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LIBRARY OF FLORIDA HISTORY PO BOX 117007 GAINESVILLE FL 3261 1 700- 8A Legislatuf e viap, Lil, sessionn Int'oriiig miore than 17,00 readers daily in pi V i ad olinAe pi2t offsJ , rint and online .. FLORIDAN Vol.90 No.100 Physicians take spotlight BY DEBORAH BUCKHALTER dbuckhalter@jcfloridan.com Two local physicians answered a series of heath care questions Friday at the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce monthly Power Breakfast, guest speakers at the breakfast sponsored this month by Jackson Hospital. Formatted as a Question ,and Answer presenta- tion, the session featured general surgeon Dr. Te- Leff resa Goodpaster and obstetrician/ gynecologist Dr. Ricky Leff. Goodpaster N said, with three general surgeons now practicing in Goodpaster Jackson County, heath care oppor- tunities continue to increase for local residents and make it pos- sible for most- to avoid traveling outside the community for any type of surgery other than for the heart and brain. With four gynecologists in practice here, the same is true in Leff's specialty. The increasing availability of medical services at Jackson Hos- pital ard the local medical com- munity at large was an overrid- ing theme of Friday's breakfast program. Jackson Hospital, for instance, has recently completed an $8.5 million renovation which includ- ed an overhaul of its emergency room. Since that time, the hospi- tal has seen a 14 percent increase in emergency room visits year- to-year, according to hospital administrator Larry Meese, who spoke briefly at the session. The MARK SKINNER/FLORIDAN Jo-Ann Anderson and Carolyn McCormick check out the goody bags they won during the door prize drawings at the First Friday Power Breakfast. hospital has also risen from the 25th to the 80th percentile in a measure of meeting or -,L L.ed in 1 national standards of care. Baby talk At Friday's meeting Leff took the first in a series of questions posed by Chamber represen- tative Jeff Massey and Jackson Hospital's new marketing direc- tor, Katherine Dozier, who took over that role on ivlonday. Left was asked what he felt was the number one threat to fetal heath. Prematurity, he said, is the cause of most newborn deaths. Because of this, pre-term labor prevention is a focus in the care of pregnant women, he said. He spoke of an available injection to combat that danger, one that has resulted in a one-third drop in the number of premature de- liveries. A cervical stitch, he said, is another remedy with similar results. High blood pressure, another danger in pregnancy, can be mitigated by a low-dose aspirin regimen, he said, and by mothers -keeping their weight at an appro- priate level. But, to take advantage of these and most other valuable medi- cal interventions, he pointed out, it is critical that expectant mother begin seeing a medical care provider as early as possible in pregnancy, since some of the See PHYSICIANS, Page 9A Warbirds coming to fly-in BY DEBORAH BUCKHALTER dbuckhalter@jcfloridan.com Old warbirds, small private planes and the celebrity Lock- heed 12 used in the movie "Ame- lia" will be among the aircraft traveling here to take part in a Saturday, May 18, Armed Forces Day and Fly-In, an event meant to promote the Marianna Mu- nicipal Airport as a place for pi- lots to land, fuel and park their aircraft. The airport, located at 3689 Industrial Park Dr., has recently added two new hangar facili- ties, each of which can shelter up to 16 aircraft. Marianna City Manager Jim Dean and his staff, Main Street Marianna Director Charlotte Bruner and Tourist Development Council Director Pam Fuqua worked with other volunteers over the course, of several months to put the event together, in part to promote and show off those new facilities as well as other things the 'airport has to offer. In addition to aircraft-oriented activities, the event will feature food and arts and crafts vendors and some fun for children, such as a bounce house and inflat- able slide, so that the fly-in will be a family-friendly weekend opportunity. The night before the fly-in gets MARK SKINNER/FLORIDAN A helicopter takes off with a cargo of sightseers during a 2010 fly-in. under way, the participating pi- lots will be able to take an FAA safety seminar from 6-9 p.m. at Citizens Lodge, and old aircraft- oriented movies will be shown in the airport terminal begin- ning at.8 p.m. that evening. The event is also meant to commemorate Graham Air Base, and organizers are extend- ing a special invitation to former pilots and employees of the fa- cility in hopes that they will at- tend and perhaps reunite with some of their former colleagues throughout the day. Pilots will be treated lo a pan- cake and sausage breakfast Sat- urday morning, and the fly-in gates open to the public at 9 a.m. After a 9:15 a.m. open- ing ceremony, the Red Dragons Aerial Demonstration Team will carry out a low-altitude fly-by, complete with show smoke. The Chipola RC (Radio Control) Aviators will put their mini-air- craft in flight in a 10-10:30 a.m. demonstration. Admission is free, and those who attend will have an oppor- tunity at 2 p.m. to win signifi- cant cash door prizes donated by local businesses first prize is $500, second prize is $250; and third prize is $100 in the must- be-present-to-win drawing. Young people interested in aviation will also have a chance to take a ."Young Eagles" ride See PLANES, Page 9A ', a.. .O I '2 ,' I ,, ~ . ,.' S .jjH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A plan to relocate Jackson County School Board offices to the old high school campus on Daniels Street in Marianna may finally have the funding it needs to move forward. Scott signature means $6M for Marianna renovation project Old campus building will be new school board home base BY ANGIE COOK acook@jcfloridan.com Nearly four years after it be- gan, a plan to renovate prop- erty that used to house Mari- anna High School may finally have the funding it needs to be realized. Late Friday, the Florida House of Representatives ap- proved a $74.5 billion state budget by a vote of 106-11. The General Appropriations bill, which earlier passed the Sen- ate by unanimous vote, now goes to the Gov. Rick Scott for his signature. In the Legislature's budget is a fixed capital outlay of $6 mil- lion (down from the initially requested $6.5 million) for use See FUNDING, Page 9A )>CLASSIFIEDS...6B This Newspaper e ,N Is Printed On . Recycled Newsprint *.- 7 65161 80100 1 ) ENTERTAINMENT..3B ) JC LIFE...3A ) OBITUARIES...9A )) OPINION...6A SSPORTS...1B ) STATE...8A Chevrolet-Buick-Cadillac-Nissan - IPIC ',A. L,;: ,' .' / , .- ."- :i:: ,1;" .,- .,, ^ / t, " Facebook Twitter -:..- ,... ... . . .....L.ti '" ; :- ;: '-. ," ; '.',..'. .. 'tt | Follow us __1____1_1_11_11_~_I____i__llll -11_1_1~_1_~ _I1~ Ctn 2 JobScq 52 I'kgScq 002 P ,. , : ~~J,,, a,.- : ~.' ,:_.:. - I a JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN + www.jcfloridan.com - High 71 Low 520 Monday Breezy. Cooler. Stray Shower. SHigh 810 Low 580 Wednesday Warmer. More Humid. High-770 2 Low 550 Tuesday Partly Cloudy & Mild. j. High 840 SN. Low 58 Thursday Mostly Sunny & Warm. Weather Outlook 2- howui Mornh to date Normal MID TIDES Panama City Apalachicola Port St. Joe Destin Pensacola 0 13 ' 0 I ,'" 0.5" Low - Low - Low - Low - Low - RIVER READINGS Woodruff Blounmtstown Marianna Caryville Year to date Normal YTD Normal for yeda 4:16AM 'High 7:38 PM High 4:21 AM 'High 5:32 PM High 6:08 PM High Reading 47.23 ft. 9.2 ft. 8.5 ft. 6.99 ft. 21.I' '(I - 8:18 PM - 1:23 PM - 8:51 PM - 9:24 AM - 9:57 AM Flood Stage 66.0 ft. 15.0 ft. 19.0 ft. 12.0 ft. ULTRAVIOLET INDEX 0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate, 6-7 High, 8-10 Very High, 11+ Extreme 0 1 2 3 THE SUN AND MOON Sunrise 5:53 AM JL.. Sunset 7:22 PM Moonrise 3:06 AM May May May May Moonset 3:36 PM 10 18 25 31 JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN Publisher Valeria Roberts vroberts@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 Marilanna, 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, call Circula- 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 271-840) "is published Tuesday through 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 by 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. HOW TO GET YOUR NEWS PUBLISHED The Jackson County Floridan will publish news of general interest free of charge. Submit your news or Community Calendar events via e-mail, 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. JCFLCR I _CC- - Community Calendar SUNDAY, MAY 5 2013 Washington County's Miss Heart of the USA Pageant-2 p.m. at the Panhandle Shrine Club, 1425 Brickyard Road, Chipley. Divisions will include: Baby Miss, Tiny Miss, Little Miss, Petit Miss, Junior Miss, Teen Miss, Miss and Ms. Proceeds will benefit the Washington County Council on Aging. Alcoholics Anonymous Closed Discussion 6:30 p.m. at 4349 W. Lafayette St. in Marianna (in one-story building behind 4351W. Lafayette St.). Attendance limited to persons with a desire to stop drinking. ) Alcoholics Anonymous Meeting 8 p.m. in the board room of Campbellton-Graceville Hospital, 5429 College Drive, Graceville. MONDAY, MAY 6 Chipola College Registration for Summer I 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Call 718-221. or visit www. chipola.edu. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year -1-3 p.m. at Early Childhood Center in Marianna. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the Early Child- hood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Graceville Elementary School. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all familyincome and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. r Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013- 14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Grand Ridge School. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September land Early Head Start is for chil- dren 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets'are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. D Employability Workshop, Common Job Search Mistakes to Avoid 2:30 p.m. at the-Marianna One Stop Career Center, 4636 Highway 90, Mari- anna. Call 718-0326. D Jackson County Quilter's Guild Meeting 5:30-7:30 p.m. at Ascension Lutheran Church, 3975 U.S. 90 West, Marianna. Business meetings are fourth Mondays; other Mondays are for projects, lessons, help. All quilters welcome. Call 209-7638. I) City of Jacob Regular Monthly Meeting 6 p.m. at the Jacob City Hall. The public is welcome to attend. ) Alcoholics Anonymous Open Meeting 8-9 p.m. in the AA room of First United Methodist Church, 2901 Caledonia St., Marianna. TUESDAY, MAY 7 a Chipola College Late Registration for Sum- mer I 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Call 718-2211 or visit www. chipola.edu. ) EJCEDC Recognizes May Business of the Month -10 a.m. at Kiddie Campds, 7950 Davis St. in Sneads. The public is invited to attend. Optimist Club of Jackson County Meeting Noon at Jim's Buffet & Grill in Marianna. D Orientation Noon to 3 p.m. at Goodwill Career Training Center, 4742 Highway 90, Marianna. Learn about and register for free services. Call 526-0139. ) Sewing Circle -1 p.m. at Jackson County Senior Citizens, 2931 Optimist Drive in Marianna. Call 482-5028. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Cottondale Elementary School. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Early Childhood Center in Marianna. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the Early Child- hood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Grand Ridge School. Pre- school is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certifi- cate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Malone School. Pre- school is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certifi- cate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Prograrhs Office. Call 482-1266. Employability Workshop, Making Positive First Impressions 2:30 p.m. at the Marianna One Stop Career Center, 4636 Highway 90, Mari- anna. Call 718-0326. )) Jackson County Tobacco-Free Partnership Meeting 3:30-5 p.m. at the Department of Health in Jackson County in multi-purpose meeting room, 4979 Health Way, Marianna. Call 526-2412 ext 157. ) City of Marianna Regular Commission Meet- ing 6 p.m. at City Hall, 2898 Green St. The public is invited to attend. Call 718-1001. Alcoholics Anonymous Open Meeting - 8-9 p.m. in the AA room of First United Methodist Church, 2901 Caledonia St. in Marianna. ) Chipola College Classes begin for Summer I Term with late registration through noon on May 8. Call 718-2211 or visit www.chipola.edu. WEDNESDAY, MAY 8 Blood Drive 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Cottondale High School. Call 482-9821 ext. 231 to schedule an appointment. n Jackson County Senior Appreciation Day 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Jackson County Agricul- tural Center, 2741 Pennsylvania Avenue in Marianna. Help celebrate Older Americans Month sponsored by Jackson County Senior Citizens and enjoy food, fun, fellowship and entertainment by Trish Brannon. Call 482-5028. ) Alcoholics Anonymous Open Meeting Noon to 1 p.m. in.the AA room of First United Methodist Church, 2901 Caledonia St. in Marianna. ) Basic Computer Class Part 2 Noon to 3 p.m. at Goodwill Career Training Center, 4742 Highway 90, Marianna. Free class teaches basic components and use of a computer. Call 526-0139. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Cottondale Elementary, School. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September land Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013-14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Early Childhood Center in Marianna. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the Early Child- hood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013- 14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Graceville Elementary School. Preschool is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September 1 and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certificate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. ) Jackson County School District Preschool/ Early Head Start Registration for the 2013- 14 School Year 1-3 p.m. at Malone School. Pre- school is for children 3 or 4 years old on or before September I and Early Head Start is for children 2 years old or younger. Bring the child's birth certifi- cate, social security card, proof of all family income and completed registration forms. Registration packets are available at the school site or the Early Childhood Programs Office. Call 482-1266. The submission deadline for this calendar is two days before publication. Submit to: Community Calendar, Jackson County Floridan, P. O. Box 520, Marianna, FL 32447, email editorial@jcfloridan.com, fax 850-482-4478 or bring items to 4403 Constitution Lane in Marianna. P.,icc Roundup -A- Marianna Police Department ' The Marianna Police De- partment listed the following incidents for May 2, the latest available report: Two accidents, one suspicious vehicle, one verbal disturbance, one burglar alarm, four traffic stops, one civil dispute, two follow-up in- vestigations, one animal com- plaint, one assist of a motorist or pedestrian, one property damage report and one welfare check. Jackson County Sheriff's Office The Jackson County Sheriff's Office and county fire/rescue reported the following incidents for May 2, the latest available report: Three accidents, three abandoned vehicle reports, three suspicious vehicle re- ports, one escort, one highway obstruction, one report of mental illness, one physical -. -- .- disturbance, :--, <- two verbal disturbances, C M E one vehicle fire, z- E 13 medical calls, one traffic crash (with entrapment), one burglar alarm, two panic alarms, two reports of shooting in the area, eight traffic stops, three larceny complaints, three trespass com- plaints, one obscene/threaten- ing phone call, one follow-up investigation, one assault, two suicide attempts, one noise disturbance, one retail theft, one assist of another agency, six transports and three threat/ha- rassment complaints. Jackson County Correctional Facility The following persons were booked into the county jail dur- ing the latest reporting periods: )) Brenda Pogue, 45, 1013 Bay Circle, Panama City Beach, sen- tenced tO 90 days in county jail. )) Kyle Head, 22, 614 Mid Park Ave., Bonifay, violation of county probation. )) Terrance Thomas, 29, 4515 Hosford Highway, Quincy, worthless checks-six counts. ) Joseph Painter, 45, 3700 Highway 71, Marianna, hold for Walton Co. Jacob Tucker, 20, 4322 Deer- ing St., Marianna, grand theft. ) Justin Hamilton, 24, 944 Spears Lane, Graceville, hold for Holmes Co. ) Charles Weeks, 65, 6179 Fort Road, Greenwood, battery - domestic violence. ) Randy Morris, 55, 1787 Vir- ginia St., Alford, possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia. ) Amber Burns, 20, 4649 High- way 273, Graceville, grand theft. Jail Population: 184 To report a crime, call CrimeStoppers at 526-5000 or a local law enforcement agency. To report a wildlife violation, call 1-888- 404-FWCC (3922). -e ,,. .'.' " L. ., "- .. .- .. - ,. .; : .: ,, .'L; .. .i 68. ' . ;, L o,,, *4-,w 45, I .' ,_ .7,. . High: 67 S"' ^ '-.- "-' .' "" IL ow: 47 High: 74 .... -.' ~- ''" "-"" '- '"", -"-'<.. -w "": 48 ".- '' ';" '* ', '.-. ","x-= -" High: 7'S ^ ..** .., .'^ ," ", -, V, . .' :- ', &. .,,A .L'O ..,7 .:' '.2 ,M,_ ',''-: ,' .-: .'- ::% ut,! :. '*.- -. ."- *-. "' ; -ZJ^ ^ y -. '- ; o j .-7, '. H.igh .7.. ..... Lo, ,:4-. .; ""; ;.ir ,. ,. - Low: 50 14~~' PRECIPITATION FLORIDA'S REAL PANHANDLE MEDIA PARTNERS WJAQ 10oo0.9" LISTENFORHYEA -12A SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 WAIE-UP CgL. 8 Calvin and Debra Lockey of Marianna, Florida are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter Chelsea Anne to William Crawford Hagy, son of John Hagy, Sr. of Knowville, Tennessee and Treva Hagy of Tallahassee, Florida. Chelsea is the granddaugh- ter of Jurlene Hall and the late Ed Hall; and the late Charles and Beatrice Lockey all of Ma- rianna, Florida. Chelsea is a 2005 graduate of Marianna High School and a 2006 graduate of Northwest Florida School of Cosmetolo- gy in Tallahassee, Florida. She is a master hair stylist in Talla- hassee, Florida. Will is the grandson of the late Charles and Thelma Hagy of Kentucky; and the late James Lee and Joyce Lee. Will is a 1994 graduate of Amos P. Godby High School in Tallahassee, Florida. He is an executive chef in Tallahas- see, Florida. A beach wedding in Inlet Beach, Florida is planned for June 21. 