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WEATHER, 2A CALL US: (386) 752-1293 SUBSCRIBE TO THE REPORTER: Voice: 755-5445 Fax: 752-9400 People 2A Opinion 4A Obituaries 5A Advice & Comics 4-5B Puzzles 4-5B TODAY IN PEOPLE Enjoying the library. COMING SUNDAY Local news roundup. 92 72 T-Storm Chance WEATHER, 2A Lake City Reporter FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1874 | 75¢ LAKECITYREPORTERCOM WEEKEND EDITION Vol 139, No 138 Aug. 9 Community theater High Springs Community Theater will present its Summer Youth Production of “A Walk in the Woods” by Debbie Metzler. Come see the tales of Goldilocks, the Three Bears, Red Riding Hood, the Three Little Pigs and Hansel and Gretel, all blended into one delight- ful play. Tickets are $5 in advance, and are available at The Framery of Lake City, 341 S. Marion Ave., or by calling (386) 754- 2780 or for $6 at www. highspringscommunity- theater.com. Dates are Aug 9,10,11 and 16,17,18. Shows will be Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Doors open 30 minutes before the performance. The the- ater is at 130 NE First Ave. in High Springs. Classic cars A classic car cruise-in is held each Friday from 5:30 to about 8 p.m. at the Hardee’s restaurant on U.S. 90 West at Bascom Norris Drive. All car enthusiasts are welcome. For more information, call Graham White at (919) 368-5893. Aug. 10 Ice cream fundraiser Holiday Inn & Suites will have an “Ice Cream for Breakfast” event from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event is part of the national fundraising and aware- ness campaign for Give Kids The World Village to benefit children with life-threatening illnesses. For a donation of $5 or more, attendees will get to serve themselves at a make-your-own sundae bar. For more information and sponsorship opportu- nities, call Amanda Daye at (386) 487-1078. Dinner dance American Legion Auxiliary Unit 57 will host a Hawaiian Dinner and Dance at 6 p.m. at American Legion Post 57 on U.S. 41 South. Members and their guest are welcomed. Cost $10 per person for dinner and dance or $5 per person for the dance only. For more information, call Maryann at (386) 205-8035 or email [email protected]. Aug. 10 & 12 Altrusa/CARC Altrusa will be doing a project with CARC to address a clothing back- log and assist with their transition into a new store location from 8a.m. to noon Aug. 10 and 2 to 8 p.m. Aug. 12 at the House of Bargains /Valerie’s loca- tion downtown.Volunteers are needed for this project and CARC’s ongoing need for both donations and vol- unteers to process them. For more information, contact Heather McInnis at (386) 752-8420 or email heather@northfloridajus- tice.com. Seminar to offer worker insights Local Scout earns national award County’s health ranks low Photos by AMANDA WILLIAMSON/Lake City Reporter By TONY BRITT [email protected] One of the major objec- tives for the Lake City- Columbia County Chamber of Commerce in 2013 was to address ways to increase the local workforce as well as make it stronger. Local officials have sched- uled a Workforce Development Seminar in which Dr. Jim Johnson, a professor at the University of North Carolina, will address some of issues facing local employers. “One of the main problems that local employers are telling us is that the new generation of workers are having a hard time with fol- lowing direc- tions, show- ing up to work on time, dressing appropri- ately and respecting author- ity,” said Dennille Decker, Lake City-Columbia County Chamber of Commerce Chamber bringing in expert to talk about ‘millennials.’ By AMANDA WILLIAMSON [email protected] Columbia County ranks near the bottom of healthiest counties in Florida, according to a 2013 study conducted by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute. Out of the 67 counties in Florida, Columbia placed 58th in terms of heath outcomes and 50th in health factors. Overall health outcomes — mor- tality and morbidity — are deter- mined by health factors within the community. For the purposes of the Population Health Institute study, health factors comprised four different categories: behav- ioral, societal and economic, clini- cal and environmental. “We’re looking at the health care system as a whole,” said Mark Lander, administrator of the Columbia County Health Department. “[The ranking] doesn’t surprise me, but we can do better. That’s our goal... Just because we’re rural and we know we face these challenges, it doesn’t give us an excuse to not address them.” Mortality rates in Columbia County were determined by cal- culating premature deaths in the area to find the years of potential life lost. The rates ranked higher in the county than the rest of Florida, placing the Columbia at 61st out of Columbia 58th out of 67 Florida counties in health outcomes. WORKFORCE continued on 3A HEALTH continued on 3A END-OF-SUMMER BASH ABOVE: Girls Club leader Erika Barrs touches up the face paint on Emma Maggart, 8, during the club’s end-of-summer bash. Watching are (from left) Jordan Owens, Amari Murphy, Kabreon Allen and Haley Howell. RIGHT: Mackenzie Libasci, 7, braces herself as she takes a trip down the slide at end-of-summer bash Thursday. Party Down 4 Less provided several bounce houses and a slide at reduced cost, said Tara Krieghauser, Girls Club coordinator. BELOW: Heyward Christie, athletic director and coordinator of youth activities for boys at Teen Town, cooked 160 ham- burgers for the girls. Volunteers to aid CARC with project By TONY BRITT [email protected] According to the mis- sion statement for Altrusa International, the organiza- tion provides community ser- vice, develops leadership, fos- ters international understand- ing and encourages fellowship by an international network of executives and professionals in diversified career classifica- tions. More than 50 members of the local service organization plan to put the mission state- ment into action during the next few days as part of a community outreach project. Several local Altrusa mem- bers have volunteered to par- ticipate in a project to help CARC-Advocates For Citizens With Disabilities address a clothing backlog and assist with the agency’s move to a new store location. PROJECT continued on 3A By STEVEN RICHMOND [email protected] Whoever said “there’s just not enough time in the day” has never met Jeremy Barwick. Barwick, an Eagle Scout with Boy Scouts of America, Troop 85 at First Presbyterian Church, was awarded the National Outstanding Eagle Scout Award for his abundance of local charitable work. For one of his Eagle Scout projects, Barwick held a 24-hour food drive that produced almost 33 tons worth of goods for local food banks. “It took nine and a half months of planning,” he said. “Mostly driving around, meeting other people and telling them about food-challenged individuals.” Barwick said the inspi- ration from his food drive came from issues he faced while he was growing up. “My dad was in prison and my mom got hooked on drugs, wasn’t really providing for us,” he said. “She’d disappear, we’d go hungry and had to go to neighbors for food.” He’s achieved several awards and recognitions since joining the Scouts through the Webelos (“We’ll Be Loyal Scouts”) SCOUT continued on 3A Johnson Food drive drew 33 tons of goods for food banks.

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Page 1: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

WEATHER, 2A

CALL US:(386) 752-1293

SUBSCRIBE TOTHE REPORTER:Voice: 755-5445Fax: 752-9400

People . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2AOpinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4AObituaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5AAdvice & Comics . . . . . . . . 4-5BPuzzles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-5B

TODAY INPEOPLE

Enjoying the library.

COMINGSUNDAYLocal newsroundup.

92 72T-Storm Chance

WEATHER, 2A

Lake City ReporterFRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER SINCE 1874 | 75¢

LAKECITYREPORTER .COM

W E E K E N D E D I T I O N

1A

Vol . 139, No . 138

Aug. 9Community theater

H i g h S p r i n g s Community Theater will present its Summer Youth Production of “A Walk in the Woods” by Debbie Metzler. Come see the tales of Goldilocks, the Three Bears, Red Riding Hood, the Three Little Pigs and Hansel and Gretel, all blended into one delight-ful play. Tickets are $5 in advance, and are available at The Framery of Lake City, 341 S. Marion Ave., or by calling (386) 754-2780 or for $6 at www.highspringscommunity-theater.com. Dates are Aug 9,10,11 and 16,17,18. Shows will be Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Doors open 30 minutes before the performance. The the-ater is at 130 NE First Ave. in High Springs.

Classic carsA classic car cruise-in

is held each Friday from 5:30 to about 8 p.m. at the Hardee’s restaurant on U.S. 90 West at Bascom Norris Drive. All car enthusiasts are welcome. For more information, call Graham White at (919) 368-5893.

Aug. 10Ice cream fundraiser

Holiday Inn & Suites will have an “Ice Cream for Breakfast” event from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event is part of the national fundraising and aware-ness campaign for Give Kids The World Village to benefit children with life-threatening illnesses. For a donation of $5 or more, attendees will get to serve themselves at a make-your-own sundae bar. For more information and sponsorship opportu-nities, call Amanda Daye at (386) 487-1078.

Dinner danceAmerican Legion

Auxiliary Unit 57 will host a Hawaiian Dinner and Dance at 6 p.m. at American Legion Post 57 on U.S. 41 South. Members and their guest are welcomed. Cost $10 per person for dinner and dance or $5 per person for the dance only. For more information, call Maryann at (386) 205-8035 or email [email protected].

Aug. 10 & 12Altrusa/CARC

Altrusa will be doing a project with CARC to address a clothing back-log and assist with their transition into a new store location from 8a.m. to noon Aug. 10 and 2 to 8 p.m. Aug. 12 at the House of Bargains /Valerie’s loca-tion downtown.Volunteers are needed for this project and CARC’s ongoing need for both donations and vol-unteers to process them. For more information, contact Heather McInnis at (386) 752-8420 or email [email protected].

Seminar to offer workerinsights

Local Scout earns national award

County’s health ranks low

Photos by AMANDA WILLIAMSON/Lake City Reporter

By TONY [email protected]

One of the major objec-tives for the Lake City-Columbia County Chamber of Commerce in 2013 was to address ways to increase the local workforce as well as make it stronger.

Local officials have sched-uled a Workforce Development Seminar in which Dr. Jim Johnson, a professor at the University of North Carolina, will address some of issues facing local employers.

“One of the main problems that local employers are telling us is that the new generation of workers are having a hard time with fol-lowing direc-tions, show-ing up to work on time, dressing appropri-ately and respecting author-ity,” said Dennille Decker, Lake City-Columbia County Chamber of Commerce

Chamber bringing in expert to talk about ‘millennials.’

By AMANDA [email protected]

Columbia County ranks near the bottom of healthiest counties in Florida, according to a 2013

study conducted by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute.

Out of the 67 counties in Florida, Columbia placed 58th in terms of heath outcomes and 50th in health factors.

Overall health outcomes — mor-tality and morbidity — are deter-mined by health factors within the community. For the purposes of the Population Health Institute

study, health factors comprised four different categories: behav-ioral, societal and economic, clini-cal and environmental.

“We’re looking at the health care system as a whole,” said Mark Lander, administrator of the Columbia County Health Department. “[The ranking] doesn’t surprise me, but we can do better. That’s our goal... Just because we’re rural and we know

we face these challenges, it doesn’t give us an excuse to not address them.”

Mortality rates in Columbia County were determined by cal-culating premature deaths in the area to find the years of potential life lost. The rates ranked higher in the county than the rest of Florida, placing the Columbia at 61st out of

Columbia 58th out of 67 Florida counties in health outcomes.

WORKFORCE continued on 3A

HEALTH continued on 3A

END-OF-SUMMER BASH

ABOVE: Girls Club leader Erika Barrs touches up the face paint on Emma Maggart, 8, during the club’s end-of-summer bash. Watching are (from left) Jordan Owens, Amari Murphy, Kabreon Allen and Haley Howell. RIGHT: Mackenzie Libasci, 7, braces herself as she takes a trip down the slide at end-of-summer bash Thursday. Party Down 4 Less provided several bounce houses and a slide at reduced cost, said Tara Krieghauser, Girls Club coordinator. BELOW:Heyward Christie, athletic director and coordinator of youth activities for boys at Teen Town, cooked 160 ham-burgers for the girls.

Volunteers to aid CARC with projectBy TONY [email protected]

According to the mis-sion statement for Altrusa International, the organiza-tion provides community ser-vice, develops leadership, fos-ters international understand-ing and encourages fellowship by an international network of executives and professionals in diversified career classifica-tions.

More than 50 members of the local service organization plan to put the mission state-ment into action during the next few days as part of a community outreach project.

Several local Altrusa mem-bers have volunteered to par-ticipate in a project to help CARC-Advocates For Citizens With Disabilities address a clothing backlog and assist with the agency’s move to a new store location.

PROJECT continued on 3A

By STEVEN [email protected]

Whoever said “there’s just not enough time in the day” has never met Jeremy Barwick.

Barwick, an Eagle Scout with Boy Scouts of America, Troop 85 at First Presbyterian Church, was awarded the National Outstanding Eagle Scout Award for his abundance of local charitable work.

For one of his Eagle Scout projects, Barwick held a 24-hour food drive that produced almost 33 tons worth of goods for

local food banks. “It took nine and a half

months of planning,” he said. “Mostly driving around, meeting other people and telling them about food-challenged individuals.”

Barwick said the inspi-ration from his food drive came from issues he faced while he was growing up.

“My dad was in prison

and my mom got hooked on drugs, wasn’t really providing for us,” he said. “She’d disappear, we’d go hungry and had to go to neighbors for food.”

He’s achieved several awards and recognitions since joining the Scouts through the Webelos (“We’ll Be Loyal Scouts”)

SCOUT continued on 3A

Johnson

Food drive drew 33 tons of goods for food banks.

Page 2: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

CORRECTIONDuring a violent incident Tuesday that involved Jimmy

Flowers, Austin Thomas and Jordan Kimbrell, Flowers was the one who fired shots at the vehicle of John Spain and family, according to the arrest report. A story in Thursday’s Reporter suggested otherwise.

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Celebrity Birthdaysn Comedian-director David Steinberg is 71. n Actor Sam Elliott is 69. n Singer Barbara Mason is 66. n Actress Melanie Griffith is 56.

n Actress Amanda Bearse (“Married ... With Children”) is 55. n “Today” co-host Hoda Kotb is 49. n Actor Pat Petersen (“Knots Landing”) is 47.

AROUND FLORIDAVirtual school lays off hundreds

MIAMI — The Florida Virtual School has laid off several hundred teachers in response to a decline in enrollment and change in funding.

The online school cut 177 full-time positions and 625 part-time instructors over July and August. The layoffs come in light of a significant decline in enrollment. Thirty-two percent fewer students pre-enrolled for August and September courses as of July 23 compared to the previous year.

“As a result of a decline in pre-enrollments, for the first time in 16 years, we had to make the painful decision to reduce staff,” Florida Virtual School spokeswoman Tania Clow said.

The state Legislature has also changed the funding model for virtual school education. Before July 1, a traditional school received a set amount of funding to provide six classes for each student, and the Florida Virtual School received the equivalent of one-sixth that amount for each addi-tional course the student enrolled in online.

Now funding has been capped to the amount that was traditionally provided to the brick-and-mortar schools. So for each addi-tional online class the student enrolls in, the school loses money, and the Florida Virtual School receives less — the equiva-lent of one-seventh of the traditional school’s funding instead of one-sixth.

Vote suppression alleged in election

SOPCHOPPY — A small Florida Panhandle town best known for its

annual Worm Grunting Festival is at the center of an investigation into charges the white city clerk suppressed the black vote in an election where the black mayor lost by a single vote and a black city commissioner was also ousted.

Both losing candidates and three black voters have filed complaints, now being investigated by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, that City Clerk Jackie Lawhon made it more difficult for blacks to cast ballots by question-ing their residency.

State sues mortgage firm

TALLAHASSEE — Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi is suing a company that her office says allegedly preyed on homeowners in danger of losing their homes.

Bondi’s office filed the lawsuit Wednesday in Broward County against Nicholas Torgerson and two companies Whitestone Capital Trust LLC and

Become the Bank LLC.The lawsuit contends

that the company violated the state’s consumer pro-tection laws by charging homeowners up-front fees and by falsely misrepre-senting that the defendants would cancel or void the homeowners’ mortgage.

Bondi’s office, however, alleged that the company allegedly acquired titles to the distressed own-ers’ homes and pocketed the advance fees without providing any help. The homeowners remained liable for the mortgage payments.

Enterprise Florida CEO gets bonus

TALLAHASSEE — For the second year in a row, Florida’s top official in charge of bringing busi-nesses to the state is get-ting a $70,000 bonus.

The board of Enterprise Florida — which includes Gov. Rick Scott — voted Thursday to grant the bonus to president and CEO Gray Swoope.

“Daily Scripture

”For the Lord takes delight in his people; he crowns the humble with victory.

— Psalm 149:4

LeBron serves as music curator for gameATLANTA

LeBron James is taking some of his talents during the offseason to a best-selling basketball video game franchise as a music

curator.2K Sports announced that the two-

time NBA champion of the Miami Heat selected 20 songs for the soundtrack of the upcoming “NBA 2K14.” The league’s four-time MVP is also the cover athlete of the popu-lar video game.

James said in a statement that he is honored to be the first cover athlete to choose songs for the soundtrack. He follows his friend and Grammy-winning rapper Jay-Z, who was the executive producer of the last year’s installment that sold more than 4.5 million copies.

“2K is letting me take control of some important elements in NBA 2K14, including this year’s soundtrack,” James said. “I love that I’m the first NBA 2K cover athlete to choose the soundtrack.”

Some of the songs featured on the game’s soundtrack are Drake’s “Started From The Bottom,” Phil Collins’ “In the Air Tonight,” Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky,” featuring Pharrell Williams and Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ “Can’t Hold Us,” with Ray Dalton.

James is the first solo cover ath-lete to cover the game in two years since Michael Jordan.

Latin ‘queen of radio’ dies in Miami

MIAMI — A Latino radio person-ality known as the “queen of radio” has died in Miami.

Betty Pino was one of the voices on Univision Radio’s Amor 107.5 FM. The station announced the death on its website Wednesday, saying they

had lost a great person and wanted to end it by saying “goodbye with applause and all our admiration.”

She died Tuesday at a hospital from a bacterial infection. Pino was 65.

The Ecuadorian disc jockey was a well-known personality in Miami’s Latin music radio.

Music producer Emilio Estefan told the Miami Herald that Pino’s death was “a great loss for Latin music.”

Estefan says Pino was also the first DJ to play songs from his first album with wife Gloria Estefan.

Allen wants to reclaim N-word in comedy

LOS ANGELES — Tim Allen isn’t a fan of the N-word — not just the

word, but the phrase.The 60-year-old actor-comedian

told the Tampa Bay Times a that the term “N-word” is worse than the racial slur it represents.

The star of the TV shows “Home Improvement” and “Last Man Standing,” and films such as “The Santa Clause” said he thinks the crit-icism that keeps non-black comedi-ans from using the actual N-word is a step backward from the days when Richard Pryor and Lenny Bruce pur-posefully used such language.

Allen’s comments were published last week ahead of a stand-up perfor-mance.

But he made them in June after it was revealed celebrity chef Paula Deen admitted using racial slurs in the past.

Thursday:Afternoon: 7-7-4

Evening: N/A

Thursday:Afternoon: 5-9-1-8

Evening:N/AWednesday:5-16-24-28-35

2A LAKE CITY REPORTER DAILY BRIEFING FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUgUST 9 & 10, 2013

2A

Thought for Today

“Government is too big and important to be left to the poli-ticians.”

— Chester Bowles, American diplomat, businessman, author

— and politician (1901-1986)

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Lake City ReporterJASON MATTHEW WALKER/Lake City Reporter

Enjoying the libraryDezmund Cothran (left), 12, reads Nancy Van Laan’s and Bernadette Pons’ book ‘tickle tum!,’ to her sister, Blayre Slanker, 2; cousin, Kadon Cothran, 6, and brother, Ricky Cothran, 10, at the Columbia County Public Library on Tuesday.

n Associated Press

n Associated Press

TONY BRITT/Lake City Reporter

Different strokesPaul Kleck (right) of Florida Gateway College leads percus-sionists from local middle and high schools in a recent drum clinic at the college’s Alfonso Levy Performing Arts Center. The two-day clinic allowed the drummers to work on perform-ing single- and double-stroke striking techniques.

Page 3: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

Sandy Kishton, local Altrusa International mem-ber, said Altrusa does various service projects throughout the year and this weekend, Saturday and Monday, Altrusa members have designat-ed hours where they are going to CARC’s House of Bargains/Valerie’s, a retail thrift store, and help with a clothing backlog.

“We’re volunteering to do some of the sorting of the various items that come to the store,” she said. “We’re going to be sorting items that have been donated. Then when we sort through it we’ll be sorting through clothing, hanging things on racks and also separating things by category wheth-er it’s a household item or something else.”

Altrusa International members will help CARC with its clothing backlog and move to a new store

location, 500 N. Marion Ave., from 8 a.m. - noon on Saturday and from 2 - 8 p.m. on Monday.

Kishton estimates there will be around 60 people from Altrusa volunteer-ing. She said there will be approximately eight Altrusa volunteers working per shift and there will be about four shifts of volunteers during the two-day project.

“CARC is a very impor-tant part of our community and with the services they provide to their clients, we felt like this was an impor-tant thing for us to do as far as giving our time,” she said. “I think it’s important for all of us to participate within our own community and this is one opportunity that we at Altrusa decided to do it for such a good organization.”

Kishton encouraged resi-

dents to volunteer in the effort to process the items and also urged people to continue to donate items to CARC’s House of Bargains/Valerie’s Boutique. She said CARC also has delivery trucks for large bulk items such as furniture.

“The House of Bargains store not only financially supports the (CARC) orga-nization, but it also provides the location for some of the

higher functioning (CARC) clients to have a place of employment,” she said. “They also work in the store and assist with the hang-ing of items and sorting. The mission of the store is twofold.” National early childhood program accreditation commission Licence#: CO3CO0043

Now enrolling VPK for 2013-2014Free for all children who will be 4 on or before Sept. 1, 2013.

Free from 8 a.m. - 1 p.m. Breakfast & lunch provided.

VPK Spaces LimitedAlso accepting ages 6 weeks to 12 years old. Spaces are limited;

please call for more information and to tour our facility. We do accept Coalition & other funding.

Open House Saturday, August 10th - 2 p.m. until...

