22
AUGUST 13, 2020 www.chronicleonline.com HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds . . . . . . . . B5 Comics . . . . . . . . . . B4 Crossword . . . . . . . B10 Editorial . . . . . . . . . A10 Entertainment . . . . . A4 Horoscope . . . . . . . . A4 Sports . . . . . . . . A7, A8 Lottery Numbers . . . A8 Lottery Payouts . . . . A8 Obituaries . . . . . . . . A6 TV Listings . . . . . . . . B3 INDEX 74 91 LOW Florida’s Best Community Newspaper Serving Florida’s Best Community VOL. 125 ISSUE 310 50 ¢ Full coverage of Wednesday’s MLB action /A7 CITRUS COUNTY Adams 000YVQD Political advertisement paid for and approved by Scott Adams, Republican, for Citrus County Supervisor of Elections. Elect Scott For Citrus County Supervisor of Elections Accuracy Accountability Action Citrus COVID-19 daily update Twenty new positive cases were reported in Citrus County since the latest FDOH update. Two new hospitalizations were reported; one new death was reported. To date in the county, 1,610 people have tested positive (including four non-residents), 154 have been hospitalized and 38 have died. League of Women Voters to meet The League of Women Voters of Citrus County will meet at 10:15 a.m. the second Tuesday monthly, via Zoom. Meet- ings will be recorded live and posted online for public viewing. To join meetings, visit lwvcitrus. org/ to access the form. For information, 614-563- 4282 or email [email protected]. Drop your vote-by-mail ballot off early Vote-by-Mail (VBM) bal- lots may be dropped off at one of the four early vote sites; Inverness City Hall, Central Ridge and Homosassa libraries and at the Crystal River elections office at Meadowcrest. Additionally, the Mead- owcrest Elections Office has a secure 24 hour drop box to the left of the front door on the wall of the office located at 1500 N. Meadowcrest Blvd. Crystal River. Dropping off your VBM ballot will take place in- side the early vote site as it is required that the drop box be secured by the supervisor’s staff or poll workers. The poll workers or staff will check to make sure the VBM envelope is signed. Voters who have not signed their certificate en- velope will be contacted by the elections office and will be required to complete a Cure Affidavit providing their signature and a form of ID. All these precautions are required and are in place to pro- vide security of the vote. — From staff reports NEWS BRIEFS BUSTER THOMPSON Staff writer At their last meeting be- fore the first day of the 2020-21 school year amid a pandemic, Citrus County School Board members said their district is as ready as it can be. “It’s not going to be easy and there’s going to be a lot of times people are going to question what’s happen- ing,” Doug Dodd said, open- ing the board’s Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020, meeting. “But when we work together, when we look at the talent we have and when we look at our desire to do what’s right for children, we’re going to make it through this, we are.” County schools will wel- come roughly 11,300 of their 15,000 students back to brick-and-mortar cam- puses on Aug. 20. Roughly 3,630 students will start their first semes- ter of schooling with Citrus Virtual, the school dis- trict’s new online school taught by local teachers using curriculum from Florida Virtual School. Students were supposed to return to class Aug. 10, a date school board members voted to postpone so their school district could better prepare for reopening with COVID-19 looming. Withlacoochee Techni- cal College began its fall courses Aug. 10. For more information about the district’s reopen- ing plan “Citrus Cares,” visit tinyurl.com/yy2j636b. Even after the Aug. 5 deadline ended to enroll in Citrus Virtual, parents are still asking the school district to move their chil- dren there. District Chief Academic Officer Dr. Scott Hebert told school board members his staff are accommodating those families. However, he said, there will have to be an ultimate deadline soon so class schedules and sizes can be finalized before school starts. Schools ready for unknown Officials expect bumps, but confident system is prepared for pandemic year See SCHOOLS/Page A5 NANCY KENNEDY Staff writer T he first time the Rev. Tom Morgan met Monsi- gnor George Cummings was the summer of 1992. Morgan, a young priest at the time, had been assigned to serve as chaplain at Our Lady of Good Counsel Camp in Floral City, the youth camp Msgr. Cummings founded in 1947. Cummings had already served 50-plus years as a Cath- olic priest, including 15 years as the founding pastor at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church in Citrus Springs and more than 37 years as camp di- rector at Good Counsel. By 1992, Cummings was legendary. “I wanted to meet this man who had made such an im- pact,” said Morgan, former pas- tor at St. Scholastica Catholic Church in Lecanto and current pastor at St. Jerome Catholic Church in Largo. Msgr. Cummings took Morgan for a tour of every single piece of property associated with the camp, ending up in a tree stand with the monsignor handing Morgan a rifle. “My tour ended with hog hunting!” Morgan said. “I’m in Msgr. Cummings: ‘Last of the giants’ Special to the Chronicle Among his many roles as a Catholic priest, the Rev. Monsignor George Cummings, right, served as camp director at Our Lady of Good Counsel Camp in Floral City for 37 years. He founded the camp in 1947. He’s seen here in this undated photo with the Rev. David Banks, who served as the pastor of St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church in Homosassa and spent many summers at Good Counsel Camp. Banks died in 2006 and Cummings died Aug. 8, 2020, at age 102. Priest, centenarian, founder of Good Counsel Camp had great impact See GIANT/Page A2 BUSTER THOMPSON Staff writer When someone asks Marilyn Stephens when they have to respond to the U.S. Census, the 22-year employee and expert of the nation’s decennial population count has a quick and simple reply: “Right now!” Answering the 2020 cen- sus’ nine-question survey on age, housing status, eth- nicity and in-home rela- tionships takes a moment for a household to do. “It’s really fast ... just very simple questions ... it takes six to seven minutes,” said Stephens, the assistant re- gional census manager of the U.S. Census Bureau At- lanta Region, covering Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina. “Just complete it,” she added. “Once you com- plete it, encourage 10 of your friends and relatives to complete it also.” Not only has it been a civic duty in the U.S. since 1790, responding to the census helps shape future funding appropriations and government represen- tation for states, counties, cities, tribal communities and U.S. territories. “If you talk about health care, social services, edu- cation, affordable housing and veteran services,” Deadline approaching to respond to US Census See CENSUS/Page A11

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AUGUST 13, 2020www.chronicleonline.com

HIGH

Scattered showers and thunderstorms.

PAGE A4

TODAY & next morning

T H U R S D A Y

Classifieds . . . . . . . .B5Comics . . . . . . . . . .B4Crossword . . . . . . .B10Editorial. . . . . . . . . A10Entertainment . . . . . A4Horoscope . . . . . . . . A4Sports . . . . . . . . A7, A8Lottery Numbers . . . A8Lottery Payouts . . . . A8Obituaries . . . . . . . . A6TV Listings. . . . . . . .B3

I N D E X

74

91LOW

Florida’s Best Community Newspaper Serving Florida’s Best Community VOL. 125 ISSUE 31050¢

Full coverage of Wednesday’s MLB action /A7C I T R U S C O U N T Y

Project1:Layout 1 6/10/2014 1:13 PM Page 1

A dams 000YVQD Political advertisement paid for and approved by Scott Adams, Republican, for Citrus County Supervis or of Elections.

Elect Scott For Citrus County Supervisor of Elections � Accuracy

Accountability Action � �

Citrus COVID-19 daily update

Twenty new positive cases were reported in Citrus County since the latest FDOH update. Two new hospitalizations were reported; one new death was reported.

To date in the county, 1,610 people have tested positive (including four non-residents), 154 have been hospitalized and 38 have died.

League of Women Voters

to meetThe League of Women

Voters of Citrus County will meet at 10:15 a.m. the second Tuesday monthly, via Zoom. Meet-ings will be recorded live and posted online for public viewing. To join meetings, visit lwvcitrus.org/ to access the form. For information, 614-563-4282 or email [email protected].

Drop your vote-by-mail

ballot off earlyVote-by-Mail (VBM) bal-

lots may be dropped off at one of the four early vote sites; Inverness City Hall, Central Ridge and Homosassa libraries and at the Crystal River elections office at Meadowcrest.

Additionally, the Mead-owcrest Elections Office has a secure 24 hour drop box to the left of the front door on the wall of the office located at 1500 N. Meadowcrest Blvd. Crystal River.

Dropping off your VBM ballot will take place in-side the early vote site as it is required that the drop box be secured by the supervisor’s staff or poll workers. The poll workers or staff will check to make sure the VBM envelope is signed.

Voters who have not signed their certificate en-velope will be contacted by the elections office and will be required to complete a Cure Affidavit providing their signature and a form of ID. All these precautions are required and are in place to pro-vide security of the vote.

— From staff reports

NEWS BRIEFS

BUSTER THOMPSONStaff writer

At their last meeting be-fore the first day of the 2020-21 school year amid a pandemic, Citrus County School Board members said their district is as ready as it can be.

“It’s not going to be easy and there’s going to be a lot of times people are going to

question what’s happen-ing,” Doug Dodd said, open-ing the board’s Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020, meeting. “But when we work together, when we look at the talent we have and when we look at our desire to do what’s right for children, we’re going to make it through this, we are.”

County schools will wel-come roughly 11,300 of their 15,000 students back

to brick-and-mortar cam-puses on Aug. 20.

Roughly 3,630 students will start their first semes-ter of schooling with Citrus Virtual, the school dis-trict’s new online school taught by local teachers using curriculum from Florida Virtual School.

Students were supposed to return to class Aug. 10, a date school board members voted to postpone so their

school district could better prepare for reopening with COVID-19 looming.

Withlacoochee Techni-cal College began its fall courses Aug. 10.

For more information about the district’s reopen-ing plan “Citrus Cares,” visit tinyurl.com/yy2j636b.

Even after the Aug. 5 deadline ended to enroll in Citrus Virtual, parents are still asking the school

district to move their chil-dren there.

District Chief Academic Officer Dr. Scott Hebert told school board members his staff are accommodating those families. However, he said, there will have to be an ultimate deadline soon so class schedules and sizes can be finalized before school starts.

Schools ready for unknownOfficials expect bumps, but confident system is prepared for pandemic year

See SCHOOLS/Page A5

NANCY KENNEDYStaff writer

The first time the Rev. Tom Morgan met Monsi-gnor George Cummings

was the summer of 1992.Morgan, a young priest at the

time, had been assigned to serve as chaplain at Our Lady of Good Counsel Camp in

Floral City, the youth camp Msgr. Cummings founded in 1947.

Cummings had already served 50-plus years as a Cath-olic priest, including 15 years as the founding pastor at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church in Citrus Springs and more than 37 years as camp di-rector at Good Counsel.

By 1992, Cummings was legendary.

“I wanted to meet this man who had made such an im-pact,” said Morgan, former pas-tor at St. Scholastica Catholic Church in Lecanto and current pastor at St. Jerome Catholic

Church in Largo.Msgr. Cummings took Morgan

for a tour of every single piece of property associated with the camp, ending up in a tree stand with the monsignor handing Morgan a rifle.

“My tour ended with hog hunting!” Morgan said. “I’m in

Msgr. Cummings: ‘Last of the giants’

Special to the ChronicleAmong his many roles as a Catholic priest, the Rev. Monsignor George Cummings, right, served as camp director at Our Lady of Good Counsel Camp in Floral City for 37 years. He founded the camp in 1947. He’s seen here in this undated photo with the Rev. David Banks, who served as the pastor of St. Thomas the Apostle Catholic Church in Homosassa and spent many summers at Good Counsel Camp. Banks died in 2006 and Cummings died Aug. 8, 2020, at age 102.

Priest, centenarian, founder of Good Counsel Camp had great impact

See GIANT/Page A2

BUSTER THOMPSONStaff writer

When someone asks Marilyn Stephens when they have to respond to the U.S. Census, the 22-year employee and expert of the nation’s decennial

population count has a quick and simple reply:

“Right now!”Answering the 2020 cen-

sus’ nine-question survey on age, housing status, eth-nicity and in-home rela-tionships takes a moment for a household to do.

“It’s really fast ... just very

simple questions ... it takes six to seven minutes,” said Stephens, the assistant re-gional census manager of the U.S. Census Bureau At-lanta Region, covering Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina.

“Just complete it,” she added. “Once you com-plete it, encourage 10 of your friends and relatives to complete it also.”

Not only has it been a civic duty in the U.S. since 1790, responding to the census helps shape future funding appropriations

and government represen-tation for states, counties, cities, tribal communities and U.S. territories.

“If you talk about health care, social services, edu-cation, affordable housing and veteran services,”

Deadline approaching to respond to US Census

See CENSUS/Page A11

Page 2: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

my clergy clothes and he hands me a rifle and says the feeders are on a timer and when the hogs come up, take your shot. So, the timer goes off, the hogs come up, I take my shot — and thank goodness I missed.”

Morgan added, “Msgr. Cummings was the last of the giants ... who made a big impact in our state.”

The Rev. Msgr. George Cummings died Aug. 8, 2020. He was 102.

Ordained Nov. 27, 1943, Cummings served in churches all over Florida, from Miami to Citrus Springs.

However, his legacy and the great love of his life is Good Counsel Camp.

“As a teenager in 1971-72, I was a counselor at the camp when Msgr. Cum-mings was camp director,” said the Rev. James John-son, pastor at St. Scholas-tica Catholic Church and current Good Counsel Camp director. “What I re-member most is how he led by example.”

The counselors would be working at something, clearing bushes or digging septic tanks, and he would be right there working alongside them.

“He was in his 50s at that time, and he could outwork any of us,” John-son said. “He was some-one you wanted to please, because of the kind of life he lived.”

Cummings was also known for his one-of-a-kind cars.

“He loved to have fun,” Johnson said. “People would donate an old car and he would take the doors and the trunk lid off to make it into a work car. But first, he would paint it.”

One of his cars was the “Pink Panther.” Another was the “Red Baron,” which he fixed up to re-semble a World War I fighter plane.

