12
PALATKA DAILY NEWS www.mypdn.com FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2014 $1 Scattered Thunderstorms 40% rain chance 91 | 75 For details, see 2A Putnam free of ‘flesh-eating’ bacteria So far this year, no Putnam Countian has been infected by the dangerous, water-borne vibrio fulnificus bacteria, health authorities report. See Page 2A Signs point to history A series of historic markers is planned for streets in Palatka’s Northside Historic District. See Page 3A By mail, 2 sections The Voice of Putnam County since 1885 VOL. 126 • NO. 153 PALATKA, FLA. Public Notices on Page 3B INDEX Advice ............................. 5A Briefing ........................... 2A Classified/Legals ............ 3B Comics............................ 5A Horoscope ...................... 5A Lottery............................. 2B Obituaries ....................... 6A Opinions ......................... 4A Sports ............................. 1B Sudoku ........................... 5B Weekend Happenings First Friday Coffee, ‘Let’s Talk’ 7-10 a.m. Friday, Magnolia Cafe, 705 St. Johns Ave., Palatka. An informal gathering to ask questions, have coffee, breakfast, share information and get updates on down- town projects. Sponsored by Palatka Main Street Inc. Melrose First Friday ArtWalk 6-9 p.m. Friday, Melrose, with Gallery 26, 303 State Road 26 and the Artists Hall, 301 SR 26. Music will be by Ron Bowman, Paula Tyner, Sam Read and Karen Newman. Jamming at the Bostwick Community Center 6:30-8:30 p.m. Friday, 126 Tillman St., Bostwick. Sponsored by the Bostwick Library. Bring musical instru- ments and play along or just come and enjoy the music. Details: 326-2750. Pomona Park Community Market 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday, rain or shine, Pomona Park Community Center, 200 E. Main St. Hosted by the town of Pomona Park Beautifucation Committee. Includes assorted vendors selling local produce, plants and baked goods, along with arts and crafts, antiques and collectibles. Also an all you can eat breakfast from 7-10:30 a.m. for $5 and hot lunch from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. for $6. Vendors call Lynda Linkswiler (904) 806-0427. Museum and Running of Trains 1-4 p.m. Saturday, Union Station Depot, 222 N. 11th St., Palatka. Sponsored by the Palatka Railroad Preservation Society. SHRIMP ARE RUNNING IN ST. JOHNS RIVER Above, Ray Crisp spent Thursday morning at one of the floating docks at Palatka’s Riverfront Park netting shrimp. Above right, Tom Taylor and Tosh Ganion spent Thursday morning at Riverfront Park throwing nets and filling buckets with shrimp. Atlantic shrimp travel the St. Johns River upstream every year to spawn and feed before heading back out to the ocean. Above left, fishermen were filling their nets and coolers full of shrimp Thursday. Photos by CHRIS DEVITTO Palatka Daily News Sign season: Candidates decorate front lawns, roadsides BY BRANDON D. OLIVER Palatka Daily News With campaign season in full swing, the local election chief contin- ues to stress to candidates the impor- tance of abiding by the rules when it comes to their campaign signs. The 2014 primary isn’t until Aug. 26, but political candidates have already erected signs in all corners of Putnam County. While that’s all OK, there are a number of regulations to follow regard- ing when the signs can go up, where they can be put and when they must be taken down, said county Supervisor of Elections Charles Overturf III. “You try to always tell (candidates) what the requirements are,” Overturf said. Months ago, Overturf conducted a meeting for political candidates so that he could bring them up-to-speed on elections rules such as the rules about signs. But since the meeting, a number of new candidates qualified to run for office, so the Elections Office staff attempts to notify candidates if an infraction is brought to their atten- tion, Overturf said. An area of concern Overturf said he has is where candidates and their vol- unteers place campaign signs. There have been reports this year of candidates placing signs on private property without permission and on public rights of way, both of which are against election regulations, he said. “We’ve had two or three or four calls from (property) owners telling us they can’t find the candidate to come get their signs,” Overturf said, acknowledging that these calls have happened within the past four weeks. “Technically, there aren’t supposed to be signs on any right of way.” Church leader Dr. Ruth Lowe-Reaves dies at 83 Palatka Daily News It’s probable no one in Putnam County heard the call to service loud- er than Dr. Ruth Lowe-Reaves. The prominent Palatka religious leader served in and founded several local institutions during a lifetime of devotion to her religion and the com- munity. Lowe-Reaves died Sunday at the age of 83. Born in Palatka and educated at historic Central Academy, she was a founder and leader of her own church when that was an unusual role for a woman. “She was one of the first women to actively pastor a church,” said her grandson Dr. Aaron Hall, a Palatka pharmacist. Lowe-Reaves started her own prayer band, Hall said, ministering to children, then visiting hospitals, jails and nursing homes – wherever she felt needed. In 1972, she founded The Universal Church of Christ, Dominion of God on 13th Street in Palatka. That led to institutions with a variety of names and locations, culminating in To God Be the Glory Holiness Church in 1993, and moving to its present loca- tion at 3521 St. Johns Ave. in 1998. The church is nondenominational and Pentecostal in its orientation, Hall said. Lowe-Reaves also established a church in Green Cove Springs. She was the founding president of the One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism Fellowship and the Greater Palatka Ministerial Association. Lowe-Reaves received her doctor of divinity degree from Jameson Christian College in 1983. Visitation and services begin today and continue tomorrow. Karl N. Flagg Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements. A complete obitu- ary is on Page 6A. Smokey the Bear to observe 70th at Welaka State Forest Two arrested, charged with computer theft BY PETE SKIBA Palatka Daily News INTERLACHEN – A Samsung computer tablet sto- len in June during a burglary led to a couple with war- rants outstanding for the theft from 124 Osborne St. According to a Putnam County Sheriff’s Office report, a person who bought the tablet later suspected it was stolen. They called deputies about it. The ensuing investigation linked Interlachen resi- dents, 26-year-old Ganelle Tory Denning, of 521 Wilson Ave., and BY PETE SKIBA Palatka Daily News WELAKA – Smokey the Bear cele- brates his 70th birthday at Welaka State Forest Aug. 9 with a party and photo opportunity for the kids at the ranger station. The station and forest sit about 17 miles south of Palatka, off U.S. 17 on State Road 309, a mile south of the town of Welaka. “We want everyone to come out and meet Smokey to celebrate his birthday with a cake,” said Stacy Harris of Welaka State Forest staff. “Between noon and 2 p.m., they can have their photo taken with Smokey.” By “their photo taken” Harris meant kids of all ages are invited to pose with the famous fire-prevention bear. So no matter if people remember Smokey from his earliest days, when in 1947 he first said, “Only you can prevent forest fires,” or if they have first seen him on Facebook, the invitation to meet up for a picture stands. Like many birthday parties, the day promises games and activities for every age group. Smokey will have Smokey Bags with toys for younger kids to take home. Harris said that people who have never visited Welaka State Forest are especially invited to see what the park has to offer in its more than 2,280 acres. The forest features wetlands, flat- woods, hammocks known for their shady areas, sandhills and bayheads to explore. An amazing variety of trees and plants flourish along the St. Johns River and its swamps. The inaptly named Mud Spring car- ries 13,750 gallons an hour of crystal- clear spring water into a half-mile Denning Donahue Submitted art Lowe-Reaves See SMOKEY, Page 3A See THEFT, Page 3A See SIGNS, Page 3A 080114a1.indd 1 7/31/14 8:03 PM

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2014 $1 - Amazon Web Servicesmatchbin-assets.s3.amazonaws.com/public/sites/2839/assets/DSDJ_8… · FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2014 $1 ... Smokey the Bear to observe 70th

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PALATKA DAILY NEWSwww.mypdn.com

FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2014 $1

Scattered Thunderstorms40% rain chance

91 | 75For details, see 2A

Putnam free of ‘flesh-eating’ bacteriaSo far this year, no Putnam Countian has been infected by the dangerous,

water-borne vibrio fulnificus bacteria, health authorities report.

See Page 2A

Signs point to historyA series of historic markers is planned for

streets in Palatka’s Northside Historic District.

See Page 3A

By mail, 2 sections

The Voice ofPutnam County

since 1885VOL. 126 • NO. 153

PALATKA, FLA.

Public Noticeson Page 3B

INDEXAdvice ............................. 5ABriefing ........................... 2AClassified/Legals ............ 3BComics ............................ 5AHoroscope ...................... 5ALottery............................. 2BObituaries ....................... 6AOpinions ......................... 4ASports ............................. 1BSudoku ........................... 5B

WeekendHappenings

First Friday Coffee, ‘Let’s Talk’

7-10 a.m. Friday, Magnolia Cafe, 705 St. Johns Ave., Palatka. An informal gathering to ask questions, have coffee, breakfast, share information and get updates on down-town projects. Sponsored by Palatka Main Street Inc.

Melrose First Friday ArtWalk

6-9 p.m. Friday, Melrose, with Gallery 26, 303 State Road 26 and the Artists Hall, 301 SR 26. Music will be by Ron Bowman, Paula Tyner, Sam Read and Karen Newman.

Jamming at the Bostwick

Community Center6:30-8:30 p.m. Friday, 126

Tillman St., Bostwick. Sponsored by the Bostwick Library. Bring musical instru-ments and play along or just come and enjoy the music. Details: 326-2750.

Pomona Park Community Market

7 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday, rain or shine, Pomona Park Community Center, 200 E. Main St. Hosted by the town of Pomona Park Beautifucation Committee. Includes assorted vendors selling local produce, plants and baked goods, along with arts and crafts, antiques and collectibles. Also an all you can eat breakfast from 7-10:30 a.m. for $5 and hot lunch from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. for $6. Vendors call Lynda Linkswiler (904) 806-0427.

Museum and Running of Trains

1-4 p.m. Saturday, Union Station Depot, 222 N. 11th St., Palatka. Sponsored by the Palatka Railroad Preservation Society.

SHRIMP ARE RUNNING IN ST. JOHNS RIVER

Above, Ray Crisp spent Thursday

morning at one of the floating docks at

Palatka’s Riverfront Park netting shrimp.

Above right, Tom Taylor and Tosh Ganion spent Thursday morning at Riverfront Park throwing nets and filling buckets with shrimp. Atlantic shrimp travel the St. Johns River upstream every year to spawn and feed before heading back out to the ocean. Above left, fishermen were filling their nets and coolers full of shrimp Thursday.

Photos byCHRIS DEVITTO

Palatka Daily News

Sign season: Candidates decorate front lawns, roadsides

BY BRANDON D. OLIVERPalatka Daily News

With campaign season in full swing, the local election chief contin-ues to stress to candidates the impor-tance of abiding by the rules when it comes to their campaign signs.

The 2014 primary isn’t until Aug. 26, but political candidates have already erected signs in all corners of Putnam County.

While that’s all OK, there are a number of regulations to follow regard-ing when the signs can go up, where they can be put and when they must be taken down, said county Supervisor of Elections Charles Overturf III.

“You try to always tell (candidates) what the requirements are,” Overturf said.

Months ago, Overturf conducted a meeting for political candidates so that he could bring them up-to-speed on elections rules such as the rules about signs.

But since the meeting, a number of new candidates qualified to run for office, so the Elections Office staff attempts to notify candidates if an infraction is brought to their atten-tion, Overturf said.

An area of concern Overturf said he has is where candidates and their vol-unteers place campaign signs.

There have been reports this year of candidates placing signs on private property without permission and on public rights of way, both of which are against election regulations, he said.

“We’ve had two or three or four calls from (property) owners telling us they can’t find the candidate to come get their signs,” Overturf said, acknowledging that these calls have happened within the past four weeks. “Technically, there aren’t supposed to be signs on any right of way.”

Church leader Dr. Ruth Lowe-Reaves dies at 83Palatka Daily News

It’s probable no one in Putnam County heard the call to service loud-er than Dr. Ruth Lowe-Reaves.

The prominent Palatka religious leader served in and founded several local institutions during a lifetime of devotion to her religion and the com-munity.

Lowe-Reaves died Sunday at the age of 83.

Born in Palatka and educated at historic Central Academy, she was a founder and leader of her own church when that was an unusual role for a woman.

“She was one of the first women to actively pastor a church,” said her grandson Dr. Aaron Hall , a

Palatka pharmacist.Lowe-Reaves started her own

prayer band, Hall said, ministering to children, then visiting hospitals, jails and nursing homes – wherever she felt needed.

I n 1 9 7 2 , s h e f o u n d e d T h e Universal Church o f C h r i s t , Dominion of God on 13th Street in Palatka. That led to institutions with a variety of names and locations, culminating in To God Be the Glory Holiness Church in

1993, and moving to its present loca-tion at 3521 St. Johns Ave. in 1998.

The church is nondenominational and Pentecostal in its orientation, Hall said.

Lowe-Reaves also established a church in Green Cove Springs. She was the founding president of the One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism Fellowship and the Greater Palatka Ministerial Association.

Lowe-Reaves received her doctor of d i v i n i t y d e g r e e f r o m J a m e s o n Christian College in 1983.

Visitation and services begin today and continue tomorrow. Karl N. Flagg Memorial Chapel is in charge of arrangements. A complete obitu-ary is on Page 6A.

Smokey the Bear to observe 70th at Welaka State Forest

Two arrested, charged with computer theft

BY PETE SKIBAPalatka Daily News

INTERLACHEN – A Samsung computer tablet sto-len in June during a burglary led to a couple with war-rants outstanding for the theft from 124 Osborne St.

According to a P u t n a m C o u n t y S h e r i f f ’ s O f f i c e report, a person who bought the tablet later suspected it was stolen. They c a l l e d d e p u t i e s about it.

T h e e n s u i n g investigation linked Interlachen resi -dents, 26-year-old G a n e l l e T o r y D e n n i n g , o f 5 2 1 Wilson Ave. , and

BY PETE SKIBAPalatka Daily News

WELAKA – Smokey the Bear cele-brates his 70th birthday at Welaka State Forest Aug. 9 with a party and photo opportunity for the kids at the ranger station.

The station and forest sit about 17 miles south of Palatka, off U.S. 17 on State Road 309, a mile south of the town of Welaka.

“We want everyone to come out and meet Smokey to celebrate his birthday with a cake,” said Stacy Harris of Welaka State Forest staff. “Between noon and 2 p.m., they can have their photo taken with Smokey.”

By “their photo taken” Harris meant kids of all ages are invited to pose with

the famous fire-prevention bear. So no matter if people remember Smokey from his earliest days, when in 1947 he first said, “Only you can prevent forest fires,” or if they have first seen him on Facebook, the invitation to meet up for a picture stands.

Like many birthday parties, the day promises games and activities for every age group. Smokey will have Smokey Bags with toys for younger kids to take home.

Harris said that people who have never visited Welaka State Forest are especially invited to see what the park has to offer in its more than 2,280 acres.

The forest features wetlands, flat-woods, hammocks known for their shady areas, sandhills and bayheads to explore. An amazing variety of trees and plants flourish along the St. Johns River and its swamps.

The inaptly named Mud Spring car-ries 13,750 gallons an hour of crystal-clear spring water into a half-mile

Denning

Donahue

Submitted art

Lowe-Reaves

See SMOKEY, Page 3A See THEFT, Page 3A

See SIGNS, Page 3A

080114a1.indd 1 7/31/14 8:03 PM

PALATKA

First Friday coffee begins at 7 a.m. today

First Friday Coffee, “Let’s Talk,” will be from 7-10 a.m., today at Magnolia Café, 705 St. Johns Ave. This is an informal gathering to ask questions, have coffee, breakfast, share information and get updates on downtown projects. Sponsored by Palatka Main Street Inc.

Yard goods sale today at St. James

St. James United Methodist Church will host an estate/household goods yard sale from 8 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. today and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at 231 N. 2nd St. In case of bad weather, sale will be at in the church’s fellowship hall at 400 Reid St.

Yard sale today at New Jerusalem

New Jerusalem Bridegroom Ministry will have a yard sale at 8 a.m., today at 307 Main St. Funds raised will help toward the church’s ministry.

Mylon Hayes family in concert at Hillcrest

Hillcrest Baptist Church welcomes the Mylon Hayes Family in concert at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, at 2009 President St. Free to the public; a love offering will be received. Details: 336-6511.

Archives round table discussion Saturday

The Putnam County Archives round table discussion begins at 10 a.m., Saturday at the Palatka Library, 601 College Road. A discus-sion on Norwalk south of Putnam County will be held. Bring any print-ed information for sharing, copies will be made. Future roundtables w i l l i n c l u d e d i s c u s s i o n s o n Braddock’s Farm, Hog Valley and the county’s volunteer fire depart-ments. Details: 329-0126.

Blueways & Trails board to meet Monday

Putnam Blueways & Trails Board of Directors will meet from 6-8 p.m. Monday at the Edgar Johnson Senior Center, 1215 Westover Dr. Meeting is open to the public and pizza will be sold for $1 a slice. Bring own drink. Details: putnambluewaysandtrails.org.

INTERLACHEN

Hula hoop yoga and dance class at library

A free hula hoop yoga and dance class will be from 6-7:30 p.m. today at Interlachen Library, 133 N. County Road 315. Open to all ages. Hoops are provided or bring own. Details: 546-6554.

Church yard sale

First Congregation Church of Interlachen will have its community yard sale, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday at 415 Washington St.

Cost is $5 for tables inside and $5 for outside space, but must furnish own table. To reserve a table or a space, call Rosemary at 916-8451.

Back to school activity at Nazarene

The Interlachen Church of the Nazarene will host their fourth annual Back to School Bash from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Aug. 2 at 179 Miller Square, off of County Road 315, near the elementary school. There will be bookbags with school supplies in them that will be raffled off as well as clothes giveaway, food, games, and a bouncy house. Everything is

free and the public is welcome.

MELROSE

First Friday Artwalk along State Road 26

Melrose First Friday Artwalk will be from 6-9 p.m. today with Gallery 26 at 303 State Road 26 and the Artists Hall at 301 State Road 26. Music will be by Ron Bowman, Paula Tyner , Sam Read, and Karan Newman.

BOSTWICK

Jamming at the Library this evening

J a m m i n g a t t h e B o s t w i c k Community Center from 6:30-8:30 p.m., today at 125 Tillman St. Sponsored by the Bostwick Library. Bring musical instruments and play along, or just come and enjoy the music. Details: 326-2750.

POMONA PARK

Monthly community market is Saturday

The Community Market will be from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday, rain or shine, Pomona Park Community Center, 200 E. Main St.

Hosted by the Town of Pomona Park Beautification Committee, market includes assorted vendors selling fresh, local produce; plants; and baked goods, along with arts and crafts and antiques and collect-ables.

Market Day also features an all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast from 7-10:30 a.m. for $5 and a hot lunch from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. for $6.

Vendors call Lynda Linkswiler at (904) 806-0427.

CRESCENT CITY

Free school physicals at St. Vincent mobile unit

St. Vincent’s Mobile Health Unit will administer free school physicals for all school aged children from 2-6 p.m., Monday at South Putnam Church, 114 Amos Road. The church will also be holding their food pantry the same day beginning at 1 p.m. and will also hand out free school supplies.

For directions and details, call 698-1054.

Putnam AM2A PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

PALATKA DAILY NEWSFor home delivery subscription, including taxe-edition .......................$7/month13 weeks .........................$24.6226 weeks .........................$49.2552 weeks .........................$93.68Duration of subscription subject to rate increase.

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Stock RepoRt

Weather Trivia

Peak Fishing/Hunting Times This Week

In-Depth Local Forecast

Local Almanac Last Week

Local UV Index

Sun & Moon

State Cities

Today we will see partly cloudy skies with a 40% chance of showers and thunderstorms, high temperature of 91º, humidity of 66%. Southeast wind 5 mph. The record high temperature for today is 101º set in 1999. Expect mostly cloudy skies tonight with a 50% chance of showers and thunderstorms, overnight low of 75º. Southeast wind 6 mph. The record low for tonight is 68º set in 1966. Saturday, skies will be mostly sunny with a 50% chance of showers and thunderstorms.

Friday Scat'd T-storms

91 / 75Precip Chance: 40%

Saturday Scat'd T-storms

89 / 76Precip Chance: 50%

Sunday Scat'd T-storms

89 / 75Precip Chance: 50%

Monday T-storms Likely

88 / 75Precip Chance: 60%

Tuesday Scat'd T-storms

89 / 74Precip Chance: 50%

Wednesday Isolated T-storms

91 / 77Precip Chance: 30%

Thursday Mostly Sunny

94 / 76Precip Chance: 20%

Peak TimesDay AM PMToday 4:25-6:25 3:55-5:55Sat 5:11-7:11 4:41-6:41Sun 5:58-7:58 5:28-7:28Mon 6:50-8:50 6:20-8:20

Peak TimesDay AM PMTue 7:44-9:44 7:14-9:14Wed 8:41-10:41 8:11-10:11Thu 9:41-11:41 9:11-11:11www.WhatsOurWeather.com

Sunrise today . . . . . . 6:46 a.m.Sunset tonight. . . . . . 8:18 p.m.

Date7/247/257/267/277/287/297/30

High93929192939391

Low71737275777566

Normals92/7392/7392/7392/7392/7392/7392/73

Precip0.00"0.00"0.00"0.00"0.00"0.00"0.00"

Date Degree Days7/24 327/25 327/26 327/27 34

Date Degree Days7/28 357/29 347/30 28

Farmer's Growing Degree Days

Growing degree days are calculated by taking the average temperature for the day and subtracting the base temperature (50 degrees) from the average to assess how many growing days are attained.

What was an unexpected impact of Hurricane Andrew? ?

Answer: 250,000 Americans were left homeless.