Bounce house and Refreshments

Free backpack at time of enrollment(New enrollment only)

Cell: 386-288-6877

3A

Page Editor: Jim Barr, 754-0424 LAKE CITY REPORTER LOCAL FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 3A

HEALTH: County ranks low on health measures Continued From Page 1A

67 for mortality. Morbidity, the quality of life, scores slightly better in the study, ranking Columbia 49th out of 67 counties.

“What affects health?” Lander said. “Health does not always equate to health care. Good health can be the habits that we chose.”

Health behaviors exam-ined by the Population Health Institute included adult smoking, adult obe-sity, physical inactivity, excessive drinking, sexu-ally transmitted infections, teen birth rate and motor vehicle crash death rate.

“We’re going to be focus-ing a lot of our efforts in Columbia County on pro-moting a healthy lifestyle through the health depart-ment,” Lander said. “Better eating habits. More exer-cise. Reduce smoking num-bers.”

Currently, one quarter of Columbia County residents smoke compared to 19 per-cent of the Florida popu-lation. Locally, 34 percent of adults are obese, while only 26 percent of adults are obese statewide. Twenty-nine percent of adults in the county report physical inac-

tivity, five percent higher than the state.

The study also examined Columbia County’s physical environment, specifically drinking water, particulate matter, fast food restaurant, access to recreational facili-ties and access to healthy foods. The county ranked 32nd out of 67 for physical environment.

In Columbia County, 51 percent of all restaurants in the area are fast food, ranking significantly higher than Florida’s 44 percent. However, Columbia County has a more access to rec-reation facilities and better access to healthy foods than Florida.

“When the [Population

Health Institute] says you’re in the bottom 20 in the state, you have health issues,” Lander said. “Knowing we have health issues, where do we go from there?”

At a recent Lake Shore Hospital Authority meet-ing, Lander presented the WellFlorida Council 2013 Community Health Improvement Plan Update that provides a guideline for the community to fol-low during the next couple years in terms of health.

According to the update, the county needs to increase the appropri-ate use of health care, increase health care pro-vider availability, enhance partnerships to address

community health issues, and increase the awareness of community heath issues and resources.

“By implementing the Community Health Improvement Plan, we anticipate moving up in the rankings,” Lander said. “I don’t know if we will see changes by the 2014 report, but we expect to see them by 2015.”

Because the health improvement plan provides a road map for the commu-nity to pull its way up from the bottom, Lander believes the guide shouldn’t just be for the health department, but for the entire commu-nity. The only way the com-munity can be successful is if everyone comes together to address the problems, he added.

As the study addressed environmental aspects and clinical care, the health department alone cannot tackle the wide variety of issues ranking Columbia County so low.

“[The ranking] does not strictly fall on the shoul-ders of the health depart-ment,” Lander said. “We all have a stake in this.”

WORKFORCE: Professor to offer insights Continued From Page 1A

executive director. “We’re hoping this speaker can give us some insight on some ways we can reach them.”

Johnson is a distinguished profes-sor of strategy and entrepreneurship at the University of North Carolina Kenan-Flagler Business School.

Johnson’s presentation for Columbia County is: Workforce Development “Disr uptive Demographics: Implications for Businesses and Consumer Markets.”

The program will take place 8 to 9 a.m. Monday at the Columbia High School Auditorium, 469 SE Fighting Tiger Drive. Breakfast will be served at 7:45 a.m. and the presentation will begin at 8.

Chick-fil-A is catering the event, which is sponsored by TD Bank.

The event is free to all chamber members, though anyone planning to attend is asked to make a reservation by 4 p.m. today by calling 752-3690 or emailing [email protected].

Decker said the Workforce Seminar is a collaboration between the Lake City-Columbia County Chamber of Commerce and the Columbia County School District.

Terry Huddleston, Columbia County superintendent of schools, and other school board members heard Johnson speak at a conference and they told chamber representa-

tives how beneficial it would be to have Johnson as a speaker for a local business seminar.

“He (Johnson) will speak on demo-graphic trends and why this gen-eration is so different from the Baby Boomer generation and how to reach them more effectively in business,” Decker said. “He’ll give us overall workforce trends.”

Decker said Huddleston felt so strongly about the speaker and the message that he’s going to bring, that after Johnson speaks to the busi-ness community, he’ll speak to every school system employee.

Huddleston said approximately 1,300 school district employees will hear a presentation from Johnson.

“Dr. Johnson provides a lot of infor-mation about human behavior and human nature from the Baby Boomer generation all the way to the present Millennials,” he said. “His presenta-tion is very insightful into the work habits and the way different genera-tions approach work and how differ-ent generations value work. All of it gives employers a better understand-ing of how to develop expectations, performance plans and it gives a real understanding about how society has transformed over the last 50 years.”

Huddleston said the same attri-butes from the Baby Boomers to Generation X, Generation Y and

the Millennials will be discussed by Johnson as they relate to education.

“Each of those groups have had different expectations for education,” he said. “Education served a dif-ferent purpose based on technology and where the world was at the time. Johnson’s research provides a very strong indicator about why education is so important and why we must be teaching our students to think criti-cally because it impacts their employ-ment. Not only does it affect their employment, but it affects the future of our country and locally in our county as far as economics, economic development and the sustainability of our communities.”

School district officials have scheduled two 80-minute sessions so Johnson’s presentation can be heard by all school district employ-ees. School board members will also address the employees.

Huddleston said this is probably the first time since the mid-1980s that all school board employees have gathered together for the beginning of the school year.

“Everything Dr. Johnson said is pertinent to our world today,” he said. “We just want to set a vision for our teachers and non-instructional staff and get the year off on a positive note with some very positive insight into the world we live in.”

By STEVEN RICHMOND

[email protected]

A local woman was arrested after allegedly stealing a box of blank checks she found and using them to pay person-al debts, according to a Columbia County Sheriff’s Office arrest report.

Janice Evon Prothro, 58, of 154 SW Shadow Court, was reportedly cleaning a house off Putnam Street for Ron Bickel when she stumbled upon a box full of blank checks, the report said.

Prothro used a check

to pay a debt to a neighbor. She also allegedly wrote the c h e c k out for $92 more

than the original debt and received cash back from the neighbor for the dif-ference, according to the report.

Prothro was booked into the Columbia County Detention Facility in lieu of $15,000 bond. She faces charges for fraud, forgery and larceny.

PROJECT: Altrusa volunteers to help CARC Continued From Page 1A

SCOUT: National award Continued From Page 1A

at the age of 9. He’s a become mem-

ber of the near century-old Order of the Arrow, a youth advisor and even has sailed around the Bahamas on a 64-foot sail-boat. He enjoys the out-doors and working on his saltwater aquarium in his spare time.

He said being in the Boy Scouts taught him valuable life lessons that he wouldn’t have learned out “in the regular world.”

“I get to talk with adults

older than me,” he said, referring to former Eagle Scouts who stop by to speak with current scouts. “They teach us what they did wrong and how to react to certain situations in life.”

Barwick will turn 18 soon, at which point he will transition from a Boy Scout to an Adult Leader. He looks forward to con-tinuing his education at Florida Gateway College before transferring to the University of Florida.

COURTESY

Local Eagle Scout Jeremy Barwick holds the National Outstanding Eagle Scout Award he received for organizing a food drive that resulted in 33 tons of items being gath-ered for local food banks.

Prothro

Woman faces charges of using stolen check

By the numbersColumbia County’s ranking out of 67 Florida

counties in various measures of health and wellness, as calculated by the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute:

n Health outcomes — 58thn Health factors — 50thn Mortality rate — 61stn Morbidity — 49th

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After 39 days living in a Russian airport transit lounge, a circle of hell that Dante unaccount-ably omitted, Edward

Snowden, the great leaker of NSA secrets, has been granted a year’s asylum while he waits for some Latin American country to take him in.

One Russian winter should convince Snowden, who defected from Hawaii, that his first choice of Venezuela or Ecuador for sanctuary was probably the right one. He will find that there’s a lot to be said for sunshine and warmth.

In an effort to be helpful -- and surely a great American newspa-per wouldn’t be sarcastic -- The Washington Post published a tour-ism guide of sorts so that Snowden can see what he’s been missing after days spent staring at travel posters for Ulan Bator.

“If Snowden really is, as his father suggests, a sensitive sort” -- note that he said “sensitive” and not “sensible,” a virtue Snowden clearly lacks -- “he’ll want to probe the Russian soul,” writes freelancer Isabel Gorst.

That means at some stage he’ll find himself standing on the ledge of the 17th floor of his apartment build-ing. Probing the Russian soul means reading up on Russian literature, a trove of almost unrelieved grimness.

For example, there’s the famous

Nikolai Gogol novel “Dead Souls.” It’s a comedy.

Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s “Crime and Punishment,” perhaps the country’s most famous novel, is about the ax murders of two elderly women by a penurious ex-student named Raskolnikov. There is so much hand-wringing and soul-searching that midway through the book the reader is ready to take an ax to the protago-nist. After his chief tormenter com-mits suicide, Raskolnikov gets eight years of penal servitude.

One of the most popular Russian novels in the United States was “Doctor Zhivago” by Boris Pasternak. To make a long story short -- and it is a long story -- Yuri Zhivago dies suddenly of a heart attack while the on-again, off-again love of his life, Lara, dies in the Gulag. Pasternak won the Nobel Prize for the book, but the Kremlin wouldn’t let him accept it, perhaps because it was too cheerful.

After Snowden bones up on Russian literature, he’ll be ready for some nightlife. Gorst writes that tweeters jokingly say “the first place Snowden should go is the Hungry Duck, Moscow’s legendary strip club, a favorite haunt of expats in the 1990s.”

“Unfortunately,” she writes, “the Duck is no longer open,” but she notes that the city does not lack for pole dancers, much like the girl-friend he left behind in the States and now apparently very much misses.

Moscow is, by repute, an expen-sive city. The Kremlin’s stipends for defectors tend not to be terribly generous and this is likely to be especially so with a transitory defec-tor like Snowden. The Russians have probably already copied everything in his three laptops and, given their success at spying here -- Robert Hanssen and Aldrich Ames, considerably more senior to Snowden, to name two -- Snowden probably doesn’t know much that they don’t know already.

Having embarrassed his host, the thin-skinned Vladimir Putin, by forc-ing the cancellation of the Russian leader’s one-on-one meeting with President Barack Obama, Snowden will likely have to make his own fun.

State lawmakers are showing a commendable interest in developing standards to assess and possibly enforce residency rules regarding legislative districts.

After all, the Florida Constitution requires state representatives and senators live in their districts.

But here’s the rub: When it comes to residency, there is no “clear set of principles” developed by either chamber to enforce the intent of the constitution. This has been the case for years, according to House Speaker Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, and Senate President Don Gaetz, R-Niceville.

State Sen. Jack Latvala, R-Clearwater, seeks to change that. Latvala, the chairman of the Senate Ethics and Elections Committee, has made inquiries to Gaetz and Weatherford about residency standards....

The state constitution says “each legislator shall be at least twenty-one years of age, an elector and resi-dent of the district from which elected and shall have resided in the state for a period of two years prior to election.”

That’s pretty clear, but a number of residency ques-tions have appeared in recent weeks. Latvala has ques-tions about five Democratic legislators, so partisan motivations may be present in the matter.

But the problem of residency isn’t just a partisan issue.

WCTV reports that state Rep. Alan Williams, D-Tallahassee, owns a homesteaded residence outside of his district. But he claims to split time in a home he partially owns with relatives within the district.

And Holly Hill is having its own drama about the residency of City Commissioner Donnie Moore. A check several weeks ago revealed that Moore’s driver’s license indicated he lived at an address on Woodbourne Lane in Ormond Beach. Yet he continues to serve on the Holly Hill City Commission.

Three citizens are suing Moore and a number of Holly Hill officials about the issue, but it shouldn’t have to come to a lawsuit. There should be clear — and enforced — standards of residency.

But questions continue to arise in Florida, suggesting that clearer standards are needed.

The Legislature can and should take its own steps to ensure legislators are living within their districts. Gaetz and Weatherford want the residency information from the secretary of state’s office by Sept. 1. After that date, it is unclear what they will do with the data, and how they will proceed.

Lawmakers should adopt stricter standards for mem-ber residency. The Legislature should make sure a lawmaker’s primary residence is in his or her district, and use state records — such as voting information and driver’s license data — to confirm residency. Members should be expected to resign if they move out of their district.

Florida citizens have a right to expect that their rep-resentatives live within the appropriate political bound-aries. Faith in government is running pretty low these days, but it will drop even lower if such basics of public service aren’t properly enforced.

Can’t sleep? Are you too tired at the end of your day, and end up falling into bed too early? Do you sometimes toss and

turn, worrying about today’s prob-lems and tomorrow’s threats? Do digestive problems, aches, pains, or discomfort bother you? Some good tips from psychology could help you get that better sleep you deserve.

I’m a licensed mental health counselor in Florida, but I’m not a sleep expert. My students at Florida Gateway College and I study what makes good sleep, from our research and from our text-book, Psychology, by Carole Wade and Carol Taviris. Common sense and folk wisdom are helpful, but science has some helpful facts we can use. For instance, I’ve always heard that the sleep you get before midnight is the most important, but sleep studies show that sleep gets better and better through the night, during 45-minute sleep cycles. During these sleep cycles, the sleeper goes through four stages of deeper and deeper sleep, then ascends back to stage 1 sleep, where sleep psychologists tell us that most dreaming occurs. With each cycle, more time is spent dreaming. Your best and longest dreams occur in the hour before waking in the morning! Science tells us that we need to sleep and dream every night, or we will suf-

fer problems with both our mental and physical health.

What are some common sleep mistakes? If we don’t give our nightly sleep the priority that it deserves, it comes back to haunt us! Psychologists tell us that when you lose some sleep each night of the week, you can’t make it up on the weekend! Some sleep prob-lems are easy to fix:

• Just like your workspace, you need to clear your sleep space. Your bedroom should be for just for sleeping, not for watching TV, using your computer, studying, working, or paying the bills.

• Don’t go to bed with unre-solved thoughts. Keep a note pad by your bed. If you wake up with your mind racing, make a note and go back to sleep.

• Your overall health makes a big difference. Choose healthy regular meals, and don’t go to bed too hungry or too full.

• Restlessness and tension can be a problem. Get a little exercise every day, even if it’s just a short walk. Stretch before bed, and upon getting up in the morning.

• Have a regular 8-hour sleep schedule, with a regular bedtime and regular time to wake.

• Darken your bedroom. A dim night-light is okay, so you don’t stumble around or break a toe get-ting up in the night.

• A little water before bed is OK. Don’t take too much or too little water. Limit your salt intake; it regulates water retention and metabolism.

• Anxious, nervous, worried? Deal with your issues before bed-time.

• Sleep is part of your overall health plan. See your doctor once a year. If sleep is a problem, your doctor can help. Melatonin is the body’s own sleep aid, produced by the pineal gland. Your doctor can prescribe melatonin or other sleep aids, if advised. You can find some foods, like turkey, that contain a natural sleep aid, tryptophan.

Sleep habits may be the easiest part of your life to improve. Take this one step closer to your desti-nation—a healthier, happier, and fulfilled life.

OPINIONFriday, August 9, 2013 www.lakecityreporter.com 4A

Lake City ReporterServing Columbia County Since 1874

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We believe strong newspapers build strong communities —‑“Newspapers get things done!”

Our primary goal is to publish distinguished and profitable community‑oriented newspapers.

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BY MAIL: Letters, P.O. Box 1709, Lake City, FL 32056; or drop off at 180 E. Duval St. downtown.

BY FAX: (386) 752‑9400.BY EMAIL: [email protected]

Legislature should clarify

and apply residency rules

The psychology of good sleep

■ Dale McFeatters is editorial writer for Scripps Howard News Service.

Dale [email protected]

Make your own fun, Snowden

■ Daytona Beach News-Journal

Robert [email protected]

■ Got any sleep tips? Email me at [email protected]

4AOPINION

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Aug. 9

Boys Club sign-upThe Boys Club of

Columbia County is now registering for the fall ses-sion, which runs Aug. 19 through Dec. 1 All boys and girls ages 6 to 14 are eligible. The club picks up children from elementary, middle and high schools. The fee is $200 per child, which includes transporta-tion. The club offers indoor and outdoor sports, game room, homework help, a computer lab and other activities. For more infor-mation, call 752-4184.

Community theaterHigh Springs Community

Theater will present its Summer Youth Production of “A Walk in the Woods” by Debbie Metzler. Come see the tales of Goldilocks, the Three Bears, Red Riding Hood, the Three Little Pigs and Hansel and Gretel, all blended into one delight-ful play. Tickets are $5 in advance, and are available at The Framery of Lake City, 341 S. Marion Ave., or by calling (386) 754-2780 or for $6 at www.highspring-scommunitytheater.com. Dates are Aug 9,10,11 and 16,17,18. Shows will be Fridays and Saturdays at 7 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Doors open 30 minutes before the performance. The theater is at 130 NE First Ave. in High Springs.

Youth activitiesThe Lake City Parks and

Recreation Department is now taking registration for its after-school structured Girls and Boys Club pro-grams. The girls will be at the Girls Club facility, and the boys will be at our Teen Town facility making pick-up convenient for parents. The programs are licensed by the Department of Children and Families and our staff is DCF certified. Fall registration will con-tinue until all spaces are filled. The session starts on Aug. 19 and ends Oct. 18. The cost is $225, which includes bus transportation from the area schools. For more information on the Girls Club program, con-tact Tara Krieghauser at (386) 719-5840 or email krieghauser [email protected]. For the Boys Club program, contact Heyward Christie atn (386) 754-3607 or email [email protected].

Classic carsA classic car cruise-in

is held each Friday from 5:30 to about 8 p.m. at the Hardee’s restaurant on U.S. 90 West at Bascom Norris Drive. All car enthusiasts

are welcome. For more information, call Graham White at (919) 368-5893.

Artists wantedThe Live Oak Artists

Guild is seeking artists to exhibit their works at the Autumn Artfest Sept. 9-20 at the Suwannee River Regional Library. All art-ists 18 and older are eli-gible. Entry fee si $25 for guild members and $35 for nonmembers. Deadline for entries is Aug. 23. Applications are available at The Frame Shop & Gallery and the Suwannee River Regional Library. Or, artists may download/print the application from our blog: http://theloag.blogspot.com/ For more informai-ton, contact Suzanne Marcil at (386) 362-7308. A mini-mum of $3,000 in prizes will be awarded. Artwork selected for these awards will be exhibited at a spe-cial “Featured Exhibition” at the Suwannee River Regional Library, from Sept. 21 to Oct. 4.

Aug. 10Dinner dance

American Legion Auxiliary Unit 57 will host a Hawaiian Dinner and Dance at 6 p.m. at American Legion Post 57 on U.S. 41 South. Members and their guest are welcomed. Cost $10 per person for din-ner and dance or $5 per person for the dance only. For more information, call

Maryann at (386) 205-8035 or email [email protected].

Event postponedBethel AME Church’s

back-to-school bash and health fair originally scheduled for today has been postponed until Aug. 17 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 838 SW County Road 242-A. There will be free food and school supplies, as well as guest speakers on hygiene, school rules and bullying. Health providers will have free weight and blood pressure checks, diabetes testing and mate-rials on healthy lifestyles. For more information, call chairwoman Shal’eda Mirra at (386) 984-6618.

Ice cream fundraiserHoliday Inn and Suites

will have an “Ice Cream for Breakfast” event from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event is part of the national fundraising and aware-ness campaign for Give Kids The World Village to benefit children with life-threatening illnesses. For a donation of $5 or more, attendees will get to serve themselves at a make-your-own sundae bar. For more information and sponsorship opportunities, call Amanda Daye at (386) 487-1078.

Aug. 10 & 12Volunteers wanted

Altrusa will be doing

a project with CARC to address a clothing back-log and assist with their transition into a new store location from 8a.m. to noon Aug. 10 and 2 to 8 p.m. Aug. 12 at the House of Bargains /Valerie’s loca-tion downtown.Volunteers are needed for this project and CARC’s ongoing need for both donations and vol-unteers to process them. For more information, contact Heather McInnis at (386) 752-8420 or email [email protected].

Aug. 11Family and friends day

McCray Holiness Outreach Ministry in Olustee will have Family and Friends Day at 4 p.m. The speaker will be First Lady Lakesha Ruise of Emmanuel Church of God in Christ in Maclenny. For more information, contact Sister Verdell Morgan at (386) 755-9053.

Class of 1973The Class of 1973 will

have a class meeting at

5 p.m. at the Richardson Community Center. All class members are invited.

Aug. 12Women’s Bible study

A women’s Bible study class will be held each Monday at 9:30 a.m. at the Class Extension of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, 436 SW McFarlane Ave. All denominations are welcome. For more infor-mation, call Esther at (386) 752-9909.

Bible studySouls’ Harbor Church of

God in Christ, 901 NE Lake Drive, will have Bible study each Monday from 7 to 8 p.m. For more information, call (386) 752-7811.

Cancer supportThe Women’s Cancer

Support Group of Lake City will meet at Baya Pharmacy East, 780 SE Baya Drive, from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. For more information, call (386) 752-4198 or (386) 755-0522.

Republican womenThe Columbia Federated

Republican Women will meet at Porterhouse Grill, 894 SW Main Blvd., at 7 p.m. Come at 6 p.m. if you care to eat before the meeting. For more infor-mation, call Betty Ramey, (386) 935-4111.

Schools closingThe Columbia County

School District schools and offices will be closed from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. for a districtwide professional development meeting.

Aug. 13Plant clinic

University of Florida Master Gardeners are available every Tuesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon at the Columbia County Extension Office’s new location, 971 W. Duval St. (U.S. 90 West), Suite 170, to answer questions about lawns and plants. Bring samples for free diagnosis or solutions. For more information, call 752-5384.

Support groupAnother Way Inc. pro-

vides a domestic violence support group every Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. If you are a current or former survivor of domestic vio-lence, call (386) 719-2702 for meeting location and an intake appointment. All services are free and con-fidential.