“He would dress up as the Red Baron, with a leather helmet, goggles, a scarf around his neck,” Johnson said. “He had two

cylinders on the front that were his ‘machine guns.’ He’d ride around and peo-ple would say, ‘THAT’S the monsignor?’ We’d say, ‘Yep, that’s him.’”

When Debbie Hoffman Sosnicki first moved to In-verness in 1975, she be-came acquainted with Good Counsel Camp and Msgr. Cummings.

“He invited our Catholic youth group to come and clean the cabins, which were all pretty rustic at the time,” she said. “He was a monsignor (an hon-orary title given to a priest by the pope), but he always referred to himself as ‘Fa-ther Cummings,’ so that’s what I called him.

“He was quirky,” she said. “He was thoughtful and insightful ... he was passionate about main-taining history.”

He also loved to write what he called his epis-tles, his thoughts and memories about the camp and about the churches, about life. And he wrote them with a typewriter — nothing else would do.

Sosnicki, the office and operations manager at Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church in Inverness, said Cummings often stopped by the church office to visit.

One day, he came in after his beloved type-writer died and couldn’t be fixed.

“It’s so hard without a typewriter,” he said with a sigh.

“I got the hint,” Sosnicki said. “I had an extra one and asked him if he would like it. His eyes lit up and he said, ‘When I die, you can have it back.’ But I told him, ‘That’s OK. You can keep it.’”

Cummings was rugged. He loved to hunt and was a talented taxidermist.

Many of his trophy ani-mals were mounted on the walls of the camp dining hall — Florida hogs and deer, dall sheep, caribou and moose from Alaska.

“He was well-known in the taxidermy realm in the state of Florida and com-peted and won ribbons and awards for his taxi-dermy,” Johnson said.

In September 2014, a fire destroyed the camp dining

hall, including Cummings’ trophy animals.

“He was retired from the camp at that time, but he was always up for a challenge.”

Cummings made it his personal project to replen-ish the walls with animal trophies and enlisted his many taxidermy friends to donate mounted animals — and they did readily.

Also lost in the fire were the hand-painted cow skulls given to camp coun-selors when they retired — the skulls, with the counselors’ names on them, stayed at the camp on the dining hall walls.

“So, all of the history of those skulls were burned, and he set out to secure skulls to replace them, which isn’t an easy thing to do, and then enlisted vol-unteers to paint them and decorate them, each with a counselor’s name,” John-son said. “One of those has my name on it.”

The one thing the fire didn’t destroy, although it got scorched — a sculp-ture bust someone made of Cummings.

“We later found out from the sculptor that it was ac-tually the second bust, and he gave us the original one,” Johnson said. “Msgr. Cummings told us not to put it back up until after his

death, so we’ve been hold-ing onto it all this time.”

The biography of Msgr. Cummings provided by the Diocese of St. Petersburg tells the story of a seminar-ian who was an intern at Good Counsel Camp.

One day the young man asked the monsignor, “When did you decide to become a priest?”

Without skipping a beat, Cummings said, “This morning.”

He added, “Every day I

wake up and I recommit myself to serving as a priest.”

Even at age 102, George Cummings was a priest.

“To say that Msgr. Cum-mings was loved and respected is an under-statement,” Tom Morgan said. “He would never say goodbye, even on the phone. He would just hang up when he was done speaking.

“When he was at the camp, when it came time for the campers and the counselors to leave, he used to get very quiet. He wouldn’t say goodbye. And now we’re saying goodbye to him.

“His contribution to St. Elizabeth Ann Seton where he served many years as pastor, to all the people of Citrus County that he touched and every-one associated with Good Counsel Camp will never be matched or repeated,” Morgan said. “Monsignor, God sent us a giant when he sent you.”

Contact Chronicle re-porter Nancy Kennedy at 352-564-2927 or nkennedy @chronicleonline.com.

A2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 LOCAL CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

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GIANTContinued from Page A1

Special to the ChronicleOne of the features at Good Counsel Camp is the rustic, round chapel where priests say Mass daily during camp season. This undated photo is of Msgr. George Cummings saying the Mass.

Page 3: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

Local salon to offer free back-

to-school haircutsKids ages 5 to 11 can get

a free haircut from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16, at Upper Cutz Hair Studio, 3883 N. Lecanto Hwy, Bev-erly Hills (next to Los Ma-gueyes Mexican Restaurant).

No appointment needed. Hot dogs available outside, also auction for backpacks and school supplies.

“We want to give free haircuts to help out families who are struggling in this crazy time as a way to give back to our community,” said Carly Taft, Upper Cutz hair stylist.

For information, call 352-249-3196.

Free gardening workshops set

for Aug. 18Citrus County Utilities

Florida-friendly Landscap-ing Program will offer a free workshop:

*9 Principles of Flori-da-friendly Landscaping from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Tues-day, Aug. 18 — These 9 basic principles allow gar-deners to create beautiful landscapes generating little or no impact to our water resources. Selection of the right plant for the right loca-tion, efficient irrigation, proper fertilization and re-sponsible pest manage-ment are several of the topics discussed during this workshop.

These workshops will be held online. A computer equipped with a monitor and speaker is ideal, al-though a phone connection is available for those with-out speakers. Presentation will be live and offer Q&A with the instructor. Once registered, an email with a link to connect to the pre-sentation via Zoom will be sent.

Contact Steven Davis at 352-527-5708 to confirm participation and register at https://ccufflprogram.eventbrite.com.

Cemetery cleanup, yard sale Aug. 22

For more than a century, the cemetery near Citrus Avenue and Turkey Oak Drive in Crystal River has been called the “Black cem-etery,” but is now named Crystal Memorial Gardens, owned by the community.

Beginning at 7 a.m. Sat-urday, Aug. 22, the commu-nity is invited to a community cemetery cleanup and yard sale.

Bring your yard cleanup tools and yard waste bags to help beautify the resting place of hundreds of Crystal River’s ancestors.

Proceeds from the yard sale will go toward the cem-etery’s restoration.

The cemetery is located near the intersection of Cit-rus Avenue and Turkey Oak Drive in Crystal River.

To get there: If you’re traveling north on Turkey Oak Drive, at the light at Citrus Avenue turn left and then right at Garden Street. The cemetery is on that road.

For information, call George Ann Jackson, cem-etery sexton, at 352-202-2665 or Rev. Leon Thomas at 352-257-8223.

— From staff reports

STATE & LOCALPage A3 - THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020

CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE

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Early voting now underwaySpecial to the Chronicle

Early voting is from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. now through Saturday, Aug. 15, at Inverness City Hall, the Central Ridge and Homo-sassa Libraries and at the Su-pervisor of Elections Office at Meadowcrest.

The Supervisor of Elections Of-fice is utilizing CDC guidelines at this time.

� Paper masks, cloth masks, and face shields will be provided to the poll workers. Poll workers are required to wear a mask or shield while working.

� A table with hand sanitizer and paper face masks will be available for voters at the en-trance to the polling room if they so choose.

� We will do the best we can to social distance as the size of the

polling room allows.� There will be a Plexiglas bar-

rier between the voter and the poll worker checking in the voter.

� Styluses will be available for voters to sign in which will be cleaned after each voter with dis-infecting wipes.

� Voter’s IDs will be handled carefully. Each poll worker will have hand sanitizer.

� Voter will receive their ballot

in a black plastic secrecy sleeve.� Voters are encouraged to

bring their own black ink pen to mark their ballot. Black pens will be provided to voters at check-in for voters who did not bring their own pen.

� After depositing their ballots into the tabulator, the voter will place their secrecy sleeve and pen, if issued one, into a box by the tabulator to be disinfected.

Husband, wife arrested after altercationJEFF BRYAN

Managing editor

A physical altercation between a husband and wife took a way-ward turn Tuesday, Aug. 11, 2020, for the Homosassa couple, ac-cording to Citrus County Sheriff ’s Office arrest affidavits.

Deputies ar-rested Michael Keith Barringer, 39, and Kylee Ann Smith, 41, both of Homo-sassa. Barringer was charged with one count of battery on a law en-forcement officer and resisting without violence. His bond was

set at $6,000. Smith was charged with resisting without violence; her bond was set at $1,000.

Upon arriving at West Fern Place and South Alabama in Ho-mosassa, deputies met with Mi-chael Keith Barringer about what occurred, but the 39-year-old Ho-mosassa man re-fused to speak with law enforce-ment officers, the report stated, telling officers he we would “(ex-pletive) you up” and “I’ll knock you out” as he began balling his hands up into a fist. At that point, deputies put him in handcuffs, where he was asked to sit on the

ground near the rear tire of a pa-trol vehicle.

According to the report, 41-year-old Kylee Ann Smith began running around and screaming. As deputies focused their attention on her, Barringer jumped up, fleeing through a wooded area into a back yard. De-spite losing sight of him, deputies found him under a nearby trailer. Barringer followed orders to come out.

After securing Barringer in the rear of a patrol vehicle, he began kicking the windows. The report stated deputies opened the door to instruct him not to, when Bar-ringer told Deputy Jon Baker, “I’m going to kick you in the face,” at which time Barringer kicked him in the right forearm a couple

of times.According to the report, Baker

grabbed the defendant by the an-kles as he and Deputy Harris placed Barringer in leg restraints to stop him from kicking the win-dows of the patrol vehicle.

After informing Smith that Bar-ringer was being arrested and transported to the Citrus County Detention Facility, Smith became hysterical, running to the rear of the patrol vehicle and began banging on the window and tried to open the door, the report stated. She ignored commands to stop and back away from the vehicle.

She was handcuffed, secured in the rear of a separate patrol vehi-cle and also transported to the Citrus County Detention Facility.

Working together for the common good

Daystar Life Center and Community Food Bank partner to help

those in needSpecial to the Chronicle

Daystar Life Center of Citrus County has been a partner of the Community Food Bank of Citrus County (CFBCC) since 2013.

In fact, Daystar’s former executive di-rector played an integral role in establishing the CFBCC, and the organiza-tion’s current executive director, Anthony Kopka, and food pantry manager, Nancy Whittemore, con-tinue to be active mem-bers of the CFBCC Advisory Council.

Daystar’s mission is to make a positive difference in people’s lives by providing immediate assistance for low-income individuals and families throughout Citrus County. Some of the basic needs Daystar provides include food, clothing and assistance with paying rent and utilities. The organization also connects individuals with resources and opportunities to help improve their situ-ations and put them on a path toward success.

The demand for food assistance contin-ues to increase. In 2019, between 340 and 420 households sought assistance from Daystar each month and the organization distributed 121,466 pounds of food to a total of 1,539 households.

According to Kopka, the Daystar truck makes a stop at least once a week, some-times more, to the CFBCC. Picking up food at a central location makes it conve-nient for all.

“Having a centralized location of foods donated by local supermarkets — where every food pantry and feeding agency can go to share in the bounty — streamlines accessibility for us all,” Kopka said. “It must certainly be better for the supermar-kets as well. They only need to deal with one entity instead of all 50 or more who seek grocery donations.

“Having a food bank for the entire county also benefits us all by having one

entity represent all community pantries in order to leverage corporations, national or state agencies and regional networks for either better prices or for free foods,” he said.

“Daystar has been with us since day one,” said CFBCC Executive Director Bar-bara Sprague. “Not only do they provide much needed, comprehensive services to those in need throughout our community, but they are active in supporting and pro-moting what we do here at the Community Food Bank of Citrus County.”

Kopka said the COVID-19 pandemic has significantly affected the agency because the churches, organizations, civic clubs and community groups that support Day-star have had to cancel their fundraising events. As a result, Daystar has leaned on the CFBCC for additional assistance.

“The Community Food Bank has been especially helpful by procuring free fresh produce and other foods,” Kopka said. “We also go to the food bank every week for meat and poultry, which are difficult foods to obtain. It is also very helpful to have one hub for distribution of items needed during and after a crisis, such as bottled water after hurricanes and face masks for COVID-19.”

According to Sprague, the most suc-cessful partnerships are those where each agency works together for the com-mon good.

“Anthony Kopka and his team are al-ways supportive and available to help in any way they can,” she said. “We, in turn, are able to provide them with a variety of fresh, nourishing food options to distrib-ute to the individuals and families they serve. It’s a win-win for us all.”

“The executive director, employees and the Board of Directors of the Community Food Bank have been very accessible, re-sponsive and helpful to the needs of Day-star Life Center, ever since the food bank was established,” Kopka said. “In addi-tion to food, Daystar also provides cloth-ing and financial aid to avert utility disconnections or to prevent evictions from rental housing for needy and low-in-come residents throughout Citrus County. The food bank is like having a partner to procure food for distribution, giving Day-star staff more time to line up resources to sustain our other services that help those who are in critical need.”

To learn more about Daystar and all of the important resources and services they provide, please visit www.daystarci-truscounty.org. For more information about the CFBCC, please visit www.feedcitrus.org.

Michael Barringer

Kylee Smith

Marion Co. sheriff bans use of masks

Anthony D. Kopka

With some exceptionsTAMARA LUSH AND MIKE SCHNEIDER

Associated Press

ST. PETERSBURG — A central Florida sheriff says his deputies won’t be allowed to wear face masks except under some condi-tions, and neither will visitors to the sher-iff ’s office.

Marion County Sheriff Billy Woods said this week in an email to staff that he had weighed both sides of the issue.

“Now, I can already hear the whining and just so you know I did not make this decision easily and I have weighed it out for the past 2 weeks,” Woods said. “We can debate and argue all day of why and why not. The fact is, the amount of professionals that give the reason why we should, I can find the exact same amount of professionals that say why we shouldn’t.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Pre-vention in July asked Americans to wear masks to help stop the spread of the new coronavirus. “There is increasing evidence that cloth face coverings help prevent peo-ple who have COVID-19 from spreading the virus to others,” the CDC said.

The sheriff made the announcement on the week that Florida reported 213 new deaths Wednesday. That brought its overall total to 8,898 and its average daily deaths over the past week to 164. That’s down from the state’s peak rate in daily reported deaths of 185 a week ago. The peak rate for New York — a state of comparable population — was more than 760 in mid-April.