3 50 - 2 4 6 8 107 9 11+

0-2: Low, 3-5: Moderate,6-7: High, 8-10: Very High,

11+: Extreme Exposure

7-Day Local Forecast

Farmer's Growing Days

Precipitation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.00"Normal precipitation . . . . . . . 1.50"Departure from normal . . . . .-1.50"

Average temperature . . . . . . . 82.4ºAverage normal temperature . 82.5ºDeparture from normal . . . . . . -0.1º

St. Johns River Tides This Week

City Hi/LoDaytona Beach . . . 91/76 tGainesville. . . . . . . 92/73 tJacksonville. . . . . . 90/77 tKey West . . . . . . . . 91/82 tMiami . . . . . . . . . . 89/80 tNaples . . . . . . . . . . 90/77 tOrlando . . . . . . . . . 95/76 tPanama City . . . . . 88/74 sPensacola. . . . . . . . 90/75 pcPort Charlotte. . . . 94/74 tTallahassee . . . . . . 94/71 sTampa . . . . . . . . . . 92/77 tW. Palm Beach . . . 90/78 t

Today

Day High Low High Low8/1 6:37 am 12:52 am 7:10 pm 12:56 pm8/2 7:19 am 1:37 am 7:52 pm 1:38 pm8/3 8:08 am 2:34 am 8:43 pm 2:27 pm8/4 9:02 am 4:12 am 9:47 pm 3:21 pm8/5 10:07 am 5:31 am 11:19 pm 4:19 pm8/6 11:26 am 6:36 am None 5:21 pm8/7 12:29 am 7:36 am 12:39 pm 6:35 pm

Day High Low High Low8/1 6:57 am 1:24 am 7:26 pm 1:40 pm8/2 7:36 am 2:09 am 8:08 pm 2:22 pm8/3 8:19 am 3:02 am 8:56 pm 3:10 pm8/4 9:09 am 4:00 am 9:51 pm 4:04 pm8/5 10:07 am 5:02 am 10:54 pm 5:02 pm8/6 11:12 am 6:04 am None 6:03 pm8/7 12:00 am 7:06 am 12:18 pm 7:05 pm

Palatka Palmetto Bluff

First8/3

Full8/10

Last8/17

New8/25

Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly cloudy; mc/mostly cloudy; ra/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms

pALAtkA DAILY NeWS WeAtHeR RepoRt

july 31Name Close ChaNge

APPLE 95.60 -2.55AFLAC 59.74 -1.64ALCATEL 3.43 -0.41AT&T 35.59 -0.77BAXTER 74.69 -1.40CHEVRON 129.24 -3.29COCA-COLA 39.29 -0.33CISCO 25.23 -0.40COMCAST 53.73 -1.68CORNING 19.65 -0.22CSX 29.92 -0.54DELTA AIR 37.46 -0.38DUNKIN 42.86 -0.43NEXTERA 93.89 -2.45GEN ELEC 25.15 -0.49GLAXOSMITH 48.37 -0.10HOME DEPOT 80.85 -0.91J.C.PENNY 9.38 0.00LIFEPOINT 71.72 -1.75LOWE"S 47.85 -0.62LSI 11.14 0.00MANULIFE 20.41 -0.18MICROSOFT 43.16 -0.42PLUM CREEK 41.37 -0.70PFIZER 28.70 -0.56TRACT SUP 62.17 -1.64VULCAN 63.13 -2.21WALMART 73.58 -1.20WALT DISNEY 85.88 -1.33

DOW JONESINDUSTRIALS16,563.30 NASDAqCOMPOSITE4,369.77

STANDARD& POOR 5001,930.67

FLORIDA GASAVERAGE

-317.06

-93.13

-39.40

$3.41One Gallon Regular

MARketS

Local

Special to the Daily News

Magic Moments & Memories art exhibit featuring the works of Laverne Williams and her late husband,

Robert, will be on display beginning today during an open reception from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the Larimer Arts Center in Palatka.

Mrs. Williams is a master at catching that magic moment on canvas, accord-ing to a news release from gallery chair-man Evelyn Snyder. “After enjoying Laverne’s work at regional shows, I just had to invite her to do a show here for us,” she said.

Snyder said for many years, Williams sold her art in shows with her husband, Robert, a full time watercolorist. He died in 2004.

Mr. Williams’ work captured the many moods of Florida in his subtle renderings of birds, native architecture, lighthouses, Key West-style homes, boats and lush tropical landscapes found throughout Florida and its sur-rounding islands, a release said.

“That is where the memories comes in,” Snyder said. “This show will include a memorial tribute to Robert, showcasing a selection of his original watercolors that are for sale.”

Mrs. Williams’ subjects are pri-marily birds, wildlife, Florida land-scapes, children on the beach, light-houses and covered bridges. The mediums for her paintings include acrylic, watercolor and colored pen-cils often adding mixed media for emphasis. She uses her own exten-sive collections of photographs as reference for her paintings. Williams also offers custom paintings and por-traits to a client’s specifications.

Williams’ work is also featured in area homes and hospitals, Sarasota Memorial Hospital, H.C.A. Blake Hospital in Bradenton and Palm Beach County Aids Clinic, as well as

in private collections. The release said Laverne Williams

has participated in the Federal Duck Stamp workshop and contest, plac-ing in 1999. When in Indiana, she lived and painted in Parke County, which is known as “The Covered Bridge Capital of the World.” She is a member of the Covered Bridge Art Association, owns property there, and participates in the annual show in October. She has been the owner of Art and Rugs by Design since 2005. She designs custom art, cus-tom rugs and carpets for designers, stores and for manufacturers.

Graduating from Lipscomb

University with a bachelor of arts degree, Williams majored in art with a minor in interior design. She took graduate classes at Middle Tennessee State University and received a master of science degree in art from Indiana State University. For details on her work, visit www.lavernesartbydesign.com/.

The Larimer Arts Center ia at 216 Reid St., Palatka. Regular gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday. The exhibit will be on display until Aug. 23.

For details on the Arts Council, visit www.artsinputnam.org or call 328-8998.

‘Magic MoMents & MeMories’

Exhibit opens today at Larimer Arts Center

Submitted photos

Artist Laverne Williams’, above, and her late husband, Robert’s, work will be on dispaly beginning today at the Larimer Arts Center in Palatka during an opening exhibit reception. The reception is free and open to the public. The event will be from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at the center at 216 Reid St., Palatka. At left is a piece of Robert Williams’ art work that will be on display. The show will run through Aug. 23.

By AsiA AikinsPalatka Daily News

The St. Johns River was the reported location where a child was recently infected with the vibrio vulnificus bac-teria in Duval County, but local health officials said Putnam County residents have not reported any similar incidents.

“There are no suspect or confirmed cases in Putnam County,” said Kena Foster, Florida Department of Health in Putnam County director of nursing.

Vibrio vulnificus is often referred to as a “flesh-eating bacteria” because it could lead to skin breakdown, ulcers and blistering skin lesions. According to the FDOH, “the

bacterium is frequently isolated from oysters and other shellfish in warm coastal waters during the summer months. Since it is naturally found in warm marine waters, people with open wounds can be exposed to vib-rio vulnificus through direct contact with seawater.”

An updated report from FDOH lists one vibrio vulnifi-cus case reported in Duval this year. A total of 11 cases have been reported throughout the state this year, resulting in two deaths.

There were no cases reported in Putnam during 2013, but a total of 41 cases throughout the state, resulting in 11 deaths.

The bacteria could infect people when they eat raw shellfish as well, the FDOH report said.

Health officials: Putnam Countians have avoided vibrio

080114a2.indd 1 7/31/14 7:11 PM

By AsiA AikinsPalatka Daily News

A guided tour of the Palatka North Historic District could lead to fewer vacant homes and more interest in one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods, residents say.

“Over the last few years, we’ve gotten a lot of interest in the ne ighborhood , ” sa id Elizabeth van Rensburg, resi-dent and Palatka Historic N o r t h N e i g h b o r h o o d Association spokesperson. “People will see the (Reid’s Garden) sign, get out of their cars, sometimes take a pic-ture, look around and then just kind of shrug their shoul-ders and leave.”

Over the last couple of years, van Rensburg said the neighborhood association has been working to develop a series of way-finding signs, guiding visitors through the neighborhood. The idea devel-oped after the city worked with the neighborhoods to pro-duce downtown markers, like the s ign enter ing Reid ’s

Garden. “The design for the signs

has been completed,” van-Rensburg said. “We’ve got the brochure for the walking tour ready. We’re just in the per-mitting process.”

Seven additional kiosks are planned throughout the neigh-borhood, highlighting eight of the neighborhood’s most his-

torically significant homes. T h e P u t n a m C o u n t y Historical Society has provid-ed information about the homes and photos for each kiosk.

“We have them planned so that you can see the next kiosk from the one you are standing at,” vanRensburg said. “That way, they are easy

to find.”The walking tour would

begin at the Reid’s Garden sign, where the brochure map would also be avai lable . Kiosks are planned for: 310 N. Third St., Hedick House; 100 M a d i s o n S t . , B r o n s o n -Mulholland House; 510 N. Third St . , Loeb-Hi lburn House; 605 N. Third St. , Walton House; 414 Olive St., Smith House; 400 Olive St., Cockrane (Cochran) House; 220 Madison St., Calhoun House; And 407 N. First St., Wilson House.

The kiosk plan is expected to be cons idered by the Palatka Historic Preservation Board on Aug. 7. The project has been funded by the North H i s t o r i c D i s t r i c t ’ s T a x I n c r e m e n t F u n d , v a n Rensburg said.

“We’re hoping to develop an interest in the neighborhood and fill the vacant homes,” she said. “It doesn’t take long to fall in love with our historic district.”

[email protected]

spring run that flows into the St. Johns River.

Foot trails lead through the forest and give opportunities to watch wildlife. Have a horse? The Sandhill Horse Trail can handle them as well as hikers.

Many equestrians take advantage of the 72-horse sta-ble, training arenas and a

show horse arena for practice.Everyone is invited to sam-

ple the delights of Welaka State Forest on Smokey’s birthday. The big furry guy would like nothing better than to bear hug and greet nature-supporting fans.

More information about Smokey and his history is avai lable at h is websi te smokeybear.com or on his Facebook page facebook.com/smokeybear.

[email protected]

33-year-old Shaun Anthony Donahue, of 533 O’Farrell Ave., to the theft and war-rants were issued for their

arrest , sa id Sgt . Hancel Woods.

Deputies arrested the cou-ple Tuesday on burglary, lar-ceny and dealing in stolen property charges, Woods added. According to Putnam County Jail records, as of 4 p .m. Thursday, Denning remained incarcerated with-

out $15,020 bail.D e n n i n g ’ s j a i l r e c o r d

stretches back to 2008 with arrests for larceny, dealing in stolen property and other property crimes.

With a record going back to 2005, Donahue also remains incarcerated in lieu of $15,020 bail.

His previous arrests include aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, stalking, cyber stalking and possession of drug equipment.

[email protected]

Overturf said that when he hears reports of these infrac-tions, he tries to contact the candidate so that they can col-lect his or her sign and keep it from being thrown away.

In addition to the location of the signs, candidates and campaign volunteers had to have been aware of when they were allowed to erect them.

Overturf said the number of days before the primary signs could go up varies depending on if they were being placed in a certain municipality or unincorporated county land.

He said signs could be placed in Welaka 60 days before the primary; Palatka, Interlachen, Pomona Park and county land, 50 days prior; and Crescent City, 30 days prior.

“We’re going to try next year to see if we can get all the municipalit ies together,” Overturf said about trying to allow signs to be put up any-where in the county the same number of days before the pri-mary.

Residents should see a decrease in the number of signs in the few weeks follow-ing the primary because of the rules stating when the signs must be removed, Overturf said.

After this month’s contest,

some candidates will be elimi-nated from the race and oth-ers will have won their seat without having to be elected in November.

And then there are some candidates who have already won because no one qualified to run against them.

“Within 14 days is what the county code says (signs must be removed) whether you win, l ose or run unopposed , ” Overturf said, stating that people who are unopposed should have taken down their signs within two weeks after the qualifying period ended.

For more elections informa-tion, call 329-0224 or visit soe.putnam-fl.com.

[email protected]

3A PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

Smokeycontinued from PAge 1A

Theftcontinued from PAge 1A

Signscontinued from PAge 1A

WIN $250.00Each week for 12 weeks the Palatka Daily News will run a partial picture with a clue

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Pick up your official answer form at the Palatka Welcome Center or at www.PalatkaDowntown.com. Sponsored by The Palatka Daily News and Downtown Palatka, Inc. Winner will be announced at the Gem City Shrimp Blast, August 29-30. Call 386-328-0909 for more details. Check the website for previous pictures and clues.

Downtown PalatkaTreasure Hunt9

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Here is your second clue:I’ve been around a longer time,Even before I was built in ’39

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Signs to point the way to historic Northside District

CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News

A way-finding sign at the corner of Third and Main streets is one of several planned to provide a walking tour of the Northside Historic District.

Circuit judge orders open primary in legislative race

Associated PressTALLAHASSEE — A Florida judge is ordering that a

primary election for a Tampa Bay legislative seat be pushed back until November.

Circuit Judge Angela Dempsey ruled Thursday the elec-tion for Florida House District 64 should be open to all voters regardless of party affiliation. She disqualified a write-in candidate because the candidate did not live inside the district that includes north Hillsborough County and northeast Pinellas County.

Dempsey also ruled that any ballots already sent out cannot be counted now. This ruling is at odds, however, with a decision in another lawsuit.

Associated PressATLANTIC BEACH — The

U.S. Coast Guard is alerting the public of a Navy exercise occur-ring near Port Canaveral that involves the use of bland ammu-nition and smoke flares.

The exercises began Thursday

morning and are expected to con-tinue through Aug. 7. They are being conducted from the Port Canaveral East Trident Basin out to 8 nautical miles southeast.

The Coast Guard reminds mari-ners not to approach within 100 yards of any Navy vessel. And all

mariners should operate at a mini-mum safe speed when they are with-in 500 yards of any Navy vessel.

Boaters who are unsure wheth-er any indications of a person or vessel in distress during through Aug. 7 should report the activity to the nearest Coast Guard unit.

Navy exercise ongoing near

Canaveral

080114a3.indd 1 7/31/14 7:49 PM

By Edward F. roBErts

Please let me state that as a disabled Vietnam vet-eran, I totally resent that my status as a veteran is currently being used by some

people to justify their selfishness, anger, and downright cruelty to the thousands of children from Central America being detained as “ille-gal immigrants” on the southern border.

Let me publically proclaim that none of my veteran’s benefits or medical care has been affected in any way by the plight of these poor children. Neither has any other veteran been affected. If you are one of these people who are unemployed, under-employed, working two jobs, having marital problems, or any other frustrations, these children being held by the border patrol have absolutely nothing to do with your problems.

As a veteran, I resent, deeply resent, my name and the names of thousands of other vet-erans being used in social media to justify rac-ism and cruelty towards children. Veterans are not sleeping on the streets or being denied medical care because of immigration. I would also like to say that any “hero” would be more than happy to give up his bed or hospital visit for a small child who is homeless and sick. If you are not willing then you are not a hero.

These children crossing our borders are not drug dealers, gang members, an invading army or any of the other hyperbole spewed out daily on social media and the networks. They are frightened children coming to this country to escape the violence and deprivations in their own countries. Their parents have made the agonizing decision that if they can’t be safe and have a good life then maybe their children may enjoy a better life.

History will judge us harshly for the way we are dealing with this humanitarian tragedy. These children did not walk thousands of miles from El Salvador and Guatemala across

Mexico to destroy the United States. The opportunity to save 50,000 children, most of them orphans and street waifs, has

been laid on our doorstep. We will be judged by both Almighty God and humanity itself for our actions.

What do we do with these children? The same thing we did when tens of thousands of Irish immigrants flooded our shores fleeing the potato famine. The same thing we did when the Italians came, the Jews, the Eastern Europeans, the Vietnamese boat people. None of these immigrant migrations destroyed America, they made America a better place for all of us to live. We look at immigration all wrong. Sure, the people crossing the border now may spend their lives doing menial jobs; but what about their children and grandchil-dren? Are we seriously going to deport the grandparents of the person who may one day find a cure for cancer? Who knows what untapped talent and potential might be hud-dled in those immigrant shelters.

However, let me say in conclusion this is not a national security issue as some claim; it is not even an immigration issue. It is a Christian issue! It is clearly spelled out in the words of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew when he said “Let the little children come unto me and do not hinder them, for to such belongs the Kingdom of Heaven.” Matthew 10:14. Jesus further warns us in Matthew 25:30, “you do this to the least of these my brothers, you do it also unto me.” Let us not join King Herod in the slaughter of the innocents.

Christianity is not a cross on a water tower, a Nativity scene on a courthouse lawn, or even a prayer in a classroom, it is how we live our lives and treat our fellow human beings. For those people who are constantly calling for this nation to return to God, let us begin right now.

Edward F. Roberts lives in Palatka.

O t h e R V I e W S

guest column

today in HistoryO p i n i O n s

PALATKA DAILY NEWSP r o u d to s e r v e P u t n a m C o u n t y, F lo r i da s i n C e 1 8 8 5

W ay n e K n u C K l e s , P u b l i s h e r a l K r o m b a C h , e d i t o r

t o m W o o d , C h a i r m a nd i n K n e s m i t h , P r e s i d e n t

A tax-paid holiday

Florida schools will be back in session very soon, and the new school year brings plenty of changes. Students, teachers and parents will face new

learning standards and a new assessment to test student achievement, but one thing will stay the same: the need for paper and pen-cils, clothes to wear, and maybe even a new computer at home.

With only a few weeks to prepare for the ringing of the first tardy bell, this weekend is the best time to shop because Florida’s back-to-school sales tax holiday begins. From now through Sunday night, Floridians can shop tax-free on items to prepare stu-dents, teachers, and maybe even mom and dad to take on the classroom this fall. Purchases of clothing, school supplies and computers will go untaxed for three days.

Florida TaxWatch, the independent, non-partisan watchdog group, has long support-ed sales tax holidays. They are a great way to lower the tax burden for hard-working Floridians. Tax-free holidays are popular with consumers and provide broad-based tax relief for purchases that people plan to make with or without the tax-free discount.

The back-to-school sales tax holiday has become an annual event for Florida con-sumers who plan their shopping trips around the tax-free days. This year’s sales tax holiday is the 13th since 1998. Holidays were not provided in 2002-2003 and 2008-2009.

Since 1998, taxpayers have saved $407.6 million during the back-to-school sales tax holiday. That’s $407.6 million of Floridians’ hard-earned money that families kept to pay bills, save for college, or make the back-to-school season a little more fun.

This year’s holiday is expected to save tax-payers nearly $40 million. The savings are a small part of a nearly $500 million tax cut that the governor and Legislature supported this year to provide tax relief.

Certainly, $500 million is welcome relief for Florida taxpayers, but the Legislature could do more. By implementing cost-sav-ings recommendations from the TaxWatch Center for Government Efficiency, lawmak-ers can improve public services while saving money, which they can then pass on to tax-payers in the form of tax cuts.

This weekend won’t be the only time Floridians get to purchase tax-free. Earlier this year, Floridians had a nine-day sales tax holiday on hurricane preparation goods at the start of June, and from Sept. 19-21, peo-ple who buy energy-efficient appliances won’t pay tax on the first $1,500 of their purchase.

While this year lawmakers put together a sales tax holiday package that is estimated to save Floridians $43.7 million, TaxWatch challenges the 2015 Legislature to produce more savings so they can pass them on to taxpayers with bigger and better sales tax holidays.

– Florida TaxWatch

C o m m u n i t y n e w s p a p e r s , i n C .our mission: We believe that strong newspapers build strong communities. newspapers get things done. our primary goal

is to publish distinguished and profitable community-oriented newspapers. this mission wil l be accomplished through the

teamwork of professionals dedicated to truth, integrity, loyalty, quality and hard work.

Young refugees are not harming the U.S.

Today is Friday, August 1, the 213th day of 2014. There are 152 days left in the year.

“our views” is the editorial position of the Palatka daily news. all other features on the opinions page are the views of the writers or cartoonists and do not

necessarily reflect the views of the Palatka daily news.

4A PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

The surreal national debate over the death penalty reached a climax of sorts July 23 in a prison execution chamber in Florence, Ariz. Double murderer Joseph Wood was put to death by lethal injection shortly after his lawyers went to the Supreme Court raising ques-tions about the drugs that would be used to kill him.

The justices turned Wood down, but his attorneys were right to raise concerns. It turned out Wood’s execution took two hours, as he lay unconscious on a gurney, gasping and waiting for the drugs to work.

Coming after other botched lethal injections in Oklahoma and Ohio, the Wood execution gave renewed energy to activists calling for an end not only to executions by lethal injection but by all other means as well.

“The death penalty simply has no place in this country,” said Brian Stull, an attorney for the ACLU. “As method after method of state-sponsored kill-ing has been deemed barbaric and archaic, states are left scrambling to invent new ways to execute.”

In this case, Arizona scram-bled to find drugs to execute Wood because anti-death penal-ty activists like Stull have pres-sured pharmaceutical compa-nies to stop supplying effective drugs to executioners.

Still, the Wood fiasco could start a new and productive debate on capital punishment, in part because it spurred an extraordinary statement from a well-respected federal judge.

Alex Kozinski, chief of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, was one of the jurists who lis-tened to Wood’s plea for a stay of execution based on concerns

about the lethal injection drugs. The court issued a stay, sending the case to the Supreme Court, which ultimately allowed the execution to proceed.

Kozinski focused his dissent on the broader issue of lethal injection. Older, now-abandoned methods – hanging, firing squads, the electric chair, the gas chamber – were all devised specifically to kill people, he wrote, and did so pretty well. But lethal injection took drugs originally intended to save lives and used them to kill.

“Subverting medicines meant to heal the human body to the opposite purpose was an enter-prise doomed to failure,” Kozinski wrote. Using drugs for executions was “a misguided effort to mask the brutality of executions by making them look serene and peaceful.”

If the United States is going to carry out executions, Kozinski suggested returning to an old, highly effective method: the fir-ing squad. “Eight or 10 large-caliber rifle bullets fired at close range can inflict massive dam-age, causing instant death every time,” he wrote.

Kozinski said he could under-stand pharmaceutical compa-nies retreating from involve-ment in capital punishment. “I have some sympathy for the drug manufacturers,” he said. “They’re not in the business of killing people. They’re in the business of healing people.”

