June 3, 2010

14
The Mountain Press Sevier County’s Daily Newspaper Vol. 26, No. 154 June 3, 2010 www.themountainpress.com 50 Cents Thursday INSIDE Entertainment PAGE A6 Celebrities in the news “Glee” star Jane Lynch and partner tie the knot Local & State A1-6 Calendar A3 Money A5 Opinion A7 Sports A8-9 Classifieds A9-12 Advice A14 Comics A14 Index The Tennessee Career Center at Gatlinburg is offering free technol- ogy training as part of the Elevate America- Tennessee partnership. For more information, call Donna Mullholland at 436-4381. The phone number was published incorrectly in a photo cap- tion in Monday’s paper. Corrections Weather Today Isolated Storms High: 86° Tonight Isolated Storms Low: 65° DETAILS, PAGE A6 5Volunteer legend dies Haywood Harris passes away in Knoxville SPORTS, PAGE A8 John Ramsey, 28 Stella Cooper, 63 Margaret Holder, 42 Thomas Sutton, 55 Rex Williams, 77 Ada Humphrey, 80 Obituaries DETAILS, PAGE A4 5Banding begins today Scientists, volunteers attempting to help endangered birds LOCAL, PAGE A3 Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press Aaron McMahan, right with his horse Sandy, and Josh Smith, with his horse Fancy, look over their report cards under the shade trees at Sevier County High School Wednesday. The duo decided to make the trip an adventure and rode the horses from Lane Hollow Road. They will both be seniors next year. Horse sense By JEFF FARRELL Staff writer SEVIERVILLE — A local man credits his years as an Army Ranger for his ability to fight off two knife- wielding men who tried to break into his home early Wednesday morning. Matthew Deskins woke up at about 4 a.m. to hear someone at the door to his parents’ home on New Center Road, where he is staying. He believed it was his mother — she works late at a local nursing home — and went to open the door. “I thought it was her,” he said. “We never had anything like this happen.” What he found instead was two men carrying box cutter-type knives who were trying to get into the home. Both men tried to attack when he opened the door, Deskins said. “I used to be an Army Ranger,” he said. “Thank God I was in the Army.” One of the men cut him in the chest and then swung again, cutting him in the left arm. That’s when Deskins said he was able to kick the first man, knocking him off the porch. The second struck him in the other arm, but he was able to punch the man. “I ended up hitting him in his jaw and he fell down and yelled, ‘He broke my jaw,’” Deskins said. With them both outside the door- way, he slammed the door shut and ran to get a weapon. When he returned, he saw a black 1980s model Pontiac sedan pulling away from the house. Deskins said he served in the Army for three years until he suf- fered a gunshot wound in 2003; officials subsequently discovered an earlier injury he hadn’t reported. He said it was his training and experience from that time that helped him fight off the men at his home. “Two guys with box knives and I didn’t have nothing? That’s defi- By JEFF FARRELL Staff writer SEVIERVILLE — One of the three men charged with the murder of Mary Jo Miller says in a letter that he committed the crime and takes the blame alone. Steven Eugene Weaver, 56, of Knoxville is charged with first-degree murder in Miller’s slaying. Also charged are Theodore Ratliff and Shannon Rodney Baltimore. All three men are from Knoxville. In a preliminary hearing for Ratliff, Weaver’s niece, Amy Brown, testified that she drove the three men to Miller’s home, heard a “pop” from the house, and saw them emerge later. She said Ratliff was carrying a purse. In a letter to The Mountain Press, Weaver attempts to take the blame for the crime. “I’m writting (sic) this letter to inform the public that they got two other people charge(d) with this same crime when the truth … is no ones the blame but me so I am asking the papper (sic) to reveal the truth to the public,” he wrote. The letter included a Social Security number and date of birth for Weaver; officials at the jail confirmed that infor- mation matched what they had for him. In General Sessions Court last week, pub- lic defender Amber Haas waived Weaver’s right to a preliminary hearing. That means his charges were bound over to the grand jury without a hearing, in which he would have heard some of the evidence against him and Judge Dwight Stokes would have ruled whether the case should proceed to the grand jury. Haas did not return calls from The Mountain Press; neither did District Attorney General Jimmy Dunn. Weaver says in his letter that he had told Haas he want- ed to admit his guilt. Weaver’s niece was the main witness for the state in a preliminary hearing Friday for Ratliff. Her testimony led Stokes to send the charges against Ratliff to a grand jury. Baltimore’s preliminary hearing is sched- uled for this Friday. Weaver maintains in his letter that she was lying about the involvement of the other two men. “I can’t say why my niece Amy brown is lyeing (sic) but I guess she is just scarred (sic) and don’t know what to say except blame someone else,” Weaver wrote. He maintains he was solely responsible for the crime. Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press (file) Murder suspect Steven Weaver in court last Friday. He waived his right to a preliminary hearing, meaning his case will be sent directly to the grand jury. Suspect confesses in letter Weaver says he alone responsible for elderly Kodak woman’s death “I’m the person responsible for (Miller’s) death. I had my niece drive me to her home where she lived(.) I told my niece Amy Brown that I wanted to go there to borrow some money and when we got there I went inside and was talking to (Miller) bout her lawn- mower and we got to arguing (sic) and she made me mad and I hit her in the head and shot her and cut her.” — Steven Weaver, in a letter to The Mountain Press Former Army Ranger fends off attackers See WEAVER, Page A4 Unarmed victim battles 2 knife-wielding intruders See ATTACKERS, Page A4 The Letter Steven Weaver’s letter to The Mountain Press can be read on our Web site www. themountainpress.com

description

The Mountain Press for June 3, 2010

Transcript of June 3, 2010

Page 1: June 3, 2010

The Mountain Press■ Sevier County’s Daily Newspaper ■ Vol. 26, No. 154 ■ June 3, 2010 ■ www.themountainpress.com ■ 50 Cents

Thursday

INSIDE

Entertainment

Page a6

Celebritiesin the news“Glee” star Jane Lynch and partner tie the knot

Local & State . . . . . A1-6Calendar . . . . . . . . . . A3Money . . . . . . . . . . . . A5Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . A7Sports . . . . . . . . . . . A8-9Classifieds . . . . . . . A9-12Advice . . . . . . . . . . . A14Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . A14

Index

The Tennessee Career Center at Gatlinburg is offering free technol-ogy training as part of the Elevate America-Tennessee partnership. For more information, call Donna Mullholland at 436-4381. The phone number was published incorrectly in a photo cap-tion in Monday’s paper.

Corrections

Weather

TodayIsolatedStorms

High: 86°

TonightIsolatedStorms

Low: 65°

DeTaILS, Page a6

5Volunteer legend diesHaywood Harris passes away in Knoxville

SPorTS, Page a8

John Ramsey, 28Stella Cooper, 63Margaret Holder, 42Thomas Sutton, 55Rex Williams, 77Ada Humphrey, 80

Obituaries

DeTaILS, Page a4

5Banding begins todayScientists, volunteers attempting to help endangered birds

LocaL, Page a3

Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press

Aaron McMahan, right with his horse Sandy, and Josh Smith, with his horse Fancy, look over their report cards under the shade trees at Sevier County High School Wednesday. The duo decided to make the trip an adventure and rode the horses from Lane Hollow Road. They will both be seniors next year.

Horse sense

By JeFF FarreLLStaff writer

SEVIERVILLE — A local man credits his years as an Army Ranger for his ability to fight off two knife-wielding men who tried to break into his home early Wednesday morning.

Matthew Deskins woke up at about 4 a.m. to hear someone at the

door to his parents’ home on New Center Road, where he is staying. He believed it was his mother — she works late at a local nursing home — and went to open the door.

“I thought it was her,” he said. “We never had anything like this happen.”

What he found instead was two men carrying box cutter-type knives who were trying to get into the home. Both men tried to attack when he opened the door, Deskins said.

“I used to be an Army Ranger,” he said. “Thank God I was in the

Army.”One of the men cut him in the

chest and then swung again, cutting him in the left arm. That’s when Deskins said he was able to kick the first man, knocking him off the porch.

The second struck him in the other arm, but he was able to punch the man.

“I ended up hitting him in his jaw and he fell down and yelled, ‘He broke my jaw,’” Deskins said.

With them both outside the door-way, he slammed the door shut and ran to get a weapon.

When he returned, he saw a black 1980s model Pontiac sedan pulling away from the house.

Deskins said he served in the Army for three years until he suf-fered a gunshot wound in 2003; officials subsequently discovered an earlier injury he hadn’t reported.

He said it was his training and experience from that time that helped him fight off the men at his home.

“Two guys with box knives and I didn’t have nothing? That’s defi-

By JeFF FarreLLStaff writer

SEVIERVILLE — One of the three men charged with the murder of Mary Jo Miller says in a letter that he committed the crime and takes the blame alone.

Steven Eugene Weaver, 56, of Knoxville is charged with first-degree murder in Miller’s slaying. Also charged are Theodore Ratliff and Shannon Rodney Baltimore. All three men are from Knoxville.

In a preliminary hearing for Ratliff, Weaver’s niece, Amy Brown, testified that she drove the three men to Miller’s home, heard a “pop” from the house, and saw them emerge later. She said Ratliff was carrying a purse.

In a letter to The Mountain Press, Weaver attempts to take the blame for the crime.

“I’m writting (sic) this letter to inform the public that they got two other people charge(d) with this same crime when the truth … is no ones the blame but me so I am asking the papper (sic) to reveal the truth to the public,” he wrote.

The letter included a Social Security number and date of birth for Weaver; officials at the jail confirmed that infor-mation matched what they had for him. In General Sessions Court last week, pub-lic defender Amber Haas waived Weaver’s right to a preliminary hearing. That means his charges were bound over to the grand jury without a hearing, in which he would have heard some of the evidence against him and Judge Dwight Stokes would have ruled whether the case should proceed to the grand jury.

Haas did not return calls from The Mountain Press; neither did District Attorney

General Jimmy Dunn.

Weaver says in his letter that he had told Haas he want-ed to admit his guilt.

Weaver’s niece was the main witness for the state in a preliminary hearing Friday for Ratliff. Her testimony led Stokes to send the charges against Ratliff to a grand jury. Baltimore’s preliminary hearing is sched-uled for this Friday.

Weaver maintains in his letter that she was lying about the involvement of the other two men.

“I can’t say why my niece Amy brown is lyeing (sic) but I guess she is just scarred (sic) and don’t know what to say except blame someone else,” Weaver wrote.

He maintains he was solely responsible for the crime.

Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press (file)

Murder suspect Steven Weaver in court last Friday. He waived his right to a preliminary hearing, meaning his case will be sent directly to the grand jury.

Suspect confesses in letterWeaver says he alone responsiblefor elderly Kodak woman’s death

“I’m the person responsible for (Miller’s) death. I had my niece drive

me to her home where she lived(.) I told my niece Amy Brown that I wanted

to go there to borrow some money and when we got there I went inside and

was talking to (Miller) bout her lawn-mower and we got to arguing (sic) and she made me mad and I hit her in the

head and shot her and cut her.”— Steven Weaver, in a letter to The Mountain Press

Former Army Ranger fends off attackersSee weAVer, Page A4

Unarmed victim battles2 knife-wielding intruders

See ATTACkerS, Page A4

The LetterSteven Weaver’s letter to The Mountain Press can be read on our Web site www.themountainpress.com

Page 2: June 3, 2010

The Mountain Press ◆ Thursday, June 3, 2010A2 ◆ Local

Editor’s Note: The fol-lowing information was taken from the intake reports at the Sevier County Jail. All people listed within this report are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.

◆ Marsyl Armstrong, 35, of Greeneville, Tenn., was charged June 1 with forgery. She was released on $2,000 bond.

◆ Vena Katherine Cunningham, 52, of 2339 Leisure Acre Way in Kodak, was charged June 1 with violation of proba-tion. She was being held.

◆ Oswaldo Herndanez, 29, of Clintwood Way #92 in Pigeon Forge, was charged June 1 with a misdemeanor warrant from general sessions court. He was being held.

◆ John Eric Ivy, 34, of Morristown, was charged

June 1 with a misde-meanor warrant from general sessions court. He was released on $1,000 bond.

◆ Trent Michael Myers, 33, of White Lake, Mich., was charged June 2 with vandalism. He was released on $2,000 bond.

◆ Preston Charles Moulden, 18, of 1824 Davis Lane in Sevierville, was charged June 1 with possession of drug paraphernalia. He was released on $1,000 bond.

◆ Robert Steelman, 42, of Lexington, Ky., was charged June 2 with a mis-demeanor warrant from general sessions court and failure to appear. He was being held.

◆ Lee James Stiles, 25, of Clinton, Tenn.,

was charged June 2 with driving on a suspended license. He was released.

◆ Kathy Tollefrsud, 46, of 3666 Valley View Road in Pigeon Forge, was charged June 1 with harassment: phone call. She was released on $1,000 bond.

2 Thursday

2334 Newport Hwy ( 4mi. past Sevier Co. High)

Friday Nite Special

865-453-5150

32 oz. Cowboy Cut Prime RibBet ya can’t eat it all!

LIVE MUSIC EVERY TUES. THURS. and SAT. NIGHT

AT 6pm.

BBQ & Country Cookin

Weight Loss

865-429-0921

We are now offering:

Management CenterWeight Loss

Lose Weight

Feel Great!

SUMMER CLASSES & CAMPS

REGISTER NOW

Elizabeth Williams School of Dance

453-9702

QUAL

ITY

EYEW

EAR

AT A

MAZ

INGL

Y LO

W P

RICE

S!

Dr. Lane’s Payless Optical

(865) 428-2778

QUALITY EYEWEAR AT AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES! QUALITY EYEWEAR AT AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES! QUALITY EYEWEAR AT AM

AZINGLY LOW PRICES!

Buy ONE Complete Pair of Single Vision Glasses and Get One FREE

$109.952 Boxes of Disposable Contacts

$109.95

INCLUDES EXAM

INCLUDES EXAM

Reader Recipes

Deadline is July 2, 2010Rules: 1. Recipes will be accepted from anyone living or working in Sevier County. 2. Each recipe should by typed or printed and include a complete listing of ingredients in order of use and detailed instructions. Illegible entries or those with instructions deemed unclear will be discarded. 3. Each recipe should include the name, address and day and night phone numbers of the submitter. 4. There is a limit of five (5) recipes per person, the dishes of your choice.5. All recipes should be received to The Mountain Press no later than July 2, 2010. 6. Submit by mail to Reader Recipes, P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN 37864 or by e-mail to [email protected] 7. All recipes submitted to The Mountain Press will be viewed

by a panel of culinary professionals to choose a determined number of recipes for the cookbook. 8. A number of select recipes from each category will be chosen to compete for fi rst-, second- and third-place honors. Submitters of the chosen recipes will be contacted and asked to bring their recipe to a taste-testing and photo session. 9. Those who cannot be reached or are unable to attend the taste-testing will forfeit, and an alternate recipe will be chosen. 10. Photographs for use in the cookbook will be taken at the taste-testing and the recipes will be judged by a panel of culinary professionals. Their decisions will be based on appearance, taste and ease of preparation. 11. Winners will be announced shortly before publication of the cookbook in late October. Depending on placement, winners will receive a certain number of cookbooks.

Your Favorite Recipes

Submitted

Local Boy Scout Troop 211 was invited to the Food City in Sevierville to hang the store’s new American flag. The flag measures 15 feet by 25 feet. The previ-ous flag was donated to the troop. The Memorial Day week-end seemed to be the right time to have the scouts conduct the cer-emony. Rick Adams and Steve Williams are the scoutmasters for Troop 211.

Troop 211 raises flag

a r r e s t s

We Connect you to your neighborhood, this region,

and the world.

Submitted Report

Kelly Jones, a rising senior at Sevier County High School, has start-ed a community ser-vice project to help rebuild a family’s life in Nashville.

An account has been set up at Sevier County Bank called “Nashville Flood Disaster Fund.”

Julia Householder’s daughter, Gail Householder Reeder, a 1973 SCHS graduate, lives in Nashville and is a victim of the rains and floods which recently occurred. She is mar-ried and has a 17-year-old daughter.

Householder is a retired educator and recent inductee to the Sevier County Education Hall of Fame. Her sister and brother-in-law, Elaine and Dub McIntosh, are also long-time educators in Sevier County.

In the flood Reeder and her family lost everything except a few clothes. Householder’s granddaughter was able to save her school books and a few mementos from childhood.

FEMA is only allowing them a small amount of money for losses and damages. They also did not have flood insur-ance.

Studentwants toaid family in flood

Submitted

Victoria Clements was named the Premier Exhibitor in the Big Nine Sub-Regional 4-H Project Achievement Day. She was honored for her efforts in the Junior High Nutrition Health and Fitness Project. She is active in 4-H at Sevierville Middle School and the 4-H Honor Club.

Premier Exhibitor

Page 3: June 3, 2010

Thursday, June 3, 2010 ◆ The Mountain Press

Editor’s Note: The com-munity calendar is printed as space permits. Items must be submitted at least five days in advance. Only noncommercial, pub-lic events held in Sevier County will be considered. To place an item phone 428-0748, ext. 214, or e-mail to [email protected]. Items may be faxed to 453-4913.