2013. Albert & Kathy Milton of Marianna are proud to an- nounce the engagement of their daughter, Lauren Danielle Milton to Justin Lee Lyons of Port St. Joe, Florida. He is the son of Cecil Lyons, III of Port St Joe, Florida & Sheila & Don Kelly of Colora- do Springs, Colorado. Lauren is the granddaughter of the late Robert H. & Lucille Milton of Marianna and the late Henry C. and Althea Ste- vens of Marianna. Justin is the grandson of Ce- cil, II & Beth Lyons of Port St Joe and Michael & Mary Cox of Lynn Haven; and the great- grandson of Robert Williams of Port St Joe, Florida. The bride is a 2003 graduate of Marianna High School. She attended Chipola College and Florida State University, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Busi- ness Management in 2007. She is currently employed in Marianna as a Realtor with ERA Chipola Realty. The groom is a 2005 gradu- ate of Port St Joe High School. He attended Chipola College and Florida State University, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Sociolo- gy in 2012. He is currently em- ployed in Panama City, FL as an IT specialist for Big Bend Community Based Care. The bride and groom are to be married in Marianna, Flori- da on June 1st, 2013. Pets on Parade , Larry is a two- year-old male terrier mix who wandered into a woman's house on Laramore Road through a doggy door. If you are his owner or are interested in adopting him, the shelter PHOTO BY MARK SKINNER/FLORIDANis at 4011 Maintenance Drive in Marianna. Its hours are 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday-Friday and 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday. The shelter's phone number is 482-4570; the website is www. partnersforpets.petfinder.com. This four-year-old Paso Fino colt is very shy, and needs a quiet, competent handler familiar with the Paso Fino breed for training. If you would like to adopt him, please call Hidden Springs Horse Rescue at 850-526-2231 to schedule a visit. Their website is www.FloridaHorseRescue.com. - - - - F r ^ 1 ,- I. G ' I ive Mom What She Wants... CLEAN WINDOWS! Hold on to the good, let go of the bad I Life is filled with the good and bad, and the happy or sad. When we are able to make our own decisions, we determine what kind of activities we want to be, involved in during our lifetimes. The longer we live, more challenges will come our way; and we should try to make deci- sions that will better our lives. - During the years of a lifetime each of us will learn that there are some people or things that we' are wise to keep in our lives, and some people or things we should distance ourselves from; if we want to maintain a quality, pleasant lifestyle. If we are a part of a family that sticks together through thick and thin and has strong unity, we must maintain that unity; don't let it go. When there are lifelong friendships where continuous mutual On the Menu May 6-10 Breakfast and lunch menus for Jackson County schools. Monday the cob, steamed carrots, fresh assorted fruit, chilled pears. Thursday ) Breakfast: Chicken bis- cuit, scrambled eggs and toast, assorted cereal and cinnamon toast. Choice of 1: Assorted 100% juice, chilled pears. ) Lunch: Potato bowl and breadstick, cheese- burger on a bun, assorted salads. Choose up to 3 sides: Steamed peas and carrots, seasoned green beans, fresh assorted fruit, applesauce. Tuesday Breakfast: Cinnamon roll, ultimate breakfast round, banana muffin loaf. Choice of 2: Chilled mixed fruit, fresh assorted fruit. )) Lunch: Mac and cheese with biscuit, assorted wraps, assorted salads. Choose up to 3 sides: Steamed broccoli, celery sticks, fresh assorted fruit, chilled mixed fruit. Wednesday n Breakfast: French toast sticks, oatmeal and toast, assorted cereal and buttered toast. Choice of 1: Chilled peaches, fresh assorted fruit. ) Lunch: Frito chili bake, grilled cheese sandwich, assorted salads. Choose up to 3 sides: Corn on respect is displayed, hold on to those friendships; don't let them go. Too often, people get caught up in negative Thomas friendships Thomi s n that can be Vincent very detri- Murpy mental to their lives. They end up spending time in negative places, indulging in unhealthy habits, and putting them- selves in atmospheres where criminal activities can take place. When these types of situations occur, the sooner a person can dis- solve those friendships the better. Try to find positive friends and get a fresh start. There are those who have gotten in such a rut that they don't have much hope about their future. As it has been written before, ) Breakfast: Pancake on a stick, assorted cereal and cinnamon toast, buttery grits and toast. Choice of 1: Pineapple tidbits, fresh assorted fruit. S)) Lunch: Baked spaghetti and garlic stick, cold cut on bun, assorted salads. Choose up to 3 sides: Mixed vegetables, romaine salad, fresh assorted fruit, chilled peaches. Friday Breakfast: Mini waffles, oatmeal and toast, assorted cereal and toast. anyone without hope has a serious problem. When life's circumstances have led a person to have low self esteem and a "don't care" attitude, they need to try changing their mind set and making an honest effort to improve their life. Don't waste time wal- lowing in self pity; get rid of negativity. Going to church and spending time with fellow believers can be one of the most uplifting things we can do to relax from our everyday routines. Attend- ing a friendly, comforting church we truly believe in gives many of us some- thing positive to look forward to. One of the most impor- tant things parents can do is to instill a strong respect for God in their children; because they will need inspiration at times to make it through this un- certain world. There has been a noticeable drop in Choice of 1: Raisins, as- sorted 100% juice. ) Lunch: Pepperoni pizza, hotdog on a bun, grilled cheese sandwich. Choose up to 3 sides: Baked beans, baked po- tato wedges, fresh assort- ed fruit, pineapple tidbits. Choice of milk. JCFLORIDAN.COM CREATE YOUR OWN MASTERPIECE X Waco Gift Shop ,'-"u i irt inqn~ hrr JackasoI Square 3Iarlaxppa 482-5781 I liodny riday :00-6:00 St 0urda.y i:.00.00 the morals of this world; but when a person has good character, respects others and lives an honest lifestyle, they won't fall into the trap of negativity like many have during this time in our history. When the desire for change is in a person's heart, it's never too late for them to develop a positive way of thinking and living. i Call Daniel for a i I FREE Quote! I '(850) 592-8769' L - - - -J Marianna Municipal Airport 3689 Industrial Park Dr. Marianna, Florida (850) 482-2281 ATORDPAY 9YM 4PM MAY 18... 4 PRIZES FREE EVENT Come See the Display of War Birds and Civilian Aircraft Great Food andArts & Crafts from Local Vendors Young Eagles Air Rides, Helicopter Rides $30 Also f&atarin5 CHIPOLA R/C AVIATORS SJACKSON ,, J COUNTY ..../ ".' ,:. .... ,A City of Marianna Jackson County Main Street TDC Marianna SLike us on Engagements gy Milton, Lyons - 'L y JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com MASONS HOLD AWARDS NIGHT SUBMITTED PHOTOS H armony Masonic Lodge No.3 F&AM in Marianna recently held an awards night to honor and recognize several members. Charles Mock and Lionel Young received 50 year membership pins and certfi- cates. Worshipful Master Azell Nail made the presentation to the long-time members with wives Ora Mock and Sheila Young placing the appropriate membership lapel pins on their husbands. MOTORCYCLE CLUB HOLDS FUNDRAISER On Saturday, April 6, the Fire and Iron Motorcycle Club held a car show and raffle with the benefits going to Emerald Coast Hospice. The proceeds will be used for Camp "I Believe," a camp for bereaved children. Sears and Big Lots contributed to the event also, each donating a tool box and a gas grill for the raffle. SUBMITTED PHOTO Higher Prices Paid... Sell Your Gold at... Paid on Site 4432 Lafayette Street 526-5488 www.smithandsmithonline.com veriz on I n Griffin (left) was recognized as being the newest Master Mason member of Harmony Lodge by Worshipful Master Azell Nail. ENDS MAY 12TH Get Mom a hands-free Bluetooth device paired with a 4G LTE smartphone on the Powerful Network. T A T rshipful Master Azell Nail (left) j\ j/\ /and Secretary Jeff Baxter were V Y recognized for completing advanced written course work as a Master Mason. ae'i .....,,: No Measuring Food r..:. No Pre-Packaged Food S .. No Exercise No Drugs ,.. . .... 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Samsung and Galaxy Tab are both trademarks of Samsung Electronics America, Inc. and/or its related entities. 2013 Verizon Wireless. FRHMD -14A SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 LOCAL JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN \.. .'. r.: til-r .11l- :.... ll O'BRYAN SPEAKS TO CHIPOLA CIVIC CLUB SUBMITTED PHOTO Lauren O'Bryan of Southern Craft Creamery was the guest speaker at the Chipola Civic Club meeting on April 25. Chuck Hudson introduced O'Bryan who spoke to the Club about the manufacture, marketing and distribution of ice cream by Southern Craft. All of the milk used by Southern Craft is provided by CinDale Dairy. Pictured (from left) are Dale Eade of CinDale Dairy, Lauren O'Bryan, Cindy Eade of CinDale Dairy and Chuck Hudson of First Commerce Credit Union. Marianna Garden Club installs new officers Special to the Floridan On Wednesday, April 24, members of the Marianna Garden Club gathered for a lovely salad luncheon and the installation of of- ficers for 2013-15. The club works to pro- mote beautification of the local community through tree plantings and garden development. The:. "Pocket Park" on Market Street is an example of, their efforts to provide green space in our down- town area. Over the last ten years, the club is responsible for planting 50 trees in vari- ous places. Some of these are commemorative trees to honor citizens of the community and some are in observance of Arbor Day. Recently, the garden club has undergone an ex- citing change. Originally, the club was comprised of "circles," and each cir- cle met independently .to carry on club projects. In Marianna Garden Club officers for 2013-15 are (from left): Charlotte Hunter, president; Katherine Crawford, treasurer; Carol Schoepf, secretary and Joann Heisner, vice president. order that all members benefit from the wealth of knowledge and programs available, the garden club has become one uni- fied club. Members are excited about the possi- bilities this presents, for the future. The Marianna Garden Club was formed in 1952 and is open to. anyone interested in gardening. For membership infor- mation contact President Charlotte Hunter at 482- 0097 or rosebelhunter@ aol.com. USDA announces CCC lending rates for May Special to the Floridan The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Commod- ity Credit Corporation announced interest rates for May.,The CCC borrow- ing rate-based charge for May is 0.125 percent, un- changed from April. For 1996 and subsequent crop year commodity and marketing assistance loans, the interest rate for loans disbursed during May is 1.125 percent, un- changed from April. Interest rates for Farm Storage Facility Loans approved for May are as follows: 1.250 percent with seven-year loan terms, down from 1.375 in April; 1.875 percent with 10- year loan terms, down from 2.000 in April and 2.125 percent with 12,year loan terms, down from 2.250 percent in April. The interest rate for Sugar Stor- age Facility Loans for May is 2.375 'percent, down from 2.500 in April. The maximum dis- count rate applicable for May for the Tobacco Tran- sition Payment Program is 5 percent, unchanged from April. This is based on the 3.250 percent prime rateplus2percent,rounded to the nearest whole number. Past monthly releas- es announcing interest rates charged by CCC on commodity and market- ing assistance loans dis- bursed for that particular month reflect the interest rate the U.S. Trea- sury charged CCC for that month. This was the interest rate specified by CCC since January 1, 1982, but the process of establishing the interest rate was changed by a provision of the Federal Agriculture Im- provement and Reform Act of 1996 (the Act), en- acted on April 4, 1996. Section 163 of the Act requires that monthly interest rates applicable to commodity and mar- keting assistance loans are to be 100 basis points - or 1 percent greater than the rate determined under the applicable interest rate formula in effect on Oct. 1, 1995. This formula resulted in a rate equivalent to the amount the U.S. Treasury charged CCC for borrowing, for the month. Further program in- formation is available from USDA Farm Service Agency's Financial Management Division at 202-772-6041. Make her DAY Margarita style earrings A halo of diamonds ' Starting @ $379 Come buy it's Margarita Time j atson GEMOLOGOST Downtown Marianna watsonjewelers.corn 850.482.4037 -w ,-r. ,.:r Phonee:(850) 526-4484 ii'Toll Free: (8) 664-2037 Fax: (8) 526-5484 Divinedesigns4481 @earthlink.net 10, v s hi personalityy beads... Great Selection of Beads to show Sour love S, tarting at 47 $36.00 These beads are in, 1 terling silver & .it perfc rtfc on Pandora bracelet Your Hometown Jeweler 4432 Lafayette Street 526-5488 ww smlnoandsmimnorine corn Fiad seon R PFacebook ;-"; Heart of Our Facility A-.tit n celebration of National Nurses Week, we proudly recognize the hardworking nurses who help make our hospital both a trusted provider of quality medical care and a great place to work. Brenda Sears, Amanda Williams, Amy A. Keller, Terry Brown, Julia Manners-Morales, Ammita Daniels, LaTonia M. Blair, Melissa A. Williams, Kristina Aycock, Malisa K. Yates, Milissa Fillingim, Tiffany Lucas, Marjorie J, Heddle, Patsy Gaskin, Mary A. Gay, Melinda Hobby, Cericco L, Brown, Susan E. Owens, Michelle S. Jennings, Cravius L Lawarence, Tabitha Register, Anne-Laure R. Verill, Daneisa L Hill, Wylene W. Lathan, Michelle Johnson, Lisa L, Blattner, Latranda R. Brown, Donna Leavins, Tammy L. Atkins, Tiffany L. Williford, Debra L. Duke, Santana D, Ammons, Jennifer D. Burns, Heather S. Cain, Phyllis Bullock, Diana Bush, Michele I Garner, Tushenia Smith, Jackie Bolin, Sherri Parrish, Cheryl Hamm, Stephanie K. Allen, Kristina Lenderman, Shellie L Bowden, Kimberly Smith, Mikaylo Smith, Starla Gray, Gail Ussery, Candace S. Koonce, Yorlanda C. Peterson, Kim 1. McElroy, Susan B. Lunsford, Lillie R. Tanner, Renee M, Grubbs, Terri Golden, Avis Barrios. We A ,: 'eciate All That You Do! Signature HealthCARE of North Florida S- - q..1 r *,f f .. / 'F'F ( C ' 7 ':_, I WE IMAGINED OUR PARENTS WERE HEROES. They still can be. The faith they taught will lead you to the right choice. With our caregivers and your family working together, the parent you've always loved and admired can lead the way once again. Covenant HOSPICE Licensed in Florida in 1983 Care when it counts the most, 800-541-3072 covenanthospice.org 1983 2013 9 Celebrating 30 Years of Service ~m ~ w~ iIi~~i~s 1083 Sanders Avenue Graceville, FL 32440 850.263.4447 ~__11____-___1~--11_~I ------- __ SUNDAY, MAY5, 2013 5AF ^~~ LOCRL Publisher VALERIA ROBERTS Florida Voices Politics threatens texting legislation A after years of proponents' efforts to get a texting- while-driving ban on the books in Florida, the tate House this week managed to take minimal- ist, common sense legislation and turn it into a solu- tion in search of a problem and maybe dooming this needed highway safety in the process. The House voted 110-6 on April 30 to pass the texting ban, but not until it had weakened what was already a weak measure. The bill already made texting a second- ary offense, which means a driver could not be ticketed for texting unless stopped for another violation. The fine, if caught, would be $30. Sponsors further softened the bill's language by allowing drivers to text while stopped at a light or if they had hands-free talk-to-text technology in their car. That bill passed the Senate on a bipartisan 36-0 vote. Then it got to the ideological House, where lawmak- ers, who have been putting up roadblocks to a testing ban for almost a half-decade, manufactured a problem: The law could open drivers' mobile phone records to law enforcement for any reason. "This only speaks to one area: Your civil liberties," said Rep. Jose Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, a future House speaker who sponsored an amendment limiting police access to phone records to cases involving death or injury. It is hard to imagine that our overburdened law enforcement agencies would be spending time and resources looking at phone records for a $30 traffic violation, but such is the ridiculousness of the politics that has shadowed the texting ban since it was first introduced in the Legislature by Sen. Nancy Detert, R-Venice, who has sponsored it unsuccessfully for four straight years. The House action understandably frustrated Detert, who described the amended legislation as a "watered down watered down bill." It now must go back to the Senate for a second vote. Hopefully, the senators will again vote to pass the texting ban, however weak and watered down it may be. It is, at least, a start. That lawmakers have turned this into such drawn-out discussion is befuddling. It has the support of the National Transportation Safety Board, the sheriffs and police chiefs associations, AAA, AARP, AT&T, the Florida Parent Teacher Association, medical and insurance associations and the state's trial lawyers. The AAA Auto Club South commissioned a survey that showed 87 percent of motorists support laws prohibit- ing texting or mailing while driving. The Florida Department of Motor Vehicles, mean- while, reported that nearly 5,000 vehicle crashes in 2012 were attributable, at least in part, to a driver texting or otherwise using "an electronic communication device" while behind the wheel. It is incredible that the Legislature has taken this long to address, even in the most modest way, what the general public clearly recognizes as a highway safety danger. Let's hope another legislative session does not pass without Florida having some sort of texting-while-driv- ing ban on the books it is one of only five such states. The proposed law is not as strong as is needed, but not wearing a seat belt was once a secondary violation, too, and now nine out of 10 Florida drivers wear them out of habit a good habit. Ocala Star-Banner Letters to the Editor Submit letters by either mailing to Editor, P.O. Box 520, Marianna FL. 32447 or fayihg to 850-482-4478 or send email to editoriall'icfloridan.com. The Floridan reserves the right to edit or not publish any letter Be sure to include your tull address and telephone number. These will only be used to verity the letter and will not be printed. For more information call 850-526-3614 ,C, 'e;M representatives Florida Legislature Coley Gaetz Southerland Nelson State Rep. Marti Coley, R-District 5 District Office: Administration Building, Room 186 Chipola College 3094 Indian Circle Marianna, FL 32446-1701 850-718-0047 www.MyFloridaHouse.gov State Sen. Don Gaetz, R-District 1 District Office: 4300 Legendary Drive Suite 230 Destin, FL 32541 850-897-5747 866-450-4366 (toll free) www.FLSenate.gov U.S. Congress U.S. Rep. Steve Southerland II, R-2 1229 Longworth House Office Building Washington, DC 20515 202-225-5235 @RepSoutherland www.Southerland.House.gov U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla. 716 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-5274 @SenBillNelson www.BillNelson.Senate.gov U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. 317 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3041 @MarcoRubio www.Rubio.Senate.gov CI4EMv~4L AEN~F U'~ lz- rMSYRI Playing politics, favorites with health law wo things people detest about Washington: when members of Congress play politics and when they play favor- .ites, especially favoring themselves. Well, pull up a chair and get your mad on. Both sides of the aisle are guilty in the flap over the Afford- able Care Act's health insurance Exchanges. Exchanges are the online market- places where people will compare and buy insurance starting in Janu- ary. One of the selling points for the public is that members of Congress will participate. This is less because Congress wanted to do the right thing than because Seli. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, added a require- ment that Congress and staff enter the exchanges. Members of Congress are notori- ous for making rules for the rest of us while exempting themselves, and Grassley has the novel notion that Congress ought not do that. He was also gigging Democrats and didn't expect his amendment to survive. But Democrats surprised him and agreed to it. With the online exchanges scheduled to open for enrollment in October, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, and Senate Ma- jority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., reportedly were secretly negotiat- ing a way to exempt lawmakers and Capitol Hill staffers. When the news broke, the twitterverse lit up with outrage. The congressional leaders denied they wanted to exempt themselves. They wanted only to fix it so the federal government could continue contributing its employer share to workers' insurance premiums, they MarshaMercer said. Maybe so, but the damage was done. Now comes Rep. Dave Camp, R- Mich., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. He upped the ante by proposing that all fed- eral employees from the presi- dent to groundskeepers buy their health insurance on exchang- es. He would exempt active-duty military and postal workers. "If the Obamacare exchanges are good enough for the hard-working Americans and small businesses the law claims to help, then they should be good enough for the president, vice president, Congress and federal employees," a Camp spokeswoman said. President Barack Obama has said he will buy insurance through an exchange, although he has medi- cal staff at his elbow in the White House. Camp's bill brought speedy con- demnation from Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi and the unions that represent federal workers. "There is no need to kick over 2 million federal employees off their insurance plans in order to satisfy the cynical political urges of House Republicans, who have voted to repeal this law'over 30 times," a spokesman for Pelosi said. Camp's proposal is an over-cor- reaction, and federal workers are already political footballs under sequestration's automatic spending cuts and furloughs. But his propos- al does raise an interesting point. Should the government continue to subsidize federal employees' health care the way private em- ployers do? If so, a mechanism for employer subsidies needs to be built into the exchanges. As currently envisioned, the exchanges are for people whose employers don't offer insurance and for people who can't afford the coverage that is offered. The kerfuffle over congressional participation in exchanges came as most Americans seem to be hazy, at best, about the law. Four in 10 American adults don't even know that the Affordable Care Act is still the law of the land, the Kaiser Health Tracking Poll reported. Only 35 percent of Americans have a positive view of the law, Kaiser says. People are unlikely to embrace the law as long as Congress appears to disdain it. Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., made news last month when he worried aloud that the rollout of the exchanges could be "a huge train wreck." He's retiring but other Deinocrats are worried that the exchanges will hurt them in the 2014 elections. For now, Democrats and Republi- cans have returned to their corners. But we're likely to see more mis- chief making on the health law and more reasons to detest Washington. Marsha Mercer writes from Washington. You may contact her at marsha.mercer@yahoo. com. 2013 Marsha Mercer. Sometimes insults just can't be ignored A e are taught from an early age that the better person ignores insults. Firing back in anger risks escalating a situa- tion to the point of no return and becoming the bully we so despise. But sometimes name-calling cannot be ignored. The family of Adam Holland, a Tennessee man with Down syndrome, is suing a St. Petersburg radio station and others for allegedly altering a photo of him to include a derogatory term. In the original photo, Holland, then 17, is seen holding a drawing he created to express his love for the NFL's Tennessee Titans while attending an art class at Vanderbilt University for students with mental disabilities. Almost a decade later, a modified version of the photo has gone viral. WHPT 102..5 FM, a Florida talk radio station, allegedly replaced the hand-drawn words "Go Titans One" on Holland's sign to read "Retarded News." The radio station's media conglomerate, Cox Media Group, later removed the photo from the website and issued an apology. But the photo was also found I A Susan Clary on a sign generator website, according to the lawsuit, featur- ing Holland's photo under "Retarded Handicap Gen- erator." The website allowed users to add their own text in place of Holland's artwork and download the image for a fee. A third image was found on a Minnesota man's Flickr page, where he described the posting, the law- suit alleges, as "just a stupid photo of the sick retarded kid that lives down the street that my dogs hate." Can you see why the family is seeking $18 million in damages? Along the same lines, the Florida Legislature voted unanimously this week to remove "mental retarda- tion" from state statutes and re- place it with the term "intellectual disability." It now goes to Gov. Rick Scott to be signed into law. ,-.i f to Forty-three states have already taken steps to remove the word "retarded" from their laws. Three years ago, President Barack Obama signed Rosa's Law, striking use of the term from federal policy. It was named after Rosa Marcellino, a 9- year-old Maryland girl with Down syndrome, whose parents fought to remove the word to restore dignity, inclusion and respect for people with intellectual disabilities. It isn't the first time that words we once associated with groups of people have been used to marginal- ize them and others. Even perfectly acceptable terms, such as gay, can be morphed into offensive, pejora- tive terms when used to attack and bully others. Unfortunately, the seg- ment of society inclined to ostra- cize and devalue others will make sure this won't be the last time. Still, we must keep fighting to stop it: Formerly a reporter for the St. Petersburg Times and Orlando Sentinel, Susan Clary is a freelance writer who lives in Winter Park. She can be reached at susanclary@aol.com. the Editor Is it morally right to open Dozier graves? The State Attorney, Glenn Hess says he can- not find any legal reason against opening the graves of those at Dozier School, some 100 years old. I ask this question: Is it morally right to open the graves of anyone who has not granted the request or permission by family members? Is the nephew who wants his uncle's body to be moved to their family's burial site willing to pay the expense to open all these graves? If they are all unmarked, then all would have to be opened and an examina- tion be made, costing thousands of dollars, to make sure the nephew got his uncle. As I have asked before and I ask again, what is in it for all these who want to open these graves of individuals who were at the Dozier School because of some form of violation of the law, even taking the life of another? As many citizens have said, "separate this plot of property, used for graves, from the rest of Dozier School property, clean it up and keep it so in honor of those bur- ied there and in honor of and respect for their families. These same citi- zens feel that it is a waste of tax dollars and also a disrespect to those buried there. I also want to know why it became an issue only after the state put the school up for sale? I again ask all citizens to speak out. It is your prop- erty and it will be your tax dollars that will be spent and many getting rich from your tax dollars. REV. DR. BILLY BRUNER Cottondale "r JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com Sneads FFA wins state contests Special to the Floridan Florida FFA has an- nounced the results of the 2013 State Agricultural Sales and Agricultural Communica- tions Career Development Events, which were held April 26 at the University of Florida in Gainesville. Fourteen teams from throughout Florida gath- ered to compete for the Agricultural Sales state championship. The top three teams were: First place, Sneads FFA, 1013 points; second place, Lake Butler FFA, 976 points and third place, Blountstown FFA, 960 points. Individual winners were: First place, Cole Hamil- ton of Sneads FFA; second place, Mitchell Darnell of Blountstown FFA and third place, Georgia Pevy of Sneads FFA. The pur- pose of the Agricultural Sales CDE is to stimulate student interest in the skills that are required to communicate effectively in an agricultural sales environment. Five teams from through- out Florida competed for Special to the Floridan The Marianna Duplicate Bridge Club announces winners for the game played April 29: )) First Place: Kurt Opfer- mann and Armin Kunkler ) Second Place: Bill Lies and Doris Ottinger )) Third Place: John Selfe and Lester Hutchinspn )Fourth Place: Barbara Johnson and Roselyn Wheeler ) Fifth Place: Elaine Yost and Libby Hutto Sneads FFA Communication Team members are (from left): Shelby Lawrence, Taylor Reed and Lindsey Locke the Agricultural Commu- nications state champion- ship. The top three teams were: First place, Sneads FFA; second place, Blount- stown FFA and third place, Suwannee FFA. Individual winners were: First place, Lind- sey Locke of Sneads FFA; second place, Faith Plaza- rin of Blountstown FFA; third place, Taylor Reed of Sneads FFA and fourth place, Shelby Lawrence of Sneads FFA. The pur- pose of the Agricultural Communications CDE is to stimulate student interest in the skills that are required to communi- cate effectively in an agricultural business environment. CDE's help students de- velop the abilities to think critically, communicate clearly, and perform ef- fectively in a competitive job market. FFA members in Florida compete in over 30 events each year, cover- ing job skills in everything from communications to mechanics. Some events allow students to compete as individuals while others allow them to compete in SUBMITTED PHOTOS Sneads FFA Agricultural Sales Team members are (from left): Georgia Pevy, Ashleigh Tharpe, Nick Goodwin and Cole Hamilton. teams. CDE's allow stu- dents to prepare for over 300 careers in agriculture and other industries by applying their knowledge and skills obtained from classroom instruction in agricultural education programs. 'LOOi I F, 10PE I JEW -' VISIT SWWW.JCFLORIDAN.COM COMERFORD VAULT MEMORIAL SERVICE Let us help you - with a memorial J of BEA UTY and DURABILITY _ All Work & Material Guaranteed Burial Vaults, Mausoleums, Benches, Markers and All Cemetery Supplies Pete Comerford Owner & Operator 593-6828 1-800-369-6828 comerfordvaultmemorial@hotmail.com Hwy. 90 W Sneads, FL )) Sixth Place: Nancy Watts and Judy Duell ) Seventh Place: Sharon Morgan and Mary Lou Miller ) Eighth Place: Kitty My- ers and Betty Joyce Hand The Marianna Bridge Club is sanctioned by the American Contract Bridge League. The game is held every Monday at 1 p.m. at St. Luke's Episcopal Church located at 4362 Lafayette St. in Marianna. Anyone is welcome to come and play mation and partners call or observe. For more infor- Libby Hutto at 526-3162. Southern traditionv ANw . ."':..Jackson County Boord of C. unty Commissionelrs . .--"- .-. WMBB I. _- " -ph A I !l1I- a First Commerce Credit Union Rahal Chevrolet Buick Nissan Cadillac City Of Marianna Allstate Greta Langley Altrusa Club of Marianna Tyndall Federal Credit Union Wiregrass Federal Credit Union Wal-Mart Sangaree Oil Co.. Inc. Woodall's Total Comfort Systems, Inc., Hancock Bank Anderson Columbia Marianna Rotary Club UEiilLM~ ~M FLORIDA PUBIC L T I L I T I E *,t,, fi:i,/-, /I,,.- -- C- MARIANNA TOYOTA James D. Campbell D.D.S. Phillip Tyler, C.P.A. Paramore's Pharmacy Paul Donofro, Assoc. Architects Michael's Toggery ERA Chipola Realty Chipola Community Bank Signature Healthcare at the Courtyard Dr. Jana Calhoun. D.M.D. Florida Land & Title Roberts, Roberts & Roberts Attorneys ~ *, " '- ;"" ':c ,'% "t ^ 3 !? a S ", '. ', .. . .. ... ......,.. . . ..... . . ..,.. . . . . .,.. . . ... Bridge Club announces winners LOCAL SUNDAY, MAY5,2013 7AF ',^ ' a i4 B8ole -oS 18A SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 LOCAL & STATE I JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com A LEGAL LESSON MARK SKINNER/FLORIDAN udge Wade Mercer (right) enlisted the help of Assistant Public Defender Mark Sims (left) and Assistant State Attorney Shad Redmon to help illustrate some of the problems encountered with eyewitness identifications to Toyka Holden's eighth-grade class at Malone School on Friday. They were bringing their courtroom experiences to the class as part of the students' reading of the clas- sic legal play "12 Angry Men" by Reginald Rose. Legislature passes budget The Associated Press spending, House Speaker budget include a 3 percent Will Weatherford insist- tuition hike for college TALLAHASSEE Flush ed, the final budget was and university students. with cash for the first time fiscally conservative. But Legislators also agreed in seven years, Florida he and other legislators to hand out the first lawmakers ended their stressed that the budget across-the-board pay session Friday by passing includes a more than $1 raise to state workers in a $74.5 billion budget that billion increase for public seven years. includes a big boost for schools. Only 11 legislators all of them Democrats in the House voted against the spending plan that now heads to Gov. Rick Scott. Buoyed by a rise in tax collections, the Repub- lican-controlled Legis- lature was able to craft a budget that included pay raises for state workers, more money for health care programs and Ever- glades restoration. "Our budget is not about spreadsheets and numbers, it's about values and priorities," said Sen. Joe Negron, R-Stuart and Senate budget chief. Despite a more than 6 percent increase in schools. A big portion of that increase is being given to school districts to increase teacher salaries. That was a top prior- ity of Scott, even though the final measure was not the across-the-board boost that the governor initially recommended. The budget does include federal funding tied to the Affordable Care Act that increases payments to primary care doctors who treat Medicaid patients. But House Republicans remained steadfast all the way to the end in their opposition to accept fed- eral aid to expand the state's health care safety net. Other highlights of the The increases will go to more than 160,000 people who work at state agen- cies and 12 public uni- versities. Those who earn $40,000 or less will receive a $1,400 raise, while those who currently earn more than that will get a $1,000 raise. Roughly 35 percent of all state workers will be eligible for a $600 perfor- mance bonus. The extra money made a difference in the closing moments of the session. Democrats effusively praised Republicans for many of the spending decisions they had made this year even though the GOP majority refused to accept federal money to expand Medicaid. Marianna City Farmers Market Manager Sharon Arnett fills an order for Carol and David Schoepf on Saturday. Farmers market opens early From staff reports Squash, tomatoes, potatoes and greens things of all kinds are for sale at the Marianna City Farmers Market. It was originally sup- posed to open later in the month, but according to Market Manager Sharon Arnett, so many customers were asking when opening day was they decided to start early since they had some produce to sell. She added that this year's harvest is running late because of a freeze that forced some growers to have to replant their crops. Right now, the market has around 10 sellers attending, but as more produce comes in that number should grow to 18 to 20, Arnett said. The market has 25 spots for vendors, and 20 of those have already been rented out for the year. The Marianna City Farmers Market is open on Tuesday, Thursdays and Saturdays from 7 a.m. until either noon, or when the vendors sell out. How- ever, on May 14 many of the vendors will be moving their produce to the Mari- anna Municipal Airport to take part in an Armed Forces Day Fly-In. T.C Smith shows Doris White a basket of potatoes Saturday at the Marianna City Farmers Market. PHOTOS BY MARK SKINNER/FLORIDAN Lynn Mansfield and Sam Gay look over the produce for sale at the Nubbin Ridge Farms table. Lawmakers pass elections bill on session's final day The Associated Press TALLAHASSEE Law- makers ended their 60-day session Friday, waiting un- til the final hour to pass a $74.5 billion budget and then leaving town with- out passing a bill to extend health care coverage to 1.1 million Floridians. The Legislature did send Gov. Rick Scott an elec- tions bill that attempts to fix problems with long lines and vote-counting delays that made Florida a joke across the nation last November. Among other things, the bill allows elec- tions supervisors to hold up to 14 days of early vot- ing instead of the eight days now in law, a reversal for the GOP-led legislature from two years ago. It also allows more early voting sites. The $74.5 billion budget was approved just before session ended, but the House and Senate never bridged a wide gap on a health care plan. The Senate wanted to use $50 billion in federal money over the next de- cade to expand health care coverage as allowed under the federal health care law, while the House doesn't want to accept any federal money for Medic- aid expansion. The Senate began Friday ~'1. LqS'' , ~^ , THE ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, is signaled out as the reason for the success of the Florida legislative session by Senate President Don Gaetz, R-Niceville, on Friday in the Capitol in Tallahassee. by sending Scott a bill that would speed up the resi- dential mortgage foreclo- sure process. Among bills that died on the final day were a measure that wpuld have helped the Miami Dol- phins with $400 million in stadium renovations,, prohibited judges from applying foreign law in Florida cases, banned abortions based on the race or gender of a fetus and created a needle-ex- change pilot program, among others. Still, Scott already has signed many major bills into law, including a ban on Internet cafes offering slot machine-like games, a wide-ranging ethics bill, an increase in campaign contribution limits and more. Scott vetoed a bill that would have ended permanent alimony. Scott said he will sign the elections bill. The Republican gover- nor was also able to claim victories on his top two priorities: a sales-tax ex- emption for manufactur- ers and teacher raises. "When you go across the state and listen to Florida families, they all want a job and they want the edu- cation system improved. That's exactly what they want and that's exactly what they got," Scott said after the session ended. INVITED A New Year ~ A New Smile ~ A New You Join Us to Discover What is New in Dentistry Dothan Periodontics & Implants (in Association with your General Dentist) New Dental Implant Seminar When: 1ST Thursday of the Month Hosted by: Dr. John Miller & Dr. Daniel Pittman Call our office to attend a FREE Seminar and Receive a No-Cost Consultation and 3D Scan Today! Please call 793-7232 to register SPACE IS LIMITED www.dothanperio.com ~ kathy@dothanperio.com No Childcare Available - Patient-first care for a lifetime of healthy, beautiful smiles " -^" JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN Www.jcfloridan.com James & Sikes Funeral Home Maddox Chapel 4278 Lafayette Street Marianna, Fl 32446 850.482.2332 Reverend Arthur Douglas Carr Reverend Arthur Dougla "Doug" Carr, age 70, c Ashford, Alabama wen home to be with his Lorc on Thursday, May 2, ir Dothan, AL. Doug was born on Marcl 16, 1943 in Marianna Flori da to Reverend Alfrei James "A.J." Carr and IdE McCoy Carr in Gran( Ridge, FL. He was preceded ir death by his parents brothers Alfred James Can Jr., William Doyle Carr, am Dallas Alvin Carr; and sister Elouise Robinson. Doug is survived by hi high school sweetheart an wife of 51 years, Marjori Burch Carr; sons Richar Carr and wife Susan o Grand Ridge, FL and Mi chapel John Carr and wif Lynn of Malone, FL daughter Lorie Carr Mon ey and husband Paul o Gordon, AL; five grand sons Caleb arnd Joshuz Carr; Jonathon, Aaron an< Luke Money ; one grand daughter Ashley Carr; sis ters Mildred Belodeau an husband Larry of Laki Jackson, TX; GeraldinE "Skeet" Harris of Jackson ville, FL; Mary Ruth Collin. of Marianna, FL; and nu merous nieces and neph ews. From 1966 until 1974 Doug ,served as a Floridz State Trooper during whicl time he was called into thE ministry. He also served a a Gulf County Deput. Sheriff in 1975 and 1976. Doug's ministry began 41 years ago in Crestview, FL He delivered God's word ii various churches in Flori da, Tennessee, and Alaba ma. At the time of hi death, he was the pastor o New Harmony Freewil Baptist Church ii Grangerburg, AL an Springhill Free Will Baptis Church in Gordon, AL. Services for Doug will bc held on Sunday, May 5 a 3:00 p.m. at Maddox Chap el in Marianna, Florida Reverends Otis Whiteheac and John Smith, are offi citing. Interment will- fol low at Cypress Communit Cemetery with James & Sikes Funeral Home Mad dox Chapel directing. Physicians From Page 1A options must begin prior to the 14th week in order to be effective. Leff was also asked about the effect of obesity on pregnancy outcomes. He said it is a significant and prevalent problem; it is not uncommon, he said, to encounter expect- ant mothers who weigh 300 or more pounds as their pregnancies begin. With excess weight come complications; gestational diabetes, for instance, is more likely for overweight mothers-to-be. This poses a danger for the baby, since the extra sugars can trig- ger extra production of insulin in the baby's pan- creas. The extra insulin can cause the baby to grow ab- normally large, making for a difficult and potentially dangerous delivery. Leff said there is an over- all need in any community to promote the value of exercise, and not just for expectant mothers; next year, when the Marianna Arts Festival has its associ- ated races, he'd like to see 500 participants instead of just the 50 who ran this year. He also talked about the advantages and disadvan- tages of hormone replace- ment therapy for meno- pausal women over 50, citing studies with varying results. He also outlined the Family will recieve friends Sunday one hour prior to service at James & Sikes Maddox Chapel. Pallbearers are nephews Taff and Bennie Carr of Grand Ridge, FL; Donnie Robinson of Bonifay, FL; friends Steve Hall and Tim Harper of Ashford, AL; and Jim Bob Baxter of Malone, FL. Honorary pallbearers are s his five grandsons Caleb 'f and Joshua Carr and It Jonathon, Aaron, and Luke d Money. n Expressions of sympathy may be made online at h http://www.jamesandsikes - funeralhomes.com/ d a Bevis Funeral Home d & Crematory 2710 N. Monroe Street n Tallahassee, FL 32303 s; 850-385-2193 r, d ir Barkley s Eugene Gause d e d i- e If a d d Barkley Eugene (Gene) e Gause, 83, of Marianna, FL e went home to the Lord, - Sunday, April 28, 2013. The s eldest son of former Jack- - son Co. FL Sheriff William - Barkley and Bertie Rooks Gause, was born Feb. 22, , 1930. Gene has two broth- a ers John Preston Gause of h Dothan, AL, and William e Gerald Gause of Marianna. s The Gauses are well Y known in the tri-states area from years of public serv- 0 ice, television and radio 1. personalities, and mobile n home sales. As a young - man, he was a Seaman 1st - class in the Navy Reserves, s worked deliveries to the f Officers Club at Graham 1 Air Force Base now Sun- n land. Gene worked with his d father's logging business as t timber man, log driver, cre- osote pole plant operator, a e dairy farmer (near Marian- t na Dolomite) with 100 milk - cows, selling to Sealtest in SMarianna, raising peanuts, d corn, hogs,, chickens, tur- - keys and rabbits. - He attended Chipola Jr. Y College and Troy State & Teacher's College to be- - come a science teacher. In- stead, he sought his for- debate patients and doc- tors face in determine the extent of surgery needed in some cases where a hyster- ectomy or partial hysterec- tomy is warranted. Also asked about recent reports around the world about the unforeseen shrinkage of mesh used by doctors to remedy vaginal prolapse, Leff summarized the history of the procedure and said physicians are go- ing back to the old practice of using stitches to repair prolapse, but that research is underway toward a new- er mesh that won't shrink. From the