Citation
Bradford County telegraph

Material Information

Title:
Bradford County telegraph
Place of Publication:
Starke, FL
Publisher:
John M. Miller
Creation Date:
January 12, 2006
Publication Date:
Copyright Date:
2006
Frequency:
Weekly
regular
Language:
English

Subjects

Subjects / Keywords:
Newspapers -- Starke (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Newspapers -- Bradford County (Fla.) ( lcsh )
Genre:
newspaper ( sobekcm )
newspaper ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage:
United States -- Florida -- Bradford -- Starke
Coordinates:
29.947222 x -82.108056

Notes

Abstract:
The first issue of this ongoing weekly appeared on July 26, 1879 under the title Florida Telegraph. It was published by William Wyatt Moore, a native Floridian and a staunch Democrat. Moore had previously worked for a paper in Tallahassee and had also published newspapers in Jacksonville, Lake City, Cedar Key, and Pensacola. After appearing for a short time as the Weekly Florida Telegraph and reverting back to the Florida Telegraph, the paper’s name was changed to the Starke Telegraph. In 1887, Moore sold a half-interest in the newspaper to I.C. Webb, who became sole owner within a few months and changed its name to the Bradford County Telegraph. In 1893, Eugene S. Matthews, who had previously worked for newspapers in Gainesville and Ocala, purchased the Bradford County Telegraph with Ben J. Farmer, who sold his interest to Matthews five years later. Matthews published the Bradford County Telegraph for the next forty years. He was also elected to the state legislature in 1904, 1907, 1911 and 1923. His son, Eugene L. Matthews, a graduate of Columbia University’s School of Journalism, took over the publication in 1933, matching his father’s record of forty years as publisher. The Bradford County Telegraph continues to the present.
Additional Physical Form:
Also available on microfilm from the University of Florida.
Dates or Sequential Designation:
Vol. 9, no. 41 (Apr. 13, 1888)-
General Note:
Publishers: Mathews & Farmer, <1893-1897>; E.S. Mathews, <1900-1926>.

Record Information

Source Institution:
University of Florida
Holding Location:
University of Florida
Rights Management:
Copyright Bradford County Telegraph. Permission granted to University of Florida to digitize and display this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder.
Resource Identifier:
000579551 ( ALEPH )
33886096 ( OCLC )
ADA7397 ( NOTIS )
sn 95047406 ( LCCN )

Related Items

Preceded by:
Starke telegraph

Full Text



Tlhe Sweetest Strawberries T'his Side Of q-eaven


USPS 062-700 Three Sections Starke, Florida


toun1


1107770 BC
P K YONGE LIBRARY
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
1080 S2W 11TH ST
GAINESVILLE FL 32611


Thursday, January 12, 2006


34


126th Year 24th Issue 50 CENTS


www ctelgrahcmemi: *trbtlgraph0 0 ~* .co0


In

... .



301 resurfacing
imminent
The Florida Department of .. .,.
Transportation will begin resurfacing
--on U.S. 301 iti the next couple of
weeks. k
The scope of the project includes a
one-mile stretch of 301, beginning at
the intersection of S.R. 100 and
proceeding north.
The project was awarded to0-.A
Anderson Columbia Inc. of Lake ..
'City, which bid nearly $1.9 million
for the project. The project was
awarded on Dec. 19, and work
typically begins within 30 days of the
project being awarded. A firm start
date was not available as 'of press
time. Presumably, construction will
take place at night in order to
minimize traffic disruptions, but that
information could not be confirmed.
The resurfacing project should take
approximately 90 days to complete.

MLK Breakfast
set for Monday
The annual breakfast in honor of
Martin Luther King Jr. Day will be
held at 8 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 16, at
Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church
at the corner of C.R. O10A in Starke.
The Rev. James Wilcox anild -his
congregation invite all to attend the
breakfast and the special program
that is to follow at 10 a.m.
This year's speaker will be the Rev. .. .'
'Dwayne McBride of St. Peters
Missionary Baptist Church in Archer.
Local churches will be notified this (L-R) Naya Hudson and Syntela Postway concentrate on reading a passage during the
week about what items are needed for sustained silent reading class that is part of Saturday School at Bradford Middle School.
the breakfast. The FCAT requires students to be able to read for 20 minutes and then answer
questions on what they have read. Many of today's young people haveldifficulty with
K that.skillsince more time is often spent watching television than reading during a
c r e mon se0rn o r m a l d a y .
.,ceremony set forS
Noon Saturday sho ep FCAT prep


The Bradford County Christian
Missionary Literary and Cultural
Society -will hold its Martin Luther
King Jr. Day celebration on Monday,
Jan. 16, at noon.
The ceremony will take place at
902 N. Oak St., at .the corner of
Florida and Oak streets.
According to the president of the
society, Maurice White, spirituals,
patriotic music and King's "I Have a
Dream" speech will be presented.
Students -from Gainesville and the
local area will participate in the
music program.
White said participants will also
discuss how the community can live
up to the challenges 'given to the"
black community in the "I Have a
Dream" speech.

Starke man
flees deputies,
gets arrested
A 24-year-old Starke man was
arrested Jan. 8 after he fled from
deputies while in his car and on foot.
Timothy Lavain Flowers Jr. was
Sitting in his vehicle just after
midnight in the Pleasant Grove area
when he was approached by Sgt. Ray
White. Flowers dropped a
prescription bottle on the ground
during questioning, then pulled away,
Sgt. White said. The deputy
attempted to stop the 1991 Chevrolet
sedan as it travelled at a high rate of
speed.'
The vehicle crashed in a ditch on
Northwest 180th Street and Flowers
fled into the woods. Starke K-9 with
Sgt. Richard Crews was requested
and the area was searched. Flowers
was found hiding in a wooded area,
Sgt. White said.
Flowers received minor injuries
when he was bitten by the K-9. No
medical attention was required, Sgt.
White said.
The, prescription bottle was
recovered and found to contain crack
cocaine. Flowers was charged with
aggravated fleeing, eluding and
possession of cocaine with intent to
sell, Sgt. White said.
Bond on the charges was set at
$10,000.


0// o


BY MARCIA MILLER
Telegraph Staff Writer
With the Florida Comprehensive
Assessment Test looming large on the
horizon, Bradford Middle School
students are taking advantage of the
opportunity to brush up skills they
will need to do well on the test..
Saturday School, a program that
provides additional instruction on
some of the skills tested on the FCAT,
was first offered at BMS five years
ago, said Gayle Weaver, coordinator
for the program,
Saturday School is open to any
BMS student who wishes to attend.
Transportation is not provided,
however.
Classes run from 9 a.m. to noon
each Saturday through the end of
February. Students can attend all
Saturday or just some of them, said
Weaver,


In order to qualify for the program,
the only thing required of a student is
that he or she want to attend. "It's
completely voluntary,'' said Weaver.
There are eight 'classes being
offered.
One class is for sustained silent
reading. "One of the things they tell
us is that students don't read long
enough. They are fire reading a
passage for two or three minutes, but
' the FCAT requires 260 minutes of
reading followed by questions," said
Weaver.
After the students sit and read for
20 minutes in silence, they go to the.
next class and answer questions
designed to find out how' much they
understood of what they !read. They
will find very similar situations on they
FCAT test itself.
In another class, students are taught
how to read charts and graphs and


how to glean information from them.
Many of the questions on the FCAT
require students to understand a chart,
or a graph and answer questions
about it.
"That class will get them used to
answering that type of question," said
Weaver.
A poetry class helps students
become more accomplished readers
Because it teaches reading rhythm
and vocabulary in an interesting way.
A reader's theater class does
something similar by using plays.
Reading plays requires that students
read aloud and the voice expression
makes the reading more interesting,
said Weaver.
"It improves their fluency 'and
intonation of voice. That carries over
into other forms of reading," said
Weaver.
See PREP, p. 3A


Impact fee study ready to begin


BY MARK J. CRAWFORD
Telegraph Editor
A University of Florida professor
will perform the needs study
necessary for the county to establish
impact fees for one or more areas of
service.
. With a $30,000 bid and experience
to back up his proposal, Dr. James
Nichols received the project award.
The city of Starke will share in the
cost of the largely grant-funded study.
Both the city and the county are
interested in exploring the use of
impact fees in funding new growth,
so the study will suggest an amount
for impact fees on transportation,
public facilities, emergency medical
services, law enforcement, library,
parks and recreation, fire and rescue,
emergency management; schools,
and public utilities. The-suggested fee
amounts will be based in part on the
level of service each local
government intends to provide in
those areas.
Impact fees on one or more of these


areas will be assessed on new
development by county ordinance.
Municipalities may opt in or out of
participation, but Starke is on board
and both the city and county
managers are working closely on
matters of growth management
A workshop on that topic was held
prior to the county commission's Jan.
99 meeting and-County-Manager Jim
Crawford explained the proce-s all
local government's are facing now
that the state has committed to reform
in growth management.
Local governments must update
the capital improvement elements of
their comprehensive plans, iand
Bradford County's deadline for doing
so is December 2007. Thereafter; the
county's governments will have to
submit annual updates to the capital
improvement elements, showing 'not
only what infrastructural
improvements are planned but how
they will be paid for. As Crawford
said, it will be a pay-as-you-grow
plan.


By the end of this year an
ordinance providing for developers to
pay a proportionate share of needed
transportation improvements must be
in place. Proportionate share, or fair
share, costs differ from impact fees in
that impact fees are intended to
address regional improvements while
proportionate share costs are project
specific.
For- example, a new commercial
development may be required to pay
a proportionate share of improving a
segment of roadway with traffic and
turn lanes that provide ingress and
egress from that development.
Transportation impact fees paid by
commercial and residential
development in a particular area of
the county would be earmarked for
general roadway improvements in
that region.
Concurrency is the primary
concept behind the growth
management push. Concurrency

See FEES, p. 2A


Sex

offenders


target of

new law

Restrictions extend to
landlords
BY MARK J. CRAWFORD
Telegraph Editor
Concerned by the recidivism rate
among sex offenders and what that
means for the safety of the
community, the city of Starke is
joining other cities by placing
residency restrictions on the books.
The City of Starke Sexual Offender
and Predator Ordinance, as it is titled,
was approved on first reading Jan. 3,
and created a new article in the city
code of ordinances.
The ordinance refers to repeat
sexual offenders and sexual predators
who prey on children as "an extreme
threat to. the public safety."
It reads: "Sexual offenders are
extremely likely to use physical
violence and to repeat their offenses,
and most sexual offenders- commit
many offenses, have many more
victims than are ever reported, and
are prosecuted for only a fraction of
their crimes. This makes the cost of
sexual offender victimization to
society-at large, while incalculable,
clearly exorbitant." '
It is with that statement in mind
that the city commission is. enacting
an ordinance to create areas around'
locations where children congregate
that such offenders cannot establish
either a temporary or permanent
residence.
When finalized after a second
reading, the ordinance will prohibit

See LAW, p. 2A


Starke

hesitant to

support

'condos'

Mayor says more
affordable housing may
not be needed
BY MARK J. CRAWFORD
Telegraph Editor
The city of Starke may pass on
providing local government
assistance to a new affordable
housing developer.
Beachouse LLC wants to build
condominiums adjacent to Alligator
Creek, across from Orangewood and
Whispering Oaks apartments on S.R.
100. According to City Manager Ken
Sauer, this is the area where the Call-
A-Mattress factory was located
before it burned in April 2004.
Southside Elementary neighbors the
property.
Sauer said Beachouse was in the
process of acquiring the land to
construct affordable housing, but was
seeking local government support
that would provide additional points
toward the loan application.
Starke agreed to postpone payment
of more than $67,000 in impact fees
for five and a half years for BNG
Partners Inc. when it sought state
funding to build Whispering Oaks.
Beachouse has asked the city for the
same type of support for its
subsidized housing project.
Specifically, Beachouse wants a
$10,000 deferral of fees for five
years. /
Mayor Steve Futch said the thought
of additional subsidized housing
didn't "thrill" him. The income
threshold is such that other affordable

See CONDOS, p. 2A


For crime, socials and editorials, see Regional News section. For sports, see Features and Sports section.

Deadline noon Tuesday before publication 904-964-6305 (phone) 904-964-8628 (fax) 6 89076 63869 2








Page2A TELEGRAPH Jan.12,2006


County wants to give


up Starke zoning


BY MARK J. CRAWFORD
Telegraph Editor
Who will manage the
business of zoning and
* planning for the city of Starke
may become a sticking point
as the city enters negotiations
...o.ver-a renewed interlocal
agreement with Bradford
County.
The county is asking that the
city assume responsibility for
zoning changes and land use.
plan .amendments within the
city limits as the county's
other municipalities do. The
county, however, would
continue, to handle building
permits and" inspections.
According to Starke Mayor
Steve Futch, it would be hard
for the city to establish its own
zoning department without the
permit fees to support it.
Rezoning applications do
generate revenue, but that
amount is dwarfed by what is
generated on the building side
of the house.
Figures compiled by Zoning
Director Nora Thompson
demonstrate just that. In 2005,
zoning fees for applications
filed in the city of Starke
amounted to $6,400. Building
permit fees, by contrast,
totaled nearly $63,700.
This is true even for the
county (and other
municipalities), with $20,200


LAW
Continued from p. 1A
anyone convicted of a sex
crime against a victim 16 years
old or younger, regardless-of
whether adjudication has been
withheld, from living
temporarily or permanently
within 2,500 feet of any
school, daycare center, park,
playground or other location
where children congregate.
The measurement applies
from property line to property
line; and violators can be fined
up to $500 and/or imprisoned
for up to 60 days.
,The -law allows for four
-exceptions: -- -
Residency was established
prior to enactment of the
ordinance.
The school or daycare
center within 2,500 feet of the
residence was opened after the
offefider established permanent
residence.
The offender was a minor
when the offense was
committed and was not
.convicted as an adult.
The offender is a minor.
Property owners are
prohibited from renting a
temporary or permanent
residence within 2,500 feet of
one of the restricted areas if
they have knowledge the renter
is a sex offender whose
residency would be a violation
of this ordinance. A property
owner who knowingly'violates
the ordinance could become
subject to code enforcement
action.
A third provision requires
sex offenders and predators
livingin the city to sign a form
stating he or she understands
his or her responsibilities as a
sex offender when that form is
presented by a law
enforcement officer. Refusal to
sign could also lead to a fine of
up to $500 and/or
imprisonment of up to 60 days.
According to the ordinance,
the Eighth Circuit Court of
Appeals upheld-such residency
restrictions in 2005..
A second reading will
precede final enactment of the
ordinance.
City reconsiders
dog barking
ordinance
The commission was also
set to approve the first reading
of an ordinance prohibiting
citizens from keeping animals
in a way that constitutes a
public nuisance. Examples of
.. public nuisance given included
excessive barking, whining
and howling, damaging
property, and chasing vehicles,
passers-by or other animals.
At the suggestion of Police
Chief Gordon Smith, the
ordinance was set aside. Smith
said the city's noise and
animal control ordinances
were sufficient to deal with
those problems. In addition, as


recodification of the city's
codes takes place, Smith said
certain criminal offenses will
be reclassified as civil
offenses, and that will allow
officers to write citations for
those offenses.
In other business:


in zoning fees generated 'in
2005 compared to $171,300 in
building permit fees.
With that in mind, the city
commission felt the need for
further discussion before
considering passage of the
interlocal agreement..
SCity-Manager -Ken Sauer
spoke positively of the
possibility of the city handling
its own zoning matters and has
even spoken with an
independent contractor abolit
doing the job, but Sauer, too,
feels the city will need
building fees to cover the cost.
That will also require having
someone capable for
performing building
inspections as well as zoning
administration.
County Manager Jim
Crawford said it has been
taxing for county staff to
interpret differences and
contradictions in the city's
land development regulations,
and keep up with changes.
"It's just getting to be too
much," Crawford said..
In fact, Sauer confirmed that
a number of changes in the
city's regulations are planned,
including changes to signage
rules and an effort to update all
'of the city's zoning
designations in line with its
future land use map.
"Everything is still zoned


Smith presented, police
department statistics for 2005.
.His department made 1,288
arrests during the year and
wrote 4,131 citations.
Speeding tickets accounted for
731 of those citations.
Statfistics fort red- light
violations have only been kept
since October, and 94 citations
were written during that time.
Twenty-nine DUI arrests were
made.
The Starke Police
Department responded to more
than 40,000 incidents. in 2005.
Three hundred thirty-one of
those were traffic crashes.
Alarm calls totaled 1,335 for
the :year. The average response
time was 2:34. ---7
Finally, Starke officers
escorted 142 funerals in 2005.

CONDOS
Continued from p. 1A
housing complexes are finding
that applicants make too much
to live there, he said.
"Have they done a study
showing this is needed?" Futch
asked. Sauer said he hadn't
been shown anything of that
nature.
Futch said the supply of
affordable housing was
beginning. to outweigh the
demand. Commissioner
Carolyn Spooner disagreed,
saying the need was there
hawsd on the number of
citizens living in "deplorable
conditions."
"If they're condominiums
there's going to be a particular
price range for those, even
though they may be
subsidized," she said.
Unlike Whispering Oaks,
Sauer said Beachouse would
sell the condominiums based
on a purchase program. He
guessed the price would be in
the $80,000 to $100,000 range.
"It would be worth
exploring," Spooner said.
Sauer will ask Beachouse
representatives to appear at a
future meeting to explain their
project and how it fits into the
city of Starke.
Denial of a local
government contribution won't
necessarily disqualify
Beachouse from receiving
funds, but could make the
competition for funding more
difficult.


FEES
Continued from p. 1A

means that local governments
must assess whether or not


the way it used to be, and the
city was never rezoned with its
future land use map," Sauer
said. "That's the major
problem."
New types of growth, like
combined commercial and
residential uses downtown,
require that the city amend its.- -
zoning definitions or add new.
categories as well, and Sauer..
said the regulations don't .
address parking requirements
at all. ..
Even facing that workload,
Crawford said the city could
take over zoning and allow the
county to keep building---
permits and inspection. While
it generates little revenue by
itself, he said the city wouldn't
need a full-time employee to
handle zoning.
The city doesn't see it that
way, so that difference will
have to be ironed out when' the
two commissions sit down to
discuss renewing their r
interlocal agreement. That will o
take place during an as-yet s
unscheduled workshop
session. .
The county's building and
zoning office will continue t
business as usual until told to,
do otherwise, Crawford said,
"There's not a contest going
on. We just want to address it
and see what comes of it," he
said.


each new development can be
served by the current level of
service. For example, if
improvements are required to
utility or transportation
systems in order to support
that development, those
improvements_ .must be
scheduled in the --capital,
improvement element of the
comprehensive plan along with
a plan for paying for those
improvements. Impact fees and
proportionate share costs are
intended to help fund
improvements.
Local governments must
work together in assessing.
growth-related needs, which is
why the county must include
an element addressing school
growth in its comprehensive
plan in 2008. With the cost of
school construction rising and
construction funds from the-"
state diminishing, localefforts
to fund space in public schools
will be relied upon like never
before, particularly in' light of
looming class-size ..
requirements.
"Senate Bill 360 ... deals
only with growth," Crawford
said. "It deals with how we're
going to manage growth for
the future. If We don't have
significant growth, it won't
have a big impact on us, but if
we 'do, then we've got to be
ready for it."
The impact fee study is
expected to be complete in
May. The effective date for
new impact fees could be as
soon as July 1.

BC Jaguars to

hold election
on Jan. 23.
The Bradford .County
Jaguars will meet to elect its
2006 officers and board
members for Pop Warner
football .on Monday, Jan. 23.
The meeting will be held at
6 p.m. at the Bradford County
Fairgrounds, and anyone
interested should attend.
For more information,
contact Joe Gorden or Rodney
Moseley at (904) 368-0273..
^T^^'^'h anhanTsl.H^m


-138 E. Call St, Starke, FL
904/964-4420


?irabforb Countp Ielegrapb
USPS 062-700
Published each Thursday and entered as Periodical Postage
7v; A, Paid at Starke, Florida under Act of March 3, 1879.
~'-"' POSTMASTER: Send address changes to:
A Va Bradford County Telegraph
M-L 131 West Call Street Starke, Florida 32091
Web address: BCTelegraph.com
Phone: 964-6305 P.O. Drawer A Starke, FL 32091
John M. Miller, Publisher
Editor: Mark Crawford
Subscription Rate in Trade Area Sports Editor: Cliff Smelley
$26.00 per year: Advertising: Kevin Miller
$26.00 per year: Don Sams
Darlene Douglass
$13.00 six months Typesetting Joalyce Graham
Outside Trade Area: $26.00 per year: Advertising and
$13.00 six months Classified Adv. Virginia Daugherty
Bookkeeping: RKthi Bennett


County & Other Municipalities


2005


Building Permit fees'

Zoning Fees


116,104.58

9,570.00


City of Starke

'0 ... 2004


Building Permit fees


50,914.14


Zoning Fees 3,000.00
(In 2005 two land use amendment were done at $1700.00 each but the City paid for one)


Need community service hours?
Want to have a more impressive
esume or college application.
Volunteer. Find volunteer
opportunities that fit your
schedule at
www.volunteergateway.org.
Literacy volunteers are needed
n Bradford County. Free
raining available. Your
knowledge and spare time could
benefit others. Call (904) 966-
6780 for more information.
Need Transportation?
Suwannee River Economic
Council, Inc. offers
transportation for social services.
employment (temporary),
shopping and medical. Call
(904) 964-3063 or (800) 824-
5308.
VFW Post #1016 meets the first
and third Thursday of each ,
month at the post home at 7:30
p.m : : ...
Bradford County Vietnam vets
outpost meets every Tuesday at ,
8 p.m. Vietnam veterans
interested in attending should
call Peter Kelsch at (352) 468-
3538.
A cancer and illness support
group to enable cancer survivors
to adjust to the emotional,
physical and spiritual changes
caused by cancer is held the first
and third Tuesdays of each
month at Shands at Starke from.
7- 8 p.m. in the second floor
conference room. Please call if
you need a'ride, (904) 368-2300.


AI-Anon and Alateen family
meets from 8-9 p.m. on Saturdays
at St. Edward's Catholic Church


171,318.04

20,200.00







2005



63,686.62

6,400.00


in Starke. Call (904).964-9269.
for more info.


&uatom Cuu & NVAd

SUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

Specializing in

PERMS COLOR HAIRCUTS


Come by and say hi ~
Owner Amy Dorminey,
Stylists Gwen Fletcher & Connie Stalker
(C armen Waterhouse coming Jan. 17

Experienced Nail Tech wanted...Call for details!

(904) 964-6848
118 S. Thompson St., Starke Open Mon-Sat
(Inside Merle Norman Bldg) Late appts available


Asythe 2006 Silent Auction ^approaches, the Bradford County
,Education Foundation wouldilke to once again thank those businesses
who donated items for sale and all those who participated in the 2005
auction. Please take a moment to thank the following businesses for
their generous support of Education in Bradford Cqunty.


A & G Framing & Gifts
Absolutely Fabulous.
American Gutter
American Paper': :; ,
The Atlanta Braves
Badcock Home Furnishings
John & Jeannie Baker
Barnacle Bills
Beck Chyrsler Dodge Jeep of Starke
Bobkat's Cafe
Bradford County Telegraph .
Bradford Pet Care
Bryan's Ace Hardware
Budget Inn
Capital City Bank
Bobby Carter, School Board Member
'Casa Monica Hotel
Cequent Towing:Prodvcts
Champion Pest Control
Vivian Chappell, School Board Chair
Chevrolet of Starke
China Restaurant '
City Barber. Shop ,
CJs Salon
Community State Bank .
Custom Cuts
Amy, Jassy, Bonnie, Carolyn & Jeff
Datil Dot :
Denmark Furnitire'
Derrick Alvarez Photography
Dicks Wings .
Dimple's Style Shop
Disney World
Dominos Pizza
Douglas,Douglas &Farnswonh
Downtown Merchants Association
Dr. Talisha Cunningham, DMD
Dr. Virgil Berry, Back & Neck Pain Center
Dr. William Marchese, DMD
-Drummond Financial Services --"..'-
Elixon's Wood Products
Alex Farrimond, Padnipered Chef
Faulkner Realty
Florida Twin Theatre
Garfield Cleaners
Hampton Lake Bed & Breakfast
Harry & Joanne Hatcher
Hendricks Turf
Interiors'by Bev.
Jackson Building Supply
Jacksonville Jaguars


Jo & Gilbert Reed Specialty Advertising
Randy Jones, School Board Member
Jones Funeral Home
Jerome Kelley
Keystone Building True Value
Lake Area Physical Therapy
Madison Street Baptist Church
Merle Norman Cosmetics Studio
Jesse Moore, School Board Member
Norma's Florist & Gifts
- ': North Beach Engineering
North Central Title
Option Care
Reddish & White
Lorna Reddish
Results Fitness Center
Roberts Insurance
Scott & Cindy Roberts
Phyllis Rosier
S&J Fitness Center
Santa Fe Community College
Scarlett's Southern Charm
Shands Hospital at Starke
Sister's Antiques
SMI Joist & Jim Tomberlin
Southern Professional Title Services
St. Augustine Lighthouse
Starke Academy of Dance
Starke Golf & Country Club
Starling Carpet Cleaning
Starling Family' Dentistry
Stefanie D. Smith, LMT
Strawberry Tea Room
Teal Tile and Carpet
The Office Shop
John and Julee Tinsler
Tiny Mite Choo-chioo
Trinity Mortgage
Triple S Plumbing
Universal Studios Orlando
Variety Sales-.
Walmaff
'James Watson, School Board Vice Chair
WEAG Radio
Weigh Less Weight Loss Center
Wendy Wright
Wendy's of Waldo
Wild Adventures
Williams Jewelry
Winn Dixie


Anyone interested in donating to the 2006 Silent Auction are welcome to contact
Michele Everson at (904) 364 7524 or bcef@alltel.ntet The Silent Auction is
scheduled for January 28, 2006.


7" *'-


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I







Jan. 12, 2006 TELEGRAPH Page 3A


K'-


Patrick Magyari reads a passage so that he can
answer questions about what he has read.


(Front row, I-r) Orlando Trejo, Hinesha Patel, Kyle Botruff and Aaron McNeal work on math skills that
Aparicio, (back row, I-r) Doretta Jackson, Katelyn will be tested on the FCAT.


PREP
Continued from p. 1A
There is also a class on
vocabulary and composition
where students must learn new
words and use them in writing
passages.
A class on word origins
teaches students to figure out
what an unfamiliar word
might mean by breaking down
the prefixes, suffixes, etc.
A math skills class helps
students brush up on the skills
.' that, will be tested on the
FCAT.
Instructors who are teaching
in Saturday School are Keisha
.Hampton, Dusty Newburg,
Shane McFadyen, Cindy
Whytsell, Linda Sheffield,
Beckie Burkett, Eric Verunac
and John Loper.
There is still room in the
program for new students. All
a student must have is a
signed permission slip from a
parent and transportation to
and from BMS on the
Saturday attended.
Permission slips dan be
obtained at the BMS office
-Devirt-Paulk-reads as he prepares toranswer ------... during, -school hours or at-
questions like those that will appear on the FCAT. Saturday School itself. For
more information, call (904)
966-6705.


Look Good, Feel Better support
group is a free makeover "how
to" with wig, scarf and skin care
tips for women currently
undergoing cancer treatment.
SFacilitated by a licensed
cosmetologist, classes are
scheduled to meet demand.
Preregistration is required Call
(904) 758-3074 or (352) 376-
6866 for information.
Reach to Recovery, a personal
visitation program for women
diagnosed with breast cancer, is
. available upon request.
Volunteer visitors who are breast
cancer survivors are available
before and after breast surgery to
provide information and
support. Call (904) 758-3074 or
(352) 376-6866 for information.
American Legion Post 56 holds,
monthly meetings on the second
and fourth Tuesdays of each
month at the post home on
:Edwards Road in Starke.
Love your library 964-6400.
'Cub Scouts Pack 367 holds
Weekly meetings at St. Mark's
Episcopal Church in Starke on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. for grades 1-5.
For information, contact Connie
.at (904) 964-5188.
The New Bethel Baptist Church
-has a communitywide. noonday
Bible study each Wednesday. The
public is invited and
transportation is available. For
information call the church at
(904) 964-6919.
:631st Maintenance Co. Fla.
.National Guard family support
group meets the first and third
Saturday of each month at
,Western Steer Steakhouse in
iStarke. Members of the unit and
:their families are invited to this
:Dutch-treat dinner. For
,information, call (904) 964-
5320.
A free class for adults who want
to improve reading skills and
basic math computational skills
will be held at Bradford-Union
Area Vo-Tech. For additional
information, call (904) 966-
6773 or (904) 966-6764.
Volunteers are needed at
Windsor Manor Nursing Home,
602 East Laura Street in Starke,
to assist in the activities
department. Hours,are tracked
and recorded for community
service hours. Applications are
available at Windsor Manor or
call the activity director, (904)
964-3383, for more information.
Pop Warner football board
meetings are held the third
Tuesday of each month at the
Family Service Center on Orange
Street in Starke from 7-8 p.m.
The Bradford County Domestic


Violence Task Force meets the
second Wednesday of each month
at 11:30 a.m. at Western Steer .
Steakhouse on US-301 in Starke.
All citizens interested in this
important issue are invited.
Lunch is available. For
information, call Naricy Alvarez,
(904) 964-1515.
Free blood pressure checks are
offered every Thursday from
2:30-3:30 p.m. at the Senior
Health Care Center at Starke.
Call Rebecca, (904) 964-3444,
for information.


Starke animal
control needs
blankets
Starke animal control is
accepting donation of towels,
blankets, etc., to keep animals
warm during the winter. Items
can be dropped of at the
atfimal control facility on
Edwards Road, or contact
Kristie Dickens at (904) 334-
7319.


(L-R) Katie Garber, Michael Garber and Tanea Striglers read and discuss poems
in the poetry class.


Surplus
commodities
available
Surplus commodities will be
distributed to eligible area
residents on Thursday, Jan. 12,
and Friday, Jan. 13, from 8:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at 104-4 LM
Gaines Boulevard in Starke.
Any household whose
maximum gross income is less
than the state-established
maximum for the appropriate
household size is eligible.
Also, anyone receiving aid
from one of the following
programs is eligible for USDA
commodities: food stamps,
AFDC, SSI, Medicaid or
residence in government
housing.