Thursday, June 3

Library Movies“Invictus” shown at 6

p.m., Anna Porter Library, Gatlinburg. Free; bring popcorn and soft drinks. 436-5588.

Right To Life

Sevier County Right To Life meets at 5:30 p.m. in Pigeon Forge Library. Karen Black Mercer, who counsels women considering abor-tions, will speak. 908-2689.

Gatlinburg Garden Club Gatlinburg Garden Club

meets 1 p.m. at Gatlinburg Community Center. Program: Installation of officers and awarding of scholarship.

Democratic PartySevier County Democratic

Party meets at 7 p.m. at courthouse.

Women’s Bible StudyGarlands of Grace wom-

en’s Bible study:n 9 a.m. UMC Pigeon

Forgen 2 p.m. Blue Mountain

Mist B&B, Pullen Road n 6:30 p.m. Sevierville

UMC, Conference Room

Hot Meals Smoky Mountain Area

Rescue Ministries provides hot meals 5:30-6:30 p.m., First United Methodist Sevierville and Kodak United Methodist. 933-5996.

TOPSTOPS weight loss chap-

ter meets at 6 p.m., Parkway Church of God in Sevierville. 755-9517 or 429-3150.

Celebrate RecoveryCelebrate Recovery meal

from 5-6 p.m.; 6:30 ser-vice; then small groups. Kodak United Methodist Church. Childcare pro-vided.

Blood DriveMedic blood drive noon-6

p.m., Bass Pro Shops, Kodak.

New Center RocketsNew Center Rockets

football spring practice 6 p.m. at school. Practices Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. 640-5344.

friday, June 4

Supper/AuctionSpaghetti supper 5-6:30

p.m., auction 7 p.m. at Wearwood Elementary School. Proceeds benefit Rodger and Penny Brackins for medical bills. Adult $10; 10 and under, $5.

Waldens Creek UMC Decoration at Walden’s

Creek United Methodist cemetery. Trustees on site Friday, Saturday and Sunday to accept donations for upkeep.

JOY ClubJust Older Youth Club

meets at 10:30 a.m. for bingo; 11:30 for covered dish lunch, Pigeon Forge Community Center. 429-7373.

Blood DriveMedic blood drive 10

a.m-6 p.m. Food City in Kodak.

Canning & FreezingFood preserving class,

canning and freezing, 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.; $25. Deadline to register June 4. 453-3695 or e-mail to [email protected].

Bethany BaptistBethany Baptist Church

singing, 7 p.m.

Sunny View ChurchSunny View church,

Denton Road, singing 7 p.m.

912 Project912 Project Meeting 7

p.m. Friday, Sevier County Courthouse. 436-6219.

Retired TeachersSevier County Retired

Teachers meet 11:30, Damon’s. Program includes a memorial service for teachers who have passed away this year.

saTurday, June 5

Radio ClassSevier County Emergency

Radio Service technician class 9:30-5 p.m., EOC office on Bruce Street. Testing to follow. 314-0899 or e-mail to n4jtq@live-com.

Live-It Yard SaleLive-It Ministry yard sale

9 a.m. to 3 p.m., 707 W. Main Street (formerly The Gathering). All proceeds benefit the ministry’s local projects. 604-4088.

Farmers MarketFarmers market 8-11:30

a.m., Sever Farmers Co-Op, 321 W. Main, Sevierville. 453-7101.

sunday, June 6

American Legion 104 American Legion Post 104

at Smokies Park. First pitch 5 p.m.. Admission free to veterans, members of Guard, Reserve and active duty.

Sunday Night AliveGatlinburg First UMC,

6 p.m., fellowship of contemporary music and worship followed by a hot meal. 436-4691.

Cherokee/Dan River Fourth annual Cherokee/

Dan River reunion, 12:30–4:30 p.m., Sevierville City Park. Potluck with hot dogs and burgers provided. 654-

6571 or 898-1243, e-mail to [email protected].

Oakley ReunionH.H. Oakley reunion,

noon-3 p.m., Mills Park behind G-P. 898-2411.

Waldens Creek UMC Decoration at Walden’s

Creek United Methodist cem-etery. Trustees on site Friday, Saturday and Sunday to accept donations for upkeep.

Red Bank HomecomingRed Bank Baptist on Old

Newport Highway, homecom-ing and covered dish lunch after morning service. The Rev. Jerry Bailey speaker.

Monday, June 7

Hot Meals Hot Meals For Hungry

Hearts 5:30-6:30 p.m., Henderson Chapel Baptist Church.

Women’s Bible StudyGarlands of Grace Women’s

Bible study:n 1 p.m. Gatlinburg Inn.

436-0313. n 10 a.m., Seymour Heights

Christian Church, 436-0313.

Ruritan ClubSevier County Ruritan

Club meets 7 p.m. at Sevier County Garage.

Boyds Creek RevivalBoyds Creek Church of God

revival with Bishop G.R. Hill of Cleveland, Tenn. 7:30 nightly through June 11. 680-4848.

Gold Wing RidersGold Wing Road Riders

Assn. meets at 6:30 p.m., Gatti’s Pizza, 1431 Parkway. 660-4400.

Angel FoodAngel Food orders:n 2-5 p.m., Gum Stand

Baptist Church. 429-2508.

Blood DriveMedic blood drive 10

a.m.-6 p.m. Walgreen’s, Pigeon Forge, 3071 Parkway. Bloodmobile.

Photographic SocietyLeConte Photographic

Society meets 6:30 p.m. with competi-tions, critiques and a program by Judy Cravy. LeContePhotographic.Com

Local ◆ a3

Submitted Report

NATIONAL PARK — Scientists estimate that there are nearly 230 dif-ferent species of birds in Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Thirty-four species considered endangered, threatened or of conservation con-cern have been observed.

Starting today, with the help of volunteers, scien-tists will band birds in the park.

“Everyone is encour-aged to report banded birds to the Bird Banding Laboratory, by phone or on the Internet. It’s important data that will be lost otherwise,” said Josh Davis, Tremont’s cit-izen science coordinator.

Bird Banding dates: June 3; June 16; June 17; June 23; June 29; July 8; July 30; and Aug. 4.

Bird banding sessions typically last 5-6 hours. Participants do not have to attend the entire ses-sion. Dress should be weather-appropriate . Participants should bring plenty of water and rain gear.

Those interested in attending should e-mail Josh Davis to [email protected] or call (865) 448-6709. If a banded bird is found, the infor-mation can be reported at 800-327-2263, or at www.reportband.gov.

Keeping up with all these species is a daunt-ing task, and for the past 10 years, Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont has been assist-ing the park in monitor-ing these birds through bird banding.

At the beginning of each banding session, volunteers help erect nets starting at 6 a.m. During the ensuing six hours, the nets are checked every 40 min-utes, birds are careful-

ly removed and a metal bracelet (which is marked with nine-digit number) is attached to their legs. Detailed notes are taken including age, gender, and breeding condition.

After the birds are inspected they are released.

“Everyone is encour-

aged to report banded birds to the Bird Banding Laboratory, by phone or on the Internet. It’s important data that will be lost otherwise,” said Davis.

Bird banding is one of a number of citizen sci-ence projects carried on at Tremont each year.

3 Thursday

Victory Baptist Academy

thanksforthevictory.com

ENROLLING NOW FOR 2010-2011Ministry of:

Victory Baptist Church1625 Old Newport Hwy.

Sevierville, TN 37862

Contact us now for more information (865) 774-0012

FREE ESTIMATES

FALINEXCAVATING &DEVELOPMENT

RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL

Complete Excavating & Development Service

23 YEARS EXPERIENCE

428-4752

Find custom window coverings that fit your style!

Professional Measuring & Installation

865-567-9076FREE In-Home Consultation

& EstimatesLocally Owned and Operatedwww.budgetblinds.com

Mention this ad and receive 25% OFF SIGNATURE SERIES Window Treatments!

VILLAS PRICEDFROM $299,900

www.thebouldersatmaplebranch.comExceptional Amenities Are Standard

Developers are offering a

$20,000.00FINANCIAL INCENTIVE FOR APPROVED BUYERS

Call Chirs Brown , Owner/AgentC.E. Brown Properties(865) 740-6202

OPEN HOUSESUNDAY 1:30-4:00

STANLEY FENCINGand Landscaping

All Types of Fencing:

Locally Owned and Operated 865-254-3844

Let Country Meadows Landscaping and Pools help you design and build the backyard oasis of your dreams.

Jimmy Whetstone 865-387-0096 Licensed & Insured

Kick off Your Summer With a

Splash!

Complete Landscape Services and Fiberglass Pools Installation

Scientists, volunteers beginTremont bird banding today

Submitted

A volunteer helps to band a bird in Tremont’s bird banding program. Bird banding is one of a number of citizen science projects carried on at Tremont each year.

c o m m u n i t y c a l e n d a r

Page 4: June 3, 2010

The Mountain Press ◆ Thursday, June 3, 2010

In Memoriam

John Edward Ramsey

John Edward Ramsey, age 28 of Gatlinburg, passed away Sunday, May 30, 2010. John was a member of Hills Creek Missionary Baptist Church and was preceded in death by his father Larry Ramsey. He is survived by his mother and step-father: Sherry and Stanley James; step-mother: Bertie Ramsey; sister Laura Ramsey; nephew Kegan Ward; grand-parents Jack and Nancy Davidson; several aunts, uncles, cousins and friends.

In lieu of flowers memorial donations may be made to benefit the family.

Funeral service 7 p.m. Thursday in the West Chapel of Atchley Funeral Home with Brian Huff and Rev. Lowell Wilson officiating. Interment 10 a.m. Friday in Webb’s Creek Cemetery. The family will receive friends 5-7 p.m. Thursday at Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville.

n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

“I’m the person responsible for (Miller’s) death,” he wrote. “I had my niece drive me to her home where she lived(.) I told my niece Amy Brown that I wanted to go there to borrow some money and when we got there I went inside and was talking to (Miller) bout her lawnmower and we got to argueing (sic) and she made me mad and I hit her in the head and shot her and cut her.” He also says he was the one who took

the purse.During her testimony, Brown

said Weaver had asked her to drive him and the other two men to Miller’s house May 7, saying he needed some help to repair Miller’s lawn mower. Brown said she and Weaver had helped Miller with household chores in return for money; they knew her through her late daughter.

While she was driving to Miller’s home on Day Drive in north Sevier County, she said the men began talking about rob-bing Miller. She said her uncle — Weaver — was the one who

told the others that Miller kept a large sum of money at her home, and that Miller likely had recently been to refill a prescrip-tion for the powerful painkiller OxyContin.

She said while she sat in her van with her 3-year-old daugh-ter, all three men went inside the house for some time. At one point, she said, she heard a pop that she acknowledged sounded like a gunshot. When the men emerged, Ratliff was carrying a purse and they were arguing over $50, which she said was all they’d found in the home.

She told Judge Stokes she heard Baltimore saying, “I can’t believe we did this for $50.”

After that, she said, they told her where to drive, including a stop to buy gas and other items and to throw away the purse.

Ratliff has been convicted of murder before; in fact he had only been free for one year after being convicted of the 1976 murder of a woman in Scott County; he was 17 when that crime occurred. He was given a life sentence, but was paroled last year. He had been eligible for parole for 16 years before his release.

weaver3From Page A1

rex williamsRex Williams, 77 of

Gatlinburg, formerly of Stow, Ohio, died Monday, May 31, 2010.

Survivors: wife of 37 years Mary Williams; daughter Debbie of Akron, Ohio; son, Gary of Barberton, Ohio; two grandsons; one great-grand-son; step-daughter Martha (Paul) Oblak; four step-grand-children.

The family received friends 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at Atchley ’s Smoky Mountain Chapel in Pigeon Forge. A Mass of Christian Burial will be 10 a.m. Thursday at St. Mary ’s Catholic Church in Gatlinburg with Father Joseph Brando officiating. Entombment will follow in the Chapel Mausoleum of Atchley ’s Smoky Mountain Chapel, Pigeon Forge.

n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

ada Loraine Humphrey

Ada Loraine Humphrey, 80, of Kodak, died Sunday, May 30, 2010. She attended Hills Union Methodist Church.

Survivors: husband of 62 years William Humphrey; son and daughter-in-law, William Blair and Karen Driscoll Humphrey; daughter and son-in-law, Dana J. and David R. Bohanan; 11 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren.

Service arrangements will be announced at a later date. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the American Cancer Society Relay For Life-Sevier County.

Cremation arrangements by McCarty Funeral Directors and Cremation Services, 607 Wall Street, 774-2950.

a4 ◆ Local

4 Thursday

Farmer’s Table RestaurantServing Thursday-Sunday 11:00a.m.-8:30p.m.

Lunch Served Thurs. Fri. Sat. 11:00a.m.-4:00p.m.Menu Items Available

Family style cooking at its best!2657 Newport Hwy.

Sevierville, TN 37876453-5519

ValleySpas, Inc.865-908-00252828 Parkway

Pigeon Forge, TN 378689-5

www.valleyspasinc.comRestrictions apply. Call for details.

Christ Covenant Anglican Church School NOW REGISTERING ALL STUDENTS

Beginning June 7th 2010Christ Covenant Anglican Church School

will be registering home-school students for the 2010-2011 School year

Christ Covenant Anglican Church School is affiliated with TANAS (Tennessee Association of Non-Public Academic Schools) and SMHEA (Smoky Mountain Home Education Association). Christ Covenant is dedicated to serving Christian parents in East Tennessee to educate their children with a distinctly Christian curriculum that fosters a love for God and love towards each other.

Please call for an appointment.

FRIENDS DON’T LET FRIENDS WATCH CABLE GET DIRECTV®

SERVICE TODAY!

Your Local Authorized DIRECTV Dealer

CUSTOM SYSTEMSINTEGRATION, INC.

865-730-0274Hardware and programming available separately. Receipt of DIRECTV programming subject to DIRECTV Customer Agreement; available at directv.com/legal and in first bill. (C)2010 DIRECTV, Inc. DIRECTV and the Cyclone Design logo are registered trademarks of DIRECTV, Inc

Ask about ourONE-TIME BUMP

CD RATES!

www.hubank.com

o b i t u A r i e s

nitely what helped,” he said.He said he was grateful to

have been at home. While his mother was gone, his father is ill and was asleep when the inci-dent happened.

“He ... didn’t know what was going on until I ran in. Just glad I was staying here.”

Deskins said he went to the emergency room after the attack; he had to have stitches on both arms and his chest

He’s telling his story, he said, so other people know to lock their doors and be prepared in

case something similar happens to them.

“I want it to be released,” he said. “People have got to lock their doors.”

He said he got a good look at one of the two men who attacked him — the one who said his jaw had been broken. That man had tattoos on his face, including a teardrop below one eye and a date on his neck, Deskins said.

The Sevier County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the case and is searching for suspects, Detective Matthew Cubberley said Wednesday.

n [email protected]

aTTackers3From Page A1

Curt Habraken/The Mountain Press

Matthew Deskins received stitches on both forearms and his chest during a home invasion at his house on New Center Road.

In Memoriam

Thomas Clint SuttonThomas Clint Sutton, age 55 of Sevierville, was

called to be with the Lord on Tuesday afternoon, June 1, 2010, while with his children and wife. He was an avid muscle car enthusiast. He was a dedicated husband, father, grandfather and friend.

He was preceded in death by his father Thomas Reeves Sutton, stepmother Faye Carr Sutton, mother-in-law Margaret Ramsey, and sister-in-law Mary Gibson.

Survivors include the love of his life and caregiver, Judy Faye Sutton; son and daughter-in-law, Chad and Jessica Sutton; daughters and sons-in-law, Stephie and Chris Gregg, Tessa and Felix Nicholas; grand-children, Trey Gregg, Nick Parton, Reece Sutton, Joy Floyd, and soon-to-be-born Thomas Clint Nicholas; mother and stepfather, Sonja and Bob Hall; sisters, Shirley Burchfield, Teresa Rolen, Linda Seaton; brothers-in-law, Billy Floyd, Fred Floyd; sisters-in-law, Eilene Williams, Rita Floyd, Brenda and Clayton Bohanon; father-in-law, Robert Ramsey.

Funeral service 7 p.m. Friday in the West Chapel of Atchley Funeral Home with Rev. Wayne Smith officiating. Interment 11 a.m. Saturday in Walnut Grove Cemetery. The family will receive friends from 5-7 p.m. Friday at Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville.

n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

In Memoriam

Stella Ann CooperStella Ann Cooper, age 63 of Sevierville, passed

away Monday, May 31, 2010. She was preceded in death by her parents Robert and Nancy King; sister Nell Barnes; brother Glen “Cotton” King.

Survivors include her sons and daughters-in-law Chuck and Teresa Cooper, Joey and Chrystal Cooper; grandchildren Victoria Elrod Watkins, Whitney, Samantha and Dakota Cooper; great-granddaughter Izabella Berlin Watkins; sisters and brothers-in-law Katherine and Jim Harris, Helen and Jack Adams, Zola and Glenn Hurst, Betty Kenton; brother and sister-in-law Jack and Edna King; several nieces and nephews.

