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On 3 JobScq 84 PkgSeq 001 *~ *******ORIGIN MIXED ADC 325 -- --.. LIBRARY OF FLORIDA HISTORY OZone 3 0 crowned district U/ champions. See XL d,.. __ morepage B. A dia ', 'Vol. 88 No. 128 JacksonYes: We're right on track From staff reports The leadership of the Jackso- nYes campaign says the organi- zation is on schedule in terms of collecting the number of signed petitions needed to put the liquor by the drink ques- tion on the ballot. Speaking at the Optimist Club of Jackson County Tues- day, JacksonYes' Jamie Street- nian and Tommy Lassman told club members the organiza- tion has collected some 2,800 petitions, or roughly 40 percent of the 7,0,00 petitions needed to trigger an election. The campaign is not yet at the half-way mark in terms of the time required to collect all the signed petitions needed. Organizers say JacksonYes has mailed out petitions to roughly half the registered voters in the county. JacksonYes was formed to put the liquor question on the bal- lot. Currently, restaurants and bars can serve only beer and wine; hard liquor can only be bought at package stores. The ballot question will ask county residents whether or not to See PETITION, Page 5A ONE-STOP CENTER Job center May open longer to deal with job seekers BY DEBORAH BUCKHALTER dbuckhalter@jcfloridan.com Traffic was steady Tuesday at the Chipola Regional Workforce Devel- opment's Qne-Stop Center as former Dozier employees have begun their quest to find new jobs. The facility for troubled juveniles was closed Thursday, and 185 jobs went with it. Only a handful of workers had found other work as of the closing date. Workforce Executive Director Rich- ard Williams said it was a good thing the center arranged for a mobile unit, to help handle the crowd Tuesday and today. The unit will be on the One-Stop Center grounds at 4636 U.S. Highway 90 East, Suite E, in Marianna from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. today, as it was Tuesday. If the need warrants, it may be there another day as well. The large motor home is outfitted with eight computers. Williams said job-seekers were coming in all day Tuesday to create or brush up their ex- isting resumes, fax them to potential employers, look for jobs online, file for unemployment benefits, and perform other tasks related to their job search. Williams said the services are all free. For instance, people can go online and post their job skills and get set up for e- mail notification if a matching job be- comes available. Likewise, employers seeking workers are notified if there's a registered person with the skills they need. The Early Learning Coalition is also in the suite with Workforce, so parents can find a ready list of child care pro- viders to match their new work hours. People can also search online job resources from home at www.employ florida.com, and can go deeper in the site if they register with Workforce. Workforce held workshops every day at Dozier for about a month, Williams said. But not everyone took advantage of the agency being on site. That some' are just now coming in for help is a typ- ical reaction, Williams said. es mobile MARK SKINNER/FLORIDAN Frank Bernaldo, a former Dozier employee, gets some help from Candice Kirkland Tuesday at the Marianna One-Stop Center. A mobile unit has been set up at the Marianna office to help laid off state employees file for unemployment and hunt for work. He said that, for some, the process of dealing with the loss of a job is similar to the grieving process in the loss of a loved one. They go through some of the same stages, and sometimes get stuck in denial until theywalkoutthe door of the old workplace for the last time. Workforce has programs available 'that can help the stricken workers move beyond despair toward accep- tance and hope. For employees interested in retrain- ing for different occupations, experts are available to meet with them one- on-one to talk about their fields of interest and determine which are the See WORKFORCE, Page 5A IVarianna City may go it alone on inspections Currently uses county inspector; county keeps fees BY DEBORAH BUCKHALTER dbuckhalter@jcfloridan.com The Marianna City Commission is thinking of hiring a contractor to do inspections of businesses that open or , modify their existing structures, a task that currently is carried out by the Jack- son County building department on behalf of the city. The county collects the fees for the services, and the city is wondering whether it should hire someone else to ' do the inspections so the city can keep the fees. In the boom years of 2006-2008, the annual fees collected for inspections in Marianna came to about $66,000. But now, in the current economic climate, the annual inspections generate be- tween $25,000 and $28,000. Still, the commission has asked Mari- anna City Manager Jim Dean to study , the matter'further and bring it proposals the commission could use to advertise for a contract inspector. The city briefly discussed various options at the June meeting, including putting someone on city staff, but ultimately decided to first investigate a contract arrangement. In addition to their desire to keep the fees, some city commissioners said they also had other concerns about leaving the inspections to the county. Some commissioners were under the impression that the county used a contractor, anyway, for all such inspections. However, the county only uses a con- tractor in the event that staff is over- loaded, according to County Adminis- trator Ted'Lakey. That circumstance is rare these days, he said. Some city commissioners were also concerned that the county's staff in- spector was operating under a provi- sional license to do the 'inspections. See INSPECTION, Page 5A Verdict Reached Casey Anthony found not guilty The Associated Press ORLANDO Casey Anthony was acquitted Tuesday of murdering her 2-year-old daughter in a case that became a national sensation on ca- ble TV, with its CSI-style testimony about duct-tape marks on the child's face and the smell of death inside a car trunk. After a trial of a month and a half, the jury took less than 11 hours to find Anthony not guilty of first-de- gree murder, aggravated manslaugh- ter and aggravated child abuse. She was convicted only of four misdemeanor counts of lying to in- vestigators who were, looking into the June 2008 disappearance of her daughter, Caylee. Tears welled in Anthony's eyes, her face reddened, her lips trembled, and she began breathing heavily as she listened to the verdict. Anthony, 25, could have gotten the death pen- alry if comnicied of murder. Many in Lhe crowd ot about 500 people outside the courthouse re- acted with anger after the verdict Was read, chanting, "Justice for Cay- lee!" One man yelled, "Baby killer!" Given the relative speed with which the jury came back with a ver- dict, many court-watchers were ex- pecting Anthony to be convicted in the killing, and they were stunned by the outcome. Sentencing was set for Thursday. Anthony could get up to a year behind bars on each count of lying to investigators. But since she .has been in jail for nearly three years already, she could walk free. Prosecutors contended that An- thony a single mother living with her parents suffocated Caylee with duct tape because she wanted to be free to hit the nightclubs and spend time with her boyfriend. Defense attorneys argued that the little girl accidentally drowned in' the family swimming pool, and that Anthdny panicked and hid the body See TRIAL, Page 5A THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Defense attorney Jose Baez and his client, Casey Anthony, react after the jury acquitted her of murdering her daughter, Caylee, during Anthony's murder trial at the Orange County Courthouse in Orlando on Tuesday. ) CLASSIFIEDS...4-6B > El[ TEPTAlr ]ErJT...3B ': LOCAL,..3A, 5A )) OBITUARIES...5A > OPINION...4A This Newspaper F P Recycled Newsprint 8 2. 9l 7 15161 80050 9 Facebook WT?!- .. ig ,: .. .. .. Chevrolet-Buick-Cadillac-Nissan 4204 Lafayette St.* Marianna, FL. S (85M I S.-T-i.-- .. Sus > SPORTS...1-2B 1_1~1111_1111__11_1_1_11 11 111111_11_1~111 I 11 11~~111~-111---11___1~1_1_~1_~111_1 ~----- ---kiv ~TVL:.TII11.1~. Is JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com ,12A WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 W~sileov ~rrJt Tod Scattered Storms. TOda8y -Justin Kiefer / WMBB ^,^g High 950 Low 74o '7 S High -950 Low 75 Tomorrow Thunderstorms. High - Low - Saturday Showers and Storms. High 980 Low 74 Friday - High 98 Low 770 Sunday Scattered Storms. INormal MII. 1.11 NOlrna lor yeai So.j. TIDES ULTRA VIOLET INDEX Panama City Apalachicola Port St. Joe Destin Pensacola Low - Low - Low - Low - Low - RIVER READINGS Woodruff Blountstown Marianna Caryville 9:38 PM High 12:47 PM High 9:04 AM High 10:15 PM High 10:49 PM High Reading 39.11 ft. .65 ft. 4.70 ft. .84 ft. 2:08 PM 8:41 AM 1:59 PM 2:32 PM 3:05 PM Flood Stage 66.0 ft. 15.0 ft. 19.0 ft. 12.0 ft. 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate, 6-7 High, 8-10 Very High, 11+ Extreme 01 2 3 '.... i . -- __ ;'h. THE SUN AND MOON Sunrise 5:44 AM Sunset 7:48 PM Moonrise 11:16 AM Moonset 11:22 PM July July July July 8 15 23 30 FLORIDA'S easEf xerene PANHANDLE e if MEDIA PARTNERS WEA 100" ,r .....- . .. .....3 '' .. .. : .. . .... JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN Publisher Valeria Roberts vroberts@jcfloridan.com Managing Editor Michael Becker inbecker@jcfloridan.com .Circulation Manager Dena Oberski doberski@jcfloridan.com CONTACT US Telephone: (850) 526-3614 FAX: (850) 482-4478 Email: editorial@jcfloridan.com Mailing Address: P.O. Box 520, Marianna, FL 32447 Street Address: 4403 Constitution Lane Marianna, FL 32446 Office Hours: Weekdays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. MISS YOUR PAPER? You should receive your newspaper no later than 6 a.m. If it does not arrive, calltCircula- tion between 6 a.m. and noon, Tuesday to Friday, and 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. on Sunday. The. Jackson County Floridan (USPS 271-840J is published Tuesday though Friday and Sunday mornings. Periodical postage paid at Marianna, FL. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Home delivery: $11.23 per month; $32.83 for three months; $62.05 for six months; and $123.45 for one year. All prices include applicable state and local taxes. Mail subscriptions must be paid in advance. Mail subscriptions are: $46.12 for three months; $92.24 for six months; and $184.47 for one year. ADVERTISING The advertiser agrees that the publisher shall not be liable for damages arising out of errors and advertisements beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied liy that portion of the advertise- ments in which the error occurred, whether such error is due to the negligence of the publisher's employees or otherwise, and there shall be not liability for non-inser- tion of any advertisement beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. This newspaper will not knowingly accept or publish illegal material of any kind. Advertis- ing which expresses preference based on legally protected personal characteristics is not acceptable. HOWTO GETYOUR, NEWS PUBLISHED The Jackson County Floridan will publish news of general interest free of charge. Submit your news or Community Calendar events via email, fax,'mail, or hand delivery. Fees may apply for wedding, engagement, anniversary and birth announcements. Forms are available at the Floridan offices. Photographs must be of good quality and suitable for print. The Floridan reserves the right to edit all submissions. GETTING IT RIGHT The Jackson County Floridan's policy is to correct mistakes promptly. To report an error, please call 526-3614 Monday-Friday. Community Calendar TODAY A Mobile One-Stop will be at the Marianna One-Stop Center (4636 Highway 90 East, Suite E), 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. July 5-6, to help meet increased demand from job seekers. Call 718-0326. ) Jackson County Habitat for Humanity Ware- house hours: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. D Alcoholics Anonymous Open meeting, noon to 1 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 2901 Caledonia St., Marianna, in the AA room. )) "Cool Church" 1 to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday in the Marianna First United Methodist Church Fel- lowship Hall (inside the Youth building). Stay cool with free air conditioning and ice cold water. Call 482-4502. ) The Jackson Hospital Board of Trustees con- venes a Building and Grounds Committee meeting at 5:30 p.m. in the Hudnall Building community room. THURSDAY, JULY 7 n Jackson County Farmers Market is open 6:30 a.m. to noon (or until goods sell out) Tuesdays, Thursday and Saturdays in Madison Street Park in Marianna. ) Free Money Sense Financial Literacy class, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Goodwill Career Training Center, 4742 Highway 90 in Marianna. Register for no-cost services Mondays, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.; or Thursday, 1 to 4 p.m. during orientation. Call 526-0139. n Jackson County Senior Citizens, 2931 Optimist Drive in