Gun makers, on the other hand, widely sell their products

to law enforcement agencies. “We as a society accept weapons as a means of carrying out law-ful violent activity,” Kozinski added, pointing to the examples of police, military and security guards.

Of course, an execution by fir-ing squad, unlike lethal injec-tion, would involve blood. But Kozinski concluded, “If we, as a society, cannot stomach the splatter from an execution car-ried out by firing squad, then we shouldn’t be carrying out execu-tions at all.”

One side effect of the debate over death penalty methods is that it draws attention away from the original crime. The Arizona case began in August 1989, when Wood showed up to see an ex-girlfriend, 29-year-old Debbie Dietz. Dietz’s father, Eugene, was also there. Wood shot Eugene Dietz and then, as Debbie tried to help, Wood shot her, too.

Debbie Dietz’s sister, Jeanne Brown, watched it happen.

After Wood’s execution, Brown reacted emotionally. “You don’t know what excruciat-ing is,” she said. “Excruciating is seeing your dad lying there in a pool of blood, seeing your sister lying there in a pool of blood. That’s excruciating. This man deserved it.”

Yes, he did. But how to refo-cus the debate away from methods and back to justice in heinous cases like Wood’s? Kozinski has an idea, and after the Arizona debacle, per-haps some state officials across the country will start listening.

Byron York is chief political corre-spondent for The Washington

Examiner.

TodAy’s HigHligHT in HisTory:On August 1, 1944, an uprising

broke out in Warsaw, Poland, against Nazi occupation; the revolt lasted two months before collapsing.

on THis dATe:In 1714, Britain’s Queen Anne

died at age 49; she was succeeded by George I.

In 1876, Colorado was admitted as the 38th state.

In 1907, the U.S. Army Signal Corps established an aeronautical division, the forerunner of the U.S. Air Force.

In 1914, Germany declared war on Russia at the onset of World War I.

In 1936, the Olympics opened in Berlin with a ceremony presided over by Adolf Hitler.

In 1957, the United States and Canada agreed to create the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD).

In 1966, Charles Joseph Whitman, 25, went on a shooting rampage at the University of Texas in Austin, killing 14 people. Whitman, who had also slain his wife and mother hours earlier, was gunned down by police.

In 1971, the Concert for Bangladesh, organized by George Harrison and Ravi Shankar, took place at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

In 2007, the eight-lane Interstate 35W bridge, a major Minneapolis artery, collapsed into the Mississippi River during eve-ning rush hour, killing 13 people.

Ten yeArs Ago: The federal government warned

of possible al-Qaida terrorist attacks against specific financial institutions in New York City, Washington and Newark, New Jersey. Alexandra Scott, a young cancer patient who’d started a lemonade stand to raise money for cancer research, sparking a nationwide fund-raising cam-paign, died at her home in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, at age 8.

Five yeArs Ago: A fierce storm caused an out-

door stage at the Big Valley Jamboree in Camrose, Alberta, Canada, to collapse, killing one person and injuring dozens of oth-ers. A gunman opened fired at a gay youth center in Tel Aviv, Israel, killing two people. Former Philippine President Corazon Aquino, 76, died in Manila. Naomi Sims, 61, believed to be the first black supermodel, died in Newark, N.J.

one yeAr Ago: President Barack Obama faced

congressional critics of the National Security Agency’s collec-tion of Americans’ telephone records as he and Vice President Joe Biden joined lawmakers on both sides of the issue for an Oval Office meeting. Defying the United States, Russia granted Edward Snowden temporary asy-lum.

TodAy’s BirTHdAys: Actor-director Geoffrey Holder

is 84. Actor Giancarlo Giannini is 72. Basketball Hall of Fame coach Roy Williams is 64. Blues singer-musician Robert Cray is 61. Singer Michael Penn is 56. Movie director Sam Mendes is 49. Country singer George Ducas is 48. Country musician Charlie Kelley is 46. Actress Jennifer Gareis is 44. Actor Charles Malik Whitfield is 42. Actress Tempestt Bledsoe is 41. Actor Jason Momoa is 35. Singer Ashley Parker Angel is 33. Actress Taylor Fry is 33. Actor Elijah Kelley is 28. Actor James Francis Kelly is 25. Actress Ella Wahlestedt (Film: “Earth to Echo”) is 16.

THougHT For TodAy: “Middle age snuffs out more

talent than ever wars or sudden deaths do.” — Richard Hughes, Welsh author and dramatist (1900-1976).

F Y IIf you have a collection of old books, paperback or

hardcover, there are two ways you can dispose of them properly. The first way is to donate them to a charity. But if your local charities won’t take outdated or water-damaged books, you can recycle them. Most paper recy-cling bins can take books -- so long as you remove the hard spines and covers first. The interior pages are easi-ly recyclable and can be tossed wherever you recycle magazines and used office paper. The old jackets and spines should be tossed into the trash.

DID YOU KNOW? In several episodes of TV series “M.A.S.H.,” Col. Potter (Henry Morgan) was seen paint-ing portraits, mainly of the other characters of the cast. These portraits were actually painted by Morgan.

What’s the future for death penalty?Byronyork

This day in Putnam:In 1911, to prevent train acci-

dents, railroad employees were required to have “accurate time-pieces.” This was important to Palatka which had four different railroad lines entering the city and a huge repair depot. The requirement set off a national craze to own a “railroad watch.”

In 1913, shipments of crude camphor from Putnam County left Palatka via the Clyde Line steam-boats. The Satsuma Co. held sev-eral thousand acres of land with more than 800 acres planted in camphor trees.

080114a4.indd 1 7/31/14 4:05 PM

5A PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

DILBERT Scott AdamsBEETLE BAILEY Mort Walker

JUMPSTART Robb Armstrong

BLONDIE Dean Young & John Marshall

BABY BLUES Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE Lynn Johnston

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE Chris Browne

THE BORN LOSER Chip Sansom

GARFIELD Jim Davis

HOROSCOPE

Put past unpleasantness behind you. Rehashing former mistakes or disappointments will sap the energy you need to move forward. Hard work and a positive attitude are the best tools to help you move forward. Live in the moment and aim to build a brighter future.

LEO(July 23-Aug. 22)

A charity or volunteer event will provide the backdrop for an interesting meeting. A new acquaintance will be more attract-ed to you than you realize. Handle with care.

VIRGO(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Include children in your plans today. A picnic, a day at the beach or a camping trip will boost everyone’s spirits and provide a welcome change from daily rou-tines.

LIBRA(Sept. 23-Oct. 23)

Your personal life will be in turmoil. You would be wise to reevaluate your motives and explore your feelings regard-ing certain close relationships. Be honest with yourself and oth-ers.

SCORPIO(Oct. 24-Nov. 22)

Your creativity and imagina-tion are working at full strength today. Look into activities that challenge your talents and your mind. Romance is on the rise and will improve your personal life.

SAGITTARIUS(Nov. 23-Dec. 21)

It’s a great day to socialize with friends or relatives. Don’t be disappointed if someone doesn’t want to be included. Enjoy the people who do participate.

CAPRICORN(Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

You will gain the upper hand if you ignore negative comments. The person playing mind games will be seen as spiteful and not be taken seriously.

AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

Your plans will become more of a reality once you get the infor-mation required to move forward. Consult an adviser who has the means to help you follow your dream.

PISCES(Feb. 20-March 20)

It’s impossible to change every-thing you don’t like, but accep-tance can make it easier to move

on to new enterprises. Devote your time and effort to working hard and being a caring and con-siderate person.

ARIES(March 21-April 19)

A charitable institution or cause will benefit from your giving nature. Get involved and make a difference for those less fortunate. Forget about people who have let you down in the past.

TAURUS(April 20-May 20)

You will feel pleased about your current prospects. Make use of opportunities to interact with peers in your field. Your hard work will soon pay off.

GEMINI(May 21-June 20)

You are not using your poten-tial fully. Hone your skills by joining a group that can help you to master your talents. A mental challenge will prove stimulating.

CANCER(June 21-July 22)

This is not a good time to lend or borrow money. Don’t be deceived by someone claim-ing to have the power to quickly increase your cash flow. Play it safe to avoid a loss.

HI AND LOIS Chance Browne

ACROSS 1 Enticed 6 Toys with tails 11 Last letters 13 Hacienda

housewife 14 Make more

modern 15 Salon dyes 16 June

honoree 17 Hirt and Gore18Bossy’schew 21 Male deer 23 Grecian

vessel 26 Galleon cargo 27 Long for 28 Fencing sword 29 Whistleblower 31 Alpha

followers 32 German river 33 Eye doctor 35 Fodder

storage36Censor’s

target 37 “Simpsons”

bartender 38 Compass pt. 39 Police bulletin 40 Wind up

41 Terrific bargain

42 Lillie or Arthur 44 Desert “lake” 47 Straying 51 Wall Street

broker 52 Extent 53 More recent 54 Like some

stadiums

DOWN 1 Comedian

— Costello 2 Foul ball caller 3 Ruby 4 Victorian oath 5 Online info 6 Ship bottoms 7 Taverns 8 2,000 pounds 9 Big Band — 10 Airline to

Stockholm 12 Play the siren 13 Fountain treat 18 Sandpaper

grade 19 Sea — 20 Meek 22 Automobile

trim

23 Computer availability

24 Think l ogically

25 Made a home 28 Underwater

shocker 30 Famous

numero 31 Hot — rum 34 Suppressed 36 More cunning

39 Drill 41 Commanded 43 Golden

Fleece ship 44 Geog. feature 45 Ill temper 46 Blustery 48 Sleeve filler 49 Before

marriage 50 Danson or

Kennedy

Dear Harriette: My friends’ parents have been going through a rough patch for about five years. This year, they decided to get a divorce. I found out about this a few months ago and have been there for them whenever they want to talk. However, they usually don’t want to discuss what’s going on and how they are feeling. Even though they don’t want to talk about their fam-ily and the divorce, I have noticed that they always seem upset or sad. They were very close with their father, and now they barely see him. I want them to know that I am here if they ever need anything, but is there anything I can do until they come to me? — In the Middle, Albany, New York

Dear In The Middle: What you can do is to be there for your friends as a friend. Rather than asking them about the divorce, focus on posi-tive ways that you can influence their lives. Think of activities that you have enjoyed together over the years. Invite them to participate in those activities with you now. When you call them or text them,

communicate something uplifting. You can tell stories or share funny anecdotes. You can just call to say, “I’m thinking about you.”

The best thing you can do is to be a safe place for them to find consistent happiness. In this way, you may be able to draw them out to spend time with you, especially when things are tough. Avoid get-ting into their business. As much as you might be interested, you are not an expert on divorce or family dynamics. As a friend, remember to be a friend: a great listener with an open heart.

Dear Harriette: I have two kids. My son is already in college, and my daughter is a senior who is choosing which college she wants to attend. We are a middle-class fam-ily and live in a wealthy town. I am incredibly worried about funding both of my children’s education. I want to be able to support them, but I also know that we cannot afford to spend that much money on col-lege. I would never want to sacrifice their education, but I am worried we will get into debt because of

this. How can I tell my daughter that she cannot attend a school that we cannot afford without crush-ing her dreams? — Reality Check, Westchester, New York

Dear Reality Check: How good are your daughter’s grades? Before giving up on certain schools, help your daughter research scholarship opportunities that may be perfect for her accomplishments. Speak with the guidance counselor at her school to learn about opportunities that you may not already know.

Definitely talk to your daughter also about the reality of your family finances. Figure out first what you can afford to pay for her college education and which schools fit into that range. This will help her at least to see what the options may be. Remind her that every fam-ily has to make individual school choices based on what they can afford and the student’s academic record. Promise your daughter that you will work with her to secure the best education that your family can afford.

ADVICE BY HARRIETTE COLECROSSWORD

Yesterday’s Answer

BRIDGE

Friends won’t discuss divorce

COMICS

Edith Sitwell, an English poet who died in 1964, said, “I have often wished I had time to culti-vate modesty. But I am too busy thinking about myself.”

A friend of mine said that all top bridge players have egos the size of planets. But they do not

stop thinking. Even when things seem to be going well, they do not drop their guard.

This deal is a good example. South is in four hearts. West leads the spade ace. What should happen after that?

South’s two-club rebid was New Minor Forcing. It announced at least game-invitational strength and asked North to describe his hand further. When North showed three-card heart support, South went for game in that suit. Yes, three no-trump would have been easy to make, with nine top tricks, but bidding isn’t always perfect.

Since East does not want West to shift, he should encourage spades enthusiastically by drop-

ping his nine. West should then cash the spade king and lead a third round of the suit.

Let’s suppose East thoughtless-ly switches to a club. South, who must play the trump suit without loss, should hope that East has the king and jack. Declarer takes the fourth trick with dummy’s club queen, plays a heart to his 10, crosses back to dummy with a diamond, leads a heart to his queen, cashes the heart ace and claims.

However, an East who is think-ing will realize that, based on the point-count, West is unlikely to have a high club. Instead, East will lead his last spade, which promotes a trump trick for the defense.

For Friday, August 1, 2014

Obituaries are paid adver-tising written by funeral homes based upon information provided by families. Death notices are brief announce-ments published at no charge.

Kerry T. AlexanderKerry T. Alexander, 60, of

East Palatka, passed Tuesday, July 29, 2014 at his residence following a brief illness.

He was the son of the late Luther and Beenie Pearl A l e x a n d e r . H e w a s a n a t i v e a n d lifelong resi-dent of East Palatka. He was a 1971 graduate of P a l a t k a South High School. He served in the U.S. Air Force as an Airport Control Operator. His hobbies included reading and watch-ing old television western shows. Kerry was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints, Palatka. He was formerly employed with Georgia-Pacif ic and Seminole Electric.

Those to cherish his memo-ries are daughters: Tammy and Lashawn Alexander, Palatka; son: Shon Pepper, Ocala; sisters: Mary E. (the Rev. Nathaniel) Hankins, San A n g e l o , T e x a s , D e b r a Williams, East Palatka; neph-e w : D a r r e l l ( G l e n n i s ) Hankins, Dallas, Texas; niec-es: Kimberlee (Albert) King, A t l a n t a , G a . ; T i f f a n y Williams, Elton; six grandchil-dren: one great-grandson and a host of other relatives and friends.

Memorial services will be held Saturday, Aug. 2, at 11 a.m. at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 1414 Husson Ave., Palatka. Pastor Johnny Count.

Arrangements are entrust-ed to D.A. Boyd & Sons Funeral Home, Palatka.

Mary B. DonaldsonM a r y R o s a L e e B e a t y

Donaldson, 74, of Palatka, entered the sunset of life on Tuesday, July 29, 2014 at Orange City Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Orange City, following an extended ill-ness.

The daugh-ter of Sammy L e e a n d E m m a L e e Beaty, Mary was born on S a t u r d a y , Feb. 24, 1940 in Wyoming, Del. She relo-cated to Palatka at a very early age and was educated in the Putnam County School District (Central Academy High School). In 1967, Mary was united in Holy Matrimony to Elijah Donaldson and they were the blessed parents of three children, Gail, Curtis, and Michael. She became employed with the McNeill family, where she worked for over 17 years. Mary was a compassionate caregiver to m a n y e l d e r l y r e s i d e n t s throughout Putnam County. Mother Mary accepted the Lord as her personal savior and completely dedicated her life to him. She was a longtime member of The Temple of God Miracle Deliverance Center – later known as To God Be The Glory Holiness Church – under the pastoral leadership of Dr. Ruth Lowe-Reaves. She was a faithful member for over 25 years serv ing on the Mother ’s Board and as a prayer intercessor. She loved her family, her church family, and serving people.

In addition to her parents and husband, Mary was pre-ceded in eternal rest by her brother, Jimmy Lee Beaty; brother in-law, Clover Beal.

Mary leaves to cherish her memories: devoted daughter: Gail Donaldson, Palatka; two b e l o v e d s o n s , C u r t i s Donaldson, Palatka, Michael (Adrian) Donaldson, Deltona; sister, Pastor Rosa Lee Beal, Palatka, sister-n-law, Velma Donaldson, Cherry Hill, N.J.; grandchi ldren, Lateasha Mauesby, Donte Beltzer, Zania, Nicole, Micah, and Curtis Donaldson; six great-grandchildren, dedicated niece, Stephanie Beal; and a host of other relatives and sor-rowing friends.

Visitation of family and friends will be from 1-5 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 2 at the cha-pel. Homegoing celebration will be 3 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 3 at Flagg’s Chapel of Serenity, 2400 Madison St., Palatka. Pastor Beverly Canty, of Higher Dimensions of Hope Ministries, Palatka, is the eulogist. Interment will be in Oak Hill West Cemetery.

Please sign the Donaldson family’s guestbook at www.flaggserenitychapel.com.

Arrangements are entrust-ed to Karl N. Flagg Serenity Memorial Chapel.

Jeannette W. Ford-Thomas

Jeannette Williams Ford-Thomas, 71, o f Bunnel l , entered the sunset of life on Tuesday, July 29, 2014 at her daugh-t e r ’ s r e s i -d e n c e i n Palm Coast.

The daugh-ter of Hezekiah Williams and Tessie Monroe, she was born on Saturday, Nov. 21, 1942 in Jamesburg, N.J. She was edu-cated in the St. Johns and Flagler County school dis-tricts. On March 18, 1970, Jeanette was united in holy matrimony to Wiley Thomas. In 2010, Jeanette retired from the Flagler County School System after serving as a caf-eteria manager for 42 years. During these years, she had the privilege of serving sever-al schools, including: George Washington Carver School, Bunnell Elementary, Belle Terre Middle and Flagler Palm Coast High Schools. She was a faithful member and deaconess at Gethsemane Missionary Baptist Church, Hastings. Deaconess Thomas enjoyed attending church and also enjoyed cooking and shop-ping. She absolutely adored her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Jeanette was preceded in eternal rest by her husband, Wiley Thomas; son, Leon Turner; fathers, Hezekiah Williams and George Hill; brother, Reginald Williams; s isters , Beatr ice Foster , Christine Williams.

Jeanette leaves to cherish her life and legacy: mother, Tessie Hill, Bunnell; daugh-ters, Elder Annette Lassiter, Daytona Beach, Minister Windy (James) Ford-Butler, Palm Coast; sons, Ronald (Temeca) Ford, Bunnel l , Jeffrey (Cassandra) Ford, Daytona Beach, Darryl Ford, Fo lsom, Cal i f . , Anthony (Sherill) Ford, Richmond, Va., Wiley S. (Tonisha) Thomas, Gregory (Melissa) Thomas, Palm Coast, Terry Price, Valdosta, Ga.; sister, Sue (Bob) Burns, Palm Coast; brother, Linwood (Deborah) Carter, Rochester, N.Y.; 49 grandchildren, 44 great-grandchildren; stepchildren, Clara (Elvis) Mincey, Rose Walker, Lois Walker, Wayne Walker, Queen Smith, Brenda (Stafon) Jenkins, Rhonda (Alvin) Hubbert; and a host of other relatives and friends.

Visitation of family and friends will be 5-6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 1 at New Hope Holiness Church, 813 Marion St., Bunnell. Homegoing cele-b r a t i o n w i l l b e 3 p . m . Saturday, Aug. 2 at First Baptist Church of Bunnell, 2301 Commerce Parkway, B u n n e l l , t h e R e v . E r i c Trawick, Pastor. The Rev. Rick Torrence, Pastor and the Rev. Karon Torrence, co-pas-t o r s o f G e t h s e m a n e Missionary Baptist Church of Hastings, are the officiates. Interment will be in Masonic Cemetery, Palm Coast.

Please sign the Thomas family’s guestbook at www.flaggserenitychapel.com.

Arrangements are entrust-ed to Karl N. Flagg Serenity Memorial Chapel.

Charles E. Hampton Jr.

Minister Charles Elmer Hampton Jr., 57, was born on Aug. 11, 1956 to the union of Charles Elmer and Ruth C a m p b e l l H a m p t o n . H e entered into eternal rest on July 23, 2014 at the Malcom Randall VA Medical Center in Gainesville.

He was baptized at Gilgal Missionary Baptist Church and also served at Magnolia M.B. Church. When the three church-es in Johnson Crossroads

merged, they became Trinity United M.B. Church, under the leadership of Dr. Clarence Woods. Minister Hampton was a 1974 gradu-a t e o f Interlachen High School, and he attend-ed Santa Fe Community College. His m i l i t a r y career began in 1979 at Fort Jackson, S.C. and then t o H u n t e r Army Air Field in Savannah, Ga. He also served in Germany. In addition, he was a member of the Army Reserve in Palatka and Gainesville. Special recogni-tion goes to the entire staff of the Kidney Dialysis Center in Hawthorne and the Malcom Randall VA Medical Center in Gainesville. Not to be forgotten are the VAMC Palliative Care Unit and the staff at Park M e a d o w s H e a l t h & Rehabil itation Center of Gainesville.

Minister Hampton was pre-ceded in death by his father, Charles Elmer Hampton Sr., and brother, Thadious.

He leaves to cherish his memory, a loving and devoted mother , Ruth Campbe l l Hampton; three sisters, Joyce (Pastor Leonard) Scott, Sharon (Jimmie) O’Neal, and Ursula Hampton-Goodrum; one broth-er, Wayne (Deborah) Smith; one aunt, Dorothy Hampton Green; special uncle-cousin, Eugene (Dorothy) Jackson; nieces, Kendra Smith and Shauntella Smith; nephews, Jimmie Tyrell O’Neal and Deontray Smith; six grand-nieces and numerous cousins who reside throughout the United States; faithful friends, Larry Faulkner , Se lena Fountain, Denise Girtman, Bessie Alexander, Dr. Woods and the entire Trinity United M.B. Church Family. Minister Hampton was famous for his very tasty million dollar pies that he was delighted to furnish for any occasion. He will be missed by the entire Johnson Crossroads community.