Medicare seminarA free Medicare seminar

will be held from 5 to 6 p.m. at the Lifestyle Enrichment Center, 628 SW Allison Court. The seminar will be moderated by Irv Crowetz of C/C & Associates Inc. Subjects covered will include: when to enroll, what is covered and what supplemental insurance may be needed. For more information or to register, call (386) 755-3476.

Tommy Ray Bradshaw

Mr. Tommy Ray Bradshaw 57, died at his residence on August 1, 2013. He was the son of the late Henry and Alamae Coats Bradshaw. He was of the Bap-tist faith and enjoyed ishing.He is preceded in death by one son, one brother, and a sister.He is survived by his wife Kimberly Bradshaw Lake City, FL; one son Jacob Bradshaw Lake City, FL; one daugh-ter Danielle Bradshaw, Well-born, FL; his cat Smokey.A memorial service for Mr. Brad-shaw will be conducted Monday August 12, 2013 at 7:00 P.M. in the Dees-Parrish Family Fu-neral Home Chapel with Pastor Dawn Johns oficiating. Inter-ment will be held at a later date. Dees-PaRRish Family FuneRal home is in charge of all arrangements. 458 South Marion Avenue Lake City, FL 32025. Please sign guestbook atparrishfamilyfuneralhome.com

Richard oliver shepard

Richard Oliver Shepard was born in Anderson, S.C. on 08/07/1945 and died on 08/03/2013 in the Hospice Unit of Lake City V.A. in Lake City, FL. He was well take care of by the staff at the V.A.He was preceded in death by his parents Benjamin O. & Helen Bagwell Shepard of O’brien/ Lake City, FL. Roger and his par-ents started BD & R Hay Sales.Roger supported 4-H and Branford FFA as well as Su-

wannee Rivers Riding Club and various other local or-ganizations for many years.Roger is survived by his wife, Connie H. Shepard of O’brien, FL. Son Daniel Shepard of Lake City, FL. Daughters Shelly (Kyle) Stout of Gainesville, FL, Tracie (Dan) Sax of Fernandina Beach, FL, Jeannie (Ronald) Young and Stacy (Ryan) Young of Branford, FL. Grandchildren Franklin & Christian Shepard of Lake City, FL., Christopher Barrett, Hannah & Braxton Young of Branford, FL. Long time friend Willie Poole of Lake City, FL as well as numerous aunts, uncles, cousins & friends.

At his request he was cremated. A memorial service will be held at Beth Haven Baptist Church on Smith/Market Rd. (CR240) at 10:30 A.M. on 08/17/13, where he was a member. Rev. Curt Bellinger & Rev. Randy Shepard will be oficiating.Roger requested that dona-tions or contributions be made to Beth Haven Baptist Church.Please come in casual attire. Ev-eryone who knew Roger knew he was an avid animal lover and always wore boots & jeans.

Obituaries are paid advertise-ments. For details, call the Lake City Reporter’s classified depart-ment at 752-1293.

Page Editor: Jim Barr, 754-0424 LAKE CITY REPORTER LOCAL FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUgUST 9 & 10, 2013 5A

5A

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COMMUNITY CALENDAR■ To submit your Community Calendar item, contact Jim Barr at 754-0424 or by email at [email protected].

STEVEN RICHMOND/Lake City Reporter

A life of weldingGeorge Mullings grinds a piece of metal at his small business Mullings Welding and Repair on Northwest Main Boulevard. ‘From the first time I saw welding as a teenager in Jamaica, I knew I had to do it,’ he said. ‘Welding’s been good to me.’

Party canceled

The planned 60th wedding anniversary party for Don and Polly Howell on Saturday at Fort White Church of God has been postponed due to illness.

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FAITH & VALUESFriday & Saturday, August 9 & 10, 2013 www.lakecityreporter.com 6A

6AF&V

The purpose of the Helper

Knowing that He is going to shortly leave the apostles, Jesus begins to tell them that He will

send the Holy Spirit to be a helper to them. During this con-versation, Jesus says three times He is going to send the Holy Spirit (John 14:26; John 15:26; John 16:13).

Jesus has been preparing these men for the work He wants them to accomplish; namely, taking His message to the entire world and thereby making disciples of all the nations (Matthew 28:19). The question for us to meditate upon is: How would the Holy Spirit be a helper to these men? What purpose would this Helper be to these apostles of Jesus? As we analyze these three verses, we see the various things which will be done for these men.

The Holy Spirit was going

to be sent to the apostles by both Jesus and His Father. The Father was going to send it to the apostles because Jesus had requested it. Jesus did not want the apostles to be left without some support in their mission. He knew that they would need a helper in accomplishing the mission He had given them. The fulfillment of this promise by Jesus to send the Holy Spirit was accomplished on the day of Pentecost (Acts 2).

One of the ways the Holy Spirit would help the apostles is that He would “teach [them] all things” (14:26). The Holy Spirit would be the one who would instruct the apostles in every-thing they needed to know and do to make disciples of all the nations. He would be imparting instruction to these men so that they would be able to teach oth-ers.

If the Holy Spirit taught the

apostles “all things,” then there is nothing in which they were not instructed. When “all things” have been taught, then there is nothing else to be “taught.” The apostles had all the knowledge that they needed and nothing else needed to be added. The Holy Spirit is called the “Spirit of truth, who proceeds from the Father” (15:26). This “Spirit of truth” was not only going to teach them “all the truth,” but He was going to “guide [them]

into all the truth.” The things the Holy Spirit spoke to these men were not from “His own initia-tive, but whatever He hears, He will speak” (16:13). Everything God wanted people to know, He revealed to the Holy Spirit who then gave it to the apostles.

Not only would the Holy Spirit “teach [them] all things” but He was going to “bring to [their] remembrance all that [Jesus] said to” them (14:26). The apos-tles would have a helper when it came time for them to remem-ber what Jesus had taught and because the Holy Spirit was helping them to remember, their memory would be complete; they would not have a “memory lapse” on some point; it would always be accurate.

By having someone help the apostles to know all the truth, be guided in all the truth, as well as having assistance in remem-bering everything that Jesus

taught, they would be the source for everything the disciples of all the nations would need to know. The apostles would become the authority by which everything in the body of Christ was to be done. If the apostles did not teach it, then it was not something God wanted them to teach. Since they are the source of authority, there is no one else who would have this authority.

There was a great responsibil-ity placed upon the apostles. It is very reasonable to see how and why they would need a helper to carry out their mission. Helping the apostles accomplish their mission was the purpose of the Helper.

Many churches are planning for a fall revival service; and many will only go through

the motions. Few if any will start now plan-

ning for and praying for revival. Revival will not happen if the people do not do their part.

Many today don’t really understand why the churches have the revival services because they don’t know what revival means. The word revive means “to flourish anew or to blossom again”, “to live again or to regain life”. If you do not believe the church needs reviv-ing then you need to be revived first.

Many spend what little time they spend in prayer praying for souls salvation rather than revival. However, that is not the primary purpose for the revival services. They are services that should be dedicated primarily to revive the church, those who are born again.

So many in the church today have lost their first love, they have lost the will to give their life over to the one who gave His life for them. Unless the church is revived, it will not survive nor will the nation sur-vive.

To experience revival we need to adhere to the instruc-tion God gave to Israel concern-ing their moving into the prom-

ise land recorded in Exodus 23;20-33. He said (paraphrased) He would send an angel before them to keep them in the way. God said not to provoke the angel by transgressing God’s law; if they would obey His voice and do all that He spoke, then He would be an enemy to

their enemies. He said you must not involve yourself with the ways of and the gods of their land. They must not under any circumstances compromise the word of the Lord.

If the church would just heed and adhere to the words of God in Exodus 23, the church would truly have revival.

So many of the evangelists of today have become more entertainment than preacher. They think much of their mes-sage needs to be geared around jokes and funny stories. Don’t they know that when they do that they take peoples mind off of God’s word?

Pastors, remember that Satan does not want even one of your

people to experience revival, much less you or your church. So make sure of the one you invite. As I John 4:1 says: “Try every spirit to see if it be of God.”

Evangelist, are you delivering the message God wants you to or have you slid into the world of entertainment? The meaning of revival has not changed. The way Billy Graham, EJ Daniels, etc. did it is the same way it ought to be done today.

Church, we need revival. Please pray for it today.

■ Hugh Sherrill, an ordained Baptist minister and Bible teacher, is available for special Bible stud-ies and revivals.

Hugh [email protected]

BIBLE STUDIES

Planning for revival

BIBLICAL MEDITATION

Carlton [email protected]

■ Carlton G. McPeak is an evan-gelist working in the Lake City area. All Scriptural quotations are from the New American Standard Bible, Holman Bible Publishers, unless otherwise noted.

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LAKECITYREPORTERFAITH & VALUESFRIDAY&SATURDAY,AUgUST9&10,2013 7A

7AReligion

Aug. 11

Family and friends dayMcCray Holiness

Outreach Ministry in Olustee will have Family and Friends Day at 4 p.m. The speaker will be First Lady Lakesha Ruise of Emmanuel Church of God in Christ in Maclenny. For more information, contact Sister Verdell Morgan at (386) 755-9053.

Aug. 13Women’s Bible study

Christ Central Ministries will have women’s Bible study, “The Measure of a Woman,” beginning at 7 p.m. in the church, 217 SW Dyal Ave. Call the church office for information at 755-2525 or call (386) 288-3990. Refreshments will be served.

Aug. 17Back-to-school bash

Bethel AME Church will have its annual back-to-school bash and health fair from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at 838 SW County Road 242-A. There will be free food and school supplies, as well as guest speakers on hygiene, school rules and bullying. Health providers will have free weight and blood pressure checks, diabetes testing and mate-rials on healthy lifestyles. For more information, call chairwoman Shal’eda Mirra at (386) 984-6618.

Aug. 18Homecoming service

Parkview Baptist Church, 268 NW Lake

Jeffrey Road, will have a homecoming service start-ing at 10:30 a.m., with David Cox in concert, followed by Jay Huddleston delivering the message. There will be a covered-dish dinner in the Fellowship Hall imme-diately after the service. There will be no Sunday school that morning and no evening worship ser-vice. For more informa-tion, call (386) 752-0681.

Church homecomingPine Grove Baptist

Church, 1989 N Highway 441, will its 67th homecom-ing service at 10:30 a.m. Doyle Harper will be guest speaker, and The Harper Brothers will provide the music. A covered-dish lunch will follow at noon. Nursery will be provided. For more information, call (386) 752-2664.

OngoingBible study

Souls’ Harbor Church of God in Christ, 901 NE Lake Drive, will have Bible study each Monday from 7 to 8 p.m. For more informa-tion, call (386) 752-7811.

Sunday schoolFalling Creek Chapel,

1290 Falling Creek Road in Lake City, now has Sunday school for all ages. It is 9:30 a.m. Sundays. Adults meet in the church and children meet in our new Children’s Ministry build-ing. For more informa-tion, call (386) 755-0580 or email [email protected].

Women’s Bible studyA women’s Bible study

class will be held each Monday at 9:30 a.m. at the Class Extension of Our Redeemer Lutheran Church, 436 SW McFarlane Ave. All denominations are welcome. For more infor-mation, call Esther at (386) 752-9909.

Men’s Bible studyOur Redeemer Lutheran

Church will have a men’s breakfast and Bible study from 7 to 8 a.m. each Wednesday at the church, 5056 SW State Road 47, one mile south of Interstate 75. For more information, con-tact Pastor Bruce Alkire at (386) 755-4299.

Devotional servicesThe American Legion

Rider Chapter 57, South Highway 47, hosts Sunday morning devotional ser-vices the second Sunday of every month at 9 a.m. There is also a continen-tal breakfast from 8 to 9. Services are held by the Christian Motorcycle Association. Everyone is welcome to join in the fel-lowship, breakfast and spir-itually uplifting morning.

Christian MotorcyclistsChristian Motorcyclists

Association, Iron Shepherds Chapter 826 meets the first Thursday of the month at Hong Yip Restaurant, 905 SW Main Blvd., at 6:30pm. For more information email [email protected] or call David Greene at (386) 755-5594.

Take a quick look and count how many keys are in your pocket or purse. Don’t we take these funny looking

little things for granted? That is, until we need one and can’t find it!

Even the name of a “key” is synonymous with how important they can be: crucial, important, significant, vital, strategic, basic, central, major, and essential, just to name a few. In other words, it is usually “key” that we find our “keys.”

Now look at your keys and think about what they do for you. The job of a key is to give us access to something that is protected or limited only to des-ignated people. If we have a key, we have been granted access to what that key protects. For example, my key ring includes a key to my car, house, office, post

office box, my husband’s truck, and a safe deposit box. With each key, I have been granted access to all these places.

I bring this up because I read something recently in scripture that stuck in my mind about keys. Isaiah 33:5-6 has this to say:

“The Lord is exalted, for He dwells on high;

He will fill Zion with justice and righteousness.

He will be the sure foundation for your times,

A rich store of salvation and wisdom and knowledge;

The fear of the Lord is the key to this treasure.”

In these verses, I see a list of coveted, protected items: a sure foundation for our times, a rich store of salvation, a rich store of wisdom, and a rich store of knowledge. Who doesn’t want access to a sure foundation,

especially in our times? Apart from God’s offer of a

sure foundation, the best we can do is recall the “good old days,” which had its own share of problems! Secondly, salvation is the question that every religion attempts to answer and one we have already wrestled with or will eventually.

Acts 16:30 records the jailer asking Paul and Silas the ques-tion “What must I do to be

saved?” Countless people are still asking the same question every day. Access to this rich store is indeed priceless.

The rich stores of wisdom and knowledge are worthy pursuits as well in order to be successful and live rich, full lives. We press our kids to read and learn voraciously in order to gain knowledge and become wise. Studies suggest those who continue learning later in life are less likely to lose brain func-tion. In fact, there doesn’t seem to be any downside to having access to a rich store of wisdom or knowledge, but we could be pounding on the door of these rich stores and still be denied access … without the key.

The Bible clearly identifies the key to this foundation and these rich stores: the fear of the Lord. This fear is defined as a rever-ence or awe; a recognition of His

place and our place. Translated into our daily life,

this would mean that we have a clear understanding of who God is and what we are. It also means when God speaks, we don’t keep doing our own thing, shrug our shoulders and say, “Oh well, God understands me.”

It means we listen with fear and trembling. That fear gives us the key, the access to these destinations, and is available to “whosoever will” ... because every heart matters.

Angie

The key to life’s riches

■HeartMattersisaweeklycolumnwrittenbyAngieLand,directoroftheFamilyLifeMinistriesoftheLafayetteBaptistAssociation,wheresheteachesbiblestudies,leadsmarriageandfamilyconferences,andoffersbiblicalcounseling.FollowAngieonTwitter:AngieLand@HeartMttrs.

HEART MATTERS

Angie [email protected]

“Meanwhile, the older son was in the field. When he came near the house, he heard music and dancing. So he called one of the ser-vants and asked him what was going on. ‘Your brother has come,’ he replied, ‘and your father has killed the fattened calf because he has him back safe and sound.’ “The older brother became angry and refused to go in.”

— (Luke 15:25-28a)

They were cel-ebrating inside, but the elder brother wasn’t celebrating. He

heard that the father was celebrating the return of his brother, but he did not share the feelings of his

father. Think now how this series began. “Now the tax collectors and sinners were all gathering around to hear Jesus. But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law muttered, ‘This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.’”

The elder brother was angry, and refused to go it and celebrate. Why? Because his brother had gone off and squan-dered everything, and then comes home and is accepted! The brother is jealous! You can hear him saying, “This is not fair! That rotten brother has done too much! He has not obeyed your com-mands (like I have)! He has not worked every day

in the fields (like I have)! He has done everything he could to shame and dishonor you, Father!

“You receive him back with open arms, give him the best robe, a ring, shoes, and kill that calf … which should have been for me!”

On and on the brother complains, and reveals his heart to the father. The

father now responds to his other son. The one who had been “faithfully keep-ing his commandments.” The one who had worked so hard … “My son,” the father said, “you are always with me, and every-thing I have is yours. But we had to celebrate and be glad, because this brother of yours was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found” (Luke 15:31-32).

Christians are not perfect (by a long shot), they’re just forgiven. The life of the Christian is one of grace. Grace is not something which just saves, it is that by which keeps one saved… By grace one grows and becomes. It’s about elbow

room, its about being patient with each other as well as loving. One does not need to know every-thing about the Bible to be saved, he just needs to come to Jesus, repent of sins and be immersed into Christ (Acts 2:38)… New Christians (as well as mature ones) make mis-takes (sin). Every child does things that need corrected. Even when your child breaks your heart… you don’t disown the child.

The older brother never understood the grace, mercy and love of the father. He was working hard, keeping commandments faith-fully… all the while

thinking “I earned what I got. I deserve it and everyone has to do the same.” Understand this: Legalism, law and works totally undermine the grace of God.

One doesn’t come to Christ and be saved by grace and then earn heaven. We are saved by grace through faith… and because we are heaven bound, we live for Jesus.

Jack Exum [email protected]

The older brother

■JackExumJr.Isafree-lancewriterwholivesinLakeCity.Tofindmorearticles(byJackExumJr.aswellasJackExumSr.),Exumbooksforsale,familypictures,Biblestudies,spe-cial“ForTeensOnly”areaandmore,visitExum’sweb-site,www.jackexum.com.

CHURCH CALENDAR

■TosubmityourChurchCalendaritem,contactJimBarrat754-0424orbyemailatjbarr@lakecity reporter.com.

By KARIN LAUB

and TONY G. GABRIEL

Associated Press

CAIRO — Millions of Muslims paid respects at ancestral graves, shared fes-tive family meals and visited beaches and amusement parks Thursday to mark the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, but violence and political tension over-shadowed holiday joy in hotspots like Egypt, Yemen and Afghanistan.

The three-day Eid al-Fitr holiday, which caps Ramadan, also highlighted the long-running divide between Sunni and Shiite Muslims.

Many Sunnis began cel-ebrating Thursday, while Shiites were to mark the holiday today, based on dif-ferent views about sighting the moon.

In recent months, sec-tarian tensions have risen between Sunnis and Shiites, with the two sides increas-ingly lined up on opposite sides of Syria’s civil war.

Ramadan and Eid al-Fitr are a time of increased reli-gious devotion, and some Muslims said they’re par-ticularly distraught over discord among the faithful during the holiday season.

In Egypt, where rival polit-ical camps have been facing off since the military oust-ed President Mohammed Morsi last month, worship-per Medhat Abdel Moneam said he doesn’t like to see Muslims quarreling.

Abdel Moneam was among hundreds of Morsi opponents performing prayers in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.

“I am very sad about what is going on in Egypt,” he said of the intensifying showdown between Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood and interim rulers backed by the military. “Today is Eid, and the Egyptian people are divided into two sides, two different thoughts, and it’s a shame because both sides

are Muslims.”Morsi supporters, camped

out at two other sites in Cairo, said they will not give up until Morsi is reinstat-ed. “Whoever thought that the revolution would come to an end once Ramadan is over was wrong,” said Mohammed el-Beltagy, a top Muslim Brotherhood figure.

Protesters at one of the pro-Morsi sit-ins set up an amusement park for chil-dren with trampolines, slides and water games.

For many of the world’s hundreds of millions of Muslims, Eid al-Fitr begins with a cemetery visit to pay respects to ancestors. In parts of the Middle East, people typically place palm fronds on graves.

In other holiday customs, children get haircuts, new clothes and toys, while well-off families slaughter animals and distribute the meat to the poor. Relatives visit each other, gather for festive meals, such as lamb and rice sprinkled with pine nuts, or spend the day in parks or on beaches.

In eastern Afghanistan, a bomb planted in a cem-etery killed seven women and seven children from an extended family as they visited a relative’s grave as part of Eid observances.

There was no claim of responsibility, but a man whose daughter was killed in the blast blamed Taliban insurgents. Afghan President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack and urged the Taliban to lay down their arms.

In northern Iraq, police closed many streets in the mainly Sunni city of Mosul to prevent car bombs dur-ing the holiday. Bombings are part of Iraq’s ongoing sectarian strife, and violence has picked up in recent months.

Mosul resident Mohammed al-Samak said he planned to take his wife and five children to an

amusement park later in the day despite the poten-tial risk.

“We are aware that the security situation in Mosul is bad, but we cannot stay home all the time,” he said. “The family and I decided to have a nice Eid, away from fear and sadness.”

In Syria, devastated by civil war, rebels fired rockets and mortar shells Thursday at an upscale neighborhood in the capital, Damascus, where President Bashar Assad attended Eid prayers.

At least two rebel brigades claimed to have hit Assad’s motorcade on its way to a mosque, but this appeared to be untrue. Two opposi-tion figures said the route was hit but not the convoy itself. State TV broadcast images of Assad praying at the mosque.

Syria’s brutal war, in its third year, has killed more than 100,000 people and uprooted millions, with no end in sight.

In tent camps that have sprung up in neighboring countries, Syrian refugees marked the holiday with a mix of hope and despair.

“We wish in this Eid that God liberates Syria and to return safely to our coun-try,” said Ibrahim Ismail, a refugee from Damascus, after he performed holi-day prayers with others in Jordan’s sprawling Zaatari camp.

Yet, he said, “we feel truly said because we are not at home, we are displaced.”

In the Palestinian territo-ries, rival leaders Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank and Ismail Haniyeh in the Gaza Strip used holiday speeches to stake out their opposing views on the negotiations with Israel that resumed last week.

Abbas, the Western-backed Palestinian presi-dent, said he hoped that by next year’s holiday, “our people will achieve their hope of freedom...”

Muslims celebrate Ramadan end, but strife casts shadow

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8A LAKECITYREPORTERLOCALFRIDAY&SATURDAY,AUgUST9&10,2013

8A

Working through the heatScenes of Lake City area workers and residents coping with Thursday’s mid-90s heat while trying to get their jobs done.