Marianna, hosts a free presentation/lun- cheon starting at 10 a.m. Humana Inc. represen- tatives will discuss "Financial Protection." Call 482-5028. ) Orientation 1.to 4 p.m. at the Goodwill Career Training Center, 4742 Highway 90 in Marianna. Reg- ister for free job placement and computer training classes offered to people with disadvantages/dis- abilities. Call 526-0139. )) Free wildfire safety seminar Fla. Division of 'Forestry and Jackson County CERT present "How to Have a Firewise Home," 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Emergency Operations Center, 2819 Panhandle Road in Marianna. Learn how to protect families, homes from wildfire. No charge. Public welcome. Register by calling 272-1372 or mailing training. jacksoncitizencorps@gmail.com. William Dunaway Chapter, Florida Society, Sons of the American Revolution, meets at Jim's Buffet and Grill in Marianna, with a Dutch treat meal starting at 6:30 p.m. Compatriot Ed Wood will discuss his recent six-week missionary trip to Kenya. Anyone interested in SAR is welcome. Call 594-6664.. ) Free Summer Concert Series Dry Creek, 7 to 9 p.m. at Madison Street Park in downtown Marianna. Bring lawn chairs, coolers. Presented by Jackson County Parks department, Main Street Marianna. Call 718-5210 or 718-1022. ) Alcoholics Anonymous Closed discussion, 8 to 9 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 2901 Cale- donia St., Marianna, in the AA room. Attendance limited to persons with a desire to stop drinking. FRIDAY, JULY 8 n First on the Second The Jackson County Chamber of Commerce First Friday Power Break- fast, held this month on the second Friday, is 7 to 8:30 a.m. in the Jackson County Agriculture Conference Center, 2741 Pennsylvania Ave. in Marianna. Breakfast/networking at 7 a.m.; program at 7:45 a.m. Rick Marcum, executive director of Opportunity Florida, will present "Fast Forward to the Future: Getting High Speed Internet Access to Rural Florida." D Blood Drive Southeastern Community Blood Center's mobile -jr,r ,.. ili be at the Graceville Cor- -ec tional Institute, 7 a.m. to 2 p.m.; or give blood 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday -Friday at 2503 Commercial Park Drive, Marianna. Call 526-4403. V "Cool Church" The Marianna First United Methodist Church Fellowship Hall (inside the Youth building), 2901 Caledonia St., is open to the public 1 to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday. Stay cool with free air conditioning and ice cold water. Call 482-4502. ) Better Breathers helping meet the challenges .of chronic lung disease meets 2 to 3 p.m. in the Hudnall Building community room at Jackson Hospital, 4230 Hospital Drive in Marianna. Sandy Watson of Amedisys Home Health Care will present, "Family & Friends CPR." No cost. Light refreshments served, Call 718-2849. n Celebrate Recovery Adult, teen meetings to "overcome hurts, habits and hang-ups in a safe environment," 7 p.m., Evangel Worship Center, 2645 Pebble Hill Road. Dinner: 6 p.m. (free for first-time guests). Child care available. Call 209-7856 or 573-1131. ) Alcoholics Anonymous open meeting, 8 to 9 p.m. in the AA room at First United Methodist Church, 2901 Caledonia St., Marianna. SATURDAY, JULY 9 ) Cox Family Reunion Descendents of William Henry and Elizabeth Owens Cox will gather at 10 a.m. in the Circle Hill Church, 7170 Circle Hill Road in Sneads. Bring a covered dish. Call 592-8823 or 592-4779. SUNDAY, JULY 10 n Alcoholics Anonymous closed discussion, 6:30 p.m., 4349 W. Lafayette St., Marianna (in one-story building behind 4351W. Lafayette St.). Attendance limited to persons with a desire to stop drinking. MONDAY, JULY 11 a Chipola College will hold early fall registra- tion for returning students from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call 718-2211; visit www.chipola.edu. D Orientation -10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Goodwill Career Training Center, 4742 Highway 90 in Mari- anna. Register for free job placement and computer training classes offered to people with disadvan- tages/disabilities. Call 526-0139. ) Lions Club of Marianna meeting, Jim's Buffet & Grill, at noon on second and fourth Mondays. Call 482 2005. a "Cool Church" 1 to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday in the Marianna First United Methodist Church Fel- lowship Hall (inside the Youth building). Stay cool with free air conditioning and ice cold water. Call 482-4502. D Today is the deadline to order copies the Pilot Club of Marianna's 2012 "Community Birthday Calendar." To include a listing (500) or order a .alendar ($3), call 482-7507. The Jackson Hospital Board of Trustees con- venes a Joint Conference Committee meeting, 5:30 p.m. in the Hospital boardroom. ) Alcoholics Anonymous open meeting, 8 to 9 p.m. in the AA room of First United Methodist Church, 2901 Caledonia St., Marianna. TUESDAY, JULY 12 a Chipola College will hold early fall registra- tion for returning students from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Call 718-2211; visit www.chipola.edu. * Heaven's Garden Food Pantry distributes food 10 a.m. to noon on the second Tuesday of the month. Line begins at 9 a.m. Jackson County resi- dents only. Call 579-9963 or visit www.aidaspina. org. ) Republican Club of West Florida meeting, noon, Jim's Buffet and Grill in Marianna. Guest speaker: Republican Senatorial candidate Adam Hasner via Skype. Call 718-5411. Optimist Club of Jackson County board meet- ing, noon, First Capital Bank, Marianna. ) Free quilting, crocheting or knitting class led by Christine Gilbert, 1 p.m. at Jackson County Senior Citizens, 2931 Optimist Drive, Marianna. Call 482-5028. Marianna Sit-n-Sew presented by the Jackson County Quilters Guild, Tuesdays, 6 to 8 p.m., First United Methodist Church Youth Hall, Clinton Street, behind Marianna Post Office. Call 272-7068. ) Marianna American Legion monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the American Legion building on the west end of the agricultural center parking lot, 3627 U.S. Highway 90 West. Sgt. Max Thomas will give an update on the Marianna National Guard unit and its last deployment. Open to all veterans and their spouses. Call 850-482-5526 for information,. The submission deadline for this calendar is two days before publication. Submit to: Community Calendar, Jackson County Floridan, P. 0. Box 520, Marianna, FL 32447, email editorial@jcfloridan.com, fax (850) 482-4478 or bring items to 4403 Constitution Lane in Marianna. Police Roundup MARIANNA POLICE DEPARTMENT The Marianna Police De- partment listed the following incidents for July 4, the latest available report: One suspi- cious person, one physical ,---'-- disturbance, '_ -- -- one verbal dis- ,R]UME turbance, two --- burglar alarms, eight traffic stops, one illegally parked vehicle, three juvenile complaints, one suicide at- tempt, two noise disturbances and one public service call. JACKSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE The Jackson County Sheriff's Office and county Fire/Rescue reported the following incidents for July 4, the latest available report. (Some of these calls may be related to after-hours calls taken on behalf of Graceville and Cottondale Police Depart- ments): One stolen tag, seven abandoned vehicle reports, one reckless driver, two suspicious vehicles, one suspicious inci- dent, four suspicious persons, two reports of mental illness, three physical disturbances, four verbal disturbances, one woodland fire, one burning complaint, 12 medical calls, three burglar alarms, 33 traf- fic stops, two larceny com- plaints, three civil disputes, two trespassing complaints, one illegally parked vehicle, three juvenile complaints, one suicide attempt, two noise disturbances, one animal com- plaint, one assist of a motorist or pedestrian, one child abuse complaint, two public service calls, one criminal registration and two transports. JACKSON COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY The following persons were booked into the county jail dur- ing the latest reporting periods: ) Michael Garner, 26, 7303 Bonnie Hill Road, Chattahooch- ee, trespassing after warning. ) Anthony Bush, 28, 5034 3rd Ave., Dothan, Ala., felony habitual driving under the influence. JAIL POPULATION: 204 To report a crime, call CrimeStoppers at 526-5000 or a local law enforcement agency. To report a wildlife violation, call 1-888-404-FW,CC (3922). WAICE-UP CRLLI JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com Senate candidate to address club Special to the Floridan Republican senatorial candidate Adam Hasner will address the Republi- can Club of West Florida on Tuesday, July 12, during Bthe group's noon meet- ing at Jim's Buffet & Grill in Marianna. Hasner will appear via Hasner the Skype video call- ing/conferencing applica- tion and will accept ques- tions from the group. Hasner served alongside Marco Rubio in the Florida House for six years, and in 2007, he was tapped by Rubio to serve as majority leader for the Republican caucus. In 2010, Hasner served as the founding na- tional co-chairman of the Pass tfie Balanced Budget Amendment group. He has also been an advocate in support of Israel, and worked to pass Florida's first-in-the-nation law to divest state pension funds from companies that do business in Iran. He now serves as the founder of a financial ad- visory firm. Hasner and his wife Jillian live in Boca Raton. The public is welcome to the July 12 meeting. It is not necessary to be a Repub- lican or a member of the Republican Club of West Florida to attend. For more information, call 352-4984. Marriage, Divorce Report Marriages and divorces, as reported for the week of June 27-July 1. Marriages ) Steven Andrew May and Lindsey Elise Jackson ) Tares Antione Laster anfd Rebecca Lorraine Laster )) Willis Neal Brown III and Lisa Lawrence Burdeshaw ) Jon Patrick Hamilton and Marissa Naomi Russ )) Kevin Dirk Shores and Cassie Lynn Mitchell Divorces ) Christopher Smith vs. Heather Hamilton Smith ) Gregory Dean Barnes vs. Angie Denise Barnes Tell your story The Jackson County Floridan is asking readers to suggest interesting and unusual jobs and companies that can be featured in an upcoming edition of the paper. We are looking for people who do interesting or unusual things for companies here in Jackson County that residents ma not even be aware exist. Please forward your suggestions to editorial@jcfloridan.com or call 860-526-3614. So) Akoya Freshwater To learn more about pearls www.watsoniewelers.com Downtown Marianna 8*50.482.4037 Retiree Recognized for Assistance SUBMITTED PHOTO Nell Roach (right) is presented with an Optimist Club coffee mug by Northeast Jackson County Optimist Club Student of the Month Program Chairman Ling Long, during the club's June 20 meeting. The meeting was held in recognition and appreciation of Roach's help with the student of the month program at Grand Ridge School. Dnh utirarl frnm the schoonnl this uaar GAS WATCH Gas prices are going up. Here are the least expensive places to buy gas in Jackson County, as of Tuesday afternoon. L $3.43 BP, Hwy 231, Camp- beliton 2. $3.43 McCoy's, Jefferson Street, Marianna 3. $3.47 BP, River Road, Sneads 4. $3.47 Murphy 011, Hwy 71 near 1-10 5. $3.47 Pilot, Hwy 71 near 1-10 6. $3.47 Travel Center, Hwy 71 at 1-10 It ) cu ee a lower price, t:,:,ra.:t the Floridan newsroom at ejatorial@jcfloridan,com. -----------------. WE BUY GOLD YOUR TRUSTED JEWELER FOR ALMOST 40 YEARS Exp ttatson EOxpe Repair z xOK O(jiE Repair Downtown Marianna 850-482-4037 Call Ora For All Your Real Ora Mock, GRI Broker/Associate Estate Needs In Florida And/Or Alabama! Multi-Miflion Dollar Producer Cell: 850-526-9516 Office: 850-526-5260 - E-Mail: oramock@embarqmaih.com 4257 Lafayette St., Marianna, FL FOR SALE BY OWNER: Going Concern Turn Key Business ALL EQUIPMENT, STAFF, INVENTORY, GOOD P&L Owner Financing Available Serious Inquiries Only! Cal 850=7187 OwnerAgent ( II John W. Kurpa, D.C. D.A.B.C.N., F.A.C.F.N Board Certified and Fellowship Trained* * Treating Nerve Damage * Second Opinions ' * Auto Accidents w/ Disability ratings * Physical Therapy * School/DOT Physicals $45 00 I * An Automobile Accident 4 & Injury Clinic 'The highest level of recognition by the Board of Chiropractic Medicine concerning competency and experience. Requires years of additional training. 