Also on Wednesday, there were more than 8,100 new infections reported, for a total of 550,000 cases in the state since the pan-demic started.

The number of people treated in Florida hospitals for the disease continued a three-week downward trend, standing at 6,538 in the late morning Wednesday — down from highs of more than 9,500.

Woods, the Marion County sheriff, said ex-ceptions will be made for deputies at jails, schools, courthouses, hospitals, nursing homes and when dealing with someone who is elderly or has COVID-19. In these situa-tions, the mask should be removed when giving orders or commands to comply, the sheriff said.

At the sheriff ’s office, masks won’t be al-lowed so that visitors can be easily identi-fied and there is clear communication with them, the sheriff said

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Birthday — Your associations will make or break you this year. Choose your allies carefully, and know enough to walk away from users and unreliable people. Focus on what’s important to you, and do your best to grow.Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Spend more time with people you look up to or who inspire you to do your very best. A show of enthusiasm will encourage others to pitch in and help you.Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Focus on what you can do to make your life bet-ter. Personal victory comes with loving who you are and believing in what you do. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) — Be open to suggestions, observe what’s going on around you and take better care of yourself mentally, physically and emo-tionally. Address whatever is causing anxiety and stress.Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -— Pay at-tention to how you look and represent yourself. Refuse to let possessiveness and jealousy take the reins. Sagittarius (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -— Take care of personal business. Make positive changes at home that will bring you closer to loved ones. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — What you do today will make a difference in how others feel about you. Wise deci-sions, positive changes and a demon-stration of kindness will encourage others to see things your way. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) — Make meaningful partnerships a priority. Being up-front about your feelings will help alleviate any uncertainty.Pisces (Feb. 20-March 20) — Keep your secrets and emotions to yourself, and you’ll avoid being the topic of con-versation. Concentrate on what you can do to help others.Aries (March 21-April 19) — Pick up the slack, and do your best to finish what you start. Don’t let the actions of others interfere with your plans. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Pay at-tention to how you look and feel. Don’t worry about what others think or say. Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Keep a tally of what you do for others. An idea you have to improve your surroundings will pay off. Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Some-one will use what you reveal to make you look bad. Focus on personal improvement.

Today’s HOROSCOPES

Today is Thursday, Aug. 13, the 226th day of 2020. There are 140 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight: On Aug. 13, 1961, East Germany

sealed off the border between Ber-lin’s eastern and western sectors before building a wall that would di-vide the city for the next 28 years.

On this date: In 1521, Spanish conqueror Her-

nando Cortez captured Tenochtit-lan, present-day Mexico City, from the Aztecs.

In 1889, William Gray of Hartford, Conn., received a patent for a coin-operated telephone.

In 1910, Florence Nightingale, the founder of modern nursing, died in London at age 90.

In 1932, Adolf Hitler rejected the post of vice chancellor of Germany, saying he was prepared to hold out “for all or nothing.”

In 1967, the crime caper biopic “Bonnie and Clyde,” starring War-ren Beatty and Faye Dunaway, had its U.S. premiere; the movie, di-rected by Arthur Penn, was consid-ered shocking as well as innovative for its graphic portrayal of violence.

Five years ago: The New York Times reported that DNA testing had proved that President Warren G. Harding fathered a child with long-rumored mistress Nan Britton, according to AncestryDNA, a divi-sion of Ancestry.com.

One year ago: Ken Cuccinelli, the Trump administration’s acting director of U.S. Citizenship and Im-migration Services, said the famous inscription on the Statue of Liberty welcoming “huddled masses” to American shores referred to “peo-ple coming from Europe.”

Today’s Birthdays: Golf Hall of Famer Betsy King is 65. Actor Danny Bonaduce is 61. Actor John Slattery is 58. Actor Debi Mazar is 56. Actor Quinn Cummings is 53. Country musician Mike Melancon (Emerson Drive) is 42. Actor Kathryn Fiore is 41. Former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders is 38. Actor Sebastian Stan is 38.

Today in HISTORY

HI / LO PR

H / LO

YTD

PR

HI / LO PR

HI / LO PR

YESTERDAY’S WEATHER

THREE DAY OU T LOOK Exclusi

Legend: YTD-Year toDate, PR-Daily Precipitation

ve daily forecast by:

DEW POINT

HUMIDITY

POLLEN COUNT**

**Light - only extreme allergic will show symp-toms, moderate - most allergic will experience symptoms, heavy - all allergic will experience symptoms.AIR QUALITY

ALM A N A C

CE L EST I A L OU T LOOK

WATER ING R UL ES

B U R N CON D I T ION S

For more information call Florida Division of Forestry at (352) 797-4140. For more information on wildfire conditions, please visit the Division of Forestryʼs Web site: www.freshfromflorida.com/Divisions-Offices/Florida-Forest-Service/Wildland-Fire

Today’s Fire Danger Index is:

City H L F’cast City H L F’cast

F LO R I DA TE M PERAT U RES

Gulf watertemperature

LA K E L E V E L S Location Full

Levels reported in feet above sea level. Flood stage for lakes are based on 2.33-year flood, the mean-annual flood which has a 43-precent chance of being equaled or exceeded in any one year. This data is obtained from the Southwest Florida Water Management District and is subject to revision. In no event will the District or the United States Geological Survey be liable for any damages arising out of the use of this data. If you have any questions you should contact the Hydrological Data Section at (352) 796-7211.

M AR IN E OU T LOOK

Taken at Aripeka

T HE N AT ION

YESTERDAY’S NATIONAL HIGH & LOW

HIGH

LOW

CITY H/L/SKY

W O R L D CI T I ES

City H L Pcp. H L City

C ity High Low

T I DES *From mouths of rivers **At Kingʼs Bay ***At Masonʼs Creek

S OLUN AR TAB L ES DATE DAY MINOR MAJOR MINOR MAJOR

HI / LO PR

SUNSET TONIGHT ...........................

SUNRISE TOMORROW ....................

MOONRISE TODAY .........................

MOONSET TODAY ..........................

Fcst H L Pcp. H L Fcst

(MORNING) (AFTERNOON)

TEMPERATURE*

RecordNormalMean temp.Departure from meanPRECIPITATION*

Total for the monthTotal for the yearNormal for the year

UV INDEX:0-2 minimal, 3-4 low, 5-6 moderate,7-9 high, 10+ very highBAROMETRIC PRESSURE

*

**Official record values from Tampa International

Data fromCrystal River Airport

Provided byezfshn.com

40s10s 90s80s70s60s50s 100s 110s0s 20s 30s

L

H

SATURDAY & SUNDAY MORNINGHigh: 92° Low: 75°Pop-up anytime showers and a few thunderstorms.

Yesterday 0.00"0.01"

11.07"34.11"

30.02

Yesterday at 3 p.m. 64%

Yesterday observed GoodPollutant Ozone

Aug 18 Aug 25 Sep 2 Sep 10

0 - 1 Monday 6 - 7 Thursday2 - 3 Tuesday 8 - 9 -or-

Common Areas Friday4 - 5 Wednesday

Daytona Bch. 91 76 shFort Lauderdale 90 80 tFort Myers 94 76 shGainesville 92 74 tHomestead 91 78 tJacksonville 92 77 tKey West 91 83 tLakeland 93 76 shMelbourne 90 76 t

WED THU

Albany 83 65 0.01 88 66 pcAlbuquerque 97 64 0.00 98 65 pcAsheville 88 68 0.24 85 67 shAtlanta 92 73 0.24 92 72 tAtlantic City 80 76 0.02 82 72 tAustin 106 79 0.00 103 78 sBaltimore 93 72 3.14 83 71 shBillings 94 61 0.00 84 55 pcBirmingham 97 73 0.00 91 73 shBoise 86 63 0.00 87 56 sBoston 93 74 0.00 88 71 pcBuffalo 88 64 0.00 86 66 sBurlington, VT 88 70 1.15 86 61 pcCharleston, SC 92 72 0.05 88 76 tCharleston, WV 91 69 0.00 90 71 tCharlotte 91 73 0.02 87 73 shChicago 83 63 0.00 83 68 pcCincinnati 88 68 0.00 88 70 pcCleveland 82 71 0.00 85 70 sColumbia, SC 90 75 Trace 90 74 shColumbus, OH 89 69 0.00 89 70 pcConcord, NH 91 73 Trace 88 61 pcDallas 101 82 0.00 104 83 sDenver 92 59 0.00 96 64 sDes Moines 88 68 0.00 85 68 mcDetroit 84 63 0.00 88 69 sEl Paso 107 82 0.00 106 80 sEvansville, IN 84 73 Trace 87 72 tHarrisburg 93 73 0.00 85 69 shHartford 93 71 0.19 90 70 mcHouston 101 79 Trace 99 79 pcIndianapolis 84 66 0.00 86 68 pcKansas City 90 70 0.00 87 70 pcLas Vegas 108 73 0.00 106 85 pcLittle Rock 84 72 0.12 90 72 pcLos Angeles 86 60 0.00 90 70 mcLouisville 86 75 0.00 88 71 mcMemphis 91 75 0.07 87 73 shMilwaukee 82 62 0.00 84 66 sMinneapolis 74 63 0.45 87 69 tMobile 94 75 0.03 92 77 tMontgomery 94 72 0.00 94 74 shNashville 90 75 0.09 90 72 sh

WED

Acapulco 90/72/clAmsterdam 87/70/raAthens 93/79/sBeijing 91/73/raBerlin 86/68/pcBermuda 84/83/sCairo 101/74/sCalgary 69/43/sHavana 87/79/raHong Kong 86/81/raJerusalem 88/63/s

91/73 1.50"37.70"

87/75 0.20"

88/74 0.20"

n/a/n/a n/a n/a/n/a n/a

WED TUEWithlacoochee at Holder 27.90 27.84 34.64Tsala Apopka-Hernando 37.05 37.02 38.66Tsala Apopka-Inverness 38.13 38.13 39.73Tsala Apopka-Floral City 39.69 39.69 41.37

Lisbon 76/63/sLondon 89/73/raMadrid 85/70/sMexico City 78/60/raMontreal 84/66/pcMoscow 59/55/raParis 84/71/raRio 87/72/pcRome 96/75/sSydney 67/52/sTokyo 96/84/raToronto 82/71/pcWarsaw 82/63/s

WED THU

New Orleans 93 80 0.24 91 78 tNew York City 89 72 1.76 84 73 tNorfolk 91 76 0.01 89 75 shOklahoma City 92 70 0.00 95 77 pcOmaha 88 72 0.00 88 71 pcPalm Springs 11378 0.00 11388 pcPhiladelphia 93 72 1.44 84 72 shPhoenix 11189 0.00 11490 pcPittsburgh 90 70 0.00 89 68 mcPortland, ME 93 73 Trace 86 67 pcPortland, OR 74 57 Trace 78 54 sProvidence, RI 92 73 0.01 89 70 mcRaleigh 91 72 0.00 89 72 shRapid City 99 61 Trace 92 62 sReno 91 55 0.00 93 60 sRochester, NY 82 59 Trace 86 66 sSacramento 97 57 0.00 10170 sSalt Lake City 93 69 0.00 94 65 sSan Antonio 10073 0.00 10177 pcSan Diego 76 64 0.00 85 70 pcSan Francisco 72 57 0.00 74 59 sSavannah 92 74 0.00 91 75 tSeattle 71 57 0.00 72 54 sSpokane 74 62 0.00 80 49 sSt. Louis 84 70 Trace 87 69 tSt. Ste Marie 84 59 0.00 87 63 pcSyracuse 84 68 0.00 87 65 sTopeka 88 70 Trace 88 71 tWashington 92 75 0.26 83 72 sh

Miami 89 81 tOcala 91 74 tOrlando 94 77 shPensacola 89 78 tSarasota 93 77 tTallahassee 92 75 tTampa 94 77 shVero Beach 91 74 tW. Palm Bch. 87 81 t

Chassahowitzka*1:39 a.m. 0.2 ft 2:02 p.m. 0.5 ft 6:00 a.m. 0.2 ft 10:41 p.m. 0.1 ftCrystal River** 11:51 a.m. 2.0 ft None n/a 6:06 a.m. 1.0 ft 7:50 p.m. 0.4 ftWithlacoochee* 8:56 a.m. 3.5 ft 11:15 p.m. 2.6 ft 3:35 a.m. 1.9 ft 5:21 p.m. 0.8 ftHomosassa*** 1:42 a.m. 0.6 ft 12:28 p.m. 1.3 ft 6:18 a.m. 0.2 ft 10:51 p.m. 0.1 ft

8:10 pm6:58 am1:41 am3:45 pm

08/13 THURSDAY 6:57 8:41 8:10 9:0608/14 FRIDAY 6:58 9:32 8:09 9:59

Predominant: GrassesThu

low med high

Yesterday at 3 p.m. 74°

11

Yesterday 91/7398/6792/71

821

FRIDAY & SATURDAY MORNINGHigh: 91° Low: 74°Hot with a few showers and thunderstorms, mainly in the afternoon.

TODAY & TOMORROW MORNINGHigh: 91° Low: 74°Scattered showers and thunderstorms.

LOW. There is no burn ban.

For established lawns and landscapes, irrigation may occur during only one (1) of the specified time periods, 12:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m., or 4:00 p.m. - 11:59 p.m., on the allowable watering days below:

Addresses with house numbers ending in:

Questions, concerns or reporting violations, please call: City of Inverness at 352-726-2321; City of Crystal River at 352-795-4216, Ext. 313; unincorporated Citrus County at 352-527-7669. For more information, visit:https://www.citrusbocc.com/departments/water_resources/watering_restrictions.php

THURSDAYKEY TO CONDITIONS: c=cloudy; fg=fog; hz=haze; mc=mostly cloudy; pc=partly cloudy; ra=rain; rs=rain/snow; s=sunny; sh=showers; sm=smoke; sn=snow; ss=snow showers; t=thunderstorms

117, Furnace Creek, Calif.29, Bylas, Ariz.

