06 -.74 -.01 -.46 +1.36 -.23 -1.64 +.04 +.54 -.16 +.27 +.17 -.10 +.33 -.51 -.08 -.05 -.67 -.07 -.01 +.14 -.26 +1.39 -.66 -.14 -.66 +.38 -.05 -1.35 -2.26 -.65 -.02 -.35 +.46 -.43 -.28 +13.82 +0.2 -0.2 -1.1 +0.8 -1.0 -0.4 -3.5 -0.5 -3.5 +0.9 -2.0 -1.0 -0.3 -0.6 +0.2 +1.8 -0.8 -0.5 -0.5 -1.2 -3.7 -1.2 -0.2 -1.1 -1.0 +2.7 +2.5 +0.8 +1.4 -2.0 -0.8 +0.5 -0.7 -1.8 -3.5 -0.2 -2.2 -0.9 +0.1 -2.4 +1.7 -1.3 -2.5 +1.6 -1.3 +0.6 +1.1 -0.5 +1.0 ... -0.2 -0.9 +1.2 +1.2 -1.1 +1.4 +0.1 +1.5 -0.9 -0.5 -1.5 ... -1.2 +0.8 -0.5 -2.9 +0.5 +1.0 -0.9 +3.6 +2.0 -0.4 +1.0 -1.3 -0.5 -0.4 -0.9 -0.8 -0.8 +2.3 -0.7 +3.2 -2.5 -0.4 -2.3 +1.0 -0.2 -1.1 -3.2 -2.3 -0.8 -0.5 +0.5 -1.1 -0.8 +6.9 +2.4 -4.9 -18.8 +1.7 +4.0 +9.7 -3.3 -4.9 -15.7 +3.6 +1.8 -2.8 -6.5 -11.7 -10.9 +20.1 -2.2 -1.7 +9.7 +5.9 -7.5 +0.3 -2.7 -3.4 -4.0 -1.9 -2.0 -0.1 +2.5 -6.4 -6.1 -5.7 +7.6 -5.3 -7.1 +0.8 ... -1.1 -0.4 +2.2 +1.0 -4.4 -10.4 +5.2 -14.7 +1.0 +3.3 +0.8 +5.2 -2.7 -4.9 +3.5 +1.5 +11.1 +6.8 -14.6 -0.2 +2.7 +4.9 -6.7 -2.7 -8.6 -1.1 +9.8 -7.2 -8.2 -9.7 +8.9 +0.2 +20.8 -11.8 +1.5 +3.0 +1.6 +5.0 -1.1 -5.2 -14.4 +0.1 -9.8 -4.2 +5.5 -5.0 -5.5 -0.7 -2.1 -1.0 +1.1 -8.0 +0.9 -0.8 +8.7 +0.9 +7.4 -1.7 +10.9 +13.3 -44.1 -18.9 -6.0 +49.0 +64.9 -4.8 +32.5 +25.2 +39.5 +27.2 +25.8 +2.8 -2.1 +12.2 -33.3 +51.9 +36.1 +40.4 +37.0 -18.7 +29.2 +3.2 +2.3 +23.1 +6.7 +10.1 +20.5 +56.8 -1.1 +3.3 +38.1 +48.1 -2.0 -4.7 +3.9 +47.9 +5.4 +22.2 +10.8 +10.8 +4.1 +28.9 -8.0 -22.8 +37.6 +45.3 +16.2 +15.8 +14.4 -12.5 +58.0 +21.5 +101.2 +29.4 -44.4 +33.7 +54.6 +18.4 -3.0 -7.5 -20.1 +28.8 +44.1 +1.3 -15.1 -17.1 +196.3 +13.2 +33.1 -26.9 +48.3 +8.0 +28.0 +5.0 +11.3 +3.0 -5.4 -43.5 +11.3 +16.2 +112.8 -34.5 +11.1 +4.0 +8.7 +102.7 +44.1 +27.9 +21.9 -5.1 +22.0 +21.3 +40.8 +24.5 +61.0 28830 371 1864 6128 15004 8086 38 5674 726 860 717 276 3466 82168 545 12191 5 3486 885 1122 4390 457 4809 9939 173 39700 7161 2331 972 939 33 317 1729 1740 10877 91 1567 19310 2171 243 753 32580 1542 5081 11 162 6690 2389 3 809 373 258 2733 5536 139 18 1219 6091 65 247 2844 1189 3339 1500 3446 2519 92 48 822 10328 312 1061 35692 280 142 49 184 17029 0 242 25 8740 9050 3158 2020 4628 23 3054 7568 130 2 1510 8827 562 3109 2134 MutualFunds StocksRecap 35 25 q -.01 Stocks of Blount Interest AT&T Inc T 31.74 Acxiom Corp ACXM 16.04 Albemarle Corp ALB 46.78 Alcatel-Lucent ALU 2.28 Alcoa Inc AA 10.83 Altria Group MO 33.80 Am Softwre AMSWA 8.21 Amgen AMGN 108.20 Arkansas Bst ARCB 29.88 Ashland Inc ASH 88.76 ATMOS Energy ATO 44.26 AutoZone Inc AZO 481.30 BB&T Corp BBT 34.50 Bank of America BAC 14.37 Bank of the Ozarks OZRK 27.51 Barrick Gold ABX 10.04 Bear State Financial BSF 6.31 TWTR $40.72 $70 Berkshire Hath B BRK/B 108.12 $65.25 ’14 Boston Prop BXP 105.82 Brunswick Corp BC 38.17 50 Cameron Intl CAM 39.52 Carlisle Cos CSL 71.51 CenterPoint Energy CNP 21.07 30 est. Chevron Corp CVX 98.88 Operating -$0.02 $0.06 Clarcor Inc CLC 52.70 EPS Comcast Corp A CMCSA 47.74 4Q ’13 4Q ’14 Comcast Spl CMCSK 47.21 Price-earnings ratio: lost money ConAgra Foods CAG 28.09 based on past 12-month results Cooper Tire CTB 21.95 Cullen Frost CFR 60.87 Dividend: none Deltic Timber DEL 58.05 DDS 82.75 Source: FactSet Dillards Inc Duke Realty Corp DRE 15.20 Eastman Chem EMN 67.13 Spotlight on trade Emerson Elec EMR 55.81 Ennis Inc EBF 12.51 The Commerce Department Entergy ETR 61.67 reports its latest tally of the Exxon Mobil Corp XOM 86.03 nation’s trade deficit today. FHN 11.00 The trade gap fell in November Fst Horizon Natl GATX GMT 52.51 to the lowest level in almost a GenCorp GY 15.11 year, thanks to the country’s Gen Electric GE 23.41 swiftly shrinking thirst for foreign Genuine Parts GPC 76.50 oil. The deficit, which measures GlaxoSmithKline PLC GSK 41.25 imports minus exports, narrowed Grupo Simec SIM 8.02 to $39 billion during the month. Hanover Insurance THG 52.86 That’s a 7.7 percent drop from the Home Depot HD 73.96 previous month. Economists have Honeywell Intl HON 82.89 forecast that the trade gap edged HopFed Bancorp Inc HFBC 11.11 Hunt, JB Transport JBHT 69.33 lower in December. iStar Financial STAR 12.30 Trade (goods and services) Integrys Energy TEG 52.08 seasonally adjusted, in billions Intl Paper IP 44.24 -$30 Kroger Co KR 35.13 LTC Prop LTC 36.08 Lo Jack LOJN 2.03 Lockheed Martin LMT 144.69 est. Lowes Cos LOW 44.13 -40 -39.0 -38.0 -40.0 Martha Stewart Liv MSO 3.40 -40.7 -42.3 Modine Mfg MOD 11.25 -43.6 Murphy Oil Corp MUR 42.19 NCR Corp NCR 22.83 -50 Newell Rubbermaid NWL 28.27 J A S O N D Northrop Grumman NOC 109.17 2014 Nucor Corp NUE 42.93 OII 50.01 Source: FactSet Oceaneering Intl Omnova Solutions OMN 5.15 PAM Transp PTSI 17.83 What a drag Parkway Properties PKY 16.95 Financial analysts anticipate that Penney JC Co Inc JCP 4.90 Philip Morris International’s Pep Boys PBY 8.00 Pepco Holdings Inc POM 18.96 fourth-quarter 2014 earnings Pfizer Inc PFE 27.51 declined from a year earlier. Piedmnt Nat Gas PNY 32.12 Philip Morris, which sells Pimco Corp &Inco Opp PTY 15.84 Marlboro and other cigarette PFL 11.42 brands outside the United States, Pimco Income Strat Regal Beloit RBC 62.15 is due to report financial results Regions Fncl RF 8.59 today. The company has raised Reliv Intl RELV 1.14 prices and cut costs to cope with Ruby Tuesday RT 5.14 declining cigarette shipments. At Simmons Fst Natl SFNC 32.01 the same time, it has been able to Swst Airlines LUV 20.23 grow its share of the retail market Sthwstn Energy SWN 22.64 in a number of key regions, Suntrust Bks STI 33.97 including Argentina, France, Trinty Inds TRN 24.41 Tyson Foods TSN 34.90 Germany and Russia. USA Truck USAK 13.00 Union Pacific Corp UNP 85.56 VF Corp VFC 55.14 Vascular Solutions VASC 18.42 Virco Mfg VIRC 2.00 Vulcan Matl VMC 54.10 WalMart Strs WMT 72.27 Weingarten Rlty WRI 28.03 Weyerhaeuser WY 27.48 Whirlpool WHR 124.39 AP 6-MO T-BILLS .06% 52-WK RANGE YTD 1YR VOL TICKER LO HI CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO QTR CHG%RTN (Thous) P/E DIV NAME Twitter has been trying to expand its user base amid concerns that it doesn’t hold as much mass appeal as other social media sites. The company’s user base increased 23 percent to 284 million monthly active users in the July-September quarter. That’s less than a quarter of the user base of Facebook. Twitter’s latest earnings, due out today, should provide an update on how the company’s efforts to woo more users fared in the final three months of 2014. DOW 17,673.02 Money&Markets Automobiles & Parts Travel & Leisure YTD NAME +.63 -4.56 +.20 -1.18 -1.43 -9.93 +.91 -5.07 -.05 -3.55 -4.70 -8.11 -.48 +1.02 -1.73 +.67 -.59 -.13 -.02 -2.51 AmAirlines Carnival CarnUK Chipotle DeltaAir Hilton LVSands MarIntA McDnlds MelcoCrwn Priceline RylCarb Ryanair SwstAirl Starbucks StarwdHtl UtdContl Wyndham Wynn YumBrnds TICKER CLOSE CHG AAL 49.46 CCL 43.46 CUK 44.05 CMG 676.00 DAL 46.96 HLT 26.33 LVS 55.41 MAR 75.94 MCD 94.05 MPEL 24.94 PCLN 1028.28 RCL 74.34 RYAAY 64.50 LUV 44.64 SBUX 88.70 HOT 73.69 UAL 71.70 WYN 82.77 WYNN 146.11 YUM 73.65 YTD +1.96 -4.17 -.23 -1.87 -.37 -.94 -50.63 -8.51 +.95 -2.23 -.24 +.24 -2.32 -2.75 -.69 -2.09 +.13 +.35 -.66 -.46 -9.27 -111.93 -.66 -8.09 -.38 -6.77 +1.39 +2.32 +.21 +6.65 -.58 -7.38 +3.73 +4.81 -.67 -2.99 -9.69 -2.65 +.04 +.80 NAME TICKER CLOSE CHG Autoliv BorgWarn DanaHldg DelphiAuto FordM GenMotors Gentex s GenuPrt Goodyear HarleyD Honda JohnsnCtl LKQ Corp LearCorp MagnaInt g TRWAuto TeslaMot Toyota Visteon WABCO ALV BWA DAN DLPH F GM GNTX GPC GT HOG HMC JCI LKQ LEA MGA TRW TSLA TM VC WBC YTD 111.32 +.36 +5.20 57.44 +.41 +2.49 23.09 +.35 +1.35 72.75 +.01 +.03 15.87 +.22 +.37 35.83 +1.85 +.92 17.21 -.10 -.86 95.50 -2.42 -11.07 24.95 +.31 -3.62 62.76 -.73 -3.15 31.32 +.09 +1.80 48.11 -.38 -.23 26.58 -.27 -1.54 108.76 +.97 +10.68 98.93 -1.51 -9.76 102.87 +.06 +.02 218.55 +.19 -3.86 132.68 +1.58 +7.20 98.55 -.76 -8.31 99.29 -.37 -5.49 Company Spotlight Ralph Lauren plummets Shares of Ralph Lauren dropped 18 percent Wednesday after the retailer cut its 2015 outlook for the second time since October. The company now expects revenue to rise about 4 percent, excluding currency fluctuations. That’s down from a previous outlook of 5 percent to 7 percent growth. Management said that based on current rates, foreign exchange is expected to have a negative impact on earnings into fiscal 2016. Ralph Lauren (RL) AP Wednesday’s close: $139.71 Price-earnings ratio: 17 52-WEEK RANGE $140 That news came as the clothing and home goods maker reported its fiscal third-quarter net income fell to $215 million, or $2.41 per share, compared with $237 million, or $2.57 per share last year. The average estimate of analysts surveyed by Zacks Investment Research was for earnings of $2.52 per share. Ralph Lauren has been investing in its infrastructure and increasing spending on marketing to promote new products. 187 (Based on past 12-month results) Total return RL 1-yr -8.4% Div. yield: 1.3% *annualized 3-yr* -2.6 5-yr* 13.5 Dividend: $1.80 Source: FactSet 8A | NATION&WORLD BRIEFS US, Iran discuss nuclear compromise THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Feds offer ‘net neutrality’ rules for Web BY ANNE FLAHERTY VIENNA — With time for negotiations running short, the U.S and Iran are discussing a compromise that would let Iran keep much of its uraniumenriching technology but reduce its potential to make nuclear weapons, two diplomats tell The Associated Press. Such a compromise could break the decade-long deadlock on attempts to limit Iranian activities that could be used to make such arms: Tehran refuses to meet U.S.led demands for deep cuts in the number of centrifuges it uses to enrich uranium, a process that can create material for anything from chemotherapy to the core of an atomic bomb. Experts warn that any reduction in centrifuge efficiency is reversible more quickly than a straight decrease in the number of machines, an argument that could be seized upon by powerful critics of the talks in the U.S. Congress. Officials face tough flu vaccine questions WASHINGTON — Federal health officials faced tough questioning Tuesday about why this year’s flu vaccine isn’t giving good protection against the winter menace. This is a particularly bad flu season, and one reason is that the most common flu strain isn’t a good match to this year’s vaccine. Lawmakers on Tuesday asked why the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention didn’t act months ago when concerns first arose to create a bettermatched vaccine. CDC immunization chief Dr. Anne Schuchat says it wasn’t possible to change course. While CDC first noticed a slight change in that strain last March, by the time the shift had become common in September, it was too late. Obama’s pick to run Pentagon grilled WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s pick to run the Pentagon was grilled Wednesday by Republicans who used his confirmation hearing to criticize White House foreign policy on every front — from battling Islamic State militants to supporting Ukraine to trying to shutter the prison at Guantanamo Bay. Ashton Carter is on the fast track to being the president’s fourth defense secretary in six years. Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., pointedly asked Carter what the administration’s strategy was to confront IS. Carter said the goal was to defeat the Islamic State forces in a way that “once they are beaten they stay beaten.” The Associated Press WA S H I N G T O N — Declaring the Internet critical for the nation, a top U.S. regulator on Wednesday proposed an unprecedented expansion of federal power to ensure providers don’t block or slow Web traffic for America’s countless users. The proposal by Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler was a victory for advocates of “net neutrality,” the idea that Internet providers must allow data to move across their networks without interference. The idea has been the subject of heavy lobbying and millions of dollars in advertising in the past year. “Net neutrality” means that whether you’re trying to buy a necklace on Etsy, stream the season premiere of Netflix’s “House of Cards” or watch a music video on Google’s YouTube, your Internet service provider would have to load all of those websites equally quickly. Act. The plan would apply to both wired service provided by companies like Comcast and wireless service by companies like T-Mobile. That would put all Internet service in the same regulatory camp as telephones and any other public utility, which Republicans and industry officials say would discourage investment and increase taxes. The FCC will vote Feb. 26 on the proposal, and approval is considered likely. President Barack Obama has called for regulation under the Communications Act, and Democratic appointees hold a commission majority. “It is counterproductive because heavy regulation of the Internet will create uncertainty and chill investment among the many players — not just Internet service providers — that now will need to consider FCC rules before launching new services,” said Michael Glover, Verizon senior vice president and deputy general counsel. The Associated Press TVBS | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS THIS IMAGE TAKEN FROM VIDEO provided by TVBS shows a commercial airplane clipping an elevated roadway Wednesday just before it careened into a river in Taipei, Taiwan. The ATR-72 prop-jet aircraft had 58 people aboard. Crashed plane hoisted from river Rescuers pull 15 alive from wreckage; 26 confirmed dead BY RALPH JENNINGS The Associated Press TAIPEI, Taiwan — Rescuers used a crane to hoist the fuselage of a wrecked TransAsia Airways plane from a shallow river in Taiwan’s capital late Wednesday as they searched into the night for 17 people missing in a crash that killed at least 26 others. Flight 235 with 58 people aboard — most of them travelers from China — banked sharply on its side shortly after takeoff from Taipei, clipped a highway bridge and then careened into the Keelung River. Rescuers in rubber rafts pulled 15 people alive from the wreckage during daylight. After dark, they brought in the crane, and the death toll was expected to rise once crews were able to search through submerged portions of the fuselage, which came to rest a few dozen meters (yards) from the shore. Dramatic video clips apparently taken from cars were posted online and aired by broadcasters, showing the ATR 72 propjet as it pivoted onto its side while zooming toward a traffic bridge over the river. In one of them, the plane rapidly fills the frame as its now-vertical wing scrapes over the road, hitting a vehicle before heading into the river. Speculation cited in local media said the crew may have turned sharply to follow the line of the river to avoid crashing into a highrise residential area, but Taiwan’s aviation authority said it had no evidence of that. Taiwanese broadcasters repeatedly played a recording of the plane’s final contact with the control tower in which the crew called out “Mayday” three times. The recording offered no direct clues as to why the plane was in distress. It was the airline’s second French-Italian-built ATR 72 to crash in the past year. AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan called Wednesday for a decisive battle against the Islamic State group, declaring “this evil can and should be defeated,” after the militants burned a Jordanian pilot to death in a cage and gleefully broadcast the horrific images on outdoor screens in their stronghold. Waves of revulsion over the killing washed across the Middle East, a region long accustomed to violence. In mosques, streets and coffee shops, Muslims denounced the militants’ brutality and distanced themselves from their violent version of Islam. Even a prominent preacher with close links to jihadi groups said Islamic State militants miscalculated if they hoped the images of the pilot’s agony would galvanize greater opposition to a U.S.-led military coalition that has been bombing targets of the group. “After millions of Muslims were cursing every pilot (in the coalition), with this act, they (IS) have made the burned one into a symbol,” Abdullah al-Muhaysni, a Saudi sheik, wrote on his Twitter account. Talk of long-ago divorce can bring present-day pain DEAR ABBY: Would you please remind your readers that people who have been through an awful divorce DO NOT want to hear anything about their ex? We don’t want to hear — again and again — how much better the ex did in the settlement than we did. We don’t want to hear that the ex was seen with his girlfriend the other day. I have a friend who tells me every time I speak with her how much better he made out in the settlement than I did. People also need to realize that even though the divorce was years ago, it still hurts. — HURTING IN MASSACHUSETTS DEAR HURTING: I’m passing along your message. However, when it first happened, you should have told the woman to drop the subject because it was hurtful. If you didn’t, please do that. But if you did say it and your request was disregarded, recognize that this person isn’t a “friend,” that she probably gets a kick out of causing you pain or aggravation, and you should avoid her. DEAR ABBY DEAR ABBY: I’m 17 and adopted. I have a wonderful new family, but a very dark past. I was beaten every day for seven years and was bulimic for five. The abuse finally ended when my stepfather went to jail for trying to murder my mother and me. I was bullied in school and went home to more abuse. Now, even though I’m out of the situation, I still get scared when people yell at me, or at school when someone raises their hands like they are about to hit me. Everyone tells me I need to “grow up,” but how am I supposed to do that when I’m still scared of my past? — CAN’T GET PAST IT Getting You Down? Call for sizes and pricing 15093051 Behind Sandy’s Lingerie DEAR CAN’T GET PAST IT: After the amount of trauma you have experienced, it may take help from a licensed mental health professional to get past what was done to you. If your family is unable to provide it, discuss this with a counselor at school and ask for help, because the counselor may be able to refer you to someone. DEAR ABBY: My adult son and his wife have had a dog for two years. I do not want a dog in my house, but I also don’t want to prevent them from visiting (they live six hours away). We have tried keeping “Puddles” in the basement, but she whined all night, and my son ended up sleeping on the basement floor with her. They think I’m going to give in because she’s so cute, but I don’t like little animals running, jumping and yapping. (OK, I’m high-strung, and holidays make it worse.) My husband doesn’t support me and tries to sneak Puddles in when I’m not looking. This is not fair! I’m the one who keeps the house nice, but I love my son. Prescription Costs 2725 U.S. Hwy 411 S. Maryville, TN 37801 Owner Major Internet providers insist they have no plans to create such fast or slow lanes, but they strongly oppose the regulation, arguing that it could stifle innovation and investment. Open Internet rules had been in place but were recently knocked down by a federal court. W h e e l e r ’s p ro p o sa l attempts to erase any legal uncertainty by reclassifying the Internet as a telecommunications service and regulating it under the 1934 Communications Jordan says ISIS can be defeated Hill’s Climate Controlled Storage Charlie Hill Thursday, February 5, 2015 Over 250 Generics Over 250 Medications Available Join our Prescription Savings Program Today! Our program saves you money on Generic Prescriptions. Annual enrollment fee as low as $500 per person or $1000 for family. Call us today for more details! 