4261 Lafayette St. Marinna 482-3696 t Find out if you're at risk for a stroke or heart attack. These painless and potentially life-saving screenings from Southeast Alabama Medical Center can help. ALTHGRADES Top 10 percent nationally for ..oronaryntervention 4H fE ALT HGRADE S' Top 10 percent nationally for coronary intervention - CAROTID ARTERY - ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM * PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE CHOLESTEROL PANEL / GLUCOSE $99 special for the month of July. Please call early for an appointment: 334-793-8143 ....................................... The SAMC Heart & Vascular Screening Program will soon be in your area: First United Methodist Church of Marianna S2901 Caledonia Street * Marianna, FL SThursday, July 14 *7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Regular price is $129. SAMC screenings are payable by cash, check or credit card. SOUTHEAST ALABAMA I .MEDICAL CENTER Heart & Vascular Center 1108 Ross Clark Circle Dothan, Alabama 36301 334-793-8143 samc.org \ LOOKING FOR MORE NEWS? VISIT S WWW.JCFLORIDAN.COM Town of Sneads 1ST PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE The Town of Sneads is considering applying to the Florida Department of Community Affairs (DCA) for a FFY 2011 Small Cities Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) of up to Seven Hundred Thousand and no/100 Dollars ($700,000.00). These funds must be used for one of the following purposes: 1. To benefit low and moderate income persons; or 2. To aid in the prevention or elimination of slums or blight; or 3. To meet other community development needs of recent origin having a particular urgency because existing conditions pose a serious threat to the health or welfare of the community and where other financial resources are not available to meet such needs. The categories of activities for which these funds may be used are in the areas of housing, neighborhood revitalization, commercial revitalization, or economic development and include such improvement activities as acquisition of real property, loans for private-for-profit business, purchase of machinery and equipment, construction of infrastructure, rehabilitation of houses and commercial buildings, and energy conservation. Additional information regarding the range of activities that may be undertaken will be provided at the public hearing. For each activity that is proposed, at least 70% of the funds must benefit low and moderate income persons. In developing an application for submission to DCA, the Town of Sneads must plan to minimize displacement of persons as a result of planned CDBG activities. In addition, the Town of Sneadsis required to develop a plan to assist displaced persons. The public hearing to receive citizen's views concerning the community's economic and community development needs will be conducted at the Town of Sneads Council Meeting Room, 2028 3rd Avenue, Sneads, Florida, onITuesday, July 12,2011 at 6:00 PM local time or soon thereafter. For information concerning the public hearing contact the Town Hall office, 2028 3rd Avenue, Sneads, Florida, (850) 593-6636. The public hearing is being conducted in a handicapped accessible location. Any handicapped person requiring special accommodation or individuals requiring an interpreter for the hearing impaired or the visually impaired should contact the Town Clerk at least five calendar days prior to the meeting. Any non-English speaking person wishing to attend the public hearing should contact the Town Clerk at least five calendar days prior to the meeting and a language interpreter will be provided. To access a Telecommunication Device for Deaf persons (TDD) please call 1-800-955-8771. FAIR HOUSING/EQUAL OPPORTUNITY/ HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE COMMUNITY WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 3AF k LOCRL KndtYll rUy III I]Vlttl ll 4llttlll~ll |l5 I IVVILHII} $ [ .l ii Publisher VALERIA ROBERTS Managing Editor MICHAEL BECKER Our Opinion Make the show bigger or those who weren't at Marianna's Fourth of July fireworks display Monday evening, you missed something special. The parking lots along U.S. Highway 90 were full. Side streets were packed. Madison Street Park, particularly the crest of the hill near Winn Dixie, was wall to wall lawn chairs. It was a won- derful community gathering. And the fireworks display itself was excellent. And the new splash pad was a hit with children. The only thing that could make it better next year is to make it bigger. More business sponsor- ships, perhaps some live music before the fire- works show, encourage and facilitate downtown restaurants to open, or set up vendor booths at the park. A late night, downtown street festival. It was marvelous to see downtown Marianna buzzing with activity that late in the evening. Main Street Marianna is on to something with this, and they need to pull out all the stops and make it bigger and better in years to come. Contact representatives Florida Legislature Rep. Marti Coley, R-District 7 Marti.Coley@myfloridahouse.gov Building A, Room 186 Chipola College 3094 Indian Circle Marianna, FL 32446-1701 Rep. Brad Drake, R-District 5 Brad.Drake@myfloridahouse.gov NWFL State-Chautauqua Campus #205 908 U.S. Highway 90 West . DeFuniak Springs, FL 32433-1436 Sen. Bill Montford. D-District 6 208 Senate Office Building 404 South Monroe St. Tallahassee, FL 32399-1100 montford.bill.web@flsenate.gov U.S. Congress Rep. Steve Southerland, R-2nd District .1229 Longworth HOB Washington, DC 20515 Phone: (202) 225-5235 Fax: (202) 225-5615 Sen. Bill Nelson (D) Washington office United States Senate 716 Senate Hart Office Building Washington, DC 20510 (202) 224-5274 Sen. Marco Rubio (R) Washington office United States Senate B40A Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 (202) 224-3041 Letters to the Editor Submit letters by either mailing to Editor, P.O. Box 520. Marianna FL, 32447 or faxing to 850-482-4478 or send email to editorial@jcfloridan.com. The Floridan reserves the right to edit or not publish any letter. Be sure to include your full address and telephone number. These will only be used to verity the letter and will not be printed. For more information calJ (850) 526-3614. ItAswTANw H BMO-JOU4UAIWU. ILUCW -UPSl TIl T -'~ *\ Leave the flakes for breakfast BY KATHRYN JEAN LOPEZ i \ re you a flake?" With that question on '"Fox News Sunday" to Rep. Michele Bachmann, Chris Wallace may have given a rallying cry to the new feminist revolution, in American politics. Except the f-word will likely be nowhere in evidence. Wallace apologized, and in a sense the whole kerfuffle is over - but only for him. He was only hitching onto the mainstream media's presentation of Bachmann, as a dim bulb, leaving the three- term congresswoman and former tax attorney to have to explain to him "I'm a serious person." That she is such is why Wallace and Bachmann were even having the conversation in the first place. She's a contender for the Republi- can nomination for the president, one who turned out an impressive performance during the first presi- dential debate. The Wallace question encap- sulates the attitude that drives Bachmann defenders mad. There's something more than a wee bit patronizing about the treatment of Michele Bachmann and Sarah Palin. "What did Bachmann do to set the lefty blogs afire today?" my colleague Jim Geraghty recently asked. "Split an infinitive? Dangle a participle? Order red wine with fish? Wear white after Labor Day?" As Democrat Kirsten Powers re- cently noted: "If Joe Biden's gaffes had received half the attention of Bachmann's, nobody would take him seriously, either." It's so way beyond Joe. Former Clinton aide George Stephanopou- los, now an anchor for "Good Morning America," asked Bach- mann in an attempt to "gotcha" her: "You said that the Founding Fathers worked tirelessly to end slavery." She explained: "Well if you look at one of our Founding Fathers, John Quincy Adams, that's absolutely true. He was a very young boy when he was with his father serving es- sentially as his father's secretary. He tirelessly worked throughout his life to make sure that we did in fact one day eradicate slavery..." Stephanopoulos would not let it go. "He wasn't one of the Founding Fathers he was a pTesident, he was a secretary of state, he was a member of Congress; you're right he did work to end slavery decades later. But so you are standing by this comment that the Founding Fathers worked tirelessly to end slavery?" Bachmann may have misfired on the wording, but this minute hair- splitting was getting ridiculous. She wound down the history lesson with grace: "Well, John Quincy Adams most certainly was a part of the Revolutionary War era. He was a young boy, but he was actively involved." Seriously? The United States of America is in danger of default and this is what "Good Morning America" is going rounds with a presidential candidate on? She may not win Trivial Pursuit, but that's not the competition she's in. From Andrew Breitbart to Bill Bennett, there has been a gentle- manly rush to defend these politi- cal ladies against the onslaught. Is it sexism? It's an interesting question. It surely is a curious thing. After decades of insisting that women have "equal rights," even when that really just means special rights to ensure the num- bers of women in executive posi- tions and other ob despite the priorities and choices women make -women are on the rise in elec- toral politics, but they're not exactly the type that longtime female-pres- ident proponents had in mind. - In their 2000 book "Madam President: Shattering the Last Glass Ceiling," Eleanor Clift and her husband, the late Tom Brazaitis, wrote: "Political analysts believe the first woman president will be a 'Sister Mister,' having the body of a woman with the character traits of a man. More than likely she will come from the moderate-to-con- servative segment of the ideological spectrum." , "Women," they continued, "fre- quently go too far in proving their toughness. Seeking credibility, they cater to men's issues military defense and the economy-- some- times at the expense of losing touch with their natural constituency of women." Women don't all want that. In the run-up to November's midterm elections, one poll found 57 percent of women saying "the private sector has better ideas than the federal government about how to improve the economy and create jobs." And the economy and jobs are what motivated so many right-leaning women to become engaged in what has become known as the tea-party movement. We don't need whining, as Sarah Palin recently noted, we need solu- tions: reform; spending discipline; seriousness. The unemployed are probably more interested in those things then academic discussions. Like long morning-show conver- sations about what era John Quincy Adams rightly belongs to, Michele Bachmann seems to have little interest in using or otherwise talk- ing about.the f-word. When Kirsten Powers pressed her in a recent interview, Bachmann called herself an "empowered American" as "pro-man" as she is "pro-woman." She said: "I'm a woman comfort- able in her own skin. I grew up with three brothers. My parents didn't see us (as) limited (by gender). I would mow the lawn and take out the trash; I was making my own fishing lures. I went along with everything the boys did." Reviving the American dream BY DONNA BRAZILE Wat is your personal American dream? Home ownership? Job security? Retirement? For many, the American dream is having a good home and getting a decent-paying job. Like my parents before me, I believe the American dream is also the ability to give your children a better life. In the middle of all the recent hyper-partisanship, we've forgotten the principles and goals that truly make us who we are. This brings me to another item that we must consider: In order for us to revive the American dream for millions of citizens still feeling the impact of the most recent econom- ic downturn, the government must honor its' international debts. The power of a nation is tied directly to honoring its debts. But, even as you read this, some members of Congress have decided to play partisan games with our nation's future. Congress, which is managed by two major politi- cal parties, is risking our financial standing by refusing to raise the debt limit unless each side gets exactly what it wants. Let me frame the problem: Whether you are single or have a family, you have three things: an income (a job or assistance), assets and debts. Because your assets secure your debts, you likely rely on your income alone to pay them off.