surgery suite Goodpaster fielded ques- tions across a range of top- ics related to ,the availabil- ity of medical care in the surgery arena. She spoke of the addition of newer technology in the local medical community which makes it possible for physicians to use more minimally invasive tech- niques the discovery, di- agnosis and treatment of breast diseases and certain gall bladder issues. For in- stance, since the gall-blad- der related equipment was put in use, it has saved mileage and time for 50 pa- tients a year who formerly had to go to Panama City, Tallahassee or Dothan, Ala. to receive the treatment it provides. Similar results are true in other medical sectors where advanced equipment has been put in place, she said. tune and fame as a roust- about on oil rigs in Colora- do, as a salesman and in American steel. Gene es- tablished the Gause name in mobile home sales in the tri-states winning many awards for sales volume. On Saturday, Gene spon- sored for years Nashville's Jim & Jessie & The Virginia Boys then local Wrestling with his brother John as announcer on Channel 4 Dothan. Gene retired a steel worker with USX Gen- eva Steel, Provo, UT, before* returning to Florida. Gene is loved dearly for the hard work he never shied away from, for the fine family he and Pat raised, for the champion he was to the less fortunate or oppressed, for his devotion to his membership in The Church of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints. His quick smile and laughter, love of people, piano play- ing, strong arm and help- ing hand, service in LDS temples and sermons in church, will be missed. Gene married (Pat) Iris Shuler of Bristol, FL in June 1950 in the LDS Mesa AZ temple. Together they had 7 children: Genine, William (Bill) Parley, Jim Logan, Barkley Howell, Wade Shu- ler, Richard Eugene and David Wayne Gause. He doted over his 23 grand- children and 14 great grandchildren. He always told the girls they were beautiful and the boys he loved them. He will be interned at the Gregory Neil Gentry/White Springs Cemetery 'on Greg- ory Gentry Road, approxi- mately 4 miles east of Bris- tol on Hwy 20, south off of Hwy 20 on White Springs Road then east on Gregory Neil Gentry Road (graded road). The graveside service will be held Saturday, May 11th at 10 a.m. EDT. Bevis Funeral Home (850) 643- 3636, www.bevisfh.com, is in charge of the arrange- ments. Lanier-Andler Funeral Home Sneads, Florida PH 850-593-9900 Frank C. Hunter Mr. Frank C. Hunter, age 64, a lifelong resident of Sneads, Florida, passed away Saturday, May 4, 2013, in Marianna, Florida after a sudden illness. He was a member of the First Methodist Church of And Goodpaster said the local hospital and medi- cal care providers have come together to create a team approach to the care of cancer patients, which they hope will be seen by local residents as an- other great advantage to staying local for medi- cal care. All the medical providers involved with each patient gather pe- riodically to. compare notes and plan strate- gies for care, rather than each making independent decisions in their special areas of concern, she said. Asked about the recom- mended age for people to begin having colonos- copy screenings, Good- paster said they're gener- ally needed after age 50, recommending that people follow the regimen. It's not only the wise thing to do medically; regular screen- ings could have a positive effect financially speaking. If a person has a colonoscopy because of a symptom, she explained, rather than as a mainte- nance procedure, it could be viewed differently by insurance providers and, as a diagnostic tool, the pro- cedure could be covered differently, perhaps at more expense to the patient in co-pays. An insurance represen- tative who attended the meeting further pointed out that regular screen- ings could detect problems sooner and therefore result in preventive treatment in Sneads, Florida and had re- tired as a Security Officer with the Florida State Hos- pital in Chattahoochee, Florida, and had also re- tired as an Engineer with the Seaboard Coastline Railroad. Frank was 'Fire Chief for the Town of Sneads, Florida for thirty years and put together many Fund Raisers for the purchase of Fire Fighting Equipment for Sneads. For several years he did Bike- O-Thons for St. Judes Hos- pital raising money for the kids. He was a U S Army Veteran during Vietnam and was an avid Golfer, loved Drag Racing and Mud Bogging and traveling in the mountains on his Motorcycle. Frank is survived by his mother, Mary Elizabeth Powers Hunter of Marian- na, FL.; his beloved wife, Ann Hunter of Sneads; a daughter, Barbara Wolf and her husband David of Apex, N. C.; two sonrs, John Milton and Cliff Olen Hunter, both of Sneads; two brothers, Charles "Bubba" Hunter and his wife Gail of Sneads and Bill hunter and his wife Sherry also of Sneads; a sister-in- law, Melinda Hunter of Belle Glade, FL.; a grand- daughter, Maya Wolf; many nieces and nephews and a special pet friend, "Little Buddy". Frank was preceded in death by his Father, Olen F. Hunter and a brother, John Powers Hunter, Visitation with the family will take place one hour before Services at Lanier- Andler Funeral Home Chapel, Tuesday, May 7, 2013, 1:00 PM CDT till Fu- neral Services at 2:00 PM CDT, also at the Chapel. Committal and Interment Services will take place at Pope Cemetery in Sneads, Florida. The family will ac- cept flowers but those wishing to contribute to their favorite charity, please do so. Lanier-Andler Funeral Home of Sneads, Florida is in charge of arrangements, phone 850-593-9900. Florists Artistic Designs Unlimited Inc. 2911 Jefferson St. Marianna 850-372-4456 the early stages of trouble, a circumstance that could not only save heartache but save money as well since it could catch the problem earlier and help the patient avoid some further, costlier, treatment. In another matter con- cerning colonoscopies, when asked if there were an advantage to having a surgeon carry out the procedure instead of a gas- troenterologist, she point- ed out that, in the case of a finding, a surgeon would likely come on board and perform a second colonos- copy of his or her own if the physician hadn't performed the first; having a surgeon do it in the first place, she indicated, might help the patient avoid that second test. As the two speakers fin- ished their question and an- swer session, Meese came back to answer one more question; someone wanted to know if he had any infor- mation on "Obama care." Meese simply replied that the hospital is poised to make itself available to all the people who may become insured as the pro- gram takes hold in Florida. JCFLORIDANCOM JcFLOoIOAN.Colv Bonifay man arrested for meth lab From staff reports The Holmes County Sheriff's Office reports the arrest of a Bonifay man for manufacture of methamphetamine. On Thursday, May 2, investigators with the Holmes County Sheriff's Office, with the assis- tance of the Florida De- partment of Corrections K-9 unit, were conduct- ing a warrant round-up, during which they went to arrest 53-year-old Thomas Wayne Carter at his residence on Henry Grey Road, Bonifay, for a violation of probation warrant.- After making contact with Carter, investigators observed signs of the manufacture of meth- amphetamine around his residence. Investi- gators then obtained Funding From Page 1A in Jackson County at the site of the old MHS cam- pus on Daniels Street. The Jackson County School Board has long had plans to renovate .and relocate its admin- istrative offices to that site, an impossible task without a special ap- propriation in the state budget. JCSB Facilities Director Stuart Wiggins, from his Jefferson Street office on Friday, was anticipating good news from the Leg- islative session and put- ting the final touches on preliminary paperwork to advertise for a project architect. "This is as close as we've ever come," he said Planes From Page 1A aboard one of the par- ticipating pilot's planes. Organizers are -working with the school system to identify and pre-regis- ter the interested youth so that the Young Eagle flights can be properly coordinated. The young- sters will be allowed to handle controls, and will get a log book as a record of their adventure. A commercial provider will also be on hand to offer people of all ages the opportunity to buy a helicopter ride for Mon., Mon. Tue. Tue. Wed. Wed. Thurs. Thurs. Fri. Fri. Sat. Sat. Sun. Sun. (E) : (M) (E) (M) (E) (M) (E) (M) (E) (M) (E) (M) (E) (M) .1 .'. 0-3-6 6-5-0 4/30, 3-0-5 4-1-6 5/1 7-7-5 8-2-9 5/2 6-9-5 7-5-4 5/3 4-6-3 9-5-9 5/4 81-1 9-3-5 4/28 8-3-0 8-2-0 E = Evening drawing, consent to search from Carter and located items jmanufac- Sture meth- S. amphet- amine, parapher- nalia and Carter a small amount of meth oil. Carter was transported to the Holmes County Jail and was.charged with manufacture ofmetham- phetamine, possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine) and possession of drug paraphernalia. Holmes County Sheriff Tim Brown asks anyone with information on suspected drug activity to contact HCSO at 850- 547-4421 or reportac- rime@holmescosheriff. org. of the years-long process he's shepherded to get the needed funding. Wiggins started work- ing on the project in 2009, with then Superin- tendent Lee Miller, and continued progress with current Superintendent Steve Benton. Through talks with several Pan- handle representatives, including Fla. House Speaker pro tern Marti Coley, Fla. Senate Presi- dent Don Gaetz and Fla. Sen. Bill Montford, vice chair of the Appropria- tions Subcommittee on Education, the project is finally nearing launch. School board staff should know in the next two weeks if it's time to start picking out drapes for their new digs. The governor has 15 days to sign the bill. $30 each. The participating planes, alongwithabank of fire trucks and motor- cycles, will be on display until closing ceremonies at 4 p.m. unless engaged in the Young Eagles flights or other activities. Children's .activities will be ongoing and vendor booths will be open from start to finish on the day. The pilots partici- pating in the event by arrangement with or- ganizers will get a $1- per-gallon discount on fuel, but are not in any other way compensated for their time, trouble or expense associated with the fly-in. 'C ~*- 5:2P3-7 0-9-9-7 4-9-6-3 7-9-3-1 6-5-2-7 5-6-4-3 4-4-3-6 0-9-1-8 3-2-7-1 3-2-7-1 6-7-1-5 9-4-3-1 4-9-1-7 2-5-1-3 7-9-16-19-32 2-10-12-20-22 10-13-15-24-35 6-12-17-34-35 2-4-12-14-28 Not available 4-11-26-29-35 M = Mdday drawing Saturday 4/27 3-23-48-54-55 PB5 Wednesday 5/1 22-26-31-54-55 PB 18 Saturday 4/27 10-12-17-28-38-44 xtra 5 Wednesday 5/1 4-9-17-21-35-51 xtra 5 For lottery information, call 850-487-7777 or 900-737-7777 Pinecrest 3720 Caverns Road Marianna, FL 32446-1806 (850) 482-3964 Jackson County Vault & Monuments 1,,,,''' i cnf cmrv at '1/'/ Prices Come Visit us at 3424 West Highway 90 , 850-482-5041 __1_1lll____llii_1_1_._~______1__ II~ I CASH 3 PLAY 4 FANT-1 SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 9AF FROM THE FRONT JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com better place, and we admire your hard work and tireless dedication. Thanks for all that you do! 0I- ZU. Ul o1 <. L16 x 0 z mother's ay 0 l)o s 6-5 Fence S 289 Flold RS'ntrl CM an Fmi d J 2890 Noland Street Manranna, Florida I captain's Table LET Us Do THE COOKING FOR You! I k " BUFFET 3 Meats, Fresh Vegetables & Desserts Open 10:30AM until...on Mother's Day 8110 Hwy 90 Sneads. FL Next to Dollar General (850) 593-0170 -r*,^^^.^<..i^ a^-^ ^3^ JOAO-. AV NKEE CAMixE 1R 'I VI"TR WATERFORW CRYSTAL 1 4 .. Jfi l, Your .1 irA1.lfI I rJr l E .'j AjHE o (CiH'I Shop Square Marla)ia:i 182-I iS1 i'l Hudqunri':r-' _ -| |in S.'- - ~ - way she should be. "**A '! E L.mu ^:' ' '4 , ,i':.... , S"A'>" THYMCS . 'I" A - - 10A SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 '"' '' ti I,,!,' 'I 4 S4--- .4' Sports Briefs High School Baseball The Sneads Pirates host the 1A regional semifinals Tuesday against the Bozeman Bucks at 7 p.m., with the winner to face the winner of Liberty County vs. Vernon in the regional finals on May 10. Chipola Baseball The Chipola Indians will open play in the FCSAA state baseball tournament on Friday in Lakeland, taking on Miami-Dade at 6 p.m. Central Daylight Time. Chipola will play again Saturday win or lose, facing the winner of Seminole State vs. State College of Florida at 6 p.m. with a win, and taking on -the loser of that game at noon with aloss. The tournament will con- clude May 14. Chipola Lifeguard Course Chipola College will offer the American Red Cross Lifeguard course beginning Tuesday. Students must be 15 years of age. Cost is $200.. A prerequi- site swim test must be taken prior to the course. There is no charge to take the test., Course meetings will be held from 4:30-8:30 p.m., Thesday and Wednesday, and then May 7-10, with the final test on May 1i. For information, or to sched- ule a swim test, call Rance Massengill at 850-718-2240. Rob Fowler Memorial Golf Tournament The fifth annual Rob Fowler Memorial golf tournament will be held Saturday at Dogwood Lakes Golf & Country Club in Bonifay. Registration is at 7:30 a.m. with a tee time of 8 a.m. For- mat is four-person scramble, with an entry fee of $50 per person, including greens fee, cart and catered lunch. Single' and team entries are welcome. To sponsor or pre-register, call Kevin Taylor at 850- 326-1525 or Brian Taylor at 850-381-4894. JCCA Golf Tourney The Jackson County Cattle- men's Association announces that the Second Annual Colonel Thomas Memorial golf classic is set for May 17 at Indian Springs Golf Course in Marianna. There will be a 1 .m. shot- gun start for the 18-hole event that features a four-person scramble, "pick your partners." and a modified handicapped system. Registration is $60 per per- son and that includes greens fee, cart and a steak dinner. There will be prizes for longest drive and closest to the pin. All players must have a verified handicap. All benefits from the event will go to FFA and 4H scholar- ships at Chipola. For more information, call Matt Dryden at 850-573-0414, Albert Milton at 850-718-7834, Ken Godfrey at 850-209-7919 or Charlene at Indians Springs Golf Club at 850-482-8787. Marianna Swim Team The Marianna Swim Team invites people to come out to meet potential swim team members, old friends and the coach May 13 at the Ghipola College Pool from 5-6:30 p m. This is the date for the open- ing practice for the regular swim season, as well the time any interested parties' can get information, get in the water with coaching staff, and/or register for,the upcoming swim season. You can also come during any practice session for information if you can not make this date. See BRIEFS, Page 2B . .. r :- 7 ../ -. ., ^ i *i "e'- '= ". ''':'"'" 4' t ,.,t^ ..;. . . . MARKSKINNER/FLORIDAN Andy Feria reaches for the ball during a recent Sneads baseball game. Sneads gets another shot against Bozeman BY DUSTIN KENT dkent@jcfloridan.com The Sneads Pirates will open the 1A state playoffs Tues- day night in a familiar place: on their home field, with the Bozeman Bucks in the visiting dugout. The Bucks came into Sneads last season and came away with a dramatic 4-3 victory, ral- lying from a 3-2. deficit in the seventh inning with a two-out rally to deal the Pirates a heart- LADY PIRATES FA MARKSKINNER/FLORIDAN S helbi Byler races to second base Tuesday night for Sneads. Sneads lost to Liberty County 6-3 in the 1A regional finals today in Bristol. Kellybringing CII OL 'C.H.A.M.P. Camp' back to Panhandle BY DUSTINKENT . dkent@jcfloridan.com Former Graceville Tigers football star Anthony "Champ" Kelly is bringing his . "C.H.A.M.P. Camp" back to the Panhandle .,, , for a fourth-consecutive year June 28-29 at ," .. . Deane Bozeman High School in Panama *.*'.... City. . The two-day instructional camp is being ". ' moved to Panama City after previously be- ing held at Graceville High School in order to expand the camp's appeal by centraliz- . ing its location, Kelly said Friday. - "We wanted to stretch it to some other - places in North Florida, and we thought (Panama City) would be a good' area to '. .... -- 1 reach out to," he said. "We can still get the ''-' :"^:- same kids we've attracted in the past from ., Graceville, but we can pick up some more - See KELLY, Page _ See KELLY, Page 10B breaking defeat. It's a loss that has remained fresh in the thoughts of Sneads players and coaches a full year after it happened, with Tuesday providing a long-awaited op- portunity for redemption. "It's stuck with me all the way to now," Pirates coach Mark Guerra said of the playoff loss. "To be that close to winning that game in the second in- ning and them coming back, See SNEADS, Page 2B Chipola softtbal- Lady Indians go 2-0 to start tourney BY DUSTIN KENT dkent@jcfloridan.com The Chipola Lady Indians made a big early statement on the opening day of the FCSAA Gulf District Tournament in Pensacola, winning both of their first round games by a combined score of 21-8. With wins of 10-2 over State College of Florida and 11-6 over Pensacola State, the Lady Indians advanced to Satur- day's winners' bracket match- up with Polk State. In the first game against State College of Florida, the Lady Indians broke open a 1- 1 game with a six-run fourth inning, scoring on RBI hits by Kristen Allen and Stephanie Garrels, bases-loaded walks to Mya Anderson, Katie Harri- son, Jasmine Tanksley, and hit batter in Shannon Black that forced in the final run. Leading 7-2 in the bottom of the sixth, Chipola ended the game on the mercy rule early thanks to two more bases-loaded walks to Black and Megan Borak and an RBI single by Alyssa Hathcoat to See CHIPOLA, Page 2B BASEBALLL I - .. . . - .*" .-.. .2 - . .s . o. =,;t :. :-- _: 3;laT'. 'N, .. .'7 --.1 .--" "Z.. L S^,1-. .] MARK SKINNERirrnRIDAN Daniel Mars cuts his run to third base short at a recent Chipola baseball game. The Chipola Indians will open up play in the FCSAA State Tournament in Lakeland on Friday. Chipola (35-19) will face Miami-Dade (35-8) in the first round at 6 p.m. A win would put the Indians in Saturday's second round game against the winner of State College of Florida and Seminole. A loss would put the Indians against the loser on Saturday. BOB KORNEGAY Fishing? Golfing? Sometimes you just gotta go. See more on page 4B. II' eJACKSOCN C - T .EW & USED TF RC' -4 ,-, .: .. _. )l l )','t r' --, .- ," :r,, R: - JOHN ALLEN CRAIG BARD SALES TEAM SALES TEAM L j94-jIj~ ERIC WALDON FINANCE MANAGER D ,i: ,T iSW '. :. :* ^,-.. .... ; .