865-363-9230 City Drug Co. 1612 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy., Maryville 865-982-7162 www.citydrugsco.com Any suggestions? — PARTICULAR IN OHIO DEAR PARTICULAR: Yes, your son should find a pet sitter or board Puddles for the time when he visits you. And if necessary, offer to pay for it. That way the poor animal won’t be isolated in unfamiliar surroundings and will have compan- ionship, you’ll have peace of mind and your son will get a good night’s sleep. DEAR ABBY is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Craie de Terre Chalk Powder Paint! Silver-plate Spoon Jewelry for Your Valentine! Hwy 411 South Antiques Mall Mon - Sat 10 am - 5 pm 5003 US Hwy 411S, Maryville (5 miles south of the Maryville Walmart) 856-5500 | 9A THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE VAULT ENTRANCE /2015 CAM 03 WR FILE FOOTAGE 19:44.27 VAULT ENTRANCE /2015 CAM 05 WR FILE FOOTAGE 19 :4 6.07 VAULT ENTRANCE /2015 CAM 01 WR FILE FOOTAGE U.S. STATE SILVER BAR PHOTOS SURFACE (first public photos) WEIGHTS AND MEASURES FULL TROY OUNCE SOLID .999 FINE SILVER 19:48.12 STATE OF TENNESSEE DOUBLE FORGED PROCLAMATION REVERSE VIEW OBVERSE VIEW REGISTERED VAULT NUMBER CERTIFIED SOLID SILVER PRECIOUS METAL COURTESY: WORLD RESERVE PHOTO ENLARGEMENT SHOWS ENGRAVING DETAIL TN residents snap up U.S. State Silver Bars First strike TN State Silver Bars sealed away in only existing Vault Bricks now being handed over to Tennessee residents TENNESSEE – You wish you could have found these heavy bars of solid silver buried in grandpa’s old coffee cans. But thanks to an extended deadline put in place, U.S. State Silver Bars each weighing a full Troy ounce of solid .999 pure fine silver sealed away in heavy Vault Bricks are being handed over free for the next 3 days to every Tennessee resident. This is not a misprint. U.S. State Silver Bars are being given away free to Tennessee residents who beat the order deadline for the sealed Vault Bricks containing six U.S. State Silver Bars each weighing a full Troy ounce of solid .999 pure fine silver and the World Reserve is giving up the remaining five U.S. State Silver Bars for just $57 each, that’s over one hundred and eighty-seven grams of solid .999 pure fine silver. Just a few weeks ago, nobody knew that these valuable U.S. State Silver Bars bearing the State of Tennessee double forged proclamation would be the talk of the town and that's why everyone's trying to get them. “As Executive Advisor to the World Reserve, I get paid to know when there's precious metal to be had. So when I was informed that these solid U.S. State Silver Bars had finally surfaced and thousands are actually being handed over free to residents of the state of Tennessee who beat the order deadline, I pushed for this announcement to be widely advertised. “These heavy bars are solid .999 pure fine silver and will always be a valuable precious metal which is why everyone is snapping up as many as they can before they're all gone,” said Mary Ellen Withrow, the now retired 40th Treasurer of the United States of America. The former Treasurer wants to make one thing very clear. Tennessee residents only have three days to call the Toll Free order Hotlines to get the U.S. State Silver Bars for free. “Pride runs deep in Tennessee and we know residents can't wait to get their hands on these heavy Silver Bars bearing the state of Tennessee double forged proclamation, but we’ve never seen anything like this before. The phone lines are ringing off the hook,” said Timothy J. Shissler, Executive Director of Vault Operations at the private World Reserve. These valuable U.S. State Silver Bars are impossible to get at banks, credit unions or the Government since they do not mint silver bars. In fact, they're only being handed over to residents of the state of Tennessee who call the Toll Free Hotline before the deadline ends three days from today's publication date. “All the heavy Silver Bars in “With a free U.S. State Silver Bar being given away free to Tennessee residents who beat the order deadline for the sealed Vault Bricks containing a total of six U.S. State Silver Bars, nearly everyone calling is taking three and four at a time before the order deadline ends because these solid .999 pure silver State Bars struck by the World Reserve are the only known to exist.” –Mary Ellen Withrow, retired 40th Treasurer of the United States of America NLOADED WITH FREE U.S. STATE SILVER BARS: These heavy State of Tennessee Vault Bricks contain the only existing U.S. State Silver Bars bearing the State of Tennessee double forged proclamation. Each sealed Vault Brick contains six U.S. State Silver Bars, each bar weighing a full Troy ounce of solid .999 pure fine silver. All Tennessee residents taking the Vault Bricks are getting one U.S. State Silver Bar free and the World Reserve is giving up the remaining five U.S. State Silver Bars for just $57 each, that's over one hundred and eighty-seven grams of solid .999 pure fine silver. No free U.S. State Silver Bars will be given away to non Tennessee residents. the State of Tennessee Vault Bricks will soon be gone because it would be foolish for anyone to pay for a single silver bar. So Tennessee residents better hurry and call right now to get the sealed Vault Bricks loaded with a free U.S. State Silver Bar,” said Shissler. “These heavy Vault Bricks loaded with over one hundred and eighty-seven grams of solid .999 pure fine silver are being released until our last remaining U.S. State Silver Bars are completely gone,” Shissler said. To make it fair, special Toll Free Overf low Hotlines have been set up to ensure all residents have an equal chance to get them. Rapid shipments to Tennessee residents are scheduled to begin with the first calls being accepted at precisely 8:30am today. “We’re bracing for all the calls and doing everything we can to make sure no one gets left out, but the U.S. State Silver Bars are only being given away free for the next three days or until they’re all gone, whichever comes first. For now, residents can claim the U.S. State Silver Bars free just as long as they call before the order deadline ends,” confirmed Shissler. “Thousands of Tennessee residents are expected to call because it just doesn't make any sense to let non Tennessee residents get these heavy Silver Bars before Tennessee residents do. So if lines are busy keep trying, all calls will be answered,” said Shissler. N TENNESSEE RESIDENTS: GET U.S. STATE SILVER BAR FREE call 1-866-211-6063 Ext.30386 beginning at 8:30am 1. if all lines are busy call this special toll free overflow hotline: 1-866-211-6066 Ext.30386 2. if you are a resident of the state of Tennessee call now to claim a u.s. state silver bar free. all Tennessee residents taking the vault bricks are getting a u.s. state silver bar free and the world reserve is giving up the remaining five u.s. state silver bars for just $57 each, that's over one hundred and eighty-seven grams of solid .999 pure fine silver all for just two hundred eighty-five dollars and that's a real steal because non Tennessee residents must pay over eight hundred dollars for the state of Tennessee vault bricks. just be sure to call the toll free hotline before the deadline ends three days from today's publication date. NON TENNESSEE RESIDENTS: MUST REMIT $134 PER STATE SILVER BAR 1. no free u.s. state silver bars will be issued to non Tennessee residents 2. call the non Tennessee resident toll free hotline beginning at 11:00am at:1-866-211-6067 Ext.30386 3. use this code to remit your payment: 30386 4. if you are a u.s. resident living outside of the state of Tennessee you are required to pay $134 for each Tennessee state silver bar for a total of eight hundred four dollars and s&h for each sealed state of Tennessee vault brick loaded with six u.s. state silver bars. THE WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE, INC. IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 30 DAYS YOU ARE DISSATISFIED, RETURN THE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING, RETURN POSTAGE AND A 15% RESTOCKING FEE. REFUNDS WILL BE ISSUED ON PROMOTIONAL OFFERS UPON THE RETURN OF ANY FREE PRODUCTS INCLUDED. DUE TO THE FLUCTUATING PRICE IN THE WORLD GOLD AND SILVER TRADES, PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ©2015 WRME 8000 FREEDOM AVE., N. CANTON OH 44720 P6864A OF18756R-1 30386 10A | THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com W hen you leave your home or go on vacation are you certain that the valuables you leave behind are protected? When you go to sleep at night are you sure your guns are secured? Although Knoxville Safe House is an authorized Browning Pro-Series dealer – a distinction that separates them from big box stores and draws customers from around the region – they also stock and support multiple lines in a wide range of prices because no single company makes a safe to fit every need. However, customer support is just as important as the price. Commissioned sales people at big box stores don’t have the incentive to sell people the right product, and don’t offer the selection, expertise and personal service customers get from Mike and Laine Bradley. Knoxville Safe House was founded in 2013 by Mike and Laine Bradley with one purpose in mind: offering their customers peace of mind. Located behind West Chevrolet at 3525 Castle Lane in Alcoa, the Bradleys have seen a steady increase in business every month since opening, with this past December being their best month yet. In the safe industry pricing is a direct function of how much steel is used in a safe’s construction and how much fire protection it offers. Additionally, commercial rated safes offer tool and torch ratings that also impact pricing. And although the largest safes with the most steel and highest fire protection ratings can be expensive, many models from the premier safe brands – like Browning and Ft. Knox – also retain their value. “Mike and I enjoy working with people in a business where you can really make a difference in people’s lives,” Laine says. “Too often we hear about tragedies after the fact that could’ve been prevented.” The Bradleys take pride in helping their customers find exactly the right safe for their needs. Some customers need protection for their valuables, documents or data, some are needing to secure their guns, while others need both. “We give people the knowledge to make an informed purchase,” says Laine. “We want our customers to think about the value of what they are wanting to protect,” Laine says, noting that any valuable worth insuring – like expensive jewelry, precious metals, and expensive coin collections – is worth protecting in a safe. Mike says that vault doors – which can also serve as storm or security room doors – can protect both life and property - have been very popular in this area. Today’s modern safes offer both traditional combination-style mechanical locks as well as advanced electronic keypads and bio-metric (fingerprint) locking mechanisms that offer rapid access and can easily be reprogrammed by safe owners. X NO VILLE SA F E YOU NEED A SAFE... You Just Don’t Know It! K Thursday, February 5, 2015 Located at 3525 Castle Lane, Suite 3 (behind West Chevrolet) in Alcoa Even if you have a small budget, they can find a safe to suit your needs. For example, small wall safes and concealment shelves that look like they come straight from a James Bond movie are virtually undetectable and offer quick access at prices starting well under $500. Call or stop by today! Knoxville Safe House also offers delivery and installation to insure that safes – some of which top 3,000 pounds – are safely placed in the customer’s home, and anchor mounted if necessary. To protect the privacy and security concerns of their customers, safes are delivered by unmarked trucks and with no logos visible, so to the unsuspecting it looks like a refrigerator or other large appliance is being delivered. 865-983-9100 Check them out on or visit them online at: www.knoxvillesafehouse.com Brands Knoxville Safe House Stocks and Represents: The Bradleys say that no one comes in and buys a safe on the first visit, but that’s by design. First, because buying a safe is such an important transaction, they want their customers to be educated and do the research into exactly what type of safe best suits their needs. Secondly, Mike says with a chuckle, usually the husband has to get the wife’s approval first. But whether it’s on the first, second or third visit, all Knoxville Safe House customers leave with the same thing: peace of mind. A complete line of Safes for every budget... and every need! Real Steel Knoxville Safe House services all models of safes even those they don’t sell! Ask about their safe trade-in program - Used safes wanted! Want to see your business reviewed on the business review page? Call 981-1172, or email: [email protected] today! Save Money! Live Healthy! PREMIUM REPLACEMENT WINDOWS Premium White Vinyl Double Hung Personalized Service & Drive Thru Pharmacy t4JHOJmDBOU4BWJOHTPO6UJMJUZ#JMMT t%PVCMF1BOF%PVCMF4USFOHUIw *OTVMBUFE(MBTT6OJU t.BYJNVN4PVOE%FnFDUJPO t"WBJMBCMFJO"MM4IBQFTBOE4UZMFT t$VTUPN&YUFSJPS$PMPS.BUDIJOH t1SPGFTTJPOBM*OTUBMMBUJPO t&OFSHZ0QUJPOT"WBJMBCMFGPS 6MUSB&GmDJFODZ t-JGFUJNF8BSSBOUZ t-JGFUJNF"DDJEFOUBM(MBTT #SFBLBHF8BSSBOUZ PRESCRIPTION MEDICATIONS, COMPOUNDS, FREE DELIVERY AND MORE! FROM OUR STORE TO YOUR DOOR! We accept all major insurance plans including Express 6FULSWV(YHU\GD\0LOLWDU\6HQLRU'LVFRXQWs XVILLE SA F FREE Consultation & Estimate 865-247-2366 www.abcwinknoxville.com 2403 Hwy 411 S., Maryville TN 865-724-1453 Visit our showroom or website for more details. www.knoxvillesafehouse.com $BTUMF-BOF4VJUFt"MDPB5/t Complete Kitchen & Bath See Us Now! We Now Have Custom Cabinets and can design your dream kitchen or bath. See us for your complete remodeling needs. Call us today for more information. X Wildwood Baptist Church Wildwood Road Now Offering Complete Kitchen & Bath Remodels 30024182 3FNPEFMJOH Your ,JUDIFOPS #BUISPPNT Best of all, You’ll love the way they look! Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter volunteerpharmacy / @pharmacyvol Locally Owned & Operated 37012644DT NO E Create peace of mind K Chad & Camilla Frost, PharmDs Why Pay More for Less? EXPIRES MEMBER Chamber of Commerce Up to 24 4/30/2014 MONTHS same as cash! *Up to 120 UI. Four window minimum. Additional labor charges apply for metal window removal. Blount County Business Owner: Looking for the Best Way to Tell Blount County About Your Business? Call 981-1152 or 981-1172 and ask about our Business Review Program! ON THE DOTTED LINE Vaught, Burgess sign with Air Force. 4B MALIK-MITCHELL HEADED TO NAVY. 4B CLASSIFIEDS 6B | COMICS 10B | PUZZLES 11B THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2015 THE DAILY TIMES 1B Maryville’s Jackson, Stanford ‘great fit’ BY GRANT RAMEY [email protected] TOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES MARYVILLE SENIOR DYLAN JACKSON signs to play football for Stanford University on Wednesday with parents John and Maureen, brother Trey and sister Mackenzie watching during a signing ceremony at Maryville High School. Dylan Jackson remembers the first time he received interest from a college football program. He remembers his reaction, too. “My first thought was, ‘me?,’” Jackson told The Daily Times. “I really wasn’t expecting it. “It was Vanderbilt, and they left me a questionnaire sort of deal. I thought that was pretty neat. It was a cool feeling to bring that home for the first time.” That first time was during spring practice of his freshman year at Maryville. Fast forward three years, to National Signing Day, and Jackson, a three-star defensive end, signed to continue his football career at Stanford University. In between that Vanderbilt questionnaire three years ago and his National Letter of Intent faxed to Stanford’s campus in REAL INK INSIDE Seymour pair heads to Bluefield. 5B WB’s Perkins has real Hump Day. 3B Carson-Newman signs a quartet. 3B Maryville has two headed to MC. 2B Bucs restart jump started by TKA, Seymour. 2B Signing Gallery: http://bit. ly/2015nationalsigningday SEE FIT, 4B Little drama for UT Tennessee Tech adds Koons, Warwick BY DARGAN SOUTHARD AND GRANT RAMEY [email protected] [email protected] Tennessee Tech head football coach Watson Brown was pleased with Wednesday’s results. By 11 a.m., 22 names were added to the Golden Eagle roster. “I said coming in this was a very important class for us, that we had to have a really good recruiting class,” Brown said in a release from the school. Among those new Golden Eagles are Maryville lineman Richie Koons, unsung hero of Maryville’s most recent state title victory, and Alcoa’s Jake Warwick, the only linebacker signed by Tech in this class. Jake Warwick Richie Koons JAKE WARWICK Warwick was looking beyond signing his National Letter of Intent to attend Tennessee Tech in a ceremony held at Alcoa High School. “To know that I can live my life after school debtfree, and I don’t have to pay off college loans (is huge),” Warwick told The KNOXVILLE NEWS SENTINEL | THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A FULL MOON SETS behind a portrait of University of Tennessee football coach Butch Jones on the Neyland Stadium jumbotron on Wednesday in Knoxville. The Vols signed their second-consecutive top-five recruiting class Wednesday with little drama. Jones ‘exceptionally proud’ of signing class SEE TECH, 5B BY GRANT RAMEY THEDAILYTIMES.COM [email protected] Tyson taking his unique nickname to UTC Mocs BY DARGAN SOUTHARD [email protected] People often shorten his name to “Quez” by habit, but for those closest to Jaquez Tyson, they know the former Alcoa running back by a different nickname. “It really came from nowhere,” Tyson explained. “I was in the hospital as a baby, and right when I was born, my uncle came in and was like, ‘I’m not going to call him Jaquez. I’m going to call him, Pete.’ And my mom was like, ‘No you’re not.’ “And it just stuck ever since then.” That simple nickname will likely follow the 2014 Mr. Football finalist to Chattanooga — the school Tyson officially signed with Wednesday. Happy NewY ear 2015 Happy New Car Jaquez Tyson The 2014 Mr. Football finalist officially signed with Chattanooga. In a ceremony held at Alcoa High School, Tyson joined teammates Kyle Malik-Mitchell (Navy) and Jake Warwick (Tennessee Tech) as part of Alcoa’s trio of signees. “I don’t think (having three Division I signees) really says a whole bunch about our class,” Tyson told The Daily Times. “I think it says a lot about the classes before us because they’ve set a tone, and I believe we matched it.” For Tyson, finding those SEE MOCS, 5B Butch Jones and his Tennessee football team needed depth en masse on the offensive and defensive lines. The Vols signed six in the trenches. Tennessee entered National Signing Day with only one scholarship quarterback on roster. Then Jones and staff added three more. Depth is also an issue at running back, where the Vols added a five-star junior-college prospect, at receiver, where they added a four-star standout, and at linebacker, where two more four-stars and a three-star were tacked on. And, on college football’s most dramatic day, it all came together with very little drama. “That’s the thing that makes me exceptionally proud of this class,” Jones said during his Wednesday afternoon press conference. “They stayed true to their word and they were extremely loyal.” The lone uncertainty amid a signing class 29 names deep arrived around 10:30 a.m., when MORE ONLINE: UT inks the state’s top three prospects in new class. UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE FOOTBALL coach Butch Jones talks about the 2015 recruitment class Wednesday on National Signing Day in Knoxville. Memphis University School five-star offensive tackle Drew Richmond flipped his previous commitment to Ole Miss and turned it into a National Letter of Intent faxed to the Vols. Not to be out done, there were a pair of five-stars on the defensive line, too — Khalil McKenzie and Kyle Phillips — to go with four-star prospects Andrew Butcher, Darrell Taylor and Shy Tuttle and three-star Quoy Picou. 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Join today! 