The visitation for family and friends will be Friday, Aug. 1, 5-7:30 p.m., at the Trinity United Missionary Baptist Church, Hawthorne, (Johnson Crossroads commu-nity) and from 10 a.m. until t h e t i m e o f s e r v i c e o n Saturday. Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, August 2 at the Trinity United Missionary Baptist Church, Hawthorne, with Dr. Clarence Woods, Pastor officiating and Pastor Frankie McClendon presiding.

Please visit and post com-ments to the guestbook at www.ewlawson.com.

Arrangements are under the direction of the E.W. Lawson & Son Funeral Home.

Dr. Ruth G. Lowe-Reaves

Dr. Ruth Geneva Lowe-Reaves, 83, native and lifelong resident of Palatka, peacefully transitioned from her earthly labors to her heavenly reward on Sunday afternoon, July 27, 2014 at Putnam Community Medical Center.

The daughter of Mathis and Leola (Adams) Gilyard, and born on Dec. 4, 1930, she was educated in the Putnam County School D i s t r i c t a t C e n t r a l A c a d e m y High School. She was a longtime presser at One Hour Martinizing Dry Cleaners on Lemon Street in downtown Palatka before answering the call to full-time ministry. She served many years at Mt. Zion Primitive Baptist Church under the lead-ership of the Rev. P.H. Frison. In 1972, she commenced her pastoral calling and worked pri-marily with children, started a prayer band and evangelized wherever she was led by the Holy Ghost. Going from hospi-tals to jails and nursing homes, she was passionate about evan-gelism. On April 30, 1972, God’s visionary leader instituted The Universal Church of Christ Dominion of God at 512 N. 13th St., Palatka. Continuing the covenant relationship with God, larger facilities were required and they relocated to 1015 Washington St. The name was revised to The Temple of God Revival Center and subse-quently The Temple of God Miracle Deliverance Center. In

September 1978, the church purchased the old Madison Theatre. Following the inspira-tion of a 1981 tent revival in Clay County (Green Cove Springs), The Temple of God Miracle Deliverance Center 2 was established in Pier Station, subsequently moving to Green Cove Springs in 1984. In 1993, the church became known as To God Be the Glory Holiness Church and in September 1998, the worship center transitioned to its present campus at 3521 St. Johns Ave. On Nov. 18, 1983, she earned her doctorate of divinity degree at the Jameson Christian College. She was the founding President of the One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism Fellowship and the Greater Palatka Ministerial Association. Her passion was worshiping God, preaching the gospel, witnessing to all she encountered and enjoying fami-ly time.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in eternal rest by her husbands, Charlie Lowe and Jake Reaves; son, Jerry Alexander Green; broth-er, Mathew Gilyard Sr., and great-granddaughter, Antoria Sophia Appling.

Those who cherish her memories: devoted daughter, Pastor Linda L. Hall, Palatka; five grandchildren, Arnetta Faye (Chattman) Word, Myra Styles, and Dr. Aaron John Hall, all of Palatka; Shan Green and Jerry Green Jr., both of Boston, Mass., beloved sister, Ola Mae Bell, Palatka; s i s t e r - i n - l a w , B e t t y W . Gilyard, Palatka; great-grand-ch i ldren , Mor ian Black , Kentrell Sanders, Jade Styles, Martise Dumas and Danasia Sampson; special longtime assistant pastors, Prophetess Lula Mae Ivey-Peoples and Elder James Campbell Sr., both of Palatka; and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, other relatives and faithful church family.

Visitation of family and friends will be from 4-8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 1 with a 7 p.m. Victory Celebration at To God B e T h e G l o r y H o l i n e s s Church, 3521 St. Johns Ave., Palatka. A homegoing celebra-tion of her life and legacy will be noon at Mount Tabor First Baptist Church, 4909 St. Johns Ave., Palatka, the Rev. Karl N. Flagg, Pastor, is the eulogist (former Temple of God Miracle Deliverance Center Church Administrator/Assistant Pastor). Interment will be in Oak Hill West Cemetery, Palatka. The cor-tege will assemble at To God Be the Glory Holiness Church at 11:15 a.m. Saturday.

Condolences may be sent to family of Dr. Ruth Lowe-Reaves at www.flaggsereni-tychapel.com.

Arrangements entrusted to the care of Karl N. Flagg Serenity Memorial Chapel, 2400 Madison St., Palatka.

Virginia E. StemblerVirginia Ethel Stembler, 86,

of East Palatka, passed away on Friday, July 11, 2014 at Moultrie Creek Nursing and Rehab Center in St. Augustine

following an extended illness. S h e w a s a n a t i v e o f

Rockville Centre, N.Y. She had worked as a personnel and customer services manag-er for over 20 years with Neiman Marcus department stores in Dallas. Virginia was a m e m b e r o f t h e F i r s t Presby ter ian Church o f Palatka. She enjoyed needle-point, reading and traveling. Virginia never really retired; she shifted gears, becoming more engaged in life and hap-p i ly invo lved in serv i ce through her church and com-munity.

She is survived by her hus-band of 68 years, Wallace P. “Wally” Stembler Jr.; Paul Stembler and wife Mary Anne Ebert of Minneapolis, Minn.; Susan Johnson and husband Tom of Allen, Texas and Father James Stembler of Corpus Christi, Texas; sister, Janet Jacobsen of Coatesville, Pa.; granddaughter, Carla Bost and husband Larry of Allen, Texas; great-grandchil-dren, Andree´Bost and Blake Bost.

A memorial service cele-brating Virginia’s life will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday, A u g . 5 a t t h e F i r s t Presby ter ian Church o f Palatka with the Rev. Dr. Cynthia Benz, the Rev. Chuck DeVane and Father James Stembler officiating.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be sent to the Putnam Coalition Of Care Inc. , 1104 Moseley Ave. , Palatka, FL 32177. Memories and condolences may be expressed to the family at Virginia’s Book of Memories page at www.johnsonoverturf-funerals.com.

Arrangements are under the direction of Johnson-Overturf Funeral Home in Palatka.

Robert A. Thomas Sr.R o b e r t A n d r e w “ B o b ”

Thomas Sr., 69 of Palatka, passed away Wednesday, July 30, 2014 at the Haven Hospice Rober t s Care Center in Palatka following an extended illness.

He was born in Egg Harbor City, N.J. and had been a res ident o f Palatka for the past 33 years coming from Galloway T o w n s h i p , N . J . H e retired from the Hawthorne Georgia-Pacific in 2007 after 23 years of service. He enjoyed listening to country music and loved going fishing, camping and taking cruises. He was a Methodist.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Nancy Thomas; his parents, Anthony and Marie Thomas; and a brother, Charlie Thomas.

Survivors include a son and daughter - in - law, Robert Thomas Jr., and his wife Hope Thomas of Palatka; a daughter and son-in-law, Kathy and David Stanley of Keystone Heights; two brothers, Anthony Albert Thomas Jr., of York, Pa., and John Thomas of Galloway,

N.J.; two sisters, Helen Thomas Castrenge of Quarryville, Pa. a n d B a r b a r a T h o m a s McDermott of Dayton, Ohio; a brother-in-law and his wife, Richard and Doreen Walsh; five g r a n d c h i l d r e n , J o s h u a Williams, Justin Williams, Amanda Moore , Mikiea l Thomas and Michelle Taylor; eight great-grandchildren and a nephew, Allen Walsh.

Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. on Saturday, August 2 at the Masters Funeral Home in Palatka with the Rev. Don Hanna officiating. Burial will follow in Palatka Memorial Gardens. The family will receive friends one hour prior to the service. To celebrate his life, a video tribute will be shown.

Flowers are grateful ly accepted or memorial gifts may be sent to Haven Hospice Roberts Care Center, 6400 St. Johns Ave. , Palatka, FL 32177. Messages of sympathy may be expressed in his online guestbook at www.themas-tersfuneralhomes.com.

Masters Funeral Home of Palatka is in charge of the arrangements.

Susan S. CaldwellSusan S. Caldwell, 75, of

East Palatka, passed away on Wednesday, July 30, 2014 at F l a g l e r H o s p i t a l i n S t . A u g u s t i n e f o l l o w i n g a n extended illness.

Arrangements w i l l be announced by Johnson Overturf Funeral Home in Palatka.

David J. HardyDavid Jerry Hardy, 67, of

Crescent City, entered the sunset of life on Saturday, July 26, 2014 at his residence.

Arrangements are entrust-ed to Karl N. Flagg Serenity Memorial Chapel, Palatka.

Jacqueline E. Middleton

J a c q u e l i n e E s t e l l e Middleton, 60, passed away on July 22, 2014.

Arrangements were under the direction and care of Eternity Funeral Homes, Jacksonville, (904) 348-5579 and Yulee (904) 261-2700.

Glenn SlaughterGlenn Slaughter, 64, of East

Palatka, passed away on Thursday, July 31, 2014 at Haven Hospice Roberts Care Center following an extended illness.

A r r a n g e m e n t s w i l l b e a n n o u n c e d b y J o h n s o n -Overturf Funeral Home in Palatka.

Janice M. WilliamsJanice Medlock Williams,

47, of Gainesville, formerly of Palatka, passed away July 23, 2014 at her home.

Chestnut Funeral Home of Gainesville is in charge of the arrangements.

6A PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

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Obituaries

080114a6.indd 1 7/31/14 8:01 PM

n Third in a series

By Andy HAllPalatka Daily News

Summer has been a tiring e x p e r i e n c e f o r t h e Palatka Panthers.

Down at the bottom of steep hill in Ravine

Gardens stood members of the football team. Their mission was to drag oversized truck tires to the top.

“One kid gives out, the other picks him up,” said PHS coach Randy Hedstrom. “It’s condition-ing, but it’s more about getting the kids to work together. It’s a rough drill. I’ve done it myself.”

Conducted with the assistance of Randy Mathews, Chance Clay and Mark Hedstrom, the drill was similar to one conducted during the summers preceding the 2002 and ’03 seasons that produced 19 wins, top-five state rankings and a district champi-onship. What followed was a string of losing seasons unbro-ken until the Panthers went 6-5 last year, highlighted by a triple-overtime win in St. Augustine, their first over the Yellow Jackets since 2003.

Coach Willie Offord subse-quently left his alma mater to

take a head coaching position in Columbia, S.C., where he played for the University of South Carolina before spending four seasons with the Minnesota Vikings. In stepped Randy Hedstrom, like Offord a former PHS player and the Panthers’ secondary coach for most of he 1990s before moving into admin-istration. Hedstrom’s Palatka weightlifting teams won five con-secutive state championships from 1991-95 and he has drawn on that experience during offsea-

son conditioning.“The majority worked real

h a r d c o n s i s t e n t l y , ” s a i d Hedstrom, who leads the team into preseason practice Monday. “We want to keep the work ethic up. Willie started it and hopeful-ly we can keep it going in the right direction.”

Offord hardly left the cup-board bare. All but one player who touched the ball for Palatka on offense last season are back.

SIDELINES

ANDY HALL Sports Editor 312-5239

[email protected]

SPORTSwww.palatkadailynews.com FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 2014 B SECTION

ANDY HALL

INSIDEScoreboard 2BBriefs 2BClassified 3B

PrestonClark

on film

So I’m vacationing at the beach a couple of weeks ago, engag-ing in the only kind of surfing l do – channel surfing.

Stumble across a movie about bass fishing. It stars Bill Engvall of Blue Collar Comedy Tour fame.

It’s awful.Nevertheless,

I linger long enough to see the name Preston Clarke flashed on the movie’s tourna-ment score-board. Funny, there’s a former Bassmaster Elite angler from Palatka named Preston Clark, only without the final e.

Coincidence? No, it turns out.Seconds of exhaustive Googling –

er, digging – by your humble corre-spondent reveal that this was the 2008 straight-to-video comedy, “Bait Shop,” in which Engvall is a hapless bait shop owner who has to win the big tournament for the cash that will let him hang on to his business. That means beating the underhanded star of the pro bass tour, portrayed by Billy Ray Cyrus.

I won’t give away the ending.Anyway, my investigation reveals

that one of the credited performers is, indeed, Palatka’s Preston Clark.

“Did you fall asleep?” he responded when asked whether he was the movie Preston Clarke.

Bait Shop was filmed in and around Lake Tohokekaliga, near Kissimmee. Clark was asked to be a consultant.

“They wanted me to make sure the guys held the fish right, didn’t hold the rods upside down – then they decided they wanted me to be in it,” he said. “I did 80 percent of the boat driving. When they wanted somebody who could drive fast, it was me.”

Which brings up perhaps the most ghastly technical flaw of “Bait Shop.” Not Clark’s boating, but the notion that a bass tournament begins in broad daylight with an announcer calling for the anglers to start their engines, as if this was NASCAR. Even I know better. But then, an orderly start at safe light wasn’t what the moviemakers wanted.

Neither did they want Billy Ray Cyrus racing off like a maniac.

“We had a scene where we’re sup-posed to go about 200 yards, then shut down and come back,” Clark said. “He kept going and they sent me after him. On the fourth try, he understood. I look at Bill and said, “He wasn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer.’ He said, ‘You think?’”

Engvall proved quite the gentle-man and a surprisingly good fisher-man.

“When we had some free time, Bill and I went fishing. You could tell it was a release for him,” Clark said. “He didn’t want to talk. He just want-ed to fish. Every once in a while, maybe once or twice a year, I hear from him. His wife is a classy lady. He jokes about her on stage, but you could tell they were very happy together.”

The four or five days Clark spent on the set afforded him the chance to meet Larry the Cable Guy, one of Engvall’s co-stars from the Blue Collar Comedy Tour. He wasn’t involved in “Bait Shop” but showed up to watch the filming. “It took me a

Clark

Two more Jaguar wideouts hurt in practiceTandonDosswasalsoexpectedtoreturnpunts

By MArk longAssociated Press

JACKSONVILLE — Already with-out suspended receivers Justin Blackmon and Ace Sanders as well as injured starter Cecil Shorts III (ham-string), the Jacksonville Jaguars got even thinner at the pos i t ion Thursday.

Receiver Tandon Doss, expected to

be the team’s punt returner, badly injured his right ankle on the final play of practice. Doss got his ankle caught under linebacker Geno Hayes during a red-zone play. He screamed in pain as trainers rushed to place his leg in an air cast. X-rays were nega-tive, showing no broken bones, but Doss is expected to miss significant time.

Ma k i ng m a t t e r s w orse f o r Jacksonville, rookie receiver Allen Robinson felt tightness in his right hamstring — the same injury that kept him out during organized team activities — and sat out most of prac-

tice.“That’s kind of the name of the

game,” fellow receiver Mike Brown said. “It’s a very physical game, lot of contact, and the reality is that inju-ries do happen. When those injuries happen you’ve got to have a next-man-up mentality. Everybody has got to be ready to step in. Nobody’s going to feel sorry for you, so hopefully guys can capitalize on the opportunity.”

Two more players were hurt Thursday. Rookie guard Brandon Linder, a third-round pick from Miami who has been working with the first team, sprained his right foot.

And linebacker John Lotulelei sprained the medial collateral liga-ment in his left knee.

But much of the talk after practice was about the wideout position.

Jacksonville can’t seem to catch a break at that spot this year. The Jaguars were down seven receivers during OTAs, and learned two days before training camp that Sanders would miss the first four games for violating the NFL’s substance-abuse policy. Sanders took a leave of absence from the team to seek counseling.

Waiting their turn

ANDY HALL / Palatka Daily News

Palatka football players (from left) Paul Mast, Bryan Williams, De’Abrie Smith and Eron Carter walk while waiting to meet with media during High School Awareness Day Monday at EverBank Field.

TiresomeEffortDrillhelpsPanthersdevelopstaminaandteamwork

CHRIS DEVITTO / Palatka Daily News

Palatka’s Joc Brown runs through an opening in the spring game.

Rays dealPriceExpecttostayinracedespitesendingCyYoungwinnertoDetroit

By Fred goodAllAssociated Press

ST. PETERSBURG — The Tampa Bay Rays insist they haven’t given up on their season by trading David Price.

The 2012 AL Cy Young winner was sent to Detroit on Thursday in a three-team deal that landed pitcher Drew Smyly and shortstop prospect Willy Adames from the Tigers and infielder Nick Franklin from the Seattle Mariners.

The Rays made the playoffs four of the past six s e a s o n s a n d e n t e r e d 2 0 1 4 with expectations of contending for a spo t in the World Series.

W i t h P r i c e leading the way, they’ve rebound-ed from poor start to surge into postseason contention, going a major league-best 29-13 since June 11.

But it wasn’t enough to stop the budget-minded team from trading Price, who was making $14 million this year and can become a free agent after 2015.

“Compared to the other possibilities, it was by far the most prudent thing that we could do for the best interests of the franchise,” executive vice presi-dent of baseball operation Andrew Friedman said.

“Simply said, standing pat makes it much, much more difficult for us to maintain a compelling, competitive team going forward. That’s the reality of a low-revenue club,” Friedman added. “I think it’s obvious to everyone that follows the game that the econom-ic disparity is only widening. It makes it a little more challenging in our quest to always balance the present and future, but we can’t waver from who we are and how we have to do things to have success.”

The Rays considered dealing Price last winter, but opted instead to sign him to a one-year contract while boost-ed payroll to around $80 million.

Price

Brooks set standard for NFL linebackersNewHallofFamerledSuperBowlchampionBucs,starredforFSU

By Fred goodAllAssociated Press

TAMPA — Eighteen years later and now headed to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Derrick Brooks laughs

at the memory of sitting in a hotel room the morning of a game early in his career.

He was turning on a TV and being riled by a national commentator who not only forecast another loss for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers but jokingly referred to the struggling team as the “Yucks.”

The young, undersized linebacker who would go on to become the heartbeat of a Super Bowl champion turned to roommate Warren Sapp,

another second-year pro embracing the challenge of transforming one of the worst franchises in pro sports history into a title contender, and the two of them locked angry eyes.

“I was upset. Sapp was beyond upset. … We thought we were turn-ing the corner,” Brooks recalled. “We kind of looked at each other and I said: ‘This has got to stop. We’re not going to be defined by this.’”

As first-round draft picks in 1995, Brooks and Sapp entered the league

with a team that suffered through 12 consecutive seasons with 10 or more losses before their arrival.

Along with hard-hitting safety John Lynch, they formed the corner-stone of a dominant defense that keyed a Super Bowl run in 2002 and ranked among the best in the NFL for more than a decade.

It’s difficult, though, for Brooks to talk about where he helped lead the

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080114b1.indd 1 7/31/14 11:39 PM

2B • PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGU ST 1 , 2014

CALENDARNOTE: Schedules are submitted by schools, leagues and recreation departments and are subject to change without notice.

FRIDAY, August 1No events scheduled

SATURDAY, August 2No events scheduled

TIDESPalatka City Dock

High LowToday 7:33A,8:02P 2:26A,2:42PAug. 2 8:12A,8:44P 3:11A,3:24PAug. 3 8:55A,9:32P 4:04A,4:12P

St. Augustine Beach High LowToday ––––-,12:20P 6:02A,6:30PAug. 2 12:29A,1:03P 6:44A,7:23PAug. 3 1:13A,1:50P 7:33A,5:44P

NOTICESFall Sports Tryouts

Any incoming Palatka High School freshman boy or girl interested in run-ning cross country this fall can get in contact with head coach Steven Gonzalez at [email protected]. Conditioning will begin with the pro-gram on Monday at Palatka High.

LOCAL BOWLINGFUNTIME SENIORS 9-PIN

NO-TAP LEAGUEAt Putnam Lanes

July 23 Standings: Opened Again, 27-17; Twisted Sisters, 26-18; Pin Balls, 26-18; Aces, 24-20; Trident Force, 23-21; 3 Aces, 22-22; Odd Balls, 21-23; Beach Bells, 20-24; Pin Pals, 18-26; Ruth’s Boys, 1-3. High scratch game, team: Trident Force, 611; 3 Aces, 574; Pin Pals, 485. High handicap game, team: Trident Force, 790; 3 Aces, 754; Aces, 746. High scratch series, team: Trident Force, 1,659; 3 Aces, 1,489; Pin Pals, 1,409. High handicap series, team: Trident Force, 2,196; Pin Balls, 2,128; Aces, 2,107. High scratch game, men: Chet Cowan, 242; Sim Suter, 206; Wesley Vaughn, 200. High handicap game, men: Chet Cowan, 311; Wayne Sapp, 284; Rich Brusseau, 267. High scratch series, men: Manny Salinas, 565; Chet Cowan, 549; Jay Crowe, 545. High handicap series, men: Manny Salinas, 775; Wayne Sapp, 767; Chet Cowan, 756. High scratch game, women: Martina Stinson, 192; Joan Holley, 168; Teresa Gray, 167. High handicap game, women: Teresa Gray, 282; Joan Holley, 267; Martina Stinson, 260. High scratch series, women: Martina Stinson, 454; Joyce Kilby, 453; Teresa Gray, 453. High handicap series, women: Teresa Gray, 798; Joan Holley, 739; Joyce Kilby, 708. Splits converted: Martina Stinson, 3-10; Don Bailey, 2-7; Sim Suter,

3-10; Cindy Howland, 3-10 (2); Joan Holley, 3-10, 2-7-8.

BASEBALLAL Standings

East Division W L Pct GBBaltimore 60 47 .561 —Toronto 60 50 .545 1½New York 55 52 .514 5Tampa Bay 53 55 .491 7½Boston 48 60 .444 12½Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 58 47 .552 —Kansas City 55 52 .514 4Cleveland 53 55 .491 6½Chicago 53 56 .486 7Minnesota 48 59 .449 11West Division W L Pct GBOakland 66 41 .617 —

Los Angeles 64 43 .598 2Seattle 56 52 .519 10½Houston 44 65 .404 23Texas 43 65 .398 23½Wednesday’s GamesMilwaukee 5, Tampa Bay 0Houston 8, Oakland 1Baltimore 4, L.A. Angels 3Cleveland 2, Seattle 0Detroit 7, Chicago White Sox 2Toronto 6, Boston 1Texas 3, N.Y. Yankees 2Kansas City 3, Minnesota 2Thursday’s GamesChicago White Sox 7, Detroit 4L.A. Angels 1, Baltimore 0, 13 inningsSeattle 6, Cleveland 5Kansas City 6, Minnesota 3Toronto 6, Houston 5Friday’s GamesSeattle (Elias 8-8) at Baltimore (W.Chen 11-3), 7:05 p.m.Texas (Williams 2-4) at Cleveland (Salazar 3-4), 7:05 p.m.