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NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING TO AMEND THE
TEXT OF THE CITY OF
STARKE LAND,
DEVELOPMENT CODE
BY THE ZONING COMMISSION OF THE CITY OF
STARKE, FLORIDA, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that, pursuant the City of Starke Land Development
Code, hereinafter to as the Land Development Code,
and Sections 163.3161 through 163.3215, Florida
Statutes, as amended, objections, recommendations
and comments concerning an amendment, as
described below, will be heard by the Zoning
Commission of the City of Starke Florida, hereinafter
referred to as the Zoning Commission, at a public
hearing on January 26, 2006 at 7:00 p.m., or as soon
thereafter as the matter can be heard, in the City
Commission Meeting Room, City' Hall, located at 209
North Thompson Street, Starke, Florida.
LDR 06-1, an application by City Commission, to
amend the text of the Land Development Code by
amending Section 4-99.3, entitled Uses Permitted by
Special Exception in Community Commercial District.
by adding new residential uses in conjunction with a
commercial use as permitted use.
CITY OF STARKE

















The public hearing may be continued to one or more
future dates. Any interested party shall be advised
that the date, time and place of any continuation of
the public hearing shall be announced during the pub-
lic hearing and that no further notice concerning the
matter will be published.
At the aforementioned public hearing, all interested
parties may appear to be heard with respect to the
amendment.
Copies of the amendment are available for public
inspection at the Bradford County-City of Starke
Zoning, Planning and Building Department located at
945 North Temple Avenue, North Wing, Starke,
Florida, during regular business hours.
All persons are advised that if they decide to appeal
any decision made at the above referenced public-
hearing, they will need a record of the proceedings,
and that, for such purpose, they may need to ensure
that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made,
which record includes the testimony and evidence
upon which the appeal is to be based.


964=3300



201'Orange Street


"I "% nihably tiilmlifli, lovid ik% ol lite.







Page4A TELEGRAPH Jan. 12, z2u0



BHS gets an 'edutainment'
BHS'? 2 g..$e "' d V


BY LINDSEY KIRKLAND
Telegraph Staff Writer
._ _After_ Christmas-- break,-
Bradford High School students
returned to campus expecting
to get their normal education.
Instead, they got an
"edutainment."
The college-aged staff of
Project SOS (Strengthening
Our Students), a Jacksonville-
based organization, provided
BHS students with a program
that teaches an educational
niessage in an entertaining
way. Hence, they called it an
edutainment.
The prograniT.taught- the
students about health facts and
making the right choices in all
aspects of their lives, including
waiting until marriage to have
sex, self pride, safety on the
Internet, reducing violence,
eating disorders, and addiction
to drugs and alcohol.
At Friday's presentation,
Project SOS staff sang, read
poetry and spoke about their
personal experiences. Some
had troubling times in their
past and others did not.
Project SOS staff member
Ashley Brown ,told how she
had decided to put off sex until
marriage, but her boyfriend
wanted more.
She ended up giving nude
pictures of herself to her
boyfriend over the Internet.
Eventually, they found their
way to her friends and to
complete strangers.
"I've never felt so dirty in
my life as I did that night,"
said Brown, who told the
crowd she regretted the
incident and then advised.them
on how to be safe on the
Internet.
Brown told the students they
had to be smarter in
relationships. Her own
personal relationship motto
comes from a necklace she
saw once of a rose wrapped
around a sword.
"Be beautiful like a rose, but
sharp like a sword," she said.
If people are smarter in a
relationship, she said, they will
be less likely to put-themselves
-ihndifficult situations.


Several Project SOS
demonstrations called for
student participation.
Tenth-grader Ronnie Sibley
gladly volunteered when
Project SOS director Mat Pace
asked for a strong guy to help
him on stage.


set high goals, which he had
Sibley represent by standing
on a chair on stage.
Then Pace pulled on
Sibley's arm and was able to
pull him off the chair. Pace
said hanging out with the
wrong crowd could bring


During a presentation at Bradford High School on Friday, Jan. 6, Project
SOS Director Mat Pace pulls on 10th-grader Ronnie Sibley's arm to show
that even students who set high goals for themselves can be brought
down by hanging out with the wrong type of people.


D.J. Robinson recites his poem "Bottle of
Tears" to students in the BHS auditorium.
Robinson wrote the poem about difficult times
he has gone through in his life.


someone down even if they
had high goals for themselves.
After the program, Project
SOS handed out surveys on the
effectiveness of. the program
and to get feedback from the
students.
Project SOS currently runs
programs in six counties in
North Florida and is expanding
throughout the nation and to
other countries.
According to its Web site,


www.projectsos.com, Project
SOS has been a success and
more than 75 percent of
teenagers said they would be
abstinent until marriage after
attending a program.
From the organization's
follow-up surveys, it said 90
percent of those committed
teenagers maintained their
promises 18 months after the
program.
In the past, Project SOS has


received funding from the
federal government's Title V
program.
Title V's 12-month follow-
up surveys said that 93 percent
of females and 91 percent of
males students kept their
abstinence commitments.
Project SOS was started in
St. Johns County in 1993 and
has provided programs to more
than 175,000 students and
parents.


Pace questioned him about
his goals for the future.
"Y'all know I'm going to
FSU," Sibley said, getting
some cheers from the other
students in the auditorium.
Pace said it was important to


trophy, first place T-shirts and
ThI -braggint riptsi!
Competitors, are, .ree to
05tifw choose their bracket. The
leisure league will play 20
basketball minute games, while the
competitive league will play
tournam ent 30 minute games. Of the 16
total teams, eight will appear
The Bradford County in each bracket. Games will
YMCA is hosting a fund --featuire certified referees.
frasing basketballtohiiament Call (904) 964-9622 to
on Saturday, Feb. 18, from 1-9 register a team. Deadline is
p.m. in the Bradford High Feb. 5. The tournament is
School gym. presently sponsored by the
Competition is open to 16 .YMCA and American Dream
teams of five, or six players Realtors, but more sponsors
each. The entrance fee is $100 are needed. Call if interested in
per team, and the cost includes joining the event as a sponsor.
receipt of one event T-shirt per
player. Winners will receive a



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19







Jan. 12,2006 TELEGRAPH Page5A


Southside announces December Terrific Kids WORTH NOTING I Student
/Need volunteers? The named
B.r L KHU' Bradford/Union Volunteer Center .S
C K---- can help organizations find volun- sunshine
teers on the Internet. Fill out a brief
form andyour volunteeropportun"i- Scholar
t;. -41 %. t~ t n hiaf.A


Southside Elementary School recently announced the December Kiwanis Terrific
Kids. They are (I-r): first row, Sidney Clark, Sarah Hudson, Rachel-Riker, Daquan
Strachen, Maudrey Tenly, Schantwez Sewell, MigUel Barquinery; second row, Sarah
Wade, Alex Mejias, Rebecca Carter, Madison Welch, Paul Byrd, Tyrek Hampton, Rima
Fare, Thomas Loudermilk; third row, Brandon Funderburk, Kamila Reyes, Renea
Sellers, Clay Arnold, Jenny Starnes, Nadine Ward, Justin Toms, Tyler Tillman and
Kaleb Wilkison. April Wood was honored, but was not present for the photo.
Kiwanians Jeanette Abbott and John Conneely assisted with the program.


Two new family nurse practitioners


Andrea Eaves Waterhouse and Gayle Shuford Nicula
graduated in December, 2005 from the University of
Florida Family Nurse Practitioner Program. They are
both employed at Shands Starke hospital.


Thanks
Andrea and Gayle would like to personally ,
thank Shands Starke Administrator Jeannie
Baker, Dr. Peter Gianas, Aniie Peantoni, ARNP,
and Clay Gilhooly, ARNP, for their support *
Also, special thanks to their family and friends
for their support, encouragement, love and
prayers. D.


NAACP to


Spelling bee
dates are
announced
The dates of the winter
spelling bees in Bradford
County have been announced.
Bradford Middle School will
have its bee on Wednesday,
Jan. 25, 8:15 a.m. in the Media
Center. For information,
contact Debbie Parmenter.
Starke Elementary will have
its spelling bee on Thursday,
Jan. 19. The event will be held
in the cafeteria beginning at 9
a.m. Call Sheila Evans for more
information.
Hampton Elementary School
spelling bee will be held in the
teacher's classrooms on
Thursday, Jan. 12, beginning at
8:30 a.m. Call Jane Damon for
information.
Southside Elementary
School's bee will be held on
Thursday, Jan. 19, in the
cafeteria. The bee will begin at
9 a.m. Contact Sonya Baldree
for information.
Lawtey Elementary School
will also have its bee on Jan.
19 beginning at 9 a.m. The
event will be held in the
cafeteria. Call Carol Redding
for information.
Also on Jan. 19, Brooker
Elementary bee will begin at
8:30 a.m. It will be held in the
cafeteria. For information, call
Susan Scott.
A district spelling bee will
be held on Friday, Feb. 3, in
the Jones-Rosenberg Building
(SFCC) Cultural Center
beginning at 10 a.m. Call
Becky Reddish for information.


BHS advisory
committee to
meet
The regular meeting of he
Bradford High School (BHS)
Advisory Committee will be
held on Thursday, Jan. 26, at 6
p.m. in the BHS Media Center.


meet Jan. 23
The National Association for
the Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP) executive
branch will meet on Monday,
Jan. 23, at 6 p.m. The general
meeting will follow at 7 p.m.
In addition, the Freedom
Fund Banquet has been
scheduled for Saturday March
4, at 7 p.m.
F.r,further information, call
Pat Smith at 782-3023.


lies will be posted at nIIO c arge a
www.volunteergateway.org. Forms
may be picked up at the Bradford
Executive Center at 113 E. Call
Street in Starke.

The Starke Code Enforcement
Board meets on the second Tuesday
of the month at 7 p.m. at Starke City
Hall, 209 N. Thompson St.


Waste
collection
sites closed
for holiday
All six solid waste
collection sites will be closed
Monday, Jan. 16, in observance
of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
All sites will reopen
Tuesday, Jan. 17.
.For information call (904)
966-6212.


CHURCH


Hope Baptist Church,
3900 SE S.R. 100 in Starke,
will have its Laymen's Revival
Sunday-Thursday, Jan. 29-Feb.
2. Service times are Sunday, 11
and 6, worship service; Monday
through Thursday, 6 p.m.,
family fellowship meal and 7
p.m. worship service. Call .
Dr. E.V. "Gene" Coons, senior
pastor, at (352) 473-4188 for
information.
The Philadelphia Missionary
Baptist Church of Lawtey and
the Rev. Marvin A. McQueen
II, pastor, invites you to attend
its New Beginning Revival on
Thursday and Friday, Jan. 12
and 13, at 7 p.m. nightly. Dr.
Marvin A. McQueen I of First
Missionary Baptist Church of
Jacksonville Beach will be
guest evangelist. Also, on
Sunday, Jan. 15, 3 p.m., a


Kiwanis Club
to sell BBQ
ribs for
charity
Kiwanis Club of Starke will
sell a whole slab of BBQ ribs
to go for $16 per slab. ,
Ribs can be picked up on
Saturday, Jan. 21, between 11
a.m and 2 p.m. at Community
State Bank in the parking lot.
Tickets are available at
Denmark Furniture, Noegels
Auto Sales (see Connie),
Town and Country
Ford/Mercury (see Carol) and
Trinity Mortgage.
The rib sale benefits Santa
Fe CommU.ity College
Kiwanis Endowed Scholarship
Fund, the Builders Club of
Bradford Middle School, the
Key Club at Bradford High


Happy Ith Birthday
Treveor McKinley











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program honoring Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. will be held. The
Rev. Jeremiah Robinson Jr. of
New Zion Missionary Baptist
Church of Fernandina Beach will
be guest speaker. This event was
originally scheduled for 6 p.m.
The public is invited.
Ebenezer Missionary Baptist
Church will be the site of the
annual Dr. Martin Luther King
Day breakfast on Monday, Jan.
16. Breakfast will be served at 8
a.m. and the program will start
promptly at 10. The public is
invited.
Evergreen Baptist Church in
Lawtey will host The Dosses in
concert on Saturday, Jan. 28, at 7
p.m. Free dinner at 6 p.m. Love
offering will be taken. The
church is 7 mi. West of U.S. 3Q 1
on C.R. 125. Call 782-3717 or'
364-8689 for more information.


Christopher Perry, a
graduating senior at Bradford
High School, has been
designated the Bradford
District Sunshine State Scholar
in Mathematics and Science for
y the current year. He will
y compete with the other 74
district scholars from around
Florida on Thursday, Jan. 19,
to become one of the six
regional scholars who then will
vie in March for the title
Statewide Sunshine State
Scholar in Mathematics and
Science for 2006.
The six regional scholars and
their teachers receive further
recognition from the governor
and cabinet, the Florida
legislature, he department of
education and private
businesses.
Established in 1997, the
Sunshine State Scholars
Program is coordinated through
the Florida, Institute of
Education at the University of
North Florida and receives its
major financial support from
the Florida Department of
Education, the Florida Lottery,
and the Technological Research
and Development Foundation.
Further information can be
found on the Web, at
http://w ww.unf. edu/dep t/sunshi
ne/.

)app/ 41k kirthda!

Isabdla Pcrkins


New our little gir is 4.
,Everydaywe leS yeu morel
'IalevI yen very much,
Memmy, DaleddY, ch all vurlamIly


Goat Club to
meet Jan. 26
The 4-H Goat Club will
holds its next meeting on
Thursday, Jan. 26, at 6:30 p.m.
at the Bradford Fairgrounds
building on U.S. 301 N, in
Starke. The date was changed
from Jan. 19 due to a
scheduling conflict.
Other meeting dates will be
Feb. 16 and March 13.
Bradford and Union County
4-H youth who are interested
in' participating in the 2006
Bradford Youth Goat Show
should attend these meetings.
FFA members are also invited.
For more information, call
the Bradford County Extension
Office at (904) 966-6224.


UDC to meet
Jan. 16
The W.T. Weeks Chapter
#1590 of the United Daughters
of the Confederacy will meet
on Monday, Jan. 16, at 2 p.m.
at the home of Midge Frick,
811 W. Pratt St. in Starke.
Historian Burney Winkler
will present the program
entitled, "Overseas Chapter of
the UDC."
Anyone interested in
becoming a member of the
UDC and can prove their
lineage to a Confederate soldier
is welcome to joint.
Call (904) 964-6356 for
information.

Happy 2nd Birthday


'We love you very much!
Daddy (Phiffip), -Mommy
& Ashtin (Sissy)


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Page6A TELEGRAPH Jan. 12, 2006



BHS ranks in top Wal-Mart comes through for Main Street


10 in use of u a


e-planner

BY LINDSEY KIRKLAND
Telegraph Staff Writer
Bradford High School has
been ranked in the top 10 on
two lists of high schools whose
students have used an online
advising planner.
Ranking sixth on both of the
lists for the number and the
overall percentage of students,
BHS had 362 out of 1,053'
students with an e-Personal
Education Planner, totaling 34
percent.
The planner has been
available since October at
www.FACTS.org, Florida's
official statewide advising,
Web site.
It gives high school students
a chance to look at their .
transcripts online to see if they
are meeting graduation,


Quilting
classes under
way
Beginning quilting classes
with Minnie Redding began
this week, and classes will run
each Monday from 6:20 p.m.
to 8:30 p.m. through March 13
at the Bradford-Union
Vocational Technical Center.
The fee for the class is $27.
An advanced class is
available on Tuesday nights
through March 14 from 6:20 to
8:30 p.m.

LPN, hair
programs
accepting
students
The nursing and
cosmetology programs at the
Bradford-Union Vo-Tech are
accepting new students for
2006.
Applications for the nursing
program can be picked up in
the student services office
from 7:45 a.m. to 3:15 p,m.,
Mibidf~"'fif- figh' Fridayk.
Completed applications should:
submitted between Feb. 13 and
March 31. Call (904) 966-6765
for more information and
financial aid availability.
Cosmetology students are
now being accepted through
Jan. 17, and a Core/CNA class
(an evening class) will begin
on Feb. 7. Call (904) 966-6769
to schedule a TABE tests for
both programs. For
cosmetology, the test must be
taken on Thursday, Jan. 12, at


scholarship and college
admission requirements.
A BHS students, for
example, could go onto the
Web site and see what classes
he or she would need to take
each year from grade eight to
12 to go into a specific field.
According to a memo from
Florida's Commissioner of
Education, John Winn, to
district school superintendents,
more than 19,000 high school
students have logged on to
create an e-planner since Dec.
8.
The ranking of high schools
who use the online planner
will come out every month, but
the memo indicated the first
lists recognized those who
participated inthe program at
its earliest stage.


either 8:30 a.m. or 5:30 p.m. to
begin class on Jan. 17.
Cosmetology students may
also qualify for financial aid.


Health
insurance
.counseling
held monthly
SHINE (Serving Health
Insurance Needs of Elders) is
sponsoring free health
insurance counseling sessions
for elders and their families
who have questions or
problems with Medicare and
other health insurance
programs.
The sessions are scheduled
for the third Tuesday of each
month at the Bradford County
Health Department on north
U.S. 301 in Starke. The next
session is Jan. 17. The sessions
last from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and
counseling will take place by
appointment only.
SHINE is a statewide
program sponsored by the
Department of Elder Affairs. It
helps .emnp9yer, elders to_ alake
informed decisions about
health insurance. During the
sessions, SHINE counselors
offer information and
assistance with Medicare,
Medicare supplemental
insurance, Medicare
prescription discount cards and
prescription drug savings
programs.
To make an appointment, or
if you cannot travel to the
counseling session site, call the
elder helpline at (800) 262-
2243.


The Waggoners Trucking-Established 1951
Now Recruiting drivers for our SE Auto Transport Division.
Drivers must have a valid Class A CDL,
1 year and 100K verifiable OTR miles.
Stable work history and clean MVR is a must.
Great'Pay, Great Benefits, Matching 401K.
Contact Susan or John at (866) 413-3074 EOE








R-.o.itvl. w .u fefc om


The Fun Ships *C 1 0 ,


Evangelism Conference
Jan. 23-24 (Monday/Tuesday)
Dauphin Way Baptist Church, Mobile, Ala. (exit #4,1-65)
THEME: "More Than Ever Before"; from 1 p.m. Monday to 8 p.m. Tuesday
MUSIC: Choirs from Cottage Hill Baptist Church & Dauphin Way Baptist
Church; "Paid in Full" quartet; "Voices," from the University of Mobile
ADMISSION: Free to all, thanks to Cooperative Program; everyone welcome.



Doug Steve Johnny David Dusty Bob
Chappelle Gaines Hunt Joyner Mcemore Pitman



Darrel Perry Mike Robert Ted Robert
Robinson Sanders Satterfield Smith Traylor White
SAlso:
SGreat Commission OTHER DETAILS:
Ministries Training www.ALSBOM.org
Opportunities! Call or
Ion go on-line for details. 1.800.264.1225, ext. 245
Wilton


Wal-Mart Supercenter Manager Brian Jackson other events planned throughout the year. Pictured
presented a $3,000 check to Main Street Starke Inc. (I-r) are Bobbie McClellan, Cheryl Canova, Jaquelyn
Manager Kim Skidmore and the rest of her board on Totura, Gayle Van Wagenen, Skidmore, Linda Tatum,
Tuesday. According to Skidmore, the grant will be Jackson, (back, I-r) Ken Sauer, Virgil Berry and John
used to assist with the Strawberry Festival and Miller.


Legion recognizes county employees


e, ===,y "--A -. (now..-.re-tired),Mik MR a
On Monday, BradfordCounty Chairman John Wayne Lar y Ard (now retired), Mike McRae and Wen
Hersey presented certificates of appreciation on Spierer for their contrutions over the past
behalf of Amierican Legion Post 56 and Post arid, in particular, their Work toward preparing
Commander Frank Knight to county employees the post's annual Veterans' Day activities.


Pine

























Pine Hill M
installed b
Beeman o
Senior De.
Cruce, Ch
Holder, (se


Hill Lodge inducts officers


lasonic Lodge officers for 2006 were
by Ted Barber, Tom Adams and Ernest
n Jan. 3. Pictured are (front row,'l-r)
acon Willard F. Gaskins, Marshal Roscoe
aplain Steve Hutcheson, Secretary Bob
second row, I-r) Senior Steward Bruce


Call J.G. Wentworth's
Annuity Purchase Program J.G.WENTWORTH.
866-FUND-549. ANNurrITY PURCHASE PROGRAM


Kirby, Worshipful Master Jeff Wood Sr., Junio
Warden Randy Raulerson, Junior Steward Arl
Roe, (back row, I-r) Treasurer Otis Tetstone, S
Warden John McKibben, and Junior Deacon
Brooker. Not pictured: Tyler Ralph "Hamp" H(


Adve,,rtisement


ndy
year,g
g for



















r











ley
senior
Jeff
older.


Homeowners with
money worries
may qualify for
low-interest loans:
"Smart Money" by Kimberly Ross
LOANS: Direct lender played? Late house pay-
loosens its requirements for ments?Financial Problems?
homeowners who need Medical bills? IRS liens?It
money now. doesn't matter!
Have you been turned down If you are a homeowner:
for a loan? Do you need more with sufficient equity, there's an
than $10,000 for any reason? excellent chance you will qual-
Are you paying more than ifyfor aloan-usually within-.
10% interest on any other 24 hours.
loans or credit cards? You can find out over the
If you are a homeowner and phone-and free of charge-
answered "yes" to any of if you qualify. Honey Mae
these questions, they can Home Loans is licensed by
tell you over the phone and the Florida Department of
without obligation if you Financial Services. Open 7 days
qualify.
High credit card debt? Less- a week to serve you.
than-perfect credit? Self em- 1-800-700-1242ext. 263









Jan. 12,2006 TELEGRAPoi Page7A


topid workshops covering
health care, legal and employer


number turn Free classes and workshops
to Internet are offered monthly, and the
Io Intr net next classes begin Jan. 17. Call
i. the Displaced Homemaker
librarians Program at Santa Fe
A growing number of Community College at 4352)
Floridians are finding 395-5047 to make an intake
authoritative, reliable answers screening appointment.
to their questions online using
4 free reference service, Ask a Starke CC to
Librarian. The service extends Starke .
ihe reach of traditional library m t lan 17
reference services by linking m1I1n6 J ., 1I
Internet users to live, one-on- The next meeting of the
pne librarian assistance. Ask a Starke City Commission will
Librarian features live chat and be Tuesday, Jan. 17, at 7 p.m.
the ability to navigate the Web The meeting is at city hall
together Usage of the service and is open to the public. An
-is rapidly increasing, topping agenda is available in advance
2,000 sessions each month and in the office of the city clerk.
growing. For more information, call
"Ask a Librarian is a great (904) 964-5027.
Service for anyone who has a
,question or who needs help Bean
finding information on the
Web," notes Vince Mariner, annO n C
:the service's statewide announces
coordinator. "There is no cost district office
to use the service, and it's district office
staffed by librarians who are hours in area
;skilled in finding information. hu i n 1 Or
Students, small business House District. 12
owners, seniors, home Representative Aaron Bean's,
:schoolers, teachers, anyone staff wilU, meet. with
.can benefit from this constituents in Middleburg,
invaluable resource." Starke and Macclenny on the
Librarians from 88 public, third Thursday of every month.
academic and special libraries Staff will next visit Starke at
throughout Florida are the Bradford County
available for live chat at Cooperative Extension Service
www askalibrarian.org, be- office on U.S. 301 north on
tween 10 a.m. and 10 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 19, from 1-2
"Sunday through Friday, and 10 p.m. Appointments are not
:a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday. necessary, but if you would
:Without ever leaving their like to make an appointment,
;homes, schools or offices, please call (904) 491-3664.
,Floridians with Internet access
!can ask a librarian almost any ombudsman
Question imaginable. In OUdsman
addition to live chat, users can m 4 a 1
:submit questions via e-mail 24 meetI Jan. I
hours a day, seven days a The North Central Florida
week. Long-Term Care Ombudsman
Ask a Librarian is part of the Council will hold its next
iFlorida Electronic Library, meeting on Thursday, Jan. 19,
,which is a collection ofr free at Hospice of North Central
databases and live reference Florida, 4200- N.W. 90t'
"services available to all Florida Boulevard in Gainesville. The
residents. Ask a Librarian is a 'meeting will commence with
collaborative service jointly an open session at 12:30 p.m.
!administered by .the College All interested parties are
,Center for Library Automation encouraged to attend .
;arid the Tampa Bay Library The. North Central Florida
,Consortium. It is funded Long-Term Care Ombudsman
through a Library Services and Council is a, group of
'Technology Act grant concerned citizens whose goal
,administered by the Florida is to improve the quality of life
Department of State Division and care for people who live in
=of Library and Information licenses long-term care
.Services. facilities such as nursing
About CCLA and -. ...bm-es,. as.sted. living
facilities, adult family care
T B C homes and long-term care
STheCollege Center for units in hospitals.
JLibrary Administration
,(CCLA) operates the statewide
,Library Information Network County.
Ifor Community Colleges and C n.t.
ithe associated Web-based convenes
;info-rmation portal,
JLINCCWeb, from its jan. 19
:headquarters in Tallahassee. The Bradford County
.As an administered program of Commission will meet on
ithe Florida Department of Thursday, Jan. 19, at 6:30 p.m.
'Education's Division of in the boardroom at the
iCommunity Colleges, CCLA Bradford County Courthouse,
.serves 28 community colleges located on U.S. 301 in Starke.
iahd 73 campus libraries in 60 A 5 p.m. workshop will
.cities throughout Florida. Find address planning issues.
:it on the Web at The meeting is open to the
1www.cclaflorida.org and public, and an agenda may be
www.linccweb.org. obtained in advance in the
SThe Tampa Bay Library office of the clerk of courts.
,Consortium (TBLC) is a For more information, call
nonprofit multitype library (904) 9666280.
:cooperative comprising 97
member libraries serving 12
west central Florida counties.
;TBLC member libraries
;include six community 0^
:colleges, five state university
-system libraries, 27 private E A
!academic colleges and LE A L
universities, four public school
,systems, 41 public and 13
special libraries. TBLC's NOTICEOF PUBLIC SALE
Anywhere-Anytime virtual RAY'S AUTO REPAIR gives Notice
of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to
library includes Alleycat, a sell these vehicles on Jan. 25, 2006,
.virtual union catalog with 9:30a.m.atP.O. Box2229,Keystone
interlibrary loan management Heights, FL32656-2229, pursuant to
capabilities serving 44 libraries subsection 713.78 of the Florida
Statutes. RAY'S AUTO REPAIR
through 103 outlets in reserves the right to accept or reject
southwest, west and central any and/or all bids.
Florida. Find it on the Web at 1FTYR10D23PA36026 2003 FORD.
www.anywhereanytimelibrary. 1/12 2tchg. 1/19
org/. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
: ED'S AUTOMOTIVE, LLC gives
T r Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and
._ anS ft intent to sell these vehicles on
01/13/2006, 08:00 a.m. at 2163 N.
board meets TEMPLE AVE., STARKE, FL 32091-
board m e 1966 pursuant to subsection 713.78
Tuesday of the Florida Statutes.
Tu sda ED'S AUTOMOTIVE, LLC reserves
T s *the right to accept or reject any and or
The Bradford County alibids.
Transportation Disadvantaged 1GCCS14R7G2188276
Coordinating Board will meet 1986Chevrolet 1/52tchg.1/1
Tuesday, Jan. 17, at 9:30 a.m.
at Starke City Hall. ADVERTISEMENT OF SALE


Growing


working days of your receipt of this


Focus on the

future
If you are 35 years or older
and have lost financial support,
the Displaced Homemaker
Program can help you make
the transition to the job market.
Homemakers can develop
self-sufficiency and'
confidence, learn job search
and interview skills, create a
master application and resume,
and gain basic computer skills
while finding supportive
friends. There are even special


NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the
undersigned Intends to sell the
personal property described below to
enforce a lien imposed on said
property under the Florida Self
Storage Facility Act Statutes (83.801 .
83.809). The undersigned will be sold
at public sale by competitive bidding
on the 18th day of Jan., 2006, at 12
noon on the premises where said
property has been storage and
which is located at Santa Fe Storage,
15540 NE U.S. 301, Waldo, Florida,
county of Alachua, the state of Florida
the following:
Verda Scott, Unit #C-2
Michael Kirkland, Unit #A-18
Tonia Tipton, Unit #A-37
Sally Cox, Unit #A-2
Cheri Raing, Unit #C-41.
1/52tchg. 1/12
PUBLIC AUCTION


RON DENMARK MINI STORAGE
will hold a Public Auction on Friday,
Jan. 13, 2006, at 10 a.m. at 2117 N.
Temple Ave., Starke, Fla. on the
following storage units containing
personal items.
#5-Belonging to R. Goodwin
#14-Belonging to D. Vollmer
#22-Belonging to T. Jordan
#56-Belonging to L Hall
#85-Belonging to R. McGrew
1/52tchg. 1/12

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF
'FLORIDA, IN AND FOR
BRADFORD COUNTY
CIVIL DIVISION
Case No. 05-CA-332
MIDFIRST BANK Plaintiff,
vs.
RANDALL W. WHEELER AND
TINA C. WHEELER, and
UNKNOWN TENANTS/OWNERS,
Defendants.
NOTICE OF SALE
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to
Final Judgment of Foreclosure for,
Plaintiff entered, in this cause on
December 21, 2005, in the Circuit
Court of Bradford County, Florida, I
will sell the property situated in
Bradford County, Florida described
as:
SECTION 24, TOWNSHIP 6
SOUTH, RANGE 22 EAST,
COMMENCE AT THE SE
CORNER OF THE SE 1/4 AND
RUN N 00 37'20" W, ALONG. THE
E'LY BOUNDARY, 938.44 FEET;
RUN THENCE S 83 10050" W,
200.16 FEET, TO POB. FROM SAID
POB; CONTINUE S 8310'50" W,
100 FEET, RUN THENCE N 60
52'07" W, 215.03 FEET, TO THE
S'LY ROW OF SR 16; RUN
THENCE N 83,07'53" E, ALONG
SAID ROW, 2.51 FEET, TO A
D.O.T. ROW MARKER AT THE
BEGINNING OF A CURVE
CONCAVE TO THE SOUTH AND
HAVING A RADIUS OF 17,133.91
FEET; CONTINUE IN AN E'LY
DIRECTION, ALONG THE SAID
ROW AND ALONG THE CURVE, A
DISTANCE OF 97.49 FEET,
MEASURED ALONG A CHORD
HAVING A BEARING OF. N
83017'40" E; RUN THENCE S 6*52'
07" E, 214.85 FEET, TO POB. and
commonly known as: RT 5 BOX
7116, at public sale, to the highest and
best bidder, for cash, at the east front
door of the Bradford County
Courthouse, on Feb. 17, 2006 at 11
o'clock a.m.
Dated this 4th day January, 2006.
CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
By: Carol Williams
Deputy Clerk
Michelle Garcia Gilbert
Kass, Shuler, Solomon, Spector,
Foyle & Singer, P.A.
P.O. Box80u
Tampa, FL 33601-0800
If you are a person with a disability
who needs any accommodation in
order to participate in this proceeding,
you are entitled, at no cost to you, to
the provision of certain assistance.
Please contact Jan Phillipsat (352)
374-374-3648 within 2 working days
of your receipt of this notice; iyou
are hearing or voice impaired, call 1-
1 /12 2tchg. 1/19
IN THE CIRCUIT OF THE 8th
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA,
IN AND FOR BRADFORD
COUNTY
Case #: 05-CA-0615
OLD STANDARD UFE ......
INSURANCE COMPANY
Plaintiff,
-vs.-
ESTATE OF MINNIE TYSON,
DECEASED; ET AL.
Defendantss.
NOTICE OF ACTION
FORECLOSURE
PROCEEDINGS-PROPERTY
TO: ESTATE OF MINNIE TYSON,
DECEASED; UNKNOWN HEIRS,
DEVISEES, GRANTEES,
ASSIGNEES, CREDITORS, .
UENORS AND TRUSTEES OF
MINNIE TYSON, DECEASED, AND
ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIMING
BY, THROUGH, UNDER AND
AGAINST THE NAMED
DEFENDANT(S);ALPHONSO
TYSON
Residence unknown, if living,
including any unknown spouse of the
said Defendants, if either has.
remarried and if either or both of said
Defendants are dead, their respective
unknown heirs, devisees, grantees,
assignees, creditors, lienors, and
trustees, and all other persons
claiming by, through, under or against
the named Defendant(s); and the
aforementioned named Defendant(s)