Today: Southeast winds around 10 knots then becoming west around 5 knots late in the afternoon. Seas 2 feet or less. Bay and inland waters a light chop. A chance of thunderstorms. 90°

FORECAST FOR 3:00 P.M.Thursday

Today’s active pollen:Ragweed, chenpods, grass

Today’s count: 3.1/12Friday’s count: 5.4

Saturday’s count: 5.2

ENTERTAINMENT

Lucille Ball Comedy Festival goes virtual

in its 29th yearLOS ANGELES — The an-

nual Lucille Ball Comedy Festi-val is going virtual with help from Tiffany Haddish, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Margaret Cho, “Weird Al” Yankovic and more than two-dozen others working in the realm of humor.

The festival, presented by the National Comedy Center in Jamestown, New York, will stream conversations with the artists over three weekends, starting Friday and running through Aug. 30.

In a series of discussions, they’ll weigh in on their careers, influences and the art of com-edy, with performers and produc-ers serving as hosts.

One intriguing trio: Yankovic as the subject and “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda and Jimmy Fallon of “Tonight” as the hosts in a conversation streaming at 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 29.

Other pairings include Cho with host and fellow comedian Judy Gold (10 p.m. Friday); Haddish with comedian Flame Monroe (8 p.m. Aug. 22); politi-cal satirist Mark Russell with Lewis Black (8 p.m Aug. 28).

The 29th annual festival will pay tribute to Carl Reiner, the filmmaker and creator of “The Dick Van Dyke Show” who died in June. A rare Reiner interview from the center’s archives will be shown at 8 p.m. Aug. 30, with humorist Paula Poundstone hosting.

The live streams will be free on the center’s new platform, ComedyCenter.org/Festival, and at Facebook.com/NationalComedyCenter. The programs will then be available on-demand and without charge on the cen-ter’s platform.

The nonprofit center was founded in Ball’s hometown, which the “I Love Lucy” star had envisioned as a destination for comedy. It is funded by a mix of federal, state and private support.

Hank Williams Jr., Marty Stuart to join Country Hall of Fame

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Hank Williams Jr., Marty Stuart and songwriter Dean Dillon are the newest inductees to the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Announced by the Country Music Association on Wednes-day, Williams will join his father, country legend Hank Williams Sr., in the Hall of Fame’s rotunda.

Williams is known for his songs like “A Country Boy Can Survive,” and “Family Tradition.”

Stuart, a five-time Grammy winner, started his career as a sideman playing in bands lead by bluegrass legend Lester Flatt and Johnny Cash before starting his own artist career in the 1980s.

Dillon is known for being the tunesmith behind George Strait’s dozens of hits, including “Here For a Good Time.” He also wrote time-less classics like “Tennessee Whiskey,” which has been cov-ered by David Allan Coe, George Jones and Chris Stapleton.

— From wire reports

Associated PressThis combination of photos shows, from left, Tiffany Haddish, Weird Al Yankovic and Margaret Cho, who will be participating in the annual Lucille Ball Comedy Festival, presented online by the National Comedy Center in Jamestown, New York, starting Friday.

A4 THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

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With each student who enrolls in virtual school, district teachers have to then move from brick-and-mortar campuses to meet those growing classes online.

Hebert said there’s be-tween 45 and 50 students on the waiting list for Citrus Virtual, which already has 1,748 elementary students, 864 middle schoolers and 1,020 high schoolers.

“As we’re getting more families coming in, we’re trying to work through those one day at a time,” he said.

Hebert said doctor’s notes or other medical doc-umentation aren’t required to enroll students with Cit-rus Virtual, contrary to rumors.

Suzanne Swain, director of school district human re-sources, said roughly 85 ed-ucators have been reassigned to teach Citrus Virtual, and there are still enough teachers available to meet the class sizes at b r i c k - a n d - m o r t a r campuses.

Some instructors, like those teaching International Baccalaureate or academy courses not offered through the Florida Virtual School, will host both in-person and online classes.

Swain said there are eight teaching positions still left to fill districtwide.

“This is the best spot we’ve been in in years…and we’re still hiring,” she told the school board.

Concerns linger over how school district employees will be compensated if they have to leave work for 10-14 days because either they or

someone they had contact with contract COVID-19.

Inverness Primary School P.E. teacher Terry Flaherty asked school board members Aug. 11 what he could do if he had to use all his sick time be-cause he kept coming into contact with ill staff or students.

“There’s got to be some-thing in place,” Flaherty said. “Please think about that.”

Workers can apply for 80 hours of paid sick leave through the Families First Coronavirus Response Act.

However, they can’t reap-ply after their two weeks of eligibility ends, meaning they’ll have to resort to using other time for compensation.

“If we’re quarantining through no fault of our own, it’s going to cost us,” Fla-herty said. “I’m going to fight for our time.”

Superintendent of Schools Sandra “Sam” Himmel told the board dis-trict staff is looking into how they can keep employ-ees paid if they’re out sick or quarantined over and over again.

Board members empha-sized no district has a fool-proof plan on how to navigate through the up-coming school year.

“Nobody has this figured out,” board member Thomas Kennedy said. “We don’t have all the answers, and we’re going to figure them out.”

School board members at their Aug. 11 meeting also approved a revised calen-dar for the 2020-21 aca-demic year to accommodate for the late return to school.

This calendar provides a full week for Thanksgiving break and marks June 4, 2021, as the last day of

school. First semester also extends into January.

Amy Crowell, director of school district research and accountability, said 80% of a third of district staff also voted for the revised calen-dar to a second option.

School dates could still be impacted.

A Leon County Circuit Court judge will hear argu-ments Thursday, Aug. 13, in a lawsuit challenging a state order mandating schools to reopen their campuses in August.

According to the News Service of Florida, teachers union officials with the Florida Education Associa-tion claims Education Com-missioner Richard Corcoran’s July 6 order vio-lates the state constitution because it doesn’t guaran-tee Floridans a safe and se-cure public education.

Lawyers representing the state are asking the court to dismiss the lawsuit.

Also during the school board meeting:

Board members got a preview screening of a school district video ex-plaining how brick-and-mortar campuses and students will operate with COVID-19 health measures and mask mandates in place.

To watch the video, visit citrusschools.org.

Dodd said the Florida High School Athletic Asso-ciation, of which Dodd serves as a board member, will meet Friday, Aug. 14, to decide how sports will return to play.

One option is to have fall sports return in Novem-ber, and shorten the sport seasons. School board members will discuss local athletics at their Aug. 25 workshop.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 A5LOCALCITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

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SCHOOLSContinued from Page A1

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Amid pandemic concernsHEATHER

HOLLINGSWORTHAssociated Press

MISSION, Kan. — As parents nationwide pre-pare to help their children with more distance learn-ing, a small but quickly growing number are de-ciding to take matters en-tirely into their own hands and begin homeschooling.

Some are worried their districts are unable to offer a strong virtual learn-ing program. For others who may have been con-sidering homeschooling, concerns for their family’s health amid the coronavi-rus and the on-again, off-again planning for in-person instruction are leading them to part ways with school systems.

Mindy Kroesche, a free-lance writer and editor from Lincoln, Nebraska, had been leaning toward homeschooling her 12-year-old son, who has autism and ADHD diagno-ses that made middle school a challenge. But she always felt her 10-year-old daughter was “built for school.” Now with the pan-demic raging, she is pull-ing them both out for the year.

“We just saw that with her wearing a mask for the entire day, that would make learning more diffi-cult for her,” she said. “It was going to be such a dif-ferent environment. We didn’t think it would be as beneficial for her.”

Homeschooling applica-tions are surging in states including Nebraska, where they are up 21%, and Ver-mont, where they are up 75%. In North Carolina, a rush of parents filing no-tices that they planned to homeschool overwhelmed a government website last month, leaving it temporar-i l y u n a b l e t o

accept applications.There were about

2.5 million homeschool students last year in grades K-12 in the U.S., making up about 3% to 4% of school-age children, ac-cording to the National Home Educators Re-search Institute. Brian Ray, the group’s president, is anticipating that their numbers will increase by at least 10%.

“One day the school dis-trict says X and four days later they say Y,” Ray said. “And then the governor says another thing and then that changes what the school district can do. And parents and teachers are tired of what appear to be arbitrary and capricious decisions. They are tired of it and saying we are out of here.”

Interest in homeschool-ing materials also has been surging, driven in

part by parents who are keeping their children en-rolled in schools but look-ing for ways to supplement distance learning.

The National Home School Association re-ceived more than 3,400 re-quests for information on a single day last month, up from between five and 20 inquiries per day before the coronavirus. The group had to increase the size of its email inbox to keep up.

“Clearly the interest we have been getting has ex-ploded,” said J. Allen Weston, the executive di-rector of the suburban Denver-based group. “That is really the only way to describe it.”

Some parents in rural parts of Nebraska are turning to homeschooling because staffing and lim-ited access to home inter-net leave districts unable

to offer a virtual learning option, said Kathryn Dil-low, president and execu-tive director of Nebraska Home Schools, a support and advocacy group.

Homeschooling applica-tions continue arriving in Nebraska, where the num-ber of homeschoolers al-ready had risen to 3,400 as of July 14, up from 2,800 at the same time a year ago, said David Jespersen, a spokesman for the Ne-braska Department of Education.

Jespersen said there is “a lot of confusion” and that “parents are delayed in making their decision” because so much is changing.

Regardless of the final number, Jespersen doesn’t expect that the increase will bust districts’ budgets because homeschoolers will still remain a small fraction of about 326,000

students spread over the state’s 244 school systems.

Most other states don’t have homeschooling num-bers, either because they aren’t collected at the state level or it’s too early. But all indications point to increases across the country.

Associated Press

Sumner Redstone, who joined his family’s drive-in movie chain in the 1950s and used it to build a vast media empire that in-cluded CBS and Viacom, has died. He was 97.

Under his watch, Via-com became one of the na-tion’s media titans, home to pay TV channels MTV and Comedy Central and movie studio Paramount Pictures. ViacomCBS Inc., which he led for decades, remembered Redstone for his “unparalleled passion to win, his endless intel-lectual curiosity and his complete dedication to the company.”

Redstone built the com-pany through aggressive acquisitions, but many headlines with his name focused on severed ties with wives, actors and ex-ecutives. In multiple inter-views, he said he would never die.

His tight-fisted grip on the National Amusements theater chain, which con-trolled CBS Corp. and Via-com Inc. through voting stock, was passed to his daughter, Shari Redstone, who battled top executives to re-merge the two enti-ties that split in 2006.

The elder Redstone’s battles with his own fam-ily were as dramatic as his corporate maneuvers. Son Brent Redstone once sued his father to break up his media empire — then settled for a princely

sum to give up his voting shares.

A lanky man with a thick Boston accent, Red-stone often told inter-viewers that “content is king.” And he was right. Despite sagging TV rat-ings at Viacom, his vast shareholdings in Viacom and CBS led Forbes maga-zine to estimate his net worth at $4.6 billion.

Besides being ruthless, Redstone was known for dogged determination. In 1979, he survived a fire at Boston’s Copley Plaza Hotel by gripping a third-floor window ledge with his right arm still inside. He suffered third-degree burns over half his body, his right wrist was nearly severed, and he was told he would never walk again. But he eventually recovered, and was even

able to play tennis by strapping the racket to his wrist.

“I intend to live for-ever!” he told Upstart Business Journal in 2009.

Born in 1923 in Boston, Redstone was the oldest son of Michael and Belle Rothstein, who changed the family name to Redstone.

Redstone graduated first in his class from Bos-ton Latin School in 1940 and completed his educa-tion at Harvard in less than three years. He was selected to work on an Army intelligence team during World War II that cracked Japan’s military codes.

After three years in the Army, he went to Harvard Law School and became a partner at a Washington law firm. He gave it up to

join his father’s drive-in movie business in 1954. Redstone grew it into a major chain of multi-screen movie houses.

A6 THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

5720-0813 THCRN

NOTICE OF INTENT TO CONSIDER AN ORDINANCE TO

ESTABLISH OR CHANGE REGULATIONS

AFFECTING THE USE OF LAND

The Citrus County Board of County Commissioners (BCC) proposes to adopt the following by ordinance:

AN ORDINANCE OF CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA, A POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, AMENDING THE CITRUS COUNTY LAND DEVELOPMENT CODE ATLAS BY AMENDING AN EXISTING MASTER PLAN (PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT-PUD) TO EXTEND THE PREVIOUS EXPIRATION DATE FOR USE AS AN ASSISTED LIVING FACILITY; PROVIDING FOR APPLICABILITY; PROVIDING FOR MODIFICATIONS THAT MAY ARISE FROM CONSIDERATION AT PUBLIC HEARING; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE.

PUD-20-06 Board of County Commissioners for Veterans Village

The Citrus County Board of County Commissioners will conduct a Public Hearing on September 8, 2020 at 5:01 PM in Room 100, Citrus County Courthouse, 110 N. Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Florida. Interested parties may appear at the meeting and be heard with respect to the proposed application.

All citizens entering the courthouse for the meeting will be screened. If you are sick, please stay home.

A copy of the proposed ordinance(s) and supporting materials are available for public inspection and copying between the hours of 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M., Monday through Friday, at the Department of Growth Management, 3600 West Sovereign Path, Lecanto, Florida 34461. For more information about this application, please contact the Land Development Division at (352) 527-5239.

Si necesita un traductor de español por favor haga arreglos con el Condado dentro de dos días de lanotificación de la publicación (352-527-5370)

If any person decides to appeal any decision made by the board with respect to any matter considered at this meeting or hearing, he or she will need a record of the proceedings, and for such purpose, he or she may need to insure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes all testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.