Colorado (F.Morales 5-5) at Detroit (Verlander 9-9), 7:08 p.m.L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 8-3) at Tampa Bay (Hellickson 0-0), 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees (Capuano 1-1) at Boston (Ranaudo 0-0), 7:10 p.m.Minnesota (Darnell 0-1) at Chicago White Sox (Sale 10-1), 8:10 p.m.Toronto (Happ 8-5) at Houston (McHugh 4-9), 8:10 p.m.Kansas City (Guthrie 6-9) at Oakland (Gray 12-3), 9:35 p.m.

NL StandingsEast Division W L Pct GBWashington 58 48 .547 —Atlanta 58 50 .537 1Miami 53 55 .491 6New York 52 56 .481 7Philadelphia 48 61 .440 11½Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 60 49 .550 —Pittsburgh 57 50 .533 2St. Louis 57 50 .533 2Cincinnati 54 54 .500 5½Chicago 45 62 .421 14West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 61 47 .565 —San Francisco 58 50 .537 3San Diego 48 60 .444 13Arizona 47 61 .435 14Colorado 44 64 .407 17Wednesday’s GamesMilwaukee 5, Tampa Bay 0N.Y. Mets 11, Philadelphia 2Arizona 5, Cincinnati 4Washington 4, Miami 3San Francisco 7, Pittsburgh 5Colorado 6, Chicago Cubs 4, 10 inningsL.A. Dodgers 3, Atlanta 2, 10 inningsSan Diego 12, St. Louis 1Thursday’s GamesChicago Cubs 3, Colorado 1St. Louis 6, San Diego 2Philadelphia 10, Washington 4Cincinnati 3, Miami 1Pittsburgh at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m.Friday’s GamesPhiladelphia (R.Hernandez 5-8) at Washington (Fister 10-2), 7:05 p.m.Colorado (F.Morales 5-5) at Detroit (Verlander 9-9), 7:08 p.m.Cincinnati (Latos 2-3) at Miami (Ja.Turner 4-6), 7:10 p.m.San Francisco (Vogelsong 5-8) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 5-6), 7:10 p.m.Milwaukee (W.Peralta 12-6) at St. Louis (Wainwright 13-5), 8:15 p.m.Pittsburgh (Volquez 8-7) at Arizona (Nuno 0-2), 9:40 p.m.Atlanta (Minor 4-6) at San Diego (Stults 3-13), 10:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 1-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Haren 8-8), 10:10 p.m.

WNBAEASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Atlanta 17 9 .654 – Washington 13 14 .481 4½Indiana 12 14 .462 5 New York 11 15 .423 6Chicago 11 16 .407 6½ Connecticut 10 17 .370 7½ WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Phoenix 22 4 .846 –Minnesota 21 6 .778 1½San Antonio 13 14 .481 9½ Los Angeles 12 15 .444 10½Tulsa 10 18 .357 13

Seattle 9 19 .321 14 Wednesday’s GamesNo games scheduledThursday’s GamesChicago 87, New York 74Minnesota 75, Phoenix 67Atlanta 85, Tulsa 75Indiana at Seattle, 10 p.m.Friday’s GameConnecticut at San Antonio, 8 p.m.

NFLExhibition Glance

AMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PABuffalo 0 0 0 .000 0 0Miami 0 0 0 .000 0 0New England 0 0 0 .000 0 0N.Y. Jets 0 0 0 .000 0 0South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 0 0 0 .000 0 0Indianapolis 0 0 0 .000 0 0Jacksonville 0 0 0 .000 0 0Tennessee 0 0 0 .000 0 0North W L T Pct PF PABaltimore 0 0 0 .000 0 0Cincinnati 0 0 0 .000 0 0Cleveland 0 0 0 .000 0 0Pittsburgh 0 0 0 .000 0 0West W L T Pct PF PADenver 0 0 0 .000 0 0Kansas City 0 0 0 .000 0 0Oakland 0 0 0 .000 0 0San Diego 0 0 0 .000 0 0NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PADallas 0 0 0 .000 0 0N.Y. Giants 0 0 0 .000 0 0Philadelphia 0 0 0 .000 0 0Washington 0 0 0 .000 0 0South W L T Pct PF PAAtlanta 0 0 0 .000 0 0Carolina 0 0 0 .000 0 0New Orleans 0 0 0 .000 0 0Tampa Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 0 0 0 .000 0 0Detroit 0 0 0 .000 0 0Green Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 0 0West W L T Pct PF PAArizona 0 0 0 .000 0 0San Francisco 0 0 0 .000 0 0Seattle 0 0 0 .000 0 0St. Louis 0 0 0 .000 0 0Sunday, Aug. 3N.Y. Giants vs. Buffalo at Canton, 8 p.m.Thursday, Aug. 7Indianapolis at N.Y. Jets, 7 p.m.New England at Washington, 7:30 p.m.San Francisco at Baltimore, 7:30 p.m.Cincinnati at Kansas City, 8 p.m.Seattle at Denver, 9 p.m.Dallas at San Diego, 10 p.m.Friday, Aug. 8Miami at Atlanta, 7 p.m.Buffalo at Carolina, 7:30 p.m.Tampa Bay at Jacksonville, 7:30 p.m.Philadelphia at Chicago, 8 p.m.Oakland at Minnesota, 8 p.m.New Orleans at St. Louis, 8 p.m.Saturday, Aug. 9Cleveland at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.Pittsburgh at N.Y. Giants, 7:30 p.m.Green Bay at Tennessee, 8 p.m.Houston at Arizona, 8:30 p.m.

S C O R E B O A R DTODAY ON TELEVISION

AUTO RACING11 a.m. Fox Sports 1 NASCAR Sprint Cup prac- tice for GoBowling.com 400, at Long Pond, Pa.3:30 p.m. Fox Sports 1 NASCAR Sprint Cup pole qualifying for GoBowl- ing.com 400, at Long Pond, Pa.5 p.m. Fox Sports 1 ARCA ModSpace 125, at Long Pond, Pa.

EXHIBITION BASKETBALL9 p.m. ESPN U.S. men’s national team, Blue vs. White, at Las Ve- gas

BOXING9 p.m. ESPN2 Champion Thomas Wil- liams Jr. vs. Gabriel Cam- pillo for NABO light heavy- weight title, at Shelton, Wash.

CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE10 p.m. ESPNews B.C. at Calgary

GOLFNoon Golf Channel Champions 3M Champi- onship, first round, at Blaine, Minn.2 p.m. Golf Channel WGC Bridgestone Invita- tional, second round, at Akron, Ohio6:30 p.m. Golf Channel PGA Barracuda Champi- onship, second round, at Reno, Nev.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL7 p.m. FS Florida Reds at Marlins7 p.m. MLB Network Yankees at Red Sox7 p.m. Sun Sports Angels at Rays10 p.m. WGN Cubs at Dodgers

MLS SOCCER8 p.m. NBC Sports Philadelphia at Kansas City

TENNIS4 p.m. ESPN2 ATP World Tour Cit Open,7 p.m. ESPN2 quarterfinals, at Washing- ton11 p.m. ESPN2 WTA Bank of the West Classic, quarterfinal, at Stanford, Calif.

FLORIDA LOTTERY MIDDAY CASH 3 7-4-6EVENING CASH 3 7-6-6

MIDDAY PLAY 4 8-1-1-1EVENING PLAY 4 2-3-6-4 FANTASY 5 2-15-23-25-29THURSDAY

That includes third-year start-ers De’Abrie Smith at quarterback and Ja’Twan Honor at running back. Eron Carter and Jason Shaw have been all-county linebackers – Carter as a sophomore last year, Shaw in 2012 before missing most of last season with an injury – and

Bryan Williams returns from an all-county effort on the defensive line.

“Skill positions is probably our strength,” Hedstrom said Monday at the High School Football Awareness Day at EverBank Field in Jacksonville. “We’ve got to shore up the offensive line and defensive line. The first couple of players are pretty doggone good, but we’ve got to have kids behind them.”

The offensive front took a hit with the loss of a would-be starter for academic reasons. “We’ve got some young kids,” Hedstrom said of the potential replacements. “We’ve got to see if they’re able to play.”

He’s looking for balance on offense and aggressiveness on defense. He saw both in the spring game, a 31-3 romp in Orange Park where Smith threw touchdown passes of 33 to Tareke Lewis, 40

yards to Ka’ven Berry and 61 yards to Dontaevone Evans. Honor ran nine times for 118 yards.

Last year’s class 5A state runn-erup, Clay, looms in District 4-5A, where the Panthers must also deal with Orange Park Ridgeview, Menendez and Ponte Vedra. They have an Aug. 22 preseason game against Gainesville Eastside at Citizens Field and remain on the road for the Aug. 29 opener with Ocala Vanguard.

JaguarsCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

HallCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

PanthersCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

while to get used to him because he was out of char-acter,” Clark said. “People are expecting ‘Git ‘er done,’ and he was just being himself.”

While admiring the moviemakers’ meticulous-ness, Clark had a bad feeling about “Bait Shop.”

“It was as bad as I thought it was going to be. It went straight to DVD,” he said.

But who am I to throw stones? I was an extra in the 1981 flop, “Honky Tonk Freeway,” parts of which were filmed around Mount Dora, where I was sports editor of the weekly Topic. Working at the paper gave me an inside track to the movie gig. (There couldn’t have been more than 2,000 of us.) At least Clark’s name appeared in “Bait Shop’s” closing credits. Mine did not, a tipoff that Clark probably cleared more from “Bait Shop” than the $30 a day I got for “Honky Tonk Freeway” (or HTF, as it is known by no one).

But Clark is retired from acting. And for the most part, he is done with big-time tournament fishing.

“I still fish a little, but when my wife (Katrina) had triplets, that put a screeching halt to that,” he said. “The last time I was fishing full-time, I was gone about 300 days. You can’t raise a family like that. The money was good, but you can be just as happy at home.”

And when the triplets need to go to sleep, Clark has the perfect remedy.

Pop “Bait Shop” into the DVD player.

Andy Hall is sports editor of the Palatka Daily News.

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

Seminoles top preseason pollDefending national champion Florida State is

ranked No. 1 in the preseason Amway coaches’ poll.Florida State received 1,543 overall points and

earned 56 of a possible 62 first-place votes in the poll, which was released Thursday. Alabama was second in the poll despite not receiving any first-place votes. Rounding out the top five were Oklahoma, Oregon and Auburn with the first-ever playoff looming at the end season.

Ohio State was sixth, UCLA seventh, Michigan State eighth, South Carolina ninth and Baylor 10th.

The Southeastern Conference had five of the top 13 teams in the poll, with No. 12 Georgia and No. 13 LSU joining Alabama, Auburn and South Carolina.

BASEBALL

Marlins get Cosart from AstrosMIAMI — The Miami Marlins were shoppers

instead of sellers for a change at the trade deadline, and they added a starting pitcher to help make a playoff push.

Miami obtained right-hander Jarred Cosart from the Houston Astros in a six-player deal Thursday. The Marlins also acquired infielder-outfielder Kike Hernandez and outfielder Austin Wates for third baseman Colin Moran, outfielder Jake Marisnick, right-hander Francis Martes and a 2015 compensa-tory draft pick.

The 24-year-old Cosart is 9-7 with a 4.41 ERA in 20 starts this year but has slumped lately, allowing 21 runs in 21 1-3 innings over four starts in July. The Marlins beat Cosart and the Astros 7-3 last Saturday.

A’s get Lester, Gomes from SoxOAKLAND, Calif. — The Oakland Athletics won

the Jon Lester sweepstakes, acquiring the left-hand-er and outfielder Jonny Gomes from the Boston Red Sox for slugging outfielder Yoenis Cespedes before Thursday’s trade deadline.

Oakland, with the best record in baseball at 66-41, also received cash from Boston in another blockbust-er deal by A’s general manager Billy Beane. The Red Sox also get a draft pick in a deal confirmed by both teams.

A few hours later, the Red Sox traded their No. 2 starter, right-hander John Lackey, to the St. Louis Cardinals for right-hander Joe Kelly and outfielder Allen Craig, a person with knowledge of the deal said.

GOLF

Tiger shoots 68, Leishman leadsAKRON, Ohio — Tiger Woods showed signs of a

positive recovery Thursday at the Bridgestone Invitational.

Not just from back surgery, but from making bogeys.

Woods bounced back with birdies all three times that he made mistakes, opening with a 2-under 68 on a soft, gentle day for scoring at Firestone. It left him four shots behind Marc Leishman of Australia, and hopeful that this time he can build on a solid start.

Woods opened with a 69 at the British Open two weeks ago, only to plunge down the leaderboard the rest of the week at Royal Liverpool.

–Associated Press

Blackmon hasn’t been around since getting sus-pended indefinitely last November for repeated vio-lations of the league’s drug policy.

Shorts, meanwhile, strained his right hamstring in the opening practice of camp and has out since.

He will have some company on the sideline now, joined by Doss and probably Robinson.

“It’s just one those things,” receiver Lamaar Thomas said. “It’s part of the game. It’s going to come up. Unfortunately those things have come up early in the season. Hopefully later on in the season you won’t have to worry about those problems.

Controversial replay costs Marlins vs. RedsBy Christopher stoCk

Associated Press

MIAMI — The Cincinnati Reds benefited from Major League Baseball’s new instant replay system and the rule preventing catch-ers from blocking the plate in a 3-1 victory over the Miami Marlins on Thursday night.

Reds starter Johnny Cueto (12-6) struck out nine and allowed one run in seven innings and Ryan Ludwick drove in two runs. Aroldis Chapman pitched the ninth for his 24th save.

Giancarlo Stanton hit his 25th home run

for Miami and Tom Koehler (7-8) took the loss allowing two unearned runs in seven innings.

With the Marlins leading 1-0 in the top of the eighth, the Reds loaded the bases with one out. Bryan Morris got Todd Frazier to fly out to right fielder Stanton whose throw to the plate easily beat Zack Cozart for what appeared to be the final out of the inning when catcher Jeff Mathis tagged out Cozart, who trotted in without a slide.

However, after a 6-minute, 10-second instant replay review, the call was over-

turned because Mathis was ruled to be block-ing the plate and Cozart was called safe tying the game 1-1.

Marlins manager Mike Redmond was immediately ejected after throwing his hat to the ground and arguing with the umpires. Redmond kicked his hat on his way back to the dugout for good measure.

Ludwick took advantage of the good for-tune and followed with a two-run single to give the Reds a 3-1 lead.

Jonathan Broxton struck out Stanton to end the eighth with two runners on base.

After a rough stretch in which the team lost 14 of 15 to drop a sea-son-high 18 games under .500 (24-42) on June 10, it was pretty much a foregone conclusion that the left-hander’s days in Tampa Bay were numbered.

“It’s no fun losing a David Price. But it’s done,” manager Joe Maddon said. “Now you have to

move on, and you’ve got to make the best of it.”

With Smyly (6-9, 3.77 ERA) join-ing the rotation and the injured Wil Myers, Ryan Hanigan and David DeJesus expected to return from the disabled list soon, Maddon hopes to keep the Rays in the chase for a playoff berth.

He concedes it won’t be easy without Price, but he’s confident Tampa Bay has enough left to fin-ish the job.

“I’m anticipating not skipping a beat, and that’s not denigrating

David in any way. I just think we’ve come so far — and we have a bunch of professionals in our room — that I want to believe we’re going to be able to continue this,” Maddon said.

“I want to believe our players are mature to understand to know that nobody’s given up on anything,” the manager added. “It’s just a matter of the way this thing has worked.”

Team president Matt Silverman feels the same way.

“It’s not waving a white flag at all. … If your team plays to the level that it can, especially consid-

ering all the head-to-head games we have within our division, we have a chance to make up the defi-cit and get into the playoffs,” Silverman said.

“It’s more difficult without David, but if the rest of the team plays up to their potential, we’re going to be playing meaningful games in September for the seventh consecu-tive year,” Silverman added. “And that’s what we’re about, maintain-ing that competitive team, year in and year out. And, this transaction will help us do that.”

PriceCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

Bucs during a Hall of Fame career without remembering that Sunday in San Diego.

That was when the “Yucks” ral-lied from an early 14-0 deficit to beat the heavily favored Chargers under a first-year coach named Tony Dungy, architect of the cover-2 defensive scheme the Bucs played so well it became known as the “Tampa 2.”

“The way we were able to come back and win that game, I attribute a lot of that to our turnaround,”

Brooks said.“Coach Dungy as a coach was

about excellence. He had his quiet way of challenging us,” the 2002 NFL defensive player of the year added. “Some days I’d look at my grade sheet, thinking it had been a pretty good work day. He’d crumble it up and say it’s not good enough.”

At 6 feet, 235 pounds, Brooks was deemed by many to be too small to excel at outside linebacker in a league where bigger, stronger athletes such as Lawrence Taylor and Derrick Thomas set a standard for the position as ferocious pass rushers.

That was a role Brooks rarely was asked to fill in 14 seasons with

Tampa Bay.Instead, he transformed the posi-

tion by developing into one of the best all-around linebackers in league history, using his speed and quickness to make plays all over the field and ending his career with 25 interceptions, 13 1/2 sacks and 11 Pro Bowl selections.

The six-time All-Pro scored four touchdowns off turnovers in 2002, then capped the greatest season in franchise history with a 44-yard interception return for a TD during Tampa Bay’s rout of the Oakland Raiders in the Super Bowl.

“People say he didn’t rush the passer. He didn’t have to. That was my job. You can’t have one guy

doing everything,” said Sapp, who was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2013, his first year of eligibility.

Brooks, a first-ballot selection this year, will be inducted on Saturday, joining his long-time friend and former roommate, as well as 1995 inductee Lee Roy Selmon as the only Buccaneers enshrined in Canton, Ohio.

“People ask me all the time, who was the best? Brooks was. He could touch every person on your team and they’d walk away feeling like: ‘Oh yeah, I’m going to follow him and go through the wall,” Sapp said. “He’s the greatest outside line-backer that never rushed the pass-er. Period. It’s not even close.”

BrooksCONTINUED FROM PAGE 1B

080114b2.indd 1 7/31/14 11:51 PM

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The Palatka Daily Newsneeds a writer to assistwith varsity football cov-

erage this fall. Mustknow the sport and be

able to write quickly andclearly. Rate is $50 pergame. Call Andy Hall at386-312-5239 or email

[email protected]

FINANCIAL

300

LEGALS

350

Legal Notices

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE 7TH JUDICIAL CIR-CUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 09-398-CA 52

1st UNITED BANK, suc-cessor in interest to THEBANK OF MIAMI, N.A., anational banking associ-ation,Plaintiff,

v.

ANTHONY L . DAVIDE,OCEAN BREEZE DEVEL-OPMENT, LLC, JAMES E.BURKE, MITA M. BURKEand AMBLE DRIVE RE-ALTY, LLC,Defendants.

CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALEU N D E R C H A P T E R 4 5 ,F L O R I D A S T A T U T E S

NOTICE IS GIVEN that, ina c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h eAmended Final Judgmentof Foreclosure dated July15, 2014, in above-styledmatter, I will sell to thehighest and best bidder forcash at the Putnam CountyCourthouse, 410 St. JohnsAve., Palatka, FL 32177 at11:00am on September 2,2014, the following de-scribed real property as setforth in said Judgment ofForeclosure:

SEE EXHIBITS "A" AND"B" ATTACHED HERETO

WITNESS my hand and theseal of the Court on July24, 2014.

By: /s/ Ashley DarbyDeputy Clerk

EXHIBIT A

Parcel A:

Parcel #1:Part of Sections 10, 11 and14 of Township 12 South,Range 27 East, PutnamCounty, Florida and beingmore par t icu la r ly de -scr ibed as fo l lows:

1 - All that part of the East1/2 of Section 10, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17.EXCEPT Green Acres Sub-division as recorded inMap Book 4, page 36, alsoEXCEPT those lands de-scribed In Deed Book 142,page 548, Deed Book 175,page 149 and Deed Book186, page 534.2- The East 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East, EXCEPTthose lands described InOfficial Records Book 81,page 66.3 - All that part of the North1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4 and theSoutheast 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of the Northwest1/4 and the East 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 and the Northw-est 1/4 of the Southwest1/4, lying Easterly of theEasterly right of way line ofthe Seaboard CoastlineRailroad, all in Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.4 - All that part of theSoutheast 1/4 of the South-west 1/4, lying Easterly ofthe Easterly right of wayline of the Seaboard Coast-line Railroad, in Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.5- That part of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Northwest1/4, lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,In Section 11, Township 12South, Range 27 East.6 - The South 60 feet of theWest 60 feet of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4of the Southwest 1/4 ofSection 11, Township 12South, Range 27 East.7 - The West 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.8- The West 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.9- The Northwest 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section14, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.10- The South 1/4 of theEast 1/2 of the Southwest1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 ofSection 14, Township 12,South, Range 27 East.11- The Northeast 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

All references are to thepublic records of PutnamCounty, Florida.

Parcel #2:The North 1/2 of the North-west 1/4 of the Southwest1/4 of Section 11, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East, Putnam County, Flor-ida.

Parcel B:

Parcel 1:Being a part of the NE 1/4of Section 10, Township 12South, Range 27 East andmore par t icu la r ly de -scribed as beginning at thepoint where the East line ofsaid Section 10 intersectsthe South line of the StateRoad right of way; thenceSouth 445 feet; thenceWest 392 feet; thenceNorth 666 feet to the Southline of State Highway;thence South 60 degrees25' East, 450 feet to theplace of beginning.

Parcel 2:Beginning at a point 445feet South and 392 feetWest of the point where theEast line of Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East Intersects theSouth line of the StateRoad right of way; thenceWest 100 feet; thenceNorth to the South line ofthe State Road right ofway; thence South 60 de-grees 25' East along rightof way to West line of tractpreviously deeded; thenceSouth along this line toplace of beginning.