DENMARK
FURNITURE
It's a fact, you can do better at
DENMARKIS.
434 W. Call St.
964-5827


Jan. 12, 2006 ,TELEGRAFi Page 7A
,


and such of the aforementioned
unknown Defendants and such of the
aforementioned unknown Defendants
as may be infants, incompetents or
otherwise not sui juris.
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that
an action has been commenced to
foreclose a mortgage on the following
real property, lying and being and
situated in Bradford Couhty, Florida,
more particularly described as
follows:
LOTS 3 AND 4, BLOCK 30 IN
LIVINGSTON, TRUBY AND
COMPANY'S SUBDIVISION OF
THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF
THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF
SECTION 28, TOWNSHIP 6
SOUTH, RANGE- 22 EAST,
BRADFORD COUNTY, FLORIDA.
more commonly known as 821
CROSBY STREET, STARKE, FL
32091.
This action has been filed against you
and you are required to serve a copy
of your written defense; if any, upon
SHAPIRO & FISHMAN, Attorneys
for Plaintiff, whose address is
Woodland Corporate Center, 4505
Woodland Corp. Blvd., Suite 100,
Tampa, FL 33614, within thirty (30)
days after the first publication of this
notice and file the original with the
clerk of this court either before
service on Plaintiff's attorney or
immediately thereafter; otherwise a
default will be entered against you for
the relief demanded in the Complaint
WITNESS my hand and seal of this
Courtonthe4thdayof r,200
Circuit and County Courts
By: Carol Williams
Deputy Clerk
1/12 2thi 1/19
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN
AND FOR BRADFORD COUNTY,
FLORIDA
CASE NO.: 05-CA-531
CIVILACTION
DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL
TRUST COMPANY AS TRUSTEE
UNDER THE POOULING AND,"
SERVICING AGREEMENT SERIES
2001-A,
Plaintiff,
vs.
SONJA DIANNE HUGHES, et al,
Defendants)
NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE
SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
pursuant to a Final Judgment of
Mortgage Foreclosure dated January
04, 206and entered in CaseNo.05-
CA-531 of the Circuit Court of the
EIGHTH Judicial Circuit in and for
BRADFORD County, Florida
wherein DEUTSCHE BANK
NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY AS
TRUSTEE UNDER THE POOUNG
AND SERVICING AGREEMENT
SERIES 2001-A, is the Plaintiff and
SONJA DIANNE HUGHES; LEM B
HUGHES: ROBERT FREDERICK
MASON; are the Defendants, I will
sell to the highest and best bidder for
cash at FRONT HALL OF THE
BRADFORD COUNTY
COURTHOUSE, 945 NORTH
TEMPLE AVENUE, STARI(E,
FLORIDA 32091 at 11:00 AM, on the
9th day of March, 2006, the following
described property as set forth in said
Final Judgment:
A PARCEL OF LAND LYING IN
THE WEST ONE-HALF OF THE
NORTHEAST ONE QUARTER OF
THE SOUTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER OF SECTION 25,
TOWNSHIP 7 SOUTH, RANGE 21
EAST, BRADFORD COUNTY,
FLORIDA, SAID PARCEL OF LAND,
BEING MORE PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
COMMENCE AT A CONCRETE
MONUMENT FOUND AT THE
NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID
WEST ONE-HALF OF THE
NORTHEAST ONE-QUARTER OF
THE SOUTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER AND RUN NORTH 88
DEGREES 56 MINUTES 37
SECONDS EAST ALONG THE
NORTHERLY BOUNDARY
THEREOF, 150.59 FEET FOR THE
POINT OF BEGINNING. FROM
SAID POINT OF BEGINNING
THUS DESCRIBED, CONTINUE
NORTH 88 DEGREES 56,
MINUTES 37 SECONDS EAST,
ALONG SAID NORTHERLY
BOUNDARY, 274.00 FEET TO AN
IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH12
DEGREES 47 MINUTES 14
SECONDS WEST,171.77 FEET TO
AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH
46 DEGREES 31 MINUTES 45
SECONDS WEST,260.35 FEET TO
AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH
01 DEGREES 36 MINUTES 15
SECONDS EAST,228.75 FEET TO
AN IRON ROD: THENCE NORTH


88 DEGREES 56 MINUTES 37
SECONDS EAST, PARALLEL WITH
SAID NORTHERLY BOUNDARY,
473.28 FEET TO AN IRON ROD
LOCATED ON THE EASTERLY
BOUNDARY OF SAID WEST ONE-
HALF OF THE NORTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST
ONE-QUARTER; THENCE SOUTH
01 DEGREES 31 MINUTES 49
SECONDS EAST, 283.65 FEET;
THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 32
MINUTES 19 SECONDS WEST,
PARALLEL WITH THE
SOUTHERLY BOUNDARY OF
SAID WEST ONE-HALF OF THE
NORTHEAST ONE-QUARTER OF
THE SOUTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER, A DISTANCE OF
510.55 FEET; THENCE NORTH 01
DEGREES 35 MINUTES 41
SECONDS WEST, PARALLEL
WITH THE WESTERLY
BOUNDARY OF SAID WEST ONE-
HALF OF THE NORTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST
ONE-QUARTER, A DISTANCE OF
849.50 FEET TO THE POINT OF
BEGINNING. CONTAINING 5.00
ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR
LESS.
SUBJECT TO AN EASEMENT FOR
INGRESS AND EGRESS OVER
THE NORTHERLY 25.00 FEET
THEREOF.
THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PARCEL
BEING CONVEYED WITH A 25.00
FEET STRIP OF LAND FOR
INGRESS AND EGRESS
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
COMMENCE AT THE.
NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE
ABOVE DESCRIBED PARCEL FOR
THE POINT OF BEGINNING AND
RUN SOUTH 01 DEGREES 35
MINUTES 41 MINUTES EAST
ALONG --THE WESTERLY
BOUNDARY THEREOF, 25.00
FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88.
DEGREES 56 MINUTES 37
SECONDS WEST, PARALLEL
WITH AND 25.00 FEET
SOUTHERLY OF THE
NORTHERLY BOUNDARY OF
THE WEST ONE-HALF OF THE
NORTHEAST ONE-QUARTER OF
THE SOUTHEAST ONE QUARTER
(WHEN MEASURED AT RIGHT
ANGLES THEREFROM) 150.59
FEET OF THE WESTERLY
BOUNDARY OF SAID WEST ONE-
HALF OF THE NORTHEAST ONE
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST
ONE-QUARTER; THENCE SOUTH
88 DEGREES 39 MINUTES 46
SECONDS WEST, 'PARALLEL
WITH THE NORTHERLY
BOUNDARY OF THE
NORTHWEST ONE-QUARTER OF
NORTHEAST ONE-QUARTER, A
DISTANCE OF 66.04 FEET TO AN
IRON ROD ON THE EASTERLY
BOUNDARY OF THE RIGHT OF
WAY OF COUNTY ROAD 221;
THENCE NORTH 37 DEGREES 42
MINUTES 03 SECONDS EAST,
ALONG SAID EASTERLY
BOUNDARY 32.19 FEET TO AN
IRON ROD SET ON LAST
NORTHERLY BOUNDARY;
THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 39T
MINUTES 46 SECONDS EAST,.
45.59 FEET TO A CONCRETE
MONUMENT LOCATED AT THE
NORTHEAST CORNER THEREOF
(ALSO BEING THE NORTHWEST
CORNER OF SAID WEST ONE-
HALF OF THE NORTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST
ONE QUARTER); THENCE
NORTH 88 DEGREES 56
MINUTES 37 'SECONDS EAST,'
ALONG THE NORTHERLY;
BOUNDARY OF SAID WEST ONE-
HALF OF THE SOUTHEAST ONE-
QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST
ONE QUARTER, A DISTANCE OF
150.59 FEET TO THE POINT OF
BEGINNING.
TOGETHER WITH A MOBILE
HOME LOCATED THEREON.AS A
PERMANENT FIXTURE AND
APPURTENANCE THEREl U Anv#K
6403 SE 95TH STREET,
HAMPTON, FL 32044
WITNESS MY HAND and 1he seal of
this Court on JANUARY 4, ,2006.
Ray Norman
Clerk of the Circuit Court
By: Carol Williams
Deputy Clerk
Echevarria, Codilis & Stawiarski
P.O. Box 25018
Tampa,Florida 33622-5018
F05017427
Americans with Disabilities Act
If you are a person with a disability
who needs any accommodation in
order to participate in this proceeding,
you are entitled, at no cost to you, to
the provision of certain assistance.
Please contact the Clerk of
Court,Bradford County Courthouse,
Starke, FL at 904-964-6280 within 2


1

-413W.


working days of your receipt of this
notice; if you are hearing or voice
impaired, call 1-800-955-8771.
1/121 tchg. 1/19
PUBLIC AUCTION
Pursuant to Florida Self Storage
Facility Act Statutes (83.801-83.809),
Keystone Mini Storage of America,
1053 SW SR-100, in Keystone
Heights will have a public auction at
10 a.m. on Jan. 21,2006.
Unit K132, Jessica Rowland
The sale will take place in front of the
unit.
1/121tchg.
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
BRADFORD COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
-FILE NO.: 04-2005-CP-0125
In re: THE ESTATE OF
ROBERT J.SHAUGHNESSY,
also known as
ROBERT JOSEPH
SHAUGHNESSY, .;
Deceased. ;
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
The administration of the estate of
Robert J. Shaughnessy, also known
as Robert Joseph Shaughnessyi
deceased, whose date of death was
October 2, 2005, is pending in thl
Circuit Court for Bradford County;
Florida, Probate Division, the
address of which is Bradford County
Courthouse, 945 North Temple
Avenue, Starke, Florida 32091. The
name and address of the personal
representative and the personal
representative's attorney are set forth
below.
All creditors of the decedent and other
persons having claims or demands
against decedent's estate pn whom a
copy of this notice is required to be
served must file their claims with this
Court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3
MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF'
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER
THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A
COPY. OF THIS NOTICE ON
THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and
other persons having claims or
demands against decedent's estate
must filetheir claims with this Court
WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE
DATE OF THE FIRST-
PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT SO FILED
WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET-
FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF'
THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME:
PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY:
CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OFR
MORE AFTER THE DECEDENTS:
DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. :.
The date of the first publication of this:
noticeisJan.12,2006. "
Personal Representative:
Patricia Ann Shackleford-Kendall
3901 State Road 21
Keystone Heights; Florida 32656 :
Attorney for PersIonal Representative
TAYLOR & TAYLORPA:
SBy: James J. Taylor Jr:
Flrida Bar No. 334057:
Post Office Box 2000
Keystone Heights, Florida 3265
(352) 473-8088 telephonen
(352) 473-8488 (facsimile):
1/121tchg.

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bradford Self Storage will hold a.
Public Auction on January 23rd at
5:15 p.m. at 2100 N. Temple Ave.,
Stark'e, FL on the following storage.
#14 Belongingto
Suzanne Greathouse
'#10 Sherry Shadd
#6 Cynthia and Edward Wilkinson
#9 ShaddoeWines
1/12 2tWhg. 1/19

LEGAL NOTICE -
The First Jobs First Wages
Committee of the Alachua Bradford"
Regional Workforce Board will meet
on Thursday, January 19th, at 9:00.-
a.m. at Focused Management
Solutions at 501 W. University
Avenue, Suite 501, Gainesville, FL
32601. Please contact Phyllis Marty
at 352-955-6509 with any questions
you may have.
1/12 ltchg.
LEGAL NOTICE
The Alachua Bradford Regional
Workforce Board will be holding a
-New Board Member Orientation on
Thursday, January 19, at 3:30 p.m. at
the Gainesville Job Corps, 5301 NE.
40th Terrace, Gainesville, Florida.
Please contact Phyllis Marty at 352-
955-6509 with any questions you may:
have.
1/121 tchg.







Page8A TELEGRAPH Jan. 12, 2006


0 S pl "public,pand an an agenda is the contest application must be
Patrons plan available in advance in the postmarked on or in the
office of the receptionist. For possession of Glenn R.
M madrigal more information, call (904) Mickey, State Chairman,
Dinner 966-6800. Public Education and
Citizenship (The Grand Lodge
The Santa Fe. Community A to of Free and Accepted Masons
College Patrons of the Arts, in NRSWA to, in Florida). 4028 South
conjunction with The me Fe ---Edgewater--Crcle-,-LaBelle,
--Woma-rWt-Club of Starke and f1eL Florida 33935 not later than
the Bradford Recital Series, The New River Solid Waste February 15, 2006. Write for a
will present A Madrigal Association, the governing copy of the application.
Dinner at the Woman-'s Club board of the New River
on-Saturday, Jan. 21. Regional Landfill in Raiford, W arming
This will prove a delightful will meet again on Thursday,
event depicting a typical Feb. 9, at 5:30 p.m. in the FamilieS
banquet with entertainment set boardroom at the landfill.
during the Medieval period. The January meeting has p Orject needs
-'Reservations must be made been cancelled. Please make pr ject needs
in advance by calling (904) note the new meeting time. help
964-2055. The charge is $25. The association is comprised Warming Families is a
of county commissioners from charitable organization that
Altrusa Bradford, Baker and Union charitable organization that
Altrusa Bradford, Baker and Un provides warm items like
^ ,.: counties, and its meetings are blankets, socks, hats, slippers,
open to the public. Agendas etc. to homeless shelters,
h sigal U^are available in advance. For domestic violence shelters and
Heart Health more information, call (386) nursing homes throughout the
431-1000.tn


Luncheon
The Starke~chapteJof-
Altrusa International Inc. will
be hosting a luncheon to
i increase women's awareness
of- cardiac diseases. The Heart
Health Luncheon will take
place at the Starke Golf and -
Country -Club on Thursday,
Jan. 26, from noon to 1 p.m.
Giinesville cardiac surgeon
Dr. Thomas Beaver will be the'
featured speaker.
T Tickets are available now
for $5 from any Altrusa
member or by calling Andrea
at (904) 368-2374 or Mary at
(904) 964-1901.
Af. ..f


Hampton,
Brooker meet
Feb. 14
The Harmton City Council
-and the Brooker City Council
meet on the second Tuesday of
each month at 7 p.m at their
respective city halls- -The next--
meetings will take place on
Feb. 14.
These meetings are open to
the public. For information or
to receive an agenda, call (352)
468-1201 for Hampton and
(352) 485-1022 for Brooker.


u IIUt y.,
Volunteers are needed to
join the organization.
Volunteers collect items to
donate to shelters or make
those items by crocheting,
knitting or sewing. Volunteers
also collect, donated yarn and
materials to supply to the'
volunteers who wish to create
items.
For .more 'information on
Warming Families, you can
view their Web site at
www.warmingfamilies.org, or
call Project Leader Kaye
Rogers in Keystone at (352)
473-4800. Contact her via e-
mail at minel616@yahoo.
com. ,


High Q shares its victory


The Bradford High School academic team, with coaches Ronney Harris,
BHS Principal Karl Wendell and Trixie Upton (far right), present their
division tournament trophy to Bradford County School Board Assistant
Superintendent Rick Ezzell and Chairman James Watson at the Jan. 9
school board meeting. Pictured are High 0 members Kattle Kenlaw, Tim
Hamel, Monica Tedder, Veronica Harris, Kati Tedder, Katelyn Traylor,


Not pictured are team
and Laimondo Lee.


TOPS sets
regular


YMCnA HOSt a Narconon meeting
meeting is chamber The Starke chapter of TOPS
helps with (Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Jan. 26 BASH ...-.di c i --.... now-meets in the-- daytime.
S" addiction The meeting will be held each
The Bradford County If you are interested in T d a he ar
-YMCA Founder's Committee hosting a Business and Social Narconon Arrowhead Ruesday at the Starke
meets the fourth Thursday of Hour (BASH) for the North reminds parents that during the Recreation Department h-on
each month at 5:30 p.m. in the Florida Regional Chamber of summer months children are h h i tare. eighn
Family Service Center, 611 N. Commerce, call (904) 964- more apt to let boredom set in will be from 8:30 a.m. to 9
-Orange St. 5278. and drugs and alcohol can a.m. with the meeting to
The next meeting will be work into their lives. To help follow.
Thursday, Jan. 26, and anyneyour child this summer Come and join this fun and
interested in becoming 6, andann Community recognize the signs ofsdrugand functional event. If you have a
involved is invited to attend. unityalcohol addiction and get the weight problem, no matter
voved is invited to attend ed instructors help they need. how big or small, you are
instruct If you or someone you know welcome. TOPS doesn't give
Support sought is struggling with an addiction, you a diet, but-it does givey.-
o pstrurm et-s are needed to call Narc- fifon Arrowhead all the information, support,
- fowuv form d teach Comniunity Education Narconon offers free addiction fellowship and encouragement
forclasses at Santa Fe Community counseling, assessments and
or parent College. To teach, you must referrals to rehabilitation For more information please
-An open support group have a basic competence in the centers nationwide. Call (800) feel free to call-Norma Arnett
f6 bredfor families who have sbjectr.a, desirete-oshare and 468-693.... or visit at (904) 782-3886 or (904)
experienced.the loss of a baby learn, and .enthusiasmAIf you www.stopaddiction.com. -. -6
through miscarriage, ectopic have an idea for a class and -
pregnancy, stillbirth, newborn would like to teach, call (352)
death or termination due to 395-5193.
fetal abnormality or maternal Several upcoming courses,
complications meets the first including computer classes,
Thursday of each month, sewing and yoga, are being
The group will meet again offered beginning in January at
from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. on either the Andrews Center in
Thursday, Feb. 2. The group Starke or the Watson Center in
meets at Hospice of North Keystone Heights., For cam era phones
Central Florida in the North information on registration,
Building Counseling Room, rm call thioe numbe gistratibove between,
4305 N.W. 90th Blvd., call the number abovn.4. e between you'll o ve
Gainesville. Dec. 22 and Jan. 4.
.To register or- for more
iiiformation_,contact-Gheryl- YM CA
Bailey at Hospice of North
Central Florida at- (352) 692- Offering free
5107 or (800) 727-1889. / eing f
membership


Hampton
holding music
..festival..
The city of Hampton will
hold a music festival on
Saturday, Feb. 4, beginning at
1-1 a.m. at the city park.
Spaghetti dinners will be
sold for $4 between 11 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Purchase tickets
now at Hampton City Hall or
b5y calling (352) 468-1201.
Free entertainment will
include performances by Dirt
Road Band, Doug Williamson,
Barry Moore and Phil Cay, and
a- martial arts demonstration
will feature the World Martial
Arts Academy. -
-.All funds raised will go
toward the renovation of the
park.

Lawtey will

meet Feb. 6
-The Lawtey City Council
will meet at 7 p.m. on
..Monday,-Feb.-6.-The meetingg-
are held at Lawtey City Hall.
Meetings are open to the
public, and- an---agenda is
available in advance. For more
information, call (904) 782-
3454.

School board
in session
Feb. 13
-The Bradford County School
Board will hold its next
meeting on Monday, Feb. 13,
at-6:30 p.m. in the boardroom
at the district offices, 501 W.
Washington St.
School board meetings and
workshops are open to the


- to military-
The North Central Florida
YMCA, which includes the
Bradford County chapter, is
offering a three-month adult
membership to all servicemen
and servicewomen returning
from the war in Iraq.
To qualify, simply present a
copy of your orders or of DD-
214 along with your military
ID card at the customer service
desk in the YMCA Wellness
Center, located in the shopping
center at the corner of U.S. 301
and Steel Mill Road in Starke.

Pets available
for adoption
There are dogs, cats, puppies
and kittens available for
adoption at the Starke animal
control facility. These pets are
desperately in need of a good
and loving home. The breed
and quantity of pets changes
daily.
Call to pick out your next
loving famjily _men hermDay
nd evening appointments
available. Call (904) 964-5400
for more information.

Grand Lodge
sponsoring
essay contest
All graduating seniors in the
state of Florida who will be
attending a state-supported
school the next
semester/quarter after
graduation (excluding summer
sessions) are eligible to be
awarded one of 10 $1,000
scholarships.
An original 1,000 word
essay with the theme "Why
,Education-is Important" with


Lions Club
meets
The Lions Club of Starke
meets on the first and third
Monday of each month at
Western Steer at noon. All
interested people are invited to
attend.

Free women's
Acorn health
services
offered
Women between the ages of
50 and 64-who are uninsured
and -who-have- a- low income-
leveT-are eligible to
participate in the Believe in
Miracles program and receive
-a -free mammogram and PAP
smear. For more information,
or to schedule an appointment,
call.-'t4he Aeorn-'Clin-ie near
Brooker at (352) 485-1, 33.


The program is sponsored
by the Mary Brogan Breast
and Cervical Cancer Early
Detection Program and the
Putnam County Health
Department.

Want a high-
paying
career?
If you want a chance to earn
high wages, you need to check
out the various career training
opportunities available at the
Bradford-Union Vo-Tech in
Starke.
Masonry, commerfialc truck
driving, dieseeLengine-repair, -
welding and many other career
choices are available.
Call (904) 966-6764 to find-.
out more.


come and get your love"



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Fedarl, state1111141 & local taxes apply. In addition, AIItel charges a Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee (currently 56c), a Telecom Connectivity Fee (currently 59), federal & state Universal Service Fund fees
(both vary by customer usage), & a 911 fee of up to $1.94 (where 911 service is available). These additional fees may not be taxes or government-required charges & are subject to change. Phone
Promotions: Phones available at sale prices to new customers & eligible existing customers. Requires activation of a qualifying AIItel rate plan. Contact Alltel to determine if you are eligible. $9.99
Add Unes: 1 line must be a primary line of service on select rate plans $59.99 & higher, with no more than 4 secondary lines at 9.99month each. 2-year service agreement required for each line in
conjunction with a phone promotion. Largest Network Claim: Based upon analysis by an independent research company in July 2005, which compared marketed coverage patterns at the time of
their creation of each wireless carrier without allowance for variations due to electrical interference, customer equipment, topography & each carrier's translation & defined preferences of their own
internal engineering data. Additional Ijfoimatioai-mited-time offer at participating locations. While supplies lost. Credit approval & approved handset required. $20 non-refundable activation fee
applies per line. $2 early termination fee may apply per line. Offers are subject to the Alltel Terms & Conditions for Communications Services available at any Alital store or alltal.com. All product &
service marks referenced are the names, trade names., trademarks & logos of their respective owners. Screen images are simulated.


Trenton
Mobile Telephone
Service
(3521) 463-1064


Is.-


Consumer
Information
Code
1.-1 .t
QUL11


Chris Davis, Sarah Osgood and Chad Parmenter.
members Chris Crews, Josh Green, Luke Ashley


a I L







Section B: Thursday, January 12, 2006



News from Bradford Courty, Union County and t Lake Re gion area
News from Bradford Courty, Union County and the Lake Region area


BHS gospel mass choir a 'Long'


time coming


BY LINDSEY KIRKLAND
Telegraph Staff Writer_
-Verdell Long has been
teaching for more than four
decades.
Most of those years have
been-in Bradford County with
her four children and husband,
Harvey.
Long received her degree
from the University of Florida
and started teaching
exceptional student education
in 1978.
Her college professors told
her it was a field that she
would' only be able to stay in
for maybe five years.
"I've been in the same
profession all my career,"
Long said."I love what I do."
Through the years, she has
seen a lot of changes.
When Long graduated from
high school, it was still
segregated. This influenced -
what kind of teacher she
wanted to be.
"I don't see colors," she
said. "I see children who have
needs." .. ..
From 1983 to 1984, she
started a gospel choir at BHS.
When she moved to Southside
Elementary School and later
Bradford Middle School to
continue her career, the high
school's gospel choir didn't
continue without her.
Within the past few years,
the idea of restarting the
gospel choir seemed like an
attainable goal for some BHS
students.
They asked Long for help,
and she was happy to sponsor
them.


Pesticide
cannot be
used for
termite
control
Florida Agriculture and
Consumer Services
Commissioner Charles H.
Bronson recently reminded
builders, pest control operators
and consumers that insecticides
containing a particular active
ingredient chlorpyrifos -
cannot be used for termite
control as of Jan. 1, 2006.
At one time this product was
the most widely used method
for termite protection, but this
use has been removed as a
result of a federal registration
action. The department has
removed- all products
containing chlorpyrifos from
the list of products registered
for termiteif protection on its
Web site.
This action does not affect
other legal uses of the product.
Pest control products
containing chlorpyrifos can
still be used as an insecticide
for one of the other uses found
on the label of the product,
including treating underground
utility cable-and conduit (non-
residential), utility poles and
fence posts (non-residential),
treatment of railroad ties,
landscape timbers, logs, pallets,
and other wood products in
manufacturing, industrial, or
right-of-way settings, and.pest
control on outside surfaces and
around buildings in industrial
sites such as commercial
facilities, office buildings, and
other non-residential buildings.
For information on the
registered termiticides approved
for preventive treatment of
termites, please consult the
table of "Termiticides
Registered in Florida for
Preventive Treatment of New
Construction" located at
http://www.flaes.org the web
site of the Florida Department
of Agriculture and Consumer
Services. Division Agricultural
and Environmental Services.
Pest control companies and
consumers who have products
that can no longer be used for
termite control can take
advantage of the "Operation
Cleansweep" program operated
jointly by the department and
the Florida Department of
Environmental Protection. This
program will collect and
dispose of canceled, suspended,
or unusable pesticides at no
cost (with some exceptions).
Consumers with questions
about pest control should call
the department's toll-free help
line at 1-800-HELPFLA (1-


800-435-7352) for information.


She was not able to get the
gospel .choir up and running
4ast-year,Jbut.the idea was still
in the students' minds.
"Students were interested in
it enough to approach me
about it [this year]," she said.


The BHS Gospel Mass.
Choir now has 33 members.
Mass means that the choir is
nondenominational.
BHS students Harioldi7
English plays the piano and
drums for the choir.


He said he joined the choir
so he. could-- praise the Lord
while I have a chance."
Patrise Jackson, a teacher at
BHS, and- Alice Searcy, ,a
grandparent of two chloir-
members, also help Long with


the students and their music.
Searcy said the reason she
volunteers with the choir is
because she is interested in
seeing young people advance
in life.
"Singing brings out the love


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in your heart," she said.
The choir practices two days
a week after school for almost
two hours in Long's

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k--.