Funeral service 7 p.m. Thursday in the East Chapel of Atchley Funeral Home with Cory Fordham officiating. Interment 10 a.m. Friday in Mt. Zion Cemetery. The family will receive friends 5-7 p.m. Thursday at Atchley Funeral Home, Sevierville.

n www.atchleyfuneralhome.com

In Memoriam

Margaret Elizabeth Holder

Margaret Elizabeth Holder, age 42, of Sevierville, died Saturday, May 29, 2010 at Fort Sanders Regional Medical Center.

She was preceded in death by her mother, Gloria White; brothers, Bernie and Dana White.

Survivors include her husband, Ed Holder; sons, Patrick Holder, Andrew Holder, and Alec Whaley; sister-in-law, Aletha (Ralph) Babb; nephews, Randy Babb and Dustin Babb.

Ms. Holder was cremated and a private memo-rial is planned. Arrangements by Dotson Funeral Home, Maryville/Seymour. (865) 984-5959.

Page 5: June 3, 2010

Thursday, June 3, 2010 ◆ The Mountain Press Nation/Money ◆ A5

By MELISSA NELSONAssociated Press Writer

PENSACOLA, Fla. — The BP oil slick drifted perilously close to the Florida Panhandle’s famous sugar-white beaches Wednesday as a risky gambit to contain the leak by shearing off the well pipe ran into trouble a mile under the sea when the diamond-tipped saw became stuck.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the govern-ment’s point man for the crisis, said crews hoped to free the blade from the pipe and finish the cut later in the day. The plan was to fit a cap on the blown-out well at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico to capture most of the spewing oil; the twisted, broken pipe had to be sliced first to allow a snug fit.

“I don’t think the issue is whether or not we can make the second cut. It’s about how fine we can make it, how smooth we can make it,” Allen said.

As the edge of the slick drifted within seven miles of Pensacola’s beach-es, emergency workers rushed to link the last in a miles-long chain of booms designed to fend off the oil. They were stymied by thunderstorms and wind before the weather cleared in the afternoon.

Forecasters said the oil would probably wash up by Friday, threaten-ing a delicate network of islands, bays and white-sand beaches that are a haven for wildlife and a major tourist destina-tion dubbed the Redneck Riviera.

“We are doing what

we can do, but we can-not change what has hap-pened,” said John Dosh, emergency director for Escambia County, which includes Pensacola.

Since the biggest oil spill in U.S. history began to unfold April 20 with an explosion that killed 11 workers aboard an off-shore drilling rig, crude has fouled some 125 miles of Louisiana coast-line and washed up in Alabama and Mississippi as well. Over the past six weeks, the well has leaked anywhere from 21 million to 45 million gal-lons by the government’s estimate.

The latest attempt to control the leak is con-sidered risky because slicing away a section of the 20-inch-wide riser could remove kinks in the pipe and temporarily increase the flow of oil

by as much as 20 percent. The cap could be placed over the spill as early as Wednesday.

If the strategy fails — like every other attempt to control the leak 5,000 feet underwater — the best hope is probably a relief well, which is at least two months from completion.

As the oil drifted closer to Florida, beachgoers in Pensacola waded into the gentle waves, cast fishing lines and sunbathed, even as a two-man crew took water samples. One of the men said they were hired by BP to collect samples to be analyzed for tar and other pollutants.

5 Thursday

Ants, Bees, Roaches?

BEASLEYPEST CONTROL429-4075

Single level home $20 a month,Multi-level $25 a month on quarterly program

Every other Month Service $25-$30 a monthCommercial business accounts save 25 - 40%

TN43

44

Come hang with your friends! Your Music, Good Food, and Fun!2891 PARKWAY PIGEON FORGE, TN

(LOCATED AT TRAFFIC LIGHT#4 IN PIGEON FORGE)

$5.00 Weekday Skate

Monday - ThursdayBOOK YOUR NEXT PARTY NOW!Private Party Rooms Available

Church & Youth Groups

2425 ParkwayPigeon Forge

868-0790

2441 ParkwayPigeon Forge

868-1000

$150 Off YourFirst Months Rent

Smoky Crossing865-573-4801 www.SmokyCrossing.com

Expires June 30, 2010

Chapter 7 BANKRUPTCY Chapter 13

FREE CONSULTATION / PAYMENT PLANSSTOP:

FORECLOSURES

LAWSUITS / COLLECTIONS

REPOSSESSIONS DEBT

PAYCHECK GARNISHMENT

CREDITOR CALLS

RELIEF:

SAVE HOME-AUTO

GET A FRESH START

ELIMINATE & CONSOLIDATE

DEBT

(865) 428-5263www.GoBankruptToday.com

320 Wears Valley RoadPigeon Forge, TN 37863

Catherine B. Sandifer, Esq.admitted in Tennessee & Florida

“We are a debt relief agency. We help people file for bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy Code”

(865) 428-4794

Catherine B. Sandifer, Attorney admitted in Tennessee & Florida

ALDER BRANCH BAPTIST CHURCHVACATION BIBLE SCHOOL

SUPER SUNDAYS

NASHVILLE (AP) — Tennessee House Speaker Kent Williams says he and Senate Speaker Ron Ramsey have reached a verbal agreement on the state budget.

Williams said he and Ramsey met face to face on Wednesday and worked out an agreement that will eliminate a pro-posed controversial fish hatchery in Williams’ dis-trict and restore funding

to the governor’s infant mortality program.

Williams said the finance chairmen from both chambers, as well as a member of the adminis-tration, also attended the meeting.

He said the Senate cau-cuses were to meet later Wednesday to discuss the proposed compromise. If they agree with it, he said lawmakers could finish up as early as this weekend.

State lawmakers reach verbal accord on budget

Oil slick perilously close to Florida

Associated Press

A hermit crab is covered from globs of oil that washed up along the Gulf of Mexico coastline of Dauphin Island, Ala., on Tuesday. Red-brown oil is making its first appearance on the Alabama island near the mouth of Mobile Bay, three weeks after tar balls were found there.

Staff Report

SEYMOUR — Firefighters from several agencies were responding Wednesday to a fire at a home on McCleary Road.

Dispatchers said the blaze started at 2273 McCleary Road late in the afternoon. It was near a gas line, caus-ing firefighters to call for more backup as a precaution.

They were still fighting the blaze at about 5:30 p.m.; no further information was available.

Firefighters descendupon home in Seymour

WASHINGTON (AP) — Airline passengers would receive as much as $1,300 for being bumped from a flight and would have 24 hours to cancel reservations without penalty, among other consumer protections proposed Wednesday by the Obama administration.

Currently, airlines must pay up to $800 for involuntary bumping of passengers.

The new rules, which will likely go into effect later this year, would also require airlines to fully and prominently disclose baggage fees as well as refunds and expense reimbursement when bags are not delivered on time, pro-vide special notice any time baggage fees are increased, and notify passengers buying tickets whether they must pay to check up to two bags.

Price increases after a ticket is purchased would also be prohibited under the proposal. Airlines would also have to give passengers timely notice of flight status changes.

The proposal would extend to foreign airlines a three-hour limit on the time airlines can keep passengers wait-ing on airport tarmacs. The three-hour limit went into effect for U.S. carriers in April.

Currently, airlines may limit compensation to $400 for involuntary bumping of passengers if the carrier arranges substitute transportation scheduled to arrive at the pas-senger’s destination one to two hours after the passen-ger’s original scheduled arrival for domestic flights, or one to four hours for international flights.

They limit compensation to $800 if the substitute transportation is scheduled to arrive more than two hours later for domestic flights, or more than four hours later for international flights.

The proposed rule would increase the limits to $650 and $1,300, respectively, and adjust those limits every two years inflation every two years.

DOW JONES

STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTName Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg

NASDAQ

AFLAC INC 44.64 1.51 3.50%ALCOA INC 11.48 0.29 2.59%ALCATEL LUCENT 2.60 0.07 2.77%ALLSTATE CORP 30.22 0.56 1.89%ALTRIA GROUP INC 20.38 0.26 1.29%APPLE INC 263.95 3.12 1.20%AT&T INC 24.78 0.45 1.85%BANK OF AMERICA 15.89 0.46 2.98%BB&T CORP 30.73 0.96 3.22%BOEING CO 64.34 1.39 2.21%BRISTOL-MYERS 23.00 -0.02 -0.09%CRACKER BARREL 49.91 1.27 2.61%CHEVRON CORP 74.13 1.84 2.55%CISCO SYSTEMS INC 23.35 0.35 1.52%COCA-COLA CO 52.41 1.12 2.18% CONEDISON INC 42.55 0.80 1.92%DUKE ENERGY CORP 15.96 0.26 1.66%EASTMAN CHEMICAL 60.65 2.35 4.03%EXXON MOBIL CORP 60.77 1.52 2.57%FIRST HORIZON 12.58 0.46 3.80%FORD MOTOR CO 11.85 0.44 3.86%FORWARD AIR CORP 27.37 0.77 2.89%GAYLORD ENTERTAIN 26.21 0.90 3.56%GENERAL ELECTRIC 16.35 0.37 2.32%HOME DEPOT INC 33.87 0.33 0.98%IBM 127.41 3.07 2.47%INTEL CORP 21.81 0.63 2.97%

JC PENNEY CO 27.14 0.57 2.15%JPMORGAN CHASE 39.55 1.01 2.62%KELLOGG CO 54.94 1.35 2.52%KRAFT FOODS INC 29.53 0.63 2.18%KROGER CO 20.06 0.19 0.96%MCDONALD’S CORP 67.77 1.41 2.12%MICRON TECHNOLOGY 9.18 0.52 6.00%MICROSOFT CORP 26.46 0.57 2.20%MOTOROLA INC 6.85 0.15 2.24%ORACLE CORP 22.64 0.44 1.98%PHILIP MORRIS 45.05 1.08 2.46%PFIZER INC 15.20 0.21 1.40%PROCTER & GAMBLE 61.74 0.58 0.95%REGIONS FINANCIAL 7.69 0.31 4.20%SEARS HOLDINGS 84.36 1.34 1.61%SIRIUS XM RADIO INC 1.00 -0.01 -0.99%SPECTRA ENERGY 19.85 0.65 3.39%SPEEDWAY MTRSPTS 14.24 0.14 0.99%SPRINT NEXTEL CORP 4.99 0.23 4.83%SUNOCO INC 29.43 1.06 3.74%SUNTRUST BANKS 27.26 1.09 4.17%TANGER OUTLET 41.64 0.52 1.26%TIME WARNER INC 31.07 0.89 2.95%TRACTOR SUPPLY CO 67.55 1.27 1.92%TRW AUTOMOTIVE 31.07 2.23 7.73%WAL-MART STORES 51.72 0.80 1.57%YAHOO! INC 15.18 0.16 1.07%

Bumped passengerscould receive comphike from airlines

Page 6: June 3, 2010

The Mountain Press ◆ Thursday, June 3, 2010A6 ◆

6 Thursday

Departments:News: Ext. 214; e-mail: [email protected]: Ext. 210; e-mail: [email protected]: Ext. 201 & 221Commercial Printing: Ext. 229

“A UT-TPA Prize Winning Newspaper”

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Midday: 6-4-0-1 11Evening: 6-7-1-2

Lottery NumberS

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Midday: 3-3-0 06Evening: 8-0-0 08

■ Air Quality Forecast:

Primary Pollutant: ParticlesMountains: ModerateValley: ModerateCautionary Health Message:Unusually sensitive people should consider reducing prolonged or heavy exertion outdoors.

toDAy’SbrieFiNg

CeLebritieSiN the NewS

toPStAte NewS

The Mountain PressStaffPublisher: Jana Thomassoneditor: Stan VoitProduction Director: Tom McCarterAdvertising Director: Joi Whaleybusiness manager: Mary OwenbyCirculation Distribution manager: Will Sing

SubscriptionsCarrier Delivery (where Available): $11.60 per 4 weeksin-County mail: $13.08 per 4 weeksout-of-County mail: $19.60 per 4 weeksPostmaster: Send address changes to The Mountain Press, P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN 37864

(ISSN 0894-2218) Copyright 2008 The Mountain Press. All Rights Reserved. All property belongs to The Mountain Press and no part may be reproduced without prior written consent. Published daily by The Mountain Press. P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN, 37864, 119 River Bend Dr., Sevierville, TN 37876. Periodical Postage paid at Sevierville, TN.

how to reach us:Phone: (865) 428-0746Fax: (865) 453-4913

P.o. box 4810, Sevierville, tN 37864

office hours:8 a.m. to 5 p.m. WeekdaysLocated at 119 Riverbend Dr., Sevierville, TN 37876

NAtioNQuote rouNDuP

■ Jane LynchSUNDERLAND, Mass.

— “Glee” scene-stealer J a n e L y n c h m a r -ried girl-f r i e n d , L a r a Embry, at the Blue H e r o n R e s t -aurant in S u n d e r -land, Star Magazine is reporting. Though the couple lives in California, they held the ceremony in Massachusetts where same-sex marriage is permitted.

Star reveals the inti-mate ceremony for 21 guests began at 5:30pm and was held on the res-taurant’s outdoor porch overlooking Sugarloaf Mountain. The “Glee” star and Embry both wore suits to the wed-ding.

“We are looking at a Wednesday to Friday shoreline impact, but there is a line of uncer-

tainty that depends on the wave action and the winds.”

— escambia County, Fla., emergency Director John Dosh on when the gulf oil spill may hit Pensacola beaches

“We already know where their (Republicans’) ideas led us. And now we have a choice as a nation. We can return to the failed economic policies of the past, or we can keep building a

stronger future.”— President barack obama

“The fact they were married after 40 years doesn’t negate the fact that they had a valid, good marriage. It’s just that something hap-

pened.”— Jessica bram, author of “happily ever After Divorce,”

on former Vice President Al gore and wife tipper announcing their separation

LOCAL:Storms

High: 86°Low: 65°

Windy

Chance of rain 30%

■ Lake Stages:Douglas: 994.2 U0.1

© 2010 Wunderground.com

Today's ForecastThursday, June 3

City/RegionHigh | Low tempsForecast for

Chicago72° | 58°

Washington88° | 72°

Miami90° | 77°

New Orleans86° | 74°

Atlanta88° | 67°

Raleigh88° | 70°

Memphis90° | 74°

Showers Rain T-storms Flurries Snow Ice Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Weather Underground • AP

toDAy’SForeCASt

how toSubSCribe

Just mail this coupon in with your payment to:

the mountain PressP.o. box 4810

Sevierville, tN 37864-48100r Phone 428-0746 ext. 231

Ask about Easy Pay.55 or older? Call for your special rates.

In County Home Delivery Rates4 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11.6013 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$37.7026 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$74.1052 weeks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$145.60

Name: _________________________

Address: _______________________

City: _______________St: ____ Zip: ____

Phone: ________________________

■ FridayCloudy high: 83°Low: 64°■ SaturdayCloudyhigh: 86°Low: 68°

Local■ gAtLiNburg

American Legionto meet tonight

American Legion Post 202 in Gatlinburg will have its monthly dinner and meeting at 6:30 p.m. today.

The meeting will follow the meal.

The American Legion is located between the Gatlinburg Police Department and post office. For more information call Amy Ejma at 266-3194 or e-mail to [email protected].

■ SeVierViLLe

Allensville Roaddetour scheduled

Motorists using Allensville Road today will need to use a detour while crews cross the road with storm drain.

As part of the Highway 66 project, contractor Charles Blalock and Sons Inc. will install storm drain across Allensville Road between Old Douglas Dam Road and 66. While work-ers install the storm drain, crews will close Allensville Road.

During the closure, motorists will be directed to use Old Douglas Dam Road as a detour.

■ gAtLiNburg

United Way tohold open house

The Sevier County United Way will hold an open house from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. June 10 at its new headquarters, 906 East Parkway, Suite 2, inside the new branch of Citizens National Bank.

The purpose of the open house is to make the community aware of the new location and provide information about the agency’s com-munity partners.

■ KoDAK

Recovery groupto start at church

Kodak United Methodist Church announces a new program, Celebrate Recovery, aimed at per-sons who struggle with pain from relationships; disappointments; anger; family problems; enabling; defeating habits; job loss; stress; guilt; abuse; depression; divorce; faith doubts; loss; illness; over-eating; gambling; por-nography; and substance abuse.

It will be held every Thursday. Dinner is served from 5-6 p.m.; the program starts at 6:30. Children’s programs are available.

Call 397-5011 or the church office at 933-5996.

■ gAtLiNburg

Free technologytraining offered

The Tennessee Career Center at Gatlinburg is offering free technol-ogy training as part of the Elevate America-Tennessee partnership.

Anyone can receive training in Microsoft skills, beginning with computer basics and ranging up to Information Technology professionals. When train-ing is completed, free certi-fication testing is available.

For more information, call Donna Mullholland at 436-4381 (corrected num-ber).

Vouchers to participate must be claimed by July 26. Visit http://elevateamerica.tn.gov.

■ SeVierViLLe

College coffee shopto open Thursdays

The Walters State coffee shop is open for the sum-mer semester.

The coffee shop will be open every Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. dur-ing the summer, featuring baked goods all day and lunch items from 11-1.

thiS DAy iN hiStory

Today is Thursday, June 3, the 154th day of 2010. There are 211 days left in the year.