ABOVE: Jamie Mitchell, of Fort White, prepares to hand a sheet of plywood to Blake Lunde Jr., of Lake City, while buiding a new home, just before noon Thursday. ‘I keep a cooler full of cold water to help get through the day,” Mitchell said. INSET: A car’s interior display shows the temperature at mid-afternoon Thursday.

Patricia Hickman, of Lake City, works in her yard just before 10 a.m. ‘I start early in the morning, around 7:30, drink lots of water and keep moving to create my own breeze.’ she said.

Photos by PATRICK SCOTT

Special to the Reporter

City of Lake City employee Gary Pinkham works on a traffic light at the intersection on Marion Avenue and Baya Drive. ‘It’s hot (August), but the worst part is the lightning that comes with the afternoon storms,’ Pinkham said.

Kobe Slow (left) and Clyde Uzila, both of Ocala, carry concrete reinforcing wire at the Florida National Guard Armory. ‘The heat is something you have to deal with,’ Slow said. ‘You have to stay hydrated.’

Eugene ‘Pops’ Mitchell, 64, of Fort White, carries a sheet of plywood while working on a new home Thursday. ‘You don’t beat the heat, you keep working,’ Mitchell said.

Travis Brantley, an employee of Lawn Enforcement, sprays a yard Thursday morning. ‘I do around five to six yards a day during this time of the year, and I drink about one and a half gallons of water, while keeping a dry towel with me.”

Terri Grebs and Anna Parrot sell hot dogs to a customer from their cart in front of their busi-ness, Terri’s Sweet Tweets. Anna, who just moved here from Illinois, likes the heat. ‘It’s a little hot, but I like it!’ Terri, the owner, said ‘I’m selling a lot of ice cream right now.’

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LAKE CITY REPORTER      ADVERTISEMENT      FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013   9A

9A

SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE ©2013 WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE INC. 8000 FREEDOM AVE., N. CANTON OH 44720

Vault Bags loaded with U.S. Gov’t issued coins are up for grabs as thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim

the money; now any resident of Florida who finds their zip code listed below gets to claim the bags of money for themselves and keep

any valuable coins found inside by covering the Vault Bag fee within the next 2 days

LAKE CITY AREA RESIDENTS CASH IN: Pictured above and protected by armed guards are the Overstuffed Money Bags containing 10 indi-

vidual Vault Bags full of money that everyone is trying to get. That’s because each Vault Bag is known to contain over 100 U.S. Gov’t issued coins

some dating back to the early 1900s.

State zip codes determine who gets free Silver coins

FLORIDA - The phone lines are ringing off the hook.

That’s because for the next 2 days Vault Bags containing valuable U.S. Gov’t issued coins are actually being handed over to Lake City area residents who find their zip code listed in today’s publication.

“Now that the bags of money are up for grabs Florida residents are claiming as many as they can get before they’re all gone. That’s because after the Vault Bags were loaded with over 100 U.S. Gov’t is-sued coins the bags were sealed for good. But, we do know that some of the coins date clear back to the early 1900s, includ-ing: Silver, scarce, highly collectible, and currently circulating U.S. Gov’t issued nickels, dimes and quarter dollars, so there’s no telling what you’ll find until you sort through all the coins,” said Timothy J. Shissler, Chief Numismatist for the private World Reserve.

The only thing residents need to do is find their zip code on the Distribution List printed in today’s publication. If their zip code is on the list, they need to immediate-ly call the National Claim Hotline before the 2-day order deadline ends.

Everyone who does is being given the 90% pure Silver Walking Liberty coin for free just by covering the fee for each Vault Bag loaded with over 100 U.S. Gov’t issued coins for only $99 each as long as they call before the deadline ends.

Since this advertising announcement can’t stop dealers and collectors from hoarding any of the valuable coins they can get their hands on, the World Reserve had to set a strict limit of ten Vault Bags per resident.

“Coin values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees, but those who get in on this now will be the really smart ones. Just think what some of these coins could be worth someday,” said Shissler.

Each Vault Bag is loaded in part with highly sought after collector coins dating clear back to the 1900s including a 90% pure Silver Walking Liberty Half Dollar, an Eisenhower Dollar, some of the last ever minted U.S. Dollars, Kennedy Half Dollars, Silver Mercury Dimes, rarely seen Liber-ty ‘V’ Nickels, nearly 100 year old Buffalo Nickels and a big scoop of unsearched cur-rently circulating U.S. Gov’t issued nickels, dimes and quarter dollars.

“We’re bracing for all the calls because there are just hours left for residents to get the Silver Walking Liberty coin free,” he said.

So, Lake City area residents lucky enough to find their zip code listed in to-day’s publication need to immediately call the National Claim Hotlines before the 2-day deadline ends to get the Silver Walk-ing Liberty coin free. If lines are busy keep trying, all calls will be answered.

LOADED WITH OVER 100 COINS: The

phone lines are ringing off the hook. That’s

because thousands of sealed Vault Bags each

loaded with over 100 U.S. Gov’t issued coins

some dating back to the early 1900s including:

Silver, scarce, highly collectible, and currently

circulating coins are being handed over to Lake

City area residents.

How to claim the bags of U.S. Gov’t issued coins: Read the important information

listed below about claiming the Vault Bags. Then call the National Claim Hotline before the 2-day deadline

ends at: 1-888-282-6742

FREE: WALKING LIBERTYRED BOOK COLLECTOR VALUE $15 to $325

ENLARGED TO SHOW DETAIL. YEAR VARIES

1916-1947

VALUABLE:

90% PURE SILVER

P6463A OF17342R-1

2013

Who gets to claim the bags of money: Thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the money. Now Lake

City area residents who find the first two digits of their zip code listed in today’s publication and beat the 2-day deadline get to claim

the bags of money for themselves and keep all the U.S. Gov’t issued coins found inside.

I keep calling and can’t get through: That’s because each Vault Bag is guaranteed to contain a free Silver Walking Liberty coin

and just that one coin alone could be worth $15-$325 in collector value. So thousands of residents are calling to claim as many Vault

Bags as they can get before they’re all gone. In fact, since the Vault Bag fee is just $99 everyone is claiming as many bags as they can

before the deadline ends. So if lines are busy keep trying, all calls will be answered.

How much are the Vault Bags worth: Coin values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees, but here’s why Florida

residents are claiming as many Vault Bags as they can get before they’re all gone. After the Vault Bags were loaded with over 100 U.S.

Gov’t issued coins including: Silver, scarce, highly collectible, and a big scoop of unsearched currently circulating U.S. Gov’t issued

coins the bags were sealed for good. But we do know that some of the coins date back to the 1900s. That means there’s no telling

what you’ll find until you sort through all the coins. So you better believe at just $99 the Vault Bag fee is a real steal since the free Silver

Walking Liberty coin alone could be worth from $15 to $325 in collector value.

Are the Silver Walking Liberty coins really Free: Yes. All Lake City area residents who beat the 2-day deadline are instantly being

awarded a Silver Walking Liberty coin issued by the U.S. Gov’t between 1916-1947 free with each Vault Bag they claim.

Why is the Vault Bag fee so low: Because thousands of U.S. residents have missed the deadline to claim the money the World

Reserve has re-allocated Vault Bags that will be scheduled to be sent out in the next 2 days. That means the money is up for grabs

and now any resident who finds the first two digits of their zip code on the Distribution List below gets to claim the bags of money for

themselves and keep all the U.S. Gov’t issued coins found inside. Each Vault Bag fee is set at $149 for residents who miss the 2 day

deadline, but for those who beat the 2-day deadline the Vault Bag fee is just $99 as long as they call the National Claim Hotline before

the deadline ends at: 1-888-282-6742.

SSB1749THE WORLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE, INC. IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. MINT, U.S. GOV’T, A BANK OR ANY GOV’T AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 10 DAYS (OR 30 DAYS FOR NV

RESIDENTS) OF RECEIVING YOUR PRODUCT YOU ARE DISSATISFIED WITH YOUR PURCHASE, RETURN THE ENTIRE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. NO RETURNS IF

SEAL IS BROKEN. INSURED MAIL IS STRONGLY RECOMMENDED. THE WORLD RESERVE IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR LOST RETURN SHIPMENTS.

FLORIDADISTRIBUTION NOTICE:

SSB1749

UNITED STATES ZIP CODE DISTRIBUTION LIST

Alabama35, 36

Alaska99

Arizona85, 86

Arkansas71, 72

CaliforniaN/A

Colorado80, 81

Connecticut06

Delaware19

Florida32, 33, 34

Georgia30, 31, 39

Hawaii96

Idaho83

Illinois60, 61, 62

Indiana46, 47

Iowa50, 51, 52

Kansas66, 67

Kentucky40, 41, 42

Louisiana70, 71

Maine03, 04

Maryland20, 21

Massachusetts01, 02, 05

Michigan48, 49

Minnesota55, 56

Mississippi38, 39

Missouri63, 64, 65

Montana59

Nebraska68, 69

Nevada88, 89

New Hampshire03

New Jersey07, 08

New Mexico87, 88

New York00, 10, 11, 12

13, 14

North Carolina27, 28

North Dakota58

Ohio41, 43, 44, 45

Oklahoma73, 74

Oregon97

Pennsylvania15, 16, 17,

18, 19

Rhode Island02

South Carolina29

South Dakota57

Tennessee37, 38

Texas75, 76, 7778, 79, 88

Utah84

VermontN/A

Virginia20, 22, 23, 24

Washington98, 99

West Virginia24, 25, 26

Wisconsin53, 54

Wyoming82, 83

Washington DC20

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10A LAKE CITY REPORTER ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013

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By TIM [email protected]

Football players at Fort White High and Columbia High are wrapping up their first week of practice and looking for some rest.

The support groups behind the teams are still going full bore, with fund-raisers and related activi-ties for both teams.

The Columbia High Quarterback Club and the Fort White Quarterback Club are into their weekly meeting schedules that will continue through the end of the football season, which all hope is mid-December for both teams. Both clubs meet on Monday.

The For t White Quarterback Club meets at 7 p.m. in the faculty lounge at Fort White High. Margie Kluess is president and can be reached at 365-9302.

The Columbia High Quarterback Club meets at 7 p.m. in the Jones Fieldhouse at CHS. Allen Masters is president and can be reached at 292-0725.

Both clubs are putting together programs and selling ads for the 2013 sea-son. Deadlines for ads are fast approaching.

In addition to merchan-dise sales and ad sales, both clubs have fundraisers throughout the year.

Coming up for Columbia High is the 2013 Tiger Classic golf tournament at The Country Club at Lake City on Aug. 16. Format is four-person teams playing

best ball. Cost is $60 per team member. For details, call Russell Taylor at 697-1414.

Columbia’s season tick-ets, corporate sponsor gifts and booster parking passes can be picked up at McDuffie Marine & Sporting Goods.

The 2013 Fan Fare for Fort White football is 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Aug. 17 at Deese Park in downtown Fort White. Fort White’s varsity, junior varsity and middle school football teams and cheerleaders will be introduced.

There also will be live music, bounce houses, face painting, and season tick-ets, club memberships and T-shirts on sale.

Barbecue dinners of chicken, ribs or a combo will be offered for $7, $8 and $10, respectively. Drinks also will be on sale.

Columbia’s Quarterback Club has its father-son pancake breakfast Saturday at Olivet Baptist Church. In this annual event, fresh-man parents cook for the older players and their father, guardian or special relative. Breakfast will be served from 8-10 a.m.

Following the father-son breakfast, players will go to the football stadium for team, position and individu-al pictures.

Fort White’s picture day for its football teams and cheerleaders is 3:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Both teams will host kickoff classic games at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 23 — Fort White against Dixie County High and Columbia against Trinity Christian Academy.

Lake City Reporter

SPORTSFriday & Saturday, August 9 & 10, 2013 www.lakecityreporter.com Section B

Story ideas?

ContactTim KirbySports [email protected]

1BSPORTS

BRIEFS

Fort White, CHS quarterback clubs full speed ahead.

Photos by JASON MATTHEW WALKER/Lake City Reporter

ABOVE: Columbia High coach Quinton Callum puts his players through an agilty drill during practice on Tuesday.BELOW: Fort White High’s Justin Asuncion runs the ball during practice on Tuesday.

Football support

YOUTH BASEBALL

North Florida Storm tryouts

The North Florida Storm has fall travel ball tryouts for ages 12-18 at 10 a.m. Sunday at Babe Ruth Baseball fields 6-7 at the Southside Sports Complex. Cost is $25.

For details, call Heath Phillips at 984-5261.

YOUTH FOOTBALL

Registration for city league

Lake City Parks and Recreation Department has registration for its Little League Football program from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, and Aug. 17 and Aug. 24 at the Teen Town Center. The league is for girls and boys ages 6-13. Cost is $50 per child and proof of age is required. A parent or guardian must accompany the child to registration to sign permission forms.

For details, call Heyward Christie at 754-3607.

CHEERLEADING

Registration on Saturday

Cheerleading registration for Little League Football is 9 a.m. to noon Saturday and Aug. 17 at Memorial Stadium. Total cost is $95 — $35 for registration and $60 if a uniform is needed.

For details, call Wilda Drawdy at 965-1377.

CHS SWIMMING

Alumni Purple and Gold Meet

Columbia High’s swim team has its Alumni Purple and Gold meet set for 9 a.m. Aug. 31. Warm-up is at 8:30 a.m., and alumni will swim half the distance in events. Hannah Burns will be presented her state rings at the alumni meet.

For details, call coach Mary Kay Mathis at 397-6661.

CHS GIRLS GOLF

Tournament at Quail Heights

The Columbia High girls golf team has a three-person scramble on Saturday. The fundraiser tournament begins with a shotgun start at 8:30 a.m. Format is three-person captains choice with gross and net prizes. Cost of $75 per player includes golf, lunch, prizes and a cash payout for the gross and net team winners.

For details, call the pro shop at 752-3339.

JUNIOR GOLF

Carl Ste-Marie offers clinic

The final Carl Ste-Marie Junior Golf Clinic this summer is 8-11 a.m. Monday through Friday at The Country Club at Lake City. Cost is $80 for non-members of the club and $65 for members. Drinks and snacks will be provided free of charge. The clinic is limited to the first 20 paid children.

For details, call Carl Ste-Marie at 752-2266.

n From staff reports

Furyk, Scott PGA leaders

Driskel returns for GatorsAssociated Press

GAINESVILLE — Florida has apparently cleared quarterback Jeff Driskel and reinstated suspended Antonio Morrison.

The school posted a photo on its Twitter page of Driskel throwing passes at practice Thursday, saying “Good to see No. 6 back out on the field in action tonight!”

Driskel missed the first week of fall practice fol-lowing an appendectomy,

but coach Will Muschamp expected him to return early in camp.

It had been less clear when Morrison would be back. Teammate Michael Taylor said Morrison was in position meetings earlier on Thursday.

Team officials said Muschamp will address everything today.

Morrison, a projected starter at middle lineback-er, was suspended indefi-nitely last month following his second arrest.

Associated Press

PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Adam Scott is off to another good start in a major, shooting a 5-under 65 that left him tied for the lead with Jim Furyk after the opening round of the PGA Championship on Thursday.

Scott won his first major title at the Masters, and he was out front on the final day of the British Open before fading.

The Aussie shot a 5-under 30 on the front nine at Oak Hill, taking advan-tage of a course softened

by overnight rain and ripe for the taking.

Scott got to 6 under after play resumed following a 71-minute delay while more storms passed.

Scott’s only stumble came at the 16th, where he missed a 5-footer to take his first bogey.

Furyk also flirted with the course record of 64, but bogeyed his last hole.

David Hearn and Lee Westwood shot 64.

Tiger Woods shot 71 after making a double bogey on his final hole.

Rory McIlroy shot 69 and Phil Mickelson shot 71.

Page 12: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

SCOREBOARD

TELEVISION

TV sports

Today

AUTO RACING

Noon

SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup,

practice for Cheez-It 355, at Watkins

Glen, N.Y.

1:30 p.m.

SPEED — NASCAR, Nationwide

Series, final practice for ZIPPO 200, at

Watkins Glen, N.Y.

4 p.m.

SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup,

“Happy Hour Series,” final practice for

Cheez-It 355, at Watkins Glen, N.Y.

BOXING

10 p.m.

ESPN2 — Lightweights, Rustam

Nugaev (24-6-0) vs. Jose Hernandez

(14-6-1), at Cabazon, Calif.

CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE

9 p.m.

NBCSN — Saskatchewan at Calgary

CYCLING

7 p.m.

FSN — Tour of Utah, stage 4, at Salt

Lake City

GOLF

1 p.m.

TNT — PGA Championship, second

round, at Pittsford, N.Y.

4 p.m.

TGC — USGA, U.S. Women’s Amateur

Championship, quarterfinal matches, at

Charleston, S.C.

LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL

11 a.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, Mid-Atlantic

Regional semifinal, at Bristol, Conn.

1 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, Midwest Regional

final, at Indianapolis

3 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, Mid-Atlantic

Regional semifinal, at Bristol, Conn.

5 p.m.

ESPN2 — Playoffs, West Regional

semifinal, at San Bernardino, Calif.

7 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, Southeast Regional

final, at Warner Robins, Ga.

9 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, West Regional semi-

final, at San Bernardino, Calif.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

7 p.m.

MLB — Regional coverage, Detroit

at N.Y. Yankees or Philadelphia at

Washington

8:05 p.m.

WGN — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis

SAILING

7 p.m.

NBCSN — Louis Vuitton Cup, semi-

finals, at San Francisco (same-day tape)

TENNIS

Noon, 8 p.m.

ESPN2 — ATP World Tour/WTA,

Rogers Cup, men’s and women’s quarter-

finals, at Montreal and Toronto

———

Saturday

AUTO RACING

9:30 a.m.

ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide

Series, pole qualifying for ZIPPO 200, at

Watkins Glen, N.Y.

11:30 a.m.

ESPN2 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole

qualifying for Cheez-It 355, at Watkins

Glen, N.Y.

2:15 p.m.

ABC — NASCAR, Nationwide Series,

ZIPPO 200, at Watkins Glen, N.Y.

5 p.m.

SPEED — Rolex Sports Car Series,

VisitFlorida.com Sports Car 250, at

Elkhart Lake, Wis.

6:30 p.m.

ESPN2 — Global Rallycross

Championship, at Hampton, Ga.

CYCLING

4 p.m.

FSN — Tour of Utah, stage 5,

Huntsville to Snowbird, Utah

GOLF

11 a.m.

TNT — PGA Championship, third

round, at Pittsford, N.Y.

2 p.m.

CBS — PGA Championship, third

round, at Pittsford, N.Y.

4 p.m.

TGC — USGA, U.S. Women’s

Amateur Championship, semifinal match-

es, at Charleston, S.C.

HORSE RACING

5 p.m.

NBC — NTRA, Fourstardave

Handicap, at Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL

1 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, Great Lakes Regional

final, at Indianapolis

5 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, Northwest Regional

final, at San Bernardino, Calif.

7 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, New England

Regional final, at Bristol, Conn.

9 p.m.

ESPN — Playoffs, West Regional final,

at San Bernardino, Calif.

LITTLE LEAGUE SOFTBALL

11 a.m.

ESPN — Girls, Senior League World

Series, championship, at Lower Sussex,

Del.

3 p.m.

ESPN — Girls, Big League World Series,

championship, at Lower Sussex, Del.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

3:30 p.m.

FOX — Regional coverage, Minnesota

at Chicago White Sox, Tampa Bay at L.A.

Dodgers, or Baltimore at San Francisco

7 p.m.

MLB — Regional coverage,

Philadelphia at Washington or San Diego

at Cincinnati

7:05 p.m.

WGN — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis

MOTORSPORTS

3 p.m.

NBCSN — AMA Motocross, Unadilla

National, at New Berlin, N.Y.

SAILING

6 p.m.

NBCSN — Louis Vuitton Cup, semi-

finals, at San Francisco (same-day tape)

SOCCER

8 p.m.

NBCSN — MLS, DC United at

Philadelphia

TENNIS

1 p.m.

ESPN2 — WTA, Rogers Cup,

semifinal, at Toronto

3 p.m., 8 p.m.

ESPN2 — ATP World Tour, Rogers

Cup, semifinal, at Montreal

BASEBALL

AL standings

East Division

W L Pct GB

Boston 70 46 .603 —

Tampa Bay 66 47 .584 2½

Baltimore 63 51 .553 6

New York 57 56 .504 11½

Toronto 53 61 .465 16

Central Division

W L Pct GB

Detroit 67 45 .598 —

Cleveland 62 52 .544 6

Kansas City 58 53 .523 8½

Minnesota 49 62 .441 17½

Chicago 43 69 .384 24

West Division

W L Pct GB

Oakland 64 49 .566 —

Texas 65 50 .565 —

Seattle 53 61 .465 11½

Los Angeles 51 62 .451 13

Houston 37 76 .327 27

Today’s Games

Minnesota (Gibson 2-3) at Chicago

White Sox (Joh.Danks 2-9), 2:10 p.m.,

1st game

Detroit (Porcello 8-6) at N.Y. Yankees

(Nova 5-4), 7:05 p.m.

L.A. Angels (Weaver 6-5) at Cleveland

(Kazmir 7-4), 7:05 p.m.

Oakland (J.Parker 7-6) at Toronto

(Rogers 3-6), 7:07 p.m.

Boston (Peavy 9-4) at Kansas City

(E.Santana 8-6), 8:10 p.m.

Minnesota (Hendriks 0-1) at Chicago

White Sox (Leesman 0-0), 8:10 p.m.,

2nd game

Texas (Garza 1-1) at Houston (Bedard

3-8), 8:10 p.m.

Milwaukee (Lohse 7-7) at Seattle

(J.Saunders 10-10), 10:10 p.m.

Tampa Bay (Price 6-5) at L.A. Dodgers

(Capuano 4-6), 10:10 p.m.

Baltimore (Tillman 14-3) at San

Francisco (Vogelsong 2-4), 10:15 p.m.