124 North Hall Road, Alcoa 865 / 977-3118 Stewart and three-star Chance Hall were added to the offensive line depth chart, along with Richmond. “I don’t think it’s any secret, we needed to address some program issues in our offensive and defensive lines,” Jones said. “And we were able to do that with signing five offensive linemen and six defensive linemen. “So that will add to the overall depth and competitive aspects at those positions.” With backup quar- terback Nate Peterman transferring to Pitt at the end of the semester, a move Jones confirmed Wednesday, Josh Dobbs was the lone scholarship returner at quarterback. On Wednesday UT added a trio of four-star signalcallers in Quinten Dormady, Sheriron Jones and Jauan Jennings. “I’m very proud of the three individuals at the quarterback position,” Jones said, “because not one quarterback asked me about the other individual or who else we were recruiting. “To me, that’s what we want. We want individuals with great competitive character that don’t care. All they worry about is themselves.” Tennessee signed three running backs in 2014 — Jalen Hurd, Treyvon Paulk and Derrell Scott — but only Hurd returns in 2015, after Paulk was Hwy. 411 South, Maryville 865 / 982-4392 160 Deer Crossing, Vonore 423 / 884-6124 FOLLOW US: @TDT_Sports for scores, links, delays, thoughts WRITE US: [email protected] YOUR SPORTS. YOUR TIMES 2B THE DAILY TIMES Weedman 4 ON THE SCHEDULE (5) CONCORD CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 33, (4) FREEDOM CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 23 CCS 6 9 9 9 —33 FCA 2 6 8 7 —23 CCS - Penland 24, Mee 9 FCA - L. Wilson 10, T. Wilson 9, Edmondson 2, Hall 2 PREP BASKETBALL 5:30 p.m. — Maryville Chr. at Apostolic Chr. Acad. 6 p.m. — Alcoa at Fulton 6 p.m. — Knoxville Catholic at Maryville (3) EPISCOPAL SCHOOL OF KNOX. 25, (6) TEMPLE BAPTIST ACADEMY 9 ON THE AIR GOLF 11:30 a.m........ LPGA, Bahamas Classic, first round ..........................TGC 3 p.m. ............. PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open, first round ......TGC 4:30 a.m. ....... European PGA Tour, Malaysian Open, round two ...TGC MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m. ....... Richmond at La Salle ............................................. NBCSN 7 p.m............... Iowa at Michigan ........................................................ESPN 7 p.m. ............. Auburn at LSU ...........................................................ESPN2 7 p.m............... Tulsa at Houston ............................................... ESPNEWS 7 p.m............... Mount St. Mary’s at Bryant ................................... ESPNU 9 p.m. ............. Cincinnati at SMU.......................................................ESPN 9 p.m. ............. UCLA at Stanford .....................................................ESPN2 9 p.m. ............. Belmont at E. Kentucky ......................................... ESPNU 11 p.m.............. Gonzaga at Santa Clara ......................................... ESPNU 11 p.m.............. Southern Cal at California ........................................... FS1 NBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. ............. L.A. Clippers at Cleveland ........................................... TNT 10:30 p.m. ..... Phoenix at Portland..................................................... TNT NHL 9 p.m. ............. Detroit at Colorado ................................................. NBCSN 25 YEARS AGO FROM TIMES HISTORY at From the Feb. 5, 1990 edition of The Daily Times: The Maryville College men’s basketball team hit a season-high 16-of-27 shots from 3-point range in a 114-90 rout of LaGrange College in 1990. Jesse Robinette led all shooters with six treys and helped the Scots to their eighth straight win. ODDS GLANTZ-CULVER LINE For Feb. 5 NCAA BASKETBALL FAVORITE .................. LINE ................ UNDERDOG at La Salle ................... Pk ................. Richmond at Michigan ................... 1..............................Iowa at LSU ..........................101⁄2 .....................Auburn at Elon ......................... 31⁄2 ........................Drexel at Marshall ....................3 ..............................Rice Tulsa ............................ 81⁄2 .............. at Houston William & Mary ........... 6 . a tColl. of Charlest. at FIU ..............................2 ...........................UTSA Georgia St...................... 1 at Georgia Southern at W. Kentucky............12...............North Texas at Green Bay ................15 ................ Milwaukee at Middle Tenn. ......... 111⁄2 ....... Southern Miss. UTEP .............................71⁄2 .......................at FAU at La.-Lafayette ......... 11 ....... Appalachian St. at UALR ..........................2 ................La.-Monroe at Arkansas St. ......... 61⁄2 ............................Troy at Stanford .................. 6 ........................... UCLA at SMU........................... 6 ...................Cincinnati Louisiana Tech .............3 .........................at UAB at San Francisco ..........4 .....................Portland San Diego ...................... 1...at Loy. Marymount at Cal Poly .................. 51⁄2 .......................Hawaii at UC Irvine .................. 9 ..................... UC Davis at Long Beach St. .....121⁄2 ...........UC Riverside at Cal St.-Fullerton .....4 ...........CS Northridge at Oregon St. ............... 8 ........ Washington St. BYU ................................. 1............at Pepperdine Gonzaga......................161⁄2 ....... at Santa Clara at California ..................5 .............Southern Cal Mercer............................ 6 ...........at The Citadel at Morehead St. ..........15 .......... Tennessee St. at Quinnipiac ............... 6 ....... Monmouth (NJ) Chattanooga ................4 ..................at Furman at ETSU ........................ Pk .....................Wofford Oral Roberts .................2 ...................... at IUPUI at W. Carolina ............ 91⁄2 ...................Samford S. Dakota St. .................2 .......................at IPFW at N. Dakota St. .......... 8 ....Nebraska-Omaha at South Dakota ....... 81⁄2 ..................W. Illinois at Rider........................ 91⁄2 ....................Fairfield at Murray St. ................15 ............... SE Missouri UT-Martin ......................4 ..........at Austin Peay at N. Arizona .................3 ................N. Colorado at S. Utah ...................... 1.............North Dakota Idaho...............................3 ......... at Montana St. at E. Kentucky ..............5 ..................... Belmont E. Washington.............. 1................ at Montana NBA Nashville..............-130 ... Anaheim ..........+ 110 Tampa Bay ...........-115 ... at ............Dallas -105 at Colorado ..........-115 ... Detroit ............... -105 at Arizona ........... -140 ... Carolina ........... + 120 at Vancouver ..... -140 ... San ..........Jose + 120 MCS 5 2 2 12 —21 SMS 5 6 10 7 —28 MCS - Westerfield 9, Beam 7, Anderson 3, Daffron 2 St. Mary’s - #22 13, #3 8, #11 5, #10 2 COLLEGE MEN BASKETBALL KISL MIDDLE SCOOT TOURNAMENT Tuesday at Maryville Christian School Albany (NY) 63, New Hampshire 62 Boston U. 62, Navy 59 Dominican (NY) 92, Concordia (N.Y.) 67 Hofstra 79, Delaware 69 Juniata 54, Susquehanna 52 Lafayette 84, Bucknell 74, OT Lehigh 103, Army 74 Northeastern 69, Towson 62 St. Rose 68, American International 54 UConn 65, East Carolina 52 UMass 78, Fordham 72 Ursinus 94, Swarthmore 72 Villanova 70, Marquette 52 SOUTH Charlotte 77, NC A&T 61 Duke 72, Georgia Tech 66 Lynchburg 86, Emory & Henry 59 Martin Methodist 87, Fisk 32 Memphis 74, Jacksonville St. 48 Mississippi 69, Texas A&M 59 Randolph-Macon 76, E. Mennonite 73 SC State 80, St. Andrews 48 St. Bonaventure 62, Davidson 61 Temple 61, South Florida 48 Tenn. Wesleyan 87, Bluefield 75 Transylvania 69, Mount St. Joseph 60 UNC Wilmington 77, James Madison 65 Union (Ky.) 81, Point (Ga.) 65 VCU 72, George Mason 60 Winthrop 74, Liberty 61 MCS 8 4 9 16 SJS 15 10 12 16 No player scores to report —37 —53 (5) WEBB 45, (4) CAK 36 Webb 7 13 14 11 —45 CAK 11 8 10 7 —36 Webb: Nadaud 18, Patel 15, Jenkins 6, Sanger 3, Williams 3 CAK: Peters 10, Williamson 9, Smith 8, Eldridge 5, Bevil 3, Ernstberger 1 (6) CONCORD CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 49, (3) THE EPISCOPAL SCHOOL OF KNOXVILLE 30 CCS 15 10 10 14 —49 ESK 7 2 7 14 —30 CCS - Hightower 15, Davis 14, Borthwick 7, Kuhn 6, Coffey 3, Webster 3, Keck 1 ESK - Schumaker 9, Mohammad 7, Kline 6, Blake 4, Daley 3, Musrock 1 at Dotson Memorial Baptist Church (2) KNOXVILLE AMBASSADORS 44 , (7) FREEDOM CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 31 FCA 4 3 11 13 —31 AMB 15 7 16 6 —44 FCA - Lloyd 13, Holley 11, McKeehan 3, Allen 2, Mynatt 2 AMB - Dunn 10, Peevy 9, Clow 8, Robinson 6, Hicks 5, Mallory 2, O’Leary 2, Wilemon 2 Girls at Dotson Memorial Baptist Church SAINT JOSEPH SCHOOL 30, (8) APOSTOLIC CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 15 NHL ACA 4 2 0 9 —15 SJS 8 8 10 4 —30 ACA - Murphy 8, McCreary 2, Wall 2, Kieno 2, Schilling 1 SJS - Morgan 12, Hoang 10, Waxmonsky 4, MORNING COFFEE LEAGUE Wednesday at Crest Lanes HIGH SERIES Lennis Walvoort 575, Ann Williams 534, Melissa Ownby 523, Dora Headrick 521, Cora Kiser 515, Sara Harless 497, Janet AmburnHarpe 493. Lennis Walvoort 204, Ann Williams 203, Melissa Ownby 189, Cora Kiser 189, Dora Headrick 189, Sara Harless 187, Maxine Falls 182, Janet Amburn-Harpe 182. HOCKEY NHL EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Tampa Bay 52 32 15 5 Montreal 50 32 15 3 Detroit 50 29 12 9 Boston 51 27 17 7 Florida 49 22 17 10 Ottawa 49 20 20 9 Toronto 52 22 26 4 Buffalo 51 15 33 3 Metropolitan Division 69 67 67 61 54 49 48 33 167 135 132 114 149 129 136 127 122 140 137 138 147 160 97 181 GP W L OT Pts GF GA Pittsburgh N.Y. Islanders N.Y. Rangers Washington Philadelphia New Jersey Columbus Carolina 51 50 49 51 51 51 49 50 29 32 30 26 22 20 21 17 14 8 17 1 15 4 15 10 22 7 22 9 25 3 26 7 Morehead St. 66, Belmont 55 Texas St. 46, South Alabama 44 WESTERN CONFERENCE NBA Nashville 50 St. Louis 50 Chicago 51 Winnipeg 53 Colorado 51 Minnesota 50 Dallas 50 Pacific Division 66 65 64 62 51 49 45 41 147 129 160 143 148 117 151 129 140 151 115 139 121 155 109 134 Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct GB 17 28 30 39 39 .660 .417 .375 .220 .204 — 12 14 22 221⁄2 W L Pct GB 41 31 21 21 15 9 19 27 28 36 .820 .620 .438 .429 .294 — 10 19 191⁄2 261⁄2 Toronto 33 Brooklyn 20 Boston 18 Philadelphia 11 New York 10 Southeast Division Atlanta Washington Charlotte Miami Orlando Central Division Cleveland Chicago Milwaukee Detroit Indiana W L Pct GB 30 30 26 19 18 20 20 22 31 32 .600 .600 .542 .380 .360 — — 3 11 12 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W Memphis 36 Houston 34 Dallas 33 San Antonio 30 New Orleans 26 Northwest Division L Pct GB 12 15 17 18 23 .750 .694 .660 .625 .531 — 21⁄2 4 6 101⁄2 W L Pct GB Portland Oklahoma City Denver Utah Minnesota Pacific Division 33 25 19 17 9 16 24 31 31 40 .673 .510 .380 .354 .184 — 8 141⁄2 151⁄2 24 W L Pct GB Golden State L.A. Clippers Phoenix Sacramento L.A. Lakers 38 33 28 17 13 8 16 22 30 35 .826 .673 .560 .362 .271 — 61⁄2 12 211⁄2 26 Tuesday’s Games Philadelphia 105, Denver 98 Detroit 108, Miami 91 Boston 108, New York 97 33 33 31 26 22 24 23 11 6 13 4 18 2 18 9 18 11 20 6 19 8 72 70 64 61 55 54 54 153 118 162 121 155 118 146 140 134 143 138 140 159 162 GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim San Jose Vancouver Calgary Los Angeles Arizona Edmonton 51 51 49 51 50 51 52 33 27 28 28 21 19 14 12 6 17 7 18 3 20 3 17 12 26 6 29 9 72 61 59 59 54 44 37 152 138 143 140 134 126 149 131 134 136 120 171 120 172 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Tuesday’s Games Colorado 3, Dallas 2, SO New Jersey 2, Ottawa 1 Florida 4, N.Y. Islanders 2 Washington 4, Los Angeles 0 Arizona 4, Columbus 1 Buffalo 3, Montreal 2 St. Louis 2, Tampa Bay 1, OT Nashville 4, Toronto 3 Minnesota 3, Chicago 0 Vancouver 3, Winnipeg 2, OT Anaheim 5, Carolina 4, OT Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Rangers 3, Boston 2 Pittsburgh 2, Edmonton 0 San Jose at Calgary, late Today’s Games St. Louis at Buffalo, 7 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Philadelphia, 7 p.m. Washington at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. Los Angeles at Florida, 7:30 p.m. Anaheim at Nashville, 8 p.m. Tampa Bay at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Detroit at Colorado, 9 p.m. Carolina at Arizona, 9 p.m. San Jose at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Friday’s Games Toronto at New Jersey, 7 p.m. Anaheim at Washington, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Columbus, 7 p.m. Chicago at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. Pittsburgh at Calgary, 9 p.m. Henderson, Sloan head to Maryville College BY GRANT RAMEY [email protected] W h i l e D iv i s i o n I I I Maryville College can’t sign players, the Scots did pick up a few area commitments that were honored by the high schools Wednesday on National Signing Day. Among that group of future Fighting Scots were Maryville High seniors Blake Henderson and Brant Sloan. BLAKE HENDERSON Henderson really didn’t have much choice when it came to attending Maryville College. “I’ll be a third generation,” Henderson said Wednesday night. “My grandfather went there, my dad went there.” To break family tradition, at least in part, Henderson is going up the road to Maryville College to play football after committing to join the Scots on Wednesday. “I like the program, it’s a rising program,” Henderson said. “I can really fit in Blake Henderson Brant Sloan there and see myself playing football there.” His grandfather, Bo Henderson, played basketball at MC. His dad, David Henderson, wasn’t an athlete at the school. When the Scots started showing interest in the youngest Henderson to play safety, it was a nobrainer. “I didn’t really know at first,” Henderson said, “but when they started having a little bit of interest in me, it definitely got my attention that I could be the third generation (at MC). “I thought that would be pretty good.” BRANT SLOAN Brant Sloan looked around for college football opportunities, but it turned out he only needed to go four miles up the road to find the right one. “I looked at Tusculum, I looked at Maryville College,” Sloan told The Daily Times. “I definitely liked the close-knit family feel that the team has, that the campus has being a smaller group of people. “Coaches seem like really great guys, seem really interested in me coming to play.” Sloan, who should project as a center or guard for the Scots, said location was one of the biggest factors — if not the biggest. “I definitely like it,” Sloan said. “It’s only four miles away from home, so my parents can come, which will be great. “That was a big thing, staying close.” Sloan was a part of a senior class at Maryville that went 59-1 in 60 career games and won three state MARCUS FITZSIMMONS | THE DAILY TIMES THE KING’S ACADEMY’S JASON MADUAFOKWA signs his National Letter of Intent to play football for ETSU Wednesday during a signing ceremony on the TKA campus. ETSU inks Jerman, Maduafokwa J.J. Jerman BY MARCUS FITZSIMMONS [email protected] HIGH GAME COLLEGE WOMEN SOUTH Boys (1) SAINT JOSEPH SCHOOL 53, (9) MARYVILLE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 37 Portland 103, Utah 102 Golden State 121, Sacramento 96 Wednesday’s Games Indiana 114, Detroit 109 Atlanta 105, Washington 96 Brooklyn 109, Toronto 93 Boston 104, Denver 100 Oklahoma City 102, New Orleans 91 Houston 101, Chicago 90 Minnesota 102, Miami 101 L.A. Lakers at Milwaukee, late Orlando at San Antonio, late Memphis at Utah, late Dallas at Golden State, late Today’s Games Washington at Charlotte, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Cleveland, 8 p.m. Dallas at Sacramento, 10 p.m. Phoenix at Portland, 10:30 p.m. Friday’s Games L.A. Clippers at Toronto, 7 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Orlando, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Indiana, 7 p.m. New York at Brooklyn, 7 p.m. Golden State at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m. Denver at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia at Boston, 7:30 p.m. New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m. Milwaukee at Houston, 8 p.m. Memphis at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Utah at Phoenix, 9 p.m. Miami at San Antonio, 9:30 p.m. BOWLING EAST American U. 55, Loyola (Md.) 44 Army 66, Lehigh 62 Bucknell 51, Lafayette 37 Navy 48, Boston U. 40 Stony Brook 74, Vermont 62 Temple 84, Memphis 61 FAVORITE ..............LINE.... O/U ..........UNDERDOG St. Louis ..............-280 ... at ........Buffalo +230 N.Y. Islanders ......-125 ... atPhiladelphia +105 Washington ........-130 ... at ......... Ottawa +110 Los Angeles ........-130 ... at ...........Florida +110 at Maryville Christian School SAINT MARY’S SCHOOL 28, (7) MARYVILLE CHRISTIAN SCHOOL 21 EAST Washington ............. 3 ... (186 1⁄2)at Charlotte at Cleveland ........ 51⁄2 ... (2101⁄2)L.A. Clippers Dallas ........................ 4 ... (211) at Sacramento at Portland .............. 