Any person requiring reasonable accommodation at this meeting because of a disability or physical impairment should contact the County Administrator’s Office, 3600 W. Sovereign Path, Suite 267, Lecanto, FL 34461, (352) 527-5210, at least two days before the meeting. If you are hearing or speech impaired, dial 7-1-1, 1-800-955-8771 (TTY) or 1-800-955-8770 (v), via Florida Relay Service.

ChairmanBoard of County CommissionersCitrus County, Florida

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OBITUARIESn Obituaries must be

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n Death notices are $25, and may include: full name of deceased; age; hometown/state; date of death; place of death; date, time and place of visitation and funeral services and, for members of the military, the branch of the armed services in which they served.

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Byron Duez Sr., 80H O M O S A S S A

Byron Harold Duez, Sr., 80, of Homosassa, FL, passed away August 10, 2020. Family will re-ceive friends from 10AM-11AM with a Me-morial Service begin-ning at 11AM, Friday, August 14, 2020 at Brown Funeral Home & Cre-matory in Lecanto.

Media mogul Redstone dead at 97

Homeschooling interest ‘exploded’

Associated PressIn this Sept. 7, 1999, file photo, Viacom Chairman Sumner Redstone smiles during the announcement of a merger between CBS and Viacom in New York. Redstone, the strong-willed media mogul, died Wednesday.

Associated PressIn this March 24, 2020, photo provided by Christina Rothermel-Branham, her son James, does school work at their Tahlequah, Okla. home.

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Rays 9, Red Sox 5Tampa Bay Boston ab r h bi ab r h biMeadows dh 4 3 2 1 Pillar rf 5 1 4 0 Lowe rf-2b 5 3 3 2 Devers 3b 3 0 0 0 Díaz 3b 5 0 3 1 Araúz 3b 2 1 1 1 Margot pr-lf 0 0 0 0 Martinez dh 4 1 1 4 Choi 1b 4 1 1 0 Bogaerts ss 2 0 1 0 Wendle 2b-3b 5 0 1 1 Lin ss 2 0 1 0 Tsutsugo lf 4 1 1 2 Vázquez c 4 0 0 0 Renfroe rf 0 0 0 0 Chavis 1b 4 0 1 0 Adames ss 4 1 1 1 Verdugo lf 4 0 1 0 Kiermaier cf 4 0 3 0 Bradley Jr. cf 4 1 1 0 Perez c 4 0 0 0 Peraza 2b 4 1 1 0

Totals 39 9 15 8 Totals 38 5 12 5Tampa Bay 132 200 001 —9 Boston 000 000 050 —5DP—Tampa Bay 1, Boston 3. LOB—Tampa Bay 5, Boston 6. 2B—Choi (5), Lowe (6). HR—Adames (1), Lowe (4), Tsutsugo (2), Meadows (1), Martinez (1). SB—Chavis (1). IP H R ER BB SOTampa BaySnell, W, 1-0 5 4 0 0 0 6 Slegers 2 7 5 5 0 1 Anderson, H, 2 1 1 0 0 0 2 Fairbanks 1 0 0 0 0 1BostonGodley, L, 0-2 3 10 8 8 2 3 Weber 6 5 1 1 0 4

Slegers pitched to 6 batters in the 8th, Godley pitched to 3 batters in the 4th.

WP—Snell.

White Sox 7, Tigers 5Chicago Detroit ab r h bi ab r h biAnderson ss 5 3 4 1 Goodrum ss 5 0 0 0 E.Jiménez lf 5 1 2 1 Schoop 2b 4 1 2 1 2-Engel pr-lf 0 0 0 0 Cabrera dh 4 0 1 0 Abreu 1b 4 1 0 1 Stewart lf 3 0 0 0 Encarnación dh 5 1 0 0 Demeritte rf 0 0 0 0 McCann c 3 0 2 0 Candelario 1b 4 1 1 0 Robert cf 5 1 1 3 Reyes rf-lf 4 1 0 0 Mazara rf 3 0 1 1 H.Castro cf 4 0 1 0 Mendick 2b 4 0 0 0 Greiner c 3 1 1 2 Goins 3b 4 0 0 0 Jones ph 1 0 0 0 W.Castro 3b 4 1 3 2

Totals 38 7 10 7 Totals 36 5 9 5Chicago 201 040 000 —7 Detroit 100 400 000 —5DP—Chicago 1, Detroit 0. LOB—Chicago 8, Detroit 5. 2B—Robert (5), Mazara (2), H.Castro (1), Candelario (2), Greiner (1). 3B—Anderson (1). HR—Anderson (2), E.Jiménez (5), Schoop (4), W.Castro (1). SB—Reyes (4). IP H R ER BB SOChicagoCease, W, 3-1 6 7 5 1 0 5 Cordero, H, 3 2/3 2 0 0 0 1 Marshall, H, 4 1 1/3 0 0 0 1 2 Colomé, S, 5-5 1 0 0 0 0 1DetroitBoyd, L, 0-2 4 2/3 7 7 7 3 5 Schreiber 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 2 Garcia 1 1 0 0 0 1 Cisnero 1 0 0 0 0 2 Soto 1 1 0 0 1 3

WP—Cease.

Dbacks 13, Rockies 7Arizona Colorado ab r h bi ab r h biCalhoun rf 6 2 3 1 Hampson cf-2b 6 1 4 0 K.Marte 2b 4 2 2 1 Story ss 6 1 3 1 S.Marte cf 5 2 3 4 Blackmon dh 4 0 0 0 Peralta lf 5 1 2 3 Arenado 3b 5 2 3 3 Walker dh 5 0 3 0 Dahl lf 4 0 0 0 Escobar 3b 5 1 1 1 Owings 2b 1 0 0 0 Vogt c 5 1 1 0 Hilliard cf 3 1 1 0 Lamb 1b 5 1 0 0 Tapia rf 3 1 2 0 Ahmed ss 4 3 3 2 McMahon 1b 5 1 2 3 E.Díaz c 5 0 1 0

Totals 44 13 18 12 Totals 42 7 16 7Arizona 100 130 800 —13 Colorado 010 310 020 —7E—McMahon (3). DP—Arizona 1, Colorado 2. LOB—Arizona 6, Colorado 13. 2B—Vogt (4), Walker (9), Peralta (3), Ahmed (1), Story 2 (2), Arenado (2). 3B—Hampson (2). HR—S.Marte (2), Arenado 2 (6), McMahon (2). IP H R ER BB SOArizonaWeaver 3 1/3 6 4 4 1 3 Clarke 1 2/3 4 1 1 1 1 Crichton 2/3 1 0 0 1 1 Chafin, W, 1-1 1 1 0 0 0 2 Rondón 1/3 2 2 2 0 0 Guerra 1 1 0 0 1 2 Bradley 1 1 0 0 0 1ColoradoSenzatela 6 9 5 5 0 4 Kinley, L, 0-1 0 4 5 5 1 0 Almonte 1 3 3 0 0 0 Harvey 1 2 0 0 0 0 Pazos 1 0 0 0 1 0

Chafin pitched to 3 batters in the 7th, Kinley pitched to 5 batters in the 7th.

HBP—Guerra (Dahl). WP—Kinley.

A’s 8, Angels 4Oakland Los Angeles ab r h bi ab r h biSemien ss 4 1 1 1 Fletcher ss 4 1 1 0 Laureano cf 5 0 1 2 La Stella 2b 4 0 1 1 Olson 1b 5 1 1 1 Trout cf 2 1 1 2 Chapman 3b 5 0 2 1 Rendon 3b 4 1 1 1 Canha dh 5 1 1 0 Ohtani dh 3 0 0 0 Grossman lf 3 2 1 2 Pujols 1b 4 0 0 0 Piscotty rf 3 1 1 1 Castro c 4 0 0 0 Kemp 2b 2 0 0 0 Adell rf 3 0 0 0 Pinder ph-2b 2 1 0 0 Goodwin lf 3 1 1 0 Murphy c 2 1 1 0

Totals 36 8 9 8 Totals 31 4 5 4Oakland 120 110 030 —8 Los Angeles 102 001 000 —4LOB—Oakland 7, Los Angeles 3. 2B—Canha (3), Chapman 2 (5), Semien (2), Goodwin (3). HR—Olson (6), Grossman (3), Piscotty (2), Trout (8), Rendon (4). SB—Grossman (4). SF—Trout (2). IP H R ER BB SOOaklandBassitt, W, 2-0 5 2/3 5 4 4 0 4 Diekman, H, 5 2/3 0 0 0 1 2 Petit, H, 5 2/3 0 0 0 0 0 Soria 1 0 0 0 1 1 Hendriks 1 0 0 0 0 2

West Division

W L Pct GB WC L10 Str Home Away

Oakland 13 6 .684 — — 8-2 W-1 9-3 4-3

Houston 8 10 .444 4½ 2 4-6 W-1 5-4 3-6

Texas 7 9 .438 4½ 2 5-5 W-1 6-4 1-5

Los Angeles 7 12 .368 6 3½ 4-6 L-1 4-5 3-7

Seattle 7 12 .368 6 3½ 3-7 L-1 3-7 4-5

East Division

W L Pct GB WC L10 Str Home Away

New York 12 6 .667 — — 5-5 W-2 6-1 6-5

Tampa Bay 11 8 .579 1½ — 7-3 W-5 8-3 3-5

Baltimore 9 7 .563 2 — 5-4 W-2 3-4 6-3

Toronto 6 8 .429 4 2 4-6 W-1 1-2 5-6

Boston 6 12 .333 6 4 3-7 L-3 3-8 3-4

East Division

W L Pct GB WC L10 Str Home Away

Miami 7 4 .636 — — 6-4 L-3 2-0 5-4

Atlanta 11 9 .550 ½ 1 4-6 L-3 7-2 4-7

Washington 6 8 .429 2½ 3 5-4 L-1 2-7 4-1

New York 8 11 .421 3 3½ 5-5 W-1 4-7 4-4

Philadelphia 5 8 .385 3 3½ 4-6 L-2 4-7 1-1

Central Division

W L Pct GB WC L10 Str Home Away

Chicago 12 3 .800 — — 8-2 W-2 7-1 5-2

St. Louis 2 3 .400 5 2½ 2-3 L-3 2-1 0-2

Cincinnati 8 10 .444 5½ 3 5-5 L-1 4-6 4-4

Milwaukee 7 9 .438 5½ 3 4-6 L-1 2-6 5-3

Pittsburgh 3 13 .188 9½ 7 1-9 L-3 2-6 1-7

West Division

W L Pct GB WC L10 Str Home Away

Colorado 12 6 .667 — — 6-4 L-1 6-4 6-2

Los Angeles 11 7 .611 1 — 6-4 L-2 4-5 7-2

San Diego 11 7 .611 1 — 5-5 W-3 6-4 5-3

Arizona 8 11 .421 4½ 3½ 5-5 W-1 3-4 5-7

San Francisco 8 12 .400 5 4 3-7 L-1 3-3 5-9

Central Division

W L Pct GB WC L10 Str Home Away

Minnesota 12 7 .632 — — 5-5 W-1 7-1 5-6

Detroit 9 7 .563 1½ — 5-5 L-2 4-6 5-1

Chicago 10 9 .526 2 ½ 5-5 W-2 2-6 8-3

Cleveland 10 9 .526 2 ½ 5-5 L-2 6-4 4-5

Kansas City 8 11 .421 4 2½ 5-5 W-1 4-4 4-7

AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE ROUNDUP/MATCHUPSWhite Sox 7, Tigers 5: Tim Anderson had four hits and finished a double shy of the cycle, and Luis Robert hit a bases-clearing double.Diamondbacks 13, Rockies 7: Star-ling Marte homered and drove in four runs.A’s 8, Angels 4: Stephen Piscotty, Matt Olson and Robbie Grossman homered, center fielder Ramón Lau-reano made three nifty catches.Cubs 7, Indians 2: Kyle Hendricks pitched six strong innings and An-thony Rizzo homered.Royals 5, Reds 4: Streaking Salva-dor Perez had three more hits, includ-ing a homer and RBI double.Twins 12, Brewers 2: Byron Buxton hit two solo home runs and Miguel Sanó added another as the Minne-sota Twins jumped to an early lead.Yankees 6, Braves 3: Injury fill-in Clint Frazier had three hits, including a home run, and scored twice in his

season debut.Orioles 5, Phillies 4: Rio Ruiz, Chance Sisco and Anthony Santander all homered, Baltimore re-liever Miguel Castro wiggled out a jam in the eighth thanks to a fantastic div-ing stop by Ruiz.Astros 5, Giants 1: Martín Maldo-nado hit a three-run home run to back a strong start by Zack Greinke. The game was tied with no outs in the sixth when Carlos Correa, Kyle Tucker and Abraham Toro hit consec-utive singles. Houston took a 2-1 lead when Correa scored on a wild pitch.Mets 11, Nationals 6: Pete Alonso and Dominic Smith had back-to-back RBI doubles in a four-run first inning and hit consecutive homers in a five-run sixth. The fourth, fifth and sixth batters in the Mets’ lineup, Michael Conforto, Alonso and Smith, went 7-for-11 with eight RBIs, eight runs scored, three walks and a hit batsman.

LATEPittsburgh at St. Louis, ppd.Miami at TorontoSeattle at TexasSan Diego at L.A. DodgersTODAY’S GAMESAMERICAN LEAGUETampa Bay (Glasnow 0-1) at Boston (Hart 0-0), 4:30 p.m.NATIONAL LEAGUEWashington (Voth 0-1) at N.Y. Mets (Peterson 2-1), 1:10 p.m.Pittsburgh (Williams 0-3) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani 1-0), 5:10 p.m.Milwaukee (Anderson 0-1) at Chicago Cubs (Darvish 2-1), 7:15 p.m.San Diego (Paddack 2-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Urías 1-0), 9:40 p.m.INTERLEAGUESt. Louis at Detroit, ppd., 1st gameSt. Louis at Detroit, ppd., 2nd gameBaltimore (Eshelman 0-0) at Philadel-phia (Arrieta 1-1), 4:05 p.m.