■ Locally a year ago:Pigeon Forge hardball

Tigers celebrated their outstanding baseball season which expired just one game short of a state championship. The entire 21-man roster was honored equally giv-ing no individual honors to players. Coach Mike Guinn said, “When we have our banquet with our team, I just want to stress team. Our award was our trip and our performance at state and that was earned as a team.”

■ today’s highlight:In 1965, astronaut

Edward White became the first American to “walk” in space, during the flight of Gemini 4.

■ on this date:In 1888, the poem

“Casey at the Bat,” by Ernest Lawrence Thayer, was first published, in the San Francisco Daily Examiner.

■ Five years ago:

U.S. military officials said no guard at the Guantanamo Bay prison for terror suspects had flushed a detainee’s Quran down the toi-let, but disclosed there were instances in which Qurans were abused by guards, intentionally or accidentally.

■ thought for today: “Money can’t buy hap-

piness, but it can make you awfully comfortable while you’re being mis-erable.” — Clare Boothe Luce, American author, politician and diplomat (1903-1987).

NASHVILLE (AP) — Gaylord Entertainment Co. is laying off more than 1,700 employees as a result of flooding that inundated the Gaylord Opryland Resort, the Grand Ole Opry House and other company prop-erties.

In a conference call with investors on Wednesday, CEO Colin Reed also said the company is look-ing at its legal options after receiving incorrect advice on how high the water would rise. Reed did not elaborate other

than to say he under-stands that projections did not take into account how much water the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers was allowing to flow through its dams into the Cumberland River.

Reed said the company informed 1,743 workers on Wednesday morning they would be released June 12 with two weeks of pay plus any unused vacation. Most rehiring will occur six to eight weeks before the 2,881-room hotel reopens on Nov. 15.

The net cash impact of the flood on Gaylord is projected to be $169 mil-lion to $179 million.

Meanwhile, Dyer County may not be get-ting as much attention as Nashville but best-selling author Nora Roberts has taken notice.

One of Roberts’ fan clubs has raised just over $5,000 to help victims flooded when the Forked Deer River overflowed its banks on May 3, and Roberts has agreed to match the donation.

The Rev. Gary Meade,

president of the execu-tive council of Disaster Recovery Services of Dyer County, said the gift will be the single largest the group has received.

Dyersburg’s State Gazette reports the club chose to help the county northwest of Jackson after first looking at Nashville because one of its members lives in Dyer.

The club, called A Day Without French Fries, organized a similar fund-raiser to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.

Gaylord laying off 1,743 employees

Lynch

S u N r i S e i N t h e S m o K i e S

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

12-27-44-45-51 30 x2

Page 7: June 3, 2010

7 Opinion Thurs.

“Backwards and hateful ideas ... oust John Stossel,” said Colorofchange.org.

In a newspaper, the organization went on: “It’s time that FOX drop Stossel ... we’ll go

directly after the network with a public cam-paign unlike anything we’ve pursued to date.”

Media Matters joined: “By airing Stossel’s repugnant comments, Fox legitimizes his indefensible position.”

What “indefensible” position did I take? I said this:

“Private busi-nesses ought to get to dis-criminate. I won’t ever go to a place that’s racist, and I will tell everybody else not to, and I’ll speak against them. But it should be their right to be racist.”

Read that carefully: I condemned racism. I said I’d speak out against and boycott a racist’s business. But to some people, I com-mitted heresy. I failed to accept the entire cat-echism. I didn’t say that we need government to fight racism and prohibit racist policies in private establishments.

For this, they demand that I be fired. This controversy started when Rand Paul,

who had just won a senatorial primary, told TV talker Rachel Maddow that the part of the Civil Rights Act that bans discrimination by private business is improper interference with property owners’ rights. He, too, condemned racism.

But the chattering class’s reaction to Paul’s statements must have made him uncomfort-able. The next day, he issued a statement say-ing that he would have voted for the entire act because federal intervention was needed.

Maybe. At the time, racism was so per-vasive that such an intrusive law may have been a good thing. But, as a libertarian, I say: Individuals should be surrounded by a sphere of privacy where government does not intrude. Part of the Civil Rights Act violates freedom of association. That’s why I told Fox’s Megyn Kelly, “It’s time now to repeal that part of the law.”

You can’t say that in America? America’s fundamental political philoso-

phy has deteriorated quite a bit if we can’t distinguish between government and private conduct. I enthusiastically support the parts of the civil rights act that struck down Jim Crow laws, which required segregation in govern-ment facilities, mass transit, and sometimes in private restaurants and hotels. Jim Crow was evil. It had no place in America.

Racist policies in private restaurants are also evil, but they do not involve force. Government is force, so it should not be used to combat nonviolent racism on private prop-erty, even property open to the public.

I just don’t trust government to decide what discrimination is acceptable. Its clumsy fist cannot deter private nonviolent racism without stomping on the rights of individuals. Today, because of government antidiscrimi-nation policy, all-women gyms are sued and forced to admit men, a gay softball team is told it may not reject bisexuals and a Christian wedding photographer is fined thousands of dollars for refusing to take photos of a homo-sexual wedding.

I’ll say it again: Racial discrimination is bad. But we have ways besides government to end it. The free market often punishes rac-ists. Today, a business that doesn’t hire blacks loses customers and good employees. It will atrophy, while its more inclusive competitors thrive.

In the pre-1964 South, things were dif-ferent. But even then, private forces worked against bigotry. White owners of railroads and streetcars objected to mandated segregation. Historian Jennifer Roback writes that in 1902 the Mobile Light and Railroad Company “flat out refused to enforce” Mobile, Alabama’s seg-regation law.

In cities throughout the South, beginning in 1960, student-led sit-ins and boycotts peace-fully shamed businesses into desegregating whites-only lunch counters. Those voluntary actions were the first steps in changing a ran-cid culture. If anything, Washington jumped on a bandwagon that was already rolling.

It wasn’t free markets in the South that per-petuated racism. It was government colluding with private individuals (some in the KKK) to intimidate those who would have integrated.

It was private action that started challeng-ing the racists, and it was succeeding — four years before the Civil Rights Act passed.

Government is a blunt instrument of vio-lence that one day might do something you like but the next day will do something you abhor. Better to leave things to us — people — acting together privately.

— John Stossel hosts a show on the Fox Business Channel and is the author of “Myth, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out the Shovel — Why Everything You Know is Wrong.” (C)2009 JFS Productions Inc.

Mountain Views■ The Mountain Press ■ Page A7 ■ Thursday, June 3, 2010

c o m m e n ta ry e d i t o r i a l

P o l i t i c a l v i e w

P u b l i c f o r u m

editorial board:◆ Jana Thomasson, Publisher◆ Stan Voit, Editor◆ Bob Mayes, Managing Editor◆ Gail Crutchfield, Community News Editor

State legislators:◆ rep. richard montgomery

1-800-449-8366 Ext. 1-5981; 207 War Memorial Bldg., Nashville TN [email protected]

◆ rep. Joe mccord1-800-449-8366 Ext. 1-5481; 207 War Memorial Bldg., Nashville TN [email protected]

◆ Sen. doug overbey1-800-449-8366 Ext. 10981; 320 War Memorial Bldg., Nashville TN [email protected]

federal legislators:◆ u.S. Sen. bob corker

(202) 224-3344; 185 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg., B40A, Washington, D.C. 20510

◆ u.S. Sen. lamar alexander(202) 224-4944; S/H 302, Washington, D.C. 20510

◆ u.S. rep. Phil roe(202) 225-6356; 419 Cannon House Office, Washington, D.C. 20515

◆ u.S. rep. John J. duncan Jr.(202) 225-5435; 2267 Rayburn Office Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20515

letters to the editor policy and how to contact us:◆ We encourage our readers to send letters to the editor. Letters must contain no more than 500 words. No more than one letter per person will be published in a 30-day period. Letters must be neatly printed or typed and contain no libel, plagiarism or personal attacks. All letters are subject to editing for style, length and content. Statements of fact must be attributed to a source for verification. All letters must be signed and contain a phone number and address for verification purposes. No anonymous or unveri-fied letters will be printed. No letters endorsing candidates will be considered. The Mountain Press reserves the right to refuse publication of any letter. E-MAIL LETTERS TO: [email protected] or MAIL LETTERS TO: Editor, The Mountain Press, P.O. Box 4810, Sevierville, TN 37864. For questions, call (865) 428-0748, ext. 214. The Mountain Press and its publishers do not necessarily agree with the opinions expressed in letters and columns on this page.

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establish-ment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;

or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peacably to assemble and to petition

the government for a redress of grievances.”—united States constitution, amendment one

Tell your county officials to makeformer hospital a veterans facilityEditor:

I served my time in the U.S. Navy going back and forth in the Mediterranean trying to keep the peace. I was lucky enough to have served and never received as much as a scratch during my three years, nine months, and 27 days at sea.

For this reason I have never considered myself a veteran, even though the Navy has a medal waiting for me because I served.

For the next couple of weeks, as Seviervillians we will honor our servicemen by having bands play loudly of hymns dedicated to the various branches of our military. We will place flags at their grave sites to remember them in silent prayer. We will wave the American flag to show our dedication and thanks for their sacrifices.

At some local theaters they will ask all the veterans who served in our Armed Forces to stand where we will applaud them, and sec-

onds afterwards forget that they ever existed. Some businesses will celebrate their sacrifices by offering them a free breakfast, for it is their way of saying thanks for a job well done.

Well, I’m sorry to say that isn’t enough for what they did and for the sacrifices they made, giving up life and limb in most cases to assure that we could sleep comfortable in our beds at night and feel safe doing so.

We as taxpayers of Sevier County have the chance to really show that we truthfully do appreciate everything the veterans have done for us by either attending a workshop at 4 p.m. June 17 of the Sevier County Intergovernmental Committee, or by contacting your Sevier County commissioners and tell them that the former Fort Sanders Sevier Medical Center should be turned over to the Veterans Administration so they can make it into a facility strictly for veterans and their problems.

I have heard from other veterans that they have to travel to Nashville to receive treat-

ment that they can’t receive locally. Is it not bad enough that we punish them because we do not have a facility nearby to serve their needs, so we put the burden on them to travel a far distance to get medical and physiological treatments?

Have they not suffered enough when we as citizens of the United States made fools of them when they returned from Vietnam? We have learned from that fiasco and we can be thankful to God that we woke up to realize what a shameful thing had been committed on these men.

We now realize that the veterans have sacri-ficed a lot of themselves, and of their families to meet their obligation to God and Country. Now is the time to tell that veteran that we do appreciate each and every one of them.

Contact your commissioner today. Don’t wait until it’s too late.

William H. EvansKodak

A pet owner’s devotion to his dog or cat or other animal is intense and deep. However, once in a while an animal comes along that becomes a community’s pet. That was the case with a rather ugly, weird looking Chinese Crested Hairless named Miss Ellie.

She was rescued from an owner who didn’t want her and had kept her in a garage. Owner Dawn Goehring got the dog to be part of the animal act at Comedy Barn. Before long Ellie was trained and part of the show. But this dog was kinda special. Her tongue hanging down the side of her mouth, the hairless look, the homely but lov-able face — she was so bad she was good, so ugly she was pretty.

Ellie, who died this week at the age of 17, was indifferent to performing, but loved the attention. And when a chance to enter her in contests came along, Goehring did it. Ellie won an Ugliest Dog competition in the same

year she was in line to be named the World’s Cutest Dog. In September of last year she was entered in the All-American Dog Food Pet Brand Cutest Dog Competition and won the popular online vote over 60,000 dogs that were in the contest. She appeared on The Animal Planet cable show “Dogs 101,” was featured on Fox News, seen on billboards and a commercial, and was the star dog at The Comedy Barn Theater.

She raised thousands of dollars for the Humane Society, and had she won the Cutest Dog contest the $1 million prize would have gone to the Sevier County Humane Society.

This was an extraordinary dog that captured the hearts of the community and fans around the globe. Blind for several years, she had slowed down a lot, but her spirit was undiminished. Who knows how many dogs and cats were rescued from shelters because of the attention Ellie and her friends

gave to the plight of shelter animals.We’ll miss Ellie, but how do you

really grieve a dog that lived such a rich, full and happy life? You can’t, nor would Goehring or the dog want you to.

Want to pay your respects? This year Miss Ellie was determined to raise $1 million for the local humane society through her “Miss Ellie’s Mission” (misselliesmission.com) project. The goal of the fundraising drive is to build a new animal shelter for Sevier County. The current shelter was built to hold 1,000 animals a year and now houses some 5,000 annually. There is a video posted on You Tube titled, “Miss Ellie’s Mission,” that shows the needs of the Sevier County Humane Society.

In memory of Miss Ellie, donate money with checks marked “For the Miss Ellie Fund” and send to the Sevier County Humane Society, P.O. Box 976, Pigeon Forge, TN 37863.

Business candiscriminateif it wants

The community’s petMiss Ellie did a lot of good and found lots of happiness in her 17 years

Page 8: June 3, 2010

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

8 Sports thurs.

Sports■ The Mountain Press ■ A8 ■ Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Visit: The Mountain Press.comView/Purchase Sports & News Photos

Four county middle schoolers readying for gridiron All-Star game

Haywood Harris, legendary Vols SID, 80, dies in Knoxville

MIDDLE SCHOOL FOOTBALL

UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE

KNOXVILLE — Haywood Harris, for nearly 50 years a steadying voice in the UT Athletics Department since Gen. Robert R. Neyland appointed him Sports Information Director in January 1961, died Wednesday afternoon at his Knoxville home. He was 80.

Harris battled health issues the last six months after suffering a stroke in November the morning of Tennessee’s home football game against Memphis. The retired SID had maintained office hours as UT Athletics Historian up to that time. He was a familiar voice on the football press box public address system and still co-hosted with Gus Manning one of the nation’s longest running sports radio pro-grams, “The Locker Room,” on Saturday gamedays. The Locker Room celebrated its 49th season in 2009.

“I have lost an incred-ible friend,” Manning said. “Haywood and I have enjoyed a wonderful friend-ship of tremendous esteem

and respect for more than a half c e n t u r y . H a y w o o d w a s extremely i n t e l l i -gent and humorous. He loved his fam-ily, friends and especially his political party. And he detested the New York Yankees.

“Haywood played golf but said it was a waste of time. He did enjoy cards—mainly the game of Tong—and breakfast at Long’s. Haywood was one of my best friends for many years.”

A Maryville native who was born Aug. 26, 1929, Harris graduated from Knoxville High School in 1947 and the University of Tennessee in 1951. Just last week, Harris was rec-ognized as one of the top 100 outstanding graduates of Knoxville High School. After graduation, Harris

worked for The Knoxville Journal and The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer before returning as UT’s alumni field secretary in 1959.

Upon Manning’s rec-ommendation, Neyland hired Harris as Manning’s replacement to the SID posi-tion in 1961. After Manning was promoted, Neyland informed him of his intent to conduct a “nationwide search” for a new Sports Information Director.

Manning’s famous response: “I’ll go down-stairs and see if Haywood is still in my office.”

Harris was the last employee hired by athletics director Neyland before the general’s death in 1962.

Harris served UT as Sports Information Director, Assistant Athletics Director and Associate Athletics Director of Media Relations. In 1982, Inside Sports magazine listed him as one of the top five publi-cists in the nation.

“Smart. (Haywood was) smarter than the rest of us,” said John Ward, long-

time Voice of the Vols. “But smart didn’t stand in the way of Haywood’s putting people and his profession first. Perhaps more times than we’ll ever know, a smart suggestion from Haywood to

higher-ups helped cre-ate the positive image the University of Tennessee enjoys today among people from all walks of life.

“Haywood didn’t ask for credit; didn’t want it. He simply did what a really smart person does—help other people.”

Harris is an inductee of four halls of fame—Col-lege Sports Information Directors of America Hall of Fame (1984), Knoxville Sports Hall of Fame (1999), Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame (2005), and Tennessee Sports Writers Association Hall of Fame (2006). In 1991, he received the Arch Ward Award, the highest honor bestowed by CoSIDA, the national orga-nization of sports informa-tion directors. Harris twice served as president of the

Southeastern Conference’s publicity directors asso-ciation and he earned a Chancellor’s Citation for Extraordinary Service to UT in 1992.

After his retirement in 2000, Harris continued his employment on a part-time basis as Executive Assistant to the Athletics Director at Tennessee and, in addition to special projects, contin-ued with football and bas-ketball game management duties. Along with those responsibilities, Harris also worked on maintain-ing the university’s athlet-ics archives and served as department historian.

“I have been privileged to work under one of the most respected men in the sports information field and also be a part of a time in col-legiate sports history that most likely will never occur again,” said Bud Ford, Harris’ longtime assistant who succeeded him in 2000.

“Since 1950, the job of the Sports Information Director and promot-

ing men’s sports at the University of Tennessee has been held by a gradu-ate of UT: Lindsey Nelson in 1950, Gus Manning from 1951-60 and Haywood Harris from 1961-2000. “If you add in the 10 years I have been privileged to serve in that position, that is a total of 60 years at one school by alumni who totally dedicated them-selves to the university in every way. No one could have asked for a better role model than I have had while working under the guidance and direction of Haywood Harris. It’s tough to put my feelings about him into words—that was his specialty.”

Harris is survived by his wife, the former Carolyn Jo West. They have three chil-dren, four grandchildren and two great-grandchil-dren.