!N








Page 2B TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--B-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


Superintendent of Schools Harry
Hatcher told the Starke Rotary Club
last Wednesday the events of the past
few months have been traumatic for
him and he is glad the situation has
eased, allowing the Bradford County
school system to move along with its
mission of teaching children.
While the situation wis hectic for
students and faculty, it was a learning
experience for the superintendent and
his administration. He was forthright
in saying the lesson is, "Go with your
gut instinct," and secondly, "Trust the
people."
Hatcher outlined the situation at
Bradford High School in which a
female student was allegedly fondled
by male students, and was later beaten
by two or more female students in
retaliation for "ratting" on the boys. A
few days later she was beaten again,
and unconfirmed rumors circulated
throughout the community, some of
which were patently untrue.
On advice from council and other
advisors, the school administration
kept quiet, thinking the talk would die
of its own accord, but the second
episode added fuel to the fire,
resulting in the rumors expanding at.
the expense of the school system. In a
regularly scheduled school board
meeting only three people asked
permission to speak to the board and
did so, but another newspaper falsely
reported that the superintendent,
wouldn't let everyone speak.
The situation' was getting out of
hand, climbing rapidly toward critical
mass, requiring the superintendent to
go public with the situation as seen by
school administrators and personnel.
A town hall meeting was called to
I -"


allow the public to vent its opinions
and feelings and provide a forum for
school administrators to present their
version of the situation.
Hatcher thought that "maybe a
hundred folks would attend," but
when he arrived cars were
everywhere, and 400-500 people were
in attendance. Everyone that wanted
to speak had the opportunity, and the
people took advantage of the occasion
to berate the school for every real and
imaginary situation.
In the meantime, the victim's home
and a neighbor's home had been set
fire, with evidence pointing to arson,
and investigators found evidence
implicating the victim in the school
beating case. This information
discredited, to some extent, the
charges she had made in the school
case, and Hatcher, could feel the
animosity toward the school system
begin to subside.
Hatcher resolved to cast aside
advice to remain quiet "and hope for
the best" by advisors andt level with
the public. He faced the audience arid
told it the school system had moved
quickly and expeditiously, using
every legal means to determine the
veracity of the charges, to determine
the identify of the perpetrators and
improve surveillance of halls and rest
rooms.
His rebuttal was warmly accepted
and committees formed to look at
various elements of the system and
make recommendations for
improvements.
Stonewalling may have its place in
some situations, but, as Hatcher says,
"Trust the people."
By Buster Rahn, Editorial Writer


LETTERS TO THE EDITOR


What is
'Intelligent
'Design'
Dear Editor:
During the last few months I
have heard of or read many
articles concerning the theory
of "Intelligent Design." Most
articles show that the authors
either never read the books or
somehow just can't grasp the
concept. When an evolutionary
scientist ridicules Intelligent
Design they never have
answers to what questions
Michael Behe (1) or Michael
Denton (2) ask in their books.
There is, to date, no
evolutionary explanation of
life's foundation at the
chemical level. I find this most
fascinating because it gives
insight into a war that is being
waged, and it is a war within
two camps of world views, and
it is sometimes fought within a
single person. The outcome of
this war hits to the absolute
core of our beingibecause it is
the foundation ofiour thinking.
I would like first to explain
in a measure just exactly what
"Intelligent Design" is. I am a
lay person and this is my
opinion.
Back in the 1980s and 90s
scientists and groups of
scientists came to the
conclusion that Darwinian
Evolution, by Darwin's own
statement, completely breaks
down knowing now what we
know concerning what is call
the "Irreducible Complexity"
(3) that we see in biological
systems. Darwin states, "If it
could be demonstrated that any
complex organ existed which
could not possibly have been
formed by numerous,
successive, slight
modifications, my theory
would absolutely break down"
(4).
In Darwin's time the reasons
why and how life systems
worked was almost a total
enigma as was the mystery of
heredity. Life works at the
chemical level and everything
we ,see is built upon this.
During the last fifty or so years
our knowledge of biochemistry
has shown vast amounts of
growth. From this growth and
the advent of electron
microscopy came the
knowledge that life's
functions: from photosynthesis
to building cellular structures
are carried out by machines
(systems) and these systems
are irreducibly complex. This
means that for the system to
function, the system must have
all of its parts. Loss of a single
part (chemical) means that the


system would not work. Life's
systems cannot be formed by
the numerous, successive,
slight modifications en i o~.,
by OarwinTb.ie coultren i
ihe though. .hote\er, that-in
the billions of years (we are
told) when life evolved on
earth that a multi-mutational
event produced such a system
all at once. This does seem
plausible until you try to
figure the odds of this
happening. To produce just one
of these systems by chance
would be like the odds of
picking one particular atom out
of all the atoms contain in the-
earth. To these scientists the
thought that the random chance
mutation of DNA sites
producing all of these
irreducibly complex systems
was absolutely absurd. The
other possibility, "Intelligent
Design" of' life, leaped out to'
them as the answer.
Some of the scientist
privately ascribe Intelligent
Design to be God, others
aliens, or as yet some unknown
force. The theory of Intelligent
Design is scientific not
metaphysical, though it does
have profound religious.
implications. It was not
motivated by religious views,
as some would say.
In the beginning I started
this letter talking of a war
being fought. There are
scientists who cannot entertain
the possibility of there being
intelligence out there because it
tampers with their world view.


. To be fair, this also applies to
many devout scientists who
cannot entertain the thought
%-t4 life #,jqust a pointless ,
existence brought into being
by'idonabm'Trnttion.
The atheist sees the struggle
as a fight for knowledge and
against superstition and
upsetting his world view.
The devout see the war as
against a dark force creeping
into the lives of his children
and others, erasing absolutes
derived from a creator replacing
,them with emptiness, and he
does not want his world view
upset either.
Evolution has no right to be
exempted from examination
simply because to question-
might allow God's foot in the
door. Facts are facts and truth
is truth regardless where it
leads.

References
(1) Behe, M (1996)
Darwin's Black Box,
The Free Press
(2) Denton, M (1985)
Evolution: A Theory in Crisis,
Adler and Adler
(3) Behe M (1996) Darwin's
Black Box,(1996)
The Free Press, New York
p. 39
(4) Darwin, C (1872) Origin
of Species, 6th ed. (1988),
New York University Press,
New York, p. 154
Stephen Foster Smith
Brooker


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(All Seats $4.00 Before 6 p.m. 964-5451 *CLOSED MON & TUES*)
(Visit us on-line at WWW.FloridaTwinTheatre.comn


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Kudos to
Starke city
manager
Dear Editor:
I want to thank Ken Sauer,
our city manager, for getting
the tarps up covering the cages
at the animal shelter protecting
the"animals ,from the: cold
winds we had last weekend,.
This just goes to show that
if the citizens will get involved
it helps. I'm sure our city
government has a lot to keep
their minds busy and for us to
help them think/remember
things would be appreciated.
Being an animal lover I was
concerned so I asked Mr Sauer
about getting this done and,
voila, it was done.
Sharon Foster
Starke


Arbor
foundation
offers free
trees
Ten free flowering trees will
be given to each person who
joins The National Arbor Day
Foundation during January,.
2006.
The free trees are part of the
nonprofit foundation's Trees
for America campaign.
The 10 trees are two white
flowering dogwoods, two
flowering crabapples, two
Washington hawthorns, two
American redbuds and two
Kousa dogwoods.

"These compact' trees were
selected for planting in large or
small spaces, "John Rosenow,
the foundation's president,
said. "They will give your
home the beauty of lovely
pink, white and yellow flowers
- and also provide winter
berries and nesting sites for
songbirds."
The trees will be shipped
postpaid at the right time for
planting between Feb. 1 and
May ,31 with enclosed planting
instructions. The 6- to 12-inch
trees are guaranteed to grow, or
they will be replaced free of
charge;
Members also receive a
subscription to the
foundation's colorful
bimonthly publication, Arbor
Day, and The Tree Book with
information about tree planting
and care. ..- ..
To receive the free frees, send
4 $10 membership contribution
to Ten Free Flowering Trees,
National Arbor Day
Foundation, 100 Arbor Ave.,
Nebraska' City, NE 68410, by
Tuesday, Jan. 31 or go online
to arborday.org.


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LRCT general
membership
meeting
Join friends and neighbors
as the Lake Region
Community Theatre hosts its
2006 general membership
meeting on Monday, Jan. 23,
at 7 p.m. in the theater's new
home at 218 N. Walnut St. in
Starke.
Come share the excitement,
the drama and the thrill of live
theater. Have you ever yearned
to stand in the spotlight, create
a costume, sing a song or
dance on stage, direct a
production, make a room full
of people laugh out loud or
support the folks that do?
Anyone with an interest in
theater i.or theater craft is
encouraged to attend the
general membership meeting.
LRCT is a not-for-profit
corporation dedicating to
fulfilling its mission to
encourage interest in art and
'the performing arts in the'
community. Make 2006 an
exciting year for you and your
family by coming to the
meeting and seeing what
community theater is all about.
E-mail tcurtis@georgerob
ertsins.com for more
information



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Open auditions
are Jan. 29-30
LRCT is making a open call
for auditions that will take
place on Sunday, Jan. 29, at 2
p.m. and Monday, Jan. 30, at 7
p.m. in the LRCT theater
building at 218 N. Walnut St.
in Starke.
All interested parties are
encouraged to attend one of
the two audition dates. LRCT
is looking for singers, actors,
dancers, comedians, etc. of all
ages and both genders. Please
be prepared to read from a
provided script and, if you
desire, sing a few verses of a
song a cappella.
The show calendar for 2006
is March 24-26, March 31, and
April 1-2 for the spring
production; Sept. 8-10 and 15-
17 for the fall production; and
Dec. 8-10 arid 15-17 for the
winter production. There are
additional opportunities for
special performances and
events throughout the year.
For more information, e-
mail tcurtis@georgeroberts
ins.com.


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Jan. 12,2006 TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR-B-SECTION Page3B
I .


GOSPEL
Continued from p. 1B
classroom.
She said the chorus and band
directors have let the choir use
each of their rooms when they
were able.
The gospel choir sings only
songs that the teenagers will be
able to relate to, said Long.
Some of the songs include
"Falling in Love (with Jesus),"
"Hallelujah," "He's Able" and
"Center of My Joy."
Even then, the group is not
all about singing notes and
words on a page.
The gospel, choir lets
students, who want to be a part
of the group, "forget about
problems, and put faith in
God," Long said.


Alice Searcy
Religious denominations,
discipline problems and race
are all set aside when black
and white students come
together to participate in the
program.
"It lets children know we


Consumers
urged to
research
health clubs
Florida Agriculture and
:Consumer Services
SCommissioner. Charles H.
Bronson is urging consumers
to get some background
information on health clubs
prior to signing a contract.
Many people put losing
weight and getting into shape
at the top of their New,,Year's.
;to-do list.- But unless they do
"some research in advance; 'the.
only thing they may lose is
money. State law provides
some protections for
consumers, and they should be
aware of what those are.
The Florida 'Department of
Agriculture and Consumer
Services administers the
Health Studio Law, which
spells out the rights and
responsibilities of the gyms
and consumers. It also
provides some recourse against
health clubs that do not follow
the law.
All health clubs are required
-to register with-: the
department's Division of
Consumer Services and many
must also post a bond that can
be used to repay members if
the facility goes out of
business. In 2005, the
department collected $67,000
in fines against health clubs for
various violations of the
Health Studios Law, including
registration problems and
advertising.
There are 1,720 health
studios registered with the
Department of Agriculture and
Consumer Services, an
increase of 379 over last year;
149 clubs went out of business
over the same time period.
"Joining a health club can be
a positive but costly endeavor,
and it's important that people
know as much as possible
about a particular facility
before entering into a
contract," Bronson said.
"They need to know exactly
what they are getting for their
money and what steps they can
take to seek redress if
something goes wrong."
The law provides consumers
with the right to cancel a
contract for certain reasons
including: cancellation within
three days of signing a
contract, exclusive of holidays
and weekends, but it must be
done in writing; if the facility
moves more than five miles
away from the original
location and fails to provide,
within 30 days, a facility of
equal quality located within
five miles; if a person becomes
physically unable to use most
of the services for which they
contracted, until the disability
ends.
Bronson also recommends
consumers follow these tips
before signing a contract:
Call the Department of
Agriculture and Consumer

See HEALTH, p. 6B


can build a bridge and get over
any kind of situation," she
said. "This is a way we let
students know God is still in
control."
By checking their problems
at the classroom door, Long
said the students have actually
overcome some of those
problems.
"A lot of referrals have been
diminished by the gospel
choir," she said.
The students have gotten
involved in the community by
ministering through song, she
said.
They have performed in
Gainesville for minister and
church anniversary
celebrations. They recently
performed at the March of
Dimes event at the BHS
auditorium.
In Tampa, they attended a
district conference the week
before Thanksgiving. The
group sold baked goods and
received a donation from the'
BHS Key Club to be able to
pay for the trip.
If a church needs a gospel
choir ,r speaker for {heir youth
program, the BHS group is
happy to perform for free
outside of school on any day
except Suruay morning.
"Anything we can help in
the community, we are here,"
Long said.
She plans to retire next year
and is in her first year of
school to become a preacher.
Jackson is heading in the same
direction and is a youth
coordinator.
Both these women say their
main goal is to reach the
youth.-
"Teenagers need this in their
life," said Long, who still
plans to help out with the choir


compliance
Florida Agriculture and
Consumer Services
Commissioner Charles H.
Bronson today announced two
major changes in food labeling
laws one that could literally
save lives of those with severe
food allergies and another that
promises to steer consumers
away from products with.
artery-clogging ingredients.
The first change, which went'
into effect Jan. 1, requires food
manufacturers to disclose in
simple, straightforward
language any of the eight major
food allergens contained in
their products.
The second, which' also took
effect Jan. 1, requires
manufacturers to disclose the
amount of trans fat, which
contributes to elevated
cholesterol levels and can lead
to coronary artery disease,
contained in their products.
Bronson stated that
inspectors and scientists in his
Food Safety Division will
sample and test random
products in grocery stores and
other retail markets to make
sure that the manufacturers are
complying with the new laws.
"We're very encouraged by
these new requirements, which
will protect those with acute
food allergies and empower all
consumers to make informed
dietary choices," Bronson said.
"We will be sampling and
testing food products to assure
consumers that they are getting
the protection that the new
labeling laws provide."
While both requirements
became effective Jan. 1,
products manufactured before
that date that remain on store
shelves are not subject to the
new requirements.
Here, in summary, are the
details of the two major food
labeling changes:


after she retires.
She said the group is very
talented.
"Some think they' cannot
sing, but all they have to do is
open their mouths, and they
can," she said.
The BHS Gospel Mass
Choir will soon be selling
products from the Yankee
Candle Co. to raise funds for
future trips and events they
want to participate in.
But these events will'not be
singing competitions.
"I don't want them to be


Enacted by Congress, the
law is designed to protect the
estimated 11 million Americans
who suffer from food allergies.
According to one of the bill's
sponsors, some 30,000
Americans are treated at
hospital emergency rooms each
year for allergic reactions to
food, and as many as 250 die
each year.
The law requires food
manufacturers to list in plaip
English in .their list of
ingredients on the package
label the presence of any of the
eight major food allergens that
are responsible for the vast
majority, of such attacks -
peanuts, nuts, fish, shellfish,
eggs, milk, soy and wheat.
Previously, ingredients such as
whey and calcium caseinate
may have been listed on a label
rather than the more common
term milk. Similarly, lecithin
had frequently been substituted
for soy..

TRANS FAT PRESENCE
Trans fat is an undesirable
fat that contributes to high
levels of cholesterol and can
lead to heart disease. It is
formed when liquid oils are
made into .solid fats like
shortening and hard margarine
- a process that increases the
shelf life and flavor stability of
foods.
While many food
manufacturers have phased out
or eliminated trans fat in their
products altogether because of
growing health concerns,
companies only now' are
required by federal law to list
the amount, if any, contained in
their products. It is required to
be listed in grams in the
"Nutrition Facts" panel of the
food label.
In addition to the sampling
and testing that will be
conducted regarding' the two
news laws, Bronson's
department will continue to


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hung up on being better than
the others," she said.
One performance Long said
she would like to see occur is a
concert with gospel choirs
from 'several different areas,
including Gainesville.
The idea would be for each
choir to sing and then sing one
song together at the end, she
said. It would feature the
different style of each group,
but then show they are all
coming together, under one
God.
Long said, "When they all


randomly select products as it
has in recent years to make sure
that calories, carbohydrates and
other nutrients listed on food
labels are accurate. In the last
four years, the department has
documented more than 1,100
food labeling violations.

"Consumers must be able to
rely on the accuracy of food
labels because inaccurate labels
can endanger people's health,"
Bronson said.


get to singing on the last song,
there will be a halo over the


auditorium for all of Bradford
County to see."


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Members of the Bradford High School Gospel Latayvia Henderson, Jalisa McDuffie, Michelle
Mass Choir are (front, I-r) Marquita Brown, Partee, Latierra Partee, Verdell Long
LaQuita Campbell, Valoria Haile, Michael Bass, (advisor), (back, I-r) Danni Betterson.
Jakear Simmons, Kierra Mosley (assistant (president), Nikita Slocum (secretary), Eli
secretary), (second row, I-r) Teesha Randolph, Hamilton (treasurer), Josh Bell, Wayne Long
Brittany Bolton (parliamentarian), Ebony (parliamentarian), Harold English (musician)
Smith, Doretha Snell, Emmall Ramseur, and George Lott (vice-president).


Changes in FOOD ALLERGEN LABELING AND
food labeling/ CONSUMER PROTECTIONHACT
4eA&;,4"n,. -- ,e.m r


THE RAPEUTIC MASSAN OY

Mary Coleman-Varley LMT
\1 \ '14282 304357-00
I


I







Page 4B TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--B-Sc adi.,, o.an. 12, 2006


CRIME -


Man arrested
for forging
checks
A 24-year-old Lake Butler
man was arrested Jan. 5 after
receiving cash from checks he
had forged.
Jeremy Randall Stephens
was charged by Deputy Mac
Johns with petit theft, fraud
and forgery. Stephens allegedly
forged the' victim's name on
three of her personal checks.
He then got a friend to cash the
checks for him iat a local bank,
each in the amount of $475,
Deputy Johns said.
The friend was questioned at
the bank where he was.
attempting to cash a fourth
check, Deputy Johns said.
Stephens admitted to asking
the friend to cash the checks,
telling him he (Stephens) did
not have a local bank account.
The friend was paid $25 for
cashing each check, Deputy
-Johns-said --

Starke man
flees


Recent
arrests
in Bradford,
Clay or UniOn
The following individuals
were arrested recently by local
law enforcement officers, in
Bradford, Clay (Keystone
Heights) or Union County:
Reynaldo Aviles, 23, of
Hampton was arrested Jan. 4
by Bradford Deputy Stephen
Bivins for aggravated assault
with a deadly weapon. Aviles
is charged with threatening the
victim while displaying a
handgun following a verbal
altercation. No weapon was
located, Deputy Bivins said.
Bond was set at $15,000.
Manuel Garcia, 30, of
Hampton was arrested Jan. 7
by Bradford Deputy Joseph A.
Jones for domestic battery.
Garcia is charged 'with kicking
the victim several times in the
back. No visible injuries were
noted, Deputy Jones said. The
incident occurred at 1 a.m.
Garcia was released on his own


uti recognizance by Judge Elzie
deputies, Sanders.
gets .arrested Peter Alden Roberger, 51, of
A 24-year-old Starke man Keystone Heights was arrested
%.as arrested Jan. 8 after he fled Jan. 9 by Clay Deputy Lejeune
from deputies while in his car for domestic battery. Roberger.
and on foot. is charged with striking the
Timothy Lavain Flowers Jr. victim in the face several times
was sitting in his vehicle.just with his fist. He was
after midnight in the Pleasant intoxicated at the time of the
Grove area when he. was incident, Deputy Lejeune said.
approached by Sgt. Ray White.
Flowers dropped a prescription Angela Hyland, 34, of
bottle on the ground .during Keystone Heights was arrested
questioning, then pulled away, < Jan. 5 by Green Cove Springs
Sgt. White said. The deputy officers for possession of a
attempted to stop the 1991 controlled substance,
Chevrolet sedan as it travelled possession of drug
at a high rate of speed. paraphernalia, possession of
The vehicle crashed in a marijuana and driving while
ditch on Northwest 180th license suspended or revoked
Street and Flowers fled into the (DWLS) knowingly.
woods. Starke K-9 with Sgt.
Richard Crews was requested William T. White, 37, of
and the area was searched. Starke was arrested Jan. 7 by
Flowers was found hiding in a Starke Officer Paul King for
wooded area, Sgt. White said. possession of drug
Flowers received minor paraphernalia. White was seen.
injuries when he was bitten by paraphernalia. Wvehie was seen
the K-9. No medical attention park nce. The office outside a
residence. The officer knew
was required, Sgt. White said. White did not have a valid
The prescription bottle was driver's license and approached
recovered and found to contain him to question him. White
crack cocaine. Flowers was was attenting to conceal
cltrged withfiV laggravatedJ o'eth g as the officer
fleeing, eluding and possession approached. A metal crack pipe
of cocaine with intent to sell, was found on the floorboard
Sgt. White said. .- between White's feet, Officer
-.Boid on fthe charges was set King said. Bond was set at
at $10,000. $1,000.


Starke man
faces
charges
of battery
A 46-year-old Starke man
was arrested Jan. 6 for battering
two victims after breaking into
their hbuse.
Raymond Konrad Secrest
_wascharged-by-Offieer-Mark
Lowery with two counts
battery, burglary of a dwelling,
disorderly intoxication and
resisting arrest without
violence.
Secrest is charged with
kicking the victim's door open,
grabbing the victim and
slamming, him into the wall
with enough force to make a
hole, Officer Lowery said. He
then grabbed and shook a
second victim. When
approached at another address,
Secrest stated he was there
.when the incident occurred.
Witnesses stated he had arrived
just before the officers.
During the investigation,
Secrest became loud and
abusive, calling the officer
names. He smelled strongly of
an alcoholic beverage, Officer
Lowery said.
Bond on the charges was set
at $15,000.

Man arrested
at BHS for
trespassing
A 48-year-old Starke man
was arrested Jan. 7 when he
was found on school property
in an area that should have
been closed to any pedestrian
traffic.
Ernest Charles Vanwart was
charged trespassing on school
property by Officer Mark
Lowery. Vanwart was seen at
11:09 p.m. at Bradford High
School. He could give no good
explanation for his being on
school property, Officer
Lowery said. A pipe containing
cannabis was found on Vanwart
and he was additionally charged
with possession of drug
paraphernalia, Officer Lowery
said,
He was released Jan. 8 on
his own recognizance by Judge
Elzie Sanders.


Kelly Robinson, 36, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 3 by
Officer King for possession of
drug paraphernalia.- A $1,000
surety bond was posted for
Robinson's release from
custody.
Michael Stoneman, 27, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 7 by
Officer King for. possession of
controlled substance and on a
warrant from Seminole County
for violation of probation
possession of cannabis. A
plastic bag containing four
Ecstasy pills were found where
Stoneman was sitting. Bond
was set at $5,000. Stoneman's
vehicle was stopped at 1:04
a.m. on North Temple Avenue
for a cracked windshield.
Fredd. \M.. Stephens III, a


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passenger in the vehicle, was
charged with possession of
marijuana when a marijuana
cigarette was found in his
cigarette package, Officer King
said. Stephens, 25, of Starke
was released on his own
recognizance by Judge Sanders.
Two Lake Butler teenagers
were arrested Dec. 30 by Union
Deputy Mindy Goodwin for
stealing batteries from the
Family Dollar Store in Lake
Butler. The 14-and 17-year-olds
said the batteries were bought
at CVS but they did not have a
receipt. The price tags indicated-
they were from the Family
Dollar, Deputy Goodwin said.
William Grayer, 23, of
Starke was arrest&l Jan. 6 by,
Starke Officer J.W. Hooper for
possession of cannabis.
Marijuana weighing less than
20 grams was found in
Grayer's vehicle when it was
stopped on S.R. 16 at Water
Street, Officer Hooper said. He
was released Jan. 7'on his own
recognizance by Judge Sanders,.
George Michael
Hammontree, 45, of Alachua
was arrested Jan. 7 by Starke
Patrolman Jason Crosby for
retail theft. Hammontree is
charged with stealing
merchandise valued at $126
from Dollar General in Starke
A $1,000 surety bond was
posted for his release from
custody.
Michael Devitt, 42, of
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 5 by Clay deputies for
possession of drug
paraphernalia.
Troy Perry, 23, of Starke
was arrested Jan. 6 by Clay
deputies on a warrant for
contempt of court.
Patti Williams, 27, of Lake
Butler was arrested Jan. 4 by
Deputy Jones for failure to
appear possession of drug
paraphernalia. Bond was set at
$4,000.
Christopher Chastain, 19, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 4 by
Starke Sgt. Robert Melton for
violation of probation forgery,
grand theft.
Raymond Robinson, 46, of
tMefrose was rested Jan. 4 for
Sfailtire to appearer worthless
check. Bond was set at $2,000.
Lonnie Thompson, 44, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 3 by
Bradford Deputy R. Watkins on
an order of arrest for violation
of.probation.


Michael Cam, 46, of
Hampton was arrested Jan. 6
by probation officers for
violation of probation
aggravated assault with a deadly
weapon and purchase and
possession of cocaine. Cam's
arrest Dec. 22 for interference
with railroad track violated his
probation. Cam stated he had
been waiting for a train for
some time. He decided to find a
place to cross and his vehicle
became disabled on the tracks,
according to Sgt. Donald
Spriggle. The incident occurred
at 6:30 a.m. on Dec. 22, Sgt.
Spriggle said.


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Brandon J. Croft, 22, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 6 by
Officer King on a warrant for


* failure to appear battery from
Bradford County and violation Michael Norris, 26, of Lake
of probation .battery from Butler was arrested Jari. 5 by
Alachua. Bond was set at Bradford Deputy Casey Moore
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Dennis Sheffield Jr., 35, of
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 4 by probation officers for
violation of probation sexual
battery.
Regina Randolph, 39, of
Lake Butler was arrested Dec.
29 by Union Lt. H.M.
Tomlinson on warrants for
failure to appear with bond set
at $1,500 on each charge.
.Sandra Lee Terry, 56, of
Gainesville was arrested Jan. 4
by Union Raymond J. Shuford
on a warrant from Volusia
County for failure to appear,
with bond set at $1,000.
Lavar Demerion Mills, 27,
of Jacksonville was arrested
Jan. 4 by Lt. Tomlinson on a
warrant from Duval County for
failure to appear with bond set
at $10,000.
Edward Earl Mitchell Jr., 22,
of Lake Butler was arrested Jan.
3 by Lt. Tomlinson on
warrants for. failure to appear
with bond set at $10,000 on
each charge.
Shirley Ritchie, 38, of
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 3 by Clay deputies on a
writ of attachment.
Kimberly Strickland, 25, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 3 by
on a warrant from Levy
County for failure to appear
larceny and violation of
probation domestic battery.
Total bond was set at $11,000.
Randall Wainwright, 37, of
Hawthorne was arrested Jan. 4
by Starke Officer William
Murray for violation of
probation. He was transported
to Putnam County.
Gregory Parrish, 28, of
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 4 by Bradford Correctional
Deputy Jason Clark for
violation of probation
' possession of controlled
substance. He was released on
his own recognizance.


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Nathan Prosser, 38, of
Starke was arrested Jan.. 8 by
Officer King for failure to
appear violation of probation
battery. Bond- was set at
$4,000...
Lannie McCauley, 34, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 8 by
Officer Hooper for violation of
probation robbery.
Larry Wiggins, 45, of Glen
St. Mary was arrested Jan. 6 by
probation officers for violation
of probation by his use of
marijuana.
Heather Johnson, 20, of
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 9 by Clay deputies on a
warrant for violation of
probation grand theft.
Traffic
Russell Grill, 45, of Sunrise
was arrested Jan. 7 by Officer
King for driving under the
influence (DUI). Grill's blood-
alcohol level was .15 percent
when his 1987 Ford was
stopped on U.S. 301 at
Edwards Road. He was released
on his own recognizance by
Judge Sanders.
Dawn E. Green, 41, of Lake,
Butler was arrested Jan. 1 by
Union Deputy Robert Manning
for DUI. Green was found
sitting in her vehicle on
Southwest 89th Street just
after midnight. She admitted
she had been drinking and failed
the field sobriety test, Deputy
Manning said. Her blood-
alcohol level was .18 percent,
Deputy Manning said.

Darius Donley, 21, of
Melrose was arrested Jan. 6 by
Deputy Bivins for DWLS
habitual offender, resisting
arrest without violence and
DWLS third conviction. A
$15,000 surety bond was
posted for his release from
custody.
Christopher Ballou, 20, of
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 6 by Clay deputies for no
valid driver's license and
DWLS.


Sno was posted Tor nis re11 stm
from custody.
Michael Thornton, 20, of
Lake Butler was arrested Jan. 6
by Lawtey Officer J.W. Padgett
for DWLS with knowledge. He
was released after a $500 surety
bond was posted.
Duane Grochowski, 36 of.
Keystone Heights was arrested
Jan. 5 by Clay deputies on a
warrant for violation of
probation DUI, DWLS and
failure to comply DUI, DWLS.
Kristy .Sauls, 22, of Lake
Qeneva was arrested Jan. 5 by
Deputy Clark for violation of
probation DUI from Alachua
County. A $500 surety bond
was posted for Sauls' release.
Lori Reid, 32, of Starke was
arrested Jan. 3 by Bradford
Deputy Sapp for failure to
appear DWLS. Bond was set at
$5,000.
Lintallifero Chandler, 28, of
Starke was arrested Jan. 8 by
Officer King for, failure to
appear DWLS. Bond was set at
$205. Chandler was released on
his own recognizance by Judge
Sanders.


Starke man
charged in
Union crash
A Starke man was charged .
.after his vehicle was sideswiped
on C.R. 121 in Union County.
Merle H. Haddock, driving a
1996 Chrysler, was.
southbound on C.R. 121 Jan.
5 at 11:30 a.m., according to
Florida Highway Patrol
Trooper Childress. A 2004
Mack semi attempted to
overtake the Chrysler as
Haddock slowed to make a left
turn, Trooper Childress said.
The semi struck the Chrysler,
causing approximately $5,500
in damages and $500 damage to
the semi, Trooper Childress
said.
Haddock was charged with
improper change of course
while being overtaken.
Both drivers were wearing
seat belts and received possible
injuries.


I ....


m ..........







Jan. 12, 2006 TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR-B-SECTION Page 5B


Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Dean Cason


Crawford and Cason are wed


Carrie Beth Crawford of
Lake City and Matthew Dean
Cason of Lake City were
married on Dec. 10, 2005 in
Islanmorada.
The bride is the daughter of
Stanley and Mary Ann
Crawford of Lake City.
The groom is the son of
DeWitt and Sherri Cason and
Eugene and Sandra Robertson,
all of Lake City.
Tim Williams officiated the
ceremony.
Flower girl was Korie Cason
and Rebekah Welch Huffman
was the maid of honor.
Ethan Umstead was the ring
bearer. Caleb Umstead was the
best man and Brian Crawford


and Bryan Cason were ushers.
The bride is a graduate of
Union County High School
and the University of Florida.
She is currently employed with
Westfield Realty Group.
The groom is a graduate of
Columbia High School. He is
employed with Stanley
Crawford Construction, Inc.
and Westfield Realty Group.
The couple will reside in
Lake City.
There will be a reception
held at the Crawford home at
4280 SW C.R. 242 in Lake:
City on Saturday, Jan. 21, 2006
from 6-9 p.m.
All friends and family are
invited to attend.


BIRTHS
FKymberlyn Williams and
c- Hunter Collins.
Maternal grandparents are
Karen McQuiston of Kansas
and Bryant O'Neill of West
SVirginia.
S Maternal greal-grandmother
S'"" is lone Russell of Kansas.
_, Paternal grandparents are
"\ Frederick and Mildred Crews
\ Sr. of Lake Butler.
Paternal great-grandmother
S) is Lucille Regar of Lake
-. Butler.
Christian Fuller Donohue Alden Clemons

Christian Alden
Donohue Clemons
Kevin and Jessica Graham Victoria -Clemons of Lake m ,
Donohue announce the birth of Butler announces the birth of
their son, Christian Fuller her son, Aiden James
Donohue, on Dec. 23, 2005 at Clemons, on Dec. 6, 2005.
Martin Memorial Hospital in Aiden weighed 7 pounds, I .
Stuart. ounce and measured 20 inches
Christian weighed 8 pounds, in length.
14 ounces and measured 20 Grandparents are Kenneth
inches in length. He joins two and Paula Clemons of Lake Jack Hen Whitehead
sisters, Allisonr Michelle Butler. Jack Henry Whitehea
Donohue and Kaitlin Marie Great-grandparents are
Donohue. Ernest and Alma Addison of Jack
Maternal grandparents are Lake Butler and the late Archie .
Philip "Flip" and Joan Graham and Thelma Clemons of Lake W hitehead
of Orange Park and the late Butler and the late Paul Archer
Patricia Graham of of Lacrosse. Jerry and Tammy Whitehead
Gainesville. announce the birth of Jack
Paternal. grandparents are Henry Whitehead, born on
Patricia Markovic and Milan Dawson Dec. 1I, 2005 in Gainesville.
Markovic and the late William He weighed 8 pounds and was
Donohue. rFewsAI 19 inches long. Jack has a
_____ Cresister Chelsea and three broth-
Birth announcements are consid- Frederick and Renee Crews ers, Jake, Matt and Brad, all of
ered news and are a free service'of Jr. of Raiford announce the Lake Butler.
the Bradford County Telegraph. birth of their son, Dawson Grandparents are Larry and
Region Monitor. Announcements are Frederick Crews, on Dec. 31, Joan Kitchens and John and
edited for style and content. A 1-col. 2005 in Gainesville. Vivian Whitehead of Lake
photo may be included for $12. Call Dawson joins siblings Butler. Great-grandmother is
(904) 964-6305 for information. C h r i st o ph e r Williams, Hazel Smith of Baldwin.