Parcel 3:Beginning at a point 445feet South and 492 feetWest from the point wherethe East line of Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East Intersects theSouth line of U.S. Highway#17 (60 foot right of way);thence West 350 feet;thence North to South lineof Highway; thence South60 degrees 25' East alongHighway to a point dueNorth of place of begin-ning; thence South to placeof beginning.

Parcel 4:Beginning at a point 445feet South from the pointwhere the East line of Sec-t ion 10 , Township 12South, Range 27 East Inter-sects the South Line ofU.S. Highway No. 17 (60foot right of way); thenceWest 842 feet; thenceSouth 176 feet; thence East842 feet; thence North 176feet to place of beginning,all In the NE 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

LEGAL DESCRIPTIONEXHIBIT "B"

2005 Double-wide desig-nated on the Florida Certi-ficate of Title as being themake of PALH with theIdent i f ica t ion Nos. o fP H 2 3 5 7 1 5 A a n dP H 2 3 5 7 1 5 B a n d 1 9 8 0Peachtree Doublewidemanufactured home, Identi-fication Nos. unknown

The Property Is located onportion of the following de-scribed land ("The Land")Parcel A"

Parcel #1:Part of Section 10,11 and14 of Township 12 South,Range 27 East, PutnamCounty, Florida and beingmore par t icu la r ly de -scr ibed as fo l lows:1 - All that part of the East1/2 of Section 10, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,EXCEPT Green Acres Sub-division as recorded InMap Book 4, Page 36, alsoEXCEPT those lands de-scribed In Deed Book 142,Page 548, Deed Book 175,Page 149 and Deed Book186, Page 534.2- The East 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East, EXCEPTthose lands described InOfficial Records Book 81,Page 66.3- All that part of the North1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4 and theSoutheast 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of the Northwest1/4 and the East 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-w e s t 1 / 4 a n d t h eNorth3west 1 /4 of theSouthwest 1/4 lying East-erly of the Easterly right ofway line of the SeaboardCoastline Railroad, all InSection 10, Township 12south, Range 27 East.4- All that part of theSoutheast 1/4 of the South-west 1/4, lying Easterly ofthe Easterly right of wayline of the Seaboard Coast-line Railroad, In Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.5- That part of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Northwest1/4, lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,In Section 11, Township 12South,Range 27 East.6- The South 60 feet of theWest 60 feet of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4of the Soutwest 1/4 of Sec-t ion 11 , Township 12South, Range 27 East.7- The West 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.8- The West 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.9- The Northwest 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section14, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.10- The South 1/4 of theEast 1/2 of the Southwest1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 ofSection 14, Township 12South, Range 27 East.11- The Northeast 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

All references are to thepublic records of PutnamCounty, Florida.

Parcel #2:The North 1/2 of the North-west 1/4 of the Southwest1/4 of Section 11, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East, Putnam County, Flor-ida.

8/1/14, 8/8/14Legal No. 00025785

ANNOUNCEMENTS

100

EMPLOYMENT

200

DriverOn-Call Driver Needed.Flexible hours & clean

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208, Green CoveSprings, FL 32043. (OldFood Lion DistributionCenter-south of GCS)

EMAIL Resume to:[email protected]

or Contact ShellyWeaver: 386-937-0249

MONDAY - FRIDAY8am - 4pm

OFFICE HOURS

2:00 P.M.(312-5200)

1:30 P.M.(312-5209)

FAXDEADLINE...

CLASSIFIEDDEADLINE...

GARAGE SALE4 LINES - 1, 2 OR 3 DAYS4 LINES - 1, 2 OR 3 DAYS

$1075

ONLY ONE ITEM PER AD OR LIKE ITEMS UNDER ONE CATEGORY. THIS IS A NONREFUNDABLE RATE. ADDITIONAL COST FOR EXTRA LINES. ALL ADS ARE PREPAID.

312-5200TOLL FREE

800-881-7355

CLAS

SIFI

EDS

GENERAL INFORMATIONAll advertising is accepted, subject to the

approval of the publisher, who reserves the right to revise or reject any advertisement without notice.

The publisher reserves the right to correctly classify and edit all copy.

Copy changes requested during a schedule con-stitute a new ad, and new billing for schedule will be prepared.

Please check your ad the first day it runs to see that all of the information is correct. This will insure that your ad is exactly what you want the reader to see.

Call us the FIRST DAY if you find an error after the FIRST DAY of publication.

The publisher assumes no financial responsibil-ity beyond the charge of the ad. Direct questioning regarding classified bill to our business office at 312-5203.

CREDIT POLICYRate charges are quoted at time of ad place-

ment and all ads must be paid for at time of placement (Cash, Checks, Mastercard, Visa,

American Express or Discover) unless a credit application is approved by the publisher.

CANCELLATIONSPrivate Party ads sold at a flat rate can be can-

celled during the schedule, but no refund will be made.

Ads published at the open rate can be cancelled during the schedule, and the publisher will prorate your billing to the nearest earned rate.

FREE ADSIf you have found an item or a pet or want to

give away anything of value (item, pet, service…) the Daily News will run an ad up to four consecu-tive days.

Call for details at 312-5200 or long distance at 800-881-7355.

RATES/TERMSMinimum size advertisement four (4) lines.

All rates quoted are per line, per day.

REGULAR CLASSIFIED4 LINES - 5 DAYS4 LINES - 5 DAYS

$4520INCLUDES ALL

CLASSIFICATIONS.EXTRA LINES $2.26 PER LINE, PER DAY.

AD MUST INCLUDE ADDRESS OF

SALE AND MUST BE PREPAID

MONDAY - FRIDAY8am - 4pm

OFFICE HOURS

FREE CLASSIFIED LINE AD PRIVATE PARTY MERCHANDISE1 ITEM $25 OR LESS • 1 ITEM PER COUPON • 2 ITEMS LIMIT PER WEEK, 4 LINES - 4 DAYS

LOOK FOR COUPON IN THE CLASSIFIED PAGESAD MUST INCLUDE PRICE. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

NEWSPAPER RESERVES RIGHT TO EDIT COPY.

YARD SALE

4 LINES FOR....3 DAYS .......... $750

5 DAYS ........ $1075

10 DAYS ........$1575

20 DAYS ....... $3150

30 DAYS ....... $4150

FOR SALE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

100

EMPLOYMENT

200

FINANCIAL

300

LEGALS

350

PETS & SUPPLIES

550

LIVESTOCK & SUPPLIES

560

FOR RENT REAL ESTATE60

0

MERCHANDISE

400

FOR RENT REAL ESTATE60

0ANNOUNCEMENTS

100 EMPLOYMENT

200 FINANCIAL

300

FOR SALE REAL ESTATE70

0PETS & SUPPLIES

550MERCHANDISE

400 RECREATIONAL

800 TRANSPORTATION

900

CAL

L CLA

SSIFI

EDS T

ODAY

• 31

2-520

0

FRIDAY.indd 2 7/31/14 2:52 PM

4 B C L ASS I F I E D S • PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

Paid Advertisement

Public Service Announcement

PALATKA, FL - Beck Chrysler, Dodge Jeep and Ram have partnered in an initiative to expand their customer base. The bulk of this initiative involves financing components that are specifically targeted to assist those who have had challenges in life. As a result of market conditions such as the mortgage crisis and economic downturn, this segment has ballooned in recent years. It is the understanding that bad things happen to good people and recognizing the void in the marketplace of programs that provide adequate support that has led to this partnership.

Historically, finance companies have offered rates as high as 29% to offset what they consider risk factors. In the event they gauged risk to be in excess of what the state of Florida would allow rates to yield they have charged loan discounts that often added significant cost to dealers which resulted in higher

prices. That meant huge rates and larger prices-- not fair! Especially for those of us who could use some help during challenging times. Chrysler Capital is finally trying to do something about it.

Here’s how it is designed. Subvention (provision for financial support) by the manufacturer toward the purchase of a new vehicle to the finance company offsets risk factors. With many manufacturers there are optional offers that allow for either a rebate or a subvented APR. Historically customers without perfect credit history are not eligible for subvented rates. With this new program even those who have had significant challenges can qualify for subvented rates. Chrysler pays depending upon model to offset risk and allow APR’s as low as 0%. What this means is many customers can now own more car for less money.

Beck Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram have partnered with the all new Chrysler Capital Bank to eliminate the finance companies high interest rates for

customers with ZERO MONEY DOWN, LIMITED CREDIT, NO CREDIT, BAD CREDIT, FIRST TIME BUYERS and BANKRUPTCY

Ex.: Customer “A” buys a new vehicle for $25,000 with zero money down plus tax, tag, title & dealer fee. That customer qualifies for a 22% APR with a finance company and drives off for around $653 a month.

Under the new Chrysler Capital Program the same customer “A” could now qualify for 1.9% APR for the same new vehicle and drive away for around $411 a month. That’s $242 a month less for the same vehicle of your dreams.

Why pay over 20% and spend over $17,000 of your hard earned money in just interest. You don’t have to anymore. Visit everybodyridez.com to get pre-qualified and start saving today!

FEDERAL TRUTH-IN-LENDING DISCLOSURESANNUAL

PERCENTAGERATE

The cost of your credit as a

yearly rate.

18.99%

FINANCECHARGE

The dollar amount the credit will

cost you.

$19,104.48

TOTAL SALE PRICE

The total cost of your purchase on credit, including your down

payment of

$0.00 is $47,08728

TOTAL OF PAYMENTS

The amount you will have paid after you have made all pay-

ments as scheduled.

$47,087.28

AMOUNTFINANCEDThe amount of credit provided

to you or on your behalf.

$27,982.80

Your payment Schedule Will Be:Number of Payments

72

Amount of Payments

$653.99

When Payments Are Due

Monthly beginning 8/31/2014

FEDERAL TRUTH-IN-LENDING DISCLOSURESANNUAL

PERCENTAGERATE

The cost of your credit as a

yearly rate.

1.90%

FINANCECHARGE

The dollar amount the credit will

cost you.

$1,647.36

TOTAL SALE PRICE

The total cost of your purchase on credit, including your down

payment of

$0.00 is $29,630.16

TOTAL OF PAYMENTS

The amount you will have paid after you have made all pay-

ments as scheduled.

$29,630.16

AMOUNTFINANCEDThe amount of credit provided

to you or on your behalf.

$27,982.80

Your payment Schedule Will Be:Number of Payments

72

Amount of Payments

$411.53

When Payments Are Due

Monthly beginning 8/31/2014

or as follows

n/a

From: Beck Chysler Dodge Jeep RAM256 Hwy 17N. • Palatka, FL • Call: 386-328-8863 • www.BECKCHRYSLERDODGEJEEP.COM

Community Sale Sat 8-2415 Washington St. 1stCongregational ChurchSpaces avail.: 916-8451

Yard Sale! Moving &everything must go!

640 W. Peniel Rd.Fri & Sat 7am-?

Yard Sale!!! Sat. 8-?2015 Prosper St. Lots ofmisc. items, something

for everyone!!

Lawn & Garden1510 Ford Diesel

Tractor, 19.5HP, apx.1100 hrs, 6 implementsincl'd, $5K. Can be seen

@ 129 Roanoke Ave.Satsuma. 386-983-1642

Machinery &Tools

Sears table saw, 10"blade w/Dado heads,$400. 386-983-1642

MedicalEquipment

Jazzy electric wheel-chair, good cond.,$300. Hawthorne

352-215-8634/284-1427

Miscellaneous12" Sony 1300 watt sub-woofer, ported box, per-fect cond. Sounds great.

$350. 386-546-8248

Items $25 or Less

12V Coleman travelcooler, 40qt, $25.

386-326-0943

1960s school desk w/at-tached seat. Good cond.Great for home schooler,

$25. 904-571-5524

2 new blue cushionsfor double-seater

porch lounge, $10.386-649-6114

5x8 slanted vinyl awning,aqua green, $25.

386-326-0943

Antique meat grinder.Clamps to table. Makeyour own burger! $15.

904-616-1815

Antique wooden windowframe, 6 panes. Rustic,

but good cond., $20.904-616-1815

580 Stokes Landing Rd.Sat. 8-12 + size clothes,

shoes, kids clothes &toys, hshld, furn., misc.

Community Yard SaleSouthwest VFD 3409

Park St. Sat. 8/27a-3p. Rain or shine!

Computer monitor, com-pact fridge, BlackburnTrakstand, Lane cedarchest, kitchen & babystuff, tools, rugs. 203Cynthia St. E. Pal. Th,Fr, Sa 8-3 Rain/Shine

Downtown Blues Gar-age Sale Fri & Sat 9a-12

714 St. Johns Ave.Everything must GO!

Estate Sale 118Dunaway Inter Lk Est Fri,

Sat & Sun 8am-2pmEverything Must Go

Inside & Out

Estate Sale Fri & Sat 9-?117 Carole Rd. Furn.,dishes, Tupperware. A

little of everything!

Estate/Hshld GoodsSale, 231 N. 2nd St.

Palatka. Fri 8-3:30 & Sat8-2. If bad weather, salewill be held @ St. James

UMC, 400 Reid St.

3-Family Sale Fri & Sat8-1, 107 White Oaks Tr.

San Mateo. Acrossfrom Flea Market.

Fri & Sat 8-4, 104 Tim-berwood Terr. E. Pal-atka. Men, women,

kids clothes all sizes, in-cl. big men & +sz wo-

men, misc. hshld, camp-ing gear, some furn.

Fri & Sat 8a-1p125 Cypress Dr. E. Pal-atka. Palm Port Subd.

Fri & Sat 9am-?6110 W. 1st Manor.

Furn., antiques, hshld,nicknacks, misc.

Fri, Sat, Sun Rain/Shine234 Deer Run Rd. Sat-suma. Boat & RV parts,fishing gear, trolling mo-tor, riding mower, com-puters, electronics, bldg

materials, petite women'sclothes, handbags,

shoes, & much more.

Multi-Family SaleSaturday 8/2 @ 8am112 Kelley Smith Rd.

Sat. 7-?, 2718 Edge-moor St. Toys, clothes,hshld & baby items, etc.

Saturday 8:30am-'til7023 Foxwood Ln.

Palatka

Auctions/ FleaMarkets

CRYSTAL COVE RESTAURANT,

MOTEL &EQUIPMENT

AUCTIONSat., August 2, 2014

Preview at 9 a.m. Starts at 10 a.m.

131 Crystal Cove Dr.Palatka

Restaurant equipment, bedroom sets, lamps, desks, artwork, chairs, tables & boxes of vinyl soffit. Also, personal collection of Barbies and Winnie the Pooh plus more.

SOUTHERN CHARM AUCTIONS

ADB1985Gene & Judy Caputo

AU2840, AU 2884

10% BP, 7% sales tax or tax certificate.

Bring chair for comfort.For more info

Call 386-916-1095

Furniture &UpholsteryMattresses: Thick plushpillow-top or tight-top, allsizes. Cheapest prices!Pomona Park 336-1544

Garage Sales124 Bass Ave., behindChico's. Fri & Sat 8am.Misc. hshld, crafts, furn.

Too much to list!

153 WATERWAY AVE.Fri & Sat 7a-2p 3-FamilyOnly nice things - Hshld,clothing, tools, fishing,

grill, generator.

203 Mimosa Dr. Sat.8a-1p. Brand name kids

shirts & jeans, hshld,nicknacks, lots of misc.

5-Family Yard Sale406 Magnolia Dr.

Fri & Sat 8-12Too much to list!

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEAR-ING BY THE PUTNAMCOUNTY ZONING BOARDOF ADJUSTMENT. A pub-lic hearing will be heldWednesday, August 20,2014 at 3:00 p.m. in theBoard of County Commis-sioners Meeting Room, loc-ated at 2509 Crill Ave., Ste.100, Palatka, Florida, toconsider the following ap-plication for a variance un-der the provisions of thePutnam County Land De-velopment Code (Ordin-ance No. 2005-18 , asamended) :

CASE NO. V-14-007: This isa request by Elizabeth J.Anson for a variance to al-low Fence over 3 feet infront yard. The property is1.32 +/- acres and is loc-ated at 118 Oak HavenRoad, Palatka. (Parcelnumber 19-11-27-0000-0010-0240). The property iszoned AG (Agriculture).

A detailed legal descrip-tion and maps are avail-able for inspection at thePlanning & DevelopmentServices Department, loc-ated at 2509 Crill Ave., Ste.300, Palatka, Florida, or callstaff at 386-326-7136 forfurther information.All interested personswishing to speak on behalfof or in opposition to thisrequest will be heard at theabove stated place andtime. Persons with disabil-ities requiring accommoda-tions in order to particip-ate should contact JackieGarrett at 386-326-7136 atleast 24 hours in advanceto request such accom-modations. If a person de-sires to appeal any de-cision with respect to anymatter considered at theabove listed meeting, suchperson may need to insurethat a verbatim record ofthe proceeding is madeand submitted to the Plan-ning & Development Ser-vices Department.

Please be advised that oth-er petitions located northof Dunn’s Creek and westof the St. Johns River mayalso be scheduled for thishearing. Legal advertise-ment for these petitionswill appear in the PalatkaDaily News.

PUTNAM COUNTYZONING BOARD OF AD-JUSTMENTBy/s/ Jackie GarrettSecretary to the Board

8/1/14Legal No. 00025546

SBA Network Services Incis proposing to construct a346-foot overall heightguyed-type telecommunic-ations structure at 731 Cor-al Farms Road, Florahome,Putnam County, Florida,Tax Parcel ID 03-09-24-2600-0740-0050. SBA Net-work Services invites com-ments from any interestedparty on the impact theproposed undertaking mayhave on any districts, sites,buildings, structures or ob-jects significant in Americ-an history, archaeology,engineering, or culture thatare listed or determined eli-gible for listing in the Na-tional Register of HistoricPlaces. Comments pertain-ing specifically to historicresources may be sent toEnvironmental Corpora-tion of America, ATTN:Dina Bazzill, 1375 UnionHill Industrial Court, SuiteA, Alpharetta, Georgia30004. Ms. Bazzill can bereached at (770) 667-2040ext. 111. Comments mustbe received within 30 daysof the date of this notice.Q0893

8/1/14Legal No. 00025838

MERCHANDISE

400

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIR-CUIT, IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 2014-292-CADiv: 53

STATE OF FLORIDA, ex rel.MICHAEL J. CZYMBOR,Plaintiff,

vs.

ANITA PAYNE, a single wo-man; WILLIAM E HUGHEY;and UNKNOWN OCCU-PANTS, TENANTS, OWN-ERS, and OTHER UN-KNOWN PARTIES, includ-ing, if a named defendantis deceased, the personalrepresentatives, the surviv-ing spouse, heirs, de-visees, grantees, creditors,and all other parties claim-ing by, through, under oragainst that defendant, andthe several and respectiveunknown assigns, suc-cessors in interest, trust-ees or other persons claim-ing by, through, under oragainst any corporation orother legal entity named asthe defendant, and al lc la imants, persons orparties, natural or corpor-ate, or whose exact legalname is unknown, claim-ing under any of the abovenamed or described de-fendants,Defendants.

NOTICE OF ACTION

TO: ANITA PAYNE, a singlew o m a n ; W I L L I A M EHUGHEY; and UNKNOWNOCCUPANTS, TENANTS,OWNERS, and OTHER UN-KNOWN PARTIES, includ-ing, if a named defendantis deceased, the personalrepresentatives, the surviv-ing spouse, heirs, de-visees, grantees, creditors,and all other parties claim-ing by, through, under oragainst that defendant, andthe several and respectiveunknown assigns, suc-cessors in interest, trust-ees or other persons claim-ing by, through, under oragainst any corporation orother legal entity named asthe defendant, and al lc la imants, persons orparties, natural or corpor-ate, or whose exact legalname is unknown, claim-ing under any of the abovenamed or described de-fendants. YOU ARE NOTI-FIED that an action seek-ing to foreclose a lien onthe following property inPutnam County, Florida:

The North 100 feet of Lot 2in Block 69 of the CITY OFPALATKA.

has been filed against youand you are required toserve a copy of your writ-ten defenses to it, if any,Donald E. Holmes, Esquire,of HOLMES & YOUNG,P.A., at 222 North ThirdStreet, Palatka, Florida32177, (386) 328-1111, onor before the 24th day ofAugust, 2014, and file theoriginal with the clerk ofthis court either before ser-vice on the plaintiff's attor-ney or immediately there-after; otherwise a defaultwill be entered against youfor the relief demanded inthe complaint or petition.

DATED this 18th day of Ju-ly, 2014.

TIM SMITHClerk of the Court

By: /s/ Kelly PurcellDeputy Clerk

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025693

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEAR-ING BY THE PUTNAMCOUNTY ZONING BOARDOF ADJUSTMENT. A pub-lic hearing will be heldWednesday, August 20,2014 at 3:00 p.m. in theBoard of County Commis-sioners Meeting Room, loc-ated at 2509 Crill Ave., Ste.100, Palatka, Florida, toconsider the following ap-plication for a variance un-der the provisions of thePutnam County Land De-velopment Code (Ordin-ance No. 2005-18 , asamended) :

CASE NO. V-14-007: This isa request by Elizabeth J.Anson for a variance to al-low Fence over 3 feet infront yard. The property is1.32 +/- acres and is loc-ated at 118 Oak HavenRoad, Palatka. (Parcelnumber 19-11-27-0000-0010-0240). The property iszoned AG (Agriculture).

A detailed legal descrip-tion and maps are avail-able for inspection at thePlanning & DevelopmentServices Department, loc-ated at 2509 Crill Ave., Ste.300, Palatka, Florida, or callstaff at 386-326-7136 forfurther information.All interested personswishing to speak on behalfof or in opposition to thisrequest will be heard at theabove stated place andtime. Persons with disabil-ities requiring accommoda-tions in order to particip-ate should contact JackieGarrett at 386-326-7136 atleast 24 hours in advanceto request such accom-modations. If a person de-sires to appeal any de-cision with respect to anymatter considered at theabove listed meeting, suchperson may need to insurethat a verbatim record ofthe proceeding is madeand submitted to the Plan-ning & Development Ser-vices Department.