- Have you ever been in the posi- tion where, no matter how much you cut your budget, you didn't have enough to meet your monthly payments? That's the situation the United States in right now. We must borrow to pay on the debt we already have: for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; for pre- scription payments for Medicare; for our homeland security; for our modest social safety net for the needy, disabled and poor; for tax subsidies for large corporations; for tax credits for small businesses; and for lower taxes for millionaires and billionaires. Do you know that, even if we grant lawmakers every single cut they want, we still can't pay a single cent on the national debt? Congress can start to pay down on our debt by increasing our income: ending subsidies for cor- porations that have cash on hand; cutting modestly programs we no longer can afford; and restoring taxes to previous levels on the very wealthy. You know what you've told your children: If you don't pay on your loans, your loan interest will increase, and banks won't lend you money. Your credit rating will suffer. Here is a fundamental truth of life as a national economist put it: "Financial integrity and national power go hand in hand." "A nation cannot prosper long when it favors only the prosper- ous," President Obama declared at his inauguration. Indeed we can't. The economic stagnation we are experiencing, the slow growth, the snail's pace of cre- ating new jobs, it all comes down to our values and what we believe to be the American dream. Just think about this: Warren Buf- fett said that the cleaning woman who empties his wastebasket pays more in taxes than he does. Is that fair? Is that shared sacrifice? Of course not. As tens of thou- sands of Americans are laid off each week, it is time to ask what Con- gress has against people who work hard and try to play by the rules. Enjoy the Fourth of July. After you're done using the grill and eat- ing, call or email your member of Congress. Tell them you want a balanced approach to solving our nation's fiscal problems. Tell them you want both budget cuts and revenues to help reduce our long-term debts and obligations. Tell them it's time the middle class is treated as favorably as the well-connected upper class. If you want to restore the Ameri- can dream, you must tell them. @ 2011 Jeff Stahler/Dist. by Universal UClick for UFS APPYENENCE SDAY j JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com Marianna Chapel Funeral Home 3960 Lafayette St. Marianna, FL 32446 Phone 850-526-5059 Fax 850-526-3066 Peggy Jane Bastek Mrs. Peggy Jane Bastek, 74, of Cottondale, passed away her home on Tues- day, July 05, 2011. Arrangements are incom- plete and will be an- nounced by Marianna Chapel Funeral Home. Marianna Chapel Funer- al Home is in charge of ar- rangements. Marianna Chapel Funeral Home 3960 Lafayette St. Marianna, FL'32446 Phone 850-526-5059 Fax 850-526-3066 Dr. Harvey Rex Nowell Dr. Harvey Rex Nowell, 77, of Marianna, passed away on July 2, 2011, at Mayo Hospital in Jackson- ville. A memorial service will take place Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the First Presbyteri- an Church of Marianna, following a private family Obituaries burial. Marianna Chapel Funer- al Home is in charge of ar- rangements. Expressions of sympathy may be submitted online at www.mariannachapelfli.co in. James & Sikes Funeral Home Maddox Chapel 4278 Lafayette St. Marianna, FL 32446 850-482-2332 www.jamesandsikes funeralhomes.com Mary A. Roberts Mary A. Roberts, 71, of Orlando, died Sunday, July 3, 2011, at Hospice of the Comforters in Altamote Springs. Mary Ann was born in Americus, Ga. in 1940, and moved to Marianna in 1951. She graduated from Marianna High School in 1958. She married her high school sweetheart Ernest "Buford" Roberts in No- vember 1958 and they moved to Orlando.. She was a homemaker for many years and later went to work and retired from Sears in 1992. She was a member of Faith United Methodist Church for more than 45 years. She was preceded in death' by 'her grandson, Bryan Daniel Breuer in Trial From Page 1A because of the traumatic effects of being sexually abused by her father. The case played out on national televi- sion almost from the moment Caylee was reported missing three years ago. CNN's hard-nosed Nancy Grace dissected the case at every turn with the zeal of the prosecutor she once was, arguing that Anthony was responsible for her daugh- ter's death. The TV host turned the term "tot mom" into shorthand for Anthony. Anthony's attorney Cheney Mason blasted the media after the verdict. "Well, I hope that this is a lesson to those of you having indulged in media assassi- nation for three years, bias, prejudice and incompetent talking heads saying what would be and how to be," Mason said. "I'm disgusted by some of the lawyers that have done this, and I can tell you that my colleagues from coast to coast and border to border have condemned this whole process of lawyers getting on tele- vision and talking about cases that they don't know a damn thing about." The jurors seven women, five men - would not talk to the media, and their identities were kept secret by the court. State's Attorney Lawson Lamar said: "We're disappointed in the verdict today because we know the facts and we've put in absolutely every piece of evidence that existed." The prosecutor lamented the lack of hard evidence, saying, "This is a dry-bones case. Very, very difficult to prove. The delay in recovering little Cay- lee's remains worked to our considerable disadvantage." Caylee's disappearance went unreport- ed by her own mother for a month. The child's decomposed body was eventually found in the woods near her grandpar- ents' home six months after she was last seen. A medical examiner was never able to establish how she died. The case became a macabre tourist at- traction in Orlando. People camped out- side for seats in the courtroom, and scuf- fles broke out among those desperate to watch the drama unfold. Because the case got so much media at- tention in Orlando, jurors were brought in from the Tampa Bay area and sequestered for the entire trial, during which they lis- tened to more than 33 days of testimony and looked at 400 pieces of evidence. An- thony did not take the stand. "While we're happy for Casey, there are no winners in this case," Anthony attor- ney Jose Baez said after the verdict. "Cay- lee has passed on far, far too soon and what my driving force has been for the last three years has been always to make sure that there has been justice for Caylee and Casey because Casey did not murder Caylee. It's that simple. And today our system of justice has not dishonored her memory by a false conviction." In closing arguments, prosecutor Linda ,CF RI ' I ' JCFLORIDAN.COM 1989; and her brother Doug Melvin in 2011. She is -survived by her husband, Ernest "Buford" Roberts of Orlando; her pa- rents, Jack and Ruth Melvin of Marianna; one daughter, Rhonda Breuer and hus- band Ron; two sons, Keith Roberts, and Steven Rob- erts and his wife Lori, all of Orlando; one brother, Ken- neth Melvin and wife Fran- cis; one sister, Toni Melvin, all of Marianna; and four grandsons, Aaron, Joshua and Jeremy Breuer of Or- lando, and Cody Roberts of Swartz Creek, Mich. Viewing will begin Fri- day, July 8, 2011 at 1 p.m. and funeral services at 2 p.m. Friday, at Christian Center Church, 4791 Shef- field Drive, Marianna, with Pastor Jack Hollis officiat- ing. Interment will be in Pinecrest Memorial Gar- dens with James & Sikes Funeral Home Maddox Chapel directing. There will be a memorial service in Orlando Wed- nesday, July 1.3 at 2 p.m. at Faith United Methodist Church with Pastor Tony, Chance officiating. A re- ception will follow in the church fellowship hall. Expressions of sympathy may be made online at www.jamesandsikesfuneral home.com. Drane Burdick showed the jury two side- by-side images. One showed Anthony smiling and partying in a nightclub dur- ing the first month Caylee was missing. The other was the tattoo Anthony she got a day before law enforcement learned of the child's disappearance: the Italian words for "beautiful life." "At the end of this case, all you have to ask yourself is whose life was better with- out Caylee?" Burdick asked. "This is your answer." Prosecutors also focused heavily on an odor in the trunk of Anthony's car, which forensics.experts said was consistent with the smell of human decay. But the defense argued that the air analysis could not be duplicated, that no one could prove a stain found in the trunk was caused by Caylee's remains, and that maggots in the compartment had come from a bag of trash. Prosecutors hammered away at the lies Anthony told when the child was miss- ing: She told her parents that she couldn't produce Caylee because the girl was with a nanny named Zanny a woman who doesn't exist; that she and her daughter were spending time with a rich boyfriend who doesn't exist; and that Zanny had been hospitalized after an out-of-town traffic crash and that they were spending time with her. Baez said during closing arguments that the prosecutors' case was so weak they tried to portray Anthony as."a ly- ing, no-good slut" and that their forensic evidence was based on a "fantasy." He said Caylee's death was "an accident that snowballed out of control." He contended that the toddler drowned and that when Anthony panicked, her father, a former police officer, decided to make the death look like a murder by putting duct tape on the girl's mouth and dumping the body in the woods a quar- ter-mile away. Anthony's father denied both the cover-up and abuse claims. The verdict could divide people' for many years to come, just as the O.J. Simp- son case in the mid-1990s did, with some believing Anthony got away with murder. Ti McLeod, who lives near the Anthony family, said, "The justice system has failed Caylee." Jodie Ickes, who lives a mile away and goes to the same hairdresser Anthony uses, said she is against the death penalty and was glad that Casey wasn't facing ex- ecution. "I'm comfortable with the out- come," she concluded. Among the many trial spectators was 51-year-old Robin Wilkie, who said she has spent $3,000 on hotels and food since arriving June 10 from Lake Minnetonka, Minn. She tallied more, than 100 hours standing in line to wait for tickets and got into the courtroom 15 times to see Anthony. "True crime has become a unique genre of entertainment," Wilkie said. "Her sto- ries are so extreme and fantastic, it's hard to believe they're true, but that's what en- grosses people. This case has sex, lies and videotapes just like on reality TV" Quigley earns bachelor's degree from Berry College Special to the Floridan More than 315 students earned bachelor's or mas- ter's degrees during Berry College's spring com- mencement in Rome, Ga. Steven Quigley of Mari- anna received a Bachelor of Arts in communication. Marianna man dies in Ala. motorCycle wreck The Associated Press MADRID, Ala. A Florida man has died after authorities say he lost control of his motorcycle in southeast Alabama Houston County Coroner Robert Byrd says 53-year-old Andrew Smith of Mari- anna, died around 1:30 p.m. Saturday. Byrd told The Dothan Eagle Smith was Petition From Page 1A allow mixed drinks to be served as well. Lassman noted the petition drive will only put the question to voters the election will determine whether or not it passes. He encouraged those who op- pose liquor by the drink to sign a petition and then vote "no" if they feel strongly against it. He said even if the question does pass, residents shouldn't expect any immedi- ate impact. However, restaurant chains like Olive Garden, which rely on bars as part of their business model, won't con- sider opening in Jackson County without one, Lassman said. "It will be an opportunity to remove that barrier to economic opportunity," he said. Streetman talked about the many let- ters to the editor written on the subject. He said many of those who write are missing the point. "It's not an alcohol issue," Streetman said. He noted the presence of many pack- age liquor stores in the county, some of Workforce From Page lA best viable options. Williams said people have expressed interest in a "broad and wide range of interests" so far, and that the one-on-one sessions will help them find the right fit. There's also training money available for tuition, books and other expenses to program enrollees. Training funds are not just available only to job-seekers. Po- riding his Harley Davidson with a group of other riders when he got separated from the pack. Byrd said it appears Smith lost control of his motorcycle when he tried to go around a car to catch up. No one else was injured in the accident. Alabama state troopers are investigating. which also have drive-through windows. Alcohol sales are already here, he said. The problem is Jackson County's cur- rent alcohol ordinances are a hindrance to bringing "mainline" restaurants and hotels here. Streetman also noted these same res- taurants and hotels have house limits on the number of drinks customers can or- der, while package liquor stores have no limits on the amount of alcohol sold. "This is about the economy, this is not about alcohol," he said. Noting that hundreds of people were laid off by the state June 30, Streetman said the county needed to do something to create employment. Passing liquor by the drink won't create enough jobs to replace the ones lost, but it will create some. Lassman agreed, stating the county needed to create new opportunities in order to survive. "In every community, you're either growing or dying," he said. "You can't maintain the status quo for very long." The JacksonYes campaign officially kicked off May 18. State law gives it until. Sept. 15 to collect all the required sig- natures; the campaign hopes to have enough by mid to late August. tential employers may be able to recoup as much as.50 percent of a person's wage for a set period, if they hire someone who needs training and has registered at Workforce. The process of matching employers with displaced workers continues and is not just for employees at downsized or 'closed state facilities. One-Stop is also one of the application sites for people who need to sign up for food stamp as- sistance through the Department of Children and Families. Workforce can be reached at 718-0326. Wahlart Fashion Show SUBMI 1f 1O Piiu Marianna Walmart employees entertain area seniors with a summer fashion show on June 24. The Uth annual event was at the Jackson County Senior Citizens center. Modeling for Walmart (from left) are Tata Johnson, Mary K. Taylor, Vema