Rose Mortuary-Mann Heritage Chapel (6200 Kingston Pike) is in charge of funeral arrangements, which are pending.

HaywoodHarris

By SAMUEL PETREQUINAP Sports Writer

L U X E M B O U R G , Luxembourg — Lance Armstrong split with for-mer teammate and rival Alberto Contador, yet that hasn’t made the seven-time Tour de France champion any more comfortable.

Precisely the opposite.With the Tour starting in

less than a month, on July 3 in the Netherlands harbor of Rotterdam, Armstrong said he could have more pressure being the leader of his new RadioShack team than when he was riding with Contador on last year’s Astana team.

“Last year at the Tour I felt absolutely no pres-sure,” Armstrong said at the Tour of Luxembourg, where he finished in fifth Wednesday in the pro-logue during his first race since crashing last month at the Tour of California.

“It was not my team, I didn’t take a salary,” he said of last year’s Tour. “I was there just riding, just to do everything with my (Livestrong) foundation.”

Armstrong returned to competition last season following a 3 1/2-year retirement. He joined Contador’s Astana team, where his friend and men-tor Johan Bruyneel was sports director.

Tension between Armstrong and Contador arose and the 27-year-old Spaniard ended up winning the Tour while Armstrong had to be con-tent with a third-place fin-ish in the showcase event.

Armstrong and Bruyneel then left the team to launch their new team, RadioShack.

“This year is differ-ent,” said the 38-year-old Armstrong. “This is my team. We put the team together and we orga-nized it, we organized the money, so with that comes pressure.”

Armstrong’s season has been hampered by injuries and illness, and he is now trying to make up for the racing miles he lost. He will also take part in the Tour of Switzerland from June 12-20.

By PAUL NEWBERRYAP Sports Writer

ATLANTA — Chipper Jones was on the bench, nursing an injured finger.

Bring on Omar Infante, the latest player to come through for a team that can do no wrong.

Infante lined a two-out, run-scoring single in the eighth inning to back Derek Lowe’s best out-ing of the season, lead-ing the Atlanta Braves to their eighth straight win, 2-1 over the slumping Philadelphia Phillies on Wednesday.

The Braves finished off a three-game sweep of the defending NL champions and increased their lead in the East Division to 2 1/2 games as they headed off on an 11-game road trip that could determine if they’re a true contend-er for their first playoff appearance since 2005.

“We can make some-thing special here,” Martin Prado said. “We’re going to be a surprise.”

Lowe (8-4) went eight innings in his longest out-ing of the season, allow-ing six hits and the only Philadelphia run. Billy Wagner worked a score-less ninth for his ninth save. Jose Contreras (2-2) took the loss, giving up only his second run in 16 2-3 innings and snapping a streak of 13 straight scoreless outings.

Manager Charlie Manuel was livid at his team, saying the play-ers have shown no sense of urgency to end their slide. He showed his dis-pleasure before the game when he spotted several of them gathered around a television, watching the movie “Gran Torino.” He ordered the clubbies to shut it off.

That didn’t stop the Phillies from losing their fourth in a row and ninth in 11 games. They haven’t scored more than three runs during that span.

Infante’s RBI single

carries Braves past

Phillies

CYCLING

Armstrong off to solid start in race

Jason Davis/The Mountain Press

Pictured beside the practice field at Carson-Newman are Chaz McKinney, Connor Bailey, coach Brad Justus, Chad Ayers and Spencer Brien.

By JASON DAVISSports Editor

JEFFERSON CITY — Four area middle school football players are pre-paring for a battle between the states this Saturday.

Two Gatlinburg players — seventh grader Chad Ayers and eighth grader Spencer Brien — and two Sevierville players — Chaz McKinney and Connor Bailey —are practicing at Carson-Newman College today with their Tennessee teammates in training for this Saturday’s matchup with the best seventh and eighth graders Kentucky has to offer in the first-ever Kentucky/Tennessee Future Stars All-Star Football Classic at Doss High School in Louisville, Ky.

The four players will be split onto two separate squads — one made up of seventh graders and one

made up of eighth grad-ers — to play games at 4:30 p.m. and 6 p.m.

Brad Justus, an assis-tant coach at Gatlinburg-Pittman, was invited to coach the linebackers for the eighth grade squad.

“It’s going real well. We had one practice earlier (Wednesday) and got a chance to see what they could do,” Justus said. “They’re competing really well with the kids from Memphis, Nashville and Chattanooga. I think they’ll be really success-ful.”

Still, Justus said there

are some extremely impressive athletes at the practices competing for the Tennessee team.

There’s a kid from Fulton, a lineman, that’s 6-3, 6-4, 320 pounds,” Justus said. “There are some really impres-sive kids up here. There are some kids from Chattanooga that look really good.”

Ayers, a defensive tack-le for the seventh grade squad, and Brien, an eighth grade linebacker, should both see signifi-cant playing time in the fall, with Brien playing

on the freshman squad at G-P and Ayers playing for the middle school squad.

Bailey, who will be an eighth grader at Sevierville Middle next year, plays wide receiver and defensive back, while McKinney will be a fresh-man lineman at SCHS.

Tomorrow the players will get a special treat, as they’ll bus from Carson-Newman to UT to take a tour of the Volunteers’ football facilities.

Organizers hope the game will become an annual event.

Hosted by the Kentuckiana Prep Sports Recruiting Service, the game will provide excel-lent exposure for its play-ers at a time when many top college recruits are spotted as early as sev-enth or eighth grade.

[email protected]

“They’re competing really well with the kids from Memphis, Nashville

and Chattanooga. I think they’ll be really successful.”

Brad Justus, G-P assistant and Tennessee eighth grade linebackers coach

Page 9: June 3, 2010

Thursday, June 3, 2010 ◆ The Mountain Press Sports ◆ A9

9 Thursday

Max Richardson Jewelers

WE BUY GOLDScrap Gold, Class Rings, Broken Chains, etc.

213 Forks of the River Parkway, Sevierville

865-774-3443

Locally owned since 1970.

Our name is on the door and we stand behind our services!

DISC PADS OR BRAKE SHOESFREE TOWING WITH REPAIR

Labor not included.Most U.S. cars.3997$

2 wheels

DONE RIGHT AUTOMOTIVE

908-7814

starting at

12 Months NO INTERESTFix Your Car Now…Pay Next Year*

*wac

TRANSMISSION SERVICE$49.95 includes FREE DIAGNOSTIC

(on most domestic vehicles) Expires 6/30/2010Includes: Fluid, Filter, Retorque the valve body to spec, band adjustments

We Fix It Right - GuaranteeFamily Owned & Operated

178 West Main St.Sevierville, TN 37862

429-1399

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

STATE OF TENNESSEE, SEVIER COUNTY

Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed on March 10, 2003 by Tina M. Metzger and Gerald W. Metzger (aka Gerald M. Metzger) to Branch Banking and Trust Company, Lender and BB&T Collateral Service Corporation, Trustee(s), which was recorded on April 1, 2003, in Book 1660, at Page 384, Sevier 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 owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, Branch Banking and Trust Company, (the ìOwner and Holderî), appointed the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee, by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Sevier County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; andNOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Owner and 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 June 10, 2010, at 12:00PM at the usual and customary location at the Sevier County Courthouse,Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit:SITUATE in the Sixteenth (16th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being all of Lot 115R in The Homestead in Wears Valley Unit 4, Phase I, as shown on plat of record in Map Book 33, page 90, Register�s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, said lot being more particularly bounded and described as shown on the above-referenced plat, and to which plat specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description.Subject to easements, rights of way, setback lines, reservations, notations and all other matters shown on plats of record in Map Book 33, page 90, and Map Book 33, Page 16, in said Register’s Office.Subject to the rights of others in and to those portions of the subject property that may lie within the bounds of Whetstone Road.Lot 115R has been approved for a standard individual subsurface sewage disposal system serving a maximum of three (3) bedrooms.Subject to Declaration of Covenants and Restrictions for The Homestead in Wears Valley Subdivision, of record in Volume Book 1352, page 110, in said Register’s Office. (Please also see restrictions of record in Volume Book 1139, page 761 and Volume Book 1239, page 512 and Volume Book 1316, page 183 in said Register’s Office).BEING the same property Gerald M. Metzger (aka Gerald Metzger) and wife, Tina M. Metzger acquried from Four Seasons Properties of Tennessee, LLC, a Minnesota Limited Liability Company by deed dated March 10, 2003 of record in Volume Book 1660, page 382, Register’sOffice, Sevier County, Tennessee.Parcel ID Number: 122E-A-100.00Said property is commonly known as

Lot 115R The Homestead in Wears ValleyPhase 1 Unit 4

Sevierville, TN 37862

Current Owner(s): Gerald M. Metzger (aka Gerald W. Metzger) andWife, Tina M. Metzger.

Other Interested Party(ies): none known.

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

M.Todd Jackson, TN BPR 23455Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trusteec/o Tennessee Foreclosure Department

5431 Oleander Drive, Suite 200Wilmington, NC 28403

PH: 888-251-0331 FX: (910) 392-8597File No.: 10-10649

May 20, 27 & June 3, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on July 6, 2004, by Tania J Gutierrez and Jose Gutierrez, Jr. to Douglas S. Yates, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register’s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book 2019, Page 296, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as trustee under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of October 1, 2004, GSAMP Trust 2004-NC2; and WHEREAS, Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as trustee under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement dated as of October 1, 2004, GSAMP Trust 2004-NC2, the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, (the “Owner and Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the Register’s Office of Sevier 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 Owner and Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or his duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested in him, will on Thursday, June 17, 2010, commencing at 2:00 PM at the steps of the Main entrance of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit: Situated in the Eleventh (11th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee and being more particularly described as follows: Beginning on iron pin on East side of hidden Valley Road, and a corner to Ted Houser, and running with the road, S 10 deg. 30 min. E, 100 feet to iron pin; thence leaving the Road and running N. 67 deg. 33 min. E, 200 feet to iron pin; thence N. 64 deg. 28 min. E, 212 feet to iron pin; thence N. 68 deg. 38 min. E, 123 feet to iron pin; thence N 76 deg. 33 min. E, 71.3 feet to an iron pin in line of Cantwell; thence with the line of Cantwell, N 4 deg. 23 min. E, 100 feet to iron pin, in the line of Cantwell and iron pin to Houser; thence with the line of Houser and Paul Vickory, Survey, S 71 deg. 35 min. W, 103.8 feet to hemlock; thence S. 73 deg. W, 117.5 feet to a dogwood; thence S 63 deg. 30 min. W, 100 feet to a hickory; thence S 66 deg. W, 120 feet to hickory; thence S 67 deg. 30 min. W, 182 feet to point of Beginning. Containing 1.5 acres, more or less. Being the same property conveyed to Tania J. Gutierrez, a married person, by Warranty Deed from Tolbert Reagan, Jr. and wife, Sandra Clarice Reagan, dated July 6, 2004, of record in Book 2019, Page 294, in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

PROPERTY ADDRESS:740 Hidden Valley Road

Gatlinburg, TN 37738

CURRENT OWNER(S): Tania J Gutierrez and Jose Gutierrez, Jr. The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan; 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 any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: Rita D. EllisonOTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A 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 IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.Substitute Trustee c/o Amy Gonzalez

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.1587 Northeast Expressway

Atlanta, GA 30329(770) 234-9181

File No.: 416.0901434TN

May 20, 27 & June 3, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’SNOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

WHEREAS, Sonia Roca, single, executed to T. Mike Estes, Trustee, a Deed of Trust to secure the payment of indebtedness described therein, which Deed of Trust is recorded in Record Book 2568, page 526, as corrected in Book 2607, page 492 in the Sevier County, Tennessee Register of Deeds Office; andWHEREAS, G.�Wendell Thomas, Jr., has been appointed as Substitute Trustee under said Deed of Trust, with all the rights, powers, privileges and immunities of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; andWHEREAS, default has been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, and Farm Credit Services of Mid_America, FLCA (the ìCreditorî), the present holder and owner of the debt secured, has requested the undersigned to advertise and sell the property described in and conveyed by said Deed of Trust, all of said indebtedness and obligations having matured by default on the payment of a part thereof, at the option of the holder of said indebtedness and obligations;NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of the power and authority vested in me as such Substitute Trustee, under the Deed of Trust, at the request of the Creditor, the undersigned, G.�Wendell Thomas, Jr., Substitute Trustee, will on:

Thursday, June 17, 2010

commencing at 1:00 p.m. at the front entrance to the Sevier County Courthouse, in Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the real property located in Sevierville County, Tennessee, described in the Deed of Trust as follows:

Situate in the Fourth (4th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being Unit 530 of Hidden Springs Resort, Phase 6, Enchanted Forest Section, a Horizontal Property Regime, as the same is shown by plat of record in Map Book 35, page 26 and Large Map Book 6, page 72, both in the Registerís office for Sevier County, Tennessee to which maps specific reference is hereby made for a more particular description. In the event of uncertainty as to the precise location of this unit, the Southern corner of the unit is located S 43 eg. 57 min 06 sec. E 306.14 feet, more or less, from the intersection of North Star Way and Enchanted Mountain Way.Subject to easements, notations, setbacks, restrictions and rights of way as shown on the map of record in Map Book 35, page 26; Large Map Book 3, page 111; Large Map Book 4, page 4; Large Map Book 4, page 113 and Large Map Book 6, page 72, in the said Register’s office. Subject to restrictions of record in Book 1238, page 454; Book 1326, page 589; Book 1356, page 727; Book 1370, page 585; Misc. Book 327, page 389; Misc. Book 350, page 394 and Book 1004, page 497, in the said Register’s office. Subject to the use of right of ways of record in ROW Book 12, page 187; ROW Book 14, page 20; ROW Book 13, page 719 and ROW Book 9, page 59, in the said Register’s office. Being the same property conveyed to Sonia Roca, a single person, by Warranty Deed of Richard Fraser and wife, Martha Mirie Fraser, dated June 28, 2006 of record in Book 2568, page 523, in the Register’s office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

The street address of the property being foreclosed is unknown.

The sale will be subject to any encumbrances having lien priority over the Deed of Trust, including, without limitation, any unpaid ad valorem taxes or other taxes.The undersigned is aware of no lien claims of the State of Tennessee required to be identified by T.C.A. �35_5_104. The undersigned is aware of no lien claims of the United States required to be identified by T.C.A. �35_5_104.The undersigned will sell and convey only such title as he holds as Substitute Trustee.The following persons are parties known or believed to have an interest in the property: Sonia Roca.

All proceeds of the sale shall be used first to satisfy the indebtedness and obligations secured by the Deed of Trust. After the satisfaction of the debts and obligations secured by the Deed of Trust, any proceeds that are received from the sale that are in excess of the amount necessary to satisfy the Deed of Trust shall be paid to subsequent lien holders and claimants in order of their priority. The sale will be subject to all matters, if any, having lien priority over the Deed of Trust that is being foreclosed, if any. The property is being sold ìas is, where isî, with no representation as to the condition of the property or as to marketability or merchantability of the title to the property.The undersigned reserves the right to postpone the sale to another time and date certain upon announcement by the Substitute Trustee or his agent at the time and place of sale. The undersigned reserves the right to conduct the sale through his duly appointed agent. If one or more apparently successful bidders fail to comply with the terms and conditions of the sale, the undersigned shall have the right to accept the next highest bid until a bidder whose bid has been accepted shall have complied with the terms and conditions of the sale, all without the necessity of re_publishing notice of the sale.

G. Wendell Thomas, Jr.,Substitute Trustee

550 Main StreetFourth Floor, Bank of America Center

Knoxville, Tennessee 37902865-546-7311

May 27, June 3 & 10, 2010

Legals

100 Announcements

200 Employment

300 Services

400 Financial

500 Merchandise

600 Rentals

700 Real Estate

800 Mobile Homes

900 Transportation

Cor rec t i onsOn l i ne After the first insertion, want ads scheduled to be published again on Tue., Wed., Thu., or Fri. may be canceled or corrected between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. on the day prior to publication. For ads on Sat., due Thu., prior to 3 p.m., for Sun., Fri., prior to 10 a.m. and Mon., prior to 11 a.m.

Notice of typographical or other errors must be given before 2nd insertion. The Mountain Press does not assume responsibility for an ad beyond the cost of the ad itself and shall not be liable for failure to publish an ad for a typographical error.

http://www.themountainpress.com OR, www.adquest.com

All line ads published in The Mountain Press are placed FREE on a searchable network of over

500 newspapers’ classifieds located at http://www.themountainpress.com

WANT TO KNOW WHEN A CLASSIFIED ITEM IS AVAILABLE?

Go to http://www.adquest/request/ to register your request and we will notify you by e-mail when it

becomes available in the Classifieds.

Dead l i nes Edition Deadline

Sunday Friday, 10 a.m. Monday Friday, 11 a.m. Tuesday Monday, 10 a.m. Wednesday Tuesday, 10 a.m. Thursday Wednesday, 10 a.m. Friday Thursday, 10 a.m. Saturday Friday, 10 a.m. Good News In The Smokies Thursday, 10 a.m.