1A
,- t1


Jolleen Johnson and
Rob Cason


Johnson and
Cason to wed
in October
Phyllis Johnson of
Plattsburg, N.Y. and Tom
Johnson of Fergus Falls, Minn.
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Jolleen
Johnson, to Rob Cason, son of
Robert and Peggy Cason of
Lake Butler.
An October wedding is
planned.



WORTH NOTING
Veterans with an honorable
discharge who are interested in
reactivating Post #314 are urged to
call 964-5373, Maurice J. White,
anytime after 7 p.m.
The Lawtey Recreation Board
meets on the second Tuesday of the
month at 7 p.m.


Hanas and Archey are engaged


Rick and Susan Hanas of
Oviedo announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Erin Alaina Hanas, to Clayton
Henry Archey, son of Allan
Archey and Judy Archey of


Clayton Henry Archey and
Erin Alaina Hanas


Starke.
The bride-elect graduated
from Florida State University
in May 2003 with a bachelor's
degree in business
management and received her
masters of agribusiness, degree
from the University of Florida
in December 2004. She is
current\ employed as an
economic analyst for ,hlie,r
family\ 's agribusiness company,
A. Duda and Sons, Inc. -
The groom-elect graduated
from the University of Florida
in August 2003 ~ ilh a
bachelor's degree in business
administration and received his
masters of agribusiness degree
in December 2004. He is
employed by Lennar Homes-
Orlando Land Di\ vision.
The wedding is planned for
Saturday, December 30, 2006
at St. Luke's Lutheran Church
in Oviedo.


Vickery and Williams to wed


Lisa Vickery and David
Vickery, both of Starke,
announce the upcoming
marriage of their daughter,
Christina Lynn Vickery, to
Travis Wayne Williams of
Lake Butler, son of Thomas
and Denise Williams of Starke
and Jennifer Williams, also of
Starke.
The bride-elect is a 2002
graduate of Bradford High
.,, School. She works fpr
Partnership For Strong
Families. .. She-, is Athe.
granddaughter of Wayne and
Diane Mundorff of Keystone
Heights and Edwin and Lucille
Vickery of Starke. She is the
great-granddaughter of Helen
Burnette of Keystone Heights.
The groom-elect graduated
from Union County High
School in 1998. He works for
RMC Correctional Institute.
He is the grandson of Mildred
Bridgeman.
The wedding will take place


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Page 6B TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--B-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


OBITUARIES: r. I


Darrell Ansley
HAMPTON Darrell C.
Ansley, 40, of Hampton died
Wednesday, January 4, 2006, in
Jacksonville.
Born in Green Cove Springs;
Mr. Ansley lived in Clay County
most of his life.
Mr. Ansley is survived by: his
wife Stacie Hughes Ansley; his
parents Annette Williams and
Fred Ansley; a son Jalin D.
Ansley; a daughter Shonni Q.
Ansley; three step-daughters,
Shaleigh D. Peterson, Shakura E.
Patterson and Samatha L.
Denson; two sisters, Tanya D.
Aldrich and Tammy L. Ray; two
step-sisters, Diane Ansley Tillie
and Linda Ansley; and two step-
brothers, Anthony and Brian
Ansley.
Funeral services for Mr. Ansley
were Jan. 9, 2006 in Hardage-
Giddens Rive'rmead Funeral
Home of Orange Park. Burial
followed in Macedonia Cemetery
in Macclenney.



Ellen Bailey
STARKE Ellen Louise
Morgan Bailey, 78, of Starke
died Sunday, Jan. 8, 2006, at her
residence following a brief
illness.
Born in Miami on Jan. 13,
1927, Mrs. Bailey moved to
Starke in 1978 from Key Largo.
She was a longtime member of
'First Baptist Church in Starke
where she worked in the nursery.
She was the owner/operator of
Bailey Advertising for more than
30 years.
Mrs. Bailey is survived by:
three daughters, Jacquelyn
Taylor of Hollywood, Ellen
"Bootsie" Lowe of Ft. Walton
Beach and Carolyn Jean Lohr of
Miami; two sisters, 'Joyce
Chambers of Lake Butler and
Judy Somerville of Starke; six
grandchildren, 13 great-
grandchildren and one great-
great-grandchild. She was
preceded in death by her
husband Jackson Bailey.


A LOOK

BACK AT

HISTORY


Providence is the
second oldest village
inthe state h
" "(Iiformation6'f6i' this porfionI
of the history was taken fftbr"
an article written by Gail D.
Livingston in the 110th
anniversary edition of the
Telegraph.) Records show that
not long after settlers from
Spain established St.
Augustine in 1565, parties of
explorers were sent out into
the interior of Florida by
Menendez. The Spanish
explorer had returned to
Florida after the forts at San
Mateo and St. Augustine were
destroyed by De Gourges, in
an effort to, Christianize the
natives. Menendez sought to
learn more about the interior,
and armed with knowledge
given to the Spanish by the
Indians at St. Augustine,
parties of explorers made their
way into the interior, braving
dense, swampy wilderness and
attack by unfriendly Indians.
The Indians were generally
vicious in their attacks since
the Spanish had killed and
tortured many of the Indians in
forcing them to leave land that
had been claimed by Spain.
Indians from the interior were
captured and returned to St.
Augustine ahd used essentially
as slave labor to help build
fortifications.
The exploration parties
made their way west to a
location near Olustee Creek
which is in what is now known
as Union County. They built
living quarters there. It is
believed that what is now
known as Providence was on
the direct path taken by the
Spanish explorers who won
their way to Pensacola and
settled there. Legend says that
one party of these settlers had
a large treasure chest with
them. When they were
attacked by Indians, the legend
claims the box was thrown into
the Suwannee River near
Providence. Four miles from
the settlement of Providence,
Ft. Call was built to provide
protection for the Spanish
settlers of the area. Ft. Ward,
located a few miles southeast
of Ft. Call, was also built about
this time.
Providence continued as a
settlement long after the
Spanish had turned Florida
over to English control. Years
later, Providence Village
became the first county seat of
the land which now includes
Columbia, Bradford and Union
counties. Col.. W.T. Weeks
served as clerk of the court
while the county seat was
See HISTORY, p. 8B


Funeral services for Mrs.
Bailey were Jan. 11, 2006 in First
Baptist Church of Starke with the
Rev. Wailon' Haston and Dr.
Rodney Coe conducting. the
services.. Interment followed in
Crosby Lake Cemetery under the
care of Jones Funeral Home of
Starke.
Memorial contributions may
be made to First Baptist Church
of Starke Nursery, P.O. Box
123D Starke, 'L .)/uVi.

Donald Hayes
KEYSTONE HEIGHTS -
Donald Stephen Hayes, 56, of
Keystone Heights died Thursday,
Jan. 5, 2006, at Shands UF


Mr. Delancey is survived by:
his mother Dorothy Croft of
Fairhope, Pa.; a daughter Noreen
Delancey of Pennsylvania; two
sons, James. Delancey of
Keystone Heights and Larry
Delancey of Reading, Pa.; a
brother Ronald Delancey of
Fairhope; three sisters, Bonnie
Wilson of Mt. Pleasant, N.C.,
Donna Croft of Hamilton, N.J.
and Deborah Versnel of Wichita,
Kansas; and four grandchildren,
He was preceded in death by a
daughter Mary Catherine.
A celebration of the life of Mr.
Delancey was Jan. 10, 2006 at
Moring Funeral Home in
Melrose.


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Owners


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Green and the Rev. Charles Clark
officiating. Burial will follow at
New River Cemetery under the,
care of Archer Funeral Home of
Lake Butler.
The family will receive friends
on Saturday, Jan. 14, 2006, from
10 a.m. until noon at New River
Baptist Church.

Christopher Jackson
KEYSTONE HEIGHTS -
Christopher Lee "Chris"
Jackson, 24, of Keystone Heights
died Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2006, from
injuries sustained in an
autuoiiobiic adLLUIIJlL.'
Born in Charleston, W.Va. on
Jan. 3, 1982, Mr. Jackson lived
in Keystone Heights most of his
life. He was a foreman at JB
Coxwell and was a member o4f
Lake Hill Baptist Church.
Mr. Jackson is survived by: his
sons, Alexander Lee Jackson and
Hunter, both of Keystone
Heights; his mother Leisa Morris
Jackson of Keystone Heights; his
father Randy Jackson of West
Virginia; and his grandmother
Nellie Cook of West Virginia.
Funeral services for Mr.
Jackson were Jan. 7, 2006 at
Lake. Hill Baptist Church with
*the Rev. Jim Snell officiating.
Burial followed in Gadara
Cemetery under the care of Jones
Funeral Home of Keystone
Heights.

Walter Martell
KEYSTONE HEIGHTS -
Walter Martell Jr., 56, of
Keystone Heights died Monday,
Jan. 2, 2006, at his residence.
Born in Lowell, Mass. on Sept.
12, 1949, Mr. Martell was a
welder and served in the U.S.
Army.
Mr. Martell is survived by: his
wife Denise Wichman Martell of
Keystone Heights and a step-
daughter Danielle Arnold.
Memorial services for Mr.
Martell will be held at a later
date under the care of Jones
Funeral Home of Keystone
Heights.

"When You Say It With Flowers
It' s Beautifully Sgaid"








SN.(904)Templ964-77e 11ve.


Ressie Colson
STARKE Ressie Arnold
Colson, 94, of Starke died
Wednesday, Jan. 4, 2006, at the
home of his caregiver following
a brief illness.
Born in Brooker on Nov. 4,
1911, Mr. Colson was a lifelong
resident of Bradford County and
member of First Baptist Church
of Starke. He was a retired
owner/operator of Colson and
Sons Grocery in Brooker and
served in the United States Army
during World War II.
Mr. Colson is survived by: his
wife of 64 years Clara Flume
Colson of Starke; two daughters,
Dianne Moody of Lake Butler
and Kay Colson Waters of Starke;
a son-in-law S. LaRue Williams
of Ormond Beach; seven
grandchildren and nine great-
grandchildren. He was preceded
in death by his daughter
Margaret Colson Williams.
Funeral services for Mr. Colson
were Jan. 7, 2006 in First Baptist
Church of Starke with Dr.
Rodney Coe conducting the
services. Interment followed in
Crosby Lake Cemetery under the
care of Jones Funeral Home of
Starke. .




Paul Wolf
GAINESVILLE Paul 'John
Joseph Wolf Sr., 59, of
Gainesville died Monday, Jan. 2,
2006.
Born in Stacyville, Iowa, Mr.
Wolf retired after 20 years of
employment with the Florida
Department of Corrections and
worked part time as a substitute
teacher for the Alachua County
School District. He served in the
U.S. Navy during the Vietnam
War and also served int the
Florida National Guard.
Mr. Wolf is survived by: his
wife of 32 years Mary Louise
Wolf of Gainesville; a son Paul
Joseph Wolf Jr. of Mountain


Home, Idaho; a daughter Lily
Joplin of Beaufort, S.C.; his
mother Albina Wolf of Mason
City, Iowa; sisters, Mary
Christofferson of Gainesville and
Judith Ann Ramker of Leesburg;
brothers, Tom Wolf, of Sheffield,
Iowa, Ralph Wolf Jr. of Mason
City, Richard Wolf of Rockford,
111. and Joseph Wolf of Hiawatha,
Iowa. He was preceded in death
by an infant son John Paul Wolf.
Arrangements by Williams:-.
Thomas Fun eral Home Westarea.
in Gainesville.

e44d9^7<4s^|


Chris Jackson


There is no way to express how
thankfidl am for all the love and
support everyone showed to my
family.
It truly helped my heart to know my
son, Chris Jackson, was loved so
much. The love that everyone has
showed for him is amazing. I know
he loved you all dearly.
Chris worked hard, played hard
and loved deeply.
I just cannot thankyou all enough
for allyour support and for loving
my son.
With love and gratitude,
LeisaJackson & family


following a brief illness. | Lonzo Starlin
Born in Jacksonville on July InzoI Starlin
2, 1949, Mr. Hayes moved to LAWTEY Lonzo Ray
Keystone Heights 20 years ago. "Judge" Starling Jr., 76, of
He was of the Catholic faith and Lawtey died Monday, Jan. 9,
retired from Bellsouth as an 2006, at Shands at Starke
electronic engineering tech in .following a brief illness.
Orange Park and Jacksonville. Born in Heilbronn Springs on
Mr. Hayes is survived by: his Feb. 14, 1929, Mr. Starling was a
children, Brandy Leigh Davis of lifelong resident of Bradford
Jacksonville, Casey Marie County. He was a member of
Murray of Green Cove Springs, Sampson City Chunch of God.
Kelly Anne Hayes of Keystone He was a retired heavy
Heights; his mother Elizabeth equipment operator for E.I.
"Betty" Silock Fuwox of Dupont and served in the United
Keystone Heights; a sister Carole States Army during the Korean
Anne Hayes of Tallahassee; and Conflict.
six grandchildren. Mr. Starling is survived by: his
Memorial services for Mr. wife of 52 years Louise Ilene
Hayes will be held at, 12 noon on Hawkins Starling of Lawtey; five
Saturday, Jan. 14, 2006,, at Mr. daughters, Helen Padgett" of
Hayes' residence. Jones Funeral Macclenny, Deborah Passwater of
Home of Keystone Heights is in Lawtey, Amy- Head of
charge of arrangements. Gainesville, Joy. Schiller and
Memorial contributions in Mr. Lydia Spratlin, both of Starke;
Hayes' name may be made to a two sons, Steven Starling -of
local charity. Raiford and Enoch Starling of.
Enterprise, Ala.; three sisters, Inez
S Batten of Port St. Lucie, Naomi
carry Delancey Starling of Starke and Ruby
INTERLACHEN Larry Harris of Jacksonville; three
Edward Delancey, 59, of brothers, Vernon "Dick"
Interlachen died Friday, Jan. 6, Starling of Lawtey, Paul Starling
2006, in Interlachen. of Starke and Carlos Norman of
Bdmrn in .Sommerset, Pa., Mr. Lawtey; 16 grandchildren and
Delancey moved to Interlachen seven great-grandchildren.
21 years ago from Morrisville, Funeral services for Mr.
Pa. He was a contractor in the Starling will be held at 2 p.m. on
construction industry and served Thursday, Jan. 12, 2006, in
in the U.S. Marine Corps. Sampson City Church of God
with the Rev. Gene Bass and the
Rev. Robert Johnson and the
AI | A I| I IR' Rev. Wayne Spratlin conducting
H EA LTH the services. Interment will be in
Kingsley Lake Cemetery under
Continued from p. 3B the care of Jones Funeral Home
of Starke. I
Services' helpline at (800) The family will receive friends
435-7352 to make sure the at Sampson City Church of God
health studio is registered and on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2006,
to check its complaint history. from 7-9 p.m.
Find out if the studio has Memorial contributions may'
posted a bond with thbebe made to' J.T. Kirkland
department, as most that Scholarship Fund, 2225 N.
collect fees in advance are Temple, Starke, FL 32091 or
PR .rch of Dimes, 4161- ,
Saeq r... rmichael Ave., Suite 212-,
S* PrioFr-tojoining,-ask about J'ek-onville; ,PL' 32207- or, the
the club's cancellation policy Gift of Life blood donations.
should you move or become
physically unable to use the
facility. Charlotte Hendry
* Before signing up, visit LAKE BUTLER Charlotte
the club during the hours you Marie Bryant Hendry, 63, of
intend to use it to determine Lake Butler died Thursday, Jan.
whether it is overcrowded and 5, 2006, at her' residence
the equipment you plan to use following an extended illness.
is available. Born in Jacksonville, Mrs.
* Find out if any of the Hendry moved to Lake Butler in,
services offered require an 1966. She was a homemaker and
services offered require an member of Air Park Baptist
additional fee. Church of Starke.
Bronson said it is important CMrs. Hendry is survived by:
to read proposed contracts her husband the Rev. John Mack
thoroughly and make sure you Hendry of Lake Butler.
get all promises made by club Funeral services for Mrs.
personnel in writing. Ask Hendry will be held on Saturday,
questions to make sure you Jan. 14, 2006, at 12 noon at New
understand the terms of your Brivooker with Dr. Harold F.
membership.


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Jan.. TELEGRAPH, TIMES &MONI I OR--B-SECTION Page 7B



Saby proves big miracles come in small packages


.BY LINDSEY KIRKLAND
Telegraph Staff Writer
Jessica Hoover was already
under some stress knowing
'that her husband probably
-wouldn't be able to make it
home for the birth of their
:second child.


Like any other day as a
military wife, Jessica, 23, also
worried if her husband,
Spencer, 23, who was
deployed to the Middle East,
would even make it home at
all.
But June 10, 2005, was a


Three-year-old Spencer holds his sister 7-
month-old sister, Lillian, who shies away from
the camera.


very different day.
It started off when the
Hoovers' attic fan stopped
working, the stove broke and a
tree fell on the house.
She was scheduled for a
routine pregnancy ultrasound,
but the way 'her luck was
going, she knew the results
would not be what she wanted
to hear.
Unfortunately, she was right.
While her husband's home
base was Fort Bragg, N.C.,
Hoover went to the Womack
Army Medical Center
(WAMC) for her appointment.
She felt she was being
ignored and at her insistence, a
doctor at WAMC checked her
more thoroughly. He found the
baby did not have enough
fluids.
To compound the problem,
Jessica had developed
preeclampsia, a condition that
causes a pregnant woman to
have high blood' pressure and
other complications. It could
even be fatal for both mother
and baby.
She was taken by ambulance
from WAMC to the University
of North Carolina hospital at
Chapel Hill.
Jessica said she started to


Historic days, medieval knights
pastries and sweet potato fries
are the norm. It's not
.'',, ; .-... uncommon to see a young lord
'-~ : of the court munching happily
S, -on a giant turkey leg or a
sugary funnel cake.
";".^ .' fVisitors are encouraged to
arrive early for the "meet and
S^ greet session" during the first
30 minutes of the Faire, when
Actors and dancers gather each
S- day at the front gate to
.^ i '' entertain the early crowds.
"That's my favorite part of
the day," Piper says. "It's great
"" -"" ;' ^ J to see all the performers at the
..; gate to greet the guests. The
sights and sounds are simply
^ ^i breathtaking; I get so much
S, M pleasure from watching the
Spaces of the visitors as they
1 .'; enter Hoggetowne."
S The Faire, which is produced
'^ ?'' by the City of Gainesville
S' Department of Cultural Affairs,
z is one of North Florida's most
Popular events. The Alachua
... east of Gainesville, on 39th
SAvenue and SR 24, adjacent to
-. i." 'the Gainesville Regional
,ta ;!' Airport.
Ai For more information call
// 'i '. 334-ARTS or visit
S, I .* _.. www.gvlculturalaffairs.org.


wonder why all of this was
happening to her again.
Almost three years earlier,
the Hoovers' son had been
premature too.
Even though Jessica's doctor
said the chances of pregnancy
complications for a second
time were small, she' took
every precaution to prevent
them.
"He had so many
complications," she said. "I
was expecting the roller
coaster as before."
The only difference was that
this time, she, said the roller
coaster was 10 times faster
with more ups and downs.
While her body fought
against her child as if it were
something that did not belong
there, the baby had other plans.
She fought back.
A day later on June 11, UNC
doctors took the baby in an
emergency procedure.
They called her Lillian
Grace Hoover, Lilly for short.
Others called her a miracle.
Lilly was due on Sept. 16, so
she was only at 24 weeks

See MIRACLE, p. 8B


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The Hoggetowne bag lady welcomes
festivalgoers at the gate.


For two weekends each year,
tie clear blast of trumpets
diingles with 'the laughter of
children as the kingdom of
Iloggetowne opens its gates.
lancers and singers in
!medieval garb perform to the
delight of passers-by. Vendors
Iawk their fine wares and
blacksmiths demonstrate their
kills. Magicians amaze crowds
with their secret arts. Knights
jiattle one another from
-rseback and warriors meet in
combat as pieces in a living
Chessboard.
' The Hoggetowne Medieval
Fire is a beloved Gainesville
tradition ; and for the 20th year
4t will delight many thousands
f guests over two weekends,
Jan. 28-29 and Feb. 3-5.
Hundreds of actors, volunteers
~nd merchants work together to
produce the award-winning
&vent. The Faire features talent
fiom all over the country, but
i's not only the actors and
merchants who travel to
Hoggetowne.
- "We're expecting upwards of
50,000 guests this year," said
finda Piper, events coordinator
fr i the Faire. "Some people
wait all year to come to the
Fire, and we're thrilled to
liave them."
On School Day, thousands
children come to the Faire to
t.ke a field trip back in time
and learn about the medieval
era first hand.
"Admission for the Faire is
$10 for adults and $5 for
cJaildren ages 5-17. Children
tinder 5 enter free. Admission
0on School Day, Friday,
February 3, is half-price. The
Faire is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
on the weekends and 9 a.m. to
4-p.m. on Friday's School Day.
' The Faire offers attractions
fbr guests of all ages, and
especially for the younger
members of the kingdom.
Animal rides, games of chance
and skill, and of course, the
royal pavilion await visitors.
The brightly colored pavilion
is erected near the entrance of
the Faire. A green overhang
shades the royal throne, upon
which sit the king and queen


of Hoggetowhe, flanked by
their guards and heralds. It's
here where, over the course of
the Faire, more than a thousand
children will become knights
and ladies, dragon slayers and
damsels of the royal court.
And as these children, newly
honored by the King and
Queen, wander through the
Faire, they'll be met by dozens
of different attractionsvendors,
and merchants.
Seven stages of continuous
entertainment feature jugglers,
jesters and magicians.
Musicians play medieval
melodies on period instruments
and belly dancers perform in
the street. Thrilling human-
powered push rides attract lines
of eager children and vendors
call out to the crowds to try
their hand at crossbow
shooting and knife throwing.
The astounding "Birds of
Prey" show features trained
hawks and falcons who perform
for the pleasure of the crowds.
Guests can visit one of
Hoggetowne's mysterious
fortune-tellers to learn the
secrets of the future, or they
may visit artisans have their
hair braided or-faces festively
painted.
One of the Faire's most
notable attractions is the joust,
where knights in full plate
armor charge each other on
horseback, clashing in the
middle of the field and battling
for the honor of the King and
Queen. After the joust, children
are encouraged to meet the
knights and their steeds.
The marketplace has more
than 150 skilled artisans,
whose specialties include
weaving, jewelry making,
blacksmithing, leather working,
woodcarving and ceramics. It's
here that guests will see one-
of-a-kind items not available
anywhere else in Gainesville.
Guests can make their own
candles or even buy a colorful
wax replica of their own hand.
Past the marketplace is the
food court, where the delicious
aromas of cooking food entice
those passing by. Tasty onion
blossoms, soups, fresh-baked


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Page 8B TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--B-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


MIRACLE
Continued from p. 7B

gestation.
She was born at the weight
of 14.5 ounces and was 11
inches long. This is a weight
less than a soup can and not
much longer than a ball point
pen.
:Jessica's in-laws had
scheduled a visit to North
.Carolina from Lake Butler that
-weekend, so they happened to
ibe3there to watch her son.
Spencer was able to come
-home on emergency leave
.soon after.
1-Jlessica said, "I was left
-Ieechless after she was born."
--t-had-takRelFlmost all of
three years and almost all of
-ffe energy to get her son
through his-countless-therapies
.r-ulting- -from being a
oparnature baby.
-Now, the Hoovers would,
hate to do the same thing all
over again with Lilly.
:-Children born weighing
-more than 500 grams are given
:-30 percent chance of living.
She only weighed 420 grams.
2:'They told us she wasn't


going to make it, so we prayed
a lot," said Spencer.


She came home from the
hospital on Sept. 16, the date
she %as originallN due to be


Lilly's first 50 days of her born. weighing 5 pounds. 2
life were spent on life support. ounces.
Dozens of tubes and machines Lilly turned 7 months old on
were hooked up to her tiny Wednesday, Jan. II11, but is at
body... an adjusted age of 4 months
She had many because of her size. She
complications, including weighs 9 pounds. I I ounces.
retinal detachment, 12 blood
transfusions and ruptured She still has to have oxygen
intestines (they were not sometimes at night to help her
formed completely at birth). breath. There are a few other
Dealing with each complications, and she has to
complication as it came, the see five doctors.
doctors told the Hoovers it
would take Lilly longer to get "\We have to be super
past each episode that vigilantt about washing hands."
occurred. said Jessica.
Some of the babies in the .....---
-sa r nefiiatfl intensive care I here ihaen't been man\
unit as Lilly weighed more, but outings for the Hoovers in
were struggling to stay alive. their almost fi'e Nears of
One even died. marriage because of both of
",,A-n. .-..i i. .... A their children being premature.


vWe-lll 111g11 nUopes, saio
Jessica. "That put a damper on
our spirits."
About a month after she was
born, the Hoovers were
allowed, to fully hold their
baby.
With all the odds stacked
against her, Lilly pulled
through.


-'4:\ ';":e1..-.
.-. .4. ..


.. .....,. .. .
-.. .. .... 5.-. ,
.y.;:: ,^ _.


*. ,.

v i ,/ A --
'"r "
; *y $.:"" '..;:. ''


:. .. ff,?: *: .. .


-Both
right,
-bluer
:were


'"She [Lilly] can't go out on
e% ery little shopping
excursion." said Jessica.
Lill, should catch up to
%%here she is supposed to be
over the next couple of years
like her brother did.
Jessica said, "My children
beat all the odds."

Things are just beginning to
get back to some sort of
normal for.the Hoovers.

Spencer- Has finished with-
the military and is looking
forward to graduating from
college with his bachelor's
degree. Soon, he will start his
new job in Gainesville.

Jessica said she will be glad
when she gets to the point
where she can just go and see a
movie.

The Hoovers are looking
forward to building a home in
Lake Butler and their future as
a family, even though it
probably won't include
another child.

Jessica said, "It takes going
through severely hard times to
appreciate the good times. I
count my blessings every day."


' :1

t ~j-^
-- *. .. ,
.:. -. t,: .?. ^


l
[

)


'1 .- T. '
: ''"Si"''
,.^
ffr. _.^f .
.. .s^y' '^'^
''- '-;., : v ,'-


-.- ,-

,


Spencer-and --Jessica Hoover are happy to have th1
home with them. When she was born in June, the
than a 10 percent chance of surviving.


HISTORY
Continued from p. 6B

located in Providence. In early
days, mail for the village was
delivered by horseback from
Starke a grueling 30 miles
through the wilderness. John
D. Harden was one of the first
mail carriers who had to find
solid ground through swamps
and safe passage over rivers
and streams often swollen by
rainfall. Animal or Indian
attack was always a
possibility, as was robbery.
Schools were unheard of for
many years and education was
, available only through .private
lessons. One teacher in these
early days who was well
respected was Miss Moore
from South Carolina. She was
employed by the Summerall


family and .taught children
from other families in the
'Summerall home. In addition
to the reading, writing and
arithmetic offered, Miss Moore
also -taught music. Few
churches existed in the early
days of Providence, but circuit..
riding preachers served New
Zion, Ft. Call and Old
Providence churches near


ieir-daughter, Lillian, -at
doctors gave. her less ,



Providence Village. The&
village had drug stores,
blacksmith shops, carpenters
and general mercantile stores =
which did a good business-
with people who traveled fqr'
.miles over rough roads from-
Lake Butler, High Springs and
Lake City in the days before_
those towns had outgrown
Providence. -


There are no secrets to success. It is the result of
preparation, hard work and learning from failure.
-Colin Powell

Love is a fire. But whether it is going to warm your heart or
burn down your house, you can never tell.
-Joan Crawford

I am neither especially clever nor especially gifted. I an),
only very, very curious.
-Albert Einstein


Lillian Hoover, left, and Spencer Hoover,
were born premature. The small pink and
hats, knitted by the babies' grandmother,
about as big as a three-inch cell phone.


-1 -


. .1- i












Featu res and port
Section C: Thursday, January 12, 2006 Telegraph Times Monitor



UC's Spiller doesn't get many touches in Army Bowl

Senior running back The drive stalled when again until the last series of the gained 4 yards on the first Ohio, had 13 carries for 67 received a U.S. Army scholar-
Senior running back Tebow was sacked for a 5-yard game. He first recovered an carry, but was dropped for a 7- yards and three touchdowns, athlete award for maintaining a
does, however, earn loss at the 45 on a third-down onside kick-attempt by the yard loss on the second. earning the game's MVP GPA of at least 3.5. He was
recognition for his play. West team, then lh-ad- two-- --Wells.. an Ohio State honors., one of 26 players to receive the
wore gnition the r is Spiller did not carry the ball consecutive carries. Spiller commitment fFit-Aeror,-- .. Spiler. prior to the game, award.
work in the
classroom

SBY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer
It was a chance, to showcase
his talents on a national stage,
but Union County senior
running back C.J. Spiller was
overshadowed by East
teammate Chris Wells in the
U.S. Army All-American
Bowl played Jan. 7 in San
Antonio, Texas.
Spiller did not get into the
annual all-star game, which
was won by the East 27-16, for
many offensive series, carrying 4 9i
the ball just five times for 13
yards. His first touch came in
the second quarter, on which
he was dropped for no gain.
However, Spiller did have
two carries for 15 yards on a
potential scoring drive late in
the second quarter that began
at the East team's 5-vard line.
Quarterback Tim Tebow, a I
University of Florida
commitment from Florida's
Nease High School, scrambled 1099 FORD RANGER SPORT 1999 FORD WINDSTAR IX 1998 FORDEPLRER SPORT 1998 CHEVY S-10
for a 17-yard gain and a first .7 TK#1326 STK#12959 STK#13223
down at the East 44. Spiller i
then had a 9-yard carry to the l ..
West 47, followed b, a 7-Iard,. .:.'.., .:'.- t' '



Starke Rec.
Dept. summer 6990 '" ,490 7990 s6900
program -- -
starts May 30
The Starke Recreation
Department's summer program
will begin May 3o and a 1997 CHEVY S-10 X-CAB 1998 CHRYSER T &COUNTRY 1999 MERCURY VILLAGER 1998 FORD EXPLORER
through July 28. STK# 13238 1#13217 STK# 13270 STK#13300
-TThe --tnie-weekleprogram.
which costs $105, will include "
sports, games, moi les,
scavenger hunts and trips as
well as free lunches.
For more information. call
the Starke Recreationk
Department at (904) 964-6792.