5 ... (213 1⁄2) ...... Phoenix FAVORITE ..............LINE.... UNDERDOG .........LINE TBA 3 0 2 4 —9 ESK 6 2 4 13 —25 TBA - Pepin 4, Sullivan 4, Newport 1 ESK - Musrock 10, Dewhirst 8, Pensky 3, Killefer 2, Stooksberry 2 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2015 championships, including the last two Class 6A titles and a perfect 30-0 record over their last two years at the school. “It’s going to be a little different,” Sloan said of football at the next level. “I don’t expect to be undefeated, but we’re going to try and get a couple more conference titles at Maryville College.” He’s expecting to try and work his way into a starting job for a line that graduates two All-American selections and has ranked in the top 10 of D3 for rushing the last two seasons. “I’m going to go in, fight my hardest to take a (starting) spot next year,” Sloan said. But Wednesday was less about the work still ahead of him and more about the work that had went into officially becoming a college football player. “Getting to today took a lot of hard work,” Sloan said, “but I feel like today is the reward you look for.” ETSU head football coach Ca rl To rb u s h announced the program’s second recruiting class during a special National Signing Day event Wednesday inside the Carnegie Hotel’s Grand Soldiers Ballroom. “As we move closer to our opening game on Sept. 3, 2015, against Kennesaw State, today’s announcement of our second recruiting class marks an exciting time for Buccaneer football,” Torbush said in a statement. “Today we welcome 45 new recruits to our program. This group will join our inaugural class of players from 2014, as we continue to build a firm football foundation that will bring pride to our proud institution.” Among those 45 new Bucs are Seymour kicker J.J. Jerman and The King’s Academy’s Jason Maduafokwa. J.J. JERMAN The Seymour senior started the season as a verbal commitment to Campbell University but adjusted his aim. “I was going to Campbell. I decided ETSU was a little closer, a little cheaper and I liked it up there, too,” Jerman told The Daily Times following a signing ceremony at Seymour. “There were more people I know there and it’ll be easier for my family to watch me. “My former quarterback, Nick Sexton, is there. Then Jason at TKA and a couple other guys I know in the Knoxville area.” Jerman, who is looking toward becoming a wildlife resource officer upon graduation, was also enticed by the rebooted Buc program. ETSU opens its first season after more than a decade in the dark. “It’s amazing. The biggest thing for me was the fresh start of what’s going to be like a new program.” JASON MADUAFOKWA That fresh start was also an incentive to Maduafokwa, who was signing his letter of intent a few min- The Seymour senior was one of three kickers signed by ETSU. utes later across the road and up the street at TKA. “I’m aware of the success ETSU had in the past and I want to be part of the new start, make something of the opportunity,” the Lion senior said. “They started talking to me in December and we kind of went from there. I was really on board at that point but I needed to go see the campus and see what it was really like before I made my decision. When I was there, they offered me and I immediately accepted it.” Maduafokwa made a lot of noise as a junior running back but made even more delivering hits as a linebacker as a senior. Given his preference he’d rather play the defensive side of the football. “I’m open to wherever they want me,” Maduafokwa told The Daily Times. “They asked me where I was more comfortable playing and it’s definitely playing linebacker.” In the eyes of his high school coach, ETSU got a real deal steal signing the 230-pounder. “He’s been a blessing,” TKA coach Matt Lowe said. “When he got here he was probably more a soccer athlete than football athlete, but he has really embraced everything we’ve tried to teach him football wise. “He’s been a blessing to be around, just watching his growth. I’ve told anybody I could tell that this is a kid whose best years of playing football are clearly ahead of him. Not only has he developed into a physical specimen but he loves football, he wants to learn it and learn as much as he can.” BRIEFS MC men down Covenant in Georgia The Maryville College men’s basketball team pulled out a USA South road win Wednesday night with a 52-45 victory over Covenant. MC’s Spencer Shoffner led the way, knocking down four of Maryville’s seven treys. Covenant was 2-of-21 from beyond the arc. MC (10-10 ,5-4 USAC) was able to outrebound Covenant, 42-29, but 24 Maryville turnovers made for a conference contest featuring eight ties and six lead changes. Scots block Covenant on road The Maryville College women’s basketball team took a convincing 57-39 victory over Covenant College in Lookout Mountain, Ga. Maryville (18-2, 10-1) posted 10 blocks. No. 17 Maryville converted 13 second-chance points as 10 MC players got into the scoring column. SPORTS | 3B THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com Eagles grab Dockery, UT: Jones says officially signing Teeter, Watts, Sexton Richmond ‘completed the class’ FROM 1B BY GRANT RAMEY [email protected] Carson-Newman University made a sweep through the area schools Wednesday as coach Ken Sparks 36th signing class for the Division II Eagles came together. Among those who are headed to Jefferson City in the fall are Maryville’s John Watts, TKA’s Ben Sexton, Alcoa’s Braxton Dockery and Brenden Teeter. It only made sense that Teeter and Dockery, teammates on Alcoa’s football field and best friends off of it, continued their football careers together at Carson-Newman. “I visited and their program was just really nice, the people there were really nice,” Teeter said Wednesday night. “Me and Braxton, we went up there and visited together and I just think it would be pretty cool to keep playing with my best friend and play football at the next level.” They made that “pretty cool” idea official on national signing day Wednesday, signing to play for Sparks and the Eagles football program. “I was thinking about going to Lindsey Wilson (College),” Teeter said, “then whenever we went and visited Carson-Newman, (Braxton and I) were talking about being roommates and it was pretty awesome.” Football wasn’t biggest factor in the decision for Dockery, either. “I didn’t really know what to expect, but I went (on a visit) and they didn’t really talk about football when I first got there,” Dockery said. “When I got done, and I was talking to my mom, she really liked it. Knowing that she liked it that much made me know it was a good decision to go there.” So was the possibility of not having to go through the transition alone. “It’ll be a lot easier because I think I was closer to committing than Brenden,” Dockery said. “And I was really nervous, was talking to him, saying let’s go up there together. “Brenden was the only person I could really think of that I really wanted to go with me, that I felt like I could connect with. “When he committed, it made it a lot easier.” JOHN WATTS Watts had the same dream that most footballplaying kids in East Tennessee had when he was young. He wanted to play football at the University of Tennessee. “Obviously as a kid I always dreamed of going to UT and being a big star and going to the NFL and stuff,” Watts told The Daily Times, “but I never really thought I could actually do it.” At least not all of it. Watts is excited to get a chance after signing with the Eagles Wednesday. “I never really got recruited much,” he said, “but I looked around at ETSU, (Tennessee Tech), Tusculum, a lot of close schools.” John Watts Ben Sexton Braxton Dockery Brenden Teeter But Carson-Newman was the only one that stuck out. “It’s pretty incredible, really,” Watts said. “I looked a lot of places, and I found a home at CarsonNewman. Really excited to go there. It’s a special place.” What made it special was the coaching staff. Instead of just selling a recruiting pitch, they lived it. “Every time I went up there they would introduce the coaches, and every single coach would always say this place is based on faith, family, football — in that order,” Watts said. “You can say that anywhere, but they made that true.” dismissed from the program last September and Scott chose to leave the program after the season. Jones called depth at the position a “big concern,” a month removed from signing five-star junior college running back Alvin Kamara out of Hutchinson (Kansas) Community College, the No. 1 overall JuCo running back in the country and early enrollee. Jones said the Vols are “still behind,” in terms of depth, at linebacker and “getting behind” at wide receiver. Tennessee signed four-star receiver Preston Williams Wednesday, along with linebackers Quart’e Sapp (four-star) and Austin Smith (threestar). Four-star linebacker Darrin Kirkland Jr. signed as an early enrollee last month. The class that addressed so many needs — one that finished at No. 5 overall in the country for a second consecutive year according to Rivals. com’s class rankings — wasn’t finished until the Vols heard from the only name that had been in doubt. “It completed the class,” Jones said of signing Richmond, adding that the staff didn’t know if it would happen until it was official Wednesday. “Again, we get back to improving our overall athleticism on the offensive front and Drew obviously does that.” Just don’t believe that, based on a relatively stress free signing day, there weren’t sleepless nights down the stretch. “It’s like the last push, the last 24 hours before signing day,” Jones said. “Anyone and everyone comes after everyone. “They try to put a nugget out there and see if a young man is interested. And if they think they are, it’s an allout assault on them. So we had to continually talk and be in contact with them.” Tennessee’s commitments weren’t taking the bait. “There was very, very litte drama today,” Jones said. “And I think that speaks volume for their character. I think that speaks volumes for the unique closeness that this group already has.” TENNESSEE SIGNING CLASS EARLY ENROLLEES Ath Pos Ht Wt Andrew Butcher DL 6-2 245 Quinten Dormady QB 6-4 200 Stephen Griffin DB 6-2 185 Chance Hall OL 6-5 315 Jauan Jennings QB 6-4 200 Jack Jones OL 6-5 300 Alvin Kamara RB 5-11 195 Darrin Kirkland Jr. LB 6-2 235 Kyle Phillips DL 6-4 250 Shy Tuttle DL 6-3 315 SIGNED WEDNESDAY Micah Abernathy DB 6-0 186 Venzell Boulware OL 6-3 303 Zac Jancek QB 6-5 195 Sheriron Jones QB 6-2 182 John Kelly RB 5-10 200 Riley Lovingood LS 6-0 246 Justin Martin DB 6-2 173 Kahlil McKenzie DL 6-3 327 Darrell Miller DB 5-10 170 Kyle Oliver TE 6-4 226 Quay Picou DL 6-1 263 Drew Richmond OL 6-5 310 Quart’e Sapp LB 6-2 200 Austin Smith LB 6-3 234 Zach Stewart OL 6-4 310 Darrell Taylor DL 6-4 228 Laszlo Toser K 5-9 185 Tommy Townsend P 6-1 168 Preston Williams WR 6-4 180 Eli Wolf TE 6-4 205 SOURCE: UT Sports Information Gov to become Camel BEN SEXTON That same simple approach was also key for Sexton. The TKA receiver, who helped the Lions to their best season in school history as a senior, looked hard at several options before coming full circle to Carson-Newman. “I went there after my junior year and I visited multiple times,” Sexton said just before taking center stage for his signing ceremony at the Seymour school. “I kind of changed my mind and started leaning more to the University of the Cumberlands and then went back to football camp and had one of the better 40 teams. Carson-Newman showed some more interest but I was looking at Maryville. When Maryville didn’t work out for me, I found I really still liked CarsonNewman and the coaches and realized it’s where I felt at home the most. “Growing up in a Christian home it just felt like they could be my other family.” While not a proto-typical wide receiver, Sexton’s biggest asset for the Eagles is that ability to just make the play. “He’s going to fit in a lot of different categories,” TKA coach Matt Lowe said. “It’s tough to call if he’s better catching the short ball and making things happen or adjusting to the ball in flight and making those long plays. He does a lot of things extremely well.” DAILY TIMES sports editor Marcus Fitzsimmons contributed to this report. JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES WILLIAM BLOUNT SENIOR JOSH PERKINS signs his letter of intent to play football for Campbell University Wednesday while his grandparents Rebecca and Bob Parker look on during a signing ceremony at WB. Perkins gets over hump to sign with Campbell BY MARCUS FITZSIMMONS [email protected] Almost everywhere else it was signing day, but William Blount senior Josh Perkins spent the bulk of his hearing as many Hump Day references from the Geico commercials as he could handle. The Govs offensive linemen that the staff compares to “The Blind Side” finally sat down before the final bell rang and had a small crowd gather as he signed his National Letter of Intent to play football for the Campbell University Camels. “I heard quite a few Hump day references, I think everybody has said something about it,” Perkins said before getting a photo made with WB head coach Justin Ridge beside a unique Hump Day-themed sign. It was about as appropriate a mascot as there could be for Perkins. The Gov lineman has gained size and stature on the field in CALL MARC WEBB FOR A NEW OR PREOWNED VEHICLE. 865-214-2421 three seasons at WB but has also made tremendous academic strides that allowed him to qualify for academic scholarships. The 6-foot-3, 280-pound senior will get a full ride package. “His size is pretty substantial; he’s grown quite a bit. At that same time he’s spent a lot of time in the weight room,” Ridge told The Daily Times. “Watching him go from an average student to an excellent student just through hard work, that’s what I’m most proud to see, and how the school community stepped up to help a kid who wanted to do more and wanted to go above and beyond. “For him to get a full ride from multiple sources at that kind of school is really something to be proud of.” The camel wasn’t the first thought for Perkins, who looked at several Tennessee schools before coming back to the interest expressed by Campbell third-year coach Mike Minter and his staff. “They talked to me last year but I didn’t give them much thought at first,” Perkins said. “Then they came by and got me to come up and take a look and I fell in love with it. “It’s a smaller school,” he said of the Buies Creek, N.C., college. “I didn’t like the bigger schools that much. It’s a small campus community and I felt like I would fit into it. I’m looking forward to going to a Division I team and improving myself an a student and an athlete.” Perkins, one of 16 Campbell signees on Wednesday, is planning to major in exercise science with an eye toward becoming a strength and conditioning coach and perhaps returning to the classroom as an instructor. Ridge offered the public hope to Perkins that he’ll earn that degree and one day come back to William Blount to work with another generation of Governors. “He had a motor for a big guy, and played with all his heart all the time,” Ridge explained later. “He’s a great leader. He never says a lot but when he did, guys got in line. We’ll really miss him a lot.” Alcoa Youth Baseball, Inc. Baseball & Softball Age divisions 4-year-old league, 6U (5-6 years of age), 8U (7-8 years of age) 10U (9-10 years of age), 12U (11-12 years of age) Girls’ age divisions will be determined after signups Registration Fee: $95 3 yrs Free Oil Changes. Call for Details. Airport Hwy, Alcoa TN 865-214-2421 [email protected] Signups Saturday, Feb. 7, 10 - 1:00 @ Alcoa Middle School Saturday, Feb. 14, 10 - 1:00 @ Alcoa Middle School For more information, call 806-7091 or send an email to [email protected] 4B | SPORTS THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com Thursday, February 5, 2015 FIT: Quarles says it was important for Jackson to make ‘a 40-year decision’ FROM 1B Palo Alto, Calif., was a long, winding road — one that included seven total scholarship offers, a commitment and a de-commitment from Tennessee, three state championships and college visits all over the country. “I’ve been through a lot with my recruitment,” Jackson said. “So it’s cool looking back on all the things I’ve been through the last two, three years. All the people I’ve met and the things I’ve seen. “It’s really an eye-opening experience, and I’ve really enjoyed it.” Initial scholarship offers came in from Vandy, Duke and Northwestern. Later, Tennessee, LSU, Stanford and Alabama took notice. After it didn’t work out with the Vols, Jackson committed to Stanford on Jan. 25, following an official visit to Georgia Tech. “I think Dylan, it was really important for him to make not just a four-year decision but a 40-year decision,” Maryville coach George Quarles said. “I think that was big for him. “There’s not a better fit, hardly, when you combine athletics and academics, than Stanford ... I think it’s a great fit for him, and we’re really excited about his decision.” Jackson said, “just like any kid,” playing college football had always been on his mind. He just didn’t let it grow to be something where he put too much pressure on himself. “It was one of those things, if it happened, great,” he said. “If it didn’t, oh well, I can go to school. “But freshman year, going into spring practice, I got my first look, and from there on, I just started working a lot harder, eventually got (offered) scholarships and now here I am.” Jackson was one of a group of seven Rebel football seniors on Wednesday, five signees and two D3 commitments. The group helped lead Maryville to a 59-1 record in 60 career games, went a perfect 30-0 as upperclassmen. “It’s a cool feeling because you know the teammates you battled with for the last four years are going to be going to play at the next level also,” Jackson said. “It’ll be cool to reconnect with them, see how they’re doing, how their football careers are continuing. It’s a cool thing.” Two Air Force bound SCOTT KELLER | THE DAILY TIMES ALCOA SENIOR KYLE MALIK-MITCHELL signs his letter intent to play football at the U.S. Naval Academy Wednesday during a ceremony at Alcoa High School. Malik-Mitchell adds to family full of players BY DARGAN SOUTHARD [email protected] TOM SHERLIN | THE DAILY TIMES MARYVILLE SENIORS JAYLEN BURGESS (left) and Tyler Vaught sign their Letters of Intent to play for the Air Force Academy Wednesday at Maryville High School. Long wait, hard work Vaught calls signing pay off for Burgess ‘a pretty big deal’ BY GRANT RAMEY BY DARGAN SOUTHARD [email protected] [email protected] As long as Jaylen Burgess had to wait, as hard as the Maryville running back had to work, it just made National Signing Day a little bit sweeter. “Today is like payday,” Burgess said. “I didn’t get my offer until midway through my senior year. It was something I had to be patient for. “It felt like it would never come, then it finally did.” That offer came from the U.S. Air Force Academy, and Burgess hopped on it, signing Wednesday to join the Falcon football program in the fall, along with his Rebel teammate Tyler Vaught. Football was only part of the decision, though. “It’s just a great thing to serve our country, for one part,” Burgess said. “And the second part, it’s a great academic school. You’re getting a lot of benefits out of it besides football. “It’s much more academically and brotherhood wise. It’s a school that appealed to me because of how close they were to me. They were like a family to me.” Burgess was in the shadow of former Maryville running back Shawn Prevo during his underclassmen years, before bursting onto the scene and being the Tyler Vaught’s collegiate plans have been in place for quite some time. Wednesday morning came time to make them official as the former Maryville quarterback inked his National Letter of Intent to play at the Air Force Academy, fulfilling the verbal commitment he made to the Falcons and head coach Troy Calhoun on July 25. “With the whole shoulder injury and not being able to play basketball, (signing) is a pretty big deal to me,” said Vaught, who injured his shoulder while quarterbacking the Rebels to a Sept. 19 win over Hardin Valley, missed several games and had surgery shortly after Maryville’s state title game. “Having my friend, (Maryville running back) Jaylen (Burgess), right there next to me, that’s awesome.” Along with Burgess — a fellow Air Force signee — Vaught carried an integral role on Maryville’s 2014 state championship team, which pulled out an improbable 35-34 overtime win over Ravenwood to secure the Rebels’ eighth gold ball in the last 11 years. The future Falcon con- workhorse tailback in the Rebel backfield the last two years, helping lead the team to a perfect 30-0 record and two Class 6A state championships. “I don’t think we’ve had a kid as dedicated, probably, as Jaylen has been,” Maryville coach George Quarles said. “He works at it all the time. “We’re happy for him, that he’s getting this opportunity to play at the Division I level. I think Jaylen’s best days are ahead of him.” “He’s a guy, too,” Quarles added, “that academics are important, just like the athletics.” Burgess spent his four years at Maryville frequenting recruiting camps and putting in extra hours working out on his own in the offseason, trying to get noticed by college football recruiters. The wait, as he explains it, was hard to handle. But he trusted an offer would come, when it was supposed to come, and would be the perfect opportunity when it finally did. “It was difficult at times,” Burgess said. “But I knew God was going to put me in the right place and take me on the right path.” nected with wide receiver Kelby Brock for a 65-yard touchdown right before the half and later had a 3-yard ground score in overtime. “I haven’t watched the film because I kind of want to remember it as I remembered it during that day,” Vaught said. “But it still brings a tear to my eye sometimes.” Vaught will have to share some of the family spotlight this week. His sister, Torie, who is a former Maryville High School basketball standout and now plays collegiately at Belmont, got engaged last Tuesday. “I don’t think so, I hope not at least,” a smiling Vaught said when asked if Wednesday’s ceremony will become overshadowed. “(The engagement) was a pretty big deal.” So is Vaught’s signing, which was one of seven for the Maryville football team. “I’m pretty glad to have those (people signing with me), especially Jaylen,” Vaught said. “It’s a good groups of guys to have next to you while you’re doing this.” FOR AN UNABRIDGED version visit thedailytimes.com. Where Service Matters Most ‘I feel like it will definitely prepare me for the challenges of life since there is a lot of discipline.’ Kyle Malik-Mitchell Alcoa lineman joined running back Jaquez Tyson (Chattanooga) and linebacker Jake Warwick (Tennessee Tech) Wednesday at Alcoa’s football signing ceremony. On the gridiron, that trio helped propel the Tornadoes to a 46-10 overall record during their four years (201114), which included four playoff seasons, a pair of state title game appearances and one gold ball. Just like his football-oriented family did with him, Malik-Mitchell has relished watching his former teammates morph from inexperienced freshmen to Division I signees in just a matter of years. “It’s just like we accomplished our goals,” said M a l i k- M i t c h e l l , w h o helped block for both Tys o n a n d Wa r w i c k . “From freshman year, all three of us had a dream to go onto the next level and play college football, and that’s exactly what we did.” SMOKY VIEW AUTO PARTS 2816 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy., Maryville TN Ph. 865-233-7166 / Fax: 865-233-5885 a lot of discipline. It’s just an opportunity I couldn’t walk away from.” It’s an opportunity — signing a Division I National Letter of Intent — that MalikMitchell happily shared with a pair of his most treasured teammates. The future Midshipman Where Service Matters Most GARNER BROS. AUTO PARTS 60020526DT Growing up in a “family full of football players,” Alcoa lineman Kyle MalikMitchell has been enamored by the gridiron for the better part of his adolescent years. Top contributors to that galley of gridiron include his dad, Richard, — a former Alcoa standout and Middle Tennessee State football player — and his uncle, Shannon, — a former Georgia tight end and fouryear NFL veteran with the San Diego Chargers. Now the Alcoa senior can officially hold his own at any future family reunions. This afternoon, MalikMitchell inked his National Letter of Intent to play at the U.S. Naval Academy, fulfilling the verbal commitment he made to the Midshipmen and head coach Ken Niumatalolo on Jan. 12. “It feels like I’ve accomplished one of my lifelong goals,” Malik-Mitchell told The Daily Times. “It’s always good to carry on the tradition. I just never thought my opportunity to play Division I football would come from the Naval Academy.” Although Malik-Mitchell’s signing makes him the first person in his family to attend a service academy, the presence of a military background still exists for the 6-foot-2, 290-pound guard. Decades ago, his grandfather was drafted and later served in the Vietnam War — one of the countless reasons why the 2014 Mr. Football finalist strongly values the military principles that come with attending a service institution. “It prepares you for the longer run of life,” said Malik-Mitchell, who added that he plans on majoring in either logistics or economics upon arriving in Annapolis, Md. “It’s beyond football. I feel like it will definitely prepare me for the challenges of life since there is Coupon good from 1-1-15 through 2-28-15 2104 W. Lamar Alexander Pkwy., Maryville TN Ph. 865-984-9875 / Fax: 865-984-7858 SPORTS | 5B THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com FROM 1B previous classes beneficial didn’t require much effort. His cousin, Taharin, who is both a former Alcoa standout and UTC fullback, provided a stable wealth of information as Tyson prepared to start the often-unpredictable collegiate transition. When the two got together, though, football wasn’t necessarily atop the agenda. “His biggest concern wasn’t me going to UTC (for football),” Tyson said. “His biggest concern was me going to a place that I would excel in — not just on the field, but in the classroom. He just wanted me to get an education. That was his main concern.” Once UTC’s interest in Tyson picked up after his 276-yard, five-touchdown performance versus Heritage on Sept. 26, football discussions were inevitable. Throughout the season, Tyson visited Chattanooga “numerous times” for unofficial visits, watched a handful of Mocs games in person and even got a taste of UTC’s Finley Stadium in the Class 3A semifinals when the stadium played host to Alcoa’s win over Notre Dame. That all culminated in an official visit, which the 5-foot-10, 210-pound running back took just days before delivering his verbal commitment on Jan. 25. By that point, Tyson’s UTC affection had grown significantly, and it was finally time to inform his cousin why his most recent trip to Chattanooga would be different than the others. “When I told (Taharin) I was coming down there for an official, a couple of teammates that he’s really close with and I’m really close with told me that he had just the biggest smile on his face and he was pacing back and forth in front of his apartment,” Tyson said. “He was like, ‘Man they f inally got Pete down here. They offered him, and they’re bringing him on an official visit.’ He was really ecstatic about it.” Hinson, Huff sign with NAIA Bluefield BY MARCUS FITZSIMMONS [email protected] SEYMOUR — Bluefield College continued its road back Wednesday, following up on its first three wins under coach Ordell Walker with the signing of 25 student-athletes, two of which hail from Seymour. “I am so excited about this recruiting class,” Walker said in a statement from the NAIA school. “We have 25 outstanding young men committed.” Daniel Hinson is looking at playing running back at the school located in Virginia neat the West Virginia line. “I decided on Bluefield because of the family JOY KIMBROUGH | THE DAILY TIMES SEYMOUR SENIORS (FROM LEFT) Daniel Hinson, Cody Huff and J.J. Jerman sign their National Letters of Intent Wednesday during a signing ceremony at Seymour High School. They were joined by (back, from left) Seymour Athletic Director Gary Householder and Head Football Coach Jerry Cooper. atmosphere and the way the coaches brought me in and it’s a new program I just believe will achieve, Hinson said. “I was visiting schools in the Mid-South Conference and they just found me. I think it was the class that they’re saying can put them over the top.” Huff isn’t planning on playing immediately after being knocked around this season . “I’ll red-shirt this year and recover some,” the linebacker said. “Hopefully I can get bigger, add some weight and play linebacker in college, but I can play safety.” Both are undecided on a major but Hinson is leaning towards education while Huff is considering studying forensic science. TECH: Koons commits after finding out injury didn’t faze coaching staff FROM 1B Daily Times. “I’ve been thinking about it for a long time now because it just takes a big burden off me and my family’s shoulders.” Fortunately for Warwick, one family member carries extensive knowledge on the journey he is about to tackle. His grandfather, Lonnie, played linebacker for the Golden Eagles and was later inducted into the Tennessee Tech Hall of Fame. Following his collegiate career, he embarked on a 13-year NFL stint, spending a decade with the Minnesota Vikings, two years with the Atlanta Falcons and one with the Washington Redskins. Warwick perks up when his grandfather offers up any sort of football advice. “He’s said you’ve just got to be prepared for the amount of time it’s going to take up, but most of all, enjoy it while it lasts,” Warwick said. “Because when you get to be his age, you don’t get to do that kind of stuff anymore. He said you’ll miss it.” Although his grandfather’s playing days have come and gone, Warwick, will still have another close ally making the same trek with him to Cookeville. Just a few miles down the road, Koons was signing his National Letter of Intent at Maryville’s signing ceremony. “I’ve talked to Richie a lot actually,” Warwick said. “I played with Richie all the way up — I guess around here you call it grasshoppers, and then you have pee-wee and midgets — I played with Richie all the way up until I got to middle school. So I know Richie pretty well, and it won’t be anything new for me and Richie playing together.” Two of the 17 seniors departing Tech, and opening up the spots being occupied by this class, are Alcoa alum Austin Tallant and Maryville alumni Zach Sharp. Rising sophomores Jordan Patrick and J.T. Rankin, both Tornado alums, will still be in Cookeville next season to provide some familiar faces. “It’ll be a lot easier because there are people down there that I know, but they’ve kind of already established themselves. They already have their groups of friends, so to go down there with Richie, it kind of makes it easier on me to get to know him. We can form maybe our own group, which will makes us closer as friends and teammates.” RICHIE KOONS It was only by coincidence that Koons happened to be back at the scene of the crime. A week removed from tearing his ACL — and playing the rest of the game on that torn ACL — in Maryville’s dramatic state championship win over Ravenwood in Cookeville, Koons was back at Tennessee Tech’s Tucker Stadium for the annual East-West All-Star Game. Worried if he would still have scholarship offers on the table to play college football after the setback, Koons decided to find out first hand from the Tech coaching staff. “We just figured we’d go talk to them,” Koons told The Daily Times. “I told them (about the injury), and they said it didn’t faze them a bit, so I committed then. “I thought that was really cool that it didn’t bother them.” Ko o n s , a 6 - f o o t -2 , 279-pound defensive MICE tackle, made that commitment official signing his National Letter of Intent to attend Tech, where he will likely flip sides of the ball once he completes rehab on the torn ACL. “I think he’ll probably play offense at the next level, he’s probably more of an offensive lineman,” Maryville coach George Quarles said. “Some people haven’t seen him do that, but they’ve seen him do it in camps. “We kept telling him, if he was playing offense, he would’ve been one of our best ones. He has a chance to be a great offensive lineman at the next level.” Baseball & Softb f all MUNCHING? Your Hometown Pest Control Company! GO ONLINE TO a case where they saw of my clips on the recruiting sites.” It was a similar story for Cody Huff. The Eagle linebacker was looking for interest while rehabbing from his third shoulder surgery and found what he was searching for in Bluefield, Va. “I had some interest from other schools but I picked Bluefield because they have this real family atmosphere. You could tell the coaches really care,” Huff said.“They aren’t just there to teach you about football, they are there to teach life lessons. This is photostore.thedailytimes.com or scan the code on the right to browse and purchase now! 509 W. Lamar Alexander Pkwy. 982-0000 T.D.A. 381 30017498DT MOCS: Tyson’s interest in Chattanooga increased Sign up Online or more info www.eagletonbp.com EAGLE: This gorgeous boy was found running with two of his buddies. He was scared when he came in, so hoping he can find his forever home soon. About 1 year old. BARNEY is a real cutie! Very shy but ready to find his new home. About 1 year old. Beautiful dog. 4/*''&3: The nose knows, according to Sniffer. He came to us as a stray and now he’s ready to find a forever home where he can sniff out missing slippers. Beautiful 1-year-old hound. WE LOVE VOLUNTEERS! ORIENTATION THIS SAT 10:30 – 12. ADOPTION EVENT this FRIDAY 10 – 2 AT TVA CREDIT UNION IN ALCOA. 'PSQIPUPTPGBMMPVSBEPQUBCMFQFUT QMFBTFWJTJUXXXTNBDGDPN BOEDMJDLi"EPQUJPOwBU UIFUPQPGUIFQBHF #-"$,*& is a Dutch breed male rabbit about 3 years old. He soft and cuddly. TIGER is a beautiful girl, but we aren’t sure she NEPTUNE is a 2 month old husky/rottie puppy. likes being around all of these other cats. She’s a senior girl who needs a home where she can live out her golden years. Tortie about 10 years old. He a cute little ball of fur looking for a loving home. Found with six other puppies by the side of the road. BLOUNT COUNTY ANIMAL CENTER $VSSJF"WF.BSZWJMMFt )PVST5VFTEBZ'SJEBZBNQNt4BUVSEBZBNQN $633&/5"%015*0/'&&4$)&%6-& Dogs $70 * Puppies $100 Cats and kittens $40 * Senior cats $30 Find us on Facebook! 4FBSDIGPSi#MPVOU$PVOUZ "OJNBM4IFMUFSw BOEDMJDL-*,& Call 865-981-1170 to place your ad Fax: 865-981-1117 On the web: thedailytimes.com/classifieds E-mail: classifi[email protected] 6B THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 Public Notices Public Notices PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01262 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE Homero Lopez Arevalo vs. The Tellico Reservoir Development Agency (TRDA) Board of Directors will meet in regular quarterly session on Friday, February 13, 2015 at 12 noon. The meeting will be held at the TRDA Office, 165 Deer Crossing, Vonore, Tennessee. Committee meetings, if necessary, will be held the same date and place beginning at 11:30 am. No. E-25732 Maria Cruz Lopez Alejandro NON-RESIDENT NOTICE In this cause, it appearing from the Complaint, which is sworn to, that the defendant, Maria Cruz Lopez Alejandro is a non-resident of the State of Tennessee or whose whereabouts are unknown so that ordinary process cannot be served upon her. Said defendant must file an Answer in Circuit Court for Blount County, at Maryville, Tennessee, and with plaintiff's attorney, David F. Peeples, 101 W. Broadway Ave., Suite 240, Maryville, TN 37801 within 30 days of the last date of publication or a Judgment by Default may be entered and the cause set for hearing ex parte as to defendant. February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01253 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) This Notice will published in the Daily Times for four successive weeks. This the 22nd day of January, 2015. STEPHEN S. OGLE, CLERK & MASTER By: Dorothy McClure Attorney: David F. Peeples February 5, 12, 19, and 26, 2015 NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated March 12, 2014, executed by VIRGINIA F. REAGAN, conveying certain real property therein described to INDEPENDENCE TITLE AND ESCROW SERVICES, INC. , as Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register's Office of Blount County, Tennessee recorded March 13, 2014, in Deed Book 2383, Page 665-680; and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to FREEDOM MORTGAGE CORPORATION who is now the owner of said debt; and WHEREAS, the undersigned,Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC, having been appointed as Substitute Trustee by instrument to be filed for record in the Register's Office of Blount County, Tennessee. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable, and that the undersigned, Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee or his duly appointed agent, by virtue of the power, duty and authority vested and imposed upon said Substitute Trustee will, on March 5, 2015 at 01:00 PM at the Main Entrance Steps of the Blount County Courthouse , located in Maryville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash or certified funds ONLY, the following described property situated in Blount County, Tennessee, to wit: SITUATE IN DISTRICT NO. NINETEEN (19) OF BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND BEING ALL OF LOT NO. TWENTY-EIGHT (28) OF HILLTOP VISTA SUBDIVISION, AS SHOWN BY PLAT OF RECORD IN MAP FILE 999A, IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE FOR BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND AS SHOWN BY SURVEY OF WADE B. NANCE, SURVEYOR, DATED OCTOBER 5, 1990, AND BEARING FILE NO. A-9195; SAID PREMISES BEING IMPROVED WITH A DWELLING. NO NEW BOUNDARY LINE SURVEY WAS PERFORMED AT THE TIME OF THIS CONVEYANCE. SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS, EASEMENTS, SETBACKS, AND OTHER CONDITIONS RECORDED IN MAP FILE 999A, IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE FOR BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE. SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIONS, EASEMENTS, SETBACKS, AND OTHER CONDITIONS RECORDED IN MISC. BOOK 93, PAGE 283, IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE FOR BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE. Parcel ID: 066E-A-022.00 PROPERTY ADDRESS: The street address of the property is believed to be 1331 WOODSIDE PARK DR, MARYVILLE, TN 37801. In the event of any discrepancy between this street address and the legal description of the property, the legal description shall control. CURRENT OWNER(S): VIRGINIA F. REAGAN OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plat; any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; and to any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. This property is being sold with the express reservation that it is subject to confirmation by the lender or Substitute Trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The Property is sold as is, where is, without representations or warranties of any kind, including fitness for a particular use or purpose. THIS LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC, Substitute Trustee 119 S. Main Street, Suite 500 Memphis, TN 38103 www.rubinlublin.com/property-listings.php Tel: (877) 813-0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846 Ad #77314: 2015-02-05 2015-02-12, 2015-02-19 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE STATE OF TENNESSEE, BLOUNT COUNTY WHEREAS, William L. Gribble, II and Laura Beth Gribble executed a Deed of Trust to Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage, Lender and FMLS, Inc., Trustee(s), which was dated August 17, 2012 and recorded on August 21, 2012 in Book 2331, Page 324, Blount County, Tennessee Register of Deeds. WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debt(s) and obligation(s) thereby secured by the said Deed of Trust and the current holder of said Deed of Trust, Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage, (the “Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee, by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Blount County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; and NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Holder, and that as agent for the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee, by virtue of the power and authority vested in it, will on March 3, 2015, at 1:30PM at the usual and customary location at the Blount County Courthouse, Maryville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Blount County, Tennessee, to wit: Situated in District No. Nineteen (19) of Blount County; Tennessee, within the 4th Ward of the City of Maryville, Tennessee, and being known and designated as all of Lot 25, Final Plat of Royal Oaks, Phase One, Section Two as shown by map of the same of record in Map File 1042-A, Register's Office, Blount County, Tennessee, to which map specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description thereof. This conveyance is subject to all applicable restrictions, easements, set-back lines, and other conditions shown of record in the Register's Office for Blount County, Tennessee. Being and intending to be the same property conveyed to William Lee Gribble, II, and wife, Laura Beth Gribble by Warranty Deed dated August 17, 2012 and recorded in Record Book 2331, Page, 322, in the Register's Office for Blount County, Tennessee. Parcel ID Number: 068I B 024.00 Address/Description: 4206 Legends Way, Maryville, TN 37801. Current Owner(s): William Lee Gribble, II and Laura Beth Gribble. Other Interested Party(ies): Y-12 Federal Credit Union; City of Maryville; Donna Lynn Miller (gribble); Hummel Family Living Trust Family Subtrust; Federal Building FCU; and Lakewood Capital, LLC assignee of Credit One Bank, N.A.. The sale of the property described above shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plat; any and all liens against said property for unpaid property taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; a deed of trust; and any matter than an accurate survey of the premises might disclose; and All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. This office is attempting to collect a debt. Any information obtained will be used for that purpose. Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee c/o Tennessee Foreclosure Department 277 Mallory Station Road Suite 115 Franklin, TN 37067 PH: 615-550-7697 FX: 615-550-8484 File No.: 15-00366 February 5, 12 & 19, 2015 ATTENTION ADVERTISERS No cancellations or corrections will be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser's responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Blount County Publishers, LLC, is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Blount County Publishers, LLC. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Blount County Publishers, LLC, which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Blount County Publishers, LLC does not investigate statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Blount County Publishers, LLC. their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and loses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, Blount County Publishers, LLC, shall not be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Blount County Publishers, LLC, for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make- good insertion, in the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Blount County Publishers, LLC, shall not be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Blount County Publishers, LLC, shall not be liable for errors in or nonpublication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court situated in Blount County, Tennessee. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Blount County Publishers, LLC, reserves the right to disclose a user's identity where deemed necessary to protect Blount County Publishers, LLC, or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated June 19, 2006, executed by JASON SMITH AND KARYN SMITH, conveying certain real property therein described to FOOTHILLS TITLE SERVICES, INC., as Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register's Office of Blount County, Tennessee recorded July 7, 2006, in Deed Book 2115, Page 2990-3006 (see also the Reformation/Amendment to Deed of Trust at Book 2157, Page 1614); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee, on behalf of the certificate holders of the FFMLT Trust 2006-FF13, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-FF13 who is now the owner of said debt; and WHEREAS, the undersigned,Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC, having been appointed as Substitute Trustee by instrument to be filed for record in the Register's Office of Blount County, Tennessee. NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable, and that the undersigned, Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee or his duly appointed agent, by virtue of the power, duty and authority vested and imposed upon said Substitute Trustee will, on March 5, 2015 at 01:00 PM at the Main Entrance Steps of the Blount County Courthouse , located in Maryville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash or certified funds ONLY, the following described property situated in Blount County, Tennessee, to wit: SITUATED IN DISTRICT NO. 9 OF BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND BEING ALL OF LOT NO. 18 AND PART OF LOT 17 OF THE J.R. WILSON SUBDIVISION, REVISION NO. 3 AS SHOWN BY PLAT OF RECORD IN MAP FILE 164B IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE FOR BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND BEING MORE PARTICULARLY BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT AN IRON PIN ON THE NORTHERN RIGHT OF WAY OF BOB WILSON PLACE SAID PIN BEING LOCATED 117.0 FEET MORE OR LESS FROM THE CENTERLINE OF MAIN ROAD AND CORNER TO LOT 17; THENCE LEAVING SAID RIGHT OF WAY AND WITH LOT 17, NORTH 40 DEG. 49 MIN. EAST 60.67 FEET TO AN IRON PIN IN THE LINE OF LOT 96 EAGLETON VILLAGE; THENCE WITH LOT 96 SOUTH 68 DEG. 54 MIN. EAST 7.20 FEET TO AN IRON PIN; THENCE SOUTH 67 DEG. 09 MIN. EAST 118.07 FEET TO AN IRON PIN IN THE LINE OF LOT 24; THENCE WITH LOT 24 SOUTH 23 DEG. 57 MIN. WEST 22.85 FEET TO AN IRON PIPE IN THE NORTHERN RIGHT OF WAY OF BOB WILSON PLACE; THENCE WITH SAID RIGHT OF WAY THE FOLLOWING 3 CALLS AND DISTANCES; (1) SOUTH 86 DEG. 41 MIN. WEST 87.19 FEET TO AN IRON PIN SET; THENCE (2) NORTH 77 DEG. 27 MIN. WEST 33.23 FEET TO AN IRON PIN; THENCE (3) NORTH 51 DEG. 12 MIN. WEST 33.90 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING AS SHOWN BY SURVEY OF WADE B. NANCE, 901 E. SUMMIT HILL AVENUE, SUITE LL100, KNOXVILLE, TN 37915, DATED JUNE 24, 1999, BEARING FILE NO. A19467, SAID PREMISES IMPROVED WITH DWELLING. NO NEW BOUNDARY LINE SURVEY WAS PERFORMED AT THE TIME OF THIS CONVEYANCE SUBJECT TO ALL APPLICABLE RESTRICTIONS, EASEMENTS, SET-BACK LINES, AND OTHER CONDITIONS SHOWN OF RECORD IN THE REGISTER`S OFFICE FOR BLOUNT COUNTY, TENNESSEE. Parcel ID: 037K-C-025.00 PROPERTY ADDRESS: The street address of the property is believed to be 106 BOB WILSON PL, MARYVILLE, TN 37804. In the event of any discrepancy between this street address and the legal description of the property, the legal description shall control. CURRENT OWNER(S): JASON SMITH AND KARYN SMITH OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., ("MERS"), acting solely as a nominee for FIRST FRANKLIN A DIVISION OF NAT. CITY BANK OF IN, WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF THE FIRST FRANKLIN MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2006-FFA, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFI-CATES, SERIES 2006-FFA, CAPITAL ONE BANK (USA), N.A., TENNESSEE ENDOSCOPY CENTER The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plat; any unpaid taxes; any restrictive covenants, easements or set-back lines that may be applicable; any prior liens or encumbrances as well as any priority created by a fixture filing; and to any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. This property is being sold with the express reservation that it is subject to confirmation by the lender or Substitute Trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time. The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day, time, and place certain without further publication, upon announcement at the time and place for the sale set forth above. All right and equity of redemption, statutory or otherwise, homestead, and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but the undersigned will sell and convey only as Substitute Trustee. The Property is sold as is, where is, without representations or warranties of any kind, including fitness for a particular use or purpose. THIS LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin TN, PLLC, Substitute Trustee 119 S. Main Street, Suite 500 Memphis, TN 38103 www.rubinlublin.com/property-listings.php Tel: (877) 813-0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846 Ad #77775: 2015-02-05 2015-02-12, 2015-02-19 Estate of Barbara Joyce Cloniger, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 20, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Barbara Joyce Cloniger, deceased, who died on August 3, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 20th day of January, 2015 Deena Haile Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01257 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Loma C. Ferguson, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 16, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Loma C. Ferguson, deceased, who died on December 7, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 16th day of January, 2015 Scott A. Hughett Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 Q: A: Start your subscription now! Call 981-1160 Estate of Harold W. Ferst, Jr. late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 20, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Harold W. Ferst, Jr., deceased, who died on November 10, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve months from the decedent's date of death. This the 20th of January, 2015 William J. Anderson Personal Representative Amy Burroughs Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01255 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Margaret Grant, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 21, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Margaret Grant, deceased, who died on October 20, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 21st of January, 2015 Michael A. Grant Personal Representative William R. Ray Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01258 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of John L. Green, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 16, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of John L. Green, deceased, who died on November 12, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 16th day of January, 2015 Loretta Green Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 Check out our Real Estate section ON LINE Thursday, February 5, 2015 CLASSIFIEDS | 7B THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds Public Notices Public Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01244 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01261 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Edith Grubb, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 7, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Edith Grubb, deceased, who died on September 1, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. Estate of Roxie S. Hannah, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 22, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Roxie S. Hannah, deceased, who died on December 8, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 7th day of January, 2015 This the 22nd of January, 2015 Larry L. Grubb Personal Representative June Knight Personal Representative Anne M. McKinney Attorney for Estate J. William Johnson Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 Daily Bridge Club NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01268 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Carl Neal Kidd, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 15, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Carl Neal Kidd, deceased, who died on November 17, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 15th day of January, 2015 G. Michael Kidd Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 January 29 and February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01264 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01263 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Raymond L. Handley late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 13, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Raymond L. Handley, deceased, who died on December 31, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve months from the decedent's date of death. Estate of Donald Ray Hurst late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 13, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Donald Ray Hurst, deceased, who died on October 27, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve months from the decedent's date of death. This the 16th of January, 2015 This the 16th of January, 2015 STEPHEN E. HANDLEY Personal Representative MICHELLE HATCHER Personal Representative P. ANDREW SNEED Attorney for Estate P. ANDREW SNEED Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 Public Notices True bills By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency You’re serving on a grand jury, investigating today’s deal. I’ll tell you what happened. Decide whether to hand down any true bills. After West bid spades and diamonds, South got to four hearts. West cashed two diamonds and led a trump, and South drew trumps and took the A-K of clubs. He next led his deuce of spades to dummy’s queen and returned a spade: jack, king, ace. West was end-played. A diamond lead would concede a fatal ruff-sluff. A spade would give South a spade trick with dummy’s nine. What say you? Estate of Dora L. Kidd, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 15, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Dora L. Kidd, deceased, who died on August 17, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 15th day of January, 2015 G. Michael Kidd Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 January 29 and February 5, 2015 South was guiltless, but I would indict West for fatuous bidding. After East couldn’t respond to one spade, West was going nowhere. His bid of two diamonds helped South play the hand. If West passes at his second turn, South will have options. He may play West for a hand such as A J 10 8 7, 8 3, A K 4, Q 8 2. Then South could succeed by drawing trumps, leading a spade to the queen, and running the trumps to catch West in a black-suit squeeze and end play. You hold: K 2 A K J 10 6 5 9 6 A K 4. You open one heart, and your partner responds one spade. $15 TO PHO Deadline: February 6th, 2015 Name _________________________________________________ Address ________________________________________________ Phone _________________________________________________ Name of Loved One ______________________________________ Special Message (Limit 20 words) ___________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Photo ______Yes ______ No ______Cash ______Check Mail To: 307 E Harper Ave, Maryville, TN 37804 Call:865-981-1170 Email: [email protected] EAST J 4 9 7 J 10 3 2 Q 10 9 8 2 SOUTH K 2 A K J 10 6 5 9 6 A K 4 West 1 2 Pass North Pass Pass 4 East South Pass Dbl Pass 3 All Pass Opening lead — K (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC Public Notices Public Notices NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01231 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01142 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01256 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Lynda Gredig Lyda, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 12, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Lynda Gredig Lyda, deceased, who died on November 11, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. Estate of Roger Myers, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 7, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Roger Myers, deceased, who died on July 3, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. Estate of Beverly A. Roberts, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 16, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Beverly A. Roberts, deceased, who died on December 3, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. Darlene Reagan Personal Representative Tell that special someone just how much they mean to you in a Daily Times Love Line. Publishing Feb. 14th. Don’t forget to include a photo of your loved one at no extra charge. Deadline is February 6th at 5pm. WEST A 10 8 7 5 8 3 A K 8 5 4 6 Public Notices This the 12th day of January, 2015 2015 Valentine Love Lines NORTH Q 9 6 3 Q 4 2 Q 7 J 7 5 3 NOWHERE DAILY QUESTION NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01267 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: A jump to three hearts would be highly encouraging but not forcing. This hand is strong enough to commit to game. Since the heart suit is self-sufficient, jump to four hearts. You will have a chance for 11 tricks even if your partner has a minimum response such as A Q 4 3, 3 2, 8 7 5, 9 6 5 3. West dealer Both sides vulnerable By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 This the 7th day of January, 2015 Nancy Myers Personal Representative Steve Merritt Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 This the 16th day of January, 2015 Carl W. Roberts Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 January 29 and February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01250 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01248 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Carl Wilson McGinn, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 14, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Carl Wilson McGinn deceased, who died on November 24, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. Estate of Edgar Parker Jr., late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 12, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Edgar Parker, Jr., deceased, who died on December 21, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve months from the decedent's date of death. This the 14th day of January, 2015 This the 12th of January, 2015 David McGinn Personal Representative David W. Tipton Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 Christopher Parker, David Parker and Gregg Parker Personal Representatives H. Allen Bray Attorney for Estate By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 NOTICE TO CREDITORS DOCKET NO.: P-01270 (As required by section 30-2-306 of the Tennessee Code Annotated) Estate of Charles Frank Sheets, late of Blount County, Tennessee. Notice is hereby given that on January 20, 2015, Letters Testamentary in respect to the Estate of Charles Frank Sheets, deceased, who died on December 14, 2014 were issued to the undersigned by the Probate Clerk of Blount County, Tennessee. All persons, resident and non-resident, having claims, matured or unmatured, against the estate are required to file the same with the clerk of the above named court on or before the earlier of the dates prescribed in (1) or (2), otherwise their claim will be forever barred: (1)(A) Four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting as the case may be) of this notice if the creditor received an actual copy of this notice to creditors at least sixty (60) days before the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting); or (B) Sixty (60) days from the date the creditor received an actual copy of the notice to creditors if the creditor received the copy of the notice less than sixty (60) days prior to the date that is four (4) months from the date of the first publication (or posting) as described in (1) (A); or (2) Twelve (12) months from the decedent's date of death. This the 20th day of January, 2015 Frieda N. Sheets Personal Representative By Stephen S. Ogle Blount County Probate Clerk Maryville, TN 37804 January 29 and February 5, 2015 8B | CLASSIFIEDS THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds Public Notices Of Interest General Help Wanted NOTICE OF SALE OF MANUFACTURED HOME PLEASE CHECK YOUR AD BLOUNT COUNTY 911 is taking applications for the position of Public Safety Dispatcher. 18 or older; HS Diploma or equivalent. Experience preferred but not required. Criminal background check required, psychological and physical exam required; must pass 25wpm typing test, capable of computer data entry; must pass basic public safety telecommunicator certification course, and stringent in house training program. Applications may be printed off or emailed on line www.blount911.com or apply in person 1431 William Blount Dr. Maryville, TN; resumes may be mailed to P.O. Box 4609 Maryville, TN 37802. Deadline for applications is 430 PM Friday, February 6, 2015. $13.63 Hr. EOE In accordance with T.C.A. § 66-14101, et seq., Anthony R. Steele, Attorney for SCRR INVESTMENTS, will sell a 2000 Clayton Millenium manufactured home bearing serial no. CWP008616TN registered in the name of REBECCA S. CANTRELL (BORING) to satisfy the storage lien accruing against said home upon its abandonment by the owner upon the real property of SCRR INVESTMENTS, generally known as 1822 Redbud Valley Rd., Maryville, TN 37801. The property will be sold for cash upon such terms as will be announced at the sale. Said manufactured home is held by SCRR INVESTMENTS and is subject to the accruing storage fees and expenses as a result of its abandonment. Sale Date and Location: February 24, 2015, at 3:45 p.m. at the front steps of the Courthouse in Maryville, Blount County, Tennessee. Publication Dates: February 5, 2015; February 12, 2015 Other Parties Interested: None known. This the 2nd day of February, 2015. /s/ Anthony R. Steele Anthony R. Steele, Esq. Winchester, Sellers, Foster & Steele, P.C. P. O. Box 2428 Knoxville, TN 37901 (865) 637-1980 February 5 & 12, 2015 for errors the FIRST DAY it appears in print. Our paper will not be liable for incorrect ads after the first day of publication. You may request a proof of your ad be sent to you by fax or email before it prints to correct any errors. Deadline for Corrections: Noon 1 day prior to publication. 