-. '" % 12B SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 Chipola From Page 1B make it an eight-run game. Garrels and Chandler Seay each had two hits to lead the Lady Indians, while Anderson and Black both had two RBI, with Garrels, Hayley Parker, and Tanksley all scoring twice. Eva Voortman started in the circle and got the win for Chipola, allowing just one earned run on three hits and no walks with five strikeouts. Taylor O'Quinn took the loss for the Manatees, giv- ing up seven earned runs on six hits and five walks and three strikeouts in 3 2/3 innings. Kayla Bjorge had two of the three Manatee hits, go- ing 2-for-3 with two runs. The Lady Indians carried that momentum over into the second game of the day against Panhandle Confer- ence rival Pensacola State, scoring five runs in the top of the first inning off of Lady Pirates starter Elise - Richardson, who recorded "just one out before being replaced by Aimee Leduc. Parker walked and scored the first run on a wild pitch by Leduc, with Tanksley following with an RBI sin- gle to score Anderson to make it 2-0. An RBI. single by Seay added another run, with Tanksley scoring on an er- ror, and Seay coming home SPORTS JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN e www.jcfloridan.com MARKSKINNER/FLORIDAN Eva Voortman pitches for Chipola at a recent game. on an RBI groundout by Borak to make it 5-0. Becca Calloway got Pen- sacola on the board in the bottom of the third with a two-run home run off of Voortman, but Harrison answered with a two-run shot of her own in the fifth to increase the Chipola lead to 7-2. Anderson went deep in the top of the seventh with a solo shot to lead off the inning, with Harrison add- ing her second homer of the game to make it 9-3. Chipola tacked on two more runs to push the margin to 11-3, which seemed a pretty safe lead for the Lady Indians, but Pensacola made one last charge in the bottom of the seventh off of Chipola reliever Karissa Childs. An error, a bunt single by Kelly Hayes, and a single by Ashley Peters loaded the bases with two outs, with Nicole Quigley, Emily Pettigrew, and Dominique Rodriguez coming up with three consecutive RBI singles to make it 11-6. But Childs finally put an end to the threat by getting Kayla Rosario to fly out to left field for the final out. Voortman got the win, going 4 1/3 innings and al- lowing two earned runs on four hits, no walks, and a strikeout, with Childs go- ing 2 2/3 and surrendering three earned runs on eight hits and a walk. * Richardson took the loss for the Lady Pirates for giv- ing up two earned runs on a hit and three walks, with Leduc allowing eight earned runs on eight hits and three walks in 6 2/3. Harrison led the Lady In- dians offensively, going 2- for-2 with two home runs, two walks, three runs, and three RBI, with Anderson going 2-for-3 with a walk, two runs, and an RBI, and Seay 2-for-3 with two runs and an RBI. Tanksley was 2-for-4 with a run and an RBI and Allen was 1-for-3 with a walk and an RBI. Calloway went 3-for-4 with a home run, a double, and three RBI for Pen- sacola, with Pettigrew and Hayes both adding two hits. Pensacola State was scheduled to take on Northwest Florida State on Saturday morning in an elimination game. Panhandle Conference Gulf Coast State did not survive Friday's opening round, falling to South Florida State 2-1 and Northwest Florida State 8-2. Sneads From Page lB it's tough. It's still in (the players') minds. Devin (Hayes), Brandon (Moats), Austin (Lombardo), they talk about it all the time. It's there and in their minds. .They've been preparing for it and they're ready to play. "But what I say about this and what I say about sports in general is that when the game starts, it's just about who is going to make plays. When the op- portunity to make some- thing happen is there, you have to make it happen." The Pirates (17-9) have had a similar season in 2013 to the ohe they had last year, again winning the district title and getting Briefs From Page 1B The Marianna Swim Team is a local, recreation- al swim team for boys and girls ages 4-18. Practices are held from 5-6:30 p.m., Monday through Thurs- day from May 13 through August at Chipola College Pool. Meets are held on Saturday throughout the summer. Registration is open. All that is required is the swimmer swim one full pool length (25 yards) and children younger than 10 have parental supervision during practices. The registration fee of $35 payable to MST helps cover cost of life guards and relay events at meets. Team T-shirts for mem- bers will be an additional $5 and $15 for non-mem- bers. Pool membership also is required by Chipola College. For additional informa- tion, call Vicki Pelham at 482-2435, Angie Bunting at 209-8918, Julie Smith at 557-3292, Monica Bolin at 209-2388 or email your questions to MST2010@ centurylink.net. Bulldog Wrestling Club The Bulldog Wrestling Club is starting practice for the summer season. Practice will be Tuesday and Thursday nights from 5:30-7 p.m. at the old Marianna High School wrestling room. All Jackson County kids ages 5-18 are welcome to join. For more informa- tion, call MHS coach Ron jThoreson at 272-0280. - to host their regional semi- final playoff opener. Sneads rolled through the district tournament with wins of 8-1 over Al- tha in the semifinals and 9-3 over Vernon in the title game, while Bozeman (16- 9) used a massive six-run rally in the seventh inning of the EIistrict 4 semifinals to beat Walton 11-10 be- fore being blanked by Lib- erty County 4-0 in the title game. Despite the shutout loss in the final and the huge comeback needed just to get into the playoffs, Guer- ra said that his team still views the Bucks as a major obstacle to getting to the regional finals. "We're not taking any- thing for granted because they're a really good team," the coach said. "They have Sports Items Send all sports items to editorial@jcfloridan. com, or fax them to 850- good pitching and they've always been very good defensively. Supposedly they don't have the hitters they've had in the past, but they score runs and they're winning here at the end just like we are, so they're doing something right. "We just have to play our best baseball. I think if we play our best, then at the end of the game we'll be able to hold our heads up high." Who is going to start on the mound for the Pirates is still not settled, with Guerra still trying to decide which of his three senior starters Hayes, Moats, Lombardo that he's go- ing to give the nod. ' The coach said he will continue to deliberate on the matter until Monday 482-4478. The mailing address for the paper is Jackson County Floridan P.O. Box 520 Marianna, FL 32447. THE NEW ADDRESS FOR COMPLETE SKIN HEALTH 4357 Lafayette Street Gulf Coast Dermatology is excited to open our newest office in Marianna, providing the highest level of comprehensive skin care in the region. What does this mean for you? * Access to the region's widest range of advanced skin cancer treatments, including those with the Highest cure rates * Our newest physician-supervised Aqua Medical Spa, offering proven treatments for total skin revitalization and rejuvenation * The peace of mind that comes from knowing you have a highly specialized skin care team dedicated to your health To make an appointment or schedule a complimentary cosmetic consultation, please call 1-877-231-DERM (3376). DERMATOLOGY The Skin Experts AQUA MEDICAL SPA ,a c4 eC- Jon Ward, MD I Board-Certified Dermatologist 1-877-231-DERM (3376) I gulfcoastderm.comn when he goes to his assis- tants Pat Jones and Jack Glover to collaborate on a final decision. "I have confidence in all three ofmystarters.They've been our workhorses all year long and kept us in ballgames," Guerra said. "Whoever we choose, there will be a short leash on everybody because it's an all-or-nothing game. If I have to use every pitcher I have, then we'll use them all. I'm just not sure who I want to start yet. All three have a little different pitch- ing style. It will come down to seeing what my coaches say and just going with my gut." Whoever is on the mound, the coach said that it's most important for his players to not get too caught up in the emotion of the moment and simply focus on playing hard and executing. "We've just got to play baseball and' don't make mistakes," he said. "We've got a good team. The guys just have to believe in themselves and their teammates. If they do that, then it should be a good game for us." The game will start at 7 p.m., with the winner mov- ing on to Friday's regional semifinal game against the winner of Vernon vs. Liberty County. If Liberty County wins, then it will host the re- gional finals, while the Pirates would only host with a win and a Bulldogs loss. JCARC 1 2TH ANNUAL FESTIVAL 1'll, 2013 8:OO-2:OO 2973 PENNSYLVANIA AVE MARIANNA, FLORIDA THROUGHOUT THE DAY! ARTS & CRAFTS SILENT AUCTION PLANTS S WOODWORKING GREAT FOOD .B .. _ CHILDREN'S GAMES CALL 850-526-7333 FUNDRAISING PROCEEDS BENEFIT INDIVIDUALS WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES. SALE PRICES ALSO APPLY AT OUR NURSERY OUTLET LOCATED AT (CORNER OF SMITH STREET & KELSON) 010- JCARC is a non-profit organization funded in part by Agency for Persons with Disabilities, DOE and Vocatllonal Rehabilitation. 'i __I_~ ~Z~ZZ~ JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com Annie's Mailbox Dear Annie: My brother was divorced L more than a year ago. Of course, it was extremely difficult for his family, but slowly, life is moving forward. My mother is the one who is not get- ting over it. In the past year, she has grown into one of the most bitter people I know. She used to be fun, positive and easygoing. Now she detests her former daughter-in-law and makes no bones about it. Their children hear her speak negatively about their mother all the time'. Mom also no longer lets minor dis- agreements or differences of opinion roll off her back. If anyone crosses her in any way, intentionally or otherwise, she will stop speaking to them. She has even cut off a few close family members. I'm worried because Mom seems like a, different person. I barely know her these days, and it's hard to be around her. Is there any way to get the old version back? -WHERE'S MY MOTHER? Dear Where: A certain amount of anger and bitterness is not an unusual reac- tion to a child's difficult divorce. But it is unlikely that your brother's marital prob- lems changed your mother's personality. Either there was an underlying problem, or the stress provoked an overreaction that she has been unable to control. She might even have had a small stroke. Please urge her to see her doctor for a complete checkup. Offer to go with her so you can make sure the doctor under- stands the problem. Dear Annie: Our grandchild is getting married this summer in another state. My husband has anger management problems worsened by alcohol. He was very careful at the first family wedding and handled himself well. However, this time our son-in-law has told me that while I am "always welcome," my husband is not, and they don't want him at this wedding. I have not yet told my husband about their demand. How do I approach this? I certainly cannot go if he asks me to stay home with him. What do I tell the grand- child who is getting married? I love this girl. I have been placed in an impossible situation, and it's heartbreaking for me. What do I do? IN THE MIDDLE Dear Middle: If your husband has a serious problem with alcohol, you cannot expect him to be welcomed at major family events, no matter how well behaved he was the last time. You must tell him that, sadly, he is not invited to the wedding. If he is gracious, he will insist that you go without him. You don't have to tell your granddaughter anything other than whether or not you are at- tending. Additional clarification is up to her parents. But either way, please send your warmest wishes to the bride and groom. Dear Annie: I disagree with your advice to "Some Etiquette, Please" about a host- ess asking that a dish be brought to a party. Potluck parties are becoming more popular in these economic times. I live in an affluent neighborhood, and we all can afford to cater parties if we so choose, but we have potluck parties all the time. It fosters a sense of community and giving. We all make a special dish, and it is fun to see what each person brings. It ,also takes some of the burden off the hostess. TOLUCA LAKE, CALIE. Dear Toluca: We have no objection to potluck parties. They are fun and informal, and the obligations of the participants are stated in advance and agreed to. But to send out invitations to your own party and then demand that responding guests bring a dish of the hostess's choosing is not a "potluck par- ty." It's taking advantage of your guests. Bridge Christian Nestell Bovee, an epigram- matic writer who died in 1904, said, "Music is the fourth great material want - first food, then clothes, then shelter, then music." If alive today, he would surely relegate music to fifth behind food, clothes, shel- ter and bridge. In bridge, the fourth bid in an uncon- tested auction is game-forcing when it is in the fourth suit. Usually, responder is hunting for the best game, but some- times he wants to suggest a slam. Look at this deal. When North hears his partner rebid one spade, he knows game in spades should be easy and that a slam might be possible. Jumping immediate- ly to four spades does not do justice to his hand. Instead, he first forces to game with two diamonds. Then, after opener continues with three clubs, North jumps to four spades, which logically is a slam- try. Now South, with such a great hand, can take control with (Roman Key-Card) Blackwood before bidding seven spades or seven no-trump. After West leads the diamond queen to the bare ace, how should South plan the play? If declarer can play spades safely, he will have 13 tricks: four spades, one heart, two diamonds and six clubs. The right play is to cash the spade king, North 05-04-13 4 A 8 5 4 VA QJ 6 SK5 2 A3 West East A6 A J .973 V 8 5 3 V K 1092 + QJ1098 6 7643 S7 6 4 2 5 South 4 K Q 10 2 V 7 4 A SK Q J 10 9 8 Dealer: South Vulnerable: Neither South West North East 1 % Pass 1 V Pass 1 6 Pass ?? Opening lead: Q planning to cross to dummy's ace. That works great here, uncovering the 4-1 break. However, East might throw South off the scent by playing his spade nine under declarer's king. If South thinks that is a singleton, he will next cash his spade queen and go down one. Watch out for this falsecard. Previous Solution: "One thing is clear to me: We, as human beings, must be willing to accept people who are different from ourselves." Barbara Jordan , TODAY'S CLUE: slenbe o 2013 by NEA, Inc., tIist. by Universal Uclick 5-4 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. "C TCXH PZH COHI AN ANPHD EHCDF ITADH CD ITT IMKHWPM AN RL TCNH. C TCXH PA NH H T TAD HTL." BAEH BP KTIDP Previous Solution: "I believe that each of us has God-given talents within us waiting to be brought to fruition." Mary Kay Ash TODAY'S CLUE: 0 stenbe A 2013 by NEA, Inc., dist. by Universal Uclick 5-6 Horoscopes TAURUS (April 20-May 20) When you put the needs of others before your own, your probabili- ties for getting what you want become excellent. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You're not likely to have much control over a change in your affairs. You might interpret this happening negatively, but it will prove to be a good thing. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Although you might have to take a little heat on behalf of a friend, you're doing the right thing and your loyalty won't be forgotten. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) When you apply yourself, you will find the opportunities you need to succeed. Once you make up your mind, woe to those who try to block your path. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don't hesitate to take a calculated risk if you feel it's necessary. If you believe th'e odds favor you, it's OK to gamble. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.23) Any major issues in which you and your mate are in agreement will have far-reaching, favor- able results. You'll dis- cover that a united front brings many benefits. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Rather than criti- cize or dominate others, you'll be inclined to set an example of leadership. Doing so will make your methods constructive, not contentious. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec. 21) You should give full rein to your enter- prising side, especially if you're in need of some extra cabbage. Your mon- eymaking instincts are unusually keen. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) If you feel that those in charge of a current endeavor aren't handling things, don't hesitate to assert yourself and show them how to do a better job. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) The possibility of achieving two personal objectives is quite good. When you're determined to be successful, you will be. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Sometimes it's necessary to take a risk to achieve something big. If you believe the odds favor you, go ahead and take a chance. ARIES (March 21-April 19) If you wait for things to go your way, you're not likely to get very far. You've got to make things happen yourself. . ,. - TODAY'S HISTORY: In 1862, the Mexican army halted the invading French army in the Battle of Puebla. This day later became the "Cinco de Mayo" holiday. In 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American to travel into space. TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Soren Kierkegaard (1813- 1855), philosopher; Karl Marx (1818-1883), phi- losopher; Nellie Bly (1864- 1922), journalist; Tyrone Power (1914-1958), actor; Michael Palin (1943-), ac- tor/comedian; John Rhys- Davies (1944- ), actor; Brian Williams (1959- ), TV journalist; Craig Da- vid (1981-), singer; Henry Cavill (1983-), actor; Adele (1988- ), singer/songwrit- er; Chris Brown (1989- ), singer. Gerbils strut their stuff at pageant BEDFORD, Mass. - Ever think your gerbil could do more in life than its cage in your liv- ing room will allow? Dozens of gerbils are scurrying to New England this weekend in the hopes of squeak- ing out a victory in an annual pageant held ACROSS 1 Lively dances 5 Corn unit 8 Leave out 12 Racetrack 13 Ms. Thurman 14Walk through water 15 Story 16 Wooed 18 Loses control 20 Joule fraction 21911 responder 22 Barge pusher 25 Air rifle ammo 28 Peruse 29 Constantly 33 Claim 35 Harry Potter's rival 36 Pioneer Daniel 37 Against 38 Popular columnist 39 Familiar auth. 41 Total 42 Difficult 45 Squeak stopper 48 Web address 49 Finish line markers 53 Charmingly 56 Forum farewell 57 Roman robes 58 Nourished 59- Stanley Gardner 60 Winter fall 61 NFL scores 62 Campus bigwig DOWN 1 Little bits 2 John, in Russia 3 Fundraiser, often 4 Got some rest 5 Lux. locale 6 It multiplies by dividing 7 Strict boss 8 Have 9 Medieval weapon 10 Footnote word 11 Williams and Koppel by the American Gerbil Society. The competition in Bedford, Mass., will fea- ture agility demonstra- tions where the gerbils must overcome various obstacles and race to the end of a course. The small rodents vie for coveted ribbons based on body type and agility. From wire reports Answer to Previous Puzzle H I DDEA lA N E 1A NT D R40U GH T S LiK|ABLEiDODOS 5 Ra 4o_Iumlcd D-cras cK|E 47TSyAD|EC NCRS TSACRAO B AR TETr S FESTIVE SNO K ELS ASIA I N ERAT WALT 17 Noted 37 Pigeon talk Khan 39 Aimless 19 Power 40 Canceled gl itch 43 Furrow 23 "Golly!" 44 Rescued 24 Gull kin 45Chooses 25 Rum-laced 46 De-crease cake 47Toy 26 Amorphous building mass block 27 Unkempt 50 Rid of rind one 51 Fitzgerald 30 Dye or Raines vessels 52 Perceived 31 Brownish 54 Fancy tint shooter 32 Wander 55 Fabric 34 New Age meas. singer 35 Coffee go-with Want more puzzles? Check out the "Just Right Crossword Puzzles" books / at QuillDriverBooks.com 2013 UFS, Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS ACROSS 1 Burst 4 Mr. Sandier 8 Math proof letters 11 Ms. Lupino 12 Battery terminal 13 Part of TNT 14 Extra large (hyph.) 16 Not well 17 Political alliance 18 Strong-arm 20 Teachers' org. 21 Air safety org. 22 Eye makeup 25 Freighter capacity 29 "The X-Files" topic 30 Urge 31 Chat 32 NASA destination 33 Finish 34 Tulip, e.g. 35Tofu source 38 Restaurant offerings 39 Mag. staffers 40 Undercover org. 41 Kid 44 Fighter 48 Yank foe 49 Resolved (2 wds.) 51 Natural resource 52 French coins 53 Purpose 54Tussaud's material 55 Recognized 56 Ave. crossers DOWN 1 Diver's position 2 Norse deity 3 Breathe hard 4 Singer Baker 5 Catnap 6 Summer quaff 7 Highway divider 8 Handy swab (hyph.) 9 Perry's penner 10 Kind of pickle Answer to Previous Puzzle OVAL UMU A WADE TALE ROM DANCED SINhRGEMS BBS R D E VER pOIL UR L T S TOGA ,DS ERAN 12 Lou Grant 36 Paese portrayer cheese 15 Heredity 37Whirlpools factors 38 Bogs down 19 Isle of 40 Ecclesias- 21 Doting tical law 22 San 41 Black bird Obispo 42 Zeus' 23 In that spouse case 43 Alpine goat (2 wds.) 44 Sported 24Curious 45 Debt 25 N.C. memos neighbor 46 Depose 26 Water, to 47 AAA Pedro suggestions 27 Nerve 50 Weep over 28 Flows back 30 Pro votes 34 Facial hair Want more puzzles?, Check out the "Just Right Crossword Puzzles" books at QuillDriverBooks.com 5-6 2013 UFS, Dist. by Universal Uclick for UFS ALLEY OOP BY JACK AND CAROLE BENDER WHY DO YOU HE'S IN A REALLY BAD OKAY? SAY I SHOULD TURN MOOD RIGHT OW! IT'S IT'S YOUF BACK? I MUST SEE SAFEST JUST T'LEAVE HIM FUNERAL KING GUZ! ALONE FOR A WHILE. MISTER! ,/M1. ^I } 4. 