Starke
Recreation
Department i
is registering 2000 CHEVY S-10 LS 19917 FORD F-150 XIT 2000 FORD WINDSTAR 1998 ISUZU RODEO LS
STK# 13294 STK#13385 STK#13301 STK#13264
The Starke Recreation -
Department is currentIl ...
registerifig players through
Friday, Feb. 17, for this 'ear's
baseball season.
Children will be placed in ....
one of four leagues- rookies
(ages 6-8), minors t9-101.._.
majors (11-12), Babe Ruth l I
(13-15) and Babe Ruth (16-
18). The determining date for
the child's age is Apri 30.


The cost of registration is 1999 CHEVY 5-10 K-CAB 0 lEVY SILERAD 2000 GMC IIMMY SLE 1999 MERCURY VILLAGER
$55 ($65 after Feb. 17), plus STK#13225 STK#.301 STK#13232 ESTA1TMODEL*STK#13269
there is a $1 fee if a child has
never played before to cover
the cost of a Babe Ruth birth v .
Also, if a child has never
played before, a birth
certificate must be shown at
the time of registration.
Children must live in any
area of the county but Lawtey,
Brooker or Hampton to play
with the Starke division, or .
they must attend a Starke
school. If a child played in
either Lawtey, Brooker or I
Hampton last year, he or she
same area this year. However,
once a child plays with the
Starke league, he or she must
., mu I inum t


stay in this area to play EERAIFlIES I I EP R
baseball unless he or sheI
moves. an.x....g...
Players will need tok
purchaseapairLof baseball
pants. Rubber cleats or tennis
shoes may be worn in the
rookie, minor and major
leagues. It is suggested that
Babe Ruth players wear rubber
or metal.cleats.
For more information, call
the Starke Recreation
Department at (904) 964-6792.

Love is an exploding cigar
we willingly/smoke.
-Lynda Barry









Page 2C TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


Helping people is what it's a


about in EMS


Paramedics, EMTs
overcome many
stresses to get the
job done

BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer
"Why do I do it?"
It's a question paramedics
and emergency medical
technicians sometimes ask
themselves.
EMT Ryan Lowery said the
question pops into his mind
during certain calls, such as
going to one of the prisons at 3
a.m. and having to transport an
inmate to a hospital in
Jacksonville.
For paramedic John Nichols,
it may occur when people are
screaming at him and seem
unappreciative of his efforts.
Paramedic Matt Maloney
asks himself the question when
he has to respond to a call that
turns out to not be a true
emergency.
,So why do they d6 it? Why
do they put up with the long


u Fri. 9-6
lay 9-3


hours of working under
stressful conditions with little
sleep and sometimes not even
getting the chance to eab6? It's
the desire to help people-to
make a difference in their lives
and to possibly save those
lives.
"That's why all of us got
into it in the very end,"
Nichols said.
And once you get into the
EMS field, it's hard to get out
of it, Maloney said. The job is
addictive, he said, a sentiment
shared by fellow paramedic
Bethany Hunsinger. She and
the rest of the crew that was
working at the station Jan. 9
joked that if they won the
lottery, they would leave EMS
that second. Hunsinger then
thought about that and
reconsidered.
"I don't know, most of us
are still addicted to that
adrenaline rush," she said.
"Even if we won the lottery,
we'd still work here-not the
hours that we're doing now,
but probably a shift a week."
Hunsinge'r, Lowery,


Maloney and Nichols are four
of 24 part-time and full-time
paramedics who work for
Bradford County's Emergency
Medical Services. As
paramedics and EMTs, they do
more than drive an ambulance.
Theirs is a specialized
profession that requires two
years of college as well as
continuous training to remain
licensed.
However, they are not
doctors and there is a limit to
what they can do, which is
difficult for some people to
comprehend.
"We're not doctors,"
Nichols said. "We have to tell
people that all the time. They
look at us when .we walk in the
door and they assume we
know everything."
For example, Nichols cannot
tell somebody if they're having
a heart attack or not. He has to
explain to them that for a
doctor to make such a
diagnosis, several tests have to
be conducted and even then


the diagnosis may be wro
"All we can tell them


Bradford
paramedic
Matt Malon
scrubs one
the EMS
trucks-a
typical cho
when there
some dowi
time at the
station. ,


UP TO


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DENMARK FURNITURE


STORE
Mon. &
Wed thr
Saturd


laStreet .

adison St.


N m-m


Paramedic
Kat Fluegel
performs a
supply check
in one of the
Bradford
Emergency
Medical
Services
vehicles.
Trucks are
checked
every
morning as
part of daily
routines.


)ng. look like you're having serious
is you signs and symptoms," Nichols
said. "We're going to treat
you like you're having a heart
.attack because, obviously,
that's what we're most
concerned about."
Said Maloney: "Our biggest
Benefit to the public is early'
recognition and identification
of a potential illness or injury.
It's all about getting an early.
recognition so we can get you.
to the appropriate facility."
Nelson Green, Bradford
ey County's EMS director, said
ofm what paramedics and EMTs
can and cannot do is a public
misconception.
ire "Some people view them as
is nothing more than ambulance
drivers, while others think we
n can do everything in. the world
for them," Green said. "We're
sort of in the middle of the
road."
Speaking of middle of the
road, Green said another
public misconception is that
the majority of calls EMS
responds to are traffic crashes.
That couldn't be further from
the truth.
The department responded
to mnore than 4,000 calls in
2005. Of those calls, 261 were


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traffic crashes. That number is
less than, responses- to medical
emergencies (illness,
respiratory distress, cardiac
arrest and injury) that year,
which totaled 2,391.
Green said that holds true
regardless of the time of year
and regardless of the amount
.of traffic that may be on the
roads.
"My friends say, 'Oh, I bet
you were busy this weekend
with all the traffic on the
road,'" Green said, referring to
New Year's weekend. "We
just don't respond to that many
motor vehicle accidents.
People see that more than
anything else, but that's not the
majority of our call load."
In fact, Nichols was
anticipating this past weekend
being busy-not because of
traffic but because of the
weather.
"This weekend's probably
going to have a lot of
respiratory calls because you
had warm temperatures and it
dropped really quickly to cold
temperatures," Nichols said on
Jan. 6. "That always seems to
trigger everybody's breathing
difficulties."
So medical emergencies are


$999


the typical calls paramedics
and EMTs respond 'to, but
that's the only thing typical,
about their shift. Some people
may go through the same grind
day in and day out at work, but
there is no such thing as a
typical day at EMS. It may be
busy one day, slow the next.
"It is feast or famine, it
seems like," Green said. "We
can go from nothing going on
to all the trucks out on
different calls within 10
minutes. There are days where
you run four or five calls
between all three trucks and
there's days where we'll run
28 or 29 calls between all thr e
trucks."
Maloney added: "Every day
is going to be different. You
never know what's going to be
,,thrown at you. That's one of
the things we like. You show
up and it could be a calm day
or could just be the most hectic
day of your entire life. You
never know."
Don't think there's nothing
going on during those times
when the call load is light.
There are chores to be done
around.the station to keep the
crew busy during "business
hours."
"One day, we might detail
the trucks, clean everything
out of the cabinets and wash
them down," Lowery said.
"Other days, we'll clean the
kitchen and clean out the bays
with water hoses.
"We try to do something
every day to make the station
better."
Even a light call load can
keep the crew busy away from
the station. Green said crews
can spend up to an hour or
more cleaning the trucks and
restocking medical supplies
after every call.
"It's got to be' done before
you go on another call," Green
said.
Plus, those .calls can take
longer for paramedics and
EMTs in Bradford County than
for those who work in larger
cities. That's because people in
Bradford County may have to
be transported to either
Gainesville or Jacksonville to
receive the proper medical
attention.
See EMS, p. 3C


Warriors travel
team holding
tryouts twice
this month
The Gainesville Warriors
fastpitch softball organziation
will be holding tryouts for the
spring/summer season on
Sunday, Jan. 15, and Sunday,
Jan. 29.
Both tryouts are at 2 p.m.
and at the Alachua Recreation
Center softball fields in
Alachua.
Age groups are 8U, 10U,
12U, 14U, 16U and 18U.
For more information,
please call coach Robert
Atwood at (352) 246-6905 or
(352) 377-0795.









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Jan. 12, 2006 TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MbNITOR-d-SECTION Page 3C


EMS
Continued from p. 2C

"Our average call load last
year was 12-14 calls a shift,"
Maloney said. "That doesn't


sound like a lot, but i
think about it, one call ca
up to two, two-and-
hours."
Those longer trans
however, give the Bra
paramedics and EMT
opportunity their large


John Nichols, a Bradford paramedic, sits at the
computer, performing work on a soon-to-be-
operational electronic reporting system.


f you counterparts don't ha'
in take' "We get to see hi
a-half them helped them wh
way rather than jus
ports, them to the hospital,
adford said.
rs an "It's kind of
g-city experience to work o
Nichols said.
When they are not
time with patients,
and stocking their
performing chores a
station, the paramc
EMTs are most likely
. get some sleep. Nic
S. anytime, and anywhe
* ~ his colleagues can tal
helpful because the
guarantee of sleep be
while working a shift.
"The pager can g
time of the day- c
Nichols said.
That fact alone pre
sleep from being
Lowery said. It's alw
back of his mind that
will go off at any time
Maloney said so
when he and paran
Fluegel go out on
will sleep in the ba
truck while she driv
versa.
If a nap won't do,
are beverages that can


A LOOK BACK AT AREA HISTORY


Fort Call was,
established to
protect settlers
(Information for this history._
was provided by Marjorie
Driggeis of Lake Butler for the
110th anniversary edition of
the Telegraph.) Today, only a
cemetery remains of the fort
which once helped protect
early settlers of the Providence
area from Indian attack. Built
more than 150 years ago,
probably during the Seminole
Indian Wars (1835-37), Fort
Call was located about four
miles west of Providence. The
fort was named after General
Richard Keith Call, who was
commander of part of Florida's
Volunteer Militia when it
fought the Creek Indians "in
1813. General Call later
became Florida's first
governor and held that office
twice. According to Driggers,
who was long an accepted
historical authority oh 'Union
County, a number of the early
settlers were killed or injured
in fights with the Indians. The
fort housed military men who
could answer a call for help
and served as a deterrent to
make the native residents think
twice about attacking the
settlers. Driggers described the
fort as being surrounded by a
high board fence with a few
small huts inside where
families lived. In' the center
was a large shed to house the
,guards or soldiers and their -
equipment .and supplies.
Driggers said that when
trouble was spotted, farm bells
would ring and about 18
families from the surrounding
area would abandon their
homes and head for the fort to
wait out the danger.
After the fort was
constructed, a church was built
nearby. The structure was
completed under the eyes of
John C. Ley, a Methodist
circuit-riding preacher. About
1940 the church building was
moved to Worthington Springs


where it was remodeled and
used as the parsonage of the
Sardis Baptist Church for at
least 30 years. 'When the
church was moved, the
cemetery remained, of course,
and is now the only marker
that can be used to help
determine the location of this
early fortification. Its exact
location, however, is still
disputed by long-time
residents.. There is a federal'
document which says the fort
was located on Bluff Creek
between the cemetery and the
community of Dukes, but
many long-time residents
question the accuracy of that
document. Since most early
maps depended on springs,
creeks and rivers as markers,
the accurate location of any
site depends on whether or not
these features have remained
unchanged. Springs dry up or
get filled in over the years and
.several area waterways have
had their 'courses changed in
that time. ... :: --
' The general area is known to
have been settled in early years
because artifacts have been
found like the hammer of a
flintlock rifle, glassware
common to the period and half
dimes. Of course, there are
also legends of buried treasure
associated with the fort, as
there often, are with early
settlements that no longer
exist. Some of the older
citizens in the area claimed
that a search party set out in
1934 or 1935 to find this
buried treasure. They
supposedly had a map, n
"instrument" which located
gold 'under ground, and a
woman; who claimed to
possess the power to ward off
the evil spirits who were
supposed to inhabit the
immediate environs of the fort
site. Rumor had it that the
party found the treasure, but no
record or report exists to verify
this.
The cemetery at Fort Call is
one of the oldest graveyards in


the area well over 100 years
old but no records exist to
verify when the first burial was
held there. Graves were
marked with pine knots instead
of tombstones and these have
long since decayed. In later
times gravestones were used to
mark the final resting places
and these are marked with
names like Weeks, Brown,
Mizelle, Clyatt, Crawford,,
Doke and McNeal.
Fort Call was known in early
days for soil that contained
ideal components for brick
building. H.F. York, one of the
earliest settlers of the region,
had a brick making business in
the area in 1882. It folded after
two years when York died.


Some of the brick and pottery
from the Fort Call has been
displayed in museums. The
area was also known for
having some of the fertile
farmland in the region -
which was one of the more
important factors that
influenced early settlement in
the area. Fort Call was born, as
were hundreds of other forts
- during the period of early
settlement before 1850. Some
of these forts, like Ft.
Lauderdale and Ft. Meyers,
grew into large cities. Most,
like Fort Call and Fort Harllee,
passed into obscurity as people
no longer needed the security
of a fortification and began to
choose homesites using other
criteria.


Everyone has talent. What is rare is the courage to follow
that talent to the dark place where it leads.
-Erica Jong

... Hope is the companion of power and the, mother of.
success. For those of us Who fiop sdtonggt hoe within "'i
us the gift of miracles.
-Sydney Bremer


40~


\\ %~4*
' .


"' \






/ 9
/;^


.*5
S


" 5.- '



", I-
-'5^


ve. "You see all the caffeine we
ow we've keep at the station, readily
while on the available," Hunsinger said,
st getting, pointing to the many two-liter
," Lowery bottles of soft drinks stocked
in the station's kitchen.
a unique Maloney, cradling one of the
out here," bottles, said, "This is my
friend."
spending The paramedics and EMTs
cleaning do have friends beside their
trucks or favorite caffeinated soft
round the drinks-each other. They.have
edics and a bond because their
y trying to experiences are something that
.hols said family members and other
re, he and people can 'never relate to
ke a nap is unless they, too, work in
ere is no emergency medicine.
beyond that Plus, paramedics and EMTs
often find themselves spending
o off any more time with each other than
>r night," they do with family.
"I probably spend, three
events any times as much time with my
relaxing, partner as I do with my
rays in the husband," Hunsinger said. "I
t the pager see my husband one day a
e. week. I see my partner two to
sometimes three times a week for 24
nedic Kat hours straight."
a call, he Lowery said, "If you break
ick of the out the days I work in a month,
es or vice I'm here more than I am at my
own house. You get to know
then there these guys. They are like. a
n help. family to you."


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LENDER .. .. : I


Ryan Lowery, a part-time EMT at Bradford EMS who
also works full time in Union County, inspects the
expiration date on the station's drug supply.


l








Page 4C TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


_ UC girls defeat Baker for 11th win


between two Santa Fe players as she battles for a
rebound.
Ig d f.at
BHS girls defeat

Rai- r in h-atl


I,,


of d district's best
BY CLIFF SMELLEY game with nine points, nailed
Telegraph Staff Writer one after the Raiders had
ppulled to within four points
Khalaa Hill scored a team- with 3:16 remaining. .
high 16 points as the Bradford Santa Fe had its chances late
girls basketball team grabbed as the Tornadoes turned the
sole possession of first place in ball over and took shots when
District 3-Class 4A, defeating they didn't need to. The
visiting Santa Fe 46-42 on Jan., Raiders, however, made only
5. two field goals in the final five
Bradford got key 3-point minutes and went 1-of-6 from
baskets from Tosha Newman the foul line during that
and Jerica Warren in the fourth stretch.
quarter-to hold off the: Raiders Hill got the Tornadoes off to
and improve to 6-0 in district a quick start, scoring the first
play and 10-0 overall. two baskets of the game, but
N a tg w -inte je Raiders P2-al
earn m'he quatnished the HS
War rran.-tha, finished thee; c,-;" -,.. HS sc


BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer
Tiffany Holmes led four
players in double figures with
21 points as the Union County
girls basketball team defeated
visiting Baker County 60-52
on Jan. 9. -
Union (11-4 prior to Jan 10))
trailed 39-37 heading into the
fourth quarter, but then
outscored the Wildcats 23-13.
Amika Davis added I 1
points for the Tigers. who hale
won four of their last five
games. Amber Franzluebbers
and Miranda Kent each had 10
points.
Holmes led the team in
rebounding with 16. while
Vanessa Clemons had a team-
high five assists.
The Tigers played district
opponent Interlachen Jan. 10
and will travel to play district
opponent Keystone Heights
Thursday, Jan. 12. Union then
travels to pla Fort White
Tuesday, Jan. 17.
Both games are scheduled
for 7 p.m., following junior-
varsity gaines at 5:30 p.m.
Score by Quarter
BCHS: 19 5 15 '13-52
UCHS: 10 11 16 232,-60
Union Scoring (60): Bryant 2,
Clemons 6, Davis 11,
Franzluebbers 10, Holmes 21,
Kent 10. 3-pointers: Kent.
Free throws: 11-20.
Earlier results:

UC 57 Taylor 19
Despite having to shake off


girls no match,

5A Eastside


BY CLIFF SMELLEY

Keystone Heights was going
for its fourth straight win, but a
16-1, Class 5A Eastside squad
proved to be too much for the
Indians to overcome in a 74-37
loss in a girls basketball
matchup on Jan. 9 in
SGainesville.
The Indians (12-6) were
outscored by eight points in
the opening quarter, but the
'host Rams really put the game
away in the third quarter,


UC to host
iv basketball
tournament
this Monday
Union County's junior
varsity girls basketball
program will be hosting a
Martin Luther King Jr. holiday


outscoring-Keystone 30-4.
....Jessica Whitfield led the
Indians with 15 points, while
Kim Russell had eight.
Keystone hosts district
opponent Union County
Thursday, Jan. 12, at 7:30
p.m., following a junior varsity
game at 6 p.m. The Indians
Then host Bradford Friday, Jan.
13, at 6 p.m. before traveling
to take on district opponent
Crescent City Tuesdiy, Jan.
17, at 6 p.m.
See KH4HS, p. 6C

tournament on Monday, Jan.
16.
The Tigers will be hosting
the first game of the day,
taking on Branford at 10:30
a.m. That will be followed by
Keystone Heights against St.
Francis at 11:30 a.m.
The losers of the two games
will play each other at 1:30
p.m., while the winners will
play-at 2:30 p.m.


some rust, the Tigers had no
problem handling district
opponent Pierson Taylor,
defeating' the visiting Wildcats
57-19 on Jan. 6.
It was the first game for. the
Tigers in three weeks and head
coach Perry' Davis said the
offense took a little while to
get going.
The defense, however, held
Taylor to two points in the first
quarter and none in the fourth.
Union also had 37 steals,
with Franzluebbers and Amika
Davis each having eight.
Franzluebbers led all scorers
with 20 points, while Davis
and-Holmes added 16 and nine
points, respectively.
The win improved the
Tigers' record in District 6-
Class 3A to 4-1.
Score by Quarter
THS: 2 7 10 0-19
UCHS: 18 16 19 4-57
,Uion Scoring (57): Bryant 3,
Davis 16, Franzluebbers 20,
- Giebeig 2, Holmes 9, Kent 7. 3-
pointers: Davis.

Hilliard 55 UC 53
The Tigers suffered through
turnovers and a horrible
shooting night in a 55-53
overtime loss to host Hilliard
on Jan. 7.
Holmes had a double-double
to lead the Tigers, scoring 15
points and grabbing 17
rebounds. She' also had four
blocks.
Franzluebbers added 10
points, while Davis had six
steals and Clemons had seven


assists.


Score by Quarter
UCHS: 11 18 9
HHS: 10 9 19


Union Scoring (53): Bryant 8,
Clemons 6, Davis 7,
Franzluebbers 10, Holmes 15,
7-53 Kent 7. 3-pointers: Clemons,
9-55 Kent 2.


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I Jan.'12, 3oo TLjqdRAPH,I;TIMES & rtlITOR..;-q-EC..TlQN 1, C


6 area players

chosen for Florida

Shrine Bowl


Proceeds from the
game will support
Shriners Hospitals in
effort to provide
free medical care
BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer
Bradford. Keyvstone Heights
and Union County will each
ha\e. two representatives in the
17th annual Florida Shrine
Bowl, which will be played at
2:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan.9 21, at'
Orange Park High School.
This is the third straight year
at least six players from the'
three schools have been chosen
for the all-star game. Six were
selected following the 2003
season and 12 were-chosen for
the 2005 game.
Four of this year's six
players selected for the South
team will line up on the
defensive side of the ball:
.Bradford linebacker Shauntell
Carter, Keystone lineman Lans
Hardin, Keystone defensive
back Michael Williams and
Union County linebacker
Brendan Odom.
Union County tight end
Kasey Nobles will join
Bradford running back James
Jamison ofi, the offensive side
of the ball.
Jamison, if history is ainy
indicator, could be in for a big
game. Three former Bradford
running backs have won team.
MVP awards in previous
years: DeWhitt Betterson,
Demetrice Hankerson and
Milton Sumpter, who. captured
the award in last year's game.
Union County head coach
Buddy Nobles will be a
member of the South team
coaching staff. Nobles also
coached in last year's game.
Tickets are $7.50 for adults
and $3 for children under 12,
and are tax deductible as' a
charitable donation.
Tickets can be obtained by
calling (904) 642-5200 (ext.'
12).


ENROLLfl




The key to your


Net proceeds from this game
will help support the network
of 22 Shriners Hospitals for
Children, all of which provide
free medical care to crippled
and burned children
Two such children will
preside over this ear's game
as Queen and King.
Nine-year-old Katelynn
Childress was born with
clubbed feet and had her first
surgery when she %was just 8
months old at the Shriners
Hospitals facility in Tampa.
:She underwent a second
procedure six weeks later and:
spent more than a year in a
cast.
Today, the A-B honor roll
student ,at- Wilkinso'n
Elementary School in
Middleburg has no trouble
participating in a favorite
activity-jumping on her
trampoline.
"You would never know
Katelynn as born with- club.
feet unless you were told,"
Theresa'Childress, Katelynn's
mother, said. "I can't say
enough great things about the
Shriners. They helped my
daughter live'a normal life."
This year's Florida Shrine
Bowl king *is Phillip
Wetheringtofi, who is also 9.
Phillip, one of two surviving
triplets, weighed just 1 pound,
10 ounces at birth. He stayed
in the neonatal intensive care
unit for more than three
months.
Phillip has cerebral palsy
and is a regular patient at
Shriners Hospitals in Tampa.
Doctors there have provided
him with night braces to
control his leg spasms and
hand splints to train him not to
tuck his thumb under his palm.
Still, Phillip, who is tops in,
reading in his fifth-grade class
at Biscayne Elementary
School, enjoys many activities.
He loves watching football and
is looking forward to meeting
the players in this year's
Shrine Bowl..


ls- -,

Te unity and of the court
The Bradford Middle School boys and girls basketball players all have matching team shirts (as shown in the
accompanying photos), thahks to the generous donation made by parents Dewayne and Latanya McBride. Players
were also treated by all the parents to a potluck dinner recently. The girls basketball team is comprised of: (front
row) Tripia O'Quinn, Shantavia Jackson, Kanetra Jenkins,.Shantejl Guion, Coyia Chandler, leashel Chandler, (back
row) coach Annie Williams, Ashley Johnson, Alagria Chandler, Quinessa Portis and India Williams. The boys
team, wliich is currently 7-2 arid i first place in its division of the Suwannee Middle Athletic Conference, is
comprisedof; (front ;
row, from left) Carlton
Covington, Juwan
Jamison, Rodney
* Mosley, James
Ramsuer, Darrin Blye,
(second row) Isaiah .... '' -
Jenkins, Terrence. .
Davis, Tramaine ,
Harris, James '*
McBride, (third row)
Shanon Kiser, Reggie *. .. .
Thomas, Dohelle .
Williams, Marcus
Ardley, (fourth row)
Bobby McGee, Chris
Walton, John Clark, .
Sean Andrews, (back '
row) Nevin Johns, : .
Caleb Crews and
David Shealy.


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from activity of the mind
and exercise of the body;
the two are ever united.
-Karl Wilhelm von
Humboldt


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41.







Page 6C TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


UC boys pull

out last-

minute win

over BHS
BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer
Ted Young had three big
plays in the last minute of the
game to help the Union
County boys basketball team
defeat Bradford 50-46 on Jan.
7 in $tarke.
"The score was tied at 46-all
when Young misfired on a
shot attempt. However, he
rebounded the errant shot, then
put up another jumper that
swished through to give the
Tigers a two-point lead.
Young then came up with a
steal. That led to teammate
Justin Griffin getting fouled.
Griffin went to the line and
sank both free throws for the
final margin.
It was the third straight win
for the Tigers (8-5 prior to Jan.
11), but they had to rally to get
it.
Bradford, paced by 13 points
from Clinton Cubbedge, held a
32-25 lead, but the Tornadoes
could not find the basket in the
second. half, making just two
field goals. Bradford missed
19 attempts and rebounded
only seven of those misses.
The Tornadoes also had
trouble holding, onto the ball,
committing 11 turnovers.
One of those turnovers came
midway through the third
quarter on a steal by Young,
who then hit a short jumper
and drew a foul. Young's
basket pulled the Tigers within
33-31.
Young missed .the ensuing
free throw, but teammate
Brendan Odom grabbed the
miss and scored to tie the
game.
Two free throws by Griffin
gave Union its first lead of the
game at 35-34.
Bradford finally converted
on a field goal attempt (its only
one of the quarter) when
Jimmy Hankerson scored on a
rebound putback. That tied the
game with 25 seconds left in
the quarter, but Union's' Chris
Perry drove down the middle
of the lane and scored on a
layup to send the Tigers into
the final quarter up 40-38. .
Despite their shooting woes,
the Tornadoes were very much
in the game because the Tigers
weren't shooting a whole lot
better. Union made just two
field goals in the.fourth quarter
and the Tigers eventually
relinquished their lead. when
Bradford's Eugene Blye made
two free throws, putting the
Tornadoes up 45-44.
Rodencia Austin made a
basket with 2:10 to play to put
the Tigers up by one. The
Tornadoes' Roderick DeSue
made a free throw to tie the
game again before Young's
rebound score at the end of the
quarter.
Odom, who scored 14 points
in the first half, led the Tigers
with 19 points, while Young
finished with 10.,
Cubbedge, who was held
scoreless in the second half,


led Bradford with 13 points.
BIe had nine points.
4 Odom and Bradford's
.Marcus Wilson each helped
their team's cause by being a
force on the boards, especially
in the second half with all of
the two teams' missed shots.
Odom'had six rebounds 'n the
second half and Wilson had
eight..
.Union played Eastside Jan.
11 and will travel to play
district opponent Interlachen
Thursday, Jan. 12. The Tigers
then host district opponent
Crescent City Saturday, Jan.
14, and .Hawthorne
Wednesday, Jan. 18.
All games are scheduled for
7:30 p.m. following junior
varsity games at 6 p.m.
Bradford, which fell to 2-10,
played district opponent Santa
Fe Jan. 10 and will.travel to
play Newberry Thursday, Jan.
12. The Tornadoes host
Keystone Heights Friday, Jan.
13, then travel to Orange Park
to play district opponent
Ridgeview Tuesday, Jan. 17.
Bradford's games are also
scheduled for 7:30 p.m.
following junior varsity games
at 6 p.m.
$core by Quarter
UCHS: 14 11 15 10-50
BHS: 18 14 6 8-46
Scoririg '
Union (50): Austin 6, Griffin 4,
Kasey Nobles 2,- Qdom 19,
Willie Oliver 6, Perry 3, Young
10. 3-pointers: Young 2. Free
throws: 12-30.
Bradford (46): E. Blye 9, Josh
Blye 2, Cubbedge 13, DeSue
2, Hankerson 8, J.R. Petteway
3, Kyle Wilson 2, M. Wilson 7.
3-pointers: Cubbedge 3. Free
throws: 13-24.


district play

Union defeats Taylor
to remain unbeaten
in district, while
Bradford still seeks
district win after
Suwannee loss "^

BY CLIFF SMELLEY

Telegraph Staff Writer
Ted Young scored 25 points
to lead the Union County boys
basketball team to an 83-44
win 'over district opponent
Pierson Taylor on Jan. 6 in
Lake Butler.
Young was one of three
players to score, in double
figures as the Tigers improved
their record in District 6-Class
3A to 3-0. Justin Griffin and
Chris Perry each scored 14
points.
Brendan Odom added nine
points for Union, which
outscored Taylor 25-11 in the
second quarter to take a 40-22
lead.
The Tigers held the visiting
Wildcats to just one point in


the final quarter.
Score'by Quarter
THS: 11 11 21 1-44
UCHS: 15 25 22 21-83
Union Scoring (83): Austin 4,
Griffin 14, Jackson 6, Mitchell
3, Nobles 2, Odom 9, Oliver 6,
Perry 14, Young 25. 3 -
pointers: Jackson, Mitchell,
Young 2. Free throws: 13-27.