865-981-1170 Classified hours are: Monday-Friday 8am-5pm Personals ADOPTION: Loving couple promises your baby a secure home. Denise & Nick, 1-888-449-0803 Garage / Yard Sales Maryville 1554 MT. TABOR RD. Fri.-Thurs., 9am-? Tools, Tools, Tools, (construction & much more), fishing items, Harley Davidson items. 3 bay garage full. Too much to mention. 2955 MILFORD AVE E Broadway, R to Hunt, T to Milford. Fri & Sat, 8am-2pm. Antiques, hutches, beds, glassware. JAPANESE GARAGE SALE. Feb. 6th & 7th, Friday & Saturday, 8:30am1:30pm. 1902 Crest Rd MOVING SALE 857 Somerset Dr. Friday & Saturday, 7am-12pm. Oversized desk and desk hutch, bookcases, drawer storage units, craft supplies, Cherished Teddies. 865-567-8550 Lost and Found FOUND – BASSET HOUND in Peach Orchard/Blockhouse area. Call 865898-9345. Adult Care LOST – BEAGLE, white/blk. spots & Corgi Pit, light brown, 1 blue eye & 1 brown eye, has partial chain on. Lost in Clover Hill Ridge area. Call 865977-0636. FOR 10 YEARS, our trained, bonded and insured CAREGivers have provided home care services for local seniors. Call us. Home Instead 865-273-2178. Child Care 3RD SHIFT CHILDCARE for ages 4 to 13. For safe, dependable child care call now, 865-936-0511. MISSING BOXER Small, female 16 year old boxer. Missing since Thursday evening from Old Niles Ferry (west Maryville) area. No collar. Call 865-250-8707 or 865256-5507. MISSING PET? Be sure to check with the local animal shelter. Maryville Animal Shelter 865-681-2241 Blount County Animal Shelter 865-980-6244 Of Interest COUNTRY CUBBARD in Louisville located next to the Barber Shop. Open Tues. - Sat., 10am-4pm. Good used furniture, antiques & collectibles. 865-548-2520 General Help Wanted ATTENTION RETAIL WIRELESS SALES PROFESSIONALS! US Cellular Authorized Agent is looking for Enthusiastic sales professionals for one of their US Cellular stores. If you take pride in superior customer service, and if you have retail wireless sales experience, then check us out. We offer a wide range of company benefits including Commission, Bonuses, Medical, Paid Holidays, Sick & Personal Days & Retirement Plan. Great opportunities for career advancement. B&H Computers, owner of several regional US Cellular Authorized agent locations, is now accepting applications for retail wireless professionals for their Maryville store. Please submit resume to [email protected] CONTENT MANAGER The (Maryville, TN) Daily Times/TheDailyTimes.com, an award-winning multimedia outlet near Knoxville, has an opening on its Newsroom content management team. The preferred candidate will have keen news judgment; excellent grammatical and writing skills; excellent knowledge of software and processes related to preparing content for print and online production, including Adobe InDesign, InCopy and Photoshop; and basic knowledge of Web-related technologies. The preferred candidate will have a bachelor's degree in communications or an equivalent degree. He or she will be deadline conscious, objective and able to accept constructive criticism. Send non-returnable PDFs of a cover letter, resume and samples of your print page design and/or online work to [email protected]. The Daily Times is an equal-opportunity employer. EXPERIENCED climber, bucket operator & grounds person for Tree Service needed immediately. 865-977-1422 EXPERIENCED CONCRETE Finishers needed. Call 865-919-8162. HICKORY CONSTRUCTION, INC. is now seeking “A” Team Members Residential Project Manager Residential Superintendents Commercial Superintendents Foremen Trim Carpenters Apprentices Houses For Rent $345 - $450 GREAT VALUE, RIVERSIDE MANOR, Alcoa Hwy. 865-970-2267 1, 2 & 3 BR's riversidemanorapts.com 1 & 2 BR, C/H/A, W/D conn., referencess & lease, no pets. Starting at $275/mo. + deposit. 982-6446 1-2 BR APTS. $325-$395, No Dogs. 865-977-4300 3BD, 2BA Fenced back yard. No smoking. $650/mo., 1st, last & $600 deposit. 865-389-3577 3BR, 2BA, MARYVILLE CITY, large, like new. No Pets. $1000 mo. Call 865-406-3166. 3BR/2 BA Double Wide $5000 down (Why rent when you can own). Owner Finance with monthly payments. 612 Crawford St. Maryville, TN 37804 (865) 981-1004 www.maryvillerentalproperties.com 1910 E. BROADWAY (HOUSE) 3Bd, 1Ba $850/mo., $850 dep. 1354 LODWICK DR. 2BR, 1BA DUPLEX. Both units for rent immediately! Quiet with large yard, new paint & floors. $600/mo. + $600 deposit. Call 865-978-2070 or muna.tn.properties@ gmail.com. 2605 STOCK CREEK RD (HOUSE) 4Bd, 2.5Ba $1350/mo., $1350 dep. 1210 S. RACHELS CIR (CONDO) 3Bd, 2Ba $900/mo., $900 dep. 807 OLD RESERVOIR RD (HOUSE) 4Bd, 2Ba $1250/mo., $1250 dep. 3547 PEPPERMINT HILLS DR 3Bd, 2Ba $1000/mo., $1000 dep. 1BR, 1BA, W/D hookup, water included. $500 mo., 1 yr. lease. Call 865318-9444. 2BR, 1BA, 1 level, W/D conn., very clean, eat-in kitchen, patio, all appl. No pets/smoking. $600/mo 977-7831 627 GRANT ST Alcoa schools! Remodeled 2BR, 1BA with new CH/A & W/D connection! $550 per month. Call Bill Mclain with Realty Executives at 865-454-1451 or 865-983-0011 DUPLEX/TOWNHOUSE 2Bd, 1.5Ba, basement, CH/A. $675 per month + deposit. 865-980-1832 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS NICE 2BR Apt., convenient to airport or Clayton. CH/A, $575 mo., No pets. Call 865-604-7054. Commercial Rental MARYVILLE OFFICE SPACE for Lease. Approximately 1600 sq. ft., utilities included. $1600 mo. 865-983-7232 WALNUT SQUARE Commercial Rental Spaces available. Call 865981-8954. 314 RUSSELL RD (HOUSE) 3Bd, 1Ba $850/mo., $850 dep. 325 ROCKFORD CEDAR ST (MH) 2Bd, 2Ba $650/mo., $650 dep. Houses For Sale HOUSE FOR SALE, you move it to your lot. Excellent condition, approx. 1000 sq. ft., full kitchen, 2BR. Heat & air unit included. $20,000 Call 423371-9050. 2BR, 1.5BA, City of Maryville, W/D Connection, CH/A. Please call 865-977-5489. Reporting the news since 1883 3BR/2BA “Great Community near Walmart” $3,000 down & own it in 5 yrs. **YOU CAN Rent It or YOU CAN Buy It!** “WE FINANCE” Regardless of Credit! Many Available 865-696-2571 3BR, 2BA MH in country, 10 min. from Maryville. $750 mo. Call after 7pm weeknights, 865-660-3107. MOBILE HOME PARK located off Hwy 411 S. 2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes. $400-$500 month. Call 865-856-0639. WHY RENT when you can own? Small down payment, no banks. 2BR/1BA in Walland. 865-548-2021 WHY RENT when you can own? Small down payment, no banks. 2BR/2BA Louisville. 865-548-2021 Mobile/Manufactured Home Sales I BUY OLDER MOBILE HOMES Any size, age considered. Call 865-207-8825 Lots & Acreage 10 ACRES unrestricted, 3520 Glendale Community Rd, Greenback. $140,000 Call 865-803-4381. Want to Buy WANTED IMMEDIATELY Large tracts of land for development purposes. Farms, acreage & timber ok. Cash paid, decisions made quickly. David Alley, O/A, 865-389-7361 or Email [email protected] Antiques Tune In To TRADIN' TREASURES on AM 1470 Saturdays 9am to 10am To Hear YOUR Ad! ANTIQUE ARMOIRE made into TV & Stereo center. $75 865-748-5574 Condominium Rental TAXI DRIVERS NEEDED Call 865-740-8026 2 or 3 BR, $400-$550 mo. Rent to own, Friendsville. No pets. Call 865-995-2825. 3BR, 2BA, CH/A, all appliances, very nice. Lawn care furnished. $850 mo. + dep. No pets. Call 865-363-8847. RE/MAX FIRST GRAYSON APTS. in Alcoa. 2BR, $550/mo., 3BR, $650/mo. Housing accepted. Showing 7 days/week by appt. 865-982-3427 NOW HIRING Cashier, day & night shift. Exp. a plus. Apply at Rite Stop, 102 Calderwood Hwy., 865-977-0124 Mobile Manufactured Home Rentals Apartment / Duplexes Please apply at: hickoryconstruction.com EEOC We have a great team and want you to be a part of it! FT/PT flex hours available in outbound call center. Will train! BI-LINGUAL candidates also needed. 865-246-1823 or send resume: [email protected] Thursday, February 5, 2015 TREADLE SEWING MACHINE Very old. $125 865-984-5851 Mobile/ManufacturedHome Lots VICTORIAN LOVE SEAT New upholstery, beautiful wood carved frame. Mont condition. $225 865-414-1494 LOT FOR RENT Maximum size, 14x60. Garbage pick up included. No outside pets. $150/mo. 982-5222 Appliances MOBILE HOME LOTS $200 www.edgeotownmhc.com Or 865-719-1467 M&D APPLIANCE Paying $20-$30. Kenmore, Whirlpool, Roper Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Fridges. Steve 253-6172 or Ernie 659-9198. Adult Care Drywall Home Improvements CHORE & HOMEMAKER ASSISTANCE Need help with daily tasks? I clean homes, have car to run errands to store, pharmacy & doctor. Also do yard work or clean gutters, etc. Call 6am-2pm, 983-0382 or 2pm-10pm, 244-0520. ALL DRYWALL REPAIRS, patching, finish, texturing. Small jobs OK. Rocky Top Drywall 865-335-4877 or 865-771-0812 *HELP IS A PHONE CALL AWAY Carpentry, screening, painting, plumbing, pressure washing & miscellaneous repairs. Honesty & Integrity, Lic. & Ins. Air Conditioning TENNAIR – 1 HEATING/AIR Fast, reliable service. Installations. Professional duct cleaning. We service all brands. 865-983-1384 or 865-995-9660 Car Wash / Detailing AUTO CLEAN & SHINE Complete Auto Clean-up 10% off full detail with this Ad. LVming 7uffing Hhining +time Readers Choice Linner 777 Accredited Teds Auto Detailing 2532 E. Broadway Ave 865-982-3600, owner Ted McKee Concrete Services BILL'S CONCRETE SERVICE Grade, Form, Pour, Finish, 30 Years Experience Bill Correll 865-856-8632 CUSTOMS CONCRETE SERVICES Grade, Form, Pour & Finish Driveways, Slabs, Patios & More No Job Too Small! Licensed & Insured 865-266-0293 865-801-5597 STORY CONCRETE Form, grade and finish, driveways, slabs, parking lots, etc. 25 plus years' experience. 865-977-4373 Excavating FARMERS EXCAVATING *Bobcat *Backhoe *Tractor *Bushhog *Dump Truck *Tree/Stump Removal No Job Too Small, Reasonable Rates, Licensed & Insured 865-661-2565 or 865-705-5403 MURPHY'S BOBCAT Your complete excavating and hauling company. No job too big or small. Free estimates. Licensed & Insured. 865-389-7231 Fencing RC CALDWELL & SON The Fence Specialist 6luminum Fence Galvanized and Vinyl Coated Chain Link Fence Kinyl Picket and Privacy Fence 865-850-1289 WWW.FENCEPROS.COM Handy Man 1. HONEY DO HANDYMAN Painting Pressure Washing Odd JobsLight CarpentrnLandscaping Free Estimates, Gutter Cleaning. Army Vet. Call Mike at 865-724-6817 20 YEARS MAINTENANCE EXP. No Job Too Small! Free Estimates, Vietnam Vet. 865-388-0029 The Handi-Helper 865-681-8298 KENNY'S HOME REPAIR & REMODELING Painting, drywall, tile, flooring, all carpentry & much more. Quality work, reliable contractor. Lic. & Ins. Call 865-268-9854. Located in Friendsville, TN SLANSKY BUILDERS HOME IMPROVEMENTS (865) 983-6144 *Decks *Screen/Sun Rooms *Kitchens *Bathrooms *Flooring *ADA compliant and Custom Tile Showers *Small Projects Welcomed! No money down. FREE Estimates Family owned and operated in Blount Co. since 2001. TN Contractor, licensed, & insured to $1,000,000. Call now to speak to a live person. Lawn Maintenance FULL SERVICE LAWN CARE, LLC. Licensed & Insured, Free Estimates. Trust us for all your lawn care needs. Painting PAINTING – Interior & Exterior, Pressure Washing. 40 yrs. exp. Terry Morton 865-661-1015 or 865-984-5059. Remodeling Legal Services ROCKY TOP BUILDING & REMODELING Painting, Doors/Windows, Flooring, Drywall, Siding, Trim Work. Ref's, Licensed & Insured. 254-3455 Denee Foisy Tennessee State Notary and part time paralegal for attorney at 400 Ellis Avenue, Maryville. If you are in need of a notary, contact 309-532-7915. Masonry BRICK/BLOCK MASON All Types Brick Work & Repair Quick, Professional Service 35 Years Experience Christian Ethics Licensed & References Available. Please Call 865-216-7474 AFFORDABLE SIDING AND GUTTERING Call James Stinnett at 865-977-9092 Tree Services Call Taylor or Josh 865-776-5791 or 865-776-7328 [email protected] NOTARY/PARALEGAL Siding Restoration DAVID LEE NICHOLS Roofing/Siding Replace & Repair Int. & Ext. Paint & Stain Chem prep Mold Removal System Complete Home Restorations Debris cleaning & removal Walker Home & Business Sec. Guards. All local workforce, $20 hr. 865-210-3005 Roofing Miscellaneous !! BUBBA'S !! TREE & STUMP REMOVAL Licensed and Insured. Proudly serving Blount County for 20 yrs. Specializing in all types of tree work. No tree too tall, No limb too small, We do it all! Local References. 24 hr. Emergency Service 865-977-1422 GOT STUMPS? Hmall $5 and up Bedium $25 and up AVg\Z$40 and up Job minimum $50. 865-984-8815 www.slanskybuilders.com Lawn Maintenance BLOUNT LAWN SERVICE, LLC All lawn care, All landscape. Licensed General Contractor Irrigation Specialist Tree Removal & Stump Grinding Free estimates, Lic. and Ins. (865)805-4572 or 805-1147 www.blountlawnservice.com Looking for that second vehicle? Check out The Daily Times’ TRANSPORTATION section for the Best Deals in Town!!! MURPHY'S BOBCAT Fill dirt and gravel. Year round dry topsoil. Mushroom Compost by scoop or dump truck load. 865-389-7231 Painting COLONIAL PAINTING & WATERPROOFING Interior, exterior, residential, commercial. Quality, creative, affordable, solutions for your home and business needs. 30 years exp. Free Estimates. US Navy Vet. Ken Bear 865-982-8840 SAVE UP TO 20% on your energy bills with added attic insulation. R19 insulation at 90¢/sq. ft. TERRY MORTON Hhingles Betal Roofing Eressure Washing Free Estimates 38 yrs. experience References on request. 865-661-1015 or 865-984-5059 Petree Arbor, Lawn & Landscape Pruning season is almost over. Call today for your free estimate. 865-980-1820 FIND IT!!! SELL IT!!! Whatever you need... THE DAILY TIMES Classifieds can help! Thursday, February 5, 2015 CLASSIFIEDS | 9B THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds Clothing Furniture BLACK LEATHER BOOTS, fits size 11-12. Double H brand, oil & chemical resistant. Paid $199, asking $35 obo. 865-983-5945 BEDROOM SET Bleached knotty pine. Queen head board, box springs & mattress. $250 865-414-2660 NORTHFACE Pullover Fleece, new, orange, XXL, $15. Call 865-336-2618. VINTAGE PROM DRESS Beautiful one of a kind vintage 1960s pink prom dress. Excellent condition. Small size. $65 865-705-3792 Computer Equipment DELL COMPUTER Desktop, 17” screen, speakers. Good condition. $150 OBO. 865-567-1123 Electronics 57” HIGH DEFINITION Sony projection TV. Good condition. $250 865982-2735 or 865-719-5325 MOTOROLA WALKIE TALKIES Used once. $25 865-300-2248 “BEN HAMPTON” Rambling Rose framed print by Glenstone Gallery. $150 865-414-1494 BUFFET with 2 doors on each side & 3 drawers in the middle. Medium oak color. Nice. $50 865-995-1874 FURNITURE Couch $200, Dinette Set $100, Coffee Table $100, Solid Wood Bed Frame $500, Deluxe Boxing Punch Bag with Stand $200. 865-984-3143 LARGE WALL MIRROR 24" wide x 51.5" tall. Ready to hang. Dark stain. $45 865-705-3792 2 RATTAN Dining Room Chairs. Fan shaped backs with green leather seats, very well padded, $95 for both. 363-8085 3 TALL (34”) Bar Stools, special order, bronze metal, never used. $350 for all 3. Call 865-983-6345 for pics. ANTIQUE DUNCAN PHYFE dining room table with leaf & 6 chairs. Beautiful mahogany finish, pedestal base, chairs have rose colored bottoms. Smoke free home. Must sell. 865-3638085. NORWEGIAN WOODEN BOWLS. Set of (2) handcrafted in Mosjoen, Norway: (1) 6”x3” Aspen wood, round shape w/collared edge, (1) 2”-7” (flared bottom to top) x 3” birchwood, round base & top w/smooth edge. Both have honey toned color & wood grains. Have original receipt & store cards, stamp & sticker on bowls. $55 for both. Call 865-984-0848. TERRY'S FURNITURE & AUCTION A Family Tradition since 1958 We are a consignment auction, accepting new consignments daily! We buy antiques, used furniture, glassware & estates. (865) 681-7228 or (865) 973-4577 TFL# 2485 PAIR OF STATUES (Boy & Girl) Universal Statuary Corp., Chicago, 1975. #821 & 823 $30 865-995-9229 CABLE'S RECYCLING TABLES Oblong coffee table and matching end table. Glass & wrought iron. $125 865-748-5574 Miscellaneous BRASS CANDLESTICKS, 18”, 22”, 34”, $40. Call 865-336-2618. VIZIO SOUNDBAR Model VSB200. Excellent condition. $50. 865-9805591 Furniture SOFA RECLINER La-Z-Boy, good condition, light to medium brown. $250 865-995-1874 CREDENZA/MIRROR 1970's, beautiful green color, great condition. $250 865-984-5851 GLASS TOP TABLE $30 865-6806945 FIREWOOD All hardwood oak and hickory. $65 per rick. Call 865-216-3173. Want To Buy 5 PICTURES by P. Redoute'. (1) 31x24½, (2) 17x13, (2) 11½ x9. All for $30. 865-995-9229 Entertainment Equipment Firewood Miscellaneous CHAIR All wood with padded seat. Very sturdy and beautiful. Beige fabric, dark wood. Solid oak construction. $65 865-705-3792 END TABLE Solid maple made by Tell City. Good condition. $60 865984-5851 LINGERIE CHEST 7 drawers, like new. $200 firm. Round sunflower patio table & 2 chairs. $150 230-1348 NICE ROYAL BLUE Recliner with handle on side. Smoke & pet free home. Very pretty & clean, $125. Call 865-363-8085. OAK JEWELRY ARMOIRE $50 cash. 865-980-6233 OLD MOHOGANY CHAIR $20 865995-1874 OLD OAK CHAIR $20 865-995-1874 PAINTING OR DRAFTING DESK, gray metal, like new, 24 x 24, paper rack on the side. $15 865-983-5945 RATTAN CHAIRS 2 large with red faux leather seats. $200 865-7485574 Automotive Parts / Accessories Furniture PICTURE – BEAUTIFUL BOUQUET by Albert Williams, 33”x39”, matted & framed by Cedar Creek Gallery. A must to see. Reg. $275, asking $60 obo. Call 865-983-5945. COLLECTOR'S “GLACIER GIRL” airplane. 1/64 scale. $20 865-9959229 PRESSURE WASHER 5 hp Briggs & Stratton engine, needs work. $50 865-680-6945 EVIAN PITCHER, 7” tall handcrafted ceramic pottery pitcher w/creamy offwhite matte finish & beautiful handpainted flowers. From Evian Savoie, France. Have original receipt & pitcher has Evian sticker on the base, $35. Call 865-984-0848. ROSEWOOD BOWLS, set of (2) handcrafted wooden bowls KailuaKona, Hawaii. Both 6”x2” in size & round shapes, 1 w/fluted edges, 1w/smooth edges. Beautiful colors & wood grains. Have original store card & receipt, stamp & sticker on bowls. $25 for both. Call 865-984-0848. FOR SALE high speed, Dot Matrix Printers by GENICOM for information processing, distribution networks. business computing systems, mail processing, bar codes, labels, and forms. Model 4840e: Out of working order; good for parts $65 Model 5000 Series 500 LPM printer. Out of working order; good for parts $75. Greeneville, Tennessee, 423359-3151 or 423-359-3172. TWIN BEDSPREAD SET with dust ruffle, sham, curtains & lamp. $75 865-414-1494 Sporting Goods PAYING CASH Mon-Fri. 9a-5:00p & Sat, 9a-3p *Cans .55/lb., *Batteries $10/$13 *Computer Towers $2 ea.,*Alum. .45/lb. *Scrap Metal $7/$9. Now Buying Gift Cards, Cell Phones & Catalytic Conv. 865-556-8812 or 865-556-8845 WE BUY Used Furniture, Antiques, Estates. Hall's Furniture & Auction 865-983-1598 or 865-983-2465 Domestic Pets ENGLISH COON Red Tick pups, $100. 865-983-5487 AIR IMPACT WRENCH, Air Paint Gun and Air Drill. All for $100. 865680-6945 NEW STILL IN BOX 2 in 1 Flooring Nailer, air operated. Originally $170, asking $120. Call 865-776-2679. Farm Equipment / Supplies Midland Plaza Tractor Parts, Accessories & Farm Antiques 984-6385 Hay, Feed, Grain STALL & PASTURE space for rent for 1 well mannered horse & owner. Price neg. 865-684-8158 Automotive Parts / Accessories $3000 $2000 You Know Better %! # # % %444 /4444 /444 .4444 .444 4444 444 4444 $( $ &!' $( ! # .)4 444 */4 )44 )4 %4444 %%/4 %/44 We buy scrap cars. HIGHEST price paid in East TN! WE ALSO BUY YOUR OLD CLUNKER! FOR SALE, WIFE'S, 2013 Dodge Challenger R/T, color red, interior black, Hemi engine, auto trans. Car only has 11,500 mi. Asking $29,500. Call 865-982-2637. Autos - Imports Just Cut - HAY ROLLS, $35 ea., Square bales, $4/bale & Construction Hay, $4/bale. Call 865-235-2357. 1!