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. "X SKRXKHK ZFBZ KBOF NY MJ FB J UN E--UXHKA ZBRKAZJ GXZFXA MJ GBXZXAU ZN SK SWNMUFZ ZN - LBWT PBT BJ F YWMXZXNA." -1 r SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 o 3B- e 't i ".": Brief ENTERTAINMlENT JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN www.jcfloridan.com Outdoors Fishing? Golfing? Sometimes you just gotta go Ag./ number of years :;..A ago, on a rather E Z Inclement winter's day, I spied a friend of mine, doing something -tat the time considered rather foolish. "Don't tell anybody you saw this," my friend Bob requested, looking Outd miserably uncomfortable. I didn't answer. Southwe I just stood there dards) a dumbfounded. blisterin What I saw my friend seem eve and a rather large party was all I 'doing was playing golf. out my g Now, most folks know the way, I believe golf to be a silly was doir little game under the best my frien |f circumstances. Given on the g ghat day's weather condi- the street Xions, however, circum- Back ir ptances were far from the I started best and golf, according the imag to Kornegay, went way grown m Beyond silly, chasing ] It was cold (at least by across Ea BT TUESDAY MORNING COFFEE LEAGUE APRIL 30 TEAM STANDINGS W-L 1) Kindel Awards 81-59 2) Family Dentistry 80.5-59.5 3) Down Home Dental Center 79-61 4) Champion Tile 72-68 5) Jim's Buffet & Grill 68.5-71.5 6) James & Sikes 62-78 7) Pacers 62-78 8) Marianna Animal Hospital 55-85 . High Team Hdcp. Game: Kindel Awards 935 High Team Hdcp. Series: Kindel Awards 2640 High Game:Paula Kindelspire: 214, Lynn 237 High Series: Paula Kindelspire: 540, Lynn 618 TUESDAY NIGHT MIXED LEAGUE APRIL 30 4 m Kornegay oors Columnist est Georgia stan- nd the blustery, g wind made it en colder. Heck, it could do to take garbage which, by was just what I ig when I "caught" d and his buddies olf course across t. side my house, chuckling over ;e of a half-dozen en frenziedly little white balls early County's equivalent of the Arctic tundra. Refrain from sharing this? Not tell? Uh-uh. No way. This was way too good a cof- fee-shop story to pass up. Then I checked myself. Just by chance I hap- pened to glance up at the wall in my son's empty room. Hanging there was a sizable, nicely mounted crappie; Kyle's first all- by-himself fish caught 15 years prior when the boy was just 4 years old. "Wait a minute," I said aloud to myself. "Wasn't the weather just like it is now when that fish was caught?" Looking back, it certain- ly was. My offspring and I didn't have any more busi- ness fishing that day than my buddies had golfing owling 4) Try Hards 75-65 5) Harley's Hawgs 75-65 6) 2 Pair of Nuts 71.5-68.5 7) Perfections Detailing 69-71 8) Hollis Body Shop 68-72 9) Fireballs 66.5-73.5 10) EJ Sound Machine 62.5-77.5 11) Smith's Supermarket 57-83 12) Mr. Bingo 46.5-93.5 High Team Hdcp. Game: Harley's Hawgs 963 High Team Hdcp. Series: Adventure Diving 2752 High Game: Mary Jones 224, Jason Kindelspire 258 High Series: Amie Kain 583, Zack Davis 708 CHIPOLA MEN'S LEAGUE SMAY 2 E TEAM STANDINGS W-L 1) Kindel Pro Shop 95.5-44.5 2) We're Back Again 84.5-55.5 3) Lu's Crew 83-57 4) X-Men 80-60 5) Shelton Trucking 78-62 6) All Day 75.5-64.5 7) D and D 68-72 $) James Gang 58-82 9) Marianna Metal 56.5-83.5 10) Oak Creek Honey 52.5-87.5 11) Backwoods Bowlers 52.5-87.5 1) El-Rio 51-89 High Team Hdcp. Game: We're Back 1034 High Team Hdcp. Series We're Back 2728 High Game: LuAnn: 188, Jay Roberts & Jack Townsell: 275 High Series: LuAnn: 538, Jack Townsell: 738 WEDNESDAY NIGHT MIXED MAY 1 i) Marianna Metal 2) Big Lots 3) Adventure Drive TEAM STANDINGS W-L 88-52 81-59 76-64 TEAM STANDINGS W-L 1) Perfections Detail 41-23 2) Man On 38-26 3) Kindel Lanes 2 38-26 4) X Men 37-27 5) 3 Aces & A Deuce 34-30 6) Ricoh 32-32 7) Remedials 32-32 8) Ouzts Again 32-32 9) The Posse 25-39 10) The Wolf Pack 11-53 High Team Hdcp. Game: Perfection's Detail 1002 High Team Hdcp. Series: Perfection's Detail 2935 High Game: Jason Kindelspire 297 High Series: Jason Kindelspire 763 JC--FLORF IDAN-OO that particular afternoon. I had even less reason, probably. At least none of them were out there with an innocent child risking, at best, a severe chill or, at worst, hypothermia. I remembered it well. It was one of those I-just- gotta-go-fishing days. I couldn't help it. I hadn't wet a hook since Thanks- giving. It was fish or go crazy. I readied the boat, pre- pared to leave and, as luck would have it, Kyle caught me red handed. "Where you goin', Daddy?" "Fishing, kiddo." "Can I come?" "Sure," I said after only a brief hesitation. I'm sorry, but I never could say no to my son when it comes to fishing, weather be hanged. Besides, Mama was nowhere in sight which, of course, justified * my poorly-thought-out decision. So, off we went, one oth- erwise sane grownup and a potato-chip devouring, Gatorade-iswilling rugrat, off to do battle with the crappie population of a white-capping state park lake in 40-degree cold with monstrous wind chill. What a reckless gambler I was. By all rights that day my son should have been ruined for life where fishing was concerned. This was certainly no time to place a rod in the boy's hands and expect him to enjoy it. Did I say gam- bler? Idiot's much more appropriate. It is said, however, that God looks after fools. Per- haps he knows when their foolishness is well intend- One of the hottest topics in total hip replacement surgery is the direct anterior (front) approach, or DAA, often billed as minimally invasive hip surgery that does not require muscle cutting. , Traditionally, hip replacement M has been performed either ir through the posterior (back) ir or lateral (side) approach. The DAA involves entering the hip joint between muscles instead of requiring elevation of muscles or release of tendons. The procedure often leads to less pain, faster recovery, shorter hospital stay, and more natural hip function. Special cases may be performed as outpatient procedures or a one day hospital stay. ed. I think he probably had such people in mind when he made crappies, a gullible, easily-caught spe- cies if ever there was one. We had a ball, the kid and I. I don't recall ever once feeling too cold or too windblown and I don't believe Kyle did either. And when that big (to four-year-old eyes, any- how) speck came aboard flopping and dousing us both with icy droplets, it mattered not in the least that the two of us really should have been home talking about fishing rather than engaging in the act. And of course you know I changed my mind regarding golf and all the grief I was going to 'give my buddy over his bad- ,weather golfing excursion. Yeah, right. Direct anterior (front) surgical approach, or DAA, in a right hip. Dotted line shows incision. 4inimall', evasive .(..Hip icision joint S- , The Hughston Foundation, Inc. @2013 Dn Waldrop has performed over 12,000 knee and hip replacements during the past 30 years. He has been init, umcntal in the deelopnment of the pari rl knee- A i 7 Appointments: 706-324-6661 1-800-331-2910 Visit us onlie: www.Hughston.com nMtjE ~l' ,C S (50S56-67 MIR, * A ANR AYTSLTORIAN CENTERR TODAY AT JCFLORIDAN.COM MA 1203J EMDOXFR ------* IMPROVED APPROACH ^^^^^ REPLACEM ENT^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^*^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 14B SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 SPORTS JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN + www.jcfloridan.com SPORTS SUNDAY, MAY 5 2013 5B E NBK Playoff tiratoa Knicks hold off Celtics to win series The Associated Press BOSTON Carmelo Anthony scored 21 points and the New York Knicks held on after blowing most of a 26-point lead to beat the Boston Celtics 88-80 in Game 6 on Friday night and advance in the postseason for the first time since 2000. Iman Shumpert scored 15 of his 17 points in the second half, when the Celtics cut a 75-49 deficit to four points. But Anthony made a jumper to give New York an 81- 75 lead and then sank a 3-pointer, then J.R. Smith converted a three-point play to restore the double- digit lead the Knicks had nursed most of the game. Jeff Green scored 21 points for the Celtics, who were hoping to become the first NBA team to advance in the playoffs after losing the first three games. The Knicks had not won a playoff series since Patrick Ewing and Latrell Sprewell (and current backup center Marcus Camby) helped them reach the 2000 Eastern Conference finals. They will open the second round Sunday at home against the Indiana Pacers. Paul Pierce scored 14 points on 4-for-18 shoot- ing, making one of nine 3-point attempts. Kevin Garnett had 15 points and 10 rebounds for the Celt- ics, who now face another offseason of talk whether to break up the aging core that won the franchise's record 17th NBA title in 2008 and returned to the finals two years later. Thunder 103 Rockets 94 HOUSTON Kevin Durant scc U 27 points and Kevin Martin added 25 to lead Oklahoma City over Houston, sending the Thunder to the second ' round of the playoffs for the third straight season. The Rockets were points and 11 rebounds. Lance Stephenson also had 11 rebounds. Grizzlies 118 Clippers 105 MEMPHIS, Tenn. - Mike Conley and Zach Randolph scored 23 points apiece, and Memphis beat Los Angeles to take the first-round series 4-2 and advance to its second Western Conference semi- finals in three seasons. The Grizzlies had never won four straight post- season games before this series, and they became only the 10th team in NBA history to win four straight after trailing 0-2. They will THE ASSOCIATED PRESS New York Knicks small forward Iman Shumpert (right) is embraced by teammate J.R. Smith after defeating the Boston Celtics in Game 6 of the first-round NBA playoff series in Boston on Friday. The Knicks won 88-80, eliminating the Celtics from the playoffs. looking to become just the fourth team in NBA history to force a Game 7 after trailing 3-0. But the top-seeded Thunder opened the fourth quarter with a big run to take the lead and cruised to the victory. Martin finally gave the Thunder someone to take scoring pressure off Durant for the first time since All-Star Russell West- brook had season-ending knee surgery. He had 21 points by halftime and Westbrook's replacement, Reggie Jackson helped out by scoring 17. James Harden, who the Rockets said had strep throat on Thursday, led Houston with 26 points. Pacers 81, Hawks 73 ATLANTA (AP) George Hill and David West each scored 21 points and In- diana withstood a furious Atlanta comeback in the fourth quarter, closing out the opening-roundplayoff series in Game 6. The home team had won every game until the Hawks returned to Philips Arena and set a franchise record with just nine points in the second quar- ter on 1-of-15 shooting. The defense broke down in the third, allowing Hill and West to combine for 22 points, and the Pacers built a 65-50 lead going to the fourth. The Hawks showed some heart, slicing it to 76-73 on Al Horford's dunk with 2:13 remaining. But the comeback fizzled there, and the Pac- ers advanced to face New York. Roy Hibbert added 17 open the second round at Oklahoma City on Sunday. Memphis finished with seven players in double figures. Tony Allen had a postseason-best 19 points, and Jerryd Bayless had 16. Reserve Matt Barnes scored a career playoff- best 30 points for Los Angeles. Chris Paul had 28 points before being eject- ed with 2:29 left for crash- ing into Marc Gasol off a missed free throw, though he shook hands with sev- eral Grizzlies before going to the locker room. Blake Griffin didn't start because of his sprained right ankle, and he scored nine points in 13:56. Caron Butler added 14. Ma.y Specials Mufflers & Exhaust SAMSI TlIRi 4 ERVic! R"o Sa. 0ce 2416 Air6 850O5-268 Store Hours: Mon-Fri 7am-5:30pm Sat:m'. pmm Come in today to see our... at Hatton House Apartments! Mention this ad and receive Spacious 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartment Homes for Seniors 55+ from $546!* rA., Fishing Report Lake Seminole Bass fishing is reported as fair. Early morning topwater fishing has been productive. Buzz- baits and Lunker Lures have been paying off in wood structure near the banks. Spinnerbaits are also producing. Also fish brushy areas with Texas and Carolina-rig worms with a slow presentation. For deeper fish, run crank- baits over humps and sandbars. Catfish are slow, es- pecially on the Flint River side. Small num- bers of good-size cats have been taken up the Chattahoochee. Crappie fishing is slow. Catches have been spo- radic of late. Hybrids on the main lake are slow, though a few catches are reported from a few areas on the Flint River arm. Hybrid fishing remains good below the dam. Bream have been improving of late. Shell- crackers are getting active in the Flint River and Spring Creek, where some bedding activity has been reported. Lake Eufaula Bass are good. Topwater fishing near main-lake points has been pro- ductive. Work the baits slowly. In the middle of the day try spinnerbaits at depths of ten feet or less. Crankbaits can also pay dividends and jig-and-pig combos worked slowly and deliberately is one more worthwhile pattern to try right now. Crappies are fair overall, with some fish still up the creeks in shallow water. Live minnows and brightly colored jigs can take some pretty good catches. Con- tinue to check the bridges and culverts for schools of crappies, but don't be surprised to find that the action in these spots has slowed considerably. Live minnows fished beneath a bobber is the preferred method. Hybrids are fair, but an- glers must look for them. Surface action is scarce, but bucktails and Rat-L- Traps may tempt a few fish early and late in the day. There is some fair hybrid action near creek mouths below the dam. Catfishing is fair and bream are slow at present. Lake Andrews/ Chattahoochee River good on the river right now. Fishing pressure is almost at a standstill. Go early in the morning and fish the main river near the banks with topwater baits. Specific topwater lures mentioned this week are buzz baits and the old Devil's Horse plugs. Up the creeks, try crankbaits and 6-inch worms in dark color patterns. Catfishermen are doing fairly well in the tailwa- ters and along bluff walls. Some smaller cats have been found at various times near sandbars above the Georgia Highway 62 bridge near Columbia. Shad, cut bait, and live worms are the preferred catfish baits. Bream fishing is fair to good up and down the river. Fish on the bottom with worms for shellcrack- ers up the creeks and drift along steep bluff walls with crickets for some pretty good bluegill and redbreast action. Generationrschedules, pool levels, and other such information for area waterways may be obtained by calling toll-free 1-888-771-4601. Follow the recorded instructions and access the touch-tone for the Apalachicola River System. AMENITIES INCLUDE: Weekly Transportation for You! To Wal-mart, the grocery store, and to Marianna for lunch! FREE Internet Cafe I Elevator Updated Community Room Indoor Pool with Retractable Roof & lew Furniture! Full Activity Calendar - with Yoga, Water Aerobics, Crafting, Bingo & Much More! New Hallways | Fitness Center Electric Included in Rent! Free Cable for a year! Come in for your 850-593-5777 HATTON HOUSE SENIOR APARTMENTS 2045 3rd*ve, Sneads FL 32460 hattonhouse@dominiuminc.com hatton-house-apartments.com I INSURANCE AGENCY Iaria nna 's Largest Selection -1---~--~--- '" 6 B Sunday, May 5, 2013 Jackson County Floridan CLASSIFIED www.JCFLORIDAN.com WIREGRASS CLASSIFIED MARKETPLACE ANNOUNCEMENTS Live & Internet Auction of The Estate of Joe & Beth Quick, Sat. 5/11/2013. Register & Preview at 7 AM CDT, Shed Auction at 8:00 Live Auction at 9:00 2895 Watson Dr, Marianna, FL. Bid/Preview at www.sospcfl.com. The Specialists of the South, Au3226, AB2366, AE426 ( ) FINANCIAL BUINEgSOPPORTUNiTI Be your own boss and partner with the world's largest commercial cleaning franchise. $20K! equipment, supplies, training and $5,000. in monthly customer included. 1-888-273-5264 www.janiking.com Janitorial Business for sale Equipment, training and 60K annual gross $19,500 504-915-1474 (i) MERCHANDISE; r ....I.. .. Ill l.... . ANNE'S DAY LILIES 827 S. APPLETREE ST in Dothan, Day Lilies ($1- up) Amaryllis & Iris ($3 up) 334-792-0653 or 334-797-9657 Q - L................................J REj FREE ADS 3 Elec. Wheel Chairs $200. 579-5125 Chain Saw Polan 14" $25. 850-762-3370. Chester Drawers Ig. w/mirror $75. 762-3370 Dryer, perfect condition $80. 850-526-5949 Guitar Alvarez 70's 12 string $150. 850-482-6022 Inversion Table: Teeter $100. 850-482-2155 Ladder: 24 ft Aluminum Ext. $100.850-638-2920 Ladder wooden 8ft. $20. 850-762-3370. Laptop: HP G61. $250. 850-372-2929 Nordic Track: A2350, $150. 850-482-2155 Stroller sit or stand like new $45. 850-526-3426. Trailer enclosed %" plywood 4x8 $250. 482-6022 () PETS & ANIMALS SABCA Registered Border Collie Puppies: Black and white, lilac and white, M/F $350 Call 229-774- 2662 or 229-220-0232. AKC German Shepherd Puppies: $350. Parents on site. Up-to-date on shots and worming. Black and tan. 334-393-7284 OR 334-806-5851 Collies: AKC reg. Males & Females $400. Born April 7, 2013. Ready May 20th. Sable/White. 229-308-3006, alderman.lynn@yahoo.com Sudoku SMaltese AKC Pups! Will be small. S/W, SM & F. Ready Now! Will Deliver! =-Call 334-703-2500 Mini Australian Shepherd: ASDR beautiful pups born 3/15. Blue merles, red merles, tri's & bi;s. See @ facebook.com/ huntsminiaussies or call 706-761-3024 Super Puppies Sale Morkile $175, Shih -Chi Mix $175, Chi-A-Poo $300, Chinese Chihuahua Female .* 334-718-4886 4 ) FARMER'S MARKET F I IP S Vine Ripe Tomatoes Home Grown Greens Other Fresh Vegetables!! All Farm Fresh! 220 W. H 52 Malvern Aplin Farms Strawberries & lettuce You Pick We Pick Open Mon-Sat (8-6) 4 334-726-5104 0 Frozen Green Peanuts We also have shelled peanuts 850-209-3322 or 850-573-6594 4 44128H wy231 34ur 3* =I*** **3 **-imm ** m U-Pick We Pick Juicy and Sweet 9 miles from Ross Clark Circle Hwv 52 West of Dothan. *I -0 Bahia seed for sale 4- Excellent germination with over 40 yrs , experience. Kendall Cooper Call 334-703-0978, 334-775-3423, S or 334-775-3749 Ext. 102 L................................1 END OF SEASON SALE Quality Coastal Hay; Large Rolls Fertilized & Weed Control 850-209-9145 an idea that SELLS. an idea that SELLS. 4 7 5 9 3 1 4 1 5 3 4 9 6 7 8 1 7 3 4 2 1 9 7 42 5 4 1 6 2013 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Media Services. All rights reserved. _I Buying Pine / Hardwood in your area. No tract to small / custom Thinning Call Pea River Timber 4 334-389-2003 . (0i) EMPLOYMENT Customer Service Specialist Send Resumes to: Home Source International 3595 Industrial Park Dr. Marianna, FL 32446 EDUCATION &.1IhNG CHIPOLA COLLEGE is accepting applications for the following full-time positions: * ASSOCIATE DEAN OF FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS * ACCOUNTING/BUSINESS INSTRUCTOR * ENGLISH INSTRUCTOR * CHEMISTRY INSTRUCTOR * MATHEMATICS EDUCATION INSTRUCTOR * NURSING INSTRUCTOR * SOCIOLOGY INSTRUCTOR * WELDING INSTRUCTOR * CAREER COACH WELDING PROGRAM Minimum qualifications are available at www.chipola.edu/personnel/jobs APPLICATION DEADLINE IS OPEN UNTIL FILLED. To obtain an application, contact Human Resources at pippenw@chipola.edu or at (850)718-2269. Candidates may be subject to background investigations. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER AT THE JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN, WE ARE LOOKING FOR MATURE, DEPENDABLE, BUSINESS- MINDED, NEWSPAPER CARRIERS Alford Earn an average of $600 per month Ask about our $300 -Sign on Bonus BE YOUR OWN BOSS 2 A.M. to 6 A.M. Must have dependable transportation, minimum liability insurance & valid, driver's license. Come by and fill out a bid at the Jackson County Floridan, 4403 Constitution Lane, Marianna, FL Level:g 2 3 Complete the grid so each row, column and 3-by-3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit 1 to 9. For strategies on how to solve Sudoku, visit www.sudoku.org.uk. Solution to last Sunday's puzzle 5/5/13 Lf3 4 1 3 6 5 2 7 8 9 567489213 289317645 3 9 8 741526 6 5 4 2 3 8 9 7 1 654238971 721596834 875164392 1 3 2 9 7 5 4 6 8 9 4 6 8 2 3 1 5 7 132975468 946823157 - - - i. I & AT THE JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN, WE ARE LOOKING FOR MATURE, DEPENDABLE, BUSINESS- MINDED, NEWSPAPER CARRIERS GRAND RIDGE Earn an average of $800 per month Ask about our $300 -Sign on Bonus BE YOUR OWN BOSS 1 A.M. to 6 A.M. Must have dependable transportation, minimum liability insurance & valid driver's license. Come by and fill out a bid at the Jackson County Floridan, 4403 Constitution Lane, Marianna, FL ILLY RNES P.O. RAW CR . 36"10746 Since 1975 BILLY BARNES ENTERPRISES, INC. IS NOW HIRING EXPERIENCED FLATBED DRIVERS EXCELLENT PAY & BENEFITS HOME MOST WEEKENDS MINIMUM PAY REQUIREMENTS INCLUDE: MUST BE 23 YEARS OLD, VALID CLASS A CDL, CLEAN DRIVING RECORD, 1 YEAR TRACTOR/TRAILER FLATBED EXPERIENCE FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL MARY @ 1-800-844-6458 OPT 1 OR APPLY ONLINE @ www.billybarnes.net PAPER MANSPWRT, INC. Drivers- *$1000 SIGN ON BONUS We are GROWING! PAPER TRANSPORT seeks Class A Drivers to Travel in Surrounding States for our Dedicated Account. COMPETITIVE PAY PACKAGE, BONUSES & BENEFITS! HOME WEEKLY NO TOUCH 18 Months Exp & Class A Required. l N -PhonI CallS (784s 5I and Tanker Full benefits. s Apply in person to Chipola Propane, 4055 Old Cottondale Road Marianna, FL Hours 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM Monday- Friday. No Phone Calls Please .!! 25 Drivers Trainees NEEDED NOW! Learn to drive for Werner Enterprises Earn $800 per week! No experience needed ! Local CDL Training job ready in 15 days! 1-888-368-2198 DRIVERS: All Miles PAID (Loaded & Empty)! Home on the weekends! Running Class-A CDL Flatbed. Lease to Own-No Money Down CALL: 888-880-5911 wwwJCFLORIDAN.cm River Valley Rehabilitation Center Is now hiring: RUN'S & LPN'S 7a-7p & 7p-7a SHIFT C.N.A'S 3-11 SHIFT $1.00 SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL FOOD SERVICE AIDE 5a-1:30p/11a-8p SHIFT Painter, Part Time, Temporary 'Opening for a part time interior painter. Painting experience, a must. Sheetrock repair, floor, and ceiling tile replacement, a plus. Apply in person at 17884 N. E. Crozier St. Blountstown. Great Pay and Benefits Health, Vision & Dental Please Apply at: River Valley Rehabilitation Center 17884 NE Crozier Street Blountstown, Fl. 32424 Ph: (850) 674-5464 Fax: 674-9384 Email: rvhrc@southernltc.com Drug Free Workplace- Safe Minimal Lifting Environment An EEO/AA Employer M/F/V/D PT (30+hrs) Farm/Ranch Hand Reliable Transportation! Must be dependable! 850-482-3557 leave msg. SEDoEUCATION &INSTRUCTION Classes Forming Now for Medical Assisting, FORDTIS Electrical Trades and FUOlRIS More! COLLEGE Call Fortis College Today! 