BHS falls by 5 in
overtime to Bulldogs
Bradford had a chance to
break a six-game losing streak
and earn its first win in district
play, but the Tornadoes could
not get it done in overtime,
losing 63-58 to Suwannee on
Jan. 6 in Live Oak.
The Tornadoes, who were
coming off of a 70-63 loss to
Interlachen on Jan. 3, found,
themselves trailing by 10
points after the first quarter,
but then outscored the
Bulldogs 14-4 in the second
quarter to tie the game at 25-all
heading into halftime.
Bradford outscored
Suwannee by one point in the
fourth quarter to send the game
into overtime before being
outscored 9-4 in the extra
period.
The loss put the Tornadoes
record in District 3-Class 4A at
0-4.
Marcus Wilson led the
Tornadoes with 1IS points,
while Clinton Cubbedze and
Kyle Wilson had .16 and 11
points.
Bradford Scoring (58) ; E.
Blye 4, J. Blye 2, Cubbedge'
16, DeSue. 5, Hankerson 2, K.
Wilson 11, Marcus Wilson 18.
3-pointers: DeSue, Cubbedge
2, K. Wilson 3. Free throws: 0-
2. "


BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer
The Keystone Heights boys
basketball team dropped to 2-4
in District 6-Class 3A, losing
71-40 to host Interlachen on
Jan. 6.
Keystone was outscored 23-
4 by.,,the gams, who. were
prFevi41sly iranked.in the top
10,"'i the 'first quarter. By
halftime, Interlachen had put
46 points on the board and led
the Indians by 27 points.
It ,was the second straight
loss for Keystone (5-9), which
was coming off of two straight
wins in a tournament at Father
Lopez High School in Daytona
Beach..
Chad Evans led the Indians
with 11 points.
Keystone will travel to
Starke to play Bradford Friday,
Jan. 13, at 7 p.m., following a
junior varsity game at 5:30
p.m. On Tuesday, Jan. 17. the
Indians travel to play district
opponent Crescent City at 7
p.m.
Score by Quarter
KHHS: 4 15 6 15-40
IHS: 23 23 17 8-71


Page 6C TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


Keystone Scoring (40):
Bannon 2, BrtLnink 5, Dow 3,
Evans 11, Fogg 6, Ruiz 3,
Snowberger 5, Taylor 5. 3-
pointers: Ruiz, Taylor, Fogg 2,
Evans 3. Free throws: 3-10.

Earlier result:

Oak- Hall 57 KH 37
Keystone could not build
upon its fifth-place finisfi, at
the Father Lopez 'tournament,
returning from Gainesville
with a 57-37 loss to Oak Hall
on Jan. 5.
Greg Taylor was the only
player to reach double figures
(11) in scoring.
Score by Quarter
KHHS: 5 9 6 16-37
OH: 10 11 13 23-57
Keystone Scoring (37):
Bannon 7, Dow 4, Ruiz 2,
Rund 6, Taylor 11, Yarbrough
7. 3-pointers: Rund 2,
Yarbrough 2. Free throws: 7-
10.



KHHS
Continued from p. 4C'

Score by Quarter
KHHS: 14- 11 4 8-37
EHS: 22 12 30 10-74
Keystone Scoring (37):
Knabb 2, Reddish 6, Russell 8,
Spaulding 6, Whitfield 15. Free
throws: 11-17.

Earlier results:

KH 43 Oak Hall 42
Whitfield and' Kellie
Spaulding each scored 1.6
points as the Indians rallied in
the fourth quarter to defeat
Oak Hall 43-42 on. Jan. 5 in
Gainesville.
The Indians outscored the
host Eagles 15-4 in the fourth
quarter in picking up the win
in their first outing of the new


year.
Score by Quarter
KHHS: 7 11 10
OH: 14 11 13
Keystone Scoring
3, Reddish 4, F
Spaulding 16, Wh
Free throws: 11-25.

KH 58 Rams
Keystone r
undefeated in dis
defeating the
Interlachen Rams
Jan. 6.
Russell scored 1
the Indians, who


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Rams to 10 points in the first
half. Spaulding and Karlyn
Reddish scored 14 and 11
15-43 points, respectively.
3 4-42 The win improved the
Indians to 6-0 in District 6-
(43): Gray Class 3A.
Russell 4,
hitfield 16. "
Score by Quarter
IHS: 8 2 4 12-26-
26 KHHS: 23 10 '23 2-58
remained
trict play, Keystone Scoring (58): Gray
visiting 2, Knabb 4, Passwater 2,
58-26 on Poupard 2, Reddish 11,
Russell 16, Spaulding 14,
8 points for Whitfield 7. Free throws: 11-
held the 25.


k











Jan. 12, 2006 TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Page 7C


KHHS girls

lifters are 6-0

BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer

It was close, but the
Keystone Heights girls
weightlifting team still came
out on top in a three-team meet
on Jan. 6, keeping its perfect
record intact.
The Indians, who have yet to
lose a match in the program's
eight-plus years of existence,
scored 45 points to edge out
Gainesville, while Belleview
had 22 points.
Six Keystone lifters won
their classes, while two others
finished as runners-up.
First-place finishers were:
Kelly Michalos (129-pound
class) 120-pound bench press,
120-pound clean and jerk, 240-
pound total; Jessica Ford (139)
105-125-230; Brenda Ward
(154) 145-145-290; Lauren
Stobbie (169) 160-145-305;
Rachel Lingerfelt (183) 185-
150-335; Danielle Hengl (199)
125-140-265.
The two runners-up were
Julie Myers (199) with a bench
press of 125 pounds and a
clean and erk of 120 pounds
for a 245-pound total and
Octavia C'openhaver
(unlimited) with a.bench press
of 155 pounds and a clean and
jerk of 110 pound for a 265-


pound lotal.
'_i, Keystone also had th-ree
lifters earn third-place finishes:-
Amanda Wood (101) 80-85-
165, Paige Cole (154) 120-
120-240 and Lasey Mitchell
(183) 1157115-230.
Keystone, which is currently
6-0, opened the season with a
69-21 win'over Clay on Dec.
7.
The following lifters won
their classes: Wood 85-85-170,
Courtney Pace (119) 90-95-
185, Michalos 125-120-245,
Ford 105-115-220, Ward 155-
145-300, Stobbie 170-155-325,
Lingerfelt 185-130-315, Hengl
135-125-260 and Copenhaver
145-105-250.
Earning runner-up finishes
were: Ashley Poplin (110)
105-85-190, Lindsey Harp
(139) 105-85-190, Cole 130-
125-255, Beth Frampton (169)
120-105-225, Mitchell 110-
110-220, Myers 135-120-255
and Danielle Leopold
(unlimited) 115-105-220.
Amanda Paredes earned
third place in the I10-pound
class with a bench press of 95
pounds and a clean and jerk of
60 pounds for ,a 155-pound
total. Becca Rembert, in the
119-pound class, also earned
third place with a bench press
of 95 pounds and a clean and
jerk of 90 pounds for a 185-
pound total.
Keystone again won every
class but one in its second


meet of the season, a 64-19
win over Palatka on Dec. 12. -
Winning their classes 'were:
Wood 85-85-170, Poplin 105-
90-195, Pace 95-95-190,
Michalos 120-125-245, Ford
105-120-225, Ward 160-150-
310, Stobbie 175-155-330,
Lingerfelt 185-135-320 and
Hengl 135-130-265.
Six lifters placed second in
their classes: Rembert 95-95-
190, Cole 130-125-255,
Frampton 125-105-230,
Mitchell 115-110-225, Myers
135-120-255 and Copenhaver
150-110-260.
Placing third were Paredes
95-65-160 and Hanna Johns
(129) 90-70-160.
The Indians had 11 lifters
place either first or second in a
win over Bradford and
Ridgeview in a tri-meet on
Dec. 15.
Keystone scored 61 points,
while Bradford had 32 and
Ridgeview 12.
Keystone's winning lifters
were: Michalos 125-120-245,
Ward 160-135-295, Stobbie
175-155-330, Lingerfelt 185-
140-325, Hengl 135-140-275
and Copenhaver 155-115-270.
Second-place lifters were:
Poplin 95-85-180, Pace 90-95-
185, Ford 105-120-225,
Frampton 120-110-230 and


Myers 135-125-260.
,_Five lifters finished in third
place:- Sara-Griffn (- 1 1). -65.-._
60-125, Tabitha Call (110) 60-
50-110, Rembert 105-80-185,
Cole 130-135-265 and
Leopold 115-110-225.
Keystone will host a sub-
sectional meet-the first step
toward qualifying for the state
finals-this Saturday, Jan. 14,
which will begin at
approximately 11 a.m. The top
three lifters in each class at this
meet will move on to the
sectional meet Saturday, Jan.
27, which Keystone will also
host.
The Indians host Union
County in a meet on
Wednesday, Jan. 18, at 3:45
p.m.



BHS lifters

earn 4 wins

in last outing

BY CLIFF SMELLEY
Telegraph Staff Writer

Four Bradford girls
weightlifters won their classes
in a three-team meet on Jan. 4
in Alachua.


Cassie Padget 1l 10-pound
class), Cortnee Patterson
_l119 ._Kell 11Leigh ,129) and
Jachael Nichols (15-4);i placed-
first for Bradford, which
finished third as a team with
29 points. Buchholz won the
meet with 40 points, while
Santa Fe had 33 points.
Padgett had a bench press of
110 pounds -and a clean and
jerk of 120 pounds for a 230-
pound total. Patterson also had
a 230-pound total with a bench
press of 120 pounds and a
clean and jerk of 110 pounds.
Leigh compiled a 285-pound
total with a bench press of 140
pounds and a clean and jerk of
145 pounds. Nichols had a
bench press of 125 pounds and
a clean and jerk of 140 pounds
for a 265-pound total.
Two Bradford lifters earned
second place: Reba Bennett
(129) 115-pound bench press,
105-pound clean and jerk, 220-
pound total; Julie Detlefsen
(169) 105-120-225.
Placing third were:
Samantha Schmidt (101) 70-
-.85-155, Sintoria Brown (139)
-"90-95-185 and Vanessa
Dayton (unlimited) 100-105-
205.
Bradford (3-3) opened the
season by. defeating both Clay
and Ridgeview in a meet on


Dec. 5 in Orange Park. The
Tornadoes then placed second
in a meet with Keystone
Heights and Ridgeview on
Dec. 15 in Keystone.
The Tornadoes had six
lifters place first or second to
compile 32 points. That put the
Tornadoes ahead of
Ridgeview, which had 12
points, but behind host
Keystone, which had 61
points.
Winning their classes were:
Schmidt 70-85-155, Padgett
110-115-225, Patterson 125-
115-240 and Leigh ,135-140-
275.
Placing second for Bradford:
Bennett 105-105-210 and
Nichols 125-140-265.
Bradford will compete at a
sub-sectional meet-the first
step toward qualifying for the
state finals-this Saturday,
Jan. 14, in Keystone,
beginning at approximately 11
a.m. The top three lifters in
.each class at this meet will
move on to the sectional meet
Saturday, Jan. 27, which
Keystone will also host.


Cherish all your happy
moments: they make a fine
cushion for old age.
-Christopher Morley


'98 MERCURY GRAND MillS


Khalaa Hill
puts up a
shot in the
lane for
Bradford in a
win over
Santa Fe. Hill
scored a
team-high 16
points.


BHS
Continued from p. 4(


.lead into the-second qiartert'
Bradford's Tosha Griffin,
following a rebound by
teammate Kita Goodman,
promptly pulled the Tornadoes
within one with a 3-point
basket to start the second
quarter.
A steal by Hill later in the
quarter sparked an 11-1 run
that sent the Tornadoes into
the half up 22-15. Hill scored.
four points-both off of
offensive rebounds-and
grabbed a total of five
rebounds during the run.
Griffin added another 3-
pointer, while the Tornadoes


also got baskets from
Goodman and Destiny Bass.
Goodman was also
instrumental in the run with
Shr ftfdhse,,'oming up with",,
-fGut.'.iaM t11n9deb r L'hfr".V w :
* 'baskl.
Hill scored three straight
baskets for Bradford in the
third quarter as the Tornadoes,
who forced eight turnovers in
the quarter, held onto their
lead.

Score by Quarter
SFHS: 12 3 10 17-42
BHS: 8 14 .10 14-46

Bradford Scoring (46): Bass
3, Goodman 4, Griffin 8, Hill
16, Newman 6, Warren 9. 3-
pointers: Warren, Griffin 2,
Newman 2. Free throws:. 1-3.


Classified Ads where one call does it all!


40 Notices
EQUAL HOUSING OP-
PORTUNITY. All real
estate advertising in this



EXTRA
CASH!


Could you use
s6me now that the
holidays are over?
We specialize in
helping people sell
through our
Classifieds!

*YARD SALES AUTOS
*BOATS* CLOTHES
*APPUANCES-
The list goes on.

Call Virginia Today
904-964-6305


READERS

BEWARE
You need to
investigate any
work at home and
Financial offers. Be
careful and
investigate all
offers before
sending your hard
earned dollars to
these companies.
The Telegraph
screens these Ads
but cannot always
catch them all. If
you have any
questions, call 904-
964-6305.


newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Housing
Act of 1968 which makes
It illegal to advertise "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
or national origin, or an
intention to make any
such preference, limita-
tion or discrimination."
Familial status includes
children under the age of
18 living with parents or
legal custodians, preg-
nant women and people
securing custody of chil-
dren under 18. This
newspaper will not know-
ingly accept any adver-
tising for real estate
which is In violation of the


law. Our readers are
hereby informed that all
dwellings advertised in
this newspaper are avail-
able on an equal oppor-
tunity basis. To complain
of discrimination, call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-
669-9777, the toll-free
telephone number for the
hearing impaired Is 1-
800-927-9275. For fur-
ther information call
Florida Commission on
Human Relations, Lisa
Sutherland 850-488-
7082 ext #1005.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS-
ING should be submitted
to the Starke office In
writing & paid in advance
unless credit has already


been established with
this office.A $3.00 SER-
VICE CHARGE will be
added to all billings to
cover postage & han-
dling. THE CLASSIFIED
STAFF CANNOT BE
HELD RESPONSIBLE
FOR MISTAKES IN
CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISING TAKEN
OVER THE PHONE.
Deadline Is Tuesday at
12 noon prior to that
Thursday's publication.
Minimum charge Is $8.00
for the first 20 words,
then 20 cents per word
thereafter.
41 Auctions
AUCTION EVERY Thurs-
day & Saturday night,. at


6551 NW CR'225,
Starke. Starts 7:00pm.
Will take new and used
items for consignment,
sold 1 piece at a time
ABMO 000 1542, AUMO
0001153.
42 Motor
Vehicles
WANTED: CARS AND
trucks, running or not.


Must be complete. $100
and up. Call 904-964-
5405, 904-263-8933 or
904-964-2432.
88 MAZDA EXT CAB
pickup, 5 spd, cold ac,
need possible head gas-
ket, but runs great,
$1755. Also 94 Chevy
Lumina Van, cold ac,
needs transmission


work $650. Call 904-964-
4111.
1994 CHEVY 1500 pick up,
177,000 miles, with tow-
ing package, runs good,
$2800. Call 352-514-
7348
1984 NISSAN KING CAB.
Pick up for restoration.
Need not be running.
Call 352-478-2595 eves,


Out of Area


Announcements
Is Stress Ruining Your
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by Ron L. Hubbard Call
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7.99 to Dianetics 3102
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FL 33607.
Books
FREE Publishing Guide.
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Building Materials
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Help Wanted
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Small dealership looking
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AMERICA'S DRIVING
ACADEMY
JACKSONVILLE'S
CDL SCHOOL
ANNOUNCES ITS
GRAND OPENING!
*Financing Available
Call For Details
(866)889-0210.
CYPRESS TRUCK
LINES, INC Driver
Designed Dispatch. FLA
ONLY/Flat Bed students
welcome. Home Every
WeekEnd Most Nights
(800)545-1351
www.cypresstruck.com.
Now Hiring for 2006
Postal Positions $17.50-
$59.00+/hr. F ul I
Benefits/Paid Training
and Vacations No
Experience Necessary
(800)584-1775
Reference # 5600.
Driver- NOW HIRING
QUALIFIED DRIVERS
for Central Florida Local
& National OTR
positions. Food grade
tanker, no hazmal. no
pumps, great benefits,
competitive pay & new
equipment. Need 2 years
experience. Call Bynum
Transport for your
opportunity today.
(800)741-7950.
Home For Sale
SEEKING A QUALITY
LOG HOME
MANUFACTURER?
Dealers Needed Original
Old Timer Log Homes
High Commissions,
Stability, Support, Value.
Contact Mr Henry


(800)467-3006
www.oldtimerloghomes.
com.
Legal Services
DIVORCE$275-
$350*COVERS children,
etc. Only one signature
required! *Excludes
govt. fees! Call
weekdays (800)462-
2000, ext.600. (8am-
7pm) Alta Divorce, LLC.
Established 1977.
ACCIDENT INJURED
All Personal Injury
*WRONGFUL DEATH
*AUTO
*MOTORCYCLE
*TRUCK
*PREMISE/PRODUCT
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*PEDESTRIAN A-A-A
Attorney Referral
Service (800)733-5342
24 Hours.
Miscellaneous
MEDICARE "D" DRUG
PLAN CONSULTANTS
Independent Physician
Managed. We WILL
SAVE YOU MONEY!
We Work For YOU, Not
Insurance Companies
CALL (888)325-PILL
WWW.MEDICAREDR
UGHELP.NET.
EARN DEGREE online
from home. *Medical,
*Business, *Paralegal,
*Computers. Job
Placement Assistance.
Computer & Financial
aid if qualify. (866)858-
2121
www.onlinetidewatertech
.com.
Real Estate
North Carolina Gated
Lakefront Community
1.5 acres plus, 90 miles
of shoreline. Never
before offered with 20%
pre-development
discounts 90%
financing. Call
(800)709-5253.
Coastal Southeast


leave message.
WANT A CAR, truck, or
van? Bad credit? No
money down. If you have
a job call Dean at 904-
284-9846.
97 FORD F150 green, 5
speed, AC, aluminum
..wheels, good condition.
$3000 OBO. Call 904-
964-7469.


MUSTANG DRAG CAR
Cindy Crawfords mus-
tang. Featured in Muscle
Mustang & Fast Ford
magazines. 1998 Mus-
tang convertible, SHM
Cobra engine, T-trim, C-
4, 659 HP. $25,000 will
consider partial trade.
Call 352-473-5256 or
352-473-9065.


Claissif leds


Georgia Large wooded
water access, marsh
view, lake front, and
golf oriented homesites
rom the mid $70's Live
6aks, pool, tennis, golf.
(877)266-7376.
www.cooperspoint.com
BEAUTIFUL NORTH
CAROLINA. WINTER
SEASON IS HERE!
MUST SEE THE
BEAUTIFUL
PEACEFUL
MOUNTAINS OF
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Investments. Cherokee
Mountain Realty
GMAC Real Estate,
Murphy
www.cherokeemountai
nrealty.com Call for
Free Brochure
(800)841-5868.
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CAROLINA AAH
COOL SUMMERS
MILD WINTERS
Affordable Homes &
Mountain Cabins Land
CALL FOR FREE
BROCHURE (877)837-
2288 EXIT REALTY
MOUNTA IN VIEW
PROPERTIES
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MOUNTAINS North
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is: Cool Mountain Air,
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PROPERTY SALES
(800)642-5333. Realty
Of Murphy 317
Peachtree St. Murphy,
N.C. 289 6.
www.realtyofmurphy.co
m.
NC MOUNTAINS-Log
cabin $89,900. Easy to
finish cabin on secluded
site. Million $$$ Views
Available on 1-7 acre
parcels $29.900-


$79,900. Free Info
Available!
( 828)256-1004.
ast Alabama Mountain
Property For Sale One
hour west of Atlanta in
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View 48 acres $144,000
14,400 down 1,087 per
month owner financed.
Call Glenn (850)545-
4928.
MOVE TO
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(866)292-5762.
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Bank & Gov't Repos
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(800)749-2750.
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%F% v ..I .. ... .


I I










Page 8C TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Ja. '12, 2006


Classified Ads


- where one call


does


it all!


2005 HONDA SHADOW
VT 750C. Shadow Areo
motorcycle, black/
chrome, windsheild,
saddlebags, 3800 miles.
Take over payments of
$166 per month. Call
904-964-5488 after 5pm
for more information.
1997 PLYMOUTH
BREEZE 124K, auto,'
new tires, battery &
starter, 25 to 30 mph.
$950 call 904-964-2722.
44 Boats and
ATV's
2002 STILLWATER Ca-
noe. 3 HP Mercury troll-
ing motor and trailer.
$1400 OBO. Call 352-
S473-9850.
15'6" GRIFFCRAFT with
50 HP Mercury' motor.
Very good condition.
$6000 OBO. Call 386-
431-1584.
'2001 19'BAYLINER cuddy
cabin, 3.0 Mecruiser w/
75 hrs. Full canvas top,
swim platform w/ladder.


Galvanized trailer. Excel-
lent cond. NADA avg. re-
tail $14,550. Asking
$12,000. Call 904-964-
3645 M-F after 5pm. All
day Sat/Sun.
47 Commercial
Property
FOR LEASE OR sale. Ideal
location 2 parcels! 2800
SQFT building with of-
fice, bam, mini storage,
5 acres, off of South 301.
Also 8 acres, partially
cleared. Both lots 3/10th
of a mile from new
Walmart. Call 904-964-
3827 for more informa-
tion.
COMMERCIAL/ RETAIL
space by Starke Post
Office for rent or lease.
For more information
Please call 904-964-
6305 and ask for John.
DOWNTOWN STARKE
professional offices for
rent. Conference room,
kitchen, utilities and
more provided. Call 904-
964-2616.
PROFESSIONAL OFFICE


space adjacent to the
courthouse, leasstart-
ing at $300 per month.
Two (2) offices available
sizes are 13'6" x 13'9"
and 12' x 13'6". Call 904-
964-4111.
INDUSTRIAL PARK office/
warehouse 3000sq ft,
750$ per month, call
904-964-9222.
48 Homes for
Sale
OWNER .FINANCING.
Brand new construct h',
site built home, 3BR/
2BA, large wooden 2/3
acre lot, Keystone
Heights area. $1995
down. Call 352-692-
4343. www.new
house411.com.
WE BUY JUNKY
HOUSES, nice ones too.
Can close in under 72
hours. 352-258-0865 or
webuyjunkyhouses.com.
INVESTOR SPECIAL! Vic-
torian home on B-2
(Business or Residential)
lot, 2 story, needs com-
plete renovation. Starke
home.Reduced to


$65,500! Call 904-964-
4111.
2BR/1 BA BLOCK home on
1 acre, tile floors, com-
pletely remodeled, down
VFW road, beautiful
land, cute home,
$127,000. Call 904-334-
2741 or 386-496-2403.
49 Mobile
Homes for Sale
3BR/2.5BA DWMH 1996
w/ 3 plus acres in Gra-
ham, (30 min to
Gainesville, 15 min to
Starke). Fenced with 2
gates, 2 pastures, bring





35247i -8 2
|fIK.


the kids and the pets.
Horses welcome. Well
kept, great starter home,
large back deck, all elec-
tric appliances included.
$85,000, call 352-625-
, 6926 or visit
vfoustl @wm
connect.com.'
1991 HOMES OF Merit,
DWMH, 28x60, 3BR/
2BA, vinyl siding, FP,
large covered back
porch, very good condi--
tion. $25,000 OBO. You
move. Call 904-964-
4020. 'r
KEYSTONE -HEIGHTS
3BR/2BA on wooded lot.
Walk in'closets, garden
tub, refrigerator, stove.
$44,900, call 352-468-
3221.
1996 DWMH Homes of
Merrit. 24 X 52, very
clean, must move.
$28,000 call 352-494-
0124.
BRAND NEW Jacobsen
5BR/3BA over
2000Sq.Ft.,18" Ceramic
Tile, finished drywall, 2 x
8, 2 x 6, 2 x 4 construc-
tion on all 16" centers.
Home only $76,900. Call
904-548-1480.
HILLIARD/ NEW Jacobsen
32 x 48:'3BR/2BA, set up'
on 2 acres with well, sep-
tic & power pole in-
cluded, $734 per month.
Call 904-548-1480.
8 BRAND NEW HOMES
just bought out Double J
Mobile Home dealership


on US 17 just south of
A1A. We are selling out
all existing inventory at
huge discounts! Call
904-548-1480 or come
by 850712 HWY 17 inr.
Yulee.
OWNER FINANCING
3BR/1.5BA SWMH with
-addition. Carport, new
AC, $51,900. Call Kathy
Weise at Trevor Waters
Reality inc. for more infor
352-214=-2988 or 352-,
473-7777.
50 For Rent
1 BR FURNISHED Apart-
ment on Bedford Lake,
very nice, discounts
available, no pets, fully
furnished. Call 352-473-
7769.
HOUSE FOR RENT, safe,
quiet neighborhood.
3BR, new carpet, hard
wood floors, large private
backyard. Starke. Refer-
ences, credit check, de-
posit required. $625, call
814-257-9825.
RENT-TO-OWN Brand
new construction, site
built home, 3BR/2BA,
large wooded 2/3 acre
lot, Keystone Heights
area. $1995 down. Call
352-692-4343.
www.newhouse411 .com.
WATERFRONT, BRAND
NEW, 3BR/2BA 2150 sq
ft, site built home, on 2/3
acre with paved roads,
$154,900. Call 352-692-
4343. Information avail-
able at w4vw.new
house411 .com.


904-904-8111


a j a IL-IRIf1t^1 t^I 1 B

* Commercial loans
* Construction/Perm loans with one-time closing
and guaranteed rate
* Up to 107% financing
on purchases a
refinances
with no PMI
requirements .
* Fixed-rate
censelldatlen loans
* Low refinance and
purchase mortgage
rates
* Low rates for
manufactured and
modular homes
* Christlan-owned a Jeremy Crawford,
locally operated Adam Chalker &
Keith Marshall


FURNISHED ROOMS
FOR RENT COM-
PLETE With CH/A, cable
provided, all utilities paid!
Central location. 10%
discount on first months
rent for senior citizens.
Rooms with private bath,
$105 $115. /wk. Room
without bath, $90. Laun-
dry facilities available.
Close to churches,
stores, downtown shop-
ping, theatre, and morel
See Manager at the
Magnolia .Hotel, across
from the Starke Post Of-
fice. 904-964-4303.
WE HAVE 2 OR 3 bedroom
MH, clean, close to
prison. Call 352-468-
1323.
SOUTHERN VILLAS OF
Starke Apts. Looking for
applicants. 1& 2 BR HC
& non HC apartments.
Central ac/heat, on site
laundry, playground, pri-
vate and quiet atmo-
sphere. Located on
SR16, 1001 Southern
Villas Drive, Starke, FI or
call 904-964-7295, TDD/
TTY 711. Equal Housing
Opportunity.
FOR RENT- 2 & 3BR
homes, newly renovated.
Deposit required. Call
386-496-3067,678-438-
6828 or 678-438-2865,.
for more information, tf
FOR RENT; 14x70, mobile
home, 2BR/2BA, A/C,
heat, $550 per month. A
security deposit plus first
and last months rent is


required. Call 904-964-
8431 or 352-745-1189.
NEWLY REMODELED Up-
stairs apartment in down-
town Starke. 2/BR, CH/
A. $450 month, 1st, last,
and security deposit.
Available beginning of
December, call Joan at
904-964-4303.
KEYSTONE HEIGHTS
2BR/1BA SWMH par-
tially furnished $410/mth
plus security and utilities.
Large 2BR/2BA SWMH,
CH/A, dishwasher. $460
per month plus security
and utilities. Lake
Geneva MH Park ON
SR 100. Under new own-
ership! Must have good
rental history. Call Rick
352-473-3569.
2BR/2BA FOR RENT,.CH/
A, $550 per month, good
condition, no pets, first &
last plus deposit, lease.
Call 904-964-4111.
1 BR FURNISHED Apart-
ment on Bedford Lake,
very nice, discounts
available, no pets, fully
furnished. Call 352-473-
7769.
SPACIOUS, HAMPTON
LAKE, 2BR/1BA apt.
Electric, cable, & trash
included. Handicap
ready. $1000 per month,
available Feb. 1st. Call
352-468-2060
3BR/2BA BRICK HOME
with 2 car garage, on cul
de sac, fine homes, quiet
subdivision. $1100 per
month, $1100 security
deposit. Available mid
Feb. Call 352-473-2947
or 904-626-0874 for
more information.
LAKE GENEVA 1BR apt.
$450 per month, with
$200 security deposit,
water & garbage in-
cluded. Call 352-478-
2697.
3BR/2BA, SWMH on 1
acre, quiet area, no pets.
$435 per month plus de-
posit Call 352-468-3221.
KEYSTONE HEIGHTS,
large 3BR/2BA DWMH,
CH/A, 1 porch, large
yard, $650 per month
plus security deposit.
Call 352-213-4563.
DELIGHTFUL 2BR/1BA
shaded with pecan trees,
CH/A, storage shed,
washer/dryer hook up,
garden site. 21 st Avenue
off Bessent Rd. Call 904-
472-6256 or 904-384-
8013.
SPACIOUS 3BR/2BA with

American
Dream
SN,,forthmstForida.lnc.
REALTrORS.

RENTALS

I1 BRApts
$340, $395..

First Month Free

(904) 964-5424


fenced acre, W/D, CH/A,

huge kitchen, beautiful
landscape. $700 per
month, First, last plus
$500 deposit. Must have
references. Call 352-
473-1870.
EXTRA CLEAN & In be-
tween 2BR MH in Key-
stone Heights. Spacious
Split bdr plan, CH/A, cov-
ered deck and more. No
pets. $500 per month
rent, $700 security de-
posit, credit report re-
quired. Carroll Rentals &
Management, Inc. 352-
473-1025
CONVENIENT KEY-
STONE Hts. location.
2BR stilt home, CH/A, Ig.
deck and more. No pets.
$675 per month rent,
$1000 security deposit,
credit report required.-
Carroll Rentals & Man-
agement, Inc. 352-473-
1025
WALK TO Keystone
schools. Spacious 3BR
DW, split plan, CB ga-
rage and more: 1st, Last
&.security. $650 per
month rent, $650 secu-
rity deposit, credit report
required. Carroll Rentals
& Management, Inc
352-473-1025 '
LARGE 1BR apt. No pet.
6 Month lease, $450 per
month, $450 deposit.
Call Mike at 904-364-
7026.
MELROSE 107 Eliam Rd.
3BR/2BA House. Stove,
refrigerator, microwave,
DW, large fenced yarda,
front porch, screened
back porch, W/D hopk
ups. $895 per month
$700 deposit. Call 352-
475-5533 or 352-475-
0690.
3BR/2BA DW, CH/A, on'l
acre lots, in Sampson
City. $1500 down & first,
months payment total
$2,037 move in. $537
per month. Call 352-468-
2959.
ZONED MIXED use. 3BR/
1.5BA house. Enclosed
back porch w/laundry
room. 1 BLK W of 21 In
Keystone Heights. Key-
stone schools. Walk to
Keystone beach, town
ect. $900 per month, first
month plus $800 secu-
rity deposit. Call 352-
256-5196.
CUTE COTTAGE Lake
Brooklyn, 2BR/1BA
$500 per month, plus
security. Call 352-473-
0002.
52 Animals and
Pets
BULL MASTIF lyr male.
Very friendly, good with
children, $250 OBO. Call
386-496-1364.
FULL BLOODED German -
SRortweler Pupp'es.'One
'male one female, 4
months .old. Also oni'
lyr old male very healthy
perfect markings. Call-=
Cindy before 8pm at
352-473-7233. :"'
DACHSUND CHIHUA-
HUA mix, 5 month ol-


Fisherman's Paradise Beautiful Lots
1996 3 BR/2 BA, 1216 sq. ft. situated Located within feet from 400 acre
on 1.39 ac. and ready to move in. lake with boat access. Lots ranging
Walking distance to Crosby Lake in size from 1.52 to 2.19. Any lot
boat launch. Sellers motivated! $29,500 Homes Only, Bring Offersl



Paying Rent May Be

SHazardous To Your

> Paycheck!