& *, .' *$/", JUNKERS & CLUNKERS! Autos - Domestic GOLF CLUBS & BAGS $30. 865313-0949 Tools FIBERGLASS LOW TOP bedcover for Chevy shortbed pick-up, red, like new. New $1200, asking $550. 659-9481 865-856-4590 2 TENNIS RACKETS Aluminum. $10 865-313-0949 NORWEGIAN WOODEN BOWLS. Set of (2) handcrafted in Mosjoen, Norway: (1) 6”x3” Aspen wood, round shape w/collared edge, (1) 2”-7” (flared bottom to top) x 3” birchwood, round base & top w/smooth edge. Both have honey toned color & wood grains. Have original receipt & store cards, stamp & sticker on bowls. $55 for both. Call 865-984-0848. 20” MAG. WHEELS with tires, fits Chevy pickup, excellent condition. New $1200, asking $400. 659-9481 $/) ) JUNK CARS %%/4 %444 %)4 //44 /*/4 .4444 ..)4 .)44 Call for best CASH offer. 100 PLUS cars $5,995 or less. DougJustus.com New location: Airport Motor Mall. 1995 OLDSMOBILE CIERA SL Cold air, super nice, good mileage. $2750 865-308-2743 2010 TOYOTA COROLLA S, auto, one owner, 47,000 miles. Perfect condition, $13,000 obo. 865-548-7946 watersmotorsinc.com 3019 E. Lamar Alexander Pkwy. A short drive to Waters Motors will save you money! SUVs / Jeeps 1994 CHEVY SUBURBAN 4 wheel drive, 1 owner, $2000. Sears Car Top Carrier. $50 865-984-3143 Trucks - Domestic 2007 CHEVY 2500 Allison auto trans., 2WD, dual max diesel, 4 new tires, extra clean, $8500. 308-2743 Trucks - Imports Free Pick up! 04 TOYOTA TACOMA 4x4 double cab, 3.4 V6, ARE camper shell, Yahoma roof rack, sprayed bed liner, 160K. $13,000 Call 865-742-3013 865-216-5052 87' TOYOTA 4x4, x-tra cab, AC, auto, many new parts, low miles, sharp, $5000. Call 865-242-6210. #/. NEW.2% 2014 FOCUS SE (- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&& /44 List....................................... $20,045 $' - &&&&&& &&&&&&&&& Ford Rebate ......................... $4,000444 TR Cash Back ...................... $1,100%%44 ( &&&&&&&&&&&&& % ! $0' 1!( Making your 25 Savings $ 5 , 0 1 1* Price$15,034 Your .2% NEW 2014 ESCAPE SE (- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&.4*4 List....................................... $30,640 $' - &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&.444 Ford Rebate ......................... $3,000 TR Cash Back ...................... $4,660 ( &&&&&&&&&&&&&**4 % 1!( ! $0' Making your 25 Savings $ 7 , 6 6 0 Price$22,980 Your #%% 2014 .2% %2 NEW F150 SUPER CREW 4x4 .2% 2013 FORD FOCUS SE** (- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&/%" List....................................... $42,195 $' - &&&&&& &&&&&&&&&44 Ford Rebate ......................... $5,500 TR Cash Back ...................... $5,048 ( &&&&&&&&&&&&4 ! $0' 5%Savings 1!( $ 1 0 , 548 * Making your 2 Price$31,647 Your 0-$ + All Pwr., 2'& '0( - Auto, A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Factory ''!-3 Warranty -$'3 Price$12,990 Your NOW HIRING $ or $' $ ** Mo. 189 Down, 189 Due to an increase in sales, we are in need of Sales Professionals. Call Bruce to schedule an interview. 251.3673 TED RUSSELL FORD-LINCOLN - PARKSIDE 1BSLTJEF"VUP%SJWFt(865) 251-3673 www.tedrussellparkside.com TED RUSSELL FORD-LINCOLN - KINGSTON PIKE ,JOHTUPO1JLFBU8BMLFS4QSJOHT3PBEt[865] 693-7611 www.tedrussellkingstonpike.com Prices include $595 customer service fee plus tax, title, and license. *25% off includes all eligible/Ford Rebate and TR Cash Back. 25% off is on all remaining 2014 model vehicles. Discounts based on all available rebates including Ford Motor Credit & Trade Assist Rebates, excluding specialty vehicles. Photos are for representation only. **Pre-titled vehicle. **Pre Titled payments based on 72 months at 2.19% APR. With Approved Credit. With $189 down. Customer pays tax, title, and license. Expires 2/14/15. 10B | COMICS THE DAILY TIMES www.thedailytimes.com BETWEEN FRIENDS WUMO PEARLS BEFORE SWINE PEANUTS ADAM@HOME THE AMAZING SPIDERMAN SHOE THE DUPLEX GARFIELD HAGAR THE HORRIBLE SHERMAN’S LAGOON PICKLES PRICKLY CITY MALLARD FILLMORE BEETLE BAILEY DUSTIN BABY BLUES SNUFFY SMITH HI AND LOIS B.C. Thursday, February 5, 2015 WEATHER, PUZZLES | 11B THE DAILY TIMES Thursday, February 5, 2015 www.thedailytimes.com Today Friday Partly cloudy Saturday Mostly sunny Monday Sunday Mostly sunny Chance showers Chance showers -# +,1,- ',(*+ $*$--$)(!)+ ,-!)+())(-)1 '* +-.+ )&)+(,+ -)13,*+ $- #$"#, LL LL Billings 49/37 Minn. St. Paul 20/10 San Francisco 62/54 Los Angeles 65/52 Denver 56/39 Washington D.C. 32/19 Houston 57/42 Juneau 16/4 #!" () **,) '. () **,) '$ )'&+ ')%$ ,)) &+ ") / - $ "&! 1075' ' ' # +)% 1002' 954.3' 0.7' )."&, 1710' 1653.3' 0.5' )(-( 809.3' 0.4' )+-).).( 813' 0.3' $/,, 1526' 1484.5' 793.4' 1.2' &-)($&& 795' 1020' ' ' )++$, 1939' 0.2' (- -&# 1941' Miami 77/62 '++ *+ 82° at Thermal, CA ''$ *+ -23° at Jordan, MT )% )'&+ ++#'&)0 )'&+ "'. )* *+')%* #& $,))# * &'. * * * * * * * * * * * * Key: 0/ -# +,.,.((1!+!$+**+-&1&).1&&).1#2#2 !"!)",#,#)/ +,++$(2+$22& -,-#.( +,-)+',,(,()/,!4.++$ ,$$ ,& -)+!+ 2$("+$(/$/$(1'0/$(- +1'$0+$((,()/ Mostly sunny skies and cold temperatures over the state today, due to a strong high pressure. '0 '%'))'. #+0 #'/ #'/ Bristol 32/14/fl 44/25/s Chattanooga 40/20/pc 51/31/pc Crossville 31/17/pc 46/32/s Gatlinburg 33/14/fl 47/27/s Jackson 37/19/pc 50/36/pc Johnson City 32/12/fl 47/24/s Kingsport 33/12/fl 47/24/s Knoxville 35/16/fl 50/29/pc Memphis 40/24/s 54/40/pc Nashville 34/19/pc 48/33/pc HOROSCOPE HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday, Feb. 5, 2015: This year you often fuss about details, and you could become quite critical. Make sure you are getting an overview of a situation before commenting; you will relate more easily with others if you do. Count your change and handle your own funds. ARIES (March 21-April 19) ★★★★ You might feel out of whack because of recent pressure. You also might suspect that you are too much of a misunderstood dreamer. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ★★★★ You might suspect that a partner is raining on your parade. You might wonder what would be best to do when dealing with a domestic matter and the issue that provoked it. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ★★★★★ An associate’s mood could make interacting difficult. This person seems to be in an emotional state, while you are off daydreaming about what could be. CANCER (June 21-July 22) ★★★★ You could be past the point of being able to look at a situation without bias. By asking questions and getting feedback from others, you will see where you stand. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ★★★ Listen carefully to a loved one. This person might be upset, and if you can get him or her to speak about the issue, you’ll want to stay tuned in. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ★★★★ You will be in your element as a partner or loved one goes out of his or her way to let you know how much he or she cares. Someone else could be in a bad mood and seem closed down. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ★★★ You might want to understand more of what is going on with a child or loved one. Know that this person could cop an attitude if you ask too many questions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ★★★★ Zero in on what you want. You might have a difficult time making your point with a friend or in a meeting. It might have very little to do with your style of communication, but instead with the other party’s drifting mind. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ★★★★ You might want to try a different approach when dealing with someone in charge. You have been very concise and straightforward in the past, and it could give others the impression that you will be less flexible than they’d like. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ★★★★ You could be overtired and find others to be confusing. Touch base with a key person. You might think you know what is going on, but it’s possible that you’re wearing rose-colored glasses. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) ★★★★★ Allow a partner to take the lead and do more of what he or she wants. Use caution with your funds. You might want to make a long-awaited purchase that you’ve been dreaming of. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ★★★★ Though someone could be difficult at times, you still will want to let him or her know how much you care. You also might want to make sure you are realistic. The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult '0 '%'))'. #+0 #'/ #'/ Atlanta 48/37/pc 52/25/pc Atlantic City 34/9/sn 32/20/pc Baltimore 32/13/fl 34/24/pc Birmingham 42/22/pc 53/33/s Boston 29/1/sn 19/12/pc Charleston, SC 57/27/r 49/31/s Charlotte 46/16/pc 44/30/pc Chicago 14/9/pc 30/26/pc Cincinnati 25/14/pc 39/28/pc Dallas 43/34/pc 64/47/pc Denver 56/39/pc 69/41/pc Destin 58/39/pc 57/47/s Houston 57/42/f 61/47/pc '0 #+0 #'/ Jacksonville 61/37/sh Las Vegas 74/50/pc Los Angeles 65/52/f Louisville, KY 29/21/pc Miami 77/62/ts Myrtle Beach 52/26/r New Orleans 56/37/pc New York City 27/9/sn Orlando 69/47/ts Philadelphia 33/11/sn Raleigh 45/19/pc San Francisco 61/55/r St. Louis 28/23/pc Washington, DC 32/19/fl '%'))'. #'/ 57/38/s 76/51/pc 66/54/f 48/34/pc 73/62/pc 43/32/pc 56/42/pc 24/15/pc 69/48/pc 30/23/pc 44/28/pc 62/56/r 47/34/pc 38/29/pc '+#'& -&$(.+" **&#$( -&))# %$ # NEWSMAKERS * ,&* ......... 9 40 - 50" ......... 12 43 - 67" .........18 67 - 85" ...........11 14 - 42" GOOD #&'$$,+&+ PM2.5 '0 good 7:32 a.m. 6:07 p.m. 7:56 p.m. 8:12 a.m. Feb. 11 Feb. 18 Feb. 25 Mar. 5 Last New First Full Quarter Quarter Trivia Fun by Wilson Casey Approximately how many berries does it take to make one pound of coffee? 75, 600, 2000, 4500 In South America what are Quequin, Itajal, and Chacabuco? Ports, Bananas, Cigars, Steaks What was Curly’s real name of the Three Stooges? Dan Dempsey, Jerome Horwitz, Charlie Davis, Henry Dowd More teasers? Comments? [email protected] — See answers below Sudoku I&RISH P UB S G PORTS RILL JANUARY 2015 SPECIALS SUNDAY DINE IN ONLY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Happy Hour Live Live Live Noon - 7pm College Ladies Team Karaoke $2.99 Well Night Night Trivia Music Music $3.49 Wine EVERYDAY! 1720 W. Broadway Blvd Maryville, TN (next to Jet’s Pizza) 865.724.1300 CRYPTOQUOTE --$,-$,+ -#+)."#'1 ,- +1 Atlanta 48/37 Honolulu 79/67 PRECIPITATION 24 hours ending 6 p.m.................... 0.00" Month-to-date................................. 0.65" Normal month-to-date................... 0.61" Year-to-date..................................... 4.04" Normal year-to-date....................... 4.93" LL H H Anchorage 18/-1 HUMIDITY *'-)1 31% Kansas City 28/23 DFW Metroplex 44/34 offthemark New York 27/9 Detroit 10/8 Chicago H H 14/9 H H $(",,)!*'1 ,- +1 TEMPERATURES ,- +1#$"#&)/ 52°/22° Normal high/low........................ 50°/30° Record high.............................. 72° (1986) Record low ................................. 0° (1970) 3416 4929 5540 5645 51 31 LL Azalea, Smith lead iHeartRadio Music Award nominees NEW YORK — Iggy Azalea and Sam Smith led the finalists for the 2015 iHeartRadio Music Awards with five nominations apiece, with Taylor Swift and AriSam ana Smith Grande each receiving four nominations. iHeartMedia and NBC announced the nomiIggy nations Azalea Wednesday. The awards will be presented March 29 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. The event will be televised live on NBC and air simultaneously on iHeartMedia stations and across the network’s digital music platform. Swift, Azalea, Grande, Smith and Luke Bryan are nominated for artist of the year. Best new artist nominees include Azalea, Smith, Bastille, Cole Swindell and Meghan Trainor. Fans can vote for three awards, including best lyrics. Glu Mobile to create new Perry game NEW YORK — Glu Mobile, the developer of the popular “Kim Kardashian: Hollywood” game, says it will develop a new mobile game with singer Katy Perry. The San Francisco company says the game will include Perry’s voice and likeness. It plans to launch the game in late 2015 on Apple and Android devices. Glu Mobile reported $43 million in adjusted revenue from the Kim Kardashian game in the third quarter — its biggest seller by far. Perry has nine No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, including “I Kissed a Girl” and “Roar.” She performed at the Super Bowl on Sunday. 12B | CLASSIFIEDS THE DAILY TIMES | thedailytimes.com/classifieds Thursday, February 5, 2015 t8FTU#SPBEXBZ.BSZWJMMF5/ DEAL THE BIG GAME SALE GOING ON!! Score a Touchdown with our Great Selection of Used Vehicles! Use Your Tax Refund Here and Save More!!! Come be a part of THE WINNING TEAM today! AUTO SALES r Ask ofro Nick Lana Shop I-DEAL for the BEST DEAL! OPEN 8-7:00pm M-Saturday Sunday 12-5:30pm VISIT OUR WEB SITE AT WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS WWW.IDEALAUTOSALESONLINE.COM TRUCKS WE BUY CARS TU WE BUY TRUCKS MANAGERS SPECIAL MANAGERS SPECIAL 'PSE'&YU $BC9- %PEHF3BN &YU$BC Auto, PL-PW, 2wd, Local Trade Auto, 4x4, Local Trade #7290 #7422 $ 4 ,9 9 5 %PEHF%BLPUB $SFX$BC 2-Wheel Drive, PL-PW, Air Auto, PL-PW, Air #7425 #7121 $1 3 ,9 9 5 PL-PW, Air, 4x4, STX $1 6 ,9 9 5 Auto, 4x4, Air #7403 'PSE'&YU$BC $IFWZ4JMWFSBEP-5 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7320 $2 1, 9 9 5 $1 3 ,9 9 5 15$SVJTFS $1 8 ,9 9 5 $1 7 ,9 9 5 Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Navigation, Sunroof #7199 Leather, PL-PW, 5.4, 4x4 #7413 $1 8 ,9 9 5 %PEHF3BN$SFX $BC Auto, 6,0, Pl-PW, Leather #7396 #7178 'PSE' -POH#FE3FH$BC 72k Miles, Auto #7410 91k, Auto, 2WD #7255 $1 1, 9 9 5 $2 3 ,9 9 5 $1 8 ,9 9 5 %PEHF3BN $SFX$BC Auto, Leather, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #7365 Auto, V8, PL-PW, 4x4, 5.7 Hemi, Leather #7277 $1 9 ,9 9 5 'PSE'$SFX $BC-BSJBU $1 1, 9 9 5 $2 4 ,9 9 5 #7135 $6 ,4 95 $1 9 ,9 9 5 $2 5 ,9 9 5 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, 4k, Lift Kit, Chrome Rockstar Wheels #7270 $3 2 ,9 9 5 LOW, LOW RATES /JTTBO"MUJNB4 Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather, 4 DR, Sunroof, 2.5, 139k, 4 cyl #7418 $6 ,9 95 #C2121 Crew Cab, 90k Miles, Leather, Power Sunroof, 4x4, PL-PW #C7889 %PEHF3BN$SFX$BC Auto, 4x4, Leather, PL-PW, Air $2 5 ,9 9 5 -JODPMO.BSL -5 $1 9 ,9 9 5 'PSE' $SFX$BC Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air, PS, CD, 43k, Local Trade #7364 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 109k, 4x4 $IFWZ4JMWFSBEP $SFX$BC-5 CARS Auto, PL-PW, Local Trade $6 ,4 95 $IFWZ 3FH$BC $1 1, 4 9 5 'PSE' $SFX$BC'9 'PSE'$SFX $BC,JOH3BODI 7PMLTXBHFO+FUUB Auto, PL-PW, Air #7216 $4 ,9 95 $1 0 ,9 9 5 $9 ,9 9 5 $2 3 ,9 9 5 /JTTBO4FOUSB #6837 Auto, 2wd, 81k, Air, PL-PW #7264 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Z71 #7385 WE GIVE YOU MORE FOR LESS Air, Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Sunroof, 81k Miles #7219 %PEHF3BN Ext Cab, 2WD, PL-PW (.$4JFSSB &YU$BC 7.3 Powerstroke Diesel, 4x4, PL-PW #7406 'PSE' $SFX$BC'9 $2 2 ,9 9 5 $IFWZ4JMWFSBEP Camper Top, Auto, 101k, 2wd, Running Boards #7081 $ 8 ,9 9 5 'PSE' &Y$BC Auto, 111k, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Crew Cab #6953 4x4, PL-PW, 6 Speed, Power Stroke Diesel #7309 'PSE'&YU$BC Ask Open %PEHF3BN %PEHF3BN $IFWZ4JMWFSBEP 'PSE'$SFX 'PSE' Open $SFX$BC for'PSE' $SFX$BC%JFTFM Sunday lana &Y$BC-4 5.9 Cummings Diesel, 4x4, $BC'MBUCFE $SFX$BC 4QPSU Auto8am-7pm 2WD, 4-Door, Local Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, 109k Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local or Nick Auto, 6.0 Powerstroke Diesel #402 7.3, Auto, Leather, PL-PW #7420 4x4, Auto, 122k #7028 Trade,Daily PL-PW, Air #7381 12-5:30Trade #7366 #C3456 $1 4 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 $1 5 ,9 9 5 'PSE' $1 6 ,9 9 5 Auto, 6.0, 72k #C8396 'PSE' Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4 WD, Diesel Powerstroke 6.0 #7319 #7421 $ 7 ,9 9 5 $1 3 ,9 9 5 'PSE' $SFX$BC'9 'PSE' $IFWZ 'MBUCFE 6 cyl, 2wd, Good Tires, 61k #7293 $ 5 ,9 9 5 'PSE&YQMPSFS5SBD 5SVDL9-5 %PEHF3BN 3FH$BC MANAGERS SPECIAL MANAGERS SPECIAL 'PSE'PDVT4&4 .FSDFEFT4- Auto, 126k, PL-PW #7086 $7 ,9 95 %PEHF$BMJCFS Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 88k Leather, Auto, PL-PW, 2 Door #7236 #7398 $8 ,0 00 $8 ,9 95 MANAGERS SPECIAL $IFWZ.BMJCV #7172 #7246 #7426 $9 ,9 95 7PMLTXBHFO#VH Auto, 4cyl, PL-PW, 83k Auto, 68k, Leather, Pl-PW, Air $9 ,9 95 $ISZTMFS4FCSJOH 'PSE-JNJUFE Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade $9 ,9 95 #7376 #VJDL-BDSPTTF $IFWZ.POUF$BSMP44 Auto, Leather, Sunroof Auto, PL-PW, Air, Leather Auto. PL-PW, Air, Leather, 88k $1 0, 99 5 #7054 $1 1, 30 0 #7254 $1 1, 4 95 MANAGERS SPECIAL /JTTBO4FOUSB Auto, 4 cyl, PL-PW, Air, 34k #7214 $1 2 ,4 95 #C4132 Auto, 4x4, Local Trade #7313 $3 ,4 9 5 $1 7, 99 5 #7407 $2 3, 99 5 'PSE&TDBQF Auto, PL-PW, Air #7343 $5 ,9 9 5 .FSDVSZ.BSJOFS Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Local Trade #7217 $7 ,9 9 5 5PZPUB"WBMPO-JNJUFE Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, 89k #C7771 $1 3, 99 5 $IFWZ$BNBSP44 6-Speed, 43k, Leather #C9876 25k, Auto, PL-PW, Leather #C7777 $2 5 ,9 95 SLASHED PRICES 'PSE&YQMPSFS $IFWZ5BIPF Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air 135k, Leather, Sunroof, 2WD, PL-PW, Air #C3555 Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air, New Tires, Local Trade #7298 $8 ,9 9 5 $2 7, 5 00 $IFWZ5BIPF #7253 $1 4 ,9 95 .JOJ$PPQFS$POWFSUJCMF SUVs & VANS 'PSE&YQMPSFS $1 3, 99 5 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, 57k Miles, Local Trade $2 2 ,9 95 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4, Local Trade #7409 $3 ,9 9 5 #7100 *OGJOJUJ( $PVQF$POWFSUJCMF 46k, PL-PW, Air, Black Leather, 6-Speed #C1122 LOW, LOW RATES $IFWZ5BIPF *OGJOJUJ. Auto, 4 Door, PL-PW, Leather, Power Sunroof, Heated Seats #C8888 $IFWZ$PSWFUUF 2.5, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4 Door, 27k $1 5 ,9 95 $1 3, 99 5 12 7PMLTXBHFO+FUUB4& Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air #7211 $1 2 ,9 95 $ISZTMFS$ Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power Sunroof Auto, PL-PW, Air, 62k #7249 Auto, 52k Miles, 2-Door, Air #7183 "VEJ"5 %PEHF$IBSHFS )POEB"DDPSE $8 ,9 9 5 +FFQ8SBOHMFS 5 Speed, 6 cyl, 4x4 #7328 $8 ,9 9 5 $9 ,9 95 MANAGERS SPECIAL V6, Auto, PL-PW, Air, 4x4 #7200 $1 0 ,4 9 5 Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air, 6 cyl #7291 $BEJMMBD&TDBMBEF Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat #7321 $1 0 ,9 9 5 'PSE&YQMPSFS &EEJF#BVFS $1 2 ,9 9 5 +FFQ8SBOHMFS9 +FFQ8SBOHMFS 2wd, Unlimited Sport, 4 Door Soft Top #C4567 5 speed, 78k Miles, 4x4, Air $1 7 ,9 9 5 Auto, PL-PW, Air, 94k Auto, PL-PW, Air, 87k #7417 $1 7 ,9 9 5 #7345 $1 8, 9 9 5 (.$%FOBMJ :VLPO9- 'PSE&TDBQF #7198 $1 2 ,9 9 5 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat, 4x4, Local Trade #7428 $1 3 ,9 9 5 $IFWZ5BIPF-5 +FFQ8SBOHMFS Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat, Leather, 4x4, CD #7259 Auto, 67k Miles, 4x4, Air $1 8, 9 9 5 #7356 $1 9 ,4 9 5 #7195 $1 3 ,9 9 5 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, AWD #7377 $1 3 ,9 9 5 'PSE&DPOPMJOF7BO %PEHF(SBOE$BSBWBO %PEHF(SBOE$BSBWBO Auto, Stow & Go Seats, PL-PW, Air, 75k #6670 89k, Auto, Third Seat, PL-PW $6 ,9 9 5 $1 7 ,9 9 5 $IFWZ4VCVSCBO-5; ,JB4FEPOB Auto, 68k, PL-PW, Local Trade #7424 Auto, Third Seat, Leather, 4x4, PL-PW #7355 Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat, 70k $1 9 ,9 9 5 $2 1, 9 9 5 #7174 $6 ,4 9 5 MANAGERS SPECIAL Auto, PL-PW, Air, Local Trade, Great Shape #7367 $6 ,9 9 5 Auto, 4x4, PL-PW, Air #C7654 ,JB4PSFOUP&9 MANAGERS SPECIAL +FFQ(SBOE $IFSPLFF-BSFEP 'PSE&EHF 'PSE&YQMPSFS Auto, Eddie Bauer, 3rd Row, 2wd #7339 $8 ,9 9 5 7PMLTXBHFO3PVUBO /JTTBO2VFTU Auto, PL-PW, Air, Third Seat Auto, PL-PW, Air, 92k, Local Trade #7161 #7338 $1 0 ,4 9 5 All prices include $250.00 doc fee. Not included TT&L. $1 1, 4 9 5 $ISZTMFS5PXO $PVOUSZ Auto, 3rd Seat, PL-PW, Air #7294 Not Actual Colors Shown in pictures above. $1 3 ,9 9 5 )POEB0EZTTFZ&9Auto, Leather, PL-PW, Air, Power Sunroof, Power Doors & Hatch, 82k, DVD #7017 $1 5 ,9 9 5 45026149DT +FFQ(SBOE $IFSPLFF-BSFEP 'PSE&YQMPSFS9-5
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