Terry, Kerstine Hussey and Pam Brown. Inspection From Page 1A That employee has since obtained a permanent license, Lakey said. The inspector is also certified in all the pertinent areas of construction. City officials said they want to make sure that an inspector would be readily available when businesses needs an in- spection done so they can move quickly on their projects. Officials also want to make sure that contract- ing the work out would not negatively affect the fire protection rating for the city a drop in that rating can cause prop- erty insurance premi- ums to rise. Dean said this'*week he is still gathering in- formation on the issue but expects to have a re- port for the commission Monday, when it meets at 6 p.m. "I think it needs to be made perfectly clear .that the county has done a great job in meeting the needs of the city," Dean said, "But the commission just wants to see if doing this in-house is something that would help stream- line and make things more convenient for the citizens of Marianna." Florida Lottery Mon Tue Tue Wed Wed Thurs Thurs (E) 7/4 7-4.7 1-9-4-2 4-8-31-32-33 (M) 8.2 5 0-1-6-6 JE) 7/5 1-4 0 2.9-9-9 Not available (M) 1-9-8 7.73-5 6/29 8-75 51-82 8-2-2 7-0.1-2 6/30 4 2-2 8-23-4 6-S-0 6-50-6 1-19-24-26-36 14-15-20-32-35 Fri (E) 7/1 8-3-7 9.0.5.1 11-15-22-26-29 Fri (M) 7-7-0 1-5-8-4 Sat (E) 7.2 4-9-1 4-6-6-0 2-7-8-15-34 Sat (M) 6-05 5-6.2-5 Sun (Ei 7/3 4-2-9 4.6-6-3 2-16-21-23-29 Sun (Mi 5-05 5-3-7-0 E = Evening drawing, M : Midday drawing II ALxL. Saturday 7/2 1-11-18-29-51 Wednesday 6/29 Salulday 7/2 wejl,- day 6i 2't 24 30 45' 57 59 PB26 PPx3 15-35-41.45-46-48 10 30-36-41-49-51 xtra3 For oltte v Inlor irmatin c.ill 3,50) 457 7777 or (900) 737 7777 Jackson County Vault & Monuments Quality Service at Affordable Prices 850-482-5041 Pinecrest 3720 Caverns Road Marianna, FL 32446-1806 (850) 482-3964 __~_~__11~1_1 ItLurr, WEDNESDAY, JULY 6,2011 5AF PB 32 PPx3 i1 JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com ,I i': Grocery Outlet It ir~ i~ ~ Tyson Tray Pack Breast Tenders ............. Blackwell Angus Family Pack Chuck Tenders..... Black Angus Boneless Sirloin Tip* Steaks ............. Farmland Sliced Boneless Pork Loins ............ 14 oz. Johnsonville Smoked $232 Brats ................... 3 Ib. Pkg. Valleydale Sliced Bacon .................. $968 10 oz. Thank You Brand 4x6 Cooked Ham Or Turkey.......... 1 lb. Roll Lee Mild or Hot Roll Sausage........ Mickleberry 1/4 Sliced Ham ............. 180 131 $288l SIb. 56 oz. 24 pk. 1/2 Liter Nature's Crystal Blue Bunny $ 70 35. $3 oz. $ 93 pring78 Ice Cream........ Coffeemate...... Water............... 6 oz. Shurfresh 33.9 oz 15 oz. Allen Potato Folger's $Italian Chips ............. Coffee............. Green Beans..... I 32 oz. Mueller 9 oz. Bengal 50 oz. Spaghetti or $ 174 Ant & Roach $ 86 Tide Liquid $ 93 Elbow Macaroni I Spray ............ J Detergent......... Fresh Express $ 116 California Juicy Sweet Romaine Garden Salad ........12 o. I Large Red Plums................ b. 98 L I I-- -1 6A WEDNESDAY, July 6, 2011 II PfricesEffectiveJly6uly $323, $174 I lb. $ 62 2 lb. $281 SIb. * r K *.v - Youth Softhbal Ponytails ready for state tourney Team plays at 10:30 a.m. Friday SUBMITTED PHOTO The district champion Sneads Ponytail All-Stars are (front row) Abigail Mcintosh and Emily Glover; (middle row) Lauren Stewart; (back row) Bree Davis, Shayla Johnston, Chloe Henry, Kaleigh Bruner, Kaylee Cain, Casey Grover, Autumn Avriett, Haley Dime and Katie Mayes. Coaches are Bubba Avriett, Dan Grover and Travis Bruner. BY DUSTIN KENT dkent@jcfloridan.com The Sneads Ponytails All-Stars will begin play in the state tour- nament on Friday in Carrabelle. Sneads which defeated We- wahitchka 6-0 on June 27 will take on Paxton on Friday at 10:30 a.m., Central Time in the first round of the double-elimination tournament. The All-Stars took wins of 17-0 over Blountstown and 3-2 over Marianna in nine innings before notching another shutout in the title game. The three-game scoring tally of 26-2 showed how dominant the Sneads All-Stars can be, particu- larly in the circle. "We went through the district because of strong pitching and defense," Sneads coach Dan Grover said. "That's pretty obvi- ous when you give up two runs in three games." "We went through the district because of strong pitching and defense. That's pretty obvious when you give up two runs in three games." Dan Grover, Sneads coach Sneads relies on three main pitchers to get the jobalone each game, with Autumn Avriett, K.K. Kain, and Casey Grover each tak- ing two innings apiece. "They've done a really good job," Grover said of his pitchers. "We've also played really good defense. All the girls catch and throw real well and play good de- fense. We don't strike everybody out, but we get outs. "Offensively, we do well. We didn't hit great in the district, but See PONYTAILS, Page 2B YOUTH BASEBALL O'Zone crowned district champions BY DUSTIN KENT dkent@jcfloridan.com The Marianna O'Zone All-Stars claimed a district championship with a 13-2 vic- tory over Holmes County on Friday night in Bonifay. " With the win, the All-Stars advanced to the state tournament to start on July 16 in Avon Park. Marianna got to the title game by taking a pair of 10-0 victories over Chipley and Holmes County earlier in the week. The final game was a rematch with the host team, but it was just as lopsided as the first one. Marianna wasted little time seizing control of the game, getting three runs in the first inning thanks to an RBI single by Cody Gwin to score Cameron Gray, an RBI single by Maxx Harrell to score Gwin, and another RBI single by Zac Malone to score Harrell. Holmes County answered with two runs in the bottom of the inning, but Marianna responded with two runs in the thira on an RBI single by Malone to score Gray, and an RBI double by Bobby Lewis to score Harrell for a 5-2 lead. Marianna then blew the game wide open with an eight-run fourth inning. After Seth Gilmore reached on an er- ror and Logan Benefield on a single, Gray. drove both in with a two-RBI double. Harrell followed with an RBI single to score Gray to make it 8-2, and after a walk to Malone, Lewis contributed another RBI single to score Harrell and make it 9-2. Landon Tharpe then walked to load the bases, and Ryan Reed capped off the inning with a grand slam for the final margin. Gray started on the mound for Marianna but made it just 1/3 of an in- ning before being replaced by Gwin, who lasted 2 2/3 innings on the mound, strik- ing out three. Lewis came on to close it out in the SUBMITTED PHOTO Marianna O'Zone All-Stars won district championship Tournament in Bonifay Friday night. They are (front row, from left) Bobby Lewis, Seth Gilmore, Reese Dillard, Cody Gwin, Austin Collins and Logan Benefield; (back row) Landon Tharpe, Gage Parker, Zac Malone, Maxx Harrell, Ryan Reed and Cameron Gray. fourth and did so with a perfect inning. "'I guess we doininated the tourna- ment," Marianna coach Meredith Tharpe said. "But things will be a lot different at state. The competition will be better obviously." If Marianna is able to continue the level of play it displayed in the district when it heads to state, anything could be possible. The Marianna All-Stars got great hit- ting and pitching throughout, with Har- rell even tossing a no-hitter in the second game of the tournament. Although Marianna scored 33 runs in the three games of the tournament, Thar- pe said she believes her team could go to an even higher level offensively. "I know it sounds odd, but I think this bunch can hit better," she said. "I think we're going to have to. We're kind of top- heavy. We've got some batters who are consistent, now we just need to get the rest on board." 14U Baseball Tournament Tri City finishes third at Dizzy Dean BY DUSTIN KENT dkent@jcfloridan.com The Tri City 14U All-Stars trav- eled to Pensacola on June 24 to compete in the Florida Dizzy Dean State Tournament and placed third out of 14 teams with a record of 5-2. The team was made up of play- ers from Grand Ridge, Malone, and Seminole County, Ga. Tri City started with a 14-5 win over Cantonment, with Jake Odom recording the win on the mound for Tri City. Odom also had a nice day at the plate, going 2 for 3, while An- twain Johnson led the team with three RBI. But Tri City was defeated 15-3 by host Bill Bond on the second day of the tournament, and fell into the losers' bracket. The All-Stars responded with a pair of 15-1 wins over Crestview and Tiger Point. Dustin Sneads struck out four batters in four innings to get the win-for Tri City over Crestview, with Cade Hall and Matthew Jernigan leading the team offen- sively with five RBI each. Hall and Cody Henson each went yard in the game. In the next game, Odom and Hall combined on the mound to shut down Tiger Point. Offensively, Tri City was led by Johnson's grand slam in the third See TRI CITY, Page 2B SUBMITTED PHOTO The Tri City 14U All Stars are (front row, from left) Zane Whittaker, Ryan Danford, Dustin Sneads, Alex Fudge, Harrison Floyd, Jake Odom, Matthew Jernigan and AJ Johnson; (back row) coach Holt Floyd, Rudy Campbell, Scott Stephens, Richard Davis, Cody Henson, Cade Hall, Antwain Johnson, coach Charles Sneads and coach Clint Hall. S : .' . fi --^ ^ ^i 1'W-.^.gim' jjujaaas S^^ ^I ! ~-----~ *9~P -12B WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 2011 SPORTS JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com Tri City From Page 1B inning that helped break the game open. Hall added a home run in the fourth inning. Tri City then took an 11-1 win over Gospel Projects, and then found itself in an epic battle with Myrtle Grove in the next game. The teams battled for Donations for State The Sneads Ponytails All-Stars, the Marianna Darlings All-Stars and Marianna Angels softball teams are looking for donations to help with their trips to the state tournament next week in . Carrabellq Anyone interested in sponsorships or dona- tions for Sneads, contact Crystal Avriett at 850-573- 6750, or Dan Grover at 850-510-3064. For Marianna Darlings, call Tory Hussey at 850- 209-7764, or Amanda Clark at 850-212-0659. For Marianna Angels, call Stacy Goodson at. 850-482-9670. Marianna Cross Country/Track Current Marianna High School students or incom- ing freshmen interested in running on the Marianna High School boys or girls cross-country or distance track team need to call Coach Allan Gibson at 850-209-3403. The team is practicing at 6 a.m. every morning at Marianna High School. Contact coach Gibson be- fore you show up for your first practice. Recreation Football Alford Recreation Asso- ciation will hold sign-ups 12 innings before Tri City emerged with an 11-7 win. Odom started on the mound and gave up seven runs in four innings before Jernigan came on in relief and went the rest of the way, striking out 10 batters - including the last four to end the game and al- lowing no runs. Hall and Rudy Campbell continued the home run Sports for tackle football and cheerleading Thursday from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., and July 12 from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Registration will be held at the concession stand, and fees are $75 for football, and $65 for cheerleading. Age groups are 5-6, 7-9, and 10-12. For more information, call Jason at 850-573-0900, Valerie at 850-209-1031 or Rhonda at 850-573-1507. Speed, Agility and Conditioning Camp Bionic Sports will hold a Speed, Agility, and Condi- tioning camp on Tuesdays and Thursdays start- ing Tuesday at Integras Therapy & Wellness Center for youth boys and girls ages 9-17. Cost is $40.a month, or $12 per week. The camp will continue for the entire summer, focusing on becoming a better athlete. Call Eric Pender for more information at 850-284-2368. Chipola Swimming Lessons Chipola College will of- fer programs for children of all ages this summer. Swimming lessons will be offered for ages 4 and up. Lessons are based on parade for Tri City, but it was a bunt by Harrison Floyd that allowed Ryne Danford to score from sec- ond base and tie the game in the top of the seventh inning. Alex Fudge finally broke the tie for Tri City in the 12th with yet another home run the team's third of the game. The two-run shot to cen- terfield sparked a four-run ; Briefs a combination of nation- ally-recognized methods. The following sessions are scheduled: Session 3: July 11-21 with registra- tion deadline July 5; and Session 4: Aug. 8-18 with registration deadline August 1. Classes are available at ,9 a.m., 10 a.m., or 7 p.m. Sessions are Monday through Thursday for two weeks of 45-minute lessons. Cost is $45 for each session. Pre-registration is required with a $5 late registration fee. For infor- mation, call pool man- ager Rance Massengill at 718-2473. Marianna Volleyball Camp Marianna High School will have a volleyball camp for grades 4-8 on July 11- 13 at MHS. The camp is $75 per student, and will run from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. each day. inning that gave Tri City all the cushion it needed.' However, Tri City's tour- nament came to an end the next game with a 7-6 loss to Highland Park. Hall added his fourth home run of the tourna- ment, while Johnson was 4 for 4 on the day. Tri City coach Holt Floyd said he was "very pleased with the effort and perfor- mance of every player." For more information and to register, go to the Marianna High School web site. Marianna Youth Wrestling Team Dynamic Youth Wrestling Team will continue practicing on Tuesday and Thursday nights at the wrestling room at the old Marianna High School. Practice will be from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. All kids in Jackson County from ages 6 and up are welcome to join. For further information, call Marianna coach Ron Thoreson at 272-0280. Sports Items Send all sports items to editorial@ jcfloridan.com, or fax them to 850-482-4478. The mailing address for the paper is Jackson County Floridan P.O. Box 520 Marianna, FL 32447. From staff reports Ponytails From Page 1B we've got some good hit- ters. Our girls 1-12 put the bat on the ball pretty good." The Sneads All-Stars fin- ished second in their dis- trict the past two seasons before breaking through with the title this year. They sport an experi- enced group of players, with 10 returning from last year's team. Grover said that his team is ready and motivated to make a state run. "They practice hard, and when game time comes, they always seem ready to play," the coach said of his players. "They're ready to go. They're tired of practice, and ready to play ball. I sure hope we can (make a run at state). I know there are some tough teams down there, but I think we'll compete with even the biggest teams." . Ak t PATEOT YOUIRSLC CHARTER BUS SERVICE Alabama Georgia Florida STroy Albany Chlpley 866-207-3074 i ."NeedA Bs, Cal//ls!" r, .