BUY A HOME OF YOUR OWN!
START BUILDING EQUITY NOW!

2,3, & 4 Bedroom Models Available!

LAND / HOME
VA FHA Conventional Loans ', -y
All credit applications accepted!


eiso Sco


ViUay

,Visit Us Bet


t Bilt


General


Too

fore You Buy!


Jerry's Quality Homes

(352) 473-9005

6969 SR 21 N. Keystone Heights, FL,

Jerry Ted JoAnn


2400 sq. ft.


Former HRS Building located

in Lake Butler.

Government Built Security Locks
Keypad Entrance to back offices
Walk-in Safe Moveable Interior Walls

GREAT FOR MEDICAL, GOVERNMENT
OR ANY RETAIL BUSINESS!

Call Maggie at Butler Townhomes
386-496-1969 (or) 954-650-7016



IVANHOE


Ivanhoe Financial, Inc.

Iice sedMortg eL nder'


LaN4DER


Re-finance and Purchases

FHMIVAsConventional


100% Financing Availalle

Hew Censtruction-
nt RHomeImprovement Loans







Toll Free
1-866-964-4202
1107 S. Walnut Street
US 391 South Starke, FL
(Located behind Bradford County Eye Center)


(904)
964-5424
205 N. Temple Ave. i
Starke, FL 32091_


HAE LLMNI NTAINEDHOME.lut nutide
city limits. Open floor plan w/stone fireplace,
sprinklerand watersoftenersystems. Lots of
extras. $169.000. MLS#276915.


CHARMINGOLDERhomeonulmost4 BANK REPO NEEDS TLC bul t.las of
aucres.3BR/IBA, w/nom toudd second bath. square feet, great location, close to
L4e.frnntdeck,shed,A/C,nm)foecarport and Guainesville, Macclenny urea. $64,800. I
stove new 8/2004.$165,000. MLS#276879. MLS#268633.
vmma mericandrea lori da.c *


352-671-9210
TOLL FREE
1-800-544-6429 N
Fax 352-671-9217 1 "e o
Take 1-75 to exit 352, go east to US Obile Homes
441/301, go south to location on right 2410 S. Pine Avenue
before bridge. Ocala, FL 34471
WSI!t our woeslto aSt
www.SouthPineMblleHomeSales.fhretaller.com
Cm\\2\5 m \m. m[R4Ffg[


LOCATED
AT
105 Edwards Rd
cross from Community State Bank)
Starke
TrinityMortgageFL.com
TOLL FREE
866-964-8111


zA-Lrr
ASSXSY
ty,,v- .


I
28x52.]









Jan. -, TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Page 9C



assified AdS where one call does i all!964-6305

Class ed Ads-wh one call does it all! 496-2261


male, shots, wormed,
.health certificate. $330
cash, call 904-364-
7152.
LARGE GERMAN
$HEPARD pups, Large,
smart, trainable, ap-
proved homes only,
$200 each. Cal 386-496-
.1-279.
FOUND DOG Yorkie,
male, not neutered, on
'SR 100. Call 229-848-
'325 Tera. Please pay
tees for ads and meds. .
53 A Starke
Yard Sales
MOVING SALE 10 X 10
shed, dryer, furniture,
mixisc. 9am to 4pm,
Thursday only!l comer
Wf 225 & 229, blue
fJamed house, follow the
B'gns.
DOWNSIZING HOUSE,
depression glass,
*ollectables, books,
tools, fishing supplies,
;baby & adult clothes,
householdd items,, to
muchh to list. SR16 west
Ito CR 233 left one mile
'oh the left. 6266 NW CR
_233. Follow signs. Can-
6cel if rain. Sat only!! 8am
16,?
GIANT YARD SALE in
Hampton. Sat the 14th to
'Mon the 16th. 9am to
''pm. Behind the' post
office, follow the signs, 4
sale! Mowers, tools, fish
stuff, household, furn,
joys, elecronic &much
'fore!!!
SATURDAY ONLY Jan
.4th 8am til, ? Every-
:t'hing must go. From
takere take SR 100 east
(Griffis Loop), cross RR
tracks twice, third home
bon left.
;53 B Keystone
Yard Sales
7 0 SR 21 NORTH elec-
Tric stove top, dish-
.Washer, gas grill and
-more. 9am til ? Sat. Jan.
14th.
'55 Wanted
Paying $1000 for Bradford
.,County porcelain auto
.tags dated 1911-17 and
$25+ each for Bradford
Co Florida tags starting
;,with #45 in good condi-
tion for years
-:1938;39, 40,43,44,
46,49;50,52,and 53. I
.,-eed these for a mu-

I Buy
Houses
in need of repair
And Land
352-475-2283


seum display. Also want
other Fla tags prior to
1958. Jeff Francis, PO
Box 41381, St. Peters-
burg, FL 33743-
1381 727 345 6627
e m a i I
gobucs13@aol.com
www.floridalicenseplat
es.com In Starke this
Friday Dec 16 and can
meet in person.
57 For Sale
PRIVATE RECORD COL-
LECTION. 2000Albums,
from 1930 to 1990. Best
offer. Call 904-966-0641.
BED $100. NEVER USED
Full size orthopedic
pillowtop set. Still in plas-
tic with factory warranty
from Posturecraft. Can
deliver. Call Brian 352-
376-1600.
BEDROOM 6PC SET
never used Still in
boxes. I have in truck
and can deliver. $395,"
call 352-376-1600.
COUCH AND LOVESEAT,
plush microfiber suede
set: Call 352-494-0333.
QUEEN PI'LLOWTOP
mattress set. $130 real
pillowtop set. Anything
cheaper is cheap. Brand
new made by
Posturecraft. Still in plas-
tic. Can deliver, call
Brian 352-264-9799.
BED BRAND NEW KING
Sacrifice $195. 3pc or-
thopedic pillowtop set.
Never used set, still
wrapped in plastic with
original warranty. Name
brand Posturecraft. Can
deliver call Brian at 352-
494-0333.
HOT TUB/SPA" $1795..
Brand new. Loaded with


therapy jets, waterfall,
LED lights. cuphalders,
110v energy efficient.
With warranty. Free de-
livery call 352-376-1600.
BEDROOM CHERRY 7pc
set. All wood custom
* built Louis Phillipe sleigh
bed. All dovetail con-
struction, trueglide
drawers. Never been .
used! Still in boxes. Re-
tail $6500 sacrifice
$1300. Can deliver. Call
Brian at 352,264-97.99:.
POOL TABLE georgous 8'
all wood table. Leather
pockets; Italian 1" slate,
carved legs. Brand new
still in crate. Cost $4500
sell for $1350. Call 352-'
246-9799.
MATTRESS TWIN sets
$89, full sets $129,
Queen sets $159, King
sets $189. Mattress Fac-
tory, 441 East Brownlee
St. Carpets also- large
room size pieces. Save
a lot. Cash and carry.
Call Sonia at 352-473-
7173 or 904-964-3888.
KENMORE WASHER and
dryer, new type $100
and up each, electric
stove, written guarantee,
free local delivery. For,
appointments, call 904-
964-8801.
BED-QUEEN orthopedic
Pillowtop mattress and
box. Name brand, new in
plastic, with warranty.
Can deliver. Sacrifice *
$140. Call 352-372-
8588.
BED-KING SIZE Pillowtop
mattress and boxspring
with manufactures war-
ranty. Brand new still in
plastic. Can deliver. Sell
for $200. Call 352-372-
7490. '


BEDROOM SET 7 piece
Gorgeous cherry queen/
king be 1, dresser, mirror,
2 nightstands, .chest
available, dovetail con-
struction. New still in
boxes. Retail $5200,
sacrifice for $1400.352-
377-9846.
DINING ROOM SUITE-
beautiful cherry table, 6
chippendale chairs and
lighted hutch and buffet.
Brand new still boxed.
Can deliver. Retail'
$5800, sacrifice $1100.
352-377-9846.
MATTRESS TWIN sets
$89, full sets $129,
Queen sets $159, King
sets $189. Mattress Fac-
tory, 441 East Brownlee
St. Carpets also- large
room size pieces. Save
a lot. Cash and carry.
Call Sonia at 352-473-
7173 or 904-964-3888.
HEAVY DUTY SCROLL
saw with stand. $200
OBO. Call 352-475-
0890.
HESS MODEL TRUCKS,
about 13 years of mod-
els. Asking $15 each
OBO. Call 352-473-
2715. '
42" WHITE TILE top
kitchen table with leaf,
extends to 56" oblong.
Empire style, pedestal
base, great condition.
Asking $75. Call 352-
473-0247.
ENTERTAINMENT CEN-
TER, fits a 34" TV. with
built in shelves and glass
doors. Asking $75 OBO.
Call 352-47p-0247. ,
2 TWIN MATTRESSES
only. Both are new &
eclipse. Memory Magic
Luxary firm. $ 300 each
or both for $500. Call


352-473-3626 Chuck or
Betty.
EASY GO GAS golf cart.
White, excellent me-
chanical condition, lift kit,
tires, wheels, rear seat
kit, accessories and in-
stallation also available.
90 day warranty. $2000
call 352-745-0548.
STOVE REFRIGERATOR
almond with brown trim.
Hotpoint electric appli-
ances. Stove has black
glass on front door. Re-.
modeling kitchen. In use
and good condition.
$250 for both. Will sell.
separate, call 904-424-
3112.
KENMORE HEAVY duty
washed & dryer, white,
like new, $250. Car tow
dolly with lights, new
tires, winch $850. Magic
Chef electric range $50.
Call 352-473-0721.
59 Personal
Services

FORSALE
Oak finish
bedroom suit
wldresser, mirror,
chest, nightstand,
headboard and full
size mattresses
Very nice
$299.00
Twin bed mattress
/box spring
$25.00
Serta Perfect Sleeper
Queen Mattress/box
Like New
(paid $800 new)
Only $349.00

African style sofa,
chase, two end tables
I Elephant coffee
table, lamp & rug
$349.00

New Guitar
$29.00
Kenmore side by side
Refrigerator
$299.00

Kenmore electric
stove
$99.00
Call
352-475-2283


SNewly Built Home For Sale


I Guaantee Low


,. Divorce *0Wills
: Name Changes Adoptions
-Corporations Notary
$35 to $250
COMPLETE DETAILS BY PHONE

ii (904) 964-5019
mv(352) 235-4350
8 am 8 pm Since 1985tp


Const. Clean U

MAINT. eDEBI

*CARPENTRY *PAIN

PRESSURE CLEJ

All Jobs Large or

JOHN 352-1
Lic #024973


- Keystone Hauli
Handyman Servic
* Carpentry .*Bushii4iH
*HomeRepair *TreTimi
*PreseWashing *SiteOaenUp
*Oddjobs TrashRanmo
YadWork *PineBark&C
Garden Roto-TIing '*Frem-odFor!
Ijcnsed & Insured *Feimate
Owner: Kerry Whitford




HOUSECLEAI

1-Time Clean
NEED YOUR HOUSE ORG


y Don't Waste Pre
ciCalluTIMA
o,. (904)964


Ip

IIS

T* TREES

NING

r Small

468-3786
Insured

ng &
-e, LLC
wing
ng&Rwmal

Cypress Mukh
rSale
es





MING



;ANIZED?


ecious Ti..e
FE CLEAN
-8740 J


M4 Epperson S.
Starke


3 Bedroom, 2 Bath Single Car Garage
Appliances included Berber Carpet


MASTERS CONSTRUCTION

a~ 352-745-0039


J & P HOME SERVICES,
home repairs, painting
tree trimming & more.
Local references avail-
able. Reasonable rates.
Call Johnny or Pam a
352-473-2344. .
CtARK FOUNDATION
REPAIRS, INC. Cor-
rection of termite & wa-
ter-damaged wood &
sills. Leveling & raising
Houses/Bldgs. Pier Re-
placement & alignment.
Free Estimates: Danny
(Buddy) Clark, (904)-
284-2333 or 1-800-288-
,0633.
CHAIN LINK FENCE -
Free estimates. Handy-
man Fence Co., owner
Tommy Reddish, 904-
964-8559.,


PRESSURE WASHING,
CLC home exterior
cleaning. Roofs, siding,
decks, driveways, side-
,walks. Free estimates,
call Curtis, 904-964-
4940.t
FLORIDA CREDIT UNION
has money to lend for
M.H. & land packages.
1-800-284-1144. tfn
CUSTOM CUTS Lawn &
Landscape, customized
lawn care, sod, trim-
ming, landscape design.
Reasonable rates, free
estimates. Commercial
& residential. Licensed
and insured. Call 386-
496-2820, if no answer
please leave message.
CONCEALED WEAPONS
permit course. 1 hour


ALACHUA COUNTY
43+ acres Natural woodlan4s, lots of
wetland, some dry. Good duck, turkey and
deer hunting. Minutes from 1-75,
Gainesville &Alachua on 20019 NW 91st
Street. Broker/ Owner.






T.H.E. Apartments
922 E. Brownlee St Starke, Florida
Newly Remodeled
2 & 3 Bedrooms Available
Rent is based on Income
Water, Sewer
On-Site Laundry Facility & Play Areas
Office Open: MondaFriday 8:00 to 4:30 p.m.
Call (904) 964-7133 1
Voice TTY Access 1-800-545-1833, Ext. 381




WANTED


Small or Large Parcels
With or Without
SHomes

Call Glen Lourcey
We 352-485-1818


1,459 sq. ft. brand new home on a 92-acre fishing lake.
Open floor plan. Blinds throughout. 3BR/2BA, attached
garage, paved, road, Keystone Heights.
nc\un $139,900
\ocd\ Financing available with only $2,495 down.


,- .-

B--- _

2,042 sq. ft. brand new home on a 92-acre fishing lake,
Open floor plan. Blinds throughout. 3BR/2BA, attached
garage, paved road, Keystone Heights.
0,c\oc'Ong $154,900
,,od\ Financing available with only $2,995 down.

G :I' IMt ILU ii t 1111 [1]L









1,134 sq ft. home, 3BR/2BA, brand new home on 1/3 acre
lot in Keystone Heights. Open floor plan Blinds throughout.
06codn 9 $112,900
\ond\ Financing available with only $1,995 down.
INFORMATION ON HOMES AVAILABLE AT
WWW.NEWHOUSE411.COM

Quality Land Investments, Inc.
(3521692-4343


35$ for individual or
group. call 904-9Q4-
5019.
KENDO KAN DO,-reed
something done around
your house? Pressure
washing, lawn care,
landscaping, carpentry,
cleaning, house paint-
ing, all sorts of odd jobs.
Reliable, references pro-
vided, reasonable rates.
Call 904-964-370'4.
HOUSE CLEANING years
of exp. For information
call Tina before 4pm at
904-964-5505.
64 Business
Opportunities
DIABETIC BREAK-
THROUGH. Millions are
being helped. Millions to


be made. Call 407-332-
4422 or visit the web site
at www.sportron.biz/
care
65 Help
Wanted
GROWING CHILDCARE
Center is looking for
teacher assistants &
cook in Keystone
Heights. Please call 352-
473-2008 for informa-
tion.
INSTRUCTORS NEEDED
for afterschool position-
at Waldo. BA degree
required. Monday Fri-
day approximately 23
hours a week. Pay range
is $15-$20 pbr hour.
Contact Rena Gibson at
.352-468-1451.


IhwHiLe o 'a e


. u sTo- m -M.LOP .


(352) 275-8531
904-626-4550

Jonathan Ferguson, Owner
Lic. No. CBC1250311
133 West Call Street -Starke, FL 32091


The Carriage Hoie e
All new 3BR/2BA brick & hardi board
home, fireplace, cathedral & tray.
ceilings, 2 car garage, attic storage,*
jacuzzi tub, walk-in closet, separate
laundry room, 102' x 180' lot, at NE
15th Lane, off SR 230 in Five Oaks
near Country Club

$205,000

Ferguson
SHomes m.S


Drivers Calling 0/0
Best Mileage Pay
We pay fuel
sur-charge
loaded & empty!!!!l
Home Most
Weekends
No Touch Dry Van
Currently $1.07
all miles -
Hogan eoe
800-444-6042
Class A


R&E

Contracting, Inc.
is searching for an

Office Assistant
Qualified applicants will be famiiliar
with Microsoft Excel & Word.
Experience in Quickbooks a plus.

Call

386-496-4956
Equal Emplopyment Opportunity
Affirmative Action Employer

Drivers


Transport System, Inc.


Limited Openings
GREAT Pay ~ GREAT Benefits
GREAT Hometime
6 MO. T/T Experience &
Class A CDL Req'd.


Call Doug today at:
1-800-587-1964
epestransport.com


The Wackenhut Corporation is now hiring several
Custom Protection Officers for the Camp Blanding area.
Candidates with prior career military experience are highly preferred, but we are
also seeking officers with experience in either law enforcement, corrections, police
academy graduates or a criminal justice degree.
SHE uXanflsmnks*


t

iA


zFAVVaCKUHIUIu

mia ......


I


Bobby Campbell

Roofing, Inc..
Licensed & Insured

(804) 964-8304

FREE

ESTIMATES!
Lic. #CCC-132672


Employment opportunities available.
Call for more information.


*Pumps
*Sales
*Parts
* Service 964-7061

Myers STATE LICENSE #1305
, Rotary Well Drilling 2-6" I
"GPDAMY 864 N. Temple Ave. US Hwy 301 N. 1
Starke, FL j
oil "kllk!]z "L1:21 ky 1 64011 a


. . . -


0 .


I,








Page 10C TELEGRAPH, TIMES & MONITOR--C-SECTION Jan. 12, 2006


Classified Ads


- where one call


does


it all!


ASSISTANT PARTS MAN-
AGER needed at ACE &
Garden in Keystone
Heights. Commerial
....small engine experience
and computer knowl-
edge critical. Apply in
person to complete ap-
plication & initiaflinter-
view. Ask for Bob. Phone
352-473-4001.
LPN or RN, busy, friendly.,
Pediatric office, benefits:
Fax resume to 352-376-
4959 ore mail notneb@
bellsouth.net.
DIESEL MECHANIC
wanted, M-F, benefits,
pay according to experi-
ence, will train the right
person. Call 352-468-
1644.
DAJRY FARM I=ABORERS--
needed, hardworking
dependable transporta-
tion, shift work, holidays
& weekends, -starting-
pay $7 per hour. Alachua
area. For more informa-
tion call 386-462-1016.
DRIVER- ARE YOU get-
ting top 10 pay? Leading
home time? Optional
Per Diem pay? Van or
Flatbed? Owner opera-
tors/students welcome.
SSign on bonus. Class A
required. Roehl, "The
take home more, be
home more carrier." Call
7days/week $$$ 800-
626-4915 $$$
www.GoRoehl.com;
HELP WANTED- Con-
struction Contractor and
sub-contractors several
openings in various ar-
eas of building (framing,
finish, roofing, concrete/
block, plumbing, electri-
cal & siding) must have
experience-in one or-
more of construction
phases, own tools and


We're continuing to grow a


.. ... .........N..I .%ON
qualified people to work at our Lake Butler
facility. Good benefits, pay based on
experience. Apply in person at 1050 SE 6th
St. in Lake Butler or call 1-800-808-3052.

Q PRITCHETT TRUCKING


SERVICE DISPATCHER N E E 0 E D

Full Time Position
Benefits Available
Experience a plus, but not necessary
Please apply in person at:

E Craig

FALSTREAUX
M HEATING AND AIR, INC.
228 South Walnut St. StarkeFL_


GetA JOB!!
Its 2006 and time for you to do what mom and dad says,
except this is going to be fun! We are hiring 18-20 girls
and guys to Work and Travel all major cities and resort
areas! Earn $300-700 wk. No experience needed, we train!
Oh yeah, your transportation & lodging is provided too!
Sounds pretty cool huh? Thats because it is! There is a
catch, you must be sharp, 18 or over. Free to travel, and
free to start now!' .
PICK UP THE PHONE, CALL 1-800-701-1442
parents welcome @ interviews


32091. Call 904-964- trustworthy caregivers_ a Program Supervisor,
7_9 9__ _- _. needed to provide- corh-- over the age of 21 who
ARPENTERS & AP- panionship & home loves children, depend-
PRENTICES needed helperservices to senior able, and has transpor-
exp required. Must be adults in their homes. station. It is a part time
willing to travel, have Flexibility and reliable position for before and
own insurance, trans- transportation required, after school care at Key-
portation and tools. Call Call today 904-350- stone Elementary. If in-
800-290-2983. 1648'. terested, please call
ENVIRONMENTAL ALL YOUR AUTO Me- 904-272-4304 ask for
TECHNICIAN trainee chanic needs for very Kim or Marilyn,
career opportunity. Entry, affordable prices. Spe- GILMAN BUILDING Prod-
level position. Shop and cializing in Engine repair ucts company is accept-
Field helper, one ton, and Transmission ing applications for Se-
truck driver towing utiltiy changes. Will transport curity Guard/Grounds
trailer over Easter US to your vehicle. Need a keeper at the Sawmill
assist Senior Techni- mechanic for cheaper; located in Lake Butler. A
clans collecting pollution Call Bruce at 386-496- high school diploma or
samples Irom smoke 2639. : equivalent'ls'required._-
stacks. Cannot b4 afraid THE YMQAis-looking-for--- no is-
ef-heightsr-some-heavy -
lifting, work outdoors,
climb stairs and ladders. HELP W ANTED
Frequent travel and 1
overtime required. Work Shift W orker For
In'the shop maintaining
vehicles and equipment ASSISTED
when not in the field '
DFWP screening and LIVING FACILITY
DMontact:repombientAirSe Apply in person at Parkside ACLF
vices, Inc. 904-964-8440 329 Church St., Starke
Starke FL. 3
CAREGIVERS NEEDED (904) 964-2220
PT Dependable and


transportation. Call 352-
258-0865.
AVON REPS neededein all
areas. Start up and earn
50%, total investment
$10. Start today, local
training. Call Sherry at
904-964-8851.
DISCOVER HOW ANY-
ONE can earn $25, $50,
even $100 or more in as
little as 2-3 minutes per
day taking easy "No-
Brainer" surveys! Start
today! http://
clickbank. net/
?countrymom/sponline.
SHOP HELP NEEDED, fi-
berglass manufacturing
and trimming will train.
Full time 40'hour week.
..- _Apply-iarpersen-at-U-S
Body Source, 1.5 miles
South of Hampton on
CR 325.
CARE GIVER-- 2 years
experience working with
elderly or disabled cli-
ents. 2 or 3 days per
week. Su-El's Retire-
ment Home, Hampton.
Phone 352-468-2619.
NURSERY HELP
NEEDED, weed pulling,
fertilizing ect. Full time
40 hour week. Apply in
person at U S Body
Source, 1.5 miles South
of Hampt o on CR 325.
SECRETARY/BILLING
CLERK & LPN NEEDED
full time.Will be working
with juvenile offenders
age ,12-19 in a treatment
program. Union County
area.. Back ground
check required, benefits,
vacation time, sick days,
401K offered. Call 386-
431-1999 or fax resume
to 386-431-1089. -
- CAREGIVER EXP. FT for
Christian Assisted living
-facility. Night shift 11pm


Drivers / FLATBED
Run the Southeast
HOME WEEKLY
* Lease Purchase Program
* 100% Owner Operators
* Free Base Plates
* Paid Cargo / liability
* 1 yr flatbed exp. Req.
-Excellentfuel Surcharge
Call Faye @ 1-800-325-4436
.... .orYince @
1-888-522-5046 Ext 3220


required. We have com-
petitive rates & 401K,
dental & health insur-
ance, paid vacation, holi-
days & promotional op-
portunities. Interested
applicants should apply
in person, Monday
through Friday from
8:00am to 3:30pm at the
front office. Applicants
must bring SS card, pic-
ture ID and diploma.
LAKE BUTLER APART-


MENTS, maintenance


MENTS, maintenance
position available, 32
hours, w/benefits. Expe-
rience in: plumbing,
electrical, carpentry,
painting/sheetrock re-
pair. Drug free work-
place, must have valid
DL and transportation.
Some travel required.
Call 386-496-3141 or
send resume to 1005
SW Sixth St, Lake But-
ter, Fl 32054. Equal Op-
portunity Employer.


to 7am. Must work ev- GARFIELDS CLEANERS
ery other weekend. No (formerly:Allens Laun-
-phone callsplea.oe a----dfy)-.PT-help wate-d: C
p- yatPa-rKoTtiePams Keystone & Melrose lo-
706 Palms Circle, Key- cations. Laundry mat
stone Heights Fl. experience a plus but
PHARMACY TECHNI- not necessary. Pick up
CIAN certified needed. applications at either Io-
Fax resume to Melrose cation. No phone calls
Pharmacy 352-475- please. E
1467. 65
PAINTERS HELPER in COORDINATOR 4-5
Union or Bradford Co., hours weekly from home
report to work in hours weekly from home
Worthington Springs, for non profit, govt mon-
must bava reiabletrans- tored H.S. exchange
portation, call Heathbe'rat program; Work locally
Jennings Painters Inc with high schools, host
532-373-9744 or toll free families & foreign teens.
877-229-4180. Supplemental. income,
CO DIRECTOR for large training, international
_ cildcar-centertoopen ^travel npporsut+es----
in February: Competitiv background in travel or I
salary DOE. Call 904- education preferred.
769-1348. Call 1-877-417-WORLD.
FREE CHURCH PEWS SUPPORTED LIVING
we have 24 pews in 'coach for developmen-
,good condition. Call904- tally disabled adults.
769-1198 askforMark. Must have 4 years of
CUSTOMER SUPPORT experience In medical,'
needed immediately for child, care, or other re-
onuoed nmm sdirte& les o lated field. Must be on
outgoing support'& sales call 24/7. Background
calls. Sales, phones & check required. Apply
computer exp. neces- ARC of Bradford 1351 S. C
sary. Smoke free envi- Water St., Starke FL
ronment. Fax resume to
352-473-5151 or email
to admin@astreet ASSISTANT MJ
graphics.com.
FULL TIME BRAKE and CUSTOMER SALES
Tire Mechanic,
Worthington Springs NEEDI
area. Full benefits, 7:30
am to 5pm M-F, vaca-
tion, holidays & 401K. ods
Must have current DL. Fast Track Foods CO
JANITORAL POSITION Company is seeking
PT, WorthingtonSprings individuals with initi
area. Flexible afternoon
-"hours, around 3 hours full and part-time en
per day M-F, cleaning
shop area. Call 386-496- Lawtey location. P
2251.
B Manager at 904-7,
Supervisor at 352-3
and leave your name
nd in need nf


PRE-SCHOOL TEACHERS
1 Part-time Position Available
4 Competitive starting salary
based on experience and education
4 Insurance Retirement Vacation

NOW ACCEPTING STUDENiS
Infants $135 wk 4 yr olds $75

Northside Christian Academy Pre-School
corner of SR- 16 W & CR 225 Starke, FL
CALL (904) 964-7124-~ Ask for Glenda'


Servers & Cashiers

Needed
Local Full-Service Restaurant
Competitive Salary Based on Exp.
(Positive attitude essential)
Call Matthew at

352-316-2934
M-W-F 2 4 pm
"A Great Working Environment"
DFWP-EOE


l Wendy's of Waldo
Eiimi ] 15408 NE US-301 S.


NOW HIRING

SMILING FACES

at competitive wages.
Come work with us in a
fun, friendly atmosphere.


INTERVIEWS AT
10 AM AND 11 AM
MON thru FRI

NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE


I I Oi 4 ='l I 4


PRITCHETT

TRUCKING

$1,000 Sign On Bonus!
We have immediate positions for both local and
regional. Day or night shift available. 401K,
Health InS., Paid Vacation, Performance and
Safety Bonus...


WHITEHEAD BROS., INC.ILAKE CITY LOGISTICS, INC.
OTR DRIVERS NEEDED
Go through Home several times most weeks.
Home most weekends. Personalized dispatching
that comes from only dispatching 25 trucks at
our location here in-Starke. Vacation pay, Safety
Bonus up to $1,200 per year. Driver of the Year
-..- bonus, and driver recruitment bonuses. Blue
SCross Blue Shield medical and dental insurance.
Need 2 years of experience and a decent driving
record.
S CALL. JIM OR DEBBIE LAWRENCE AT
904-368-0777 or 1-888-919-8898


HEAVY TRUCK SHOP MANAGER


'Must be experienced in all areas of the day-to-day

operations of a large tractor-trailer fleet. Minimum of 5 yrs

tractor-trailer fleet management experience required.

Excellent Salary and Benefits ~

PAT SALMON & SONS OF FLORIDA

Apply in person at 1501 Pickettville Rd. Jax, FL 32220

or Call Kayla or Ernie at (904) 781-2245


$2,000 Sign on Bonus!

We have extended our sign on bonus for
a limited time! If you are considering
coming to work for Davis Express,

NOW IS THE TIME!!











Stay in the "Sweet Part" of the south
FL, GA, SC, NC, TN, AL

.40 cpm w/5 years OTR exp.
Guaranteed Hometime
Health & Disability Ins. Avail.
Life & Dental Ins. Provided
Additional Safety Bonus


904*964-6619 #6
Highway 301 South, Starke, FL
www.davis-express,com


MANAGER &
S ASSOCIATES
ED,

convenience Store
highly motivated
ative to excel for
employment at our
Please call store
82-1228 or call
333-3011 ext. 43
and number.


Driver CDL A req'd
--MOMBNVERTT EDT
WEEKEND GUARANTEED

Avg. $707 $907/wk
No Touch Freight
85% Preloaded/Pretarped.
Jacksonville, FL Terminal
877-428-5627
www.ctdrivers.com


MEMENNIq