Saturday’s Games

Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.

Oakland at Toronto, 1:07 p.m.

Baltimore at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.

Minnesota at Chicago White Sox,

4:05 p.m.

Tampa Bay at L.A. Dodgers, 4:05 p.m.

L.A. Angels at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.

Boston at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.

Texas at Houston, 7:10 p.m.

Milwaukee at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

NL standings

East Division

W L Pct GB

Atlanta 70 45 .609 —

Washington 54 60 .474 15½

New York 51 60 .459 17

Philadelphia 51 62 .451 18

Miami 43 69 .384 25½

Central Division

W L Pct GB

Pittsburgh 69 44 .611 —

St. Louis 66 47 .584 3

Cincinnati 63 51 .553 6½

Chicago 50 63 .442 19

Milwaukee 49 65 .430 20½

West Division

W L Pct GB

Los Angeles 63 50 .558 —

Arizona 58 55 .513 5

San Diego 52 62 .456 11½

Colorado 52 63 .452 12

San Francisco 50 63 .442 13

Today’s Games

Philadelphia (Lannan 3-4) at

Washington (Haren 6-11), 7:05 p.m.

San Diego (Cashner 8-5) at Cincinnati

(Arroyo 9-9), 7:10 p.m.

Miami (Ja.Turner 3-3) at Atlanta

(Beachy 0-0), 7:30 p.m.

Chicago Cubs (Rusin 1-1) at St. Louis

(Lynn 13-5), 8:15 p.m.

Pittsburgh (Liriano 12-4) at Colorado

(J.De La Rosa 10-6), 8:40 p.m.

N.Y. Mets (Hefner 4-8) at Arizona

(Corbin 12-3), 9:40 p.m.

Milwaukee (Lohse 7-7) at Seattle

(J.Saunders 10-10), 10:10 p.m.

Tampa Bay (Price 6-5) at L.A. Dodgers

(Capuano 4-6), 10:10 p.m.

Baltimore (Tillman 14-3) at San

Francisco (Vogelsong 2-4), 10:15 p.m.

Saturday’s Games

Baltimore at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.

Tampa Bay at L.A. Dodgers, 4:05 p.m.

Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m.

Miami at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.

San Diego at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.

Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.

N.Y. Mets at Arizona, 8:10 p.m.

Pittsburgh at Colorado, 8:10 p.m.

Milwaukee at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

2B LAKE CITY REPORTER SPORTS FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013

2BSPORTS

FRIDAY EVENING AUGUST 9, 2013 Comcast Dish DirecTV 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 3-ABC 3 - - TV20 News ABC World News Entertainment Ton. Inside Edition (N) Shark Tank All-natural dog treats. Would You Fall for That? (N) Å 20/20 (N) Å News at 11 Jimmy Kimmel Live

4-IND 4 4 4 Chann 4 News Chann 4 News Entertainment Ton. Inside Edition (N) Love-Raymond Rules/Engagement Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory The 10 O’Clock News (N) Å Sharks Football (:35) omg! Insider

5-PBS 5 - - Journal Nightly Business PBS NewsHour (N) Å Washington Week Burt Bacharach’s Best (My Music Presents) Å 60s Girl Grooves (My Music) Girl groups and singers of the 1960s. Å 7-CBS 7 47 47 Action News Jax CBS Evening News Jaguars e NFL Preseason Football Miami Dolphins at Jacksonville Jaguars. From EverBank Field in Jacksonville, Fla. (N) Two and Half Men Action News Jax Letterman

9-CW 9 17 17 Meet the Browns Meet the Browns House of Payne House of Payne America’s Next Top Model Å America’s Next Top Model (N) Å TMZ (N) Å Access Hollywood The Offi ce Å The Offi ce Å 10-FOX 10 30 30 Are We There Yet? Family Guy Å Family Guy Å The Simpsons Bones “The Doom in the Gloom” (PA) The Following “Whips and Regret” News Action News Jax Two and Half Men How I Met/Mother

12-NBC 12 12 12 News NBC Nightly News Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! Å Off Their Rockers Off Their Rockers Dateline NBC (N) Å News Jay Leno

CSPAN 14 210 350 (2:00) Politics & Public Policy Today Politics & Public Policy Today

WGN-A 16 239 307 America’s Funniest Home Videos America’s Funniest Home Videos a(:05) MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals. (Joined in Progress) From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (N) WGN News at Nine Funny Videos

TVLAND 17 106 304 M*A*S*H Å M*A*S*H Å M*A*S*H Å M*A*S*H Å Friends Å Friends Å Friends Å Friends Å Friends Å Friends Å Friends Å (:36) Friends Å OWN 18 189 279 Police Women of Maricopa County Police Women of Maricopa County Oprah: Where Are They Now? Å Oprah: Where Are They Now? Å Iyanla, Fix My Life “Fix My Full House” Oprah: Where Are They Now? Å A&E 19 118 265 Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Storage Wars Legend- Shelby Legend- Shelby

HALL 20 185 312 Little House on the Prairie Å Little House on the Prairie Å ›› “Falling in Love With the Girl Next Door” (2006, Comedy) Patty Duke. Å Frasier Å Frasier Å Frasier Å Frasier Å FX 22 136 248 ›› “Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs” (2009, Comedy) Voices of Ray Romano. ››› “Rio” (2011, Comedy) Voices of Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg. ››› “Rio” (2011, Comedy) Voices of Anne Hathaway, Jesse Eisenberg.

CNN 24 200 202 (5:00) The Situation Room (N) Erin Burnett OutFront (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (N) Å Piers Morgan Live (N) (Live) Anderson Cooper Special Report (N) Stroumboulopoulos (N)

TNT 25 138 245 g 2013 PGA Championship Castle Fairytale-themed murders. Å ››‡ “Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” (2007) Johnny Depp. Jack Sparrow’s friends join forces to save him. King & Maxwell A witness is murdered.

NIK 26 170 299 SpongeBob SpongeBob Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Å Teenage Mut. Rabbids Invasion Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Full House Å Friends Å Friends Å SPIKE 28 168 241 ››› “Men in Black” (1997, Action) Tommy Lee Jones, Will Smith, Linda Fiorentino. ››› “Coming to America” (1988, Comedy) Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall, John Amos. Å “Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo”

MY-TV 29 32 - The Rifl eman The Rifl eman M*A*S*H Å M*A*S*H Å Monk “Mr. Monk Goes to Vegas” Monk Monk may have met his match. Seinfeld Å The Odd Couple Night Gallery Å Perry Mason Å DISN 31 172 290 Good Luck Charlie Jessie Å Shake It Up! Å Austin & Ally Å A.N.T. Farm (N) Jessie (N) Phineas and Ferb Gravity Falls Å Dog With a Blog Good Luck Charlie Austin & Ally Å Austin & Ally Å LIFE 32 108 252 Hoarders “Barbara; Richard” Å Hoarders “Carrie; James” Å Hoarders “Joanne; Kristy” Å Hoarders “Dee; Jan” Å Hoarders “Adella; Teri” Å (:01) Hoarders “Mike; Bonnie” Å USA 33 105 242 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Necessary Roughness Å (DVS)

BET 34 124 329 106 & Park: BET’s Top 10 Live “Freestyle Friday” (N) Å Lee Daniels’ ››‡ “Jason’s Lyric” (1994, Drama) Allen Payne, Jada Pinkett. Å (:05) Centric’s Comedy All-Stars Nine of today’s hottest comics. Å ESPN 35 140 206 SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å a Little League Baseball World Series Southeast Regional, Final: Teams TBA. (N) a Little League Baseball SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å ESPN2 36 144 209 a Little League Baseball Jaws’ Film Room SportsNation (N) ATP Tennis U.S. Open Series: Rogers Cup, Men’s and Women’s Quarterfi nals. s Boxing Friday Night Fights. (N) Å SUNSP 37 - - Ultimate Day Off Florida Insider Fishing Report Pro Tarpon Tournament Fox Sports 1 Rays Live! (N) a MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Los Angeles Dodgers. (N)

DISCV 38 182 278 Sharkpocalypse Å Alien Sharks Å The Great White Gauntlet (N) Å Gold Rush The crew fl ies to Chile. (N) Saint Hoods “Kojack Box” (N) Å Gold Rush The crew fl ies to Chile.

TBS 39 139 247 King of Queens Seinfeld Å Seinfeld Å Seinfeld Å Family Guy Å Family Guy Å ››‡ “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” (2006) Will Ferrell. Are We There Yet? Are We There Yet?

HLN 40 202 204 (5:00) Evening Express Jane Velez-Mitchell (N) Nancy Grace Mysteries (N) Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Nancy Grace Mysteries

FNC 41 205 360 Special Report With Bret Baier (N) The FOX Report With Shepard Smith The O’Reilly Factor (N) Å Hannity (N) On the Record W/Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Å E! 45 114 236 (5:00) ›› “Bring It On: All or Nothing” E! News (N) Vanessa & Ashley The Soup Fashion Police Fashion Police (N) Chelsea Lately E! News

TRAVEL 46 196 277 Bizarre Foods With Andrew Zimmern Man v. Food Å Man v. Food Å Ghost Adventures Å Ghost Adventures “Kings Tavern” The Dead Files “Burned Alive” Å The Dead Files Å HGTV 47 112 229 Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hawaii Life Å Hawaii Life Å Island Hunters Island Hunters House Hunters Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l

TLC 48 183 280 What Not to Wear “Jackie” Å What Not to Wear “Frances” Å What Not to Wear “Becca” Å Say Yes to the Dress: The Big Day (N) What Not to Wear (N) Å Say Yes to the Dress: The Big Day

HIST 49 120 269 (5:00) First Apocalypse Å American Pickers “Pandora’s Box” American Pickers “Frank Bears All” American Pickers Å American Pickers “Driving Miss Dani” (:02) American Pickers Å ANPL 50 184 282 River Monsters: Unhooked Å Wild West Alaska Å Treehouse Masters Å Tanked “Sweet Memories” Å Tanked (N) Tanked “Sweet Memories” Å FOOD 51 110 231 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Restaurant: Impossible “Meglio’s” Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive The Shed The Shed

TBN 52 260 372 (5:00) Praise the Lord Å It’s Supernatural The Potter’s Touch Behind the Scenes Hal Lindsey The Harvest Perry Stone Praise the Lord Å FSN-FL 56 - - Inside Panthers Driven Marlins Live! (N) a MLB Baseball Miami Marlins at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (N) Marlins Live! (N) World Poker Tour: Season 11

SYFY 58 122 244 Joe Rogan Questions Everything Joe Rogan Questions Everything WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Å Continuum “Second Wave” (N) Haven Raving barbarians run loose.

AMC 60 130 254 (:11) Breaking Bad “Bullet Points” (:13) Breaking Bad “Shotgun” Jesse goes missing. Å (:17) Breaking Bad “Cornered” Å (:21) Breaking Bad “Problem Dog” (:32) Breaking Bad “Hermanos” Å (:37) Breaking Bad

COM 62 107 249 (5:50) South Park (:21) Tosh.0 Å The Colbert Report Daily Show (7:54) Tosh.0 Å (:25) Workaholics (8:56) Workaholics (:27) Workaholics (9:58) Workaholics (:29) Tosh.0 Å John Oliver Kevin Hart: Grown

CMT 63 166 327 Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å Reba Å ›››‡ “Jerry Maguire” (1996) Tom Cruise. Premiere. An attack of conscience changes an L.A. sports agent’s life. Cops Reloaded (N) Cops Reloaded

NGWILD 108 190 283 Dog Whisperer “Bull-Whipped” Shark Men “Life and Limb” Shark Battleground: The Red Triangle Australia’s Deadliest Shark Attacks (N) Monster Fish “River Shark!” (N) Shark Battleground: The Red Triangle

NGC 109 186 276 Brain Games Brain Games Lost Gold of the Dark Ages: Revealed Gold Rush Ghost Ships Brain Games Brain Games Diggers Diggers Brain Games Brain Games

SCIENCE 110 193 284 Time Warp Å Time Warp Å Wonders of Life “Home” Å Into the Universe Into the Universe With Stephen Hawking The universe, from it’s beginning. Into the Universe

ID 111 192 285 Deadly Women “Love Sick” Å Deadly Women Å Deadly Women “Brides of Blood” Deadly Women “Lover’s Revenge” Deadly Women “Mean Teens” (N) Deadly Women “Brides of Blood”

HBO 302 300 501 (5:00) ›› “American Dreamz” (2006) ››‡ “Meet the Fockers” (2004, Comedy) Robert De Niro. ‘PG-13’ Å Boardwalk Empire “Resolution” Å Boardwalk Empire Å The Newsroom Å MAX 320 310 515 (:05) Strike Back Å (6:50) Strike Back (:40) Strike Back Å ›› “Taken 2” (2012) Liam Neeson. Premiere. ‘PG-13’ Å Strike Back (Season Premiere) (N) Strike Back Å SHOW 340 318 545 (:15) ›‡ “The Darkest Hour” (2011, Science Fiction) Emile Hirsch. ‘PG-13’ Å (7:50) ››‡ “Real Steel” (2011, Action) Hugh Jackman. ‘PG-13’ Å s Boxing Deontay Wilder vs. Siarhei Liakhovich. (N)

SATURDAY EVENING AUGUST 10, 2013 Comcast Dish DirecTV 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 3-ABC 3 - - TV20 News ABC World News Entertainment Tonight (N) Å Motive A lawyer is murdered. 20/20 Å News at 11 Crook & Chase

4-IND 4 4 4 Chann 4 News Paid Program 30 Rock Å 30 Rock Å Rules/Engagement Rules/Engagement Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory News Inside Edition Chann 4 News First Baptist

5-PBS 5 - - Jimmy Dean Daniel O’Donnell Live From Nashville Å Superstars of Seventies Soul Live (My Music) Motown, R&B, soul and disco artists. Å Elvis, Aloha From Hawaii Elvis Presley performs in Hawaii.

7-CBS 7 47 47 g 2013 PGA Championship Third Round. Two and Half Men Two and Half Men NCIS: Los Angeles “Endgame” 48 Hours (N) Å 48 Hours “The Perfect Family” (N) Action Sports 360 Two and Half Men

9-CW 9 17 17 Daryl’s House Jacksonville Meet the Browns House of Payne I Know Jax Like, Love The Crook and Chase Show Å YourJax Music Jacksonville Local Haunts According to Jim

10-FOX 10 30 30 a MLB Baseball: Rays at Dodgers The First Family Mr. Box Offi ce (N) Cops (PA) Å Cops (PA) Å Bones “The Patriot in Purgatory” (PA) News Action Sports 360 Axe Cop (N) Å Axe Cop Å 12-NBC 12 12 12 News NBC Nightly News Wheel of Fortune Jeopardy! Å American Ninja Warrior Å Get Out Alive With Bear Grylls Å Do No Harm “The Cookie Jar” (N) News Sat. Night Live

CSPAN 14 210 350 Washington This Communicators First Ladies As Infl uence Makers First ladies through history.

WGN-A 16 239 307 Law & Order: Criminal Intent “Beast” a(:05) MLB Baseball Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (N) (:45) 10th Inning WGN News at Nine Å Bones “The Hero in the Hold” Å TVLAND 17 106 304 (5:30) ››› “The American President” (1995) Michael Douglas. Premiere. Å The Exes Å Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond Love-Raymond

OWN 18 189 279 Undercover Boss “1-800-Flowers” Undercover Boss “Subway” Å Iyanla, Fix My Life “Fix My Full House” Iyanla, Fix My Life (N) Welcome to Sweetie Pie’s (N) Iyanla, Fix My Life “Fix My Full House”

A&E 19 118 265 Panic 9-1-1 “He’s in My Room” Å Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Psychic Tia (N) Psychic Tia (N) (:01) Psychic Tia (:31) Psychic Tia

HALL 20 185 312 (5:00) ››› “Dad’s Home” (2010) Å Cedar Cove “Reunion” Å Cedar Cove A suspicious death. (N) “Reading, Writing & Romance” (2013, Romance) Eric Mabius. Premiere. Å Cedar Cove A suspicious death. Å FX 22 136 248 (4:30) ››‡ “2012” (2009, Action) John Cusack, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Amanda Peet. ›››‡ “Avatar” (2009, Science Fiction) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana. A former Marine falls in love with a native of a lush alien world.

CNN 24 200 202 The Situation Room Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Inside Man “Our Nixon” (2013) Home movies of Richard Nixon fi lmed by his closest aides. Stroumboulopoulos

TNT 25 138 245 (4:30) Invincible (:45) ›› “Four Brothers” (2005, Crime Drama) Mark Wahlberg, Tyrese Gibson, André Benjamin. Å ››‡ “The Longest Yard” (2005, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Chris Rock, Burt Reynolds. Å (DVS) The Longest Yard

NIK 26 170 299 SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob Sam & Cat (N) Hathaways AwesomenessTV Big Time Rush See Dad Run Full House Å Friends Å Friends Å SPIKE 28 168 241 (5:28) ››› “Coming to America” (1988) Eddie Murphy, Arsenio Hall. Å ››› “Remember the Titans” (2000, Drama) Denzel Washington, Will Patton. (:32) ››› “Remember the Titans” (2000) Will Patton

MY-TV 29 32 - Adam-12 Dragnet Batman Batman Lost in Space “The Sky Pirate” Å Star Trek “Space Seed” Å ››‡ “The Mummy’s Hand” (1940, Horror) Dick Foran, Peggy Moran.

DISN 31 172 290 Austin & Ally Å Shake It Up! Å Jessie Å Jessie Å ›› “Judy Moody and the NOT Bummer Summer” (2011) Jordana Beatty. Å A.N.T. Farm Å Jessie Å Jessie Å Jessie Å LIFE 32 108 252 “Pastor Brown” (2009, Drama) Salli Richardson-Whitfi eld, Nicole Ari Parker. Å ››‡ “Madea’s Family Reunion” (2006, Comedy) Tyler Perry. Premiere. Å ›› “Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail” (2009) Tyler Perry, Derek Luke. Å USA 33 105 242 NCIS Death of a petty offi cer. Å NCIS “Caged” Women’s prison riot. NCIS Investigating a sergeant’s murder. NCIS Gibbs fi nds a cryptic message. NCIS Reopened investigation. Å Graceland “Bag Man” Å (DVS)

BET 34 124 329 Scandal Grieving parents seek help. Scandal A governor’s wife is raped. Scandal “Spies Like Us” Å Scandal “Defi ance” Å ››‡ “Tyler Perry’s I Can Do Bad All By Myself” (2009) Tyler Perry. Å ESPN 35 140 206 a Little League Baseball a Little League Baseball World Series New England Regional, Final: Teams TBA. a Little League Baseball World Series West Regional, Final: Teams TBA. (N) SportsCenter (N) (Live) Å ESPN2 36 144 209 SportsCenter (N) h Auto Racing Global Rallycross Championship. (N) ATP Tennis U.S. Open Series: Rogers Cup, Men’s Second Semifi nal. (N) Baseball Tonight (N) (Live) Å This Is Sportscenter

SUNSP 37 - - Fox Sports 1 Fight Sports: KNOCKOUTS! Fight Sports: KNOCKOUTS! C-USA Football C-USA Football XTERRA Advent. XTERRA Advent. Fitness Truth Bull Riding Championship. (Taped)

DISCV 38 182 278 Voodoo Sharks: Sharktweeto Å Spawn of Jaws: Sharktweeto Å Sharkpocalypse: Sharktweeto (N) Megalodon: Sharktweeto Trying to identify a predator. (N) Å Sharkpocalypse: Sharktweeto Å TBS 39 139 247 King of Queens Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Family Guy Å Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Big Bang Theory Sullivan & Son Deal With It Å HLN 40 202 204 Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Mystery Detectives Nancy Grace Mysteries

FNC 41 205 360 (4:00) America’s News Headquarters FOX Report (N) Huckabee (N) Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) Geraldo at Large (N) Å Journal Editorial FOX News Watch

E! 45 114 236 Keeping Up With the Kardashians E! News ››‡ “Shallow Hal” (2001, Romance-Comedy) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jack Black, Jason Alexander. Fashion Police Vanessa & Ashley

TRAVEL 46 196 277 Bikinis & Boardwalks Å State Fair Foods Å Monumental Mysteries Å Ghost Adventures “Old Fort Erie” Ghost Adventures Å Ghost Adventures “Shanghai Tunnels”

HGTV 47 112 229 House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l Love It or List It Å Love It or List It “Cira Bagnato” Å House Hunters Hunters Int’l House Hunters Hunters Int’l

TLC 48 183 280 Worst Tattoos Worst Tattoos Sex, Lies and Zumba Å Breaking Amish: LA: Extended (:10) Breaking Amish: LA: Extended Episode “Exodus” (N) Breaking Amish: LA: Extended Breaking: LA

HIST 49 120 269 American Pickers “Pickin’ Perry-dise” American Pickers “You Betcha” Å American Pickers Å Restoration Pawn Stars Å Legend- Shelby Legend- Shelby (:02) Pawn Stars (:32) Pawn Stars

ANPL 50 184 282 To Be Announced America’s Cutest Å Too Cute! “Puppy Power” Å Too Cute! (N) Too Cute! “Puppies and a Piggy” Å Too Cute!

FOOD 51 110 231 Chopped Chopped Chopped First round, diver scallops. Chopped Chopped “Chopped All-Stars Finale” Iron Chef America “Flay vs Hastings”

TBN 52 260 372 Natalie’s Rose Miracles Gaither: Precious Memories In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley Hour of Power Billy Graham Classic Crusades Not a Fan Travel the Road

FSN-FL 56 - - Inside the Marlins Marlins Live! (N) a MLB Baseball Miami Marlins at Atlanta Braves. From Turner Field in Atlanta. (N) Marlins Live! (N) Fox Sports 1 Cycling Tour of Utah.