A publication from The Mountain Press

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALSLEGALSGet Rid of It With the

Classifieds!Classifieds!Classifieds!428-0748

S P O R T S B R I E F S

GATLINBURG — Twenty-four players competed in the May 23rd Gatlinburg Round Robin Tennis Tournament held at The Don Watson Tennis Center. Miki Cadar of Sevierville and Cami Webb of Pittman Center were the tournament’s winners.

There will be another round-robin event Sunday, June 13, at The Tennis Center in Mynatt Park. It will be a doubles format for players 16 and up. Interested

players are asked to bring a dessert or appetizer to share. For more information or to pre-register for a guaran-teed spot, call G. Webb at 368-3433 or the Gatlinburg Tennis office at 436-3389.

Round robin tourneys continue

Miki Cadar of Sevierville (right) and

Cami Webb of Pittman Center were the tour-

nament’s winners this past week.

Mixed doubles league formingThere will be a mixed doubles league at the Don

Watson Tennis Center at Mynatt Park in Gatlinburg starting June 3. The league will play every Thursday night at 6 p.m. Call G. Webb at 368-3433 or the Gatlinburg Tennis Office at 436-3389 to register.

Summer Tennis CampThere will be a Summer Tennis Camp at the Don

Watson Tennis Center in Gatlinburg July 26-30 for ages 9-14 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. daily. The camp will include stroke development, fitness conditioning, match play, and a lot of fun! Camp fee is $125 and includes a t-shirt. Instruction will be by G. Webb, PTR trained instructor. Call The Tennis Corner at 368-3433 or 436-3639 to register or pick up an application at The Tennis Corner, located next to G. Webb gallery. Enrollment is based upon availability.

Lady Tigers practice startingThe Pigeon Forge High School Lady Tigers summer bas-

ketball practices start today at noon. Players must have a current physical to participate.

Smoky Bears baseball camps slatedThe 2010 Smoky Bears baseball camps will be June

7-9, 14-16 and 21-23 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. daily at the SCHS baseball field. Ages 6-13. For more information call 368-7648.

Bears baseball fundraiserSCHS baseball will have a fund-raising car wash at

Zippy’s Carwash on the Parkway in Pigeon Forge this Saturday, June 5, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Page 10: June 3, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on April 26, 2007, by David A. Shaffer to Stewart Title of Tennesse, Inc., Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register’s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book No. 2812, Page 202, as modified by agreement recorded in Book No. 3220, Page 794, aforesaid records, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to SunTrust Mortgage, Inc.; and WHEREAS, SunTrust Mortgage, Inc., the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, (the “Owner and Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the Register’s Office of Sevier 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 Owner and Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or his duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested in him, will on Thursday, June 17, 2010, commencing at 2:00 PM at the steps of the Main entrance of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit: A certain tract or parcel of land in Sevier County, Tennessee, being all of Lot No. 9, on the plan of Ellis Village, as shown by plat appearing of record in Large Map Book 7, Page 186, of the Register’sOffice of Sevier County, Tennessee, to which plat reference is hereby made for more complete details of said lot. Being part of the same property conveyed to David A. Shaffer, an unmarried man, by warranty deed from D & D Properties, LLC, a Tennessee Limited Liability Company as of record in Volume 2812, Page 200, Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

PROPERTY ADDRESS:1235 Lori Ellen CourtSevierville, TN 37876

CURRENT OWNER(S): David A. Shaffer The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan; 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 any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: N/A OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A 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 IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.Substitute Trustee c/o NDS1

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.1587 Northeast Expressway

Atlanta, GA 30329(770) 234-9181

File No.: 221.1009040TN

May 27, June 3 & 10, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on September 18, 2006, by Julie Lynn Petersen to Charlie R. Johnson, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register’s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book 2628, Page 686, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to SunTrust Mortgage, Inc.; and WHEREAS, SunTrust Mortgage, Inc., the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, (the “Owner and Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the Register’s Office of Sevier 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 Owner and Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or his duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested in him, will on Thursday, June 17, 2010, commencing at 2:00 PM at the steps of the Main entrance of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit: Situate in the Fifth (5th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, within the City of Pigeon Forge, Tennessee and being all of Unit 154 of that certain condominium known as Riverstone Resort Condominium, being designated and described as recoded Large Map Book 7, Page 106, in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, and more particularly described in that certain Master Deed for Riverstone Resort Condominium of record in Book 2578, Page 357, in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to which reference is here made for a more particular description. The land upon which the buildings are situated is described in Exhibit “A” of the Master Deed, the units are designated in attached exhibits and parking and storage spaces are designated as Exhibit “C” of the Master Deed. The Condominium Unit is conveyed subject to and together with the rights and privileges, restrictive covenants and conditions set out in the Master Deed for Riverstone Resort Condominium of record in Book 2578, Page 357 in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. The Developer and every owner, occupant and any other person or entity at any time having, talking or acquiring any right, ti8tle, claim or leasehold interest in and to any unit or any part of the property and premises dealt with and/or described herein shall be bound by and shall be deemed to have agreed to be bound by the Master Deed for Riverstone Resort Condominium, the ByLaws of the Riverstone Resort HOA, Inc., and the Club at Riverstone Rules and Regulations, and such other rules and regulations as may from time to time be promulgated under the terms of the Master Deed as such may or might be amended or modified. The Master Deed for Riverstone Resort Condominiums, the ByLaws and all such rules and regulations shall constitute covenants running with the land and shall bind any person having at any time any interest or estate in the Unit, as though recited and stipulated at length herein; and shall be deemed to be incorporated into this instrument evidencing ownership. The grantee accepts and ratifies, the provisions of the Master Deed the ByLaws, the Club Rules and Regulations (and any other Rules and Regulations adopted under the ByLaws) and agrees to comply with all terms and provisions thereof. Being the same property conveyed to Julie Lynn Petersen by deed from 212 Dogwood Lane, LLC, dated September 18, 2006 and recorded in Book 2628, Page 6845, in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee.

PROPERTY ADDRESS:212 Dollywood Lane

Pigeon Forge, TN 37863

CURRENT OWNER(S): Julie Lynn Petersen The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan; 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 any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: SunTrust Mortgage, Inc. OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A 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 IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.Substitute Trustee c/o ALK

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.1587 Northeast Expressway

Atlanta, GA 30329(770) 234-9181

File No.: 1115.1009051TN

May 20, 27 & June 3, 2010

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

STATE OF TENNESSEE, SEVIER COUNTY

Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in that certain Deed of Trust executed on March 28, 2007 by Sal A D�Allura and Tammy D�AlluraHusband and Wife to Branch Banking and Trust Company, Lender and BB&T Collateral Service Corporation, Trustee(s), which was recorded on May 9, 2007, in Book 2816, at Page 55, Sevier 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 owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, Branch Banking and Trust Company, (the Owner and Holder), appointed the undersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, as Substitute Trustee, by an instrument duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Sevier County, Tennessee, with all the rights, powers and privileges of the original Trustee named in said Deed of Trust; andNOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that the entire indebtedness has been declared due and payable as provided in said Deed of Trust by the Owner and 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 June 10, 2010, at 12:00PM at the usual and customary location at the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit:SITUATE IN THE 6TH CIVIL DISTRICT OF SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE, AND BEING ALL OF LOT 65 IN THE HOMESTEAD IN WEARS VALLEY UNIT 3, PHASE I, AS SHOWN ON THE PLAT OF RECORD IN MAP BOOK 32, PAGE 347, REGISTER’S OFFICE, SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE, SAID LOT BEING MORE PARTICULARLY BOUNDED AND DESCRIBED AS SHOWN ON THE ABOVE-REFERENCED PLAT AND TO WHICH PLAT SPECIFIC REFERENCE IS HEREBY MADE FOR A MORE PARTICULAR DESCRIPTION. SUBJECT TO EASEMENTS, RIGHTS OF WAY, SETBACK LINES, RESERVATIONS, NOTATIONS, AND ALL OTHER MATTERS SHOWN ON PLATS OF RECORD IN MAP BOOK 32, PAGE 347, BOTH IN SAID REGISTER’S OFFICE. SUBJECT TO DECLARATION OF COVENANTS AND RESTRICTIONS FOR THE HOMESTEAD IN WEARS VALLEY SUBDIVISION, OF RECORD IN VOLUME BOOK 1316, PAGE 183, IN SAID REGSITER’SOFFICE. (PLEASE ALSO SEE RESTRICTIONS OF RECORD IN VOLUME BOOK 1139, PAGE 761, AND VOLUME BOOK 1239, PAGE 512, IN SAID REGISTER’S OFFICE).LOTS 42-70 HAVE BEEN APPROVED FOR A STANDARD INDIVIDUAL SUBSURFACE SEWAGE DISPOSAL SYSTEM SERVING A MAXIMUM OF 3 BEDROOMS.BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO SAL ANTHONY D�ALLURA AND WIFE, TAMMY LYNN D�ALLURA FROM SAL AND TAMMY D�ALLURA FAMILY LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, STATE OF OHIO CERTIFICATE NUMBER 1601708 BY DEED DATED MARCH 9, 2007 AND RECORDED MARCH 15, 2007 IN VOLUME 2770, PAGE 29 IN THE REGISTER’S OFFICE OF SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE. SEE ALSO QUITCLAIM DEEDS OF RECORD IN VOLUME 2480, PAGE 440 AND VOLUME BOOK 2424, PAGE 310 AND WARRANTY DEED OF RECORD IN VOLUME BOOK 2007, PAGE 724, SAID REGISTER’SOFFICE.Parcel ID Number: 122E-A- 050.00Said property is commonly known as

Lot 65 Whetstone RoadThe Homestead in Wears Valley, Unit 3, Phase I

Sevierville, TN 37862

Current Owner(s): Sal Anthony D�Allura and wife, Tammy Lynn D�AlluraOther Interested Party(ies): none known.

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

M.Todd Jackson, TN BPR 23455Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trusteec/o Tennessee Foreclosure Department

5431 Oleander Drive, Suite 200Wilmington, NC 28403

PH: 888-251-0331 FX: (910) 392-8597File No.: 09-22632

May 20, 27 & June 3, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that by authority of a Deed of Trust executed by Larry L. Allen and wife, Betty A. Allen, to M. Coppley Vickers, Trustee, dated April 14, 2009, and recorded in Book 3324, Page 52, in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, to secure the indebtedness due from Larry and Betty Allen to Citizens National Bank, which has become due and payable by virtue of default in the Deed of Trust on the property hereinafter described; and Citizens National Bank, the true and lawful owner and holder of said indebtedness, having exercised its option to declare the indebtedness due and payable and having made demand for foreclosure pursuant to the Deed of Trust; I, the undersigned, acting under the authority of the Deed of Trust, by virtue of appointment as substitute trustee recorded in Book 3543, Page 494 in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee, will be at the front door of the Sevier County Courthouse, 125 Court Avenue, Sevierville, Tennessee, on the 14th day of June, 2010, at 10:15 a.m. to sell to the highest bidder for cash in bar of all rights waived by said Deed of Trust, the following described property to wit which is believed to have a street address of

3051 Old Newport Highway Sevierville, TN 37876

SITUATE in the Third (3rd) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, and being more particularly described as follows:BEGINNING on a Persimmon tree on the South side of the pike road U.S. Highway, now Whaleys Corner; thence running a new line South 62 E. 29 17/25 poles to a Cedar in a ditch; South 36 W 31 6/25 poles to a stake on the West side of the big ditch; thence N 53 W. 17 7/25 poles to a stake now Lillards corner; thence North with Lillards line to a stake at the ditch; thence with Lillards line along the ditch to the public road, U.S. Highway 411 to a stake on the South side of the road; thence with the public road N 36 E. 32 19/25 poles to the BEGINNING, containing by estimation 5 3/10 acres, more or less.BEING the same property conveyed to Larry L. Allen and wife, Betty A. Allen, by deed from Lillard Allen and wife, Helen Allen, dated March 29, 2005, of record in Book 2208, Page 560, Sevier County, Tennessee, Register of Deeds Office.The right is reserved to adjourn the day of the sale to another day and time certain, without further publication and in accordance with law, upon announcement of such adjournment on the day and at the time and place of sale as set forth above.Tennessee State Bank may assert an interest in the above-described property by virtue of a recorded deed of trust. Larry Hurst may assert an interest in the above-described property by virtue of a judgment lien.Said parties have been notified of this sale.The above-described property will be sold subject to unpaid taxes, prior deeds of trust, all easements and restrictions, the rights of tenants in possession of said premises, if any, prior claims, or matters of record.The proceeds of the sale will be applied first to discharge the costs and charges of executing this trust, including attorney�s fees; next, to all indebtedness remaining unpaid and secured thereby, including all indebtedness owing to Citizens National Bank, by the grantors; and next, the balance, if any, shall be paid to those legally entitled thereto.This 25th day of May, 2010.

THOMAS H. DICKENSONSubstitute Trustee

Hodges, Doughty & CarsonP. O. Box 869

Knoxville, Tennessee 37901(865) 292-2307

May 27, June 3 & 10, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

WHEREAS, default having been made in the payment of the debts and obligations secured to be paid by that certain Deed of Trust executed on June 16, 2006, by Ky D Neal, and wife Jennifer L Neal, Tenants by the entirety to Wesley D. Turner, Trustee, as same appears of record in the Register’s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, under Book 2557, Page 724, (“Deed of Trust”); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was last transferred and assigned to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-8; and WHEREAS, Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-8, the current owner and holder of said Deed of Trust, (the “Owner and Holder”), appointed the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., as Substitute Trustee by instrument filed for record in the Register’s Office of Sevier 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 Owner and Holder, and that the undersigned, Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc., Substitute Trustee, or his duly appointed attorneys or agents, by virtue of the power and authority vested in him, will on Thursday, June 24, 2010, commencing at 2:00 PM at the steps of the Main entrance of the Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee, proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Sevier County, Tennessee, to wit: Situated in the Ninth (9th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, being all of Lot No. 34, in Cherokee Hills Subdivision, Section A, as shown by map of record in Map Book 14, Page 21, Register’s Office of Sevier County, Tennessee, more specific reference is hereby made to said map book for the metes and bounds. Being the same property conveyed to KY D Neal and wife, Jennifer L. Neal, tenants by the entirety property by Warranty Deed dated 6/16/06 and filed for record 6/21/06, in Book 2557, Page 722, in the Register’s Office for Blount County, Tennessee. And Further being the same property conveyed to Paul E. West by Quit Claim Deed dated 4/27/01 and filed for record 5/1/01 in Book 1220, Page 351, in the Register’s Office for Sevier County, Tennessee. Conveyance is subject to restrictive convenants of record in Plat Cabinet 4, Slide 40 (formerly Map Book 14, Page 21), Book M28, Page 443, and all restrictions, easements setback lines, conditions, plat of record, and encumbrances of record in the Register’s Office for the aforesaid County.

PROPERTY ADDRESS:525 Texas Street

Seymour, TN 37865

CURRENT OWNER(S): Ky D. Neal and Jennifer L. Neal The sale of the above-described property shall be subject to all matters shown on any recorded plan; 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 any matter that an accurate survey of the premises might disclose. SUBORDINATE LIENHOLDERS: N/A OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES: N/A 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 IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.Substitute Trustee c/o NDS1

Nationwide Trustee Services, Inc.1587 Northeast Expressway

Atlanta, GA 30329(770) 234-9181

File No.: 381.0903666TNJune 3, 10 & 17, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

Sale at public auction will be on JJune 28, 2010 at 10:00AM local time,at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Clarence Eltzroth, a/k/a Clarence D. Eltzroth, and Trina M. Eltzroth, husband and wife, to Greg Forderhase, Trustee, on December 7, 2007 at Book 2978, Page 82conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register’s Office.Owner of Debt: CitiMortgage, Inc.The following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record:Described property located in District Number Five (5) of Sevier County, Tennessee, within the City of Sevierville, Tennessee, to wit:Lot 9 and part of Lot 10, Roberts Subdivision, as shown on the plat of the same of record in Plat Cabinet 2, Slide 132 (formerly Map Book 7, Page 40), Register’s Office, Sevier County, Tennessee, and being more particularly bounded and described as follows:BEGINNING at an existing iron pin set in the northeast right-of-way of Cherokee Circle Drive, said iron pin being located 410 feet, more or less, in a southeasterly direction from the point of intersection of Cherokee Circle Drive and Ownby and marking a divisional line across Lot 10; thence with said divisional line, North 43 degrees 15 minutes East, 149.48 feet to an iron pin; thence leaving said divisional line, South 56 degrees 22 minutes East, 165.12 feet to an iron pin set in the common corner of Lot 9 with Lot 8; thence with the common line of Lot 8, South 49 degrees 51 minutes West, 110.00 feet to an iron pin set; thence South 76 degrees 39 minutes West, 54.20 feet to an iron pin set in the northeast right-of-way of Cherokee Circle Drive; thence with said right-of-way, North 57 degrees 22 minutes West, 122.42 feet to an iron pin, the place of beginning.