BOX SCORESLos AngelesCanning, L, 0-3 4 6 4 4 0 2 Barnes 1 2 1 1 0 1 Buchter 2/3 0 0 0 1 1 Ramirez 1/3 0 0 0 1 0 Peña 1 1/3 0 1 1 1 1 Middleton 1/3 0 2 2 2 0 Buttrey 1/3 1 0 0 1 0 Robles 1 0 0 0 0 3

Cubs 7, Indians 2Chicago Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h biHendricks p-p 0 0 0 0 Hernandez 2b 5 1 1 0 Bryant lf 5 1 1 1 Ramírez 3b 2 0 1 1 Almora Jr. cf 0 0 0 0 Lindor ss 4 0 1 1 Rizzo 1b 4 2 2 1 Santana 1b 4 0 0 0 Báez ss 4 1 1 0 Reyes dh 4 0 3 0 Contreras c 3 0 0 0 Freeman lf 4 0 0 0 Souza Jr. ph 1 0 0 0 Naquin rf 4 1 1 0 Winkler p 0 0 0 0 León c 2 0 1 0 Wick p 0 0 0 0 D.Santana ph 1 0 0 0 Schwarber ph 1 0 0 0 Zimmer cf 3 0 0 0 Jeffress p 0 0 0 0 Happ cf-lf 3 2 0 0 Heyward rf 2 1 1 2 Bote 3b 4 0 1 2 Caratini dh-c 3 0 1 0 Kipnis 2b 3 0 1 1

Totals 33 7 8 7 Totals 33 2 8 2Chicago 001 031 011 —7 Cleveland 000 010 100 —2DP—Chicago 1, Cleveland 0. LOB—Chicago 9, Cleveland 8. 2B—Kipnis (3), Heyward (1), Ramírez (3). HR—Rizzo (4), Bryant (2). SB—Báez (1), Heyward (1). SF—Heyward (1), Ramírez (1). IP H R ER BB SOChicagoHendricks W,3-1 6 7 1 1 0 5 Winkler 2/3 0 1 1 2 1 Wick H,1 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 3 Jeffress 1 0 0 0 0 1ClevelandCarrasco L,2-2 4 1/3 4 3 3 5 7 Pérez 1 1/3 1 1 1 1 0 Cimber 1 1 1 1 0 0 Karinchak 1 1/3 1 1 1 2 4 Wittgren 1 1 1 1 1 2

Cimber pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.HBP—Jeffress (Zimmer). WP—Carrasco.

Royals 5, Reds 4Kansas City Cincinnati ab r h bi ab r h biMerrifield cf 3 1 1 1 Akiyama lf 3 0 1 0 Soler dh 5 0 0 0 Castellanos rf 4 0 0 0 Perez c 5 2 3 3 Votto 1b 2 0 0 0 Dozier rf 2 0 0 0 Jankowski pr 0 0 0 0 McBroom lf 3 0 1 0 Colón 2b 1 0 0 0 Phillips lf 0 0 0 0 Suárez 3b 4 0 0 0 Gordon ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Winker dh 3 1 2 1 Franco 3b 3 0 0 0 Senzel cf 3 1 0 0 O’Hearn 1b 3 0 0 1 Galvis ss 4 1 2 2 Mondesi ss 3 1 0 0 Farmer 2b 1 0 0 0 Lopez 2b 2 1 0 0 VanMeter 2b-1b 1 1 1 1 Lorenzen pr 0 0 0 0 Barnhart c 4 0 0 0 Ervin pr 0 0 0 0

Totals 30 5 5 5 Totals 30 4 6 4Kansas City 101 111 000 —5 Cincinnati 000 000 400 —4DP—Kansas City 3, Cincinnati 1. LOB—Kansas City 9, Cincinnati 8. 2B—Merrifield (4), Perez (6). HR—Perez (4), Winker (3), Galvis (3), Van-Meter (1). SB—Winker (1). SF—Merrifield (1), O’Hearn (1). IP H R ER BB SOKansas CityKeller, W, 2-0 6 2 0 0 3 3 Kennedy 0 2 3 3 1 0 Barlow, H, 2 1 1 1 1 0 2 Staumont, H, 3 1 1 0 0 1 3 Rosenthal, S, 4-4 1 0 0 0 3 0CincinnatiMiley, L, 0-2 1 2/3 2 1 1 2 2 Mahle 3 1/3 2 3 3 3 6 Antone 2 1 1 1 1 4 Garrett 1 0 0 0 1 0 Jones 1 0 0 0 1 1

Kennedy pitched to 3 batters in the 7th.HBP—Mahle (Mondesi), Keller (Farmer).

WP—Mahle(2).

Twins 12, Brewers 2Minnesota Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h biGarver c 6 2 3 0 Sogard ss-3b 4 1 1 0 Polanco ss 4 2 1 1 Hiura 2b 4 1 1 0 Adrianza ss 1 0 0 0 Yelich lf 2 0 1 0 Cruz dh 3 0 1 2 Urías ss 2 0 2 2 a-Avila ph-dh 1 0 0 0 García cf 2 0 0 0 Rosario lf 5 1 1 1 Arcia cf 2 0 0 0 Gonzalez 3b 4 0 2 2 Smoak 1b 4 0 2 0 Sanó 1b 3 2 1 1 Braun dh 4 0 0 0 Cave rf 5 1 1 1 Gamel rf 4 0 0 0 Buxton cf 5 2 3 2 Narváez c 3 0 0 0 Arraez 2b 4 2 2 1 Holt 3b-lf 3 0 0 0

Totals 41 12 15 11 Totals 34 2 7 2Minnesota 051 141 000 —12 Milwaukee 000 002 000 —2LOB—Minnesota 10, Milwaukee 6. 2B—Cave (1), Gonzalez (1), Hiura (1), Smoak (2). HR—Sanó (4), Buxton 2 (5). SF—Gonzalez (1). IP H R ER BB SOMinnesotaMaeda, W, 3-0 6 2/3 5 2 2 1 5 Thielbar 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 Thorpe 2 2 0 0 0 2MilwaukeeLauer, L, 0-1 3 2/3 9 7 7 2 2 Grimm 2/3 3 4 4 3 0 Yardley 1 2/3 1 1 1 1 1 Knebel 1 1 0 0 0 2 Suter 1 0 0 0 0 1 Gyorko 1 1 0 0 0 0

HBP—Lauer (Cruz). WP—Lauer.

Yankees 6, Braves 3Atlanta New York ab r h bi ab r h b i Swanson ss 5 1 3 0 LeMahieu 2b 5 2 4 1 d’Arnaud c 5 0 1 1 Voit 1b 5 0 2 1 Freeman 1b 3 0 0 0 Hicks cf 3 1 1 1 Ozuna dh 4 0 0 0 Urshela 3b 3 0 0 0 Duvall lf 5 0 1 0 Torres ss 3 0 1 1 Markakis rf 4 1 2 0 Ford dh 5 0 0 0 Camargo 2b 4 1 2 2 Sánchez c 5 1 1 1 Riley 3b 4 0 1 0 Frazier rf 4 2 3 1

Inciarte cf 4 0 1 0 Tauchman rf 0 0 0 0 Gardner lf 3 0 0 0

Totals 38 3 11 3 Totals 36 6 12 6Atlanta 020 000 001 —3 New York 020 220 00x —6E—Inciarte (1). LOB—Atlanta 11, New York 13. 2B—Markakis (2), Swanson (5), Voit (1), Hicks (4), Frazier (1). 3B—LeMahieu (1). HR—Cam-argo (3), Sánchez (2), Frazier (1). SB—LeMahieu (1). IP H R ER BB SOAtlantaYnoa 1 4 2 2 3 0 Matzek L,2-1 2 1/3 3 2 2 1 2 Tomlin 1 1/3 4 2 2 1 3 O’Day 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 Smith 1 0 0 0 0 0 Minter 1 1 0 0 0 2 Greene 1 0 0 0 1 0New YorkTanaka 4 5 2 2 2 3 Loaisiga W,2-0 2 3 0 0 0 3 Green H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Avilán 2/3 1 0 0 0 0 Ottavino 1/3 0 0 0 0 1 Holder 1/3 2 1 1 0 0 Britton S,7-7 2/3 0 0 0 1 0

Ynoa pitched to 4 batters in the 2nd, Loaisiga pitched to 2 batters in the 7th.

HBP—Greene (Urshela).

Orioles 5, Phillies 4Baltimore Philadelphia ab r h bi ab r h biAlberto 2b 4 0 1 0 McCutchen lf 4 0 2 0 Santander rf 5 1 2 1 Walker 2b 0 0 0 0 Iglesias ss 5 0 1 0 Hoskins 1b 4 1 0 0 Ruiz 3b 5 1 1 1 Harper rf 4 1 2 0 Núñez dh 4 1 1 0 Realmuto dh 5 0 1 1 Smith Jr. lf 3 1 2 0 Segura 3b 3 1 1 0 Velazquez lf 0 0 0 0 Gregorius ss 2 1 1 1 Hays cf 4 0 0 0 Gosselin 2b 3 0 0 0 C.Davis 1b 4 0 1 0 a-Bruce ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Sisco c 4 1 2 3 Knapp c 4 0 3 2 Quinn cf 4 0 0 0

Totals 38 5 11 5 Totals 34 4 10 4Baltimore 001 210 100 —5 Philadelphia 012 000 010 —4E—C.Davis (1), Morgan (0). DP—Baltimore 3, Philadelphia 0. LOB—Baltimore 8, Philadelphia 9. 2B—Santander (5), Núñez (5), Smith Jr. (2), Knapp (1). HR—Santander (3), Ruiz (3), Sisco (1). SB—Quinn (0), Harper (1). SF—Gregorius (1). IP H R ER BB SOBaltimoreLeBlanc 3 1/3 6 3 3 3 2 Armstrong, W, 1-0 1 2/3 0 0 0 1 2 Lakins Sr., H, 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 Givens, H, 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 Castro, H, 2 1 3 1 1 0 2 Sulser, S, 3-5 1 0 0 0 0 2PhiladelphiaEflin, L, 0-0 6 7 4 4 1 10Morgan 2/3 3 1 1 0 1 Parker 1 1/3 1 0 0 0 3 Rosso 1 0 0 0 1 1

Astros 5, Giants 1San Francisco Houston ab r h bi ab r h biYastrzemski cf 4 1 3 0 Springer dh 4 1 1 0 Dickerson lf 3 0 1 1 Reddick rf 3 0 1 0 Ruf ph-lf 1 0 0 0 Bregman 3b 3 0 2 1 Flores dh 4 0 0 0 Gurriel 1b 4 0 0 0 Belt 1b 4 0 1 0 Correa ss 3 1 1 0 Longoria 3b 4 0 0 0 Tucker lf 4 1 1 0 Pence rf 4 0 0 0 Toro 2b 3 1 1 0 Crawford ss 4 0 1 0 Maldonado c 4 1 1 3 Heineman c 3 0 1 0 Straw cf 3 0 1 0 Dubón 2b 3 0 0 0

Totals 34 1 7 1 Totals 31 5 9 4San Francisco 100 000 000 —1 Houston 000 014 00x —5DP—San Francisco 1, Houston 0. LOB—San Francisco 7, Houston 8. 3B—Yastrzemski (2). HR—Maldonado (2). IP H R ER BB SOSan FranciscoCahill 1 2/3 0 0 0 4 2 S.Anderson 1/3 0 0 0 0 0 Rodríguez BS,0-1 2 1/3 3 1 1 2 1 Baragar L,2-1 2/3 4 4 4 0 0 Selman 1 2 0 0 0 1 García 1 0 0 0 0 1 Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 2HoustonGreinke W,1-0 6 1/3 7 1 1 1 7 Raley H,1 1 2/3 0 0 0 0 2 Taylor 1 0 0 0 0 0

WP—Baragar, Greinke(2).

Mets 11, Nationals 6Washington New York ab r h bi ab r h biTurner ss 5 1 1 0 Nimmo cf 5 2 3 1 Eaton rf 3 1 1 0 Hamilton cf 0 0 0 0 Castro 2b 4 1 2 1 Davis 3b 5 0 0 0 Soto lf 4 2 3 4 McNeil lf 5 0 0 0 Kendrick dh 4 0 2 0 Conforto rf 3 3 2 2 Cabrera 3b 4 0 0 0 Alonso 1b 4 3 3 3 Thames 1b 4 0 0 0 Do.Smith dh 4 2 2 3 Suzuki c 4 1 1 1 Giménez ss 5 0 1 1 Robles cf 1 0 0 0 Ramos c 4 0 1 1 Taylor ph-cf 2 0 0 0 Guillorme 2b 2 1 1 0

Totals 35 6 10 6 Totals 37 11 13 11Washington 300 001 011 —6 New York 401 005 01x —11DP—Washington 0, New York 2. LOB—Wash-ington 4, New York 8. 2B—Turner (3), Alonso 2 (3), Do.Smith (4), Conforto (4). HR—Soto 2 (4), Castro (2), Suzuki (1), Nimmo (3), Alonso (3), Do.Smith (3). SB—Giménez (4), Guillorme (1). IP H R ER BB SOWashingtonSánchez L,0-3 2 2/3 6 5 5 2 2 Freeman 2/3 0 0 0 1 0 Finnegan 1 2/3 0 0 0 1 2 Harper 1 4 5 5 1 2 Fedde 2 3 1 1 0 1New YorkGsellman 2 4 3 3 0 1 Shreve 1 1 0 0 0 0 Familia W,1-0 2 1 0 0 1 4 Wilson H,5 1 1 1 1 0 1 Betances 1 0 0 0 0 3 Dr.Smith 1 2 1 1 0 1 Brach 1 1 1 1 0 1

HBP—Sánchez (Conforto), Familia (Robles).

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

STATISTICAL LEADERSAMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING—LeMahieu, New York, .431; Lewis, Seattle, .357; Alberto, Baltimore, .342; Correa, Houston, .333; Cruz, Minnesota, .329; S.Perez, Kansas City, .329; Trout, Los Angeles, .328; Pillar, Boston, .327; Kiner-Falefa, Texas, .320; Seager, Seattle, .309.