SYFY 58 122 244 Primeval: New World “Breakthrough” Primeval: New World (N) Å (DVS) Primeval: New World “The Inquisition” Primeval: New World (N) Å (DVS) Primeval: New World (N) Å (DVS) Face Off: The Vets Strike Back

AMC 60 130 254 Hell on Wheels “The Lord’s Day” Hell on Wheels “Blood Moon” Å Hell on Wheels “Blood Moon Rising” Hell on Wheels (Season Premiere) Cullen and Elam secure positions. (N) Å Hell on Wheels Å COM 62 107 249 (5:21) ›› “The Dukes of Hazzard” (2005) Johnny Knoxville. (:25) ››› “Get Him to the Greek” (2010, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Russell Brand, Elisabeth Moss. Å Tosh.0 Dirty Half Dozen A compliation of “Tosh.0” episodes. (N)

CMT 63 166 327 (5:00) ››› “Beverly Hills Cop” (1984) Eddie Murphy. Å ››‡ “Footloose” (1984) Kevin Bacon. Hip teen moves to corn town where pastor taboos dancing. Bounty Hunters (N) Them Idiots Whirled Tour Å NGWILD 108 190 283 When Sharks Attack “Florida Frenzy” Kingdom of the Oceans “Sand Wars” Kingdom of the Oceans Kingdom of the Oceans Kingdom of the Oceans “Fire & Ice” Kingdom of the Oceans

NGC 109 186 276 Outlaw Bikers “Inside the Outlaws” Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Doomsday Preppers Bugged Out (N) Alaska State Troopers Doomsday Preppers Bugged Out

SCIENCE 110 193 284 How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made How It’s Made San Francisco San Francisco San Francisco San Francisco How It’s Made How It’s Made

ID 111 192 285 Swamp Murders Å Wicked Attraction Å Who the Bleep Who the Bleep Happily Never After (N) Å Deadly Affairs An affair ends in murder. Who the Bleep Who the Bleep

HBO 302 300 501 (5:00) “First Comes Love” (2013) ‘NR’ (6:50) ›› “Rock of Ages” (2012, Musical) Julianne Hough. ‘PG-13’ Å “Clear History” (2013, Comedy) Larry David. Premiere. Å (:45) The Newsroom Å Hard Knocks

MAX 320 310 515 (5:30) ›‡ “This Means War” (2012) (:15) ››‡ “The Man With the Iron Fists” ( 2012) RZA, Cung Le. ‘NR’ Å (:10) Strike Back Å ›› “Taken 2” (2012) Liam Neeson. Premiere. ‘NR’ Å (:45) Strike Back

SHOW 340 318 545 (:15) ››› “50/50” (2011, Comedy-Drama) Joseph Gordon-Levitt. ‘R’ Å ›››‡ “Shakespeare in Love” (1998) Joseph Fiennes, Geoffrey Rush. ‘R’ Å (:05) ››› “Our Idiot Brother” (2011) Paul Rudd. ‘R’ Å (:35) Ray Donovan

Page 13: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

LAKE CITY REPORTER      NASCAR      FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013   3B

3BNASCAR

Even before the green flag fell to start Sunday’s Sprint Cup race at Pocono Raceway, defending Cup champion Brad Keselowski had a great weekend.

He traveled to Iowa Speedway to run the No. 22 Ford for Penske Racing in Saturday’s Nationwide Series race at Iowa Speedway and overcame a pit penalty and an overheating engine to score his third straight victory behind the wheel of that car, the other two coming at Richmond and Kentucky earlier this year.

And while he was en route from Pocono to Iowa, he got a win at Pocono as a team owner, as Ryan Blaney drove Keselowski’s No. 29 Ford to victory in the Camping World Truck Series race Saturday at Pocono.

Keselowski, who finished sixth in the Cup race at Pocono and moved to 12th in the standings, just seven points out of the top 10, said overcoming setbacks at Iowa was satisfying and a momentum-builder.

“As a driver, those are probably some of the most difficult moments, knowing you have a fast race car and circumstances are playing against you,” Keselowski told reporters at Iowa. “There are two ways you can react to that. You can let the moment define you, or you can define the moment.”

For the 19-year-old Blaney, his second career Truck Series victory saw him prevail on a green-white-checkered-flag restart

after losing out on an earlier try.

On the second attempt at a green-white-check-ered-flag finish, Blaney started on the outside, but surged past rookie German Quiroga Jr. to take a lead he would not relinquish. Miguel Paludo finished second, with Quiroga third.

On the previous restart, Quiroga, with a push from Paludo, took the lead from Blaney, but a caution set up another restart.

“It’s hard to keep the lead on a restart if you’re the leader,” Blaney told reporters at Pocono. “But we were fortunate enough to be on the front row on that last restart and capitalized on it.”

Veteran Todd Bodine, driving in a one-race effort for Turner Motorsports, was poised to take a storybook win when he held the lead on a restart with four of the scheduled 50 laps to go.

But like other leaders after him, he wound up getting shuffled back on the restart and

spun. He came back to finish 11th.With his eighth-place finish, Matt Crafton

extended his Truck Series points lead to 52 over 12th-finishing Jeb Burton.

Blaney’s win boosted him five spots in the standings to third, 62 behind Crafton.

“I am confident that this is going to give our team the momentum needed to make a run at this year’s championship, with plenty of more wins in between,” Blaney said.

‘Wind Tunnel’ ends 11-year

run with demise of SPEEDOne of the most popular racing

shows on TV signs off for the final time on Sunday.“Wind Tunnel,” hosted by veteran

broadcaster Dave Despain, will end its 11-year run on the SPEED chan-nel, which is changing over to Fox Sports 1 and an emphasis on all sports instead of focusing on motor-sports.“‘Wind Tunnel’ has been the most

relevant and popular show on auto racing for 11 years, and Dave [Despain] has been the conscience,” Robin Miller, a veteran motor sports journalist and regular contributor to the show, said in a release from SPEED. “If you mattered, you were on ‘Wind Tunnel.’ It embraced all forms of motorsports and leaves a void that won’t be filled.”

FOX-TV picks up TV rights to

more Cup, Nationwide racesThe FOX television network and

NASCAR made it official last week, announcing that Fox would pick up broadcast rights to three more Cup races and the first 14 Nationwide Series races of the season, begin-ning in 2015. NBC has obtained the broadcast rights to the remaining Cup and Nationwide races, and Fox has secured the entire Camping World Truck Series schedule. Both new arrangements begin in 2015 and continue through the 2024 sea-son.

NUMERICALLYSPEAKING

Sprint Cup victories at Watkins Glen by Tony Stewart, tops

among all drivers.

Laps led in the past eight Cup races at Watkins

Glen by Kyle Busch, tops among all drivers.

Drivers in the top 10 in Sprint Cup points who have led just

one lap at Watkins Glen in their careers: Clint Bowyer, Carl Edwards and Matt Kenseth.

Driver in the top 10 in Cup points with no laps led at

Watkins Glen: Kasey Kahne.

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With the start of the Chase for the Sprint Cup just six weeks away, several likely con-tenders appear to be hitting their strides while others seem stuck in a rut of mediocre finishes.At Pocono Raceway on Sunday, Jimmie

Johnson once again appeared to have the car to beat, but he blew a right-front tire while leading and smacked the wall. But in a show of strength that could be a deciding factor in the 10-race Chase, his team patched up the car and he drove it to a 13th-place finish, which allowed him to increase his points lead over second-place Clint Bowyer from 75 to 77 points.And while Johnson was overcoming his

setback, his Hendrick Motorsports team-mates surged to the front, with Kasey Kahne outdueling Jeff Gordon to get the win, while Dale Earnhardt Jr. fin-ished fifth. Brickyard 400 winner Ryan Newman, who runs Hendrick cars and engines, overcame slow pit work by his Stewart-Haas Racing team to finish fourth and move up one spot in the standings to 15th.Kurt Busch, whose single-car Furniture

Row Racing team has been plagued by inconsistency for much of the season, had a strong Pocono run, finishing third and moving up one spot in the standings to 13th, just 11 points out of 10th place, which is the final spot guaranteed a Chase berth after the regular season fina-le at Richmond International Raceway on Sept. 7.Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick held

on to their points positions, Edwards third and Harvick fourth, but neither were fac-tors at Pocono.Edwards finished 11th despite a penalty

for speeding on pit road, and Harvick was 17th.For Kahne, the race was his to lose once

Johnson crashed. He wound up leading a race-high 66 laps en route to his second win of the season, but he almost lost the win to Gordon, who passed him on the next-to-last restart.The race’s final caution flag gave Kahne

one more chance, and he drove to the out-side of Gordon into Turn One and held on for the final two circuits.“I had some help from Kurt Busch,

pushed me down the frontstretch, and I just drove into [Turn] One as far as I felt

I could, and I got some speed and momen-tum down the back and beat Jeff to Turn Two,” Kahne said. “That was kind of the race at that point. Once I cleared him get-ting into Two, from there it was just don’t make a mistake and try to run the quick lap on that last one.”Gordon said he thought he made the

right move by driving to the inside on the last restart, but Kahne was too strong on the outside.“I thought I did everything I needed to

do, and I looked in my mirror and I really thought that the inside lane got a good run on Kasey, so I thought all I needed to do was get in here and get the bottom and I’d be good,” Gordon said. “But, man, he got a killer run and blasted on the outside of me. Caught me by surprise. In that case, and in that scenario, it just kills your momentum, so I feel fortunate to finish second.”Gordon has five top-10 finishes in the

past six races and he’s headed to Watkins Glen, where he has four career victories, but he said his Pocono finish is the best sign in a while that his team is Chase material.“I feel like we’ve pulled together some

decent finishes, but it hasn’t been pretty,” Gordon said. “[Pocono] was an impressive run for us internally. Just well-executed ... good [pit] stops. Everything just kind of went our way. I felt like we finally actually went out and earned that one.”

And he’s upbeat about his prospects for this week’s race on the road course at Watkins Glen, especially after a second-place finish on the Cup circuit’s other road course at Sonoma, Calif.“I felt like we learned a lot at the end

of the second half of the race at Watkins Glen last year,” he said. “We kind of did a test more for Watkins Glen than we did for Sonoma prior to Sonoma, so I’m hoping that pays off.”For Kahne, a Chase berth seems much

more secure. He’s eighth in the stand-ings, 18 points ahead of 11th-place Tony Stewart, but his two victories put him in good position to take a wild card berth should he drop out of the top 10.He said his dominant Pocono victory

“gives myself confidence and gives the whole team confidence. It closes the gap.”And he said that making the Chase is

very important.“The Chase is what it’s all about in

NASCAR,” he said. “You need to make it for the sponsors, for the teams.“We’ve been right there on the edge with

the way our summer went. So it was nice to get two wins. It gives us much more hope going in. We’ll just start a lot closer.”Kahne’s crew chief, Kenny Francis, said

the second victory makes his job easier for the next few weeks.“It gives you a little more flexibility to be

able to take more risks in the upcoming races,” he said. “You’ve already got your two wins. There is a good chance you’re going to make the Chase either way, so now you can maybe take a little more risk.”

Jeff Gordon (left) congratulates Kasey Kahne on his GoBowling.com 400 win.

Kasey Kahne outduels Jeff Gordon after final restart to take the trophy at Pocono Raceway

Keselowski overcomes engine problems and penalties to win Nationwide Series race at Iowa

Brad Keselowski takes the checkered flag in the Nationwide Series race at Iowa Speedway.

NEXTUP...

Race: Zippo 200Where: Watkins Glen InternationalWhen: Saturday, 2 p.m. (ET)TV: ABC2012 Winner: Carl Edwards

NATIONWIDE SERIES CAMPING WORLD TRUCKS

Race: Michigan National Guard 200Where: Michigan International SpeedwayWhen: August 17, 12:30 p.m. (ET)TV: SPEED2012 Winner: Nelson Piquet Jr.

SPRINT CUP

Race: Cheez-It 355 at The GlenWhere: Watkins Glen InternationalWhen: Sunday, 1 p.m. (ET)TV: ESPN2012 Winner: Marcos Ambrose (right)

NOTEBOOK

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SPRINT CUP STANdINGS

1. Jimmie Johnson, 772

2. Clint Bowyer, 695

3. Carl Edwards, 688

4. Kevin Harvick, 675

5. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 656

6. Kyle Busch, 646

7. Matt Kenseth, 638

8. Kasey Kahne, 612

9. Jeff Gordon, 602

10. Greg Biffle, 599

1

Tony Stewart, who spends as much of his spare time as pos-sible racing sprint cars, flipped his sprinter five times last week while racing in a World of Outlaws event at Ohsweken Speedway in Ontario, Canada.

While his flip wasn’t especially nasty or all that uncommon for sprint car racers, it did get lots of attention because of Stewart’s primary job as a Sprint Cup Series driver and team owner.

At Pocono Raceway on Friday, Stewart explained to the assembled media, some of whom have called on him to curtail his extracurricular racing and concentrate on Cup, that the flip really was no big deal.

“You mortals have got to learn, you guys need to watch more sprint car videos and stuff,” he said. “It was not a big deal. It’s starting to get annoying this week about that.

“That was just an average sprint car wreck. When they wreck, they get upside down like that. That was not a big deal. I guarantee you there were 15 to 20 guys across the country that flipped just like that this weekend and were just fine just like we were.”

Stewart bounced back and finished fifth in the main event.Ironically, it was at Ohsweken two years ago that Stewart

won a World of Outlaws feature that started a win streak

that saw him race his way into the Chase, win five of the 10 Chase races and the 2011 Cup championship.

“Maybe it sparked something then,” Stewart said back in 2011 of his Ohsweken win. He went on to say that while those around him feared for his safety racing sprinters, he feels it was well worth the risks.

“It energized me,” he said. “It was like hitting a reset button.”

But those worried about Stewart’s safety have reason to be concerned. In May, Josh Burton was killed in a crash in Indiana. In June, one of Stewart’s fellow NASCAR drivers, Jason Leffler, died in a sprint car crash. And on Sunday, sprint car legend Kramer Williamson died from injuries suf-fered the night before when he flipped numerous times at Lincoln Speedway in Abbottstown, Pa.

Williamson, who started racing in 1968, had been inducted into the National Sprint Car Hall of Fame in 2008 and the United Racing Co. Hall of Fame in 2010.

Tony Stewart downplays World of Outlaws sprint car flip at Ohsweken Speedway

Tony Stewart finished ninth at Pocono.

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Kahne celebrates his win at Pocono Raceway on Sunday.

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Page 14: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

4B LAKECITYREPORTERADVICE & PUZZLES FRIDAY&sATuRDAY,AuGusT9-10,2013

DEAR ABBY: My father-in-law died two weeks ago. The services were beauti-ful. Many people sent flow-ers, but one arrangement -- a bouquet of white flowers -- arrived anonymously. I didn’t think much about it, just that someone wanted to express sympathy. Now my mother-in-law has become frantic with concern about the flowers. She sobs over not knowing who sent them and -- we think -- suspects they came from an old or not-so-old flame.

My in-laws were married for more than 50 years, and it is heartbreaking to see her compound her grief with these thoughts. We have suggested vari-ous reasons that someone might have sent the flow-ers anonymously, but she refuses to accept them.

Is sending flowers this way unusual? Or are there good reasons to do it? For the record, is it even good manners to send flowers to a funeral anonymously? Or is my mother-in-law’s reac-tion normal? -- GRIEVING IN GEORGETOWN, TEXAS

DEAR GRIEVING: Your mother-in-law is grieving. She is fragile right now, and possibly not thinking straight. A card may have been sent with the bou-quet that was somehow lost in transit.

That she was married to her husband for 50 years and now suspects he was unfaithful because of a bouquet of flowers at the man’s funeral is a sad reflection on their mar-riage. She should discuss this with her spiritual adviser, if she has one, or a grief therapist.

** ** ** DEAR ABBY: I am in my early 30s and have been married for five years. My husband and I decided

to have a baby, and five months ago I found out I was pregnant. When I told my mom the great news, she wasn’t happy to hear it. She doesn’t care. All she cares about is how “fat” I’m going to get.

My mother never wants to talk about anything baby-related. If I complain about an ache or pain, she quickly says, “It’s because you’re fat!” The last time I went to the OB/GYN for a checkup, Mom didn’t even ask if everything was OK. All she said was, “How much weight have you gained?”

It hurts me so much that she treats me and her future grandchild this way. I almost feel like having this baby was a mistake. Please help me. I don’t know what to do anymore. -- ALMOST IN TEARS IN OHIO

DEAR ALMOST IN TEARS: Stop depending so much on your mother’s approval and you’ll have a happier pregnancy. The person you should talk to about your weight is your OB/GYN. If your weight is such that it might affect your health or your baby’s, you need to know it ASAP. Your doctor can refer you to a nutritionist if you need guidance about your diet.

Your relationship with your mother doesn’t appear to be particu-larly positive. As you grow closer to motherhood, talk more with your girlfriends, talk more to your husband and less to your mother.

** ** **DEAR ABBY: I don’t

go to nightclubs often, so I’m curious as to what the protocol is for this. Sometimes, in the ladies’ room, there is a woman there with toiletries, gum, cosmetics, etc. Before you can get your own, she puts soap in your hand and gives you a paper towel. There is a bowl on the counter for people to leave tips. The club manager says she isn’t an employee of the club, but simply looking to make tips. I understand this.

My question: Am I supposed to tip her just once for the evening, or

each time I use the ladies’ room? -- INQUISITIVE CLUBBER IN FLORIDA

DEAR CLUBBER: Tip the attendant each time you use the bathroom and she hands you the soap and towel -- the standard rate is 50 cents to a dol-lar. However, if you tip the person generously the first time, you shouldn’t feel obligated to do it again if you need to return.

** ** **DEAR ABBY: I’m 16 and

have a 13-year-old sister. Our parents are divorced, and we live with our moth-er. We used to see our dad on visitations every other weekend, but he moved away, so now we see him for two weeks in the sum-mer and one week during Christmas. We talk to him a lot and have a good rela-tionship. We’re scheduled to visit him soon.

Dad lives in a one-bed-room apartment and when we’re there, he lets us stay in the bedroom and he sleeps on the couch. He has just told us he is “coming out of the closet” and has a partner who is living with him. They plan on getting married now that it’s legal. When I asked him what the sleep-ing arrangements will be, he said he hasn’t figured it out yet, but will work it out.

We’re really not sur-prised to find out that Dad is gay, and we can accept that. But we’re really uncomfortable about spending two weeks in a one-bedroom apartment along with his partner when we don’t even know what the sleeping arrange-ments will be. We’d like to find a way to get out of the visit, but we don’t want to hurt our dad, and because of the visitation agreement, he has the right to have us for two weeks every summer. What can we do? -- UNCOMFORTABLE IN CALIFORNIA

DEAR UNCOMFORTABLE: Of this I am sure, your father and his partner will wel-come you with open arms and do everything in their power to show you a good time. You and your sister

should go and try to be gracious guests. I agree, the space may be cramped, but it’s only for two weeks. After they marry, they may move to larger quarters.

If you don’t enjoy the visit, keep in mind that in two years you will be 18 and no longer “obligated” to spend three weeks with your dad. But if you give this a chance, you may be very pleasantly surprised, so think positive.

** ** **DEAR ABBY: My father-

in-law is considering hav-ing my two precious little girls’ names tattooed on his arm. I’m not a fan of tattoos and would prefer my daughters’ names not be displayed in this man-ner.

Do my husband and I have a right to ask him not to do this? Our history with him hasn’t been the most pleasant because he can be manipulative and hard to deal with. I’m afraid if we tell him we are opposed, it will encourage him all the more to get the tattoo. How should we approach this without causing a ruckus? -- AGAINST IT IN OKLAHOMA

DEAR AGAINST IT: You can offer your opinion, but there is no way you and your husband can control what he does with his body. Because the subject has already come up for discussion, it would not be rude to raise it again and explain NICELY that if he hasn’t done it yet, you would prefer the girls’ names not be displayed that way.

Of course, the decision is his to make, and while it may not be to your liking, I’m sure your father-in-law considers it to be a loving gesture and a sign (liter-ally) that he’s proud of his granddaughters. If the tattoo has already been applied, then please, for the sake of family harmo-ny, try to view it from that perspective.

HOROSCOPES

DEAR ABBY

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Follow a unique path that will motivate and inspire you. Consider how you can use your skills and get the highest return for what you can do. Your ideas are spot-on, but you mustn’t let your personal life interfere with your pro-fessional plans. ★★★

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Pursue your creative interests. Your hard work will pay off, and compli-ments will boost your con-fidence. Getting involved in community or neighbor-hood events will broaden your perspective as well as enhance your friendships. Romance is in the stars. ★★★★★

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Tie up loose ends that pertain to your vocational life. Once you have put work behind you, it will be much easier to enjoy fam-ily, friends and personal activities. Home-improve-ment projects will go well and keep you out of trouble. ★★

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Your strength and strong family values will keep you moving in the right direction person-ally and professionally. Someone may try to push you off course, but by showing love, respect and kindness you will end up getting your way. ★★★★

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Rethink your spending

habits, and you’ll figure out a way to cut your over-head. Greater discipline at home will encourage a tight budget without forgo-ing the fundamentals that are important to you. A change of location will do you good. ★★★

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emotions will be close to the surface. Express your feelings, and you’ll find out exactly where you stand. Love and romance are on the rise, and engag-ing in activities that are conducive to enhancing important relationships should be on your agenda. ★★★

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Sit tight and avoid making any rash deci-sion or moves. If you take a wait-and-see attitude, you will gain self-respect. Use your time wisely by researching your options. Having a plan will increase your confidence. ★★★

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Consider what you want to add to your resume. Finding a way to incorporate things you like to do into a job that interests you will pay off. Romance is on the rise, and plans for an engaging evening should be made. ★★★★

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Face whatever questions you are asked head-on. Clear the air before rumors are started

or someone complains. Once you have a clear con-science, you will be able to enjoy what lies ahead. A contract will influence your future. ★★

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Personal contracts or joint assets should be amended to fit the changing economic cli-mate. A commitment will bring positive changes to the way you live. Personal changes at home will brighten your day and encourage greater inter-action with the ones you love. ★★★★★

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Take care of

work-related matters intel-ligently. Being practical and taking care of your interests should be your first priorities. Don’t allow a partnership to come between you and your common sense. Don’t hesitate when change is required. ★★★

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Make special plans with someone you love to spend time with. Exploring what you share in common with someone or expand-ing on plans for the future will enhance your relation-ship. People from your past are likely to pop back into your life. ★★★

THE LAST WORDEugenia Last

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Puzzle Solutionson the next page.