Please be advised that oth-er petitions located northof Dunn’s Creek and westof the St. Johns River mayalso be scheduled for thishearing. Legal advertise-ment for these petitionswill appear in the PalatkaDaily News.

PUTNAM COUNTYZONING BOARD OF AD-JUSTMENTBy/s/ Jackie GarrettSecretary to the Board

8/1/14Legal No. 00025546

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE SEVENTH JUDICIALCIRCUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTION

CASE NO.: 2012-CA00065353DIVISION: 53

METLIFE HOME LOANS, ADIVISION OF METLIFEBANK, N.A. ,Plaintiff,

vs.

VIRGINIA LEE EBEN, et al,Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOS-URE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENpursuant to a Final Judg-ment of Mortgage Fore-closure dated July 16, 2014and entered in Case No.2012-CA-000653 53 of theCircuit Court of the SEV-ENTH Judicial Circuit inand for PUTNAM County,Florida wherein NATION-STAR MORTGAGE LLC(1),is the Plaintiff and THE UN-KNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES,LIENORS, CREDITORS,TRUSTEES, OR OTHERCLAIMANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH, UNDER, ORAGAINST VIRGINIA LEEEBEN DECEASED; JIMMYR. EBEN, JR. A/K/A J. RAYEBEN, JR. A/K/A JIMMYRAY EBEN A/K/A JIMMYEBEN, AS AN HEIR OF THEESTATE OF VIRGINIA LEEEBEN, DECEASED; JAMIEELIZABETH SHEPHERDF/K/A JAMIE ELIZABETHEBEN, AS AN HEIR OF THEESTATE OF VIRGINIA LEEEBEN, DECEASED; ANYA N D A L L U N K N O W NPARTIES CLAIMING BY,THROUGH, UNDER, ANDAGAINST THE HEREINNAMED INDIVIDUAL DE-FENDANT(S) WHO ARENOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAIDUNKNOWN PARTIES MAYCLAIM AN INTEREST ASSPOUSES, HEIRS, DE-VISEES, GRANTEES, ORO T H E R C L A I M A N T ;PROSPERITY BANK; arethe Defendants, The Clerkof the Court will sell to thehighest and best bidder forcash at SOUTH FRONTDOOR OF THE PUTNAMCOUNTY COURTHOUSE,410 SAINT JOHNS AVEN-UE, PALATKA, FLORIDA32177 at 11:00 AM, on the21st day of August, 2014,the following describedproperty as set forth insaid Final Judgment:

A PART OF GOVERNMENTLOT 3, AND A PART OFTHE NORTHEAST 1/4 OFTHE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OFSECTION 32, TOWNSHIP11 SOUTH, RANGE 27EAST, DESCRIBED AS:

COMMENCE AT A POINTMARKED WITH A PERMAN-ENT REFERENCE MARK-ER ON THE NORTHERLYRIGHT OF WAY LINE OFT H E P U B L I C R O A DC A L L E D E A S T M A I NSTREET, IN THE TOWN OFPOMONA PARK, SAIDPOINT BEING 503 FEETW E S T A N D 6 4 F E E TSOUTH OF THE NORTH-EAST CORNER OF THESAID SOUTHEAST 1/4,THENCE RUN SOUTH 70DEGREES 20 MINUTESW E S T A L O N G T H ENORTHERLY RIGHT OFWAY LINE OF EAST MAINSTREET, 125 FEET TO THEPOINT OF BEGINNING,SAID POINT OF BEGIN-NING BEING THE SOUTH-WESTERLY CORNER OFT H E E X C E P T I O N D E -SCRIBED IN OFFICIAL RE-CORDS BOOK 206, PAGE704; (1) THENCE CONTIN-UE SOUTH70 DEGREES 20MINUTES WEST, ALONGSAID RIGHT OF WAY LINE;196.9 FEET; (2) THENCERUN NORTH 14 DEGREES16 MINUTES 53 SECONDSWEST, 166.30 FEET, PAR-ALLEL TO THE WEST-ERLY LINE OF LANDS DE-SCRIBED IN OFFICIAL RE-CORDS BOOK 206, PAGE704; (3) THENCE RUNNORTH 70 DEGREES 33MINUTES 01 SECONDSEAST, 26.27 FEET; (4)THENCE RUN NORTH 16DEGREES 51 MINUTES 12SECONDS WEST, 40.77FEET; (5) THENCE RUNNORTH 72 DEGREES 27MINUTES 05 SECONDSEAST, 152.23 FEET TO THENORTHWEST CORNER OFTHE AFOREMENTIONEDEXCEPTION, (6) THENCERUN SOUTH 19 DEGREES55 MINUTES 34 SECONDSEAST, 200.45 FEET ALONGTHE WESTERLY LINE OFSAID EXCEPTION TO THEPOINT OF BEGINNING ANDTO CLOSE.

A / K / A 2 1 6 E M A I N ,POMONA PARK, FL 32181

Any person claiming an in-terest in the surplus fromthe sale, if any, other thanthe property owner as ofthe date of the Lis Pen-dens must file a claim with-in sixty (60) days after thesale.

WITNESS MY HAND andthe seal of this Court onJuly 17, 2014.

Tim SmithClerk of the Circuit Court

By: /s/ Kelly PurcellDeputy Clerk

**See Americans with Dis-abilities ActIf you are a person with adisability who needs an ac-commodation in order toaccess court facilities orparticipate in a court pro-ceeding, you are entitled,at no cost to you, to theprovision of certain assist-ance.

To request such an accom-modation, please contactCourt Administration in ad-vance of the date the ser-vice is needed:

Court Administration125 E. Orange Ave., Ste.300Daytona Beach, FL 32114(386) 257-6096

Hearing or voice impaired,please call 711.

(1) Plaintiff name haschanged pursuant to or-der previously entered.

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025691

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE SEVENTH JUDICIALCIRCUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTION

C A S E N O . : 2 0 1 3 - C A -0 0 0 0 4 6 - 5 3DIVISION: 53

PENNYMAC CORP.,PLAINTIFF,

VS.

JASON FERNANDEZ, ETAL,DEFENDANT(S).

NOTICE OF SALE PURSU-ANT TO CHAPTER 45

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENpursuant to a Final Judg-ment of Foreclosure datedJuly 14, 2014, and enteredin Case NO. 2013-CA-000046-53 of the CircuitCourt of the Seventh Judi-cial Circuit in and for Put-nam County, Florida inwhich PennyMac Corp., isthe Plaintiff and JasonFernandez; Cach, LLC andHelen Kreider, are Defend-ants, the Putnam CountyClerk of the Circuit Courtwill sell to the highest andbest bidder for cash in/onFront Steps of the PutnamCounty Courthouse, 410 St.Johns Avenue, Palatka, FL32177, Putnam County,Florida at 11:00 a.m. on the19th day of August, 2014,the following describedproperty as set forth insaid Final Judgment ofForeclosure:

LOT 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 AND12, BLOCK 142, UNIT NO.17, INTERLACHEN LAKESESTATE3S, AS PER PLATTHEREOF RECORDED INMAP BOOK 5, PAGE 27 OFTHE PUBLIC RECORDS OFPUTNAM COUNTY, FLOR-IDA; TOGETHER WITH AMOBILE HOME LOCATEDTHEREON AS A PERMAN-ENT FIXTURE AND APPUR-TENANCE THERETO, DE-SCRIBED AS V IN NO.GMHGA6410202646A /TITLE NO. 0091802579 ANDV I N N O .GMHGA6410202646B /TITLE NO. 0091802464

A/K/A 405 ALEXANDER STINTERLACHEN FL 32148-2521

Any person claiming an in-terest in the surplus fromthe sale, if any, other thanthe property owner as ofthe date of the Lis Pen-dens must file a claim with-in 60 days after the sale.

Dated in Putnam County,Florida this 17th day of Ju-ly, 2014.

Clerk of the Circuit CourtPutnam County, Florida

By: /s/ Ashley DarbyDeputy Clerk

ATTENTION: PERSONSWITH DISABILITIESIf you are a person with adisability who needs an ac-commodation in order toparticipate in this proceed-ing, you are entitled, at nocost to you, to the provi-sion of certain assistance.Please contact Court Ad-ministration, 125 E. Or-a n g e A v e . , S t e . 3 0 0 ,Daytona Beach, FL 32114,386-257-6096, within 2 daysof your receipt of this no-tice. If you are hearing im-paired, call 1-800-955-8771;if you are voice impaired,call 1-800-955-8770.THIS IS NOT A COURT IN-FORMATION LINE. To fileresponse, please contactPutnam County Clerk ofCourt, 410 St. Johns Ave.,Palatka, FL 32177, Tel:(386) 329-0251; Fax: (386)329-1223.

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025694

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT,SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIR-CUIT, IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 2014-292-CADiv: 53

STATE OF FLORIDA, ex rel.MICHAEL J. CZYMBOR,Plaintiff,

vs.

ANITA PAYNE, a single wo-man; WILLIAM E HUGHEY;and UNKNOWN OCCU-PANTS, TENANTS, OWN-ERS, and OTHER UN-KNOWN PARTIES, includ-ing, if a named defendantis deceased, the personalrepresentatives, the surviv-ing spouse, heirs, de-visees, grantees, creditors,and all other parties claim-ing by, through, under oragainst that defendant, andthe several and respectiveunknown assigns, suc-cessors in interest, trust-ees or other persons claim-ing by, through, under oragainst any corporation orother legal entity named asthe defendant, and al lc la imants, persons orparties, natural or corpor-ate, or whose exact legalname is unknown, claim-ing under any of the abovenamed or described de-fendants,Defendants.

NOTICE OF ACTION

TO: ANITA PAYNE, a singlew o m a n ; W I L L I A M EHUGHEY; and UNKNOWNOCCUPANTS, TENANTS,OWNERS, and OTHER UN-KNOWN PARTIES, includ-ing, if a named defendantis deceased, the personalrepresentatives, the surviv-ing spouse, heirs, de-visees, grantees, creditors,and all other parties claim-ing by, through, under oragainst that defendant, andthe several and respectiveunknown assigns, suc-cessors in interest, trust-ees or other persons claim-ing by, through, under oragainst any corporation orother legal entity named asthe defendant, and al lc la imants, persons orparties, natural or corpor-ate, or whose exact legalname is unknown, claim-ing under any of the abovenamed or described de-fendants. YOU ARE NOTI-FIED that an action seek-ing to foreclose a lien onthe following property inPutnam County, Florida:

The North 100 feet of Lot 2in Block 69 of the CITY OFPALATKA.

has been filed against youand you are required toserve a copy of your writ-ten defenses to it, if any,Donald E. Holmes, Esquire,of HOLMES & YOUNG,P.A., at 222 North ThirdStreet, Palatka, Florida32177, (386) 328-1111, onor before the 24th day ofAugust, 2014, and file theoriginal with the clerk ofthis court either before ser-vice on the plaintiff's attor-ney or immediately there-after; otherwise a defaultwill be entered against youfor the relief demanded inthe complaint or petition.

DATED this 18th day of Ju-ly, 2014.

TIM SMITHClerk of the Court

By: /s/ Kelly PurcellDeputy Clerk

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025693

IN THE CIRCUIT COURTFOR PUTNAM COUNTY,FLORIDAPROBATE DIVISION

File No. 2014-CP-188

IN RE: ESTATE OF MARKALAN CROCKETT, De-ceased.

NOTICE TO CREDITORSThe administration of theestate of Mark Alan Crock-ett, deceased, whose dateof death was March 25,2014, is pending in the Cir-cuit Court for PutnamCounty, Florida, ProbateDivision, the address ofwhich is P.O. Box 758, Pal-atka, Florida 32178. Thenames and addresses ofthe personal representat-ive and the personal rep-resentative's attorney areset forth below.

All creditors of the de-cedent and other personshaving claims or demandsagainst decedent's estateon whom a copy of this no-t ice is required to beserved must f i le theirclaims with this courtWITHIN THE LATER OF 3MONTHS AFTER THE TIMEOF THE FIRST PUBLICA-TION OF THIS NOTICE OR30 DAYS AFTER THE DATEOF SERVICE OF A COPYO F T H I S N O T I C E O NT H E M .

All other creditors of thedecedent and other per-sons having claims or de-mands against decedent'sestate must file their claimswith this court WITHIN 3M O N T H S A F T E R T H EDATE OF THE FIRST PUB-LICATION OF THIS NO-TICE.

ALL CLAIMS NOT FILEDWITHIN THE TIME PERI-ODS SET FORTH IN SEC-TION 733.702 OF THEFLORIDA PROBATE CODEW I L L B E F O R E V E RB A R R E D .

NOTWITHSTANDING THETIME PERIODS SET FORTHABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILEDTWO (2) YEARS OR MOREAFTER THE DECEDENT'SD A T E O F D E A T H I SB A R R E D .

The date of first publica-tion of this notice is July25, 2014.

Attorney for Personal Rep-resentative:/s/ John A. NelsonF l o r i d a B a r N u m b e r :0 7 2 7 0 3 2Slaymaker and Nelson,P.A.2218 Highway 44 WestInverness, Florida 34453Telephone: (352) 726-6129Fax: (352) 726-0223E - M a i l :[email protected] E-Mail: [email protected]

Personal Representative:/s/ Crystal Crockett13663 S.W. 40th CircleOcala, Florida 34473

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025683

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE SEVENTH JUDICIALCIRCUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDACIVIL ACTION

CASE NO.: 2012-CA00065353DIVISION: 53

METLIFE HOME LOANS, ADIVISION OF METLIFEBANK, N.A. ,Plaintiff,

vs.

VIRGINIA LEE EBEN, et al,Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOS-URE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENpursuant to a Final Judg-ment of Mortgage Fore-closure dated July 16, 2014and entered in Case No.2012-CA-000653 53 of theCircuit Court of the SEV-ENTH Judicial Circuit inand for PUTNAM County,Florida wherein NATION-STAR MORTGAGE LLC(1),is the Plaintiff and THE UN-KNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES,GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES,LIENORS, CREDITORS,TRUSTEES, OR OTHERCLAIMANTS CLAIMING BY,THROUGH, UNDER, ORAGAINST VIRGINIA LEEEBEN DECEASED; JIMMYR. EBEN, JR. A/K/A J. RAYEBEN, JR. A/K/A JIMMYRAY EBEN A/K/A JIMMYEBEN, AS AN HEIR OF THEESTATE OF VIRGINIA LEEEBEN, DECEASED; JAMIEELIZABETH SHEPHERDF/K/A JAMIE ELIZABETHEBEN, AS AN HEIR OF THEESTATE OF VIRGINIA LEEEBEN, DECEASED; ANYA N D A L L U N K N O W NPARTIES CLAIMING BY,THROUGH, UNDER, ANDAGAINST THE HEREINNAMED INDIVIDUAL DE-FENDANT(S) WHO ARENOT KNOWN TO BE DEADOR ALIVE, WHETHER SAIDUNKNOWN PARTIES MAYCLAIM AN INTEREST ASSPOUSES, HEIRS, DE-VISEES, GRANTEES, ORO T H E R C L A I M A N T ;PROSPERITY BANK; arethe Defendants, The Clerkof the Court will sell to thehighest and best bidder forcash at SOUTH FRONTDOOR OF THE PUTNAMCOUNTY COURTHOUSE,410 SAINT JOHNS AVEN-UE, PALATKA, FLORIDA32177 at 11:00 AM, on the21st day of August, 2014,the following describedproperty as set forth insaid Final Judgment:

A PART OF GOVERNMENTLOT 3, AND A PART OFTHE NORTHEAST 1/4 OFTHE SOUTHEAST 1/4 OFSECTION 32, TOWNSHIP11 SOUTH, RANGE 27EAST, DESCRIBED AS:

COMMENCE AT A POINTMARKED WITH A PERMAN-ENT REFERENCE MARK-ER ON THE NORTHERLYRIGHT OF WAY LINE OFT H E P U B L I C R O A DC A L L E D E A S T M A I NSTREET, IN THE TOWN OFPOMONA PARK, SAIDPOINT BEING 503 FEETW E S T A N D 6 4 F E E TSOUTH OF THE NORTH-EAST CORNER OF THESAID SOUTHEAST 1/4,THENCE RUN SOUTH 70DEGREES 20 MINUTESW E S T A L O N G T H ENORTHERLY RIGHT OFWAY LINE OF EAST MAINSTREET, 125 FEET TO THEPOINT OF BEGINNING,SAID POINT OF BEGIN-NING BEING THE SOUTH-WESTERLY CORNER OFT H E E X C E P T I O N D E -SCRIBED IN OFFICIAL RE-CORDS BOOK 206, PAGE704; (1) THENCE CONTIN-UE SOUTH70 DEGREES 20MINUTES WEST, ALONGSAID RIGHT OF WAY LINE;196.9 FEET; (2) THENCERUN NORTH 14 DEGREES16 MINUTES 53 SECONDSWEST, 166.30 FEET, PAR-ALLEL TO THE WEST-ERLY LINE OF LANDS DE-SCRIBED IN OFFICIAL RE-CORDS BOOK 206, PAGE704; (3) THENCE RUNNORTH 70 DEGREES 33MINUTES 01 SECONDSEAST, 26.27 FEET; (4)THENCE RUN NORTH 16DEGREES 51 MINUTES 12SECONDS WEST, 40.77FEET; (5) THENCE RUNNORTH 72 DEGREES 27MINUTES 05 SECONDSEAST, 152.23 FEET TO THENORTHWEST CORNER OFTHE AFOREMENTIONEDEXCEPTION, (6) THENCERUN SOUTH 19 DEGREES55 MINUTES 34 SECONDSEAST, 200.45 FEET ALONGTHE WESTERLY LINE OFSAID EXCEPTION TO THEPOINT OF BEGINNING ANDTO CLOSE.

A / K / A 2 1 6 E M A I N ,POMONA PARK, FL 32181

Any person claiming an in-terest in the surplus fromthe sale, if any, other thanthe property owner as ofthe date of the Lis Pen-dens must file a claim with-in sixty (60) days after thesale.

WITNESS MY HAND andthe seal of this Court onJuly 17, 2014.

Tim SmithClerk of the Circuit Court

By: /s/ Kelly PurcellDeputy Clerk

**See Americans with Dis-abilities ActIf you are a person with adisability who needs an ac-commodation in order toaccess court facilities orparticipate in a court pro-ceeding, you are entitled,at no cost to you, to theprovision of certain assist-ance.

To request such an accom-modation, please contactCourt Administration in ad-vance of the date the ser-vice is needed:

Court Administration125 E. Orange Ave., Ste.300Daytona Beach, FL 32114(386) 257-6096

Hearing or voice impaired,please call 711.

(1) Plaintiff name haschanged pursuant to or-der previously entered.

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025691

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE 7TH JUDICIAL CIR-CUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 09-398-CA 52

1st UNITED BANK, suc-cessor in interest to THEBANK OF MIAMI, N.A., anational banking associ-ation,Plaintiff,

v.

ANTHONY L . DAVIDE,OCEAN BREEZE DEVEL-OPMENT, LLC, JAMES E.BURKE, MITA M. BURKEand AMBLE DRIVE RE-ALTY, LLC,Defendants.

CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALEU N D E R C H A P T E R 4 5 ,F L O R I D A S T A T U T E S

NOTICE IS GIVEN that, ina c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h eAmended Final Judgmentof Foreclosure dated July15, 2014, in above-styledmatter, I will sell to thehighest and best bidder forcash at the Putnam CountyCourthouse, 410 St. JohnsAve., Palatka, FL 32177 at11:00am on September 2,2014, the following de-scribed real property as setforth in said Judgment ofForeclosure:

SEE EXHIBITS "A" AND"B" ATTACHED HERETO

WITNESS my hand and theseal of the Court on July24, 2014.

By: /s/ Ashley DarbyDeputy Clerk

EXHIBIT A

Parcel A:

Parcel #1:Part of Sections 10, 11 and14 of Township 12 South,Range 27 East, PutnamCounty, Florida and beingmore par t icu la r ly de -scr ibed as fo l lows:

1 - All that part of the East1/2 of Section 10, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17.EXCEPT Green Acres Sub-division as recorded inMap Book 4, page 36, alsoEXCEPT those lands de-scribed In Deed Book 142,page 548, Deed Book 175,page 149 and Deed Book186, page 534.2- The East 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East, EXCEPTthose lands described InOfficial Records Book 81,page 66.3 - All that part of the North1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4 and theSoutheast 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of the Northwest1/4 and the East 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 and the Northw-est 1/4 of the Southwest1/4, lying Easterly of theEasterly right of way line ofthe Seaboard CoastlineRailroad, all in Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.4 - All that part of theSoutheast 1/4 of the South-west 1/4, lying Easterly ofthe Easterly right of wayline of the Seaboard Coast-line Railroad, in Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.5- That part of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Northwest1/4, lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,In Section 11, Township 12South, Range 27 East.6 - The South 60 feet of theWest 60 feet of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4of the Southwest 1/4 ofSection 11, Township 12South, Range 27 East.7 - The West 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.8- The West 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.9- The Northwest 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section14, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.10- The South 1/4 of theEast 1/2 of the Southwest1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 ofSection 14, Township 12,South, Range 27 East.11- The Northeast 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

All references are to thepublic records of PutnamCounty, Florida.

Parcel #2:The North 1/2 of the North-west 1/4 of the Southwest1/4 of Section 11, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East, Putnam County, Flor-ida.

Parcel B:

Parcel 1:Being a part of the NE 1/4of Section 10, Township 12South, Range 27 East andmore par t icu la r ly de -scribed as beginning at thepoint where the East line ofsaid Section 10 intersectsthe South line of the StateRoad right of way; thenceSouth 445 feet; thenceWest 392 feet; thenceNorth 666 feet to the Southline of State Highway;thence South 60 degrees25' East, 450 feet to theplace of beginning.