RUNS—Judge, New York, 16; Merrifield, Kansas City, 16; Crawford, Seattle, 15; Núñez, Baltimore, 15; Alberto, Balti-more, 14; LeMahieu, New York, 14; Rosario, Minnesota, 14; 7 tied at 13.

RBI—Judge, New York, 20; Seager, Seattle, 18; Cruz, Minnesota, 18; Rosario, Minnesota, 17; Trout, Los Angeles, 16; Santander, Baltimore, 16; Chapman, Oakland, 15; Olson, Oakland, 14; 7 tied at 13.

HITS—LeMahieu, New York, 28; S.Perez, Kansas City, 26; Alberto, Baltimore, 25; Lewis, Seattle, 25; Cruz, Minne-sota, 23; Fletcher, Los Angeles, 23; Correa, Houston, 22; Merrifield, Kansas City, 22; J.Abreu, Chicago, 21; Chap-man, Oakland, 21; Polanco, Minnesota, 21; Seager, Seat-tle, 21.

DOUBLES—Alberto, Baltimore, 9; Franco, Kansas City, 7; Iglesias, Baltimore, 7; Martinez, Boston, 7; Brantley, Houston, 6; Bregman, Houston, 6; Fletcher, Los Angeles, 6; Lowe, Tampa Bay, 6; Núñez, Baltimore, 6; S.Perez, Kan-sas City, 6; Santander, Baltimore, 6; Seager, Seattle, 6.

TRIPLES—Candelario, Detroit, 2; Chapman, Oakland, 2; Crawford, Seattle, 2; Kiner-Falefa, Texas, 2; Lowe, Tampa Bay, 2; Wendle, Tampa Bay, 2; 19 tied at 1.

HOME RUNS—Judge, New York, 9; Trout, Los Angeles, 8; Moreland, Boston, 6; Olson, Oakland, 6; Rosario, Minne-sota, 6; Chapman, Oakland, 6; J.Jones, Detroit, 5; Buxton, Minnesota, 5; Voit, New York, 5; Núñez, Baltimore, 5; E.Jiménez, Chicago, 5; Kepler, Minnesota, 5; Soler, Kansas City, 5.

STOLEN BASES—Grossman, Oakland, 4; Kiner-Falefa, Texas, 4; Lopes, Seattle, 4; Mondesi, Kansas City, 4; V.Reyes, Detroit, 4; Robert, Chicago, 4; Tauchman, New York, 4; 10 tied at 3.

PITCHING—Bieber, Cleveland, 3-0; Maeda, Minnesota, 3-0; G.Cole, New York, 3-0; Bundy, Los Angeles, 3-1; Dob-nak, Minnesota, 3-1; Cease, Chicago, 3-1; 12 tied at 2-0.

ERA—Dobnak, Minnesota, 0.90; Lynn, Texas, 1.16; Ple-sac, Cleveland, 1.29; Bundy, Los Angeles, 1.57; Montas, Oakland, 1.57; Bieber, Cleveland, 1.63; Turnbull, Detroit, 2.00; F.Valdez, Houston, 2.04; Bassitt, Oakland, 2.42; Gre-inke, Houston, 2.53.

STRIKEOUTS—Bieber, Cleveland, 43; Bundy, Los Ange-les, 35; Carrasco, Cleveland, 30; Lynn, Texas, 30; Giolito, Chi-cago, 27; G.Cole, New York, 26; Eovaldi, Boston, 24; Plesac, Cleveland, 24; Ryu, Toronto, 24; Civale, Cleveland, 23.

NATIONAL LEAGUEBATTING—Blackmon, Colorado, .472; Solano, San

Francisco, .458; S.Marte, Arizona, .369; D.Murphy, Colo-rado, .358; B.Harper, Philadelphia, .341; Kendrick, Wash-ington, .341; K.Marte, Arizona, .338; Tatis Jr., San Diego, .333; Winker, Cincinnati, .333; Conforto, New York, .324.

RUNS—Story, Colorado, 19; Blackmon, Colorado, 18; Yastrzemski, San Francisco, 18; F.Freeman, Atlanta, 16; Tatis Jr., San Diego, 16; Swanson, Atlanta, 15; Castellanos, Cincinnati, 14; Nimmo, New York, 14; Grisham, San Diego, 13; B.Harper, Philadelphia, 13; S.Marte, Arizona, 13.

RBI—Blackmon, Colorado, 20; Tatis Jr., San Diego, 18; Castellanos, Cincinnati, 16; Solano, San Francisco, 15; D.Peralta, Arizona, 14; Swanson, Atlanta, 14; Realmuto, Philadelphia, 13; D.Murphy, Colorado, 13; Machado, San Diego, 13; 7 tied at 12.

HITS—Blackmon, Colorado, 34; Solano, San Francisco, 27; K.Marte, Arizona, 26; S.Marte, Arizona, 24; Tatis Jr., San Diego, 24; Conforto, New York, 22; Story, Colorado, 22; Yastrzemski, San Francisco, 22; Swanson, Atlanta, 21; C.Walker, Arizona, 21.

DOUBLES—Solano, San Francisco, 9; C.Walker, Ari-zona, 9; Betts, Los Angeles, 6; Blackmon, Colorado, 6; K.Marte, Arizona, 6; J.Turner, Los Angeles, 6; Yastrzemski, San Francisco, 6; 7 tied at 5.

TRIPLES—Bruce, Philadelphia, 2; Cronenworth, San Diego, 2; Giménez, New York, 2; Hampson, Colorado, 2; Yastrzemski, San Francisco, 2; 20 tied at 1.

HOME RUNS—Tatis Jr., San Diego, 8; Castellanos, Cin-cinnati, 7; Arenado, Colorado, 6; Story, Colorado, 6; Real-muto, Philadelphia, 5; C.Moran, Pittsburgh, 5; Myers, San Diego, 5; Machado, San Diego, 5; 15 tied at 4.

STOLEN BASES—Pham, San Diego, 5; Slater, San Francisco, 5; Tatis Jr., San Diego, 5; Giménez, New York, 4; Story, Colorado, 4; Grisham, San Diego, 3; Inciarte, At-lanta, 3; Swanson, Atlanta, 3; 12 tied at 2.

PITCHING—Senzatela, Colorado, 3-0; Fried, Atlanta, 3-0; Hendricks, Chicago, 3-1; S.Gray, Cincinnati, 3-1; Stripling, Los Angeles, 3-1; 10 tied at 2-0.

ERA—Bauer, Cincinnati, 0.93; Lester, Chicago, 1.06; Wainwright, St. Louis, 1.50; Fried, Atlanta, 1.59; Lamet, San Diego, 1.61; Márquez, Colorado, 2.08; Darvish, Chi-cago, 2.12; S.Gray, Cincinnati, 2.25; M.Kelly, Arizona, 2.29; Freeland, Colorado, 2.46; deGrom, New York, 2.46.

STRIKEOUTS—S.Gray, Cincinnati, 35; Bauer, Cincin-nati, 32; Castillo, Cincinnati, 31; Nola, Philadelphia, 29; Scherzer, Washington, 29; Gallen, Arizona, 28; Lamet, San Diego, 28; deGrom, New York, 28; Márquez, Colorado, 27; Woodruff, Milwaukee, 26.

Associated PressTampa Bay Rays starter Blake Snell pitches during the second inning of a baseball game against the Boston Red Sox, Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2020, in Boston.

Rays top Red Sox 9-5JIMMY GOLEN AP sports writer

BOSTON — Blake Snell pitched five shutout innings and the Tampa Bay Rays backed him with a trio of 400-foot homers to beat the Boston Red Sox 9-5 on Wednesday night and earn their fifth straight victory.

Willy Adames, Brandon Lowe and Yoshi Tsutsugo all homered off Zack Godley, and Austin Meadows hit a solo shot in the ninth after Boston scored five in the eighth to cut into an eight-run lead.

Lowe had a single, homer and double in his first three at-bats but failed in his next two plate appear-ances to complete the cycle. He is hitting over .400 in his career at Fenway Park.

“He didn’t want to be great today. Didn’t want the triple,” said an ob-viously amped up Snell, who began his postgame Zoom call by speed-greeting many of the pic-tured reporters by name. “Three knocks today, that’s exciting stuff.”

J.D. Martinez hit a grand slam to make it 8-5 as Boston’s first six bat-ters in the eighth hit safely off Aaron Slegers. But Nick Anderson came on and struck out the next two batters and then, after Alex Verdugo singled, got Jackie Brad-ley Jr. on a groundout to end the inning.

The Red Sox have lost three in a row and eight of their last 11, with one more against the Rays before heading into a four-game series at Yankee Stadium.

Kevin Pillar had four hits for Boston, but he also got thrown out trying to take second on a ball off the Green Monster and the Red Sox trailing 6-0.

Snell (1-0) allowed four hits and walked no one, striking out six to earn his first win of the season. The 2018 AL Cy Young winner, who struggled with injuries last year and hadn’t lasted more than three innings yet this season, threw a season-high 70 pitches and left with an 8-0 lead.

“Looking forward to being a starting pitcher again and getting away from the opener role,” Snell said. “I felt like Blake Snell. I fi-nally feel healthy.”

Manager Kevin Cash called it “another step in the right direction.”

“Blake’s got to feel good with this one,” he said.

Godley (0-2) hadn’t allowed a run in eight innings over two previous Fenway appearances. He was charged with eight runs on 10 hits and two walks, striking out three in three innings.

“The last outing threw up a bunch of zeroes,” Red Sox man-ager Ron Roenicke said. “It’s just hard to say what’s going to happen from game to game.”

UP NEXTRays: RHP Tyler Glasnow (0-1)

starts for Tampa Bay as it tries to sweep the four-game series.

Red Sox: Lefty Kyle Hart makes his major league debut in the 4:05 p.m. series finale.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 A7CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

Page 8: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

CHRIS BERNHARDT JR.

Staff writer

FRESHWATERLAKE ROUSSEAU —

Bill Burgess of Lake Rous-seau RV and Fishing said it’s best to fish early in the day or late in the evening to avoid the heat of the middle of the day. Bluegill have slowed a little bit, they’re still down 8-9 feet on the breaks. Find the weed beds close to the deep water and use wig-glers or night crawlers. Crickets could also work, but worms are getting the best results. Crappie are virtually nonexistent, while catfish are around at night biting on mullet or your favorite catfish bait. Bass are along the bottom away from the weeds in the thinner weeds, in 5-6 feet of water. Work real slowly with a Texas-rigged worm. Some anglers are also using rattle traps.

SALTWATERHOMOSASSA RIVER —

Bill Korade of Blue Water Bait and Tackle said there were a couple of good snook reports from the mouths of the Little Ho-mosassa and St. Martins rivers. Use live shrimp. There are also small red-fish mixed in around the same area.

KING’S BAY — Captain Louie Argiro of Florida Fishing Adventures (352-601-1963, www.florida fishingadventures.com), based out of Pete’s Pier in Crystal River, said, “We are looking forward to the redfish spawn which should happen around the full moon on September 1. This will cause the redfish to travel in large schools making for fun and enjoy-able trips.

“Scalloping has contin-ued to get better as the season progresses. Be sure to be on the lookout for shorter grass as that makes it much easier to

find those tasty mollusks.”

AROUND CITRUSCaptain William Toney

(352-422-4141) said, “Look-ing to put that tarpon notch in your angling belt there is still time this sum-mer to make it happen. The big schools of fish that pass by earlier this sum-mer may be long gone but some decide to stay and mix in with our local resi-dents. Our coastal rivers have good numbers of tar-pon from fun size up to real beast.

“Early weekday morn-ings are the best time to spot rolling fish that are usually in the deep chan-nels of the rivers. One way to target them is with half of a mullet on the bottom. I like to use conventional tackle with 40-pound test and a 60-pound leader. A quality 5/0 or 6/0 circle hook works best and if there is some current use the minimum amount of weight to keep it near the

bottom. Another method is to troll shallow diving plugs after dark in the deep holes and channels. Two plugs trolled off the stern work best with one about 60 feet and one at 80 feet.

“Redfishing continues to be good on the incoming tide, I have not gotten into any school fish yet but could happen any day. The mangrove snapper bite is good on the shallow rocks and scalloping continues to be hit and miss for some but good for others who keep moving after working a spot for some time. In-coming tide will be mid-day this weekend.”