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FRIDAY & sAtuRDAY, AuGust 9-10, 2013 PUZZLES & COMICS LAKE CItY REPORtER 5B

DILBERT

BABY BLUES

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEYB.C.

FRANK & ERNEST

FOR BETTER OR WORSE

ZITS

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

SNUFFY SMITH

GARFIELD

CELEBRITY CIPHER

CLASSIC PEANUTS

PUZZLE ANSWERS

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6B LAKE CITY REPORTER CLASSIFIED FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013

Legal

REGISTRATION OFFICTITIOUS NAMESWe the undersigned, being duly sworn, do hereby declare under oath that the names of all persons interest-ed in the business or profession carried on under the name of: TRUE COLORS TRANSPORT16045 31ST DRIVEWELLBORN, FL 32094Contact Phone Number:(386) 963-2948 and the extent of the interest of each, is as follows:Name: PATRICIA OLIVEIRAExtent of Interest 100%by /s/ PATRICIA OLIVEIRA

STATE OF FLORIDACOUNTY OF COLUMBIASworn to and subscribed before me this 7TH day of AUGUST, 2013.By: /s/ KATHLEEN A. RIOTTO

05540354AUGUST 9, 2013

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGCONCERNING A VARIANCE AS PROVIDED FOR IN THE COLUM-BIA COUNTY LAND DEVELOP-MENT REGULATIONSBY THE BOARD OF ADJUST-MENT OF COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA, NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that, pursuant to the Colum-bia County Land Development Reg-ulations, as amended, hereinafter re-ferred to as the Land Development Regulations, as amended, objections, recommendations and comments concerning the variance, as described below, will be heard by the Board of Adjustment of Columbia County, Florida, at a public hearing on Au-gust 22, 2013, at 7:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, in the School Board Adminis-trative Complex located at 372 West Duval Street, Lake City, Florida.V 0292, a petition by Crews Engi-neering Service, LLC, as agent for Monsta Clothing Company Inc., to request a variance be granted from the requirements of Section 4.2.17.2 of the Land Development Regula-tions to allow for a decrease in the number of off-street paved parking spaces from 10 to seven which would result in seven paved and three unpaved off-street parking spaces within a COMMERCIAL, GENERAL (CG) zoning district in accordance with a site plan submit-ted as part of a petition filed July 22, 2013, to be located on property de-scribed, as follows:A parcel of land lying within Section 18, Township 4 South, Range 17 East, Columbia County, Florida. Be-ing more particularly described, as follows: Commence at the Northeast corner of Lot 19 of the Century Oaks Subdivision, as recorded in the Pub-lic Records of Columbia County, Florida; thence South 88°28'58" West, along the North line of said Lot 19, of the Century Oaks Subdivi-sion as recorded in the Public Re-cords of Columbia County, Florida, 43.64 feet to the Point of Beginning; thence continue South 88°28'58" West, along said Lot 19 Century Oaks of the Subdivision as recorded in the Public Records of Columbia County, Florida, 172.76 feet; thence South 00°53'23" West 140.0 feet; thence North 87°56'44" East 155.10 feet; thence North 08°08'11" East 140.41 feet to the Point of Begin-ning.Containing 0.52 acre, more or less. The public hearing may be continued to one or more future dates. Any in-terested party shall be advised that the date, time and place of any con-tinuation of the public hearing shall be announced during the public hear-ing and that no further notice con-cerning the matter will be published, unless said continuation exceeds six calendar weeks from the date of the above referenced public hearing.At the aforementioned public hear-ing, all interested parties may appear to be heard with respect to the var-iance.Copies of the variance are available for public inspection at the Office of the County Planner, County Admin-istrative Offices located at 135 Northeast Hernando Avenue, Lake City, Florida, during regular business hours.All persons are advised that if they decide to appeal any decision made at the above referenced public hear-ing, they will need a record of the proceedings, and that, for such pur-pose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the tes-timony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, persons need-ing a special accommodation or an interpreter to participate in the pro-ceeding should contact Lisa K. B. Roberts, at least seven (7) days prior to the date of the hearing. Ms. Rob-erts may be contacted by telephone at (386)758-1005 or by Telecommu-nication Device for Deaf at (386)758-2139.

05540333August 9, 2013

Legal

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTIONCASE NO.: 12-00122JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NA-TIONAL ASSOCIATION,Plaintiff,vs.GUERRY BROCK ESPENSHIPA/K/A GUERRY B. ESPENSHIP, et al,Defendant(s).NOTICE OF RESCHEDULED SALENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Pur-suant to an Order Rescheduling Foreclosure Sale dated July 22, 2013, and entered in Case No. 12-2012-CA-000122 of the Circuit Court of the Third Judicial Circuit in and for Columbia County, Florida in which JPMorgan Chase Bank, Na-tional Association, is the Plaintiff and Guerry Brock Espenship a/k/a Guerry B. Espenship, Cach, LLC, Citifinancial Equity Services, Inc., The Unknown Spouse of Guerry Brock Espenship n/k/a Frieda Espen-ship, are defendants, I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in/on on the third floor of the Columbia County Courthouse at 173 N.E. Her-nando Avenue, Lake City, Florida 32055, Columbia County, Florida at 11:00AM on the 4th day of Septem-ber, 2013, the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment of Foreclosure:PARCEL 3 YOUNG ACRES, AN UNRECORDED SUBDIVISION IN SECTION 31, TOWNSHIP 5 SOUTH, RANGE 17 EAST, CO-LUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA.A PART OF THE SE 1/4 OF THE NW 1/4 OF SECTION 31, TOWN-SHIP 5 SOUTH, RANGE 17 EAST, BEING MORE PARTICULARLYDESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:COMMENCE AT THE NORTH-EAST CORNER OF THE SE 1/4 OF THE NW 1/4 OF SAID SEC-TION 31 AND RUN S 89 DE-GREES 36 MINUTES 01 SEC-ONDS W, ALONG THE NORTH LINE THEREOF 338.94 FEET FOR A POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 06 MINUTES 20 SECONDS W, 1322.64 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE THEREOF; THENCE S 89 DEGREES 35 MINUTES 27 SEC-ONDS W, 329.68 FEET; THENCE N 00 DEGREES 06 MINUTES 20 SECONDS E, 1322.69 FEET TO THE NORTH LINE THEREOF; THENCE N 89 DEGREES 36 MI-NUTES 01 SECONDS E, ALONG SAID NORTH LINE 329.68 FEETTO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA.SUBJECT TO EXISTING MAIN-TAINED ROAD R/W ALONG SOUTH LINE THEREOF.TOGETHER WITH A MOBILE HOME AS A PERMANENT FIX-TURE AND APPURTENANCE THERETO, DESCRIBED AS: A1998 GRAND DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME BEARING IDEN-TIFICATION NUMBER(S) GAGMTD3312A AND GAGMTD3312B AND TITLE NUMBER(S) 0081008087 AND 0081008228.A/K/A 431 SW REGIMENT PL, LAKE CITY, FL 32024-5366 Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, oth-er than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim within 60 days after the sale.Dated in Columbia County, Florida this 23rd day of July, 2013.Clerk of the Circuit CourtColumbia County, FloridaBy: /s/ P.A. PerryDeputy ClerkIf you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to participate in this proceed-ing, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assis-tance. Persons with a disability who need any accommodation in order to participate should call Jacquetta Bradley, ADA Coordinator, Third Judicial Circuit, P.O. Box 1569, Lake City, Florida, at (386) 719-7428 within two (2) working days of your receipt of this notice; if you are hearing impaired call (800) 955-8771; if your voice impaired, call (800) 955-8770. To file response please contact Columbia County Clerk of Court, 173 NE. Hernando Ave., Lake City, FL 32056-2069; Fax: (386) 758-1337.

05537494August 2, 9, 2013

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTYCIVIL DIVISIONBAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, L.P.,Plaintiff,vs.CASE NO. 08-000721-CAJAMES CARTER A/K/A JAMES K. CARTER, JR. A/K/A JAMES KEITH CARTER, JR.; THE UN-KNOWN SPOUSE OF JAMES CARTER A/K/A JAMES K. CAR-TER, JR. A/K/A JAMES KEITH CARTER, JR.; VELVA CARTER A/K/A VELVET J. CARTER A/K/AVELVA JEAN CARTER; THE UN-KNOWN SPOUSE OF VELVACARTER A/K/A VELVET J. CAR-TER A/K/A VELVA JEAN CAR-TER; IF LIVING, INCLUDING

Legal

ANY UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF SAID DEFENDANT(S), IF RE-MARRIED, AND IF DECEASED, THE RESPECTIVE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, CREDITORS, LIE-NORS, AND TRUSTEES, AND ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIM-ING BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST THE NAMED DE-FENDANT(S); STATE OF FLORI-DA; WHETHER DISSOLVED OR PRESENTLY EXISTING, TO-GETHER WITH ANY GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, CREDITORS, LIE-NORS, OR TRUSTEES OF SAID DEFENDANT(S) AND ALL OTH-ER PERSONS CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER, OR AGAINST DEFENDANT(S); UN-KNOWN TENANT #1; UN-KNOWN TENANT #2; Defendant(s)NOTICE OF SALENotice is hereby given that, pursuant to a Final Summary Judgment of Foreclosure entered in the above-styled cause, in the Circuit Court of Columbia County, Florida, I will sell the property situate in Columbia County, Florida, described as:COMMENCE AT THE NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE NORTH-EAST 1/4 OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 6 SOUTH, RANGE 16 EAST, COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA, AND RUN THENCE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 03 MI-NUTES 14 SECONDS EASTALONG THE WEST LINE OF THE EAST 1/2 OF SAID SECTION 7, 22.91 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF ICHETUCKNEE ROAD (ACOUNTY MAINTAINED GRAD-ED ROAD); THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 26 MINUTES 50 SEC-ONDS EAST ALONG SAID SOUTH LINE OF ICHETUCKNEE ROAD, 561.07 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 05 MI-NUTES 20 SECONDS EASTSTILL ALONG SAID SOUTH LINE OF ICHETUCKNEE ROAD, 785.95 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST, 549.74 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST, 671.46 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 38 MINUTES 15 SECONDS EAST650.50 FEET; THENCE NORTH 00 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS EAST, 671.46 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 38 MINUTES 15 SECONDS WEST, 650.50 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. THE WEST 30 FEETOF SAID LANDS BEING SUB-JECT TO EASEMENT FOR IN-GRESS AND EGRESS. SAID LANDS BEING A PART OF THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 12.TOGETHER WITH:60-FT ROAD EASEMENTA STRIP OF LAND 60 FEET IN WIDTH BEING 30 FEET EACH SIDE OF A CENTERLINE DE-SCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:COMMENCE AT THE NORTH-WEST CORNER OF THE NORTH-EAST 1/4 OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 6 SOUTH, RANGE 16 EAST, COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA AND RUN THENCE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 03 MI-NUTES 14 SECONDS EASTALONG THE WEST LINE OF THE EAST 1/2 OF SAID SECTION 7, 22.91 FEET TO THE SOUTH LINE OF ICHETUCKNEE ROAD (ACOUNTY MAINTAINED GRAD-ED ROAD); THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 26 MINUTES 50 SEC-ONDS EAST ALONG SAID SOUTH LINE OF ICHETUCKNEE ROAD, 561.07 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 05 MI-NUTES 20 SECONDS EASTSTILL ALONG SAID LINE OF ICHETUCKNEE ROAD, 785.95 FEET; TO THE POINT OF BEGIN-NING. THENCE SOUTH 00 DE-GREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST, 1,319.95 FEET TO THE REFERENCE POINT "A"; THENCE CONTINUE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST 572.72 FEET TO REFERENCE POINT "B"; THENCE CONTINUE SOUTH 00 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST, 743.47 FEET TO REFERENCE POINT "C"; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 38 MINUTES 15 SECONDS WEST, 664.25 FEET TO THE CENTER POINT OF A CUL-DE-SAC HAV-ING A RADIUS OF 50 FEET AND THE POINT OF TERMINATION. ALSO BEGIN AT REFERENCE POINT "A" AND RUN THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 38 MI-NUTES 15 SECONDS WEST, 668.85 FEET TO THE CENTER POINT OF A CUL-DE-SAC HAV-ING A RADIUS OF 50 FEET AND THE POINT OF TERMINATION, ALSO BEING AT REFERENCE POINT "B"; AND RUN THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 38 MI-NUTES 15 SECONDS EAST, 1,300.53 FEET TO REFERENCE POINT "D"; THENCE CONTINUE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 38 MI-NUTES 15 SECONDS EAST, 1,300.06 FEET TO REFERENCE POINT "E"; THENCE NORTH 00 DEGREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS EAST, 671.46 FEET TO THE CENTER POINT OF A CUL-DE-SAC HAVING A RADIUS OF 50 FEET AND THE POINT OF TERMINATION. ALSO BEGIN AT

Legal

REFERENCE POINT "D" AND RUN THENCE NORTH 00 DE-GREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS EAST, 671.46 FEET TO THE CENTER POINT OF A CUL-DE-SAC HAVING A RADIUS OF 50 FEET AND THE POINT OF TERMINATION; ALSO BEGIN ATREFERENCE POINT "D" AND RUN THENCE SOUTH 00 DE-GREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST 671.46 FEET TO THE CENTER POINT OF A CUL-DE-SAC HAVING A RADIUS OF 50 FEET AND THE POINT OF TERMINATION; ALSO BEGIN ATREFERENCE POINT "E" AND RUN THENCE SOUTH 00 DE-GREES 20 MINUTES 48 SEC-ONDS WEST, 671.46 FEET TO THE CENTER POINT OF A CUL-DE-SAC HAVING A RADIUS OF 50 FEET AND THE POINT OF TERMINATION. SAID EASE-MENTS BEING A PART OF THE NORTHEAST 1/4 OF SECTION 12 AND THE NORTHWEST 1/4 OF SECTION 7, TOWNSHIP 6, RANGE 17 EAST. To include a:2001 Fleetwood Enterprises VIN FLFL170A28852AV21 843687362001 Fleetwood Enterprises VIN FLFL170B28852AV21 84368824A/K/A213 S.W. Choctaw AvenueFort White, FL 32038at public sale, to the highest and best bidder, for cash, West door of the Columbia County Courthouse, 173 N.E. Hernando Street, Lake City, FL32055 at 11:00 AM, on August 28, 2013.Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, oth-er than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens, must file a claim within 60 days after the sale.Witness, my hand and seal of this court on the 22nd day of July, 2013.CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURTBy /s/ B. ScippioDeputy ClerkAMERICANS WITH DISABILI-TIES ACT: If you are a person with a disability who requires accommo-dations in order to participate in a court proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, the provision of cer-tain assistance. Individuals with a disability who require special accom-modations in order to participate in a court proceeding should contact the ADA Coordinator, 173 NE Hernan-do Avenue, Room 408, Lake City, FL 32055, (386) 719-7428, within two (2) business days of receipt of notice to appear. Individuals who are hearing impaired should call (800) 955-8771. Individuals who are voice impaired should call (800) 955-8770.

05540309August 9, 16, 2013

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDACASE NO. 13-350-CAWILLIAM J. HUNTER,individually and as Trustee of theWilliam J. Hunter, Sr. RevocableTrust, an unrecorded trust agreement dated February 17, 1998,Plaintiff,v.JEFFERY J. PERKINS and his wife, JULIA PERKINS; and ANYUNKNOWN PERSON(S) INPOSSESSION OF THE SUBJECTPROPERTY,Defendants.NOTICE OF ACTIONTO: JEFFERY J. PERKINSJULIA PERKINS740 SE St. Johns StreetLake City, Florida 32025YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a mortgage on the fol-lowing property in Columbia Coun-ty, Florida:Lot 1, MERLE’S ADDITION, a sub-division according to the plat thereof as recorded in Plat Book 3, Page 78, public records, Columbia County, Florida.Tax Parcel No.: 00-00-00-13367-000.has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on MARK E. FEAGLE, Plaintiff's attor-ney, whose address is 153 NE Madi-son Street, Post Office Box 1653, Lake City, Florida 32056-1653, on or before September 18, 2013, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on the Plaintiff's attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise, a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint or peti-tion.DATED this 5th day of August, 2013.P. DEWITT CASON Clerk of CourtBy: /s/ B. ScippioDeputy Clerk(COURT SEAL)

05540336AUGUST 9, 16, 23, 30, 2013

Legal

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDAPROBATE DIVISIONIN RE ESTATE OF:File No. 13-132-CPOCIE BROWN TAYLOR,Deceased.NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATIONThe administration of the estate of OCIE BROWN TAYLOR, deceased, is pending in the Circuit Court for Columbia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 173 NE Hernando Avenue, Lake City, FL 32055. The estate is testate, and the dates of the decedent's will and any codicils are June 3, 2008 . The names and addresses of the per-sonal representative and the personal representative's attorney are set forth below. The fiduciary lawyer-client privilege in Florida Statutes §90.5021 applies with respect to the personal representative and any at-torney employed by the personal rep-resentative.Any interested person on whom a copy of the notice of administration is served who challenges the validity of the will or any codicils, qualifica-tion of the personal representative, venue, or jurisdiction of the court is required to file any objection with the court in the manner provided in the Florida Probate Rules WITHIN THE TIME REQUIRED BY LAW, which is on or before the date that is 3 months after the date of service of a copy of the Notice of Administra-tion on that person, or those objec-tions are forever barred.A petition for determination of ex-empt property is required to be filed by or on behalf of any person enti-tled to exempt property under § 732.402 WITHIN THE TIME RE-QUIRED BY LAW, which is on or before the later of the date that is 4 months after the date of service of a copy of the Notice of Administration on such person or the date that is 40 days after the date of termination of any proceeding involving the con-struction, admission to probate, or validity of the will or involving any other matter affecting any part of the exempt property, or the right of such person to exempt property is deemed waived.An election to take an elective share must be filed by or on behalf of the surviving spouse entitled to an elec-tive share under § 732.201 — 732.2155 WITHIN THE TIME RE-QUIRED BY LAW, which is on or before the earlier of the date that is 6 months after the date of service of a copy of the Notice of Administration on the surviving spouse, or an attor-ney in fact or a guardian of the prop-erty of the surviving spouse, or the date that is 2 years after the date of the decedent’s death. The time for filing an election to take an elective share may be extended as provided in the Florida Probate Rules.Signed on JUNE 20, 2013/S/ Laura Ann Fouraker-GardnerLaura Ann Fouraker-GardnerAttorney for Personal RepresentativeEmail: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Bar No. 0069973Laura Ann Fouraker-Gardner, PAP.O. Box 2081Lake City, FL 32056-2081Telephone: 386-752-9803Personal Representative/s/ Larry N. TaylorLARRY N. TAYLOR1750 SW Paloma CourtLake City, FL 32025

05540147August 2, 9, 2013

Code Enforcement BoardRequest for VolunteersColumbia CountyThe Columbia County Board of County Commissioners is seeking volunteers for the following posi-tions (2 vacancies):CODE ENFORCEMENT BOARDThe Columbia County Code En-forcement Board has the authority to impose administrative fines and oth-er non-criminal penalties. The Board provides an effective and inexpen-sive method of enforcing the ordi-nances adopted in Columbia County where a pending or repeated viola-tion continues to exist, as to all coun-ty ordinances.Members of the Code Enforcement Board shall be residents of Columbia County. Appointments to the Code Enforcement Board shall be made by the Board of County Commissioners on the basis of experience or interest in the fields of zoning and building control. The membership of the En-forcement Board shall, when possi-ble, include an architect, a business-man, an engineer, a general contrac-tor, a subcontractor, and a realtor. The term of office shall be for three (3) years .Persons interested in volunteering for appointment should submit their re-sume to:* Columbia County Board of County Commissioners* P.O. Box 1529, Lake City, Florida 32056-1529* Submittal must be made on or be-fore August 30th , 2013

05540325August 9, 16, 2013

Legal

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDACASE NO. 13-320-CASTANLEY C. THOMAS, SR. andSTANLEY C. THOMAS, JR.,Plaintiffs,v.PATRICIA DAVIS a/k/a PATRICIAO. DAVIS a/k/a PATRICIA D. DA-VIS; including any unknown spouses of said Defendant, heirs, devisees, grantees, assignees, lienors, cred-itors, trustees, or other claimants by, through, under or against any of them, and all un-known natural persons, if alive, and if dead or not known to be dead or alive, their unknown spouses, heirs, devisees, grantees, creditors or other persons claiming by, through or under them, and against all persons claiming any right, title or interest in and to the lands described herein,Defendants.NOTICE OF ACTIONTO: PATRICIA DAVIS a/k/a PATRICIA O. DAVIS a/k/a PATRI-CIA D. DAVIS; including any un-known spouses of said Defendant, heirs, devisees, grantees, assignees, lienors, creditors, trustees, or other claimants by, through, under or against any of them, and all un-known natural persons, if alive, and if dead or not known to be dead or alive, their unknown spouses, heirs, devisees, grantees, creditors or other persons claiming by, through or un-der them, and against all persons claiming any right, title or interest in and to the lands described herein.YOU ARE NOTIFIED that Plaintiff has filed a verified Complaint to Quiet Title in the above-styled court as to the following described proper-ty in Columbia County, Florida:TOWNSHIP 5 SOUTH - RANGE 16 EASTSection 15: Commence at the South-west corner of the Northeast 1/4, thence run North 343.78 feet to the Easterly right of way of State Road 47, thence run Northeast along right of way 499.08 feet for the Point of Beginning; thence continue North-east 31.20 feet, thence run East 770.96 feet, thence run South 455.13 feet, thence run West 506.57 feet, thence run Northeast 443.04 feet, thence run West 393.91 feet to the Point of Beginning. AKA Parcel “C”, in Columbia County, Florida.Tax Parcel No.: 15-5S-16-03622-021.has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on MARK E. FEAGLE, Plaintiff’s at-torney, whose address is 153 NE Madison Street, Lake City, Florida 32055, on or before September 18, 2013, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on the Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise, a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the com-plaint or petition.DATED this 5th day of August, 2013.P. DEWITT CASON Clerk of CourtBy: /s/ B. ScippioDeputy Clerk(COURT SEAL)

05540337AUGUST 9, 16, 23, 30, 2013

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGCONCERNING AN AMENDMENTTO THECOLUMBIA COUNTY COMPRE-HENSIVE PLANBY THE PLANNING AND ZON-ING BOARD OF COLUMBIACOUNTY, FLORIDA, SERVING ALSO AS THE LOCAL PLAN-NING AGENCY OF COLUMBIACOUNTY, FLORIDA, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, pursuant to Sections 163.3161 through 163.3248, Florida Statutes, as amended, and the Columbia County Land Develop-ment Regulations, as amended, here-inafter referred to as the Land Devel-opment Regulations, objections, rec-ommendations and comments con-cerning an amendment, as described below, will be heard by the Planning and Zoning Board of Columbia County, Florida, serving also as the Local Planning Agency of Columbia County, Florida, at a public hearing on August 22, 2013 at 7:15 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, in the School Board Ad-ministrative Complex located at 372 West Duval Street, Lake City, Flori-da.CPA 13-01, is an application by the Board of County Commissioners, to amend the text and Future Land Use Plan Map of the Comprehensive Plan, based upon an evaluation com-pleted by the County, to reflect changes in state requirements pur-suant to Section 163.3191, Florida Statutes, as amended.The public hearing may be continued to one or more future dates. Any in-terested party shall be advised that the date, time and place of any con-tinuation of the public hearing shall be announced during the public hear-ing and that no further notice con-cerning the matter will be published, unless said continuation exceeds six calendar weeks from the date of the above referenced public hearing.At the aforementioned public hear-ing, all interested parties may appear to be heard with respect to the amendment.