--'; "Best Rates" Do you have'Cute Kids'? E-mail your'Cute Kids*' photos to editorial@jcfloridan.com, mail them to P.O. Box 520, Marianna, FL 32447 or bring them by our offices at 4403 Constitution Lane in Marianna. *12 years or under, with Jackson County ties. Include child's full name, parents'name(s) and city of residence. This is a free service. All entries subject to editing. 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KIT'N'CARLYLE BY LARRYWRIGHT HERMAN BYJIM UNGER "Can you get married and find seven dependents by September?" PEANUTS BY CHARLES SCHULTZ 1-6*-*^ -tO ^ ---^a~~- <^- yA Answer to Previous Puzzle EL K RAPT BL V D SON HOOD LUAU PROFILES URLS NI XON GREE K LOS REB KUnD UTIL CY IRSAUGGE WAN VEG SODA E ROS FR EC KL E D NTOERIOME SA NI TE M YjOU 0RIO A ACROSS 41 Cap with a pompom 1 Ant's 42 Scottish morsel for John 6 Iditarod 44 Hogan puller dweller 11 Ceremony 47 Rubbed out 13 Golfer's Iron 51 Leave in its 14 Black Sea packaging port 52 Lie at rest 15 Buying with 53 Processed passion cotton 16 C button 54 Put off to a 17 Clean water later date org. 18 Dolt DOWN 21 Share 23 Mr.Vigoda 1 --Magnon 26 Thurman of 2 Disen- "Gattaca" cumber 27 Descartes' 3 Sporty truck name 4 Ruminate 28 A blast 5 Marching- the past band need 29 Monastic (2 wds.) haircut 6 Shrew 31 Powerful 7 Egg-grading raptor org. 32 Overalls 8 Seashell material seller? 33 Vanquish 9 Family 35 Alpine goat members 36 Slue 10 Even so 37 Joule 12 More fraction delicate 38 Parent 13 Prince Arn's 39 Church part bride 40 Forest mom 18 Surpassed 41 Package sealer 43 Ponytail site 44 Gist 45 Wheel buy (2 wds.) 46 Library abbr. 48 Sun, in Mazatlan 49 NASA counterpart 50 Susan of "L.A. Law" Want more puzzles? Check out the "Just Right Crossword Puzzles" books at QuillDriverBooks.com S2011 UFS, Disl. by Univ. Udick lor UFS NEA Crossword Puzzle Annie's Mailbox Dear Annie: I am constantly getting chami-letter emails from a friend I met in a class years ago. The emails usually coq- tain vague threats about how something bad will happen to me if I don't forward the letter. The last straw was when she sent me one that said, "Forward this, and something good will happen. If you are not a believer in God, delete." I find these emails annoying arid have neither the time nor the desire to forward them along. How do I tell her that I want to continue the friendship, but this type of e-mail is not welcome. PUZZLED Dear Puzzled: Since this is the only type of email you receive from her, you may as well simply assign her to the spam file. If that seems too callous, you will need to talk to her at your next in-person meeting. Explain nicely that you never Bridge Anyone who finds the unusual play that is needed to defeat this three-no-trump contract would be unusual and also feel an unusual sen- sation great gratitude from partner. First, look at the North hand. South opens one no-trump, showing 15-17 points. What should North do? Once you have decided, also look at West's hand, West leads his heart five w against three no-trump. South takes East's king with his ace and plays a low club from his hand. * What should West do? V North should raise immediately to three no-trump. If his suit is worth five or six tricks, probably three no-trump will roll home. If the * diamonds provide only two winners, declarer will probably take at most seven tricks. When you have a good long minor with no singleton, no void and no thoughts of a slam, bid three no-trump. Second hand low works most of the time. But ifWest does that here, South takes the trick with dummy's 10 and claims nine tricks: two hearts, six diamonds and one club. What would declarer be expected to do first? Right establish dummy's diamonds. When he does not, he must have the diamond king; the suit is ready to run. He is trying to sneak a ninth winner. And if so, West's only hope is to grab the trick with his ace.and shift to spades, hoping East has at least king-fourth. Best is to lead the spade queen, cash the ace, and play a third round. Then West would deserve East's gratitude. forward chain letters, and since she now knows you will break the chain, she should take you off her distribution list. Dear Annie: I'd like to respond to "Michigan," who worries her sons won't stay close when they grow up. I have two sons, ages 27 and 29. My husband and I were very involved in their numerous activities and we tried our best to keep the lines of communication open. My sons are now both married, and we are fortunate to have wonderful daughters-in-law and adorable grand- sons. Our sons are successful in their personal lives and still call regularly and try to see us as often as possible. Please reassure "Michigan" that she is doing a wonderful job and it will pay off. I'm sure her boys will stay close, and she'll also get the girls she never had. -A MOM ALWAYS ENTERTAINMENT 19 It multiplies by dividing 20 Made a breeze 22 Some sweaters (hyph.) 23 Debated 24 Ravel classic 25 'Come into view 28 Online info 30 MNO on a phone 31 Made beloved 34 Slicker 36 Garfunkel's ex-partner 39 Oohed and BIG NATE BY LINCOLN PIERCE ARLO & JANIS BY JIMMY JOHNSON CELEBRITY CIPHER by Luis Campos , Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another. Today's clue: J equals K "TM UHGWRXY OWKK TW G PCSW CR GROGTCDM VHNIKWT. ILO OPWM XNR 'O0 HWVCKKM JRNZ TW." ACH HM Y PCRX KGRA . PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The highlight of my childhood was making my brother laugh so hard that food came out of his nose." Garrison Keillor (c) 2011 by NEA, Inc. 7-6 T0N~'~ 0 LalughingSlatock rrhlonal ln .Del* by Una ul UI k lr UFO. 011 North 07-06-11 4962 Y 104 *AQJ983 4*107 'est East AQ7 4K843 J9853 VK2 74 *652 A86 *9532 South 4J105 VAQ76 K 10 4KQJ4 Dealer: South Vulnerable: Both South West North East INT Pass ?? Opening lead: Y 5 (iD a WEDNESDAY, JULY 6,2011 3BF Horoscope CANCER (June 21-July 22) Because you're both curious and observant, there isn't too much that'll escape your attention, in- cluding things everybody else has missed. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Keep your wits about you at all times, especially when engaged with financial or commercial matters. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You have a talent that sometimes enables you to juggle several projects simultaneously. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) If you hope to fulfill an ambitious objective, keep all the essentials to your- self. The fewer people who interfere, the easier it will be for you to do a goodjob completing all the details. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) In order to save a bit of money, you need to be able to stay on bud- get. It behooves you not to go shopping with a good friend. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec. 21) One of your greatest gifts is being able to use your mental agil- ity to meet and overcome complicated challenges and obstacles. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) When dealing with people, it isn't wise to offer unsolicited advice. At this point however, if you have a suggestion that could help a friend, speak up. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) As long as all of the partners involved are mak- ing an equal contribution, joint ventures have a better chance of working out. PISCES (Feb.20-March20) There is a good chance that you will be required to decide an issue where all of the alternatives appear to be of equal value. ARIES (March 21-April 19) The perfect opportu- nity to put down someone who hasn't treated you too kindly lately might pop up. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Taking a bit of a recre- ational break when possi- ble could prove to be valu- able to you. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Two huge matters that you left hanging and are very anxious to wrap up will at last approach the fi- nal stages. 4 B Wednesday. July 6. 2011 Jackson County Floridan CLASSIFIED www.JCFLORIDAN.com WIREGRASS CLASSIFIED ARKETPLA BY PHONE: (850) 526-3614 or (800) 779-2557 BY MAIL: WIREGRASS CLASSIFIED MARKETPLACE "BY FAX: (850) 779-2557 P.O. BOX 520, MARIANNA, FL 32447 ONLINE: WWW.JCFLORIDAN.COM IN PERSON: 4403 CONSTITUTION LANE, MARIANNA Publication Policy Errors and Omissions Advertisers should check heir ad the fir-i day. This publication shall not be liable for failure to publish an ad or for a r,.pgrapr.ic enro or errors in pubiicallon except I tne extend of tie cosI of the aa for the frst day's insertion Aajustment for errors is limited to the cost of that porton of the aa wherein me error occurred. The advertiser agrees that the publisher shall -.or be larie for damages a3rsing oul of errors in advertisements beyond mne amount paid for the space actually occupied by that ponion of the advertisement in which ire error occurred w*r.einer such error is due to negligence of the publisher's employees or oinerwie and tiere snaltl be no liability for non insenior. of any advertisemeril beyond the amount paid for sucr. advertisement Display Ads are nol guaranteed position Al advernrsing is subject to approval. Right is reserved to edit, reject, cancel or classify all ads under tne appropriate classification, Fo0 r dadInescalltol-reovitw w clordn c SBlood Mountain Cabins and Country Store Located up high in the scenic Appalachian Mountains in North Georgia. The views are spectacular and the temperatures are cool, www.bloodmountain.com 800-284-6866 G.M. Properties of PC Beach 800-239-2059 Fully furnished condos & townhouses near Pier Park. 2bdrm Gulf front- starting @ $175 nt. 3bdrm Gulf front- starting @ $225 nt. 2bdrm Lake front- starting @ $100 nt. Studios Lake front- starting @ $70 nt. www.gmpropertles.com TWO STORE LIQUIDATION AUCTION OLD TOWN SQ. 3183 MAIN ST. COTTONDALE, EVERY FRIDAY @I 6PM STARTING JULY 15TH 4* FOR INFO 850-303-3023 4.4. AU LIC#AU667 AB LIC#2727 FLEA MARKET OPEN FRIDAY THRU SUNDAY' FREE SALVATION MESSAGE POSTCARDS! "If you confess with your lips the Lord Jesus, and believe in your Heart that God raised Him from the dead YOU WILL BE SAVED, " (Bible, Romans, Chapter 10:9-10). FRIENDS DON'T LET FRIENDS DIE WITHOUT JESUS. For FREE Post Cards, with Salvation Message: Boxholder, P.O. Box 439, Fairfax Station, VA 22039-0439 (Available in English, Spanish and/or Korean) WANTED/WILL BUY: OLD COINS, TOYS AND COLLECTABLES CALL 850-693-0908 Conseslon Trailerp 8x20 Wells Cargo, 2 side service, propane restaurant style, fully equip- ped. $15k May see at 2983 Sunset Dr. Marianna *A GUN SHOW ** JULY 2ND AND 3RD National Peanut Festival Building * Hwy 231 S. Dothan, Alabama Over 275 Tables* Sat 9-5 Sun. 10-4 Call 334-279-9895 Wanted: Old Coins, Gold, Diamonds, Guns, And Tools West Main Jewelry & Loan 334-671-1440. DO 12717 STOP GNAT, FLY, & MOSQUITO BITES Buy Swamp Gator All Natural Insect Repellent. Family Safe-Use head to toe. Available at The Home Depot. IT'S AS EASY AS 1 -2-3 1. CALL 2. PLACE YOUR AD 3. GET RESULTS LAKE EUFAULA WATERFRONT HOME 5BR/2BA, furnished, large lot with 2 storage bldg., covered porch, dock w/power. 3161 Calhoun Dr. (FOR SALE) 4 334-792-7046 ** Owner Financing Possible ** Waterfront Lake Seminole GA 7671 Paradise Drive, 2/2,866 SF Furnished $85,000 Reduced*334-805-0705 Free kittens Multi-colored, multi-hair length 850-482- 5880/850-303-9727 after 3pm FREE KITTENS TO GOOD HOME 850-272-1065 PLEASE RESCUE! I'm a young, playful orange & white kitty who needs a family. 334-393-9681 rADBA Reg Pitt Bull Puppies 2 Males, 2 FM $200. 