Street Address:1234 Cherokee Circle Drive

Sevierville, TN 37862

Current Owner(s) of Property: Clarence Eltzroth and wife, Trina M. EltzrothThe street address of the above described property is believed to be 1234 Cherokee Circle Drive, Sevierville, TN 37862, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control.SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION.All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead 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.If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder.This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time.This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute TrusteeLaw Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP

6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410Memphis, TN 38119Phone 901-767-5566

Fax 901-767-8890

File No. 09-020319

June 3, 10 & 17, 2010

IN THE JUVENILE COURT FOR SEVIER

COUNTYSEVIERVILLE, TENNESSEE

IN RE: DUSTINSANFORD (DOB:05/07/93)

ROYSATTERFIELD,

Petitioner

Vs.

No. 10-000751

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS LEGALS

LEGALSLEGALS

LEGALS

Drive A Hard Bargain...Advertise in the Classifieds!

Call 428-0746

10A Classifieds The Mountain Press Thursday June 03, 2010

Classifieds 428-0746

Page 11: June 3, 2010

117 ELECTRICAL

115 ROOFINGSERVICES

A.B.C. CUSTOM INSTALLATIONSOwner Ernest GrossholzPH# 865-740-7817

We do all commercial, auto, residentialCar Stereo Sound Systems 100% Professional Amps, Subs

Etc….

Free Estimates!!!We are even mobile we will come to you!100% Satisfaction Licensed

113 MISC. SERVICES

106 HOMEIMPROVEMENTS

106 HOMEIMPROVEMENTS

Cal-ProBuilders LLC

Remodeling

Randy865-556-8712

106 HOMEIMPROVEMENTS

106 HOMEIMPROVEMENTS

106 HOMEIMPROVEMENTS

Property Clean UpCutting of trees,

underbrush & misc.Yard Work

CAMP WOODCall Joe 428-1584

or 850-7891

105 YARD & TREESERVICES

A-1 MOUNTAIN TREE SERVICE

Tree Specialist

105 YARD & TREESERVICES

105 YARD & TREESERVICES

Drive A Hard Bargain...Advertise in the Classifieds!

Call 428-0746

Selling By The Yard?List your yard or garage sale in the Classifieds!

Call 428-0746 T r a s h i t ,

S E L L I T . ... give the Classifieds a try.

428-0746

ORNL Federal Credit Union is seeking a part-time teller for our Sevierville Branch located on Dolly Parton Blvd. Banking or retail experience preferred. Must have a strong sales and customer service focus as well as excellent communication skills. Must be goal and team oriented. Part-time benefits are available.

Please fax resume to 865-425-3303, email [email protected] or complete an application at our Sevierville Branch. Please include salary requirements. EOE.

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

Sale at public auction will be on JJune 24, 2010 at 10:00 AM local time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Steven L. Derosia, married and Melissa Derosia Non-obligor spouse/owner, to Ernest B. Williams IV, Trustee, on May 31, 2006 at Book Volume 2546, Page Page 156 conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register’s Office.Owner of Debt: Bank of America, National Association successor by merger to LaSalle Bank NA as trustee for Washington Mutual Asset-Backed Certificates WMABS Series 2006-HE4 TrustThe following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record:Described property located in the Fifth (5th) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, more particularly described as follows.Beginning at an iron rod in or about the intersection of Chapman Highway and Ownby Drive; thence South 75 degrees 42 minutes 21 seconds West, 21.22 feet to an iron rod; thence leaving the right of way of Chapman Highway and with the line of Mistry Brothers, Inc., North 37 degrees 16 minutes 00 seconds West, 163.46 feet to an iron rod at an old metal post; thence leaving the line of Mistry Brothers, Inc. and with the line of Jan Etheridge and Anna Frank Hammer, North 60 degrees 05 minutes 18 seconds East, 72.83 feet to an old iron pin common corner of Anna Frank Hammer and Rusty Renee Ratiff; thence leaving the line of Anna Frank Hammer and with the line of Rusty Renee Ratiff, South 26 degrees 59 minutes 31 seconds East, 89.03 feet to an old iron rod; thence South 31 degrees East, 89.03 feet to an old iron rod; thence South 31 degrees 28 minutes 07 seconds West, 39.51 feet to an old iron rod; thence South 37 degrees 16 minutes 13 seconds East, 60.48 feet to the point of beginning.

Street Address: 524 Ownby Drive

Sevierville, TN 37862

Current Owner(s) of Property: Steven L. Derosia and wife, Melissa Derosia, as joint tenants in common The street address of the above described property is believed to be 524 Ownby Drive, Sevierville, TN 37862, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control.SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION. All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead 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.If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder.This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time.This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute TrusteeLaw Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP

6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410Memphis, TN 38119Phone 901-767-5566

Fax 901-767-8890

File No. 10-004378

May 20, 27 & June 3, 2010

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE

Sale at public auction will be on JJune 24, 2010 at 10:00 AM local time, at the front door, Sevier County Courthouse, Sevierville, Tennessee pursuant to Deed of Trust executed by Richard Greenhalgh and Jvonne Hubbard, husband and wife as joint tenants, to Wesley D. Turner, Trustee, on July 15, 2003 at Book Volume 1749, Page 623 modified in Volume 2499, Page 23; conducted by Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute Trustee, all of record in the Sevier County Register’s Office.Owner of Debt: Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2004-1The following real estate located in Sevier County, Tennessee, will be sold to the highest call bidder subject to all unpaid taxes, prior liens and encumbrances of record:Described property located in the First (1st) Civil District of Sevier County, Tennessee, being known and designated as the following lot in English Mountain, to wit:Lot 2, Section 38, English Mountain, as shown on map of record in Plat Book B18, Page 57, in the Sevier County Register’s Office to which map specific reference is hereby made for a particular description.

Street Address: 1512 Basswood Court Sevierville, TN 37876

Current Owner(s) of Property: 1512 Basswood Ct Land Trust (John Zwirzina as Trustee)Other interested parties: East Sevier County Utility District The street address of the above described property is believed to be 1512 Basswood Court, Sevierville, TN 37876, but such address is not part of the legal description of the property sold herein and in the event of any discrepancy, the legal description herein shall control.SALE IS SUBJECT TO TENANT(S) RIGHTS IN POSSESSION.SALE IS SUBJECT TO COUNTY LIEN OF RECORD IN BOOK 3489 PAGE 801, IN THE REGISTER�S OFFICE OF SEVIER COUNTY, TENNESSEE.All right of equity of redemption, statutory and otherwise, and homestead 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.If the highest bidder cannot pay the bid within twenty-four (24) hours of the sale, the next highest bidder, at their highest bid, will be deemed the successful bidder.This property is being sold with the express reservation that the sale is subject to confirmation by the lender or trustee. This sale may be rescinded at any time.This office is a debt collector. This is an attempt to collect a debt and any information obtained will be used for that purpose.

Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP Substitute TrusteeLaw Office of Shapiro & Kirsch, LLP

6055 Primacy Parkway, Suite 410Memphis, TN 38119Phone 901-767-5566

Fax 901-767-8890File No. 10-004329

May 20, 27 & June 3, 2010

Multi Family Sale June3rd - 5th. 8-5pmRain or Shine,1719 South RidgeCourt. Sev. Ninten-do & Play Stationwith 1 & 2 games.Play Station 1,New leather purse,Gun rack, kids -adult clothes, hhitems & more.

Huge Moving SaleRain or Shine Anti-que loveseat, ce-dar chest, loveseatsofa, tents, linens,lamps, clothes,kitchen items,puz-zles, lots of goodstuff. 3316 Mr Mar-shall Dr Thurs Fri& Sat 8-3

Huge 2 Family YardSale, Fri/Sat & Sun8-5pm. Furn,mens, women &kids clothes, 3x3bird cage, knickknacks, misc. 2645High Valley Dr.

Garage Sale- Fri & SatJune 4th & 5th 7-3Lots of items Boys& girls clothes, fur-niture. RivergateSubdivision 1737Meadow RidgeCircle

Garage Sale Fri/ Sat8:30 - 3pm 1519Snapp Rd, Sev.

Garage & Yard SaleFri/Sat 8-3pm. Lotsof stuff. Little Kay-cee Dr.

Friday & Saturday.Clothes, 4 wheeler,push mower. 2816New Center Dr

Estate Sale 5BRhome Fri & Sat6/4 6/5 9am-2pm908 Village LoopRd, Gatlinburg (Wi-ley Oakley to Vil-lage Loop Rd) 865-774-5251

5 Family Yard Sale Fri8-? Lots of cloth-ing, womens 0-12,h o u s e w a r e s ,Christmas, cos-tume jewelry &more. AllenridgeEstates, 2nd en-trance. Rain orshine.

5 Family 512 GraceAve Thurs & Fri8am. 96 HD Elec-tra Glide, HD wom-en’s leather, 26”mens bike, airhockey table, Bratzdolls, clothes

3 Family Yard Sale,Brand name adult& kids clothing,furn, baby items &much more. Don’tMiss This One!Fri/Sat 7-? Sha-conage Sub.

3 Family Sale Mens &womens golf clubs,printer, baby items,stroller, pack nplay, adult & kidsclothing, house-hold items, muchmore. Thurs, Fri,Sat. 8am-5pm3269 RiverpointeCircle, Kodak offRiver Rd

555 GARAGE &YARD SALES

500MERCHANDISE

Gatlinburg Bus Opt 2000 SF former grill and market for lease on East Parkway. 786-412-7871

439 BUSINESSOPPORTUNITY

356 STORAGEBUILDINGS

Enrolling:2 1/2 -4 Years

HOURS6:30am-6pm

105 Long Springs Rd.Sevierville

307 CHILDCARE

Looking for a Great Place to Work? We are the place for you. The Maples’Tree Quilt & Gift stores in Gatlin-burg and Pigeon Forge are now hir-ing.What we offer:

Good PayFlexible Hours

Fun Work Environment

We are looking for people who are:

Dependable & Hard Working

Get along with othersReady to Work!!

Please call 865-436-4602 between 9:00-4:30 Thurs-day, June 3rd to set up appoint-ment.

244 RETAIL

Red Rooster Pancake House hiring all positions for night shift. Apply in per-son 9am-noon. 3215 Parkway, Pi-geon Forge

NOW HIRING PM Servers. Apply Daily 3-6 PM: Mel’s Diner 119 Wears Valley Rd. Pigeon Forge

Immediate Opening for Utility/Cooks/Cashiers. Apply in per-son at the New Wood Grill Buffet located at traffic light #1 in Pigeon Forge between 9am and 3pm Monday - Friday.

242 RESTAURANT

E X P E R I E N C E D P A R T - T I M E B O O K K E E P E R WANTED Mini-mum 3 Years Ex-perience in Payroll, Accts Payable, Ex-cel/Word Experi-ence a plus,Salary based on experi-ence. Please send resume to P.O. BOX 809, Gatlin-burg, TN 37738.

239OFFICE/CLERICAL

Riverstone Resort now hiring Housekeep-ers. Apply in per-son 212 Dollywood Lane, Pigeon Forge, left at traffic light #8.

Now Hiring for Experi-enced Front Desk Clerk. Apply in person at Red Roof Inn, PF.

Laundry/inspector per-sonnel needed. Only motivated hard working peo-ple with integrity need apply in per-son at 652 Wears Valley Road, Pi-geon Forge, TN.

Housekeepers: Experi-enced only apply. Mountain Melodies Inn, 1949 Park-way, Pigeon Forge.

Housekeeper & Laun-dry Person Need-ed, Apply in per-son, 10am - 1pm. Spirit of the Smo-kies Condo Lodge, 2385 Parkway, Pi-geon Forge,

Hampton Inn Gatlin-burg now hiring for full-time Front Desk Associate. Must be reliable, customer focused, and self-motivated, with outgoing per-sonality. Hotel ex-perience preferred. 1st & 2nd shift Full & part time hours available. Hours are 3p.m. to 11p.m. Great start-ing pay and bene-fits. Must be avail-able to work week-ends. Please apply in person at 967 Parkway, Gatlin-burg, TN 37738

Four Seasons Motor Lodge in Gatlin-burg hiring Experi-enced Mature Day-shift Clerk. Please apply between 7am-3pm.

Exp. Desk Clerk/Audi-tor needed. Apply in person at Colo-nial House Motel in Pigeon Forge.

238 HOTEL/MOTEL

CLARION INN & SUITES

Looking for dependa-ble, detailed and customer service oriented personnel. Now accepting ap-plications for the following full time positions:

FRONT DESK

Accepting applications 1100 Parkway Gat-linburg, TN.

238 HOTEL/MOTEL

WAREHOUSE &STOCK 12.00 HR

LID’L DOLLY’S LIGHT 4 PF

Wahoo Ziplines and Sterling Springs Resort are looking for front desk clerk & laundry staff. Ap-plicant must be able to multitask, make quick deci-sions, and have strong guest serv-ice skills. F/T and P/T positions. Please come by our office Mon-Fri at 1200 Matthews Hollow Road, Sev-ierville between 3:00 and 4:00 pm for interviews.

The Spa at Riverstone Resort now hiring Experienced Mas-sage Therapist and Receptionist Part time. Please apply in person 212 Dol-lywood Ln, Pigeon Forge 286-3400

COLLEGESTUDENTS

& 2010 HS Grads$13 base-appt,

FT/PTschedules, sales/svc,

no exp nec, all ages 17+,

conditions apply, 865-366-0277

236 GENERAL

The Sevier County Economic Devel-opment Council is seeking a part time Project Manager. For a complete job description, please e m a i [email protected] or go online at sevier-c o u n t y j o b s . o r g Cover letter, re-sume & 3 referen-ces should be sent to Projects Manag-er P.O. Box 4066, Sevierville, TN 37864 by 4 pm on Wednesday, June 16, 2010. SCEDC is an Equal Oppor-tunity Employer

SALES CLERK10.00 Hr.

Lid’l Dolly’sLight #4, P.F.

PART TIME WORK ALL AGES 17+

Great pay, ideal forcollege students &

’10 hs grads, customer sales/svc,

will train, conditions apply,865-366-0277

Local cabin company taking applications for Reservationist, Assistant Manager, and Cleaners. Ap-ply in person at: 333 Ski Mtn. Rd. Gatlinburg.

Laurel Crest, A Blue-green Resort, Seeking Seasonal Activities Associ-ate. Nights and Weekends a Must. Please apply in person at: Laurel Crest Resort, 2628 Laurel Crest Lane, Pigeon Forge, TN

Housekeeper Needed $10/hr Full-time Apply Lid’l Dolly’s at traffic light #4

236 GENERAL

ClassifiedsCorrections

After the first insertion, want ads scheduled to be published again on Tue., Wed., Thu., or Fri. may be canceled or corrected between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. on the day prior to publication. For ads on Sat., due Thu. prior to 3 p.m.; for Sun., Fri. prior to 10 a.m. and Mon., prior to 11 a.m.

Notice of typographical or other errors must be given before 2nd insertion. The Mountain Press does not assume responsibility for an ad beyond the cost of the ad itself and shall not be liable for failure to publish an ad for a typographical error.

Deadlines

Online http:// www.themountainpress.com

OR, www.adquest.com All line ads published in The Mountain

Press are placed FREE on a searchable network of over 500 newspapers’

classifieds located at http://www.themountainpress.com.

WANT TO KNOW WHEN A CLASSIFIED ITEM IS AVAILABLE?

Go to http:// www.adquest/request/ to register your request and we will notify

you by e-mail when it becomes available in the Classifieds .

Edition Deadline Sunday Friday, 10 a.m. Monday Friday, 11 a.m. Tuesday Monday, 10 a.m. Wednesday Tuesday, 10 a.m. Thursday Wednesday, 10 a.m. Friday Thursday, 10 a.m. Saturday Friday, 10 a.m. Good News in the Smokies Thursday, 10 a.m.

110 SPECIALNOTICES

PHOTOS SUBMITTEDIf you submit a

photo for publication,

please pick it up after it runs

in the paper within ONE MONTH ofpublicationdate. Our

photo files will be discarded each month.Thank You!

does not recommend or endorse any

product, service or company. For more

information and assistance regarding the investigation of

FINANCING, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES AND

WORK AT HOME OPPORTUNITIES, this newspaper urges its

readers to contact the Better Business

Bureau, 2633 Kingston Pike, Suite 2,

Knoxville, TN 37919, Phone (865)692-1600.

110 SPECIALNOTICES

Unauthorized use of The Mountain Presstubes for circulars

or any other advertisementauthorizes a

minimum $250 charge for which

the advertiser will be billed.

110 SPECIALNOTICES

Jacket and umbrella turned in to office of Paul Whaley, Veteran's Service Officer, following Memorial Day cer-emonies at Court-house. Call 453-8073.

107 LOST & FOUND

CONNIE E. HOLT, JUVENILE COURT

CLERK DEPUTY CLERK

06/03, 06/10, 06/17, 06/24

LEGALS

ROGER SANFORD

Respondent/Natural Father

And

LISA THOMAS

Respondent/Half-Sister

NON-RESIDENT NOTICE

IN THIS CAUSE, it appearing from the "Petition for Custody", which is sworn to, that the Respondent, ROG-ER SANFORD, is a non-resident of Ten-nessee, it is ordered that publication be made for four (4) con-secutive weeks, as re-quired by law, in the Mountain Press, a newspaper published in Sevier County, Ten-nessee notifying said non-resident Respond-ent to file an answer with Petitioner’s attor-ney, Jerry K. Galyon, whose address is 119 Court Avenue, Sevier-ville, TN 37862 and the Juvenile Court of Sevi-er County, Tennessee within thirty (30) days from the last date of publication, exclusive of said last date of publication, or a judg-ment by default may be entered and the cause set for hearing ex parte as to said Re-spondent on 25th day of August, 2010 at 9:00 a.m. before a judge of our Juvenile Court.