888-202-4813 or visit www.fortiscollege.edu. For consumer information visit www.fortis.edu RESIDENTIAL REAL, ESTATE FOR I~ENT Apartments for Rent i Greenwood 2BRS450 lBR S400 Call 850-326-4289 4 & 2BR Apartments in Marianna 2 & 3BR Mobile Homes Rent to Own Lot rent included. For details > 850-557-3432 or 850-814-6515 &4 2BR/1BA House 6914 Oaks St Grand Ridge $450. Mo. + $450. Dep. 4 Call 850-592-5571 # 2BR 1BA House for rent, Safe neighborhood, $500/mo + dep. 850-482-8196 OR 850-209-1301 2BR/1BA Newly Renovated 2658 Railroad St. Open floor plan. Cottondale. No Pets. $450 Mo. + $400 Dep. Call 850-352-4222 3/2 appliances included NO PETS 5374 Cotton St Graceville, FL $700. mo $350. dep. 850-263-2045 Lv. Mess. Austin Tyler & Associates * Quality Homes & Apartments a 850- 526-3355 or austintylerco.com "Property Management Is Our ONLY Business" For Rent Greenwood, Marianna, & Cottondale, starting @ $375/mo. Water/sewer/garb./ lawn maintincl. P 850-593-4700 4 2/1.5 with front addition, garage on Shady Grove Rd. $350. mo. $350. dep No inside pets. 850-209-3662 2/2 MH South of Cottondale Central Heat/Air, $550. + dep. & 2/1 MH H/A $450. + dep. water& lawn care is furnished, 850-352-4393/ 209-4516 2 & 3 bedroom mobile Homes in Cottondale. $500 and up. H20, garbage, sewer included. http://www.charloscountryliving.com. 850-209-8847 4 2& 3BR Mobile Homes in Cottondale. NO PETS CH&A $325- $500/Month Roomate situation also available. 850-258-1594 Leave Message -. 2 & 3 BR Mobile Homes in Marianna & Sneads (850)209-8595 I 2BR 1BA at Millpond $495 + dep. very nice, water/sewer/lawn maintenance included, access to pond, No pets 850-209-3970 2BR 2 BA MH'S in Alford, $380 mo. $380. dep. 850-579-8882/850-209-1664/850-573-1851 . 2BR/2BA Mobile Home $450 + deposit, appliances, washer & dryer, water/gartbage & sewer Included . 850-482-445 2BR/2BA Newly remodeled in quiet area. Very clean. Water, sewage, garbage and yard care provided. No smokers, no pets. $500 + deposit. Call 850-718-8158. I 3/2 Dbl. Wd. Mobile Home (by itself) on quiet lot in Sneads. 850-209-8595 f^) RESIDENTIAL ILf .l.REAL ESTATE FOR SALE Foreclosure Homes For Sale 2161 Katie Avenue. Grand Ridge 3BR/2BA double wide mobile home with land. $49,000. 555 Satsuma Road. Chattahoochee. 3BR/1BA 1665SF home. $49,000. Credit Union Owned. Call 850-663-2404 CLASSIFIED 17 Acres: If it's peace and quiet you're looking for, you've found it. Getaway from the hustle and bustle of the city, only 8 miles from Chattahoochee. This 4BR/2BA doublewide mobile home is almost 2,200 SF and has a split floor-plan with fireplace. 17 ACRES, 2 Ponds, Carport. Wildlife. Contact Michael 850-533-6011. Feel free to drive by and take a look! NO OWNER FINANCING 8 yr. old 2600 sq.ft. 4/3 brick home on 1 acre. dbl garage, sep. dbl carport & workshop, deck Beautiful home in Blountstown, near H14 $199,900. nice landscaping 8-674-1433 FSBO: 3BR/2BA Brick Home. Well maintained and updated, fireplace with gas logs, new paint and carpet, hardwood floors, nice yard 1 acre with fruit trees. $129,900. Call 850-482-3233 or 850-209-0459 please leave message. 1995 Fleetwood 16x80 3/2 CH&A all electric, all appl. good cond. $18,000 OBO 850-579-2728 or 850-348-9925 . has axle & tires RECR~AT1~N Golf Car: 2006 Club Car "Precedent" One owner, gas powered, full weather enclosure, club/ball washer, club rain protector, cooler, floor mat, tinted windshield. $2,900. Phone 334-464-3383 Honda 2007 Foreman ATV; ,2-wheel & 4-wheel Drive. Elec- tric wench, 190 hours on it; $4800 OBO 334-596-9966 2008 Crownline 19 SS, 30.5 hrs. Mercruiser 4.3L, Facto- ry wakeboard tower, cus- tom cover, snap-in carpet, walk-thru transom, trailer brakes, SS cleats, flip-up captain's chairs, Sony marine stereo & sub-woofer, bimini top, stain- less steel rub-rail upgrade, trailer tie downs, SS windshield lock, SS cupholders, chrome wheels Garage kept always. 334-796-9479 25 ft. Party Barge Pontoon 2011 Suntracker Regency edition only 75 hrs. 150hp Mercury Opti Max engine, with 2 axle trailer & lots of extras, ready for the water, take over payoff $41,000. Call 334-763-9124 Bass Boat 2011 G3 Eagle 19 ft. Yamaha 115 hp. 4 stroke, 46 hrs. 2 lowrance HDS8 depth find- ers, 24 volt Minnkota trolling motor, hydraulic steering, tilt steering wheel, build in battery charger, deluxe trailer, snap on cover, garage kept. $18,000. 334-671-3864. Pontoon Boat 2008 20ft. G3Jish & Cruise, pur- chased new July 2009, 30 gallon gas tank, fish -finder, 90HP, 4-stroke, Yamaha engine. Exc. gas mileage. Asking $15,000. 334-897-6929. 1995 30 ft. Travel Trailer fixed up to live in good condition, cold AC $4200. OBO 334-702-0001 or 386-965-6964 In Dothan 1999 26ft Jayco Eagle 5th wheel camper . Sleeps 6, one living room slide, queen size hide a bed sofa, master queen size bed, 16' awning. $6,900. 334-673-0533 32ft. Travel Trailer 2007 Conquest great cond. sleeps 4-5, slide out living room $10500. Motor Home 2002 38ft. Fleetwood Discovery 2-slide outs 35K mi. 330 hp Cummings engine, mint cond. garage kept, awnings out with TV outside to view & washer & dryer $59,500. 334-805-7679. Keystone 2006 Sidney Edition md# 30ROLS , 30ft. pull behind. Like new, total use 7-8 times, sheltered when not in use. Asking $15,000 334-897-6929. C:' IL Aft ISISI F= I =_ M .4 I~ Jackson County Floridan * TRANSPORTATION :.. Dodge 2001 Ram 1500 SLT, 4x4. tilt. cruise, electric doors & windows, sliding rear window, bedliner, very cold air, $5,995 OBO. Call 334-237-2634 1983 Buick LeSabre Limited: Two owner vehicle, and yes,it was a little Grandmother's Car!! 123,500 mi, 5.0 liter V8, Sedan. All stock, All originalAM/FM radio, power locks & windows, tilt steering, remote outside mirror adjustments, original velour seat covers, split front seats w/armrest, power adjustable driver's seat, heat/AC works great, wire spoke hubcaps, big trunk, front window power units replaced. Engine kept tuned regularly, new battery, all belts, water pump & hoses replaced, good tires. Vinyl roof needs care Left front corner/side hit by deer. Drives great, runs strong, cleans up nice! $1,975. 334-687-2330 or maczack@bellsouth.net f Chevrolet 2000 Impala, ." loaded, new tires, 66,000 miles, 3.4 liter V-6, like new! $4995. Call 334-790- 7959. DO YOU NEED A VEHICLE? GOT BAD CREDIT? Pass Repo pass bankruptcy slow credit ok $0 Down/lst Payment, Tax, Tag & Title 12 months OR 12,000 mile warranty RIDE TODAY! FREE $25. gas giveaway i Call Steve Pope 334-803-9550 Sunday,Ma5,013- B Sunday, May 5, 2013- 7 B Ford 1999 Mustang GT: 35th anniversary edition Pony Pkg with Flomaster, automatic, Mach sound system, ruby red, leather interior, ice cold AC, recent tune-up, well maintained with many new parts, 9 yrs adult owned, good tires, new battery, 168k miles. $5,200. Email @ mustanq99ad@yahoo.com Honda 1991,CRX: Red Hatchback. 5 speed; 1$1.200 OBO. Phone 334 435-3962 Hyundai 2012 Elantra, $200 down, $269 per month. No Credit Refused. Call Ron Ellis 714- 0028. _. uw-i Lincoln 1999 Town Car, Signature, loaded, leath- er, sunroof, new tires, 106,000 miles, very clean. $4500. Call 334-790-7959. Lincoln Town Car 2006 SSignature Limited Like New, original owner, always garage kept, only 39,700 miles. $17,500. Must see to appreciate 334-714-9672. Nissan 1997 Altima 4 door 168,000 miles. Great work car $1,000OBO. Call 334 803 5906 Nissan 2012 Altima, Like new, under warranty, No Credit Refused! $200 down, $269 per month. Call Ron Ellis 714-0028. Toyota 2007 Prius, White, fully loaded, excellent condition, 70K miles, $12,500 850-499-7560 VW 2011 Jetta, All Applications Accepted. Low miles, great fuel mileage, still under factory warranty. $300/down, $300/month. Call Steve 334-791-8243. 2005 Honda Goldwing 1800 Calif. Trike. Yellow w lots of chrome. 6 disk CD changer. Stereo. *'J Headsets for front & rear. Cruise control. Reverse gear. Lots more extras. 56,000 miles in perfect condition. $25,000. Call 334-406-1520 or edhughes2005@hotmail.com 2007/8 Qlink LD250 Legend 250cc low miles, runs good, $900 call Randv 850-693-0566 ('United Auction Contact. Stephen Burlon Call for Details Olnnr k Assoc. Bkr/Auctioneer A ountr Justin Terry Assoc. Broker AU 649 AL 1337 GAL 1548 Service s (850)643-6125 cell Ed Hughes, Broker Properties South, Inc. 325 Ross Clark Circle Dothan, AL "C mm U 20 me -- Aaan af8 _________________ ^ ^ _ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ - N SER'VI C E ' Affordable Lawn Care Low Overhead=Low Prices 850-263-3813 850-849-1175 CLANNG& OUEKEPN Clay O'Neal's Land Clearing, Inc. ALTHA, PL 850-762-9402 Cell 850-832-5055 WEfICEI LMOW LABM iMi XMssmma0 SSWMSMfSi Trolling Motor Repair Affordable Service! Fast Repair! Most Cases 1 Week Turnaround. Servicing Minn Kota & Motorguide. 850-272-5305 NEW& USED TIRES NEW TIRES BELBW RETAIL PRICES!I TRIPLE 850.526.1700 I Hours: Mon-Fri 7-5 Sat 7-1 2978 Pierce Street (behind Tim's Florist) - E ^ S ;r J you Oui defo u great locl ;. y, | businesses & services I DIRECTORY Call 526-3614 to place yourlad You CALL... WE COME To You! RED'S MOBILE SMALL ENGINE REPAIR SERVICE . 850-209-9713 EDWARD MAGGI, OWNER T This Month's Special $239500 35 Years in Business BESTWAY PORTABLE BUILDINGS LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF PORTABLE BUILDINGS IN NORTH FLORIDA HAVE LOVER DIFFERENT SIZES! YOU CAN CHOOSE COLOR & STYLE BUIL ONSITE 850-77.8974 2919 Hwy 231 North Panama City, FL I :MARIANNA CITY 2844 Madi son St ]FARMERS Tues Thurs,Sat :MARKET^ o Chad 0's Lawn F/X Commercial & Residential _" . SSpring Clean-up & Monthly Maintenance Full Lawn Caro Service Free'Estimates Family Owned & Operated Chad Oliver | 850-573-7279 HAPPY HOME REPAIR WE'LL BEAT ANY PRICE!! Big Or Small Jobs WELCOME "Beautification of Your Home" Carpentry/Painting Installations 'Furniture Repair & Refinishing General Repairs Insured Lighthouse Electrical Unlimited, LLC Residential Electrical Remodels Service Work #ER13014408 Insured (850)272-2918 Ricky Moser (850)272-2918 Owner w w .j %-r jukj -I ---; -- 'Al I RESEVC M=E mmk 'm 8 B Sunday, May 5, 2013 Jackson County Floridan 2011 Yamaha V-Star 950 Nothing wrong with this excellent Cruiser! Only 1316 miles. Garage kept & title in hand. Yamaha XVS95AL Blue 950 cc. Great gas mileage without compromising power. Cobra slip on exhaust gives it a more aggressive sound (original exhaust included if you want to tone it down). Show Chrome back- rest. $6,750 OBO. Call Fred 334-379-4549 Harley Davidson 2005 Dyna Low Rider, ridden, $7000. DR Field and Brush trimer, exc. cond. $800. 334-791-0701. Honda 2006 250 Rebel 13K miles, 70-80 miles per gal. nice hwy. cruiser with classic leather saddle bags, windshield, never used full face helmet $2450. OBO 850-557-1629. Kawasaki 2006 Vulcan 500 LTD 2040 miles, red in color, garage kept, $2800. 850-773-4939 Yamaha 2002 T TR125: Great condition! Includes helmet & small aluminum load ramp. Located in Dothan, AL. $800 .0BO Contact 863- 221-7680 or coletoncallender@gmail.com. CLASSIFIED IITRUCKSBUSSRACORSTRILE Ford 1993 Ranger: 5 speed, step-side, cold air, runs good, black, good condition. $2,100. OBO Call 334-798-1768 or 334-691-7111 Ford 2004 F-150 Lariat, ALL CREDIT ACCEPTED, loaded, 78k miles, leather, pwr window, door locks, tuneau cover, tow pkg., new tires. $250/down, $300/month. Call Steve 334-791- 8243. Ford Tractor 9N with 4ft. bushhog, good working condition. 229-869-0883. Tractor 240 Massey Ferguson : deisel engine with bottom plow, garage kept, less 600 hours, good condition. $7,500. Call 334-794-3226 IN THE CLASSIFIED VAN Frsae IFor sale by Owner 2006 Pontiac Montana SV6, SSK miles, 7 passenger Sliding power door, rail guards, back-up assist, front/rear CD/MP3, DVD w/remote, fabric w/4 captain seats. Maintained w/most service re- cords. 60-75% tread on tires remain. Carpet mats incl. Other extra's. Asking price suggest- ed by www.kbb.com. $7,500 334-790-6618 ADVERTISE IN THE CLASSIFIED SI' ;4 Honda 2008 Odyssey EX M1UST SELL! Less than S. ,:-' 48,.000 mi. 23 mpg. Metallic silver, 7-8 passenger seat- ing, power sliding doors. One owner, no wrecks. Non smoking. Excellent condition. Carfax available. $14,900. Selling well below Kelly Blue Book Value. 334-790-7926 _j,, SUNNY SOUTH PROPERTIES SUNNY SOUTH PROPERTIES 4630 Hwy. 90 Marianna, FL 32446 (850) 526-2891 4630 Hwy. 90 Marianna, FL 32446 Each Office Is independently Owned and Operated (850) 526-2891 SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated Ann Jones, SMARTER. BOLDER. FASTER Owner/Broker, .,. Ouida Morris SMARTER. BOLDER FASTER REALTOR REALTOR& Ellen Marsh CRS 850-209-9077 Broker/Owner 850.209.1090 cell 850-209-4705 Ellen@EducatedRealEstate. net 4438 LAFAYETTE STREET, MARIANNA, FL MARIANNA DRASTICALLY REDUCEDIII 850-482-0045 . oi wit lame with 3 ,, Don ys rng t one get offer$ o, lT larg e r kiceCmletly conw ted, lago home alr kut outside of town,,hut anvenient Commercial Bulding MLS24687135 iblLePuhse MS248229 $n 15,000c beardhoI l 'd Coah"r loT 00 Jefferson nSr-t . r...I.asl d 1 h" ack yard... efrigeratoo, aoinless anee' q nuie boerfet. ise sainess s teee exitin door hn reafersou t o b..rin ,,n MLS 2247898a $79,900. d1amhwas stanles stee l oven Hg r... 1,rdwoo fo, t o. .1 ,e ,s e efficiency 14 SEER airao0dirining syste r with high .,, ti o. -erminex malo c S ... MAR IANNA Ainsulaon R-30 with borax bug guard. nderground iites from power pole to home. Elecical -... ..H t e l, c ed iii m l ,.i upgrades. Huge storage room Inside laun dry. Oversized bedro ms end huge master suite. wrih li't.eo. Si,,, sI I,rTI Don 't let thisne getaway M LS #241597 15006 CR 274 9 99,900 ro Iup doorftor deliveries.'TWO Existing Signs already in place 2 parcels Vacant loth and H. e H ie I ciriotl 'a ia.ecn on sl ctned Commercial uding. MILS 24671 135000 Possible Lease Purchase a Conveniently located to om alML248229 $115,000 everything Cornerd lon t. Mi4;. w0; I t H aeao e r A n om nPerfect for the investor. lne H.itad home Uoa II lv MARIANNA -H Rkn om1e is currently PRM .... style 3 bedroom bi ck rented so a source of income is rea daily available. HI.Has rY......... 90 IH .H Mhome located on shaded lot BRING ALL OFFERS! MLS #247669 ih 984 2nd Ave. ..-. Ent to_, thek ....in town convenient to eall PRICE RED1 CED vb u o o thi uos meo l coml..... l ..replac i yame ties. Great buy for then o 4 bed r, 2'b ahav r , Call today nto.... set an .... ti248 559,990. L ameibuyer. so I hed 3 ,ooa homnen e n ee o. t Inotorty MAIANNA c rce f the country ast twmebhoyer. n Northwest Fl Ind The 1arme 1, ...... ... .. -. MiS247820 $62,000. k.atur (ler m Dtbwhichane S ,maere g who would like to live in a octdtbw e xtn usl-cyk F ,e vd i 1 0u romd twe historic homeorwouldliketo have a home and business. MLS 247257 ONLY $140,000 i ALTHA Uke new home in en850 ee 209MG,80r P the country appears to have all ,tvon hmi t eo u. . PRIME COMMERCIAL new carpet/ceramic file, kitchen lo,.aea tbupstairs The back daer is from pre-Ka en oOfn Three do- upstairs I .H c 90es .and* ihe r CO TTN D A R E Ldd hedy dywithn1roseanginnaltd h dle s undd irn toesThere a FR GElAYgwith nice cabinets and covered ro ee otun-a-the-etury ted d wuundh n ,,t s. The bnick orr chered there oad nr h F R O N T A G E : t" -. uh nmnuoyhe u, he urf l wee s, pi in gs, v uIns ded p' i n s or ehruvvb ae buo v ih .-1r ,,A r .-, ,, r. .,,I i..,, back porch to enjoy outdoor Inh18 00,Theeurne nyanyeme oryiemsloune ru,, Gronu verus rtoe n.n e pead cread o I, r di L O F Must setting, BIG REDUCTIONI! thSee tcs er tahedt .thise hsti ng. i pr r y isr etur edv. ithcalk, pne, dogwva d, ineao, by Hwy Frontage of 219 feetnudpptuneeuThureisot1vutunutuheeu wenepheodsirin0tnieide' on Highway 90. There is a B ML 2479712$58,999. 6' l oI ,Iee moMeorkLake forming 112791r58ll The999is. o nterm-itent s1nrm with threreaiun ut ,n o. d tld The 70 h drop r Um sd t ia create hilsides reiniseent beautiful pond and a houge onodihelnl eirin and re4dertishr1nu rre-8np60 $1r900 ,eMS #247490 $24o, 00 as well as Electricity and a house in great locan ees Dbbe Roney Smith, Well. Back of property is borderedhy Railroad. Property is located between existing businesses fireplace, Ig hobby room, Realtor and ready or you to bring your business. MLS 247962 250,000 kidey shaped in round pool, 850-209-8039 fenced hackyotd and Prv debbieroneysmith@ Rsitd.n 1 1I- ...r.r..i building. emharqmail.com S... ... ,.MLS247970 $129,900. .Cleared building lot in the , .C O T T O N D A LE l ovely .Ci ty C rt ofv G greenwood A ,hnmuo nn r nrm- with nrrntm n-Few st eed tree,. Coner """ Lo cuti C ityo n k P w ate r a id b le S ',, .P ved R d W walking di ...ro .I r:..,toGroery store, vbank, rnd city . ,, ,47"'4,* ,4 ,0 ,'pork.uMLS 2482732 Prk to seto at economical for hearing and ,aSn,50.0oo cooling. Hardwood floors throughout. This home has character that gives it charm! LGreat loatlon In Malocne,. Priced at $214,000, come see what beautiful place it iso! MLS 248150 MLS248260or$149,900. .. t Carrirla 4 tion, 8 Loh w/ established pecan & fruit trees. ,ttIHome needs to be finished Resid .ntil MA RIANNA-narOwesdredrhenoaMARIANNA Cnnat edwoting in C-11.,1:11Bi- Aev20.insrtaned .-eu ,"rl t u, Hi~ll h,,,i,tveryeelectrical ein du on , ... .. "1 t u. ,T, ,,,,, dal dryoal int & insulutnA ,0,1,.,1,:,,, ,,T,,,,'r. h, h,,..,,,.C",lh.,$lIs 2482P2 S36,900 . .,. .. . Ed Mch,, Realt r the Newer home it '..he1.tbeautiful aiew of Lake at.. 1, 1,, I,,, .,,,,,Seminole. Permitted covered ,9 MLS247964 W $104,500. c dock with bant lift is NOll included. 3/2 Split bedroom College, an d, Busi.,, ses i i,.,,1,.,Il floor plan. Sre ened porch with things with the beautiful home. This beautiful home has 4 Bedrooms and 3 baths, CAMPBELLTON vie e lake od lurninge Pe Master o .h Iath with whirlpool bath ad separate shower'.$2090KLargelaundryp MIS 248259 $249,900 craft room forall you projects. L arge Garage with lots ofstorage. MILS 247640 ,Ini i ,,ii i Wall cared for and in need .. ea pl, ,,,h,,iiu, ,',d,,,4,i0* 5 0o f a fa m i ly 3 / 2 lo a u e d o n ReosidentialS a8,90 -amn le n t)loparv reed on t on1.2 acres BLOUNTInWcuuvtmd a mude Pienty uo .R ,-, sto ra ge cand plenty o fu ev ras. .... a.... Ef MIS 248262 $20,000 A mst see. Talk a ie bout ho con c rinance this dream. ..i,,-....... ,.,...r4 ..,,..... 0Ed M cCoy, Realtor' R . Ce11-(850) 573-6198 ". -'' e'' 'i S148,900 www.emccoyrealty.com Residential Character emccoy02@yahoo.comIL T, D n gives this older home in 4 o GRACEVILLE GracevillMl its charm! This Amazing updates done in well maintained home MiIsANN this5 bedroom home while has a large yard and is---- lt o...dngMA RIA Amainniciring the original pine very convenient to the ts o iuttuha o.,,nj ,, wih 3Hfloors throughout the home. College and Businesses beofvaRi i l l ie lilii i .upno Nice covered front porch and of Graceville. This 312 samoned back porch, large shod, home is ready tfor young .10M22r280 to". Tn icrpo.24749 $3,0 call it home. The roof was ij II Tiniir. tool hin and doable gate iotachod cerpoat MIS 247494 a $130,000. completely replaced this year! Bedrooms are large with plenty of space. h.,r l,,, FOUNTAIN Well Call today to set an appointment to see this beautiful and affordable M1S248240 $59,900 mrinraned 3 bedroom home home. MLS 247421 $89,900 (payments less than rent!) located on 2,46 acres, fenced and 4K BLOUNTSTOWN ros ssfenced, in the roont.. Has Residential Beautifully pach crss te front and sun p(h updated home in Graceville ilI kilt lr I f lieu r Aiiir,, iu *-. o lbark.Thet e is imore, rai tr near the College. This [,, ,.-, I 'r i .r. R CdoiC ia MS 2490 4 home has a New Metal nd RED (ED $68,900. Boof,hm ahnewa CondenserA r (NC Unit) New hot waterM ,, ,, ,,1r ARIANNA his home heater, above range MIS.247591 $109,900. hos so many features theoe is Microwave. Energy Efficient not enough room to mention throughout the home. Relaxo lnbeitelegaageworkshop, on your12X24 Deck- there's is nothing to do but MOVE IN this home! You M,,- NeCit, ,, hI .,i tfubi, h bopacen tgroundpol have to see this to know how beautiful it is inside MLS 2480490$85,000 ,..,I l. ,, ,I Iwooden bobdge foIm back al ln,,,,-i, I .....r.lh ,l ,it ,, ,it hause to back pastue. You need 0see tis!MLS 247928 $135,000. ,IJ ,],,,,I l various locations) ... .MLS247820 *,$55,000. MLS 247754.-1.79 acres, cleared, *$37,500. ,, ,,, .... ion MIAS 247776o0.44 acres, borders lake o $37,500. I .' 1" .. 1-'dI "*44""M00ARIANNAMLS 247136 0.19 acres, cleared. $22,500. i,,- --.... ....... ..... .I ill-TIiiI I Mihlli Ti, A~Ld S 238056.10acres,w ooded a $13,500. in the attic. Perect size home I Dlwlfl' illh i and lot for easy maintenance and care. Located close to shopping and dining, in li Pat Furr a community with great schools, Chipola College and excellent Medical Care. Easy aces al s t rereational sites including the lorida Caverns State Park, Chipota Riverd I 'uilIll, , .I d ,, Realtor Blue Springs Recreation and SpringCreek. T$110,000 2C M LS6 M S 2247826 $35,000. 