Parcel 2:Beginning at a point 445feet South and 392 feetWest of the point where theEast line of Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East Intersects theSouth line of the StateRoad right of way; thenceWest 100 feet; thenceNorth to the South line ofthe State Road right ofway; thence South 60 de-grees 25' East along rightof way to West line of tractpreviously deeded; thenceSouth along this line toplace of beginning.

Parcel 3:Beginning at a point 445feet South and 492 feetWest from the point wherethe East line of Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East Intersects theSouth line of U.S. Highway#17 (60 foot right of way);thence West 350 feet;thence North to South lineof Highway; thence South60 degrees 25' East alongHighway to a point dueNorth of place of begin-ning; thence South to placeof beginning.

Parcel 4:Beginning at a point 445feet South from the pointwhere the East line of Sec-t ion 10 , Township 12South, Range 27 East Inter-sects the South Line ofU.S. Highway No. 17 (60foot right of way); thenceWest 842 feet; thenceSouth 176 feet; thence East842 feet; thence North 176feet to place of beginning,all In the NE 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

LEGAL DESCRIPTIONEXHIBIT "B"

2005 Double-wide desig-nated on the Florida Certi-ficate of Title as being themake of PALH with theIdent i f ica t ion Nos. o fP H 2 3 5 7 1 5 A a n dP H 2 3 5 7 1 5 B a n d 1 9 8 0Peachtree Doublewidemanufactured home, Identi-fication Nos. unknown

The Property Is located onportion of the following de-scribed land ("The Land")Parcel A"

Parcel #1:Part of Section 10,11 and14 of Township 12 South,Range 27 East, PutnamCounty, Florida and beingmore par t icu la r ly de -scr ibed as fo l lows:1 - All that part of the East1/2 of Section 10, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,EXCEPT Green Acres Sub-division as recorded InMap Book 4, Page 36, alsoEXCEPT those lands de-scribed In Deed Book 142,Page 548, Deed Book 175,Page 149 and Deed Book186, Page 534.2- The East 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East, EXCEPTthose lands described InOfficial Records Book 81,Page 66.3- All that part of the North1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4 and theSoutheast 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of the Northwest1/4 and the East 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-w e s t 1 / 4 a n d t h eNorth3west 1 /4 of theSouthwest 1/4 lying East-erly of the Easterly right ofway line of the SeaboardCoastline Railroad, all InSection 10, Township 12south, Range 27 East.4- All that part of theSoutheast 1/4 of the South-west 1/4, lying Easterly ofthe Easterly right of wayline of the Seaboard Coast-line Railroad, In Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.5- That part of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Northwest1/4, lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,In Section 11, Township 12South,Range 27 East.6- The South 60 feet of theWest 60 feet of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4of the Soutwest 1/4 of Sec-t ion 11 , Township 12South, Range 27 East.7- The West 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.8- The West 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.9- The Northwest 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section14, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.10- The South 1/4 of theEast 1/2 of the Southwest1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 ofSection 14, Township 12South, Range 27 East.11- The Northeast 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

All references are to thepublic records of PutnamCounty, Florida.

Parcel #2:The North 1/2 of the North-west 1/4 of the Southwest1/4 of Section 11, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East, Putnam County, Flor-ida.

8/1/14, 8/8/14Legal No. 00025785

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE SEVENTH JUDICIALCIRCUIT, IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDA

Case No.: 11-1092-FDDivision: 54

FLORIDA DEPARTMENTOF REVENUE (DOR) O/B/OAPRIL M. WARNOCK,Petitioner,andMICHAEL A HACKBARDT,Respondent.

NOTICE OF ACTION FORSUPPLEMENTAL PETI-TION TO MODIFY FINALJUDGMENT TO ESTAB-L I S H P A R E N T A L R E -SPONSIBILITY, PARENT-ING PLAN, AND FOR RE-LATED RELIEF

TO: April M. Warnock a/k/aApril M. Starling416 West Hillsborough Av-enueFlorahome, Florida 32140

YOU ARE NOTIFIED that anact ion has been f i ledagainst you and that youare required to serve acopy of your written de-fenses, if any, to it onRobert M. Fields, Esquire,whose address is 413 St.Johns Ave., Palatka, FL3 2 1 7 7 o n o r b e f o r e8/10/2014, and file the ori-ginal with the clerk of thisCourt at Putnam CountyCourthouse, 410 St. JohnsAve. , Palatka, F lor ida32177, before service onRespondent or immedi-ately thereafter. If you failto do so, a default may beentered against you for therelief demanded in the peti-tion.

Copies of all court docu-ments in this case, includ-ing orders, are available atthe Clerk of the CircuitCourt's office. You may re-view these documentsupon request.

You must keep the Clerk ofthe Circuit Court's officenotified of your current ad-dress. (You may file Noticeof Current Address, Flor-ida Supreme Court Ap-proved Family Law Form12.915.) Future papers tothis lawsuit will be mailedto the address on record atthe clerk's office.

WARNING: Rule 12.285,Florida Family Law Rulesof Procedure, requires cer-tain automatic disclosureof documents and informa-tion. Failure to comply canresult in sanctions, includ-ing dismissal or striking ofpleadings.

Dated: July 7, 2014

CLERK OF THE CIRCUITCOURTBy: /s/ Tabatha M. EasthamDeputy Clerk

7/11/14, 7/18/14, 7/25/14,8/1/14Legal No. 00025331

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE SEVENTH JUDICIALCIRCUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDAGENERAL JURISDICTIONDIVISION

Case No. 2013-CA-000207

Bank of America, N.A.,Plaintiff,

vs.

Raymond W. Essex; Patri-cia Singleton a/k/a PatriciaAnn Singleton f/k/a Patri-cia Ann Essex f/k/a Patri-cia S. Essex f/k/a PatriciaA . E s s e x ; U n k n o w nS p o u s e o f P a t r i c i aSingleton a/k/a PatriciaAnn Singleton f/k/a Patri-cia Ann Essex f/k/a Patri-cia S. Essex f/k/a PatriciaA. Essex; Putnam County,Florida; Tina Pickett; Un-known Tenant #1; Un-known Tenant #2,Defendants.

NOTICE OF FORECLOS-URE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVENpursuant to a Final Judg-ment of Foreclosure datedJuly 16, 2014, entered inCase No. 2013-CA-000207of the Circuit Court of theSeventh judicial Circuit, inand for Putnam County,Florida, wherein Bank ofA m e r i c a , N . A . i s t h ePlaintiff and Raymond W.Essex; Patricia Singletona / k / a P a t r i c i a A n nSingleton f/k/a Patricia AnnEssex f/k/a Patricia S. Es-sex f/k/a Patricia A. Essex;Unknown Spouse of Patri-cia Singleton a/k/a PatriciaAnn Singleton f/k/a Patri-cia Ann Essex f/k/a Patri-cia S. Essex f/k/a PatriciaA. Essex; Putnam County,Florida; Tina Pickett; Un-known Tenant #1; Un-known Tenant #2 are theDefendants, that I will sellto the highest and best bid-der for cash at the southfront door of the court-house, 410 St. Johns Aven-ue, Palatka, FL 32177, be-ginning at 11:00 AM on Au-gust 21, 2014, the follow-ing described property asset forth in said Final Judg-ment, to wit:

LOT 236, BLOCK 53, UNIT15, INTERLACHEN LAKEESTATES, ACCORDING TOTHE PLAT THEREOF, ASR E C O R D E D I N P L A TBOOK 4, PAGE 186, OFTHE PUBLIC RECORDS OFPUTNAM COUNTY, FLOR-IDA.

Any person claiming an in-terest in the surplus fromthe sale, if any, other thanthe property owner as ofthe date of the lis pendensmust file a claim within 60days after the sale.

Dated this 17th day of July,2014.

Tim SmithAs Clerk of the Court

By: /s/ Kelly PurcellAs Deputy Clerk

If you are a person with adisability who needs an ac-commodation in order toaccess court facilities orparticipate in a court pro-ceeding, you are entitled,at no cost to you, to theprovision of certain assist-ance. Please contact CourtAdministration, 125 E. Or-a n g e A v e . , S t e . 3 0 0 ,Daytona Beach, FL 32114;(386) 257-6096 at least 7days before your sched-uled court appearance, orimmediately upon receiv-ing this notification if thetime before the scheduledcourt appearance is lessthan 7 days; if you arehearing or voice impairedcall 711.

7/25/14, 8/1/14Legal No. 00025651

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OFTHE 7TH JUDICIAL CIR-CUIT IN AND FOR PUT-NAM COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 09-398-CA 52

1st UNITED BANK, suc-cessor in interest to THEBANK OF MIAMI, N.A., anational banking associ-ation,Plaintiff,

v.

ANTHONY L . DAVIDE,OCEAN BREEZE DEVEL-OPMENT, LLC, JAMES E.BURKE, MITA M. BURKEand AMBLE DRIVE RE-ALTY, LLC,Defendants.

CLERK'S NOTICE OF SALEU N D E R C H A P T E R 4 5 ,F L O R I D A S T A T U T E S

NOTICE IS GIVEN that, ina c c o r d a n c e w i t h t h eAmended Final Judgmentof Foreclosure dated July15, 2014, in above-styledmatter, I will sell to thehighest and best bidder forcash at the Putnam CountyCourthouse, 410 St. JohnsAve., Palatka, FL 32177 at11:00am on September 2,2014, the following de-scribed real property as setforth in said Judgment ofForeclosure:

SEE EXHIBITS "A" AND"B" ATTACHED HERETO

WITNESS my hand and theseal of the Court on July24, 2014.

By: /s/ Ashley DarbyDeputy Clerk

EXHIBIT A

Parcel A:

Parcel #1:Part of Sections 10, 11 and14 of Township 12 South,Range 27 East, PutnamCounty, Florida and beingmore par t icu la r ly de -scr ibed as fo l lows:

1 - All that part of the East1/2 of Section 10, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17.EXCEPT Green Acres Sub-division as recorded inMap Book 4, page 36, alsoEXCEPT those lands de-scribed In Deed Book 142,page 548, Deed Book 175,page 149 and Deed Book186, page 534.2- The East 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East, EXCEPTthose lands described InOfficial Records Book 81,page 66.3 - All that part of the North1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4 and theSoutheast 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of the Northwest1/4 and the East 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 and the Northw-est 1/4 of the Southwest1/4, lying Easterly of theEasterly right of way line ofthe Seaboard CoastlineRailroad, all in Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.4 - All that part of theSoutheast 1/4 of the South-west 1/4, lying Easterly ofthe Easterly right of wayline of the Seaboard Coast-line Railroad, in Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.5- That part of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Northwest1/4, lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,In Section 11, Township 12South, Range 27 East.6 - The South 60 feet of theWest 60 feet of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4of the Southwest 1/4 ofSection 11, Township 12South, Range 27 East.7 - The West 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.8- The West 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.9- The Northwest 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section14, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.10- The South 1/4 of theEast 1/2 of the Southwest1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 ofSection 14, Township 12,South, Range 27 East.11- The Northeast 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

All references are to thepublic records of PutnamCounty, Florida.

Parcel #2:The North 1/2 of the North-west 1/4 of the Southwest1/4 of Section 11, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East, Putnam County, Flor-ida.

Parcel B:

Parcel 1:Being a part of the NE 1/4of Section 10, Township 12South, Range 27 East andmore par t icu la r ly de -scribed as beginning at thepoint where the East line ofsaid Section 10 intersectsthe South line of the StateRoad right of way; thenceSouth 445 feet; thenceWest 392 feet; thenceNorth 666 feet to the Southline of State Highway;thence South 60 degrees25' East, 450 feet to theplace of beginning.

Parcel 2:Beginning at a point 445feet South and 392 feetWest of the point where theEast line of Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East Intersects theSouth line of the StateRoad right of way; thenceWest 100 feet; thenceNorth to the South line ofthe State Road right ofway; thence South 60 de-grees 25' East along rightof way to West line of tractpreviously deeded; thenceSouth along this line toplace of beginning.

Parcel 3:Beginning at a point 445feet South and 492 feetWest from the point wherethe East line of Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East Intersects theSouth line of U.S. Highway#17 (60 foot right of way);thence West 350 feet;thence North to South lineof Highway; thence South60 degrees 25' East alongHighway to a point dueNorth of place of begin-ning; thence South to placeof beginning.

Parcel 4:Beginning at a point 445feet South from the pointwhere the East line of Sec-t ion 10 , Township 12South, Range 27 East Inter-sects the South Line ofU.S. Highway No. 17 (60foot right of way); thenceWest 842 feet; thenceSouth 176 feet; thence East842 feet; thence North 176feet to place of beginning,all In the NE 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

LEGAL DESCRIPTIONEXHIBIT "B"

2005 Double-wide desig-nated on the Florida Certi-ficate of Title as being themake of PALH with theIdent i f ica t ion Nos. o fP H 2 3 5 7 1 5 A a n dP H 2 3 5 7 1 5 B a n d 1 9 8 0Peachtree Doublewidemanufactured home, Identi-fication Nos. unknown

The Property Is located onportion of the following de-scribed land ("The Land")Parcel A"

Parcel #1:Part of Section 10,11 and14 of Township 12 South,Range 27 East, PutnamCounty, Florida and beingmore par t icu la r ly de -scr ibed as fo l lows:1 - All that part of the East1/2 of Section 10, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,EXCEPT Green Acres Sub-division as recorded InMap Book 4, Page 36, alsoEXCEPT those lands de-scribed In Deed Book 142,Page 548, Deed Book 175,Page 149 and Deed Book186, Page 534.2- The East 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East, EXCEPTthose lands described InOfficial Records Book 81,Page 66.3- All that part of the North1/2 of the Northwest 1/4 ofthe Northwest 1/4 and theSoutheast 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of the Northwest1/4 and the East 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-w e s t 1 / 4 a n d t h eNorth3west 1 /4 of theSouthwest 1/4 lying East-erly of the Easterly right ofway line of the SeaboardCoastline Railroad, all InSection 10, Township 12south, Range 27 East.4- All that part of theSoutheast 1/4 of the South-west 1/4, lying Easterly ofthe Easterly right of wayline of the Seaboard Coast-line Railroad, In Section 10,Township 12 South, Range27 East.5- That part of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Northwest1/4, lying South of theSoutherly right of way lineof Old U.S. Highway No. 17,In Section 11, Township 12South,Range 27 East.6- The South 60 feet of theWest 60 feet of the Southw-est 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4of the Soutwest 1/4 of Sec-t ion 11 , Township 12South, Range 27 East .7- The West 1/2 of theNorthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.8- The West 1/2 of theSouthwest 1/4 of the North-west 1/4 of Section 14,Township 12 South, Range27 East.9- The Northwest 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section14, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.10- The South 1/4 of theEast 1/2 of the Southwest1/4 of the Northwest 1/4 ofSection 14, Township 12South, Range 27 East.11- The Northeast 1/4 of theSouthwest 1/4 of Section10, Township 12 South,Range 27 East.

All references are to thepublic records of PutnamCounty, Florida.

Parcel #2:The North 1/2 of the North-west 1/4 of the Southwest1/4 of Section 11, Town-ship 12 South, Range 27East, Putnam County, Flor-ida.

8/1/14, 8/8/14Legal No. 00025785

FRIDAY.indd 3 7/31/14 2:53 PM

5 B C L ASS I F I E D S • PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

ClassifiedLine Ad

Merchandise for Sale

1 Item $25 or Less • 1 Item Per Coupon2 Coupons Per Week • 4 lines - 4 Days

Coupon MUST be filled out and include price.Please No Phone Calls, Faxes or Emails

Coupon must be mailed or dropped off.Palatka Daily News, P. O. Box 777, Palatka, FL 32178

or 1825 St. Johns AvenueNewspaper reserves the right to edit copy.

Name:

Address:

Phone:

Ad:

Approximately 16 to 20 letters and spaces per line.

FREE

Advertisers buy audience exposure, but what they really want is results. They want consumers to take action.

Advertising Use: 8 of 10 U.S. adults took action as a result of newspaper advertising in the past 39 days.

54% clipped a coupon46% bought something advertised45% visited a store39% picked up shopping ideas37% checked a website to learn more

Circular Performance: 79% of newspaper readers used a circular from the paper in the past 30 days.

58% compared prices from one insert to another45% shared the insert items with friends or family41% took their insert to the store40% made an unplanned purchase based on an ad

In an opt-out world, people opt-in to newspapers.

You buy a newspaper ad to reach more than 70% of adults who read a newspaper in print oronline in the average week. The action from these 164 million adults is a bonus.

Sources: Frank N. Magid Associates 2011Scarborough Research (release 2) 2010

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Motorcycles /ATV /Accessories

2013 Honda CRF250L, 950 miles,

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RecreationalVehicles

2005 RV Class B Four-winds Siesta 24BB, 27Kmi., 2 slides w/awningcovers, auto awning,auto step & backupcamera. Clean, non-

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TRANSPORTATION

900

3BR/2BA, 4 acres, polebarn. Bardin area,

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Interlachen area:2BR/1BA on Cooper

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RECREATIONAL

800

Boats & Accessories

Paddleboat, 5-seater,good cond., $300.

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River Villas - 55+ Com-munity - 2004 3BR/2BA,access to river & pool,$84.5K. 352-989-1830

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For Sale or Rent2/1 $450/m + $400 sec

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Updated 2BR/2BA w/FLroom on 2.97 acres, 108Hamilton Rd. Satsuma,off CR 309, $59,900.

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Waterfront Property3BR/2BA DW San MateoDouble boat dock w/lift.$90K OBO. Call for info& appt.: 904-626-5239

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Acreage / LotsRecently Foreclosed,

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2 side lots 75x125 eaInter Lk Estates for SaleSerious Inquiries only!

$2500 ea 704-922-7998

1 Acre For Sale: Cornerof Lake Ida Point Dr. &Cutty Cir. Interlachen,$20K. 334-774-2438

Homes2 or 3BR/1BA CH/A,

1200sf, alarm sys., stor-age shed, 120 E. OakhillDr. $82K. 386-336-2649

Florahome, Santa RosaSt., $79K. 2BR/1BA

Single-family home, tonsof potential! Lease orcash. Call for details:

855-664-8357

Homes for sale Palatka,E. Palatka, Owner fin.,low dn pymt. Starting@ $40K, 386-559-0660

Interlachen - Avail. 8/10:Historic 2-story

3BR/1.5BA up, 4 rmsdown w/new kitchen, 2nd

1/2BA, good storage,systems, & appliances, +

laundry bldg w/ W/D.$975/m + DD. 684-3092

Palatka 3BR/2BA, insideutility, fenced yd, carport,$800/m + sec., credit ck

& ref., 386-972-9000

Mobile Homes2/1 MH on 1/2 acre, 165E. Pinellas St. $550/m +$550 Sec. 386-467-7183

or 386-983-2931

3BR/2BA DW PomonaPk area, back/side porch,$600/m 1st, last, deposit.

386-244-4913

Interlachen near PostOffice: 3/2 Central AC

$525/m + Deposit.386-546-5335

Large 2BR/2BA MH$600/m + Deposit. Fran-cis area. 305-794-3191

FOR SALE REAL ESTATE

700

Lost Black Lab, RoddyRd. area. Has orangecollar w/owner info.

386-328-0999

Lost Cat near CR 214,Melrose: "Murray", male

tabby, grey fur, greeneyes. 352-235-1440

LOST M., Napolean Cat,Whit/Grey & Tan Fluffy,Edgehill Hoot Owl Ridge

area 386-244-8120

Lost puppy off Kingstonin Satsuma: Solid white

fem., 1 brown ear7wk/old 386-916-3935

MISSING Female BluePit Puppy Approx 14 wksold. Pomona Park Area

386-972-9735

FOR RENT REAL ESTATE60

0

ApartmentsUnfurnished 1BR apt.

$475/m + $400 SecurityDeposit 386-684-1937

Homes3BR/1BA, CH/A, $750/m

+ Deposit. Off HussonAve. 386-325-7283

LivestockNew Zealand Rabbits6-7 month old males &

females $10 each386-983-0139

Free Animals1 free female lab mixpup, black, 10 wks,

386-559-0911

3 really cute Beagle mixpups free to good

homes. 386-983-4416

Free male AmericanBulldog, 2 yrs old. Needsfenced yd. UTD on shots.

386-983-2898

Lost & FoundAnimals

Found: Small whitefemale dog, HollisterChurch area. Call to

identify, 386-328-1297

If you've LOST a Pet.check out the Dogs &

Cats being held atPutnam County Animal

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386-329-0396

Vera Bradley purse,green design, very

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Musical Items & Services

Set of adult drums forsale: 5 drums, 2 cym-bals, 2 sticks, 1 stool,$350. 386-328-4196

TrailersPace enclosed trailer(Work Sport), 6x10,single axle, $1,600.

904-751-9925

PETS & SUPPLIES

550

Pets & SuppliesChorkie Pups: Male &female, health certs,

$350 each.904-501-0233

Male Chihuahua pups,10 wks old. 2 blue

brindle, 1 red brindle.Shots, health certs.

RCKC reg. $200 each.386-983-6616

LIVESTOCK & SUPPLIES

560

Items $25 or Less

8 pounds of pecans inshells, only $10.386-659-2473

Flowers & plants, youchoose from Rose of

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Collectible Jim Beam"State of FL" decanter(empty), good cond.,$20. 904-571-5524

Dirt Devil with on-boardattachments, used once,

$20. 386-649-6114

Frontline Plus kit fleacontrol for dogs up to22lbs, 6 mo. supply,$25. 386-916-1139

Large elec. panel,$25. 386-546-0576

Large heavy duty doghouse w/tin roof, $25.Interlachen. Call/text

916-1139 for pics.

Pool parts - Lifeguardmodel 320 chlorine

bromide feeder, $10.386-530-0898

Pool parts - Perflex ex-tended cycle filter, used,

$25. 386-530-0898

Portable Singersewing machine,

$25. 386-328-2355

Vera Bradley purse, bluedesign, very good condi-tion, $20. 386-684-2154

FRIDAY.indd 4 7/31/14 2:54 PM

6B • PALATKA DAILY NEWS • FRIDAY, AUGUST 1 , 2014

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080114b6.indd 1 7/31/14 8:35 AM