7th Gen Pedigree, parents on site. 334-684-0292 AKC German Shepherd puppies for sale black/tan mom, and silver/black father are both on premises for you to see. I've got 6 males $350 each, and 1 female $400. All have shots and ready to go. Please call or text Jason 334-618-4741 or 334-618-3586 ------------------------------- AKC Male Poodles $2M Ready Nowl Now taking deposits on CKC Toy poodles | $250. & up! Call334-794-2854 L--------------------------------J AKC registered welmaraner puppies Ready to go, tails docked and dew claws removed. I have 3 males and 7 females left, will make great pets. Asking $300, 334-657-8670 CKC Toy poodle puppies I-M, 1-F, 1st. shotes & wormed, litter pan trained. $400. cash each 334-282-2213. English Bulldog, AKC registration, current on vaccinations, 10 weeks old, $450, sheltonkayla73@yahoo.com, 850-482-4026 English Bulldog Puppy. Champion line and AKC registered, fully shots, perfect Health, gets along with kids, Fully trained, 11 weeks old, $700. Contact: ayz235@live.com. (334) 792-2132 FREE TO GOOD HOME: Female Rat Terrier mix. 2 years old. 850-272-1065 English Bulldog Puppy for sale champion line and akc registered, all shots, perfect Health, get along with kids, Fully trained, 11 weeks old, $700, zyydot235@yahoo.com, 334-702-7210 T Lots of Summer Puppies ON SALE! V Morldes $150, Chorldes $75, Papi-Yorks, Hairless Chinese Crested, Taking deposits: Morides, Pomeranians, Yorldes, Malti-Poos 334-718-4886 FARM& DAIRY PRODUCTS Fresh Shelled Peas & Butter Beans several varieties and Okra. 2307 Mayo Road, (between Cypress & Grand Ridge) Bobby Hewett (850) 592-4156 Now Open Jackson Farms U-Pick Tomatoes & Peppers! Bring your own bucket! 7 days a week. 850-592-5579 Pea Sheller for Sale in Ashford on Co. Rd. 55 334-796-1912 Build Your Caree Production Operators Michelin North America, Inc. has opportunities available for Production Operators In our Dothan, Alabama facility. Successful candidates must be able to work In an empowered, quality- driven environment. These positions Involve rotating shift work In a 7-day per week operation. Interested candidates must apply In person at the Dothan Area Career Center 787 Ross Clark Circle Dothan, AL Applications will be taken July 11 July 15, 2011 between the hours of 8:00 am and 4:00 pm. NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE Previous applicants are encouraged to re-apply. Quality People Making Quality Produc _A better way forward Wednesday, July 6, 201] 3 THE SUDOKLI GAME WITH l KICK! HOW TO PLAY - Rll in the 9x9 grid with the missing numbers so that each column, row and - 3x3 box contains the digits 1 9 only once. There is only one correct solution for each puzzle. GET MORE WASABI PUZZLES ONLINE! ARCHIVES AND MORE GREAT GAMES AT BOXERJAM.COM ALL EMPLOYEES ON OUR TEAM * receive competitive pay * receive an excellent and extensive benefits package * are offered free tires and rebates (subject to limitations) * earn while learning new skills * are considered for advancement and leadership * can Join the credit union * receive life services, such as legal counseling. * can participate In the employee activity association * are offered a gym membership * can receive tuition reimbursement * are empowered and respected * work In a friendly and professional environment Michelin is an Equai @20 T . _ 2008 BLOCKDOT, INC. V WWW BLOCKDOT.COM l Opportunity Employer Tuesday's WASABI SOLUTION 7 0 5 4 8 9 2 3 7 3 7 6 1 5 0DQ D 3 4 7 @ 1 8 (D D3@@ 6 2 9@_J o 096 401 S0 7 8 9 4 9 3 8 2 6 BE SURE TO VISIT OUR NEWEST GAME SITE KEWLBOX.COM Place an Ad Fast, easy, no press a24 hours a day, 7 da Get live previews of your classified ads, receive price quotes and make secure online payments. www.jcfloridan.com re iys a week! .p 0gl MI PANAMA CITY BEACH CONDO 111ACIANISS,! 2/1.5, Pool, Tennis, Club House mmmo Much More! Fully Furnished On Front Beach Road $125/Night $750/Week, $80 Cleaning Fee 334-300-6979 or 334-393-3559 77 www.portsideresort.com I I MM% - -.~.~.~~.-~~~~-..~I I 4. .www.JCFLORIDAN.com CLASSIFIED Jackson County Floridan * Wednesday, July 6,2011- 5 B S REAL ESTATE FOR RENT" Edgewood Apartments in Cypress Area. Quiet, Furnished 1BR 1BA.Cable & laundry included. $440/mo + deposit. -9 850-573-6062 4 screened porch, Beacon Hill (Near Mexico Beach) $550/wk 850-482-2539 or 201-888-2388 Fresh Peas m1BR 1BA House SP Tomatoes conveniently located in Squash, Cucumbers, Marianna, FL For details call SnapBeansNewPotatoe850-557-3432 or 850-814-6515 4 S 3BR/1.5 BA home, on corner of Park & Plenty of Canning Tomatoes Davis St. $650/mo + dep 850- 482-2886 or 209- for $10/Box! 1344. for $10 /Box! 133 BR 2.5 BA, Ig den, living rm, dining rm, sun 220 W. Hwy 52 Malvern porch, brkfst rm & washrm. 4612 Oakdale Dr. $1000/mo + $1000 dep. for appt. call 800-239- S334-7936690 1267/334-797-8948 avail. 7/1/11 3BR 2BA Kynesville, CH/A, big yard, $650 + ----------------------------. --.,1 dep. 850-638-1703 S VES e3BR 2BR, Study ,kitchen with w/bar & break- |- fast nook, formal dining room, florida room, at- tached garage, laundry room.master bedroom has wirlpool, mother-in-law quarters w/outside entrance only. On 231 south of Campbellton. On Hwy 84 E. $1050/mo 850-573-2063 4BR 2Full BA 2,,%BA, 300Q sf, 1 acre, Compass Lake in Hills, amenities, $950/mo. 850-832- 9577/850-832-9576 HELa L Eo D -8 I* Austin Tyler & Associates * SHEJ LLED Quality Homes & Apartments Qual- 850- 526-3355 4- I r "Property Management Is Our ONLY Business" UT 1EKDEiA N Lovely 3BR 1BA House, Clean, in town, near schools, nice yard, quiet neighborhood, out- s al!, young green door pets ok, $600/mo with $600 deposit 850- y-482-6211 & tender, and peas. NEW 3/2 house 4 rent. Compass Lk area on 1.5 ac corner lot. $750/mo +dep. 850-573-0625 Open 8am 5pm M:Bc EO 334 522375 1257 Gus Love Rd in Ashford 2/1 Mobile. Fresh Peas Home $475 Mo + Dep6 Ver R L s r Peas Bsom R. 3/1 $ 675. mo+Dep Home Grown I *- L-- ----. ----...---------- ....--- J 2006 MH $200/mo 1/1 Furnished to Qualified Caretaker/Handyman to maintain 5 acre U-Pick Slocomb Tomatoes Marianna Property until sold. 6 mos renewable lease guaranteed. 850-592-2507 White's Produce U-Pick Tomatoes & Watermelon Co. Rd. 28 off Co. Rd. 49 Next to Buffalo Farm * 4 334-726-5291 4m Graphic Designer needed. Some experience necessary. Corel or Flexi knowledge preferred. Call 850-272-4413 Caregiver Wanted for Elderly Female: Room & Board plus Salary Call for info: 850-482-5631 Campbellton-Graceville Hospital located in Graceville, Florida is seeking qualified persons for the following positions: 1 Fulltime RN (night shift) needed to work the Emergency Department; must have prior experience in an emergency environment, be ACLS and PALS certified (or be able to obtain certification within 90 days of hire), and have a current Florida Nursing License. Premium pay offered for these positions. 2 Fulitime RNs (night shift) needed to work on the Inpatient floor with acutely ill and swingbed (long term care/rehab) patients. Must be ACLS and PALS certified (or be able to obtain certification with 90 days of hire), and have a current Florida Nursing License. 1 Fulltime LPN (night shift) needed to work on the inpatient floor with acutely ill and swingbed (long term care/rehab) patients. Must be ACLS and PALS certified (or be able to obtain certification within 90 days of hire), and have a current Florida Nursing License. Qualified applicants may apply or inquire to Campbeliton-Gracevllle Hospital www.c-ghospltal.com or call (850) 263-4431 exL 2012. Resume may be faxed to (850) 263-3312, Attn: Personnel Director or emall to jaustint Ppanhandle.rr.com Drug Free workplace, EOE. &INSTUCTOION S*TT~.i :.i 6TTT~ Get a Quality Education for a New Career! Programs offered in Healthcare, HVAC and Electrical Trades. Call Fortis College Today! 888-202-4813. For consumer information www.Fortis.edu Ml 2/1 $425 & 2/1.5 $450 in Greenwood, CH/A, water/garbage/lawn included. 850-569-1015 2/1.5 $450/mo, 2/1 $425/mo Quiet, well maintained, water/sewer/ garbage/ lawn included. Also 2/1 Duplex available $575 a+ Joyce Riley RE 850-209-7825 4 2 & 3 bedroom mobile Homes in Cottondale. $500 and up. H20, garbage, sewer included. http:// www.charloscountry living. com. 850-258-4868/209-8847 2&3BRMH's in- Marianna & Sneads (850)209-8595. 3/2 Double wide on Lake Seminole in Sneads, $600/mo. water included. 850-526-2183 3/2 DW in Marianna $650 + dep Quiet, clean. H20/ septic/lawn 850-209-1027 Houses and trailers for rent starting at $300 per month. (850) 593-4700 Rent to Own: 2 & 3BR Mobile Homes. BoaVt/RV Storage 984 Bruner Rd. (S. Park in Taylor), 12w x 32d x 10h, Free water, power & air, $75/month. Mgmt. lives on site, Upholstry services available on site, 334-797-0523, 334- 792-8628, ddismukes@comcast.net I WANTED WRECKED OR JUNK VEHICLES i PAY TOP DOLLAR Do 11930 ,* DAY -334-794-9576_ NIGHT 334-794-7769 '92 Bumble Bee Bass boat 115hp, Yamaha mo- tor, complete, good condition, $4000. OBO 334- 355-0809. Bayliner '06 boat & trailer, like new, garage kept, fully equipped, ready to go, Bimbi top, 135hp Merc. inboard. $8,500. 334-699-3044. Bayliner '97 Ski Boat w/5.7 Merc. I/O, w/ SS.. Prop (licenced for 8 person) has bow seating & includes trailer w/like new tires. $6500. OBO 334-797-8172 4 DO 12707 Bayliner Trophy, :T 0 22.5', 2000 model, well kept and clean. Many extras. $19,950. 334-794-0609 DO 12632 BOSTON WHALER, Center Console, 17ft., 90 Nissan, Great Condition, Trailer Included $7,500 334-687-3334 G3 175 Eagle Bass Boat '07, 70 horsepower Yahama OB, trolling motor, galv. trailer, less than 20 hrs use, 9,800 FIRM 850-762-2065/372- 2503 DO 11230 Hydro Stream Bass Boat with 150 HP Johnson Outboard, new trolling motor new carpet & 2 props $ 4500. 888-398-0137 4 DO 11868 Seacraft, '89,20 ft- Center console, '95 225HP Johnson, dual axle trailer w/brakes. Great condition, very clean. $5.250 334-696-5505 - - Seacraft,'89,20 ft- Center l console, '95 225HP Johnson, dual axle trailer w/brakes. Great condition, very clean. $5,250 334-696-5505 Sun Catcher '08 Pontoon G3 Fsh- 50HP Yamaha motor. shower shall, AM/FM radio & CD, lights, cruise control trolling motor, fish finder, 2 live wells, 40hrs, custom cover, $16,000. Call 334- 685-1929 or 334-598-2910 D012662 WELLCRAFT '96 EXCEL 26'-Extra clean cruiser w/trailer, gen w/ac, 5.7 mercruiser, w/single prop, sleeps 6, galley, aft cabin, head, m/wave, fridge, 2 radios, 2 depth finders, chart plotter, GPS, always under cover. Located in Eufaula, AL. $22,500 OBO Call 256-492-2488 or Icoamitchell@hotmalLcom t-1 EXPRESS BASS BOAT-H-56 18' 115 HP Yamaha 4- = R stroke engine, motor guide trolling motor, galvanized trailer, GPS & 3 fish finders, 2 stainless steel props, live well, cooler & extra storage. Boat cover, life vests. Rig has less than 20 hrs and has always been stored under cover. In perfect condition, $13,500 334-687-8937 DO 12238 23'8" Jayco 5th Wheel Camper sleeps 6, 1 lidrlp nut hitch excellent connditinn $750nn 850n- educnti ner o CIL d or. FrU detau ls .,..-,., ,,LU111 C >.VI M WvM.kivii) '.aw uw 850-557-3432 or 850-814-6515 482-5090 DO 12598 SSmall 2BR 1BA Located in Sneads COUGAR TRAVEL TRAILER $300/month 850-573-0308. 2004-30 foot, SmaB Quiet Family Oriented Park- 2BR MH for Rent I big rear window, includes water, garbage, lawn care, No Pets 850-592- living/dining slide, excel- 8129 lent condition, new tires, must see to appreciate, $16,500 OBO, 334-687-6863,334-695-2161 Dutchmen 40 ft. Travel Trailer COU R P T &' E06, 38B-DSL, Sleeps 8, Has 2 lslideouts. Loaded, Like New. Land for Sale $17,995. Call 334-406-4555 8 acres -Sneads area dirt road frontage $11,000. 21 acres Pittman Hill Rd. FLEETWOOD 2005 Prowler AX6, 5th wheel, 36 South of Marianna 800 ft. of dirt road frontage ft, 4 slides, large shower, 30/50AMP. $25,000 30 acres -1 mi. south of Sneads 1-10 exit 3346954995334 7-786 J. Cobb Realty 850-227-5103 / 850-674-4469 OBO Call 334-695-4995, 334-687-7862. HOMESFRSAEREDUCED!! Montana '05 5th Wheel, S h'4 slides, king bed, excellent condition, By Owner: 3BR 2BA Country Style Home ilndian $25,500 OBO Call 850-547-2808 Springs, 2240 sf, 1.3 ac, $170,000, possible Trail Lite 2006 R-VISION owner financing. 