850.209.8071 LAN avil ab E:M ISE2478 26 $ 3 00 furr 9 @n sn .com Residential -o NoW ON n .. I I.. '.. n n't in ntl lnn Iae 3eedroon/2Batth, D uvi ynuiey ov l. 1, A ii i,,,,r n7-' ,rrraur nnvt broe o am d", . ..... .gn,00 l'... S 1' ) e mf ,' :. ' spemiei' Conrolcle rho renovation of his b P i e eDUEnDac i Gnnai H U. LEGALS LF160108 INVITATION FOR BID Bids for furnishing all labor, materials, equip- ment, and services required for the Work known as Graceville Storage Building provide the following, A Completed 28' x 48' wood framed Storage Building, a16"x16" concrete footing around perimeter of all slabs and 28'x 48'x 4" slab for interior of building & 16' x 28' x 4" pad at each end of building on exterior. Pro- vide termite treatment per code and the state of Florida. Provide 10' x 2" x 6" treated pine wood stud walls 16" on center covered with Vz"OSB sheathing, Building wrap and .30"x 8"&1/4"x 12' Hardi plank siding or 10' x 4' sheet Hardi product on the exterior Cedar Mill finish. The interior walls and ceilings are to be cov- ered with A grade plywood and have lattice strips covering plywood joints and/or seams. Stain & seal interior and paint exterior, Owner will provide color choice. Provide one 3'x 6'8" entrance door &'twol2" wide x 10'tall roll up doors (doors to fit inside a pocket in the interi- or ceiling, one on each end of building), provide a Lithonia (OLAW23) security lighting over each door, provide door hardware as needed and match PHA system. Provide wood truss roof (truss pitch to match existing Dwelling Units) 24" on center with V2" OSB/Plywood sheathing, felt, 1"x4" stripping over felt and metal roofing, metal soffit and fascia, attic venting as needed, owner to provide color. Provide R-38 attic insu- lation & R-22 wall insulation. Provide 200 amp electric service, provide two rows of six (6) Lithonia 4 foot 2 bulb type lights and electrical outlets per code and/or as directed by the Owner. Provide six windows, 3 to each side of building I'x4'6" spaced equally and all associ- ated work, comply with all Florida codes as well as all Federal Regulations. The Bids will be received until 1:00 PM local time on 23 May 2013 at the office of the Housing Authority (PHA) indicated below. At this time and place all bids received will be publicly opened and read aloud. The work required is fully described in the Bid- ding Documents consisting of the Project Man- ual. Proposed Contract forms, Drawings and Proj- ect Manual are on file in the office of the con- sultant Mr. Randall O'Barr, Post Office Box 357, Baldwin, Georgia 30511, telephone (706) 244- 0105, and Fax (706) 754-4121. Bidding Docu- ments may be obtained by providing a NONREFUNDABLE'payment of $35.00 per set of Documents to the Consultant. No partial sets will be issued. Information regarding this Proj- ect, including a list of the Plan Holders will be provided upon request. Each bid shall include Bid Guarantee in an amount equal to five percent of the Bid. Pro- vide as a certified check or bank draft payable to the PHA; U.S. Government Bonds, or as a properly executed Bid Bond with surety ac- ceptable to the PHA. A Surety Company exe- cuting the Bid Bond must be authorized to transact business in the Project State, and must appear on the most current U.S. Treasury Department's Circular No. 570. The successful bidder is required to provide satisfactory Per- formance and Payment Bonds prior to execu- tion of the Agreement. Refer to provisions for equal employment op- portunities and payment of not less than mini- mum salaries and wages indicated in the Proj- ect Manual. Each bid shall include THE SIGNED ORIGINAL AND TWO CONFORMED COPIES of the follow- ing: 1. A properly executed Bid Form. * 2. A properly executed Bid Guarantee. 3: A properly executed Non-Collusive Affidavit. 4. A fully completed Form HUD-5369-A, "Repre- sentations, Certifications and Other State- ments of Bidders". Small businesses, section three business and minority fir ms are urged to submit proposals. Certification as a Minority-business Enterprise (or number of partners, shareholders, employ- ees who are members of minority classification or are women) should be included in the Bid proposal. Refer to Articles 38, 39,and 40 of The General Conditions. The PHA reserves the right to reject any and all bids, and to waive irregularities and formalities in the bidding. No bids may be withdrawn for a period of sixty days subsd*uent to the opening of bids without PHA consent. Northwest FIA Regional Housing Authority Housing Authority (PHA) Post Office Box 218 (5302 Brown Street) Graceville, Florida 32440 LF160109 Notice Of Sale 0 Notice is hereby given that pursuant to the Self Storage Facility Act, Section 83.801 83.809 the personal property consisting of personal items & misc., items of Melenna A. Ritz unit F19, Kim- berly McNeal unit C51, Amanda M. Dalafave unit C58, and Randal Hardbower unit C30, Nicole Dumas unit C38 and Carolyn Wester unit C36, will be sold or otherwise disposed of at 9:00 A.M. on Saturday May 18, 2013 to satisfy liens for past due rent, costs, and fees. Dispostion will take place at Pack Rat Storage of Marianna, 4667 Hwy 90, Marianna, FL 32446. IN THE CLASSIFIED www.JCFLORIDAN.com 1ST PLACE TO CALL FOR ALL OF YOUR TOWING NEEDS! Hwa 'sA 24 9 o4uW 7Twa AUTO BODY & RECYCLING PAYING TOP DOLLAR FOR JUNK CARS Contact Jason Harger at 334-791-2624 CALL FOR TOP PRICE FOR JUNK VEHICLES I ALSO SELL USED PARTS 24 HOUR TOWING 4 334-792-8664 . ""G o t a C lu n k e r We'll be your Junker! I vvWe buy wrecked cars and Farm Equip. at a fair and honest price! $325 &t Complete Cars i CALL 334t-702-4323 OR 334-714-6285 :a* We buy Wrecked Vehicles S Running or not! 3_ 34794'9576 or 344-7914714 . www.JCFLORIDAN.com DWNIH Nr DR IDGE n GREAT OPPOniRTUNIT TO RAs B A EAL Localetd In Grand Riago, this OhMrH has many possSlhhiies. 4 Bedrooms 2 Baths with over 1900 Sq ot! Large Famly Sroom Wh in place, open i (.. It !_ :i- Z" .: ," kitchenhn with breakfast harI C'.m-k ^. .1.,- 11, Formal Living room & 'r S* '^'^ '.; DmOngRoom SplihtBedroom plan, with large Master bedroom The Master Bath has a garden tub and separate Showel Nice lot on Ashleigh Avenue This home needs work but can make the Perfect home for your Familye Being offered "AS-IS" CASH only sales GCALL C ESH HARRISON OR STACY BORGES FOR MORE INFORMATION GREAT COUNTRY HOME IN gACEViLLE. 3 Bedrooms 1.5 Bath Brick house asih ust anoer 1300 sq 1i Located on 2 acres on Hwya 77 wulU weArkslp o Open foria pln withe bre akfast bar in kitchen nTile flo at and carpetihng Built o in entertainment center in the family poeom MAB IANA S Nice 3S Bedroom 15 Bath Buick home Located at a dead accept all FHA and USDA nAn aON aO,,I ,ON 1 ACRESIBeautiful 1/2w.5 h Crelsnolg Oversized 2 car Son slab Teren isu also a 312 SWMH l good scondisn with screened covered front porch Polt eh a large workshop w/ les NeR sof CALL SoACYle BOSR aeS-aR573- r eM Sntrees oet tS or orn ore, e o MdIs e-1M ThenMIndis caUrd aI'Mhed nA OA-, TM-5 ,r 1 5 II lAS asirs. F a oimD FISm s HOllED MIXFlls CUliii YO bedarom15r nahes neIhdjust uider 1 e00 sqglPLocated Elementary and nerldoor toirhe Cancer Centlerin MarianasBackthreat h needs .... BraiySOUROEShFOR MORE i tyourihome" a3BR i5BA .4 on 1 15 acres, 30ge oak kichen and 10car attached Marianna MUST SEE this recently renovated, like new, move in ready home. Tray ceiling in dining living area. Nice chandelier & ceiling fan. New stain-master carpet. Kitchen has new refrigerator, custom maple cabinets, dish washer stove and microwave. Concrete drive on paved street. Would quality for USDA financing. $74,900. MIS #247456 Attractive and well-maintained, brick, 4BR/2BA home on one landscaped acre. Eat in kitchen and separate dining room. Enclosed porch, storage building, one-car carport. Want a horse? Additional 3 acres (has possible pond site) could be purchased. Must See! Call Ora today. $147,500. MLS #247968 Blountstown Business opportunity, on Highway 20, road to the beach. Metal building has approx. 3,100 sq ft. H/C and 7,500 sq ft under roof. Roll-up door 10x12, 3 offices, three i/2 baths, 8 hold rooms, and workshop/ mechanics room. Fenced back lot on corner of two paved streets. $375,000. MLS #247989 Well-maintained 2 BR 2 BA ,- mobile home in a country setting. The master bedroom has a walk-in closet. All appliances included. Most of property is chain-link fenced, .7 ac lot is cross fenced with large garden space. Open shed 18x15, storage bldg. 12x8. Front and back porch. Reduced to $29,900. Will consider offers! MLS #247915. ...-. Marianna Approximately /2 acre lot with 149' on north Jefferson zoned mixed used. Could be residential, apartments/duplex or business. City utilities. Two bedroom, old house being sold "AS IS". MLS #247182 Jackson County Floridan * countertops, living room, family room, spacious laundry, nicely painted, clean attractive, with a big deck Lrg. yard out bidg and concrete driveway. Seller will allow $2000 toward buyers closing costs, or upgrades. Comes withli an assumable Termite Bond Make your appointment today!! MLS # 248128 $114,900 .,.,, 1 1 e MB, nice master bath. Encl. patio/sunroom. This 4.24 acre property is landscaped with many fruit trees! 3-stall pole barn with a storage unit, another storage bldg., and an above ground pool! 35 minutes from Panama City! MLS #247986 $279,000 SF of space. Currently being used as a warehouse for Habitat for Humanity of Marianna. Make an appointment today! MLS # CC247736A. $70,000 home with some TLC. Approx. 972 SF in the house and 3,215 Sq. Ft. under roof. Some repair needed. Large outside deck for entertaining. Their is great potential with this listing. It is certainly a must see. Bring all offers. MLS # RD247834A. $141,900 views from each BR, new carpet, boat dock, dock, 2 wksp:, paved driveway, secluded from main road Fish, boating, diving, swimming, etc. Beautiful clear spring water fed Bring All Offers' MLS #248162A List Price: $249,000 n i-.,t 1.,, ,: d M I 11 ", "11j fi t Ih ..., ,11 ,,...,1 I. : 1"1 :1,: . in clear pasture and the balance in pine trees with pasture. Borders Wright's Creek in Holmes County.. Make an appointment today. Bring all offers! MLS# RD248137A $419,000 viewof the pool Co eswithpolebarn,end ksp with BR,horseb with 3 stalls &1 paddock partially fenced and partially cross-fenced fho horses This 140 acs is mostly surrounded by 892 acres of Water mgimt property that is bordered by Holmes Creek and Cypress Springs w/no public access' (Privacy) 30 mn to PC Itnl Apt, and 10 mmin from 1-10. Property has a running creek with about 40 acs of pasture land Make an appt today! MLS #248187A List Price $750.000 MB has Ig acuzzi tub, security system. built in Vault, built in gen. system, screened in tiled porch, Gun range, fenced property, 2 ponds, a hunters paradise. R 1, '; --'- i,- ,-, r "r,--,',,-, !,- --I hi r-.. walking or ,,~ . .. ,, , -$299,000 .. . ..... .... 3 baths, waiting area, check-in area, executive office w/private bath Currently leased on a month-to-month basis. ext. income advantage or use for your own business! By app. only MLS #248189A List Price $147,500 Baau Ih il bui d, i' ,,,l ,.',, 10 6 Y .31 -,:,I Heights. Extra large wooded lot, appx. 1.82 acres. Pick and choose the way you would landscape around your beautiful new home! MLS #248269A List Price: $27,900 down Bump nose Road close to the property. This 40 acres can be a private home site/farm. MLS #248275A List Price: $134,900 I- s l. ,, rI .... .. .. I l ,' display counter, tall sign pole out front, large warehouse space in the back with roll up doors, partially fenced, all on 7 acres with additional property of up to 140+ acres. Property has numerous potential uses. Call and make an appointment today! MLS #: 247339A List Price: $595,000 I. ,,IJ , ,, ,, ,- i.. ..i lll.. Convenient to 1-10, Panama City Mall, and beaches minutes to Marianna. MLS 247420A List P rice $169,500 n i l ing II CHARM b, u .. .. o va tL i i , i l .g i 1,.86 ac,,oa just seatt wooded ith pe hh of at least 1-12 years old or olden. 1/2 approx. wet in rainy seasons. Bring all offers. Excelaeot hunting and secluded. Property sacks u to 1190 MLS #: 247854A List Price. 39009 Sunday, May 5, 2013- 9 B CLASSIFIED Everybody's talking about what's in the classified, g A A& U I I ifiida Sftoitusc (kcaft) OgWF REALTOR" Since 1974 PRUDENTIAL, JIM ROBERTS REALTY Serving Jackson & surrounding counties since 1974 For photo tour of listings visit our website at: WWW.PRUIJIMROBEIRTSREAUII'Y.COM Office 850-482-4635 Email: robbyrobertsl2@grmail.com An Independently owned and operated member of the Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc. MLS#243993 541 Gum Creek Rd. Graceville Area Good Country Living 3BR/1Full BA/2 half baths, out buildings, 1731 Heated SF, Built in 1978 in Good Condition 1.73+ Acre. SMLS#245998 2958 Wynn St. Marianna, Located just up from City Park, 4BR/2BA. 2000 heated SF. Seller will pay up t $4,000 towards buyers closing cost. MLS#246589 5152 Presidents Circle*Marianna Indian Springs Subdivision, well maintained 3BR/28A, builtin 1997, 2304 head SF, beautiful tricolored herringbone laminate wood flooring, fireplace, Florida room and much more MLS#247206 4366 South St. Marianna 2BR/1BA, 1476 heated SF, CE heat & cool, hardwood floors, big bedrooms =MLS#247269 Compass Lake in the Hills, like new 3BR/2BA, 1757 heated SF, built 2005, porcelain tile throughout, ready for horses with cross fencing, barns, auto water, plus all the amenities of CLH S MLS#247533 2812 Appalachee Trail Mananna Located on golf course in Indian Springs Subdivision, 3 or 4BR/2BA, 2602 H&C SF, built in 2005, open floor plan, Florida room, large bedrooms, fenced backyard, and much more. MLS#247946 3258 5th St. Marianna 4 or 5BR/2.5BA, family room w/hreplace, laminate wood floonog, large kitchen, deck over looking pool plus 36x40 Morton steel building. MLS#248086 4667 Meadowiew Rd Marianna MLS#247961 3171 Hwy 73, Marianna Well built energy efficient, 3BR/4BA, 3579 Heated sqft. Built in 2002, 2 large outbuildings, all on 9.79 acres. MLS#248155 3157 HWY 73 N." Marianna Located iust outside of town, 2 21 acres fenced & cross fenced, remodeled throughout, 3BR/1BA, 1710 b&C SF, bonus room, hobby shop, outbuildings, great deal. MLS#248204 3354 Caverns Rd. Marianna 3BR/2BA, 2181 H&C SF, built in 2002, new paint, laminate wood flooring, fenced back yard, large screen porch, big kitchen, split floor plan MLS#247881 4462 Lafayette St Mananna Locaed e ine Winn Dixie Sopping Center, high traffic, 7920 SF 1140 HC SF witi 2 offices, reception & baths, (6) 14' Roll up doors, & building has sprinklers. .'l, MLS#240225 Spring Chase Subdoasion, 1 02 acres, 100' waterfront, deed restnctmns apply, nice building lot Appalachee Tramil, Indian Springs PFnate wooded lot on cul-de-sac large oak trees Overlooks fairway & green MLS#247945 Blue Spnngs Hwy Syvania Estates Subdivision, all wooded, 5 68 Acre building lot, private, full ol wildlife, deed restncions apply MLS#248231 Hpy73 S Turnkey Farm/CarrLe opera on, 80 acres farm equipment -110B SUNDAY, MAY 5, 2013 Kelly From Page 1B Panama City kids and get some more Jackson Coun- ty folks involved. It's more convenient for us and it's also allowing us to reach another demographic of kids. "We were contacted by some of those coaches (in the Panama City area) and they were excited about it. I think change is good and the vision fdr this camp was to move it around North Florida and the Wiregrass and be as impactful as we could be." It won't be the last move for the event, Kelly said, mentioning Marianna and Dothan as possible future locations. "We're not going to be static and just stay in one place," he said. "We're go- ing to keep our options open." Another big change in the camp this year is the cost as in, there isn't one with it now completely free for the first time thanks to sponsorship funding. It's a goal that Kelly, now assistant director of Pro Personnel with the NFL's Denver Broncos, said he had been working toward for some time. "I'm excited about the opportunity to provide a camp of our caliber totally free," he said. "It's amaz- ing. It's something we talked about last year, but we weren't in a position to do it completely free, but SPORTS FLORIDAN FILE PHOTO Anthony Dubose runs through obstacles during a drill at the 2012 Champ Camp in Graceville. we stepped out on faith this year and I think it's the perfect time to have it for free. I'm really excited about what's going to take place." The camp will run from 7:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. each day, with campers get- ting run through a wide range of individual and group drills led by guest instructors with high-level coaching and/or play- ing experience, such as Clark-Atlanta head coach Kevin Weston and current Broncos defensive backs Tony Carter and Chris Harris. There will be different drills for the different age groups, with the younger kids (ages 10-12) work- ing more on basic football fundamentals, and the older group (13-17) doing more in-depth and ad- vanced work. "We'll have some com- petitive one-on-one situa- tions with the line and the skill positions, and toward the end of the day we'll have some 7-on-7 stuff," Kelly said. "Most camps don't touch on every posi- tion group and have qual- ity coaches at every posi- tion, but we'll bring quality coaches in for every posi- tion on the football field. That's the exciting part for us. Just having the oppor- tunity to present that to kids in the area for free is absolutely amazing." Kelly said he hopes to continue well into the fu- ture with the camp, which has become a deeply per- sonal undertaking for him. "It means everything to me. I'm completely invest- ed in these kids and seeing them develop into produc- tive men and citizens," he said. "That's what we're try- ing to produce with these camps. When I was grow- ing up, I didn't have oppor- tunities to go to camps like this because they cost a lot of money. I wanted to and felt like I could've learned a lot, but I couldn't afford them. "Now, everything has sort of come full circle with me being able to provide that for some kid growing JACKSON COUNTY FLORIDAN , www.jcfloridan.com up in a situation like I was in then. It's truly a testa- ment to God's grace. It's about giving back, which is a major part of who I am and what I do." With longevity, Kelly said, he hopes comes expansion and even more growth of the camp to include more players and coaches participating. "I want coaches around the area to realize that this is a real football camp and the kids are getting real in- struction and learning real football, yet also getting an element of life skills that they're probably not go- ing to see at most camps around," he, said. "Pretty soon, I'd like to have six or seven complete football teams attend this camp. We can do some really fun and creative nitff if we can get to that position. That's eventually where we want to go. "There are a ton of differ- ent places we can go, but it really takes a commitment from people in the area. It's a great opportunity to .learn from people who have done it and some who still do it at a high level." To register for the camp, visit heartpowerinc.org, emailinfo@heartpowerinc. org or call 720-524-7139. Phe. BEN SAUNDERS, D.M.D. PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY 4711 Highway 90 East Marianna, FL (Between Burger King & Big Lots) 526-SPIT Horse Racing Orb comes from behind to win Kentucky Derby The Associated Press LOUISVILLE, Ky. Orb splashed through the slop to win the Kentucky Derby, coming from way back in the pack and giv- g Hall of Fame trainer. Shug McGaughey his first victory in the 3-year-old classic. When the field turned for home on the cool, over- cast Saturday afternoon at Churchill Downs, Nor- mandy Invasion grabbed the lead while Orb was gearing up.- But in the deep stretch, Orb prevailed, car- rying Joel Rosario to his first Derby win. Long shot Golden Soul was second with Revolu- tionary third. Normandy Invasion faded to fourth. "I was really far back," Rosario said. "I said hope- fully he can go faster than that. I was saying maybe I was too far back, but it was so easy." Orb, the 5-1 favorite, ran the 1% miles in 2:02.89 Orb paid $12.80, $7.40 and $5.40. Golden Soul re- turned $38.60 and $19.40 while Revolutionary paid $5.40 to show. McGaughey said the vic- tory meant everything to him. "I'm thrilled to death for (the owners), thrilled to death for the people who put so much time into this horse, and, of course, I'm thrilled to death for me," he said. Todd Pletcher had a re- cord-tying five runners. Revolutionary was the best of the "Todd Squad," fol- lowed by Charming Kit- ten (ninth), Overanalyze (11th), Palace Malice (12th) and Verrazano (14th). Goldencents, owned in part by Rick Pitino, coach of Louisville's national basketball champions, fin- ished a 17th. His jockey, Kevin Krigger, was trying to become the first black rider to win the race since 1902. Rosie Napravnik was also bidding to make history as the first woman jockey to win the world's biggest horse race. She finished fifth aboard Mylute, the highest finish by a female rider. D. Wayne Lukas, who won the Derby four times and would have been the oldest trainer to saddle a winner, sent out two run- ners. Oxbow, with three- time Derby winning jock- ey Gary Stevens aboard, finished sixth. Will Take Charge was eighth. Expectations . K U B,0 T A 1: '* :- -. '.': ' ;. :. S:Down &' Financing for 36 Months' Expect ,.ffordabilirt SExpect E-.'epi,-nal Performanice Expect Signatu ire S'3rinri," 6 Com Expect Full -1,-e.r 300-Hour VVarrantyrv Command lawns. Capture attention. Bring home the new Kubota Kommander today - Great Expectations start here. Offer ends May 31, 2013. Panhandle Tractor, Inc. 5003 Hwy. 90 Marianna, FL 32446 (850) 526-2257 www.kubota.com OKubota Unctor Corpor31 on. 2013 ~'FETV "c it et leg pain and selling put a cramp iyor plans this year! Free Vein Screening Tuesday, May 21 3pm-6pmn Tri-State Vein Center For appointment please call: 229-524-8349 Dyipeninls.uod disease include Aching, fatigue or heaviness in legs; Throbbing burning leg pain; and /or Cramping, swelling and numbness in leg Restless Legs Geary D. Bush, MD 804 North Wiley Donalsonville, GA 39845 229.524.8349 -'I 1-- -- -- - |