THIS 1st DAY OF JUNE, 2010.

LEGALS

To The Classifieds! 428-0748

People RespondPeople Respond

The Mountain Press Thursday June 03 2010 Classifieds 11A

Page 12: June 3, 2010

12A Classifieds The Mountain Press Thursday June 03, 2010

AUCTION The Strawberry Patch Inn

FEATURES: 11,000 cars per day – 15 million visitors to The Great Smokey Mountains - Over 248’ frontage on Little River - 1.17 acres, one of Townsend’s best locations for commercial and retail - A Proven long term history of income - Historic overlay potential 120 year old hand hewn logs - Over 11,400 sf, 2 buildings in the heart of Townsend - emerging market retail and commercial sales - 30 minutes to Pigeon Forge, 5 minutes to The Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 15 minutes to Cades Cove - Picnic area - One of Little River’s most scenic areas for peace and quiet - 11 Suites, 2 commercial retail spaces

PROPERTY TOURS: Please come out for maps, property tours and viewing on Sunday, June 6, from 1-4 pm, and 1 hour prior to auction.

DIRECTIONS: From Maryville take Hwy 321 towards Townsend to property on left at corner of Old Hwy 73.

TERMS: 10% down day of sale, balance in 20 days. Property to be sold with a 10% buyer’s premium plus a $2000 survey origination fee per tract.

Who ya gonna call? If you have a problem with the delivery of your morning Mountain Press , please call the Circulation Department at 428-0746, ext. 239 & 231 Monday - Friday and your paper will be delivered to you on the same day. Newspapers from calls after 10:00 a.m. will be delivered with the next day’s paper. On Saturday, Sunday and holidays you may dial 428-0748 extensions 239 & 231. If complaints are received between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m., papers will be delivered the same day. Newspapers from calls received after 10:00 a.m. will be delivered with the next day’s paper. This applies to in-county home delivery only.

Sevier County’s Only Daily Newspaper

(Answers tomorrow)THYME DRAMA EXTANT INVESTYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: What the candidates ended up with whentheir TV spots aired — “AD-VERSITY”

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEby Mike Argirion and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these four Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

YINKK

IMDEG

PHYNOT

GENNIE

©2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.All Rights Reserved.

NE

W B

IBLE

Jum

ble

Books G

o T

o:

http://w

ww

.tyndale

.com

/jum

ble

/

”“A:

Winn. Itasca 2007,Like new, 23.5 ft.,Class B+, 15,000mi, Mercedes Die-sel, 1 slide, manyextras, incl swivelpass seat, masser-ator sys, a dreamto drive & park,$57,000. 865-577-3090

837 CAMPER SALES

NEW D WIDES SETUPPRIVATE LAND WOW

BOYDS CREEK IN SEVIERVILLEAND EXIT 417

EZY EZY HOTLINE # 865-453-2931

829 MANUFACTUREDHOME SALES

NEW SINGLE WIDES& DOUBLE WIDESEZY PURCHASE HOTLINE

WE LOVE TRADESHAVE LAND

865-453-7523

829 MANUFACTUREDHOME SALES

Outstanding Commer-cial Building ready for nightly rental of-fice or pizza house restaurant. In Gat-linburg next to Westgate Resort 865-978-1056

722 BUSINESSBUILDINGS

OWNER FINANCING1- 5 AC Tracts approx

2 miles to sevier-ville Paved Roads, Underground Utilit-ies, Water Starting at $45,000. Buy over 1.4 AC Tract for $261.Mo. Call Joe Acosta @ Barnes Real Es-tate Company 305-776-6206.

718 LAND FOR SALE

LeConte Landing, FSBO. Reduced. 3BR 2BA, Very Desirable location. 865-414-0117.

House for SaleGreat location in the

Heart of PigeonForge

1400+ sq ft3BR/2+BA

Real wood floorsNew tile in bathrooms

***$134,900***Not for rent or leaseCall 865-850-6738

Dandridge, 2BR/1BA, Chestnut Hill Area 1500sq ft. $68,000. Call 865-509-0302.

710 HOMES FORSALE

BUILDER BLOW OUT$93,900 2br, 2ba

Townhomes Aw-some Views! Large Master suite, Stainless Applian-ces Sevierville, Call Realty Plus 428-8155

709 TOWNHOUSES

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICEAll real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, family status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD Toll-free at 1-800-669-9777, The Toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

In Seymour area: 3BR/1BA, water & sewer furnished. $600/mo. + $300 damage dep. No pets. Call 865-654-2519.

For Rent 4BR on lake home. Gated Comm. $1000 mo 1st & last mth. 428-0103

Executive Home 3 BR 2 car garage Wears Valley Call (865) 607-4792

3BR/2BA FP, lg. screened deck, hot tub, in Gat. 1st, last mo. req. 1 yr. lease. Great Loca-tion! $950/mo. 864-992-0363

2BR 2BA Furnished fp, hot tub, jaccuzi, private. Mtn view. $750 mth/dep. 453-6547

865-774-5919

BOBRENTSAPARTMENTSPIGEON FORGE

ANDSEVIERVILLE

3 BD / 2.5 BA$800/mo.

(865) 908-6789

DOWNTOWNSEVIERVILLE

Cute 2BR/1BAwalking distance

to school.$800/mo. – $800/dep.405-2116

3BR/2BASev. Peace & quiet.

2 miles from Courthouse.No steps. DBL garage,

Ex-clean. No Pets.No smoking.

$850 mth. 453-0205

699 HOME RENTALS

NICE, CLEAN IN KODAK4 BD / 2 BA + GARAGE

4 MILES FROM EXIT 407

$950/MONTH + DEPOSIT. NO PETS.

865-712-5238

699 HOME RENTALS

Sevierville 2+1 Dwide $500. Plus Dep. NO PETS. Ref. Call 933-6544.

Low income, 1 & 2 BR Mobile home, some furniture, 865-654-8702.

Kodak 3+2 $550 2+2 $450. No pets. References. 933-6544

3BR/2BA rent to own. Seymour. $750/mo No pets. 865-765-7929.

3BR/ 2BA with applian-ces. W/D conn. NO Pets. Quiet area. $650mth. $550. dam. dep. Call af-ter 6pm 908-1272.

698 MOBILE HOMERENTALS

697 CONDORENTALS

RIVERWALK1BR/1BA TO 2BR/2BA$545.00 to $695.00865-429-2962

Pigeon Forge 2br 1ba $650 mth + $650 dep. Pets OK. 404-324-3759.

On Lake! 1BR Town-home. Elect./H2O incl. $160 wk + dep. 865-640-8751

Murrell Meadows2BR 1BA $455Close to Walter State865-429-2962

Mountain View Town-home apartment for rent 2BR 1.5BA. Newly re-modeled with hard-wood flooring & new carpet. Locat-ed in Gatlinburg. $650 mth 1st mth rent & security de-posit required. For more information call 865-868-0449 Mon-Fri 8:30am-5:30pm or 865-356-3015 after hours & weekends

696 APARTMENTSFOR RENT

Large 1BR Water, app furnished. No pets. Ref. $450 + dep. 680-3078.

Gatlinburg 2BR apt Quiet area in city. $550 mo. No smoking or pets. 786-412-7871

CROSSCREEK2BR/1.5 BA to2BR/2BA gardenapts. $545 to $580Trolly access865-429-2962

CROSSCREEK2BR 1BA TownhomeJust off the pkwy.$470 865-429-4470

Beautiful Newly re-decorated 2BR 1BA. Sevierville $550, $400 dep. 712-0254.

A Great Location. 2 blocks off Parkway near Walmart. 2BR/2BA w/car-port, w/d & water furn. Approx. 1400 SF, non-smoking environment. No pets please. $695 month. Year lease. Call 865-453-5396.

3BD/2BA Apt. in Sev. Non smoker/ no pets/ ref. req. $675 mo/ $500 dep. 865-573-3549 or 865-607-3007.

2BR1BA Apt. Sev. $550mth. Clean, 1yr lease req. Call 428-1514.

2BR/1BA, 4x8 storage room, ground level, in Sev. $500/mo. + dep. Short or long-term lease avail. Call 423-619-1925.

2 B R / 1 . 5 B A . To w n -house. NO pets. Patio, year lease. $525+. 453-5079.

2BR apts for rent Sev-ierville area $475 $500 $550 $600. 908-7805 or 368-1327

Now Leasing,New Apartments

in Gatlinburg

behind GP High School near trolley stop

2 BR / 1 BA$585/mo.

Call (865) 436-3565

Gatlinburg area:

2BR/1BANo pets. Credit check,

Sec. Dep Required. $600/mth

430-4222

Kodak:Spacious 2BR/2BA

2 car garageNo pets. 1 yr lease.

$800 mth/$550 dep.865-932-2613

NICE, CLEAN1 BR / 1 BA

IN SEVIERVILLE$380.00 + DEPOSIT

NO PETS865-712-5238

696 APARTMENTSFOR RENT

Spacious & Quiet!2 BR / 2 BA

Apts. for Rentin Wears ValleyFrom $650/mo.12 Mo. LeasePets Allowed

(865) 329-7807

696 APARTMENTSFOR RENT

FOR RENTRooms in Gatlinburg

On Site Laundry, No Pets. Cable, Phone, Wifi,

Pool included$140/week. No Deposit

865-621-2941

GatlinburgRooms for Rent

FurnishedAll Utilities, Cable and

Tax included

$100 per week865-621-2941

DOWNTOWNSEVIERVILLE

428 Park Rd.near trolley stop

Includes All UtilitiesFree Wi-Fi, Cable, Laundry,

Kitchens, Clean Rooms, NO PETS.

405-2116

693 ROOMS FORRENT

3BR/2BA in Sev. 626 King Fisher, Unit 1, All appl. furnished. w/d connection. No smoking or pets please. $700mth. $700 sec. dep. 1yr lease. 865-599-2009.

2BR Duplex. Quiet country setting. Water, Pets ok $575 mth. 865-806-9896

610 DUPLEX FORRENT

Office building for rent. 119 South Blvd, just off pkwy. $475 mth. 933-6544

Affordable Office Space for rent in busy complex. 800sq.ft. with nice layout. Semi fur-nished. Three of-fice’s & conference room. Also, break room w/frige. $550mth. Call 865-388-5455 for more info.

605 BUSINESSRENTALS

3300 or 6600sq.ft. re-tail/ showroom space for rent in busy complex, with large delivery door. $2200mth for 3300 sq. ft. or $4000mth for 6600sq.ft. Call 865-388-5455 for more info.

Office / Warehouse space for rent.

Convenientlylocated, water/sewer

included. Call 388-0263 or 850-2231

for more info.

605 BUSINESSRENTALS

For Sale A-1 pre-owned dryers,

washers, ranges & refrigerators

All with warranty. Cagles Furniture and Appliances

453-0727

590 APPLIANCES

589 FURNITURE

Free Field Dirt Want-ed, Call 865-932-6468.

585 GARDENEQUIPMENT

Free 1yr old female large dog, mutt, long brown hair, 1 blue eye, 1 brown eye, has rabies shots, not house broken, loves to be petted, loves to go on long walks. very loyal acting. Call 933-2662 or 314-7165.

Female brown & white short haired, medi-um sized dog. 1yr old, house broken, very friendly, very cute looking. Has rabies shots, need-ing a good home for a very good dog. 933-2662 or 314-1765.

For Sale:Antique Tobacco Bas-

kets $15. Call 865-621-4477

572 ANTIQUES

Truck Tires 245-70 R 17” used $20 each. Craftsman Lawn Mower 42” cut/ 6 speed, new starter, new battery, new solenoid, new drive belt $500. Like new Thermus gas grill 2.60 $50 36” color TV $75 Call 865-250-9975

557 MISC. SALES

STUFF/ Multi-Family, Fri/Sat 8-4pm. Cash only! Furn, jewelry, toys, fish-ing rods, cook-ware, baskets, canning jars, much more. Boyds Ck/Hodges Bd, R on McClary, L on Sand Plant to sale.

Splendor Oaks Com-munity Yard Sale, Fri/Sat 8am. East on Rt 139 from Hwy 66. Info at 365-5461.

Saturday only 8am-3pm. Big Neigh-borhood Sale: 6 Family. Lots of good stuff. 915 Ea-gle View Dr, Ko-dak.

Rain or shine. Applian-ces, home school books, clothing, Thomas the Train, much more. 8am-? Fri & Sat 609 Greenfern Trail, Seymour

New Yard Sale, bicy-cle, tv’s, exercise machine, jewelry, large variety of items. Fri/Sat 8-3pm. 1226 Rachel St. Sev. Boyds Creek Rd to Korey St. to Rachel. Dog-wood Hills.

NAME YOUR PRICE! MULTI family sale. Thursday-Saturday Includes medical equipment, furni-ture, baby items & clothes. 240 Bruce St., Sevierville Across from Sevier 911 Offices. Join us & LET’S MAKE A DEAL.

Multi Family Yard Sale, Fri/Sat 8-4pm, clothes, toys, baby items, rugs, furn, bedding, curtains, books, garden items, misc. household, flat screen monitor, left hand female golf clubs, shoes, purs-es, pet items. 2521 Lees Path, Sev.

HUGE Yard Sale Thurs, Fri & Sat. Furniture, kids clothes, toys & lots more. Follow signs from Dunns Market

555 GARAGE &YARD SALES

ON-THE-SPOT

SAVINGS

CLASSIFIEDS428-0746

581 PETS

Page 13: June 3, 2010

xxxxxxxxx ◆ A13Thursday, June 3, 2010 ◆ The Mountain Press

13 Thursday

my

Visit www.themountainpress.com

and click on Community News.

You can post:

Page 14: June 3, 2010

The Mountain Press ◆ Thursday, June 3, 2010A14 ◆ Comics

14 Comics

Dear Annie: My 21-year-old son, “Charlie,” a college junior, is dating a 16-year-old high-school sophomore. His father and I are sick with worry. We sat Charlie down and explained that he is being unfair to such a young girl and risking jail, as well as his future. In addition, Charlie has been working toward obtaining a job that requires an extensive background check, and this relationship is no secret.

Charlie thinks we are overreacting. He is certain this girl would “never do that to him” and that the relationship will not affect his job prospects. Her parents are aware they are dating and put no restrictions on their daughter. Because we do not want our son to date her, this young lady thinks we don’t like her, which is not so.

Do you have any advice for us, Annie? Part of me wants to back off, thinking some of her appeal is that we don’t approve. On the other hand, I am consider-ing telling Charlie that if he doesn’t follow our rules, he doesn’t live in our house. I don’t want a prison sentence to make my son realize he’s made a huge mistake. -- Worried in NYC

Dear NYC: In New York, a person under the age of 17 is consid-ered incapable of giving consent, which means if this girl and your son are having sex, he could be convicted of a criminal act even if his girlfriend doesn’t accuse him.

We also wonder why a 21-year-old man is inter-ested in a high-school

sophomore. Kicking him out of the house is unlikely to wake him up, and if her parents are neglectful and uncaring, there’s not much you can do. Enlist someone whose opinion your son respects to talk some sense into him. But at some point, you can no longer protect your children and must let them learn their les-sons the hard way. Sorry.

Dear Annie: My wife of 16 years is depressed about gaining weight. She has given birth to two wonderful children and, according to her, is about 40 pounds overweight. I’m not the ideal weight, either, and could stand to lose the same amount.

Annie, I tell my wife every day how gorgeous and sexy she is, and I mean those words from the bottom of my heart. How can I make her understand that she is as beautiful as the day we met? She needs no makeup to look spec-tacular. If she walked into a room wearing rags, she would still be the prettiest woman in the place. I hate see-ing her sad. Her smile is too pretty to hide. Any advice? -- Chris in Massachusetts

Dear Chris: It’s obvi-ous that you love your wife, but her self-image has taken a hit you can’t easily fix. Women are particularly susceptible to societal pressure to be thin, and after two kids, her body may look sub-

stantially different than she’d like. Since you also need to lose weight, enlist her help. Get into a workout regime, and ask her to join you so she can provide incen-tive and encouragement -- for you. It could do you both a world of good.

Dear Annie: Here is yet another hair col-oring story. Recently, while I was sitting in a hospital waiting area, I saw an older man get up to visit the restroom. Upon his return, he sat down next to me and proceeded to get comfortable by leaning on my shoulder. I said nothing, waiting for his wife to discover what he had done. She finally got his attention and said, “We are sitting over here.”

He then looked at me and realized his mis-take. He gasped and stuttered for a second and said, “I just saw the white hair and sat down.” I will be 80 this fall, and it’s nice to know I can still pick up the boys. -- Joan

Dear Joan: Your letter was too cute not to share with our readers. Thanks for a good chuckle.

Annie’s Mailbox is writ-ten by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

A d v i c e

t o d Ay ’ s p u z z l e

Family Circus Close to Home

Zits

Blondie

Baby Blues

Beetle Bailey

Garfield

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

For Better Or Worse

Tina’s Groove

Son’s underage relationship worries parents