850-526-7827 26 ft., fully loaded, bought IG-E-NE -rARES,_- new, 13K miles $49,995 LAKE EUFAULA LOTS, 3 Contiguous Lake 334-616-6508 front Lots. Pricing from $70K, 404-213-5754 Western '03 Alpenlite 27' Travel Trailer $8000 www.keelproperties.com QBO 334-446-0621 DO 12628 www.keelproperes.com , Doublewide: 3 bedrooms, 2 bath mobile home Dixie RV SuperStores for sale. Includes all appliances (some new), including washer/dryer, and some furniture. FL's Newest RV Dealer 1960 sq ft. Must be moved. $27,500 NOW OPEN!!! Call (850)557-3402 or (850)579-1251 r *Store Hours* Monday-Saturday 8:00am-6:00pm AV. OCAR TSGOFARAS 21 Acres / 30 Brands New and Pre-Owned Four-Wheeler: 2007 Arctic Cat DVX 250 racing 0 Newmar 0 Keystone Heartland 0 Jayco Four-wheeler. Liquid cooled 249cc engine, front Fleetwood Prime Time Coachmen and rear hydrolic disc brakes, and like new a Forest River tires. I serviced it recently and it runs and looks , great. Excellent condition for a 2007 model. Service Department ; Asking $2,500. (334) 797-5611. Parts and Acces. Store Polaris '05 Ranger XP-700, 4X4, Garage Kept, RV Collision Center Low Hours, Like New, Hard Top, Windshield, Backseat, $6200 Call Mark 334-714-6999 Located off 1-10 Exit 70 / SR285 Yamaha07Raptor80on- 328 Green Acres Dr. Yamaha '07 Raptor 80i on- De Funlak Springs, FL 32435 ly 50 hours on it. New bat- Sales and Service: 850-951-1000 tery. helmet, has extend- www.dixlerv.com DO 12569 ed warranty. $1295. OBO, www.dlxierv.com DO 12569 SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY. 334-774-7783 DO 12303 TRAVELTRILE A LTS -RENTild Yamaha Rhino 660 4x4 side by side, clean Private RV Site In Cottondale, includes elec- rebuilt engine, new roof, runs great. trick, water, sewage, $375/mo. + $250 dep. 850- $6000. OBO s 334,790-7080 209-7502 UChewolet '81 Corvette Automatic 350 (Silver). Will sell as is for $4,700. OBO 334-774-1915 '02 Camero convertible 35th addition automatic V-6 new tires, stereo & new top. 129K miles $5600. n 334-596-9966 4w 2001 Dodge Durango all leather, 3rd row flip and fold, runs great,' Black with silver trim, roughly 170,000 miles, fully Idaded. Moving do not need and can not take, $4500. OBO, clear ti- tle!!! 334-733-0307 e2003 Ford F150 Supercrew cLmI 2WD Four Door 139" Flareside Truck, Dark Gray Approx 59,000, 4.6L EFI V8, Auto, Air, 4 Wheel ABS; Pwr Windows, Locks, Mirrors; Cruise/Tilt, Premium Sound, Class III Tow Package, Limited Slip Differential. Single Owner. $12,900 or best reasonable offer. 334- 703-7685 2004 Red Mitsubishi Outlander with 78,000 miles. Vehicle is in very good condition and has a new battery. $8,000.205-602-8807 2008 Chevrolet Corvette. 20K miles. 2 tops. Pristine condition Full warranty, $34,000,334- 774-7230 SBuick '98 LeSabre Custom. loaded, clean, 90,000 miles, 30 MPG HY. $4495. Call: 334-790-7959. DO 12746. Chevrolet '09 Impala silver, all star, fully load- ed, only one owner, like new, only 12,300 miles, $15,400 firm Call 334-479-8678 Chevy "09 Sliverado 1500 LT, Crew Cab 4d, Z71, 4 wheel-drive; 5.3 L V8. pick-up- Full-sized truck for sale. GREAT Condition! Approximate- ly 37,100 miles. Red Exterior and Black Leather Interior. Upgraded Dual Exhaust, Towing pack- age, and tool box included. Need to sell quick- ly! Appraisal value $28,000 asking $25,00 or best offer! Make an offer! Any reasonable of- fer will be considered! Call 334-389-6920 for more information. .-. CHEVY '88 CORVETTE, 350 engine, auto trans., color blue, runs great, $3,500 firm _ 334-689-827 2 DO 12653 Chrysler '06 Crossfire- roadster, 3.2L, 215HP, 20k mile, black on black convertible with dark gray interior, cloth seats, alum wheels, AC, 6 speed, manual, 25MPG, like new tires, Retiring, Enterprise $15,000. Call 334-393-4444 DO YOU KNOW ANYONE WITH BAD CREDIT? I can get U Riding Today Repos, Slow Credit, Past Bankruptcy OK! $0 Down/ 1st Payment, Tax, Tag & Title Push, Pull or Drag, Will Trade anything! Warranty On Every Vehicle Sold! $100 Referrals! Cal Steve 800-8094716 S Honda'94 Accord Tan Priced at $3,900. 2180 Montgomery Hwy. Call 334-714-2700 or 334-671-7720. DO 11820 Honda '97 Accord SE, 4door, LOADED, Sunroof, 146K miles. Nice! $4500 334-790-9983 Mercedes '86 420SEL 4-door excellent condition, light yellow in color. 205-493-0519 or 334-792-9429. Nissan '05 Aitima- GREAT CAR! 116k miles, silver, power windows and door locks, cloth interior, $8000. Call 334-794-5296 or 596-5098 Toyota '03 Camry, good condition, tan with gray interior, approx. 155k miles, vehicle locat- ed in Grand Ridge, FL $5500 850-209-4949 DO 12528 Toyota '03 Corolla LE- White with gold trim, fully loaded with leather interior, sun roof, all extras, 47k miles, like new $10,000. Call 334-790-8725 or 334-699-7849 Toyota '07 Camry SE, 48K miles, Black, alloy wheels, Excellent Condition, CD, MP3 Player, Gray Interior, 30 MPG $15,800 334-797- 3195 Toyota '08 Yarus- 23k miles, excellent condi- tion, blue, 36 MPG in town, 5 speed $10,950. Call 334-479-0099 Toyota '09 Tacoma Prerunner V6, 4 X 2 with TRD Offroad Package Tow Package. Truck has 22,000 miles, under warranty, and clear title. Included is an Undercover tonneau cqver, nerf bars, and bull bar. Drives great. 931-220-0118. USED CARS FOR SALE Ford'01 Escort ZxZ - 94k miles, speed manual $2,900. Volvo'91240- ingnition problems $500. Pontaic'93 Grand AM 124k miles, 4cyl. Auto $1,995. Ford'02 Taurus Wagon 80k miles $2,995. Ford'94 F150 XLT 4x4 Ext Cab, Transmission slipping $1,500. Call 334-693-5159 or 334-618-5828 2004 HARLEY-DAVIDSON ULTRA CLASSIC FLHTCUI, black, 9,885 miles, $5,900. Serious buyers only! EGAN99@LIVE.COM, 206-203-2893 2006 Honda CBR 1000 RR Custom paint job. Brand new tires. Has approximately 9k miles. Comes with 2 helmets. Call Josh @ 334-464- 0031, $5,899 Harley Davidson '02 Sportster 1200 Custom 11k miles, Chromed Out, $6500. Call 334-691-3468 or 334-701-3855 Honda '06 CRF 100 Dirt Bike, used very little, stored in garage, $1400. OBO 334-726-1206. HONDA'07 CBR, 600, loaded, 4,000 miles,stretch lowered, 2 brother exhaust, $6,000 334-689-3518,334-339-2352 Find jobs fast and easy'! T JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN jcfloridan.com monster FIND LOCAL JOBS AT: WWW.JCFLORIDAN.COM/JOBS IHend Farm Pro uce Slotomb Hwy. 52 * 334-726-7646 4s FORTIS COLLEGE I I ow I --- -- 1 1-19 F I ------------- -- -------- ---- -- --- .- -- --- --- --_- ----- -- ---- -_ ...-. -. ------------ --I...w .1 Iw -- -- - --- ..I III. - II l -]- I T ..... L- 0 ... .. .. 4. I n~t rpnt inrliifipcl- nr dptailq 6B Wedneslday, July 6, 2011 Jackson County Floridan C S.S. .WEDS wwwz T(WYfI'l eAar Yra .,~irIa U~ I Honda '09 CRF 100 Dirt Bike, Used. very little, never been in the mud. $1800 OBO 334-655- 1092 DO 12611 A^ ,m Kawasaki '09 KXF250 SMotor by BPM, 2 brothers S L '. performance pipe. Very L st bike for the motor- cr,,ssing extremist 334-726-3842 Kawasaki '96 800 Limited addition, lowered 5 inches, custom pipes, custom red python and tribal paint, road gears, new tires, L-E-D lights 15K mi. Must hear and hear to appreciate. $3500. 334-405-0928 Kawasaki Ninja '09 ZX-6E Monster. Less than 2500 miles, great condition, asking $8,000 obo. Will include, blue medium Kawasaki female jacket, and a large green male one, also a me- dium blue size HJC helmet. Call 334-714-1758 or email al scooby@yahoo.com S* Yamaha '09 V Star 1300 ,* ., Tourer- like new, 543 miles, S I10 months warranty, red, saddle bags, passenger m-l" ~back rest, windshield $8000. OBO Call 334-393-3824 DO12602 Honda 1962 C102 super % C Cub 50, 4k miles, Black & .. white, good condition, '1 electric start 3 speed, 4. 01! $2.500. Firm. Call noon (M- F) 334-347-9002 Ford '05 Explorer LXT 133k miles, 3rd row seating, towing package, very clean. $8400. Call 334-393-9315 or 334-763-0117 Honda '03 CRV- gold, 124k miles, power windows and locks, excellent condition, good gas mileage, $8500. Call 786-223-2278 Honda '05 CRV Special Edition- 63k miles, 4WD, fully loaded, sunroof, gold with tan interior, great condition, very clean, one owner. $15,500. Call 334-793-6790 or 718-7181 D012652 Honda '96 Passport, 5-speed, Power Steering, A, C, very clean ,low Miles $2500 OBO 334-691-7111 or 798-1768 DO 11893 -2 o Hummer '05 H2 4WD SUV. 4 tion. 3 row seat, all leath- er, new rugged tires, Sun, moon roof. Very clean. Mileage 103,100. Color Desert Sand. $20,000. Call 334- 671-4756. DO 12643 Toyota '04 4-Runner SR5 Silver, Leather, Spoil- er, 98k Mi. $12,900 334-791-9595 DO 12573 4120 John Deere Compact 4x4 Tractor- box blade, bush hog and 20ft 6 tori trailer $21,500. Call 334-803-7422 Chevrolet'00 LS Silverado ext. cab 4-door, Z71 4x4, Red, 138K miles, all power, 5000 miles on tires, tow package, Must see to appreciate. $9500. 334-791-2781 or 334-677-3050 DO 12067 i-U Chevrolet '02 S-10 regular cab. automatic, l ^ 4 cylinder, economical, 21,000 miles, 1 owner, new tires, $6795. Call: 334-790-7959. DO 12747 Chevrolet '02 Z71 L-^^,g_ ~$6999.00. f -- 2180 Montgomery Hwy - C1ll: 334-671-7720. Guaranteed Financing!! DO 12190 Chevy 1500 '07, white, ext. cab with 4 doors. 4x4 with extra leaf springs. Extra bedliner, A/C, AM/FM/CD; Electric windows, running board, new tires. $16,500. 334-793-6281 Days Dodge '06 Quad Cab Sport 4X4- red, 42k mile, fully loaded, 100,000. mile warranty, loan valued at $22k asking $17,500. OBO PRICE TO SELL!! Call 334-805-3034 Ford'08 F150 XLT 5.4 V8, 4 wheel drive, red in color $20,500. 334-671-9770. Ford'08 F-350, Dually, crew cab, 4WD, 6.4 Liter, v8 Diesel, Blue and Silver l'm. with ti,.ah. nth ro;. i t S H a nav. system and Serius radio. Tow package. 51K miles. Reese 5th Wheel hitch. Excellent Condition! $34,500 334-446-0073 or 240-925-2757 DO 12676 Ford '98 Ranger .Avr i.TUF i 9 S. regular cab, automatic, V-6, 1 owner, 24,000 miles, Speakers JBL Northridge E100 $350. 850-482- LIKE NEW! $6795. Call: 5434 7. 334.790-7959. DO 12748 Step 2 Sand/Water activity table w/cover & KUHN KNIGHT Verti- Maxx umbrella $40. 850-482-5434 Mixer Model 5032 Twin Air Conditioner unit for MH High Efficiency Augers, knives have just Air Conditioner unt for 850-592-2710MH, High Efficiency I i 0 been replaced. $15,500. works good, $50850-592-2710 Call 334-894-.315 or Camper Shell, Contractor Series, Very nice, 334-464-3189 $350 850-723-8173 Massey Ferguson '95, 240 Farming Tractor Canon 35mm Camera w/ flash handle & flash, 2WD, power steering, diesel, 519 hours, Good 28-80 auto lens & access. $250 850-482-7665 Condition, $6950 334-596-9460 or 334-693-3725 Cherry Entertainment Center, $200 Mar. FL Leave Message 850-209-4500 Toyota'03 Tacoma- V6, manual 4WD, silver Comm. Stainless Steef Sink, 48x21x13 Steal at with topper, excellent condition, 85k miles $100 Mar. FL 850-209-4500 $13,000. Call 334-889-2259 D012709 Glass Shelves- (15) from beauty shop, 5ft & 6ft, Toyota '07 Tacoma- Pre- runner SR5, fully load- all $75. Call 850-526-3426 ed with leather interior. 45k miles, 6 cyl auto, double cab, 2WD, dark blue, topper, 1 owner, garage kept $21,900 OBO Call 850-482-8700 TRACTOR '08-Massey Ferguson, 33HP, 200 Hours, like new, one owner, LOADED!! $25,000 OBO 334-687-3173, 334-695-1802 STRACTOR IH1440 Combine, Field Ready, Grain Head and Corn Head. $8,500. 850-415-0438 TRACTOR IH1440 Combine, Field Ready, Grain Head and Corn Head. $8,500. 850-415-0438 2003 Pontiac Montana Van -$6,000. White with , Gray Interior. Looks Great and Runs Great! . 48,700 Miles. Perfect for Family or Business! .,. . Extended version with 4 captains chairs and 1 bench-- seats 7 with room to carry in back. 334- 796-6729 or 334-701-8862 .., ." -K " Honda '96 Odyssey, Clean, Runs Good, Front & Rear air, VERY COLD! Automat- ic, Power Steering, $2500 OBO 334-691-7111 or 798- ' 1768 DO 11893 . Gaurenteed highest prices paid for your Junk or unwanted vehicals & farmnning equipment, Title or no Title 24 hrs a day, also pay finders fee. 334-596-0154 * Got a Clunker We'll be your Junker! We buy wrecked cars _ and Farm Equip. at a fair and honest price! Average g$ paid $-225. : S CALL 334-702-4323 D011208 - WANTED JUNK 4 VEHICLES TOP PRICE! I also sell used parts 24 HOUR TOWING 1 334-792-8664 4 WE PAY CaSH FOR JUNK CARS!!!!!! 334-818-1274 D012226 ECLtLIlJlE, II III R(LA\X S'ie .- FORD'89 F150, 4wh, 4x4 J Auto, $4,600 or reasonable offer. Call 229-296-8171. DO 11892 with the Classifieds Custom Tile & Flooring, LLC Natural Stone Ceramic Porcelain Custom Showers Hardwood Laminate & More No Job too Large or Small.! Licensed & Insured (850) 693-1423 or (850) 209-8099 For General House or Office Cleaning CallDebra Free Estimates References Available 850-526-2336 Pool Maintenance & Repair from top to bottom! Also fiberglass tub installation! (850) 573-6828 .B y ss Xl rPiU3T Et! I SELF TORAGE e*Grader Pan*# Excavator Dump Truck Bulldozer Demolition Grading Site Prep * Debris Removal Retention Ponds Leveling * Top Soil Fill Dirt Gravel Land Clearing GUNS I BUY OLD GUNS! (850) 203-2701 Hall Roofing Siding & Building LLC. - Lic. #RC29027412 RB29003513 SIDNEY HALL 4939 Hwy.2 2 = (850) 569-2021 Malone, F. (850) 526-8441 Florida 32445 "Beautification of Your Home" Carpentry/Painting Installations Furniture Repair & Refinishing General Repairs Insured I will sit with elderly. CNA Certified. Will do light housekeeping & cooking. Gail letter (850) 592-7253 (800) 693-6517| CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Your source for selligm and buyiinig! Bestway Portable Buildings Largest Manufacturer of Portable Buildings in North Florida qk. We have over 80 different sizes. You can choose color and style. Built on site 3614 Hwy 90 W. Marianna 850-482-8682 WE'LL BEAT ANY PRICE!! Big Or Small Jobs WELCOME BL OZIN:G:: Clay O'Neal's Land Clearing, Inc. ALTNA, FL 850-762-9402 Cell 850-832-5055 WE OFFER COMPLETE O.nUN, POaMW ArMYROAWDBUNE 20 YE4E M. Little Tikes Twin RaceCar Bed Frame, may be used outside also $50 Mar.FL 850-209-4500 Nascar BEANIE BABIES race car set. the 1st. (9) originals, made for Nascar Thunder stores, still in box, exc. cond. no longer made. $200. for all, Serious Inquiries ONLY!! 4 334-714-6565 4= AFTER 5 PM ONLY!!! Refrigerator, 22.6 Side by Side, good condition, $200 850-723-8173 Rug, 5x8 Terra Cotta and green floral $20 Graceville 850-209-3665 Table w/fringed lamp, V1/-round bronzed iron & .beveled glass $30 Graceville 850-209-3665 Truck Topper, Gray,fits Toyota Tundra 1995- 1997 $200 OBO 850-482-3247 IIRs~WL~UL-CL~~-m L-l,~- .I ii --, wwwICFLORBANcom I NOW OFFERINGU;I'TREE PLANTING!-~ CLASSIFIED |