Published Monthly by the

Lake City Reporter

REPORTER ClassifiedsIn Print and On Line

www.lakecityreporter.com

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FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 CLASSIFIED LAKE CITY REPORTER 7B

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280 NW ZACK DRIVE

386-965-4300

Legal

Copies of the amendment are availa-ble for public inspection at the Office of the County Planner, County Ad-ministrative Offices located at 135 Northeast Hernando Avenue, Lake City, Florida, during regular business hours.All persons are advised that if they decide to appeal any decision made at the above referenced public hear-ing, they will need a record of the proceedings, and that, for such pur-pose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the tes-timony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, persons need-ing a special accommodation or an interpreter to participate in the pro-ceeding should contact Lisa K. B. Roberts, at least seven (7) days prior to the date of the hearing. Ms. Rob-erts may be contacted by telephone at (386)758-1005 or by Telecommu-nication Device for Deaf at (386)758-2139.

05540313August 9, 2013

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGCONCERNING AN AMENDMENTTO THE COLUMBIA COUNTYLAND DEVELOPMENT REGU-LATIONSBY THE PLANNING AND ZON-ING BOARD OF COLUMBIACOUNTY, FLORIDA, SERVING ALSO AS THE LOCAL PLAN-NING AGENCY OF COLUMBIACOUNTY, FLORIDA, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that, pursuant to Sections 163.3161 through 163.3248, Florida Statutes, as amended, and the Columbia County Land Develop-ment Regulations, as amended, here-inafter referred to as the Land Devel-opment Regulations, objections, rec-ommendations and comments con-cerning the amendment, as described below, will be heard by the Planning and Zoning Board of Columbia County, Florida, serving also as the Local Planning Agency of Columbia County, Florida, at a public hearing on August 22, 2013 at 7:15 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, in the School Board Ad-ministrative Complex located at 372 West Duval Street, Lake City, Flori-da.LDR 13-03, is an amendment by Mountaintop Ministries Worldwide, Inc., to amend the text of the Land Development Regulations by amend-ing Section 2.1 entitled, Definitions, General to add a definition for resi-dential facility for the aged and amending Section 4.5.7.11 entitled Special Exceptions to add residential facilities for the aged as a permitted special exception within the Agricul-tural-1, Agricultural-2, and Agricul-tural-3 zoning districts.The public hearing may be continued to one or more future dates. Any in-terested party shall be advised that the date, time and place of any con-tinuation of the public hearing shall be announced during the public hear-ing and that no further notice con-cerning the matter will be published, unless said continuation exceeds six calendar weeks from the date of the above referenced public hearing.At the aforementioned public hear-ing, all interested parties may appear to be heard with respect to the amendment.Copies of the amendment are availa-ble for public inspection at the Office of the County Planner, County Ad-ministrative Offices located at 135 Northeast Hernando Avenue, Lake City, Florida, during regular business hours.All persons are advised that if they decide to appeal any decision made at the above referenced public hear-ing, they will need a record of the proceedings, and that, for such pur-pose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the tes-timony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, persons need-ing a special accommodation or an interpreter to participate in the pro-ceeding should contact Lisa K. B. Roberts, at least seven (7) days prior to the date of the hearing. Ms. Rob-erts may be contacted by telephone at (386)758-1005 or by Telecommu-nication Device for Deaf at (386)758-2139.

05540315August 9, 2013

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGCONCERNING A SPECIAL EX-CEPTION AS PROVIDED FOR IN THE COLUMBIA COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT REGULATIONSBY THE BOARD OF ADJUST-MENT OF COLUMBIA COUNTY, FLORIDA, NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that, pursuant to the Colum-bia County Land Development Reg-ulations as amended, hereinafter re-ferred to as the Land Development Regulations, comments, objections and recommendations concerning the special exception, as described be-low, will be heard by the Board of Adjustment of Columbia County, Florida, at a public hearing on Au-gust 22, 2013 at 7:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, in the School Board Administrative Complex located at 372 West Duval Street, Lake City, Florida.SE 0529, a petition by Crews Engi-neering Service, LLC, as agent for Monsta Clothing Company Inc., to request a special exception be grant-ed as provided for in Section 4.13.5.9 of the Land Development Regulations to allow a wholesale warehouse within a COMMER-CIAL, GENERAL (CG) zoning dis-trict and in accordance with a site plan submitted as part of a petition dated July 22, 2013, to be located on property described, as follows:A parcel of land lying within Section 18, Township 4 South, Range 17 East, Columbia County, Florida. Be-ing more particularly described, as follows: Commence at the Northeast corner of Lot 19 of the Century Oaks Subdivision, as recorded in the Pub-lic Records of Columbia County, Florida; thence South 88°28'58" West, along the North line of said Lot 19, of the Century Oaks Subdivi-sion as recorded in the Public Re-cords of Columbia County, Florida, 43.64 feet to the Point of Beginning; thence continue South 88°28'58" West, along said Lot 19 Century Oaks of the Subdivision as recorded in the Public Records of Columbia County, Florida, 172.76 feet; thence South 00°53'23" West 140.0 feet; thence North 87°56'44" East 155.10 feet; thence North 08°08'11" East 140.41 feet to the Point of Begin-ning.Containing 0.52 acre, more or less. The public hearing may be continued

Legal

to one or more future dates. Any in-terested party shall be advised that the date, time and place of any con-tinuation of the public hearing shall be announced during the public hear-ing and that no further notice con-cerning the matter will be published.At the aforementioned public hear-ing, all interested parties may appear to be heard with respect to the spe-cial exception.Copies of the special exception are available for public inspection at the Office of the County Planner, Coun-ty Administrative Offices, 135 Northeast Hernando Avenue, Lake City, Florida, during regular business hours.All persons are advised that if they decide to appeal any decision made at the above referenced public hear-ing, they will need a record of the proceedings, and that, for such pur-pose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the tes-timony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, persons need-ing a special accommodation or an interpreter to participate in the pro-ceeding should contact Lisa K. B. Roberts, at least seven (7) days prior to the date of the hearing. Ms. Rob-erts may be contacted by telephone at (386)758-1005 or by Telecommu-nication Device for Deaf at (386)758-2139.

05540343August 9, 2013

060 Services

Bankruptcy/Divorce/ResumesOther Court Forms Assistance

18 years Exp./ Reasonable386-961-5896 8 a.m.- 8 p.m.

HEY TRUCKER!You could be Saving Tons of Cash

by Ordering supplies onlineVisit – Shop – Save12Volt-Travel.com

1-888-412-8058

100 JobOpportunities

05539858

O’Neal RoofingNow Hiring - Experienced

Roofers. Will Train qualified applicants. Must have valid Drivers License. Apply in

person. 212 Hickory Drive, Lake City, FL 32025

05539998

Earn Extra MoneyDeliver the YP Real YellowPages Lake City, FL Area

FT/PT, Daily work, get paid in 72hrs

* Must be 18 or older,have driver’s license and

insured vehicle

(800) 422-1955Call for more info Mon-Fri

8:00AM– 4:30PM Or email us [email protected]

* Mention "Lake City" Help *

05540188

Local company seeking well rounded employee with

computer skills, customer service, managing phones, invoicing, scheduling and

filing. M-F 34-36 hrs. Send resume to [email protected]

05540328

Anderson Columbia Co., Incis hiring truck drivers in

Lake City. You must possess a valid

CDL A or B. You may apply in person or

www.andersoncolumbia.com Drug Free Workplace/ EOE

05540329

Seeking Certified Crane Operator and experienced

Concrete Finisher. You may apply by faxing your resume to 386-755-9132 or visit website at

www.andersoncolumbia.com.

05540331

Administrative AssistantWhite Springs, Florida

Verifiable job history. Strong computer skills. Able to be

trained in our specialty. Able to perform without

constant supervision. Must be flexible and team player.

Great communication skills. Must want to work for a

stable company. POSITION NEEDS TO BE FILLED IMMEDIATELY

Please email resume to [email protected]

05540355

LOCAL SALES POSITIONLooking for a bright, self-

motivated, hardworking and persistent sales professional for key role in their Sales division.

• Backgrounds Customer Service, Inside Sales and Outside sales are a plus

• Good Communication Skills• Strong Desire To Succeed

• Ability to work in a fast paced, dynamic environment, both independently and as part

of a team.Please email resume to

[email protected]

Admin. Assist. Immed opening Must have computer knowledge,

excellent references & highly organized. 6 day work week man-datory (Mon-Sat.) Send resume to operations@revolutionpipeline.

com.EOE/DFWP

Class A CDL Driver Wanted 3 yrs. Flatbed experience Home every

weekend. Great Pay. Call RDH Trucking Inc. 386-755-8579

WANTEDEXPERIENCED LUBE TECH

Tools RequiredApply

Rountree Moore Ford2588 W US Hwy 90Lake City, FL 32055See: Jimbo Pegnetter

100 JobOpportunities

Class A CDL drivers neededApplicants must have clean

driving record with NO points on license. Must have a minimum of

at least two years drivingexperience.Applicants must be drug free and will be subject to random drug testing throughout term of employment.Applicants must be able to read, write, and understand written directions.

Applicants must be clean and neat in appearance as they will be representing our company.

Call 386-935-1705

Local company looking for experi-enced Driver with at least 2 years

experience with rock bucket. Clean NVR. Call 386-623-6666

MECHANIC NEEDED withtools and experience. Southern Specialized Truck & Trailer.

386-752-9754

MECHANICS WANTED LakeCity Equip. Dealer looking for exp. technicians send Resume

[email protected]

Motel looking for Exp. people to help P/T w/ maint., housekeeping

& office work in exchange for room. Call 586-524-0671

F/T Secretary position. Microsoft Outlook & Excel knowledge. Benefits Avail.Medical/401K/

Profit Sharing. Apply in person Idaho Timber 1786 SE SR 100

120 MedicalEmployment

05540169

Dietary Cook, RN, LPN, CNAAvalon Healthcare Center is

currently accepting applications for the full time positions,

Dietary Cook, RN, LPN and CNA.

Competitive Salary and Excellent benefit package

offered.Please apply in person at:

Avalon Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center.1270 S.W. Main Blvd.

Lake City, Florida 32025386-752-7900 EOE

NEEDED for Skilled Nursing Facility

7p – 7a RN’s and or LPN’sDietary Manager (CDM or ACF

Chef)2 or more years work experience

in a skilled nursing facility preferred.

Competitive salary andexcellent benefits

Apply in person: Suwannee Health Care Center

1620 Helvenston St., Live Oak, FLTel 386-362-7860

Urgent Care Clinic hiring for full time Anrp/PA.

Send reply to Box 05088, C/O The Lake City Reporter, P.O. Box

1709, Lake City, FL, 32056

240 Schools &Education

05539411

Interested in a Medical Career?Express Training offers

courses for beginners & exp

• Nursing Assistant, $479next class- 9/16 /2013

• Phlebotomy national certifica-tion, $800 next class- 8/05/2013

• LPN 9/16/2013

Fees incl. books, supplies, exam fees. Call 386-755-4401 or

expresstrainingservices.com

310 Pets & Supplies

PUBLISHER'S NOTEFlorida Law 828.29 requires dogs and cats being sold to be at least 8

weeks old and have a health certificate from a licensed

veterinarian documenting they have mandatory shots and are

free from intestinal and external parasites. Many species of wild-life must be licensed by Florida

Fish and Wildlife. If you are unsure, contact the local office for information.

413 MusicalMerchandise

Hammond XK3 portable organ, with stand and bench, like new,

ready for any venue. $2500Contact 386-755-8623

416 Sporting Goods

60 Acre Hunting lease in Southeast Suwannee County. North of Beachville. $17/Ac.

Call Paul Thomas at 386-965-9822

420 Wanted to Buy

ATTENTION !We buy used mobile homes!

Singles or Doublewides .Call Rusty at North Pointe Homes

352-872-5566

430 Garage Sales

8/10 514 SW Newton Cr. Ft. White 32038 8am-12pm, weight

bench, walking mach, mech. tools, patio furn, wine making equip

Huge Estate Sale - 8/9 & 8/10 8am-3pm Indoor Rain or Shine,

Antiques, dishes, etc.. Hwy 441 to CR 240 follow signs

Moving Sale 8/9 & 8/10 8am-1pm, Great Furn., clothes,accessories, lots of misc. Wood Crest subdv, SW Guthrie Terr.

PUBLISHER'S NOTEAll Yard Sale Ads Must be Pre-Paid.

SAT 8/10, A little of everything, HH items, Antique bed, and much

more! 184 SW Cullen Ave, Ft. White

440 Miscellaneous

5’ x 10’ TRAILER, GOOD CONDITION $400

CALL 386-867-1985

HUNTING PARTNER NEEDEDfor this years gator hunt.

Tracking license already in hand. Contact 904-263-3256

450 Good Thingsto Eat

GREEN VALENCIA PEANUTSFor Sale Graded and washed.

$30.00 a bushel.386-752-3434

630 Mobile Homesfor Rent

2 & 3 BR MH. $400 - $700. mo. Plus Deposit. Water & Sewer

Furnished. Cannon Creek MHP& other locations 386-752-6422

3 BR/2 BA, completely refurbished, appliances furnished,

$850 month. & $850 deposit386-288-8401

4bd/2ba new carpet, new paint, new bathroom, new kitchen, nice

condition. located in LC.$700/mth, first + security.954-649-1037

Move In Specials - 2/1 MH $450 mo. 3/2 DW $595/mo. Only $350 + 1st mo. to m/in. Fast Approval

305-984-5511 Center of L.C.

640 Mobile Homesfor Sale

New 28X52 3/2 JacobsenOnly 1 Left $45,900 incl

del-set-ac-skirting and steps.No Gimmics! North Pointe

Homes-Gainesville 352-872-5566 Free Credit by Phone till 9 PM or

www.northpointemobilehomesales.com

North Pointe Homes in Gainesville has the largest selection of New

Jacobsen Homes in Florida. All at Factory Outlet Prices! We also

have 10 display models being sold at cost. North Pointe Hwy 441 N,

Gainesville-352-872-5566

710 Unfurnished Apt.For Rent

2/1 -1300 sqft,Good Clean Condi-tion duplex w/ gargage. W/D hook up, CH/A, $650 mth Lease Req.386-965-2407 or 386-758-5881

2 b r / 1 b a A p t . C H / A

$ 5 0 0 . m o $ 5 0 0 d e p .

N o p e t s 3 8 6 - 6 9 7 - 4 8 1 4

A Landlord You Can Love! 2 br Apts $600. & up + sec. Great area. CH/A washer/dryer hookups.

386-758-9351 or 352-208-2421

COZY COTTAGE 1 BR- New paint & carpet. 10 mins. South of

LC, all util. & satellite incl.$575 mo. Pet ok, 386-758-2408

UPDATED APT,w/tile floors/fresh paint.

Great area.386-752-9626

720 Furnished Apts.For Rent

ROOMS FOR Rent. Hillcrest, Sands, Columbia. All furnished.

Electric, cable, fridge, microwave. Weekly or monthly rates. 1 person

$135, 2 persons $150. weekly 386-752-5808

730 UnfurnishedHome For Rent

1BR Cottage 10 min. on South 41 All utilities plus Satellite included. Small Yard, carport. Pet friendly

$675. mo. 386-758-2408

3 BR/2 BA, 2,400 sq. ft., 290 SWLeisure Dr., Quail Heights, $1,200 mo. plus $1,000 sec.

386-752-6062

Block house 3/1, fenced back yard, tile floors. Near Old Country Rd.

$700 dep, $750 mth FIRM 786-436-7959

Very Large 2bd/2ba Lake City area, garage, CH/A, $900mo

386-590-0642 / 386-867-1833, www.suwanneevalleyproperties.com

750 Business &Office Rentals

05539164

17,000 SQ FT + WAREHOUSE7 Acres of Land Rent $1,500 mo.Tom Eagle, GRI

(386) 961-1086 DCA Realtor

790 Vacation Rentals

Scallops are here in Horseshoe Beach. Motel efficiencies just

completely remodeled, sleeps up to 4 max.$99/night 352-498-5986

Scallops are here in Horseshoe Beach. Motel efficiencies just

completely remodeled, sleeps up to 4 max.$99/night 352-498-5986

805 Lots for Sale

PUBLISHER'S NOTEAll real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the fair

housing act which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference,

limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex,

disability, familial status or nation-al origin; or any intention to make

such preference, limitation or discrimination." Familial status

includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal

custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of chil-dren under the age of 18. This newspaper will not knowingly

accept any advertising for real es-tate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby in-formed that all dwellings adver-

tised in this newspaper are availa-ble on an equal opportunity basis.To complain of discrimination call HUD toll free at 1-800-669-9777,

the toll freetelephone number to the hearing

impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

810 Home for Sale

3BD/2BA Brick home 2800 sqft. 2 car garage wheel chair friendly. Set on 3 fenced acres. High & dry

Horizon & Lona. Has a in law quarter. $260,000 386-755-0927

Townhouse for sale by owner, 2bd/2ba, 1,018 sf, very nice,

deed restrictions, $84K, 1029 SWRossborough Ct 697-6606

820 Farms &Acreage

5 acres with well/septic/power pole. Owner financed.

low down payment Deas Bullard /BKL Properties

386-752-4339 www.landnfl.com

830 CommercialProperty

New Warehouse/shop for Lease.5000sft freestanding Building Loading Dock, 2 O/H Doors

184 SW Ring Ct. (386) 867-3534

870 Real EstateWantedI Buy Houses

CASH!Quick Sale Fair Price

386-269-0605

951 RecreationalVehicles

ALFA SEE YA - diesel pusher, 38ft, two slide-outs, digital tv’s,

W/D, many extras. $47,500 Contact 352-871-0229

952 Vans & SportUtil. Vehicles

2007 Mercury Mountaineer Premier, fully loaded 38,400 miles

Excellent Condition, $15,000. 386-961-8680

We’re on target!

days a week

Subscribe Today 386-755-5445

180 East Duval St.Lake City, FLorida 32055

Contact us at the paper.

Mon.-Fri.: 8 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.

CLASSIFIED ADS

386-755-5440

SUBSCRIPTION

386-755-5445

ALL OTHER DEPARTMENTS

386-752-1293

ELECTRONIC ADS SEND TO

[email protected]

THIS REPORTER WORKS FOR YOU!

Lake City Reporter

REPORTER ClassifiedsIn Print and On Line

www.lakecityreporter.com

Page 18: FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013 | YOUR …ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu/UF/00/02/83/08/02148/08-09-2013.pdfAug 09, 2013  · Celebrity Birthdays n Comedian-director David Steinberg

8B LAKE CITY REPORTER ADVERTISEMENT FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUGUST 9 & 10, 2013

www.RountreeMooreToyota.com

www.RountreeMooreToyota.com

1-888-905-14741232 Hwy. 90 West, Lake City, FL

Price excludes tax, tag, title, registration, and dealer fee.

Providing You With More Selection of Pre-Owned Vehicles

2013 TACOMA 2013 TUNDRA

2013 COROLLA LE

$239

$149

$299/mo.

/mo.

/mo.39 month lease $2,638 due at signing, wac, no security deposit required, offer valid thru 5/30/13.

39 month lease $3,299 due at signing, wac, no security deposit required, offer valid thru 5/30/13.

36 month lease $2,548 due at signing, wac, no security deposit required, offer valid thru 5/30/13.

$8,970

2007 Pontiac Grand Prix

$7,500

2003 Chevy Trail Blazer

$13,500

2011 Toyota Camry LE

$13,500

2012 Dodge Avenger SE

$14,860

2010 Ford Escape

$19,500

2013 Grand Caravan SXT

$16,000

2012 Nissan Altima 2.5 S

$14,000

2012 Ford Focus SEL