A8 THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 SPORTS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

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PICK 2 (early)7 - 2

PICK 2 (late)3 - 0

PICK 3 (early)5 - 7 - 4

PICK 3 (late)6 - 8 - 9

PICK 4 (early)4 - 1 - 5 - 4

PICK 4 (late)7 - 6 - 5 - 6

PICK 5 (early)0 - 1 - 7 - 6 - 0

PICK 5 (late)6 - 6 - 8 - 5 - 5

FANTASY 57 - 15 - 17 - 32 - 36

LOTTO3 - 13 - 24 - 32 - 42 -

53

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POWERBALL2 - 6 - 18 - 36 - 37POWER BALL

21

CASH 4 LIFE12 - 19 - 22 - 42 - 56

CASH BALL2

Here are the winning numbers selected Wednesday in the Florida Lottery:

Tuesday’s winning numbers and payouts:Jackpot Triple Play: 11 – 19 – 21 – 27 – 38 – 426-of-6 No winner5-of-6 23 winners $4724-of-6 1,143 $233-of-6 19,830 $1Combo 10+ 1 $10,000Combo9 6 $500Combo8 76 $50Combo7 571 $20Combo6 3,023 $10Combo5 10,903 $5Cash 4 Life: 27 – 45 – 46 – 48 – 60Cash Ball: 2

5-of-5 CB No winner5-of-5 No winnerFantasy 5: 11 – 15 – 27 – 30 – 355-of-5 2 winners $87,110.154-of-5 239 $117.503-of-5 7,288 $10.50Mega Millions: 8 – 22 – 29 – 43 – 56Mega Ball: 95-of-5 MB No winner5-of-5 No winner4-of-5 MB No winner4-of-5 10 winners$5003-of-5 MB 32 $2003-of-5 807 $102-of-5 MB 726 $10

Florida LOTTERY

On the AIRWAVESTODAY’S SPORTS

AUTO RACING 12 p.m. (NBCSPT) IMSA Porsche GT3 Cup Challenge: Road America (Taped) 1 p.m. (NBCSPT) IMSA Prototype Challenge: Road Amer-ica (Taped) 4:55 a.m. (ESPN2) Formula 1 Aramco Spanish Grand Prix, Practice 1

MLB 1 p.m. (MLB) Washington Nationals at New York Mets4 p.m. (ESPN) Baltimore Orioles at Philadelphia Phillies4:30 p.m. (FSNFL) Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox4:30 p.m. (SUN) Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox5 p.m. (MLB) Pittsburgh Pirates at Cincinnati Reds7 p.m. (13 FOX) Milwaukee Brewers at Chicago Cubs10 p.m. (MLB) San Diego Padres at Los Angeles Dodgers12:30 a.m. (FS1) Milwaukee Brewers at Chicago Cubs (Same-day Tape) 2 a.m. (ESPN2) Baltimore Orioles at Philadelphia Phillies (Same-day Tape)

NBA 4 p.m. (TNT) Dallas Mavericks vs Phoenix Suns6:30 p.m. (TNT) San Antonio Spurs vs Utah Jazz9 p.m. (FSNFL) New Orleans Pelicans vs Orlando Magic9 p.m. (TNT) Portland Trail Blazers vs Brooklyn Nets

WNBA7 p.m. (ESPN) Los Angeles Sparks vs Washington Mystics9 p.m. (ESPN) Minnesota Lynx vs Las Vegas Aces

BICYCLING 2 a.m. (NBCSPT) Criterium du Dauphine: Stage 2 (Same-day Tape)

GOLF 7 a.m. (GOLF) LPGA Tour Aberdeen Standard Invest-ments Scottish Open, First Round11 a.m. (GOLF) Bridgestone Senior Players Championship First Round2 p.m. (GOLF) PGA Tour Wyndham Championship, First Round7 p.m. (GOLF) U.S. Amateur Championship, Round of 169 p.m. (GOLF) PGA Korn Ferry Tour Albertsons Boise Open, First Round (Same-day Tape)

NHL STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS11 a.m. (NHL) Columbus Blue Jackets vs Tampa Bay Lightning, Game 1 (Taped)3 p.m. (NBCSPT) Columbus Blue Jackets vs Tampa Bay Lightning, Game 25:30 p.m. (NBCSPT) Chicago Blackhawks vs Vegas Golden Knights, Game 28 p.m. (NBCSPT) Carolina Hurricanes vs Boston Bruins, Game 2 10:30 p.m. (NBCSPT) Calgary Flames vs Dallas Stars, Game 2

RUGBY 5:30 a.m. (FS1) NRL Sydney Roosters vs Melbourne Storm

Note: Times and channels are subject to change at the discretion of the network. If you are unable to locate a game on the listed channel, please contact your cable provider.

Chassahowitzka* Crystal River** Homosassa*** Withlacoochee*

1:39 a.m. 6:00 a.m. 2:02 p.m. 10:41 p.m.

11:51 a.m. 6:06 a.m. ———— 7:50 p.m.

1:42 a.m. 6:18 a.m. 12:28 p.m. 10:51 p.m.

8:56 a.m. 3:35 a.m. 11:15 p.m. 5:21 p.m.

THURS 8/13

FRI 8/14

SAT 8/15

SUN 8/16

MON 8/17

TUES 8/18

WED 8/19

High/Low High/Low High/Low High/Low

2:46 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 3:04 p.m. 11:39 p.m.

1:10 a.m. 7:21 a.m. 12:50 p.m. 8:48 p.m.

3:14 a.m. 7:10 a.m. 1:28 p.m. 11:56 p.m.

9:59 a.m. 4:46 a.m. ———— 6:27 p.m.

3:57 a.m. 7:34 a.m. 4:05 p.m. ————

2:33 a.m. 8:20 a.m. 1:57 p.m. 9:40 p.m.

4:37 a.m. 8:07 a.m. 2:35 p.m. ————

12:28 a.m. 5:57 a.m. 11:02 a.m. 7:27 p.m.

4:56 a.m. 12:32 a.m. 5:02 p.m. 8:57 a.m.

3:38 a.m. 9:10 a.m. 2:59 p.m. 10:30 p.m.

5:45 a.m. 12:47 a.m. 3:43 p.m. 9:12 a.m.

1:27 a.m. 7:01 a.m. 12:01 p.m. 8:20 p.m.

5:41 a.m. 1:19 a.m. 5:56 p.m. 10:14 a.m.

4:26 a.m. 9:59 a.m. 3:54 p.m. 11:19 p.m.

6:36 a.m. 1:29 a.m. 4:45 p.m. 10:27 a.m.

2:13 a.m. 8:00 a.m. 12:57 p.m. 9:07 p.m.

6:22 a.m. 2:03 a.m. 6:46 p.m. 11:22 a.m.

5:07 a.m. 10:52 a.m. 4:45 p.m. ————

7:06 a.m. 2:04 a.m. 5:37 p.m. 11:39 a.m.

2:52 a.m. 8:52 a.m. 1:50 p.m. 9:51 p.m.

7:03 a.m. 2:43 a.m. 7:34 p.m. 12:27 p.m.

5:45 a.m. 12:05 a.m. 5:34 p.m. 11:45 a.m.

7:16 a.m. 2:33 a.m. 6:24 p.m. 12:37 p.m.

3:28 a.m. 9:41 a.m. 2:42 p.m. 10:32 p.m.

*From mouths of rivers. **At Kings Bay. ***At Mason’s Creek.

Tide charts

Citrus County FISHING REPORTS

The chicken of the treesI just arrived back in town from an in-

credible trip to one of the most unique parts of our state, the Everglades. Our

Everglades, composed of an enormously varied network of intercon-nected ecosystems, has been under attack for a very long time. Mostly due to developers and engineers altering the flow of water and pollutants dumped into the aquifer via corporate farms and housing developments. A huge issue has been the arrival of inva-sive plants and trees, such as the Australian pine and Bra-zilian peppers.

Added up, the Everglades, it has been said, will never again be as it was. However, the wildlife of the region, with a few excep-tions, had hung in there, flourishing and maintaining a healthy and diverse popu-lations. Now enter the invasion; the inva-sive species from all over the world. Most recently and most destructive has been the Burmese pythons’ near obliteration of all things mammalian. But, less no-ticed by the general public has been the effect of the green iguanas’ introduction to our Everglade’s ecosystems.

The biggest impact of the large scaly reptiles, has been against our native rookeries; that is to say, that they are raiding the eggs and feeding freely upon the young of our native birds. I’ve wit-nessed first-hand the destruction. In fact, only this past weekend I filmed the cap-ture of a large male iguana as he stalked a brood of hatchling ducks. His attempts to feed upon the ducks was interrupted, but his removal from the wild is barely noticeable against a remaining popula-tion nearing half a million iguanas.

I spent four days in the Glades recently, with the cast and crew of a new adven-ture series I am producing, which pre-miers on Carbon TV in September. During that time we encountered a num-ber of invasive species, one of those we decided to target — the green iguanas. Native to Southern Mexico and Central

America, these giant lizards were brought here as part of the pet trade since the 1960s. Released illegally into the wild for a variety of reasons they

have found South Florida quite to their liking.

My co-hosts of Invasion Ev-erglades, Vince Noble and Meghan Bailes, made multiple successful captures, impres-sively bare-handed wrestling them into submission ... in-cluding the duck-hungry male I mentioned earlier. With re-markably few natural preda-tors once they reach an adult age, it isn’t very difficult to stalk to within close range. Not so easy once you have them in hand, however; they

whip their boney tail with great strength and have a bite, which can easily sever a digit or two. The utmost caution is re-quired and hand capturing these beasts is not at all advised, for the inexperi-enced hunter.

Next week, I’ll tell you about some of the other invasives, such as our success with capturing several tremendous Bur-mese pythons and locating an extremely rare South American caiman!

I surely thank you for all of your input and as always, if you have any feedback, give me a shout at [email protected]. God Bless and Good Hunting!

Special to the ChronicleExecutive Producer of the new adventure series Invasion Everglades, Toby Benoit, with an invasive green iguana removed from the wild.

Toby BenoitREBEL YELL OUTDOORS

Bruins beat ’CanesAssociated Press

TORONTO — Patrice Bergeron scored early in the second ovetime and the Boston Bruins beat the Carolina Hurricanes 4-3 on Wednesday in Game 1 of their first-round series that was postponed 15 hours to a rare late-morning start.

The game scheduled for 8 p.m. Tuesday night started the next morning at 11 after the Columbus Blue Jackets-Tampa Bay Lightning series opener went five overtimes.

Hurricanes-Br uins Game 1 wasn’t quite the same marathon with

Bergeron scoring 1:13 into the second extra period.

Islanders 4, Capitals 2

TORONTO — Josh Bailey scored a shorthanded goal 6:52 into the third period and New York overcame a two-goal deficit to beat Washing-ton in a hard-hitting opener to the first-round playoff series.

Jordan Eberle and Anders Lee scored 1:54 apart span-ning the second intermission. Semyon Varlamov stopped 24 shots and Anthony Beauvil-lier sealed it by scoring with 8:05 remaining in a game the

Islanders overcame their own lack of discipline in allowing the Capitals seven power-play opportunities.

Avalanche 3, Coyotes 0

EDMONTON, Alberta — Nazem Kadri and J.T. Com-pher scored 10 seconds apart in the third period, Philipp Gru-bauer stopped 14 shots and Colorado opened the playoffs with a victory over Arizona.

Colorado dominated the Coyotes through the first two periods, outshooting them 29-7, yet couldn’t get anything past goalie Darcy Kuemper.

Thunder rally past

HeatAssociated Press

LAKE BUENA VISTA — Mike Muscala made a 3-pointer with 5.2 sec-onds and the Oklahoma City Thunder overcame a 22-point deficit in the fourth quarter to beat the Miami Heat 116-115 on Wednesday night.

In a game largely played by reserves in the second half, Muscala hit two 3-pointers in the final 35 seconds for his only points of the game.

Darius Bazley scored 21 points and Shai Gilgeous-Alexander added 18 for the Thun-der. They outscored the Heat 34-15 in the fourth quarter.

Rookie Tyler Herro scored a season-high 30 points for Miami, and Duncan Robinson added 19 — all in the first half.

Pacers 108, Rockets 104

Myles Turner had 18 points, reserve Edmond Sumner added a season- high 17 and Indiana held off a late rally by Houston and James Harden to break a five-game losing streak to the Rockets.

Harden had 45 points and tied his career high with 17 rebounds. He came an assist shy of his fifth triple- double this season. It was Harden’s 21st game this season with 40 points or more.

Holiday also has 18 points. Turner led the Pacers with 12 rebounds. Jeff Green had 14 points for Houston. The Rockets strug-gled from the outside, going 16 of 57 on 3-pointers.

Raptors 125, 76ers 121

Stanley Johnson scored the tiebreaking basket in the lane with 4.9 seconds re-maining, giving Toronto a victory over Philadelphia that made a winner of Adrian Griffin.

Kyle Lowry and Chris Boucher each scored 19 points for the Raptors.

Tobias Harris scored 22 points and Furkan Kork-maz had 21 for the 76ers.

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Associated Press

Stocks marched broadly higher on Wall Street Wednesday, briefly nudg-ing the S&P 500 above its all-time closing high set in February, before the coro-navirus pandemic led to a historic market plunge.

The benchmark index notched a 1.4% gain, its eighth in nine days. It ended within 0.2% of its record high from Feb. 19, before the coronavirus prompted the sudden shutdown of much of the economy.

Big technology stocks led the way higher once again. Health care and communication services stocks also had a strong showing. The rally

followed gains for stocks across Europe and much of Asia, while Treasury yields continued their sharp increase after a re-port on inflation came in higher than expected for the second straight day.

The S&P 500 rose 46.66 points to 3,380.35. The Dow Jones Industrial Av-erage gained 289.93 points, or 1%, to 27,976.84. The Nasdaq composite, which is heavily weighted with technology stocks, climbed 229.42 points, or 2.1%, to 11,012.24. The Russell 2000 index of small company stocks picked up 8.15 points, or 0.5%, to 1,583.25.

Indexes in Europe closed broadly higher. Asian mar-kets were mixed.

The U.S. stock market is

on the edge of erasing the last of the losses taken after the coronavirus pandemic crushed the economy into recession, even though the economy is still hobbling despite some recent im-provements. In March, the S&P 500 had been down nearly 34% from its record.

Much of the rebound has been due to massive amounts of support from the Federal Reserve, which has slashed interest rates to nearly zero and propped up far-ranging corners of the bond market to keep the economy’s head above water. The ultra-low inter-est rates mean investors are getting paid very little to own bonds, which pushes some into stocks, boosting their prices.

Money&Markets A click of the wristgets you more at www.chronicleonline.com

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28,160 Dow Jones industrialsClose: 27,976.84Change: 289.93 (1.0%)

10 DAYS

Advanced 1637Declined 958New Highs 79New Lows ...

Vol. (in mil.) 3,478Pvs. Volume 4,470

3,6044,16317611286

10022

NYSE NASD

DOW 28043.89 27843.32 27976.84 +289.93 +1.05% -1.97%DOW Trans. 11085.44 10931.09 10936.10 +46.57 +0.43% +0.32%DOW Util. 841.49 825.59 836.74 +14.75 +1.79% -4.83%NYSE Comp. 13010.96 12941.88 12974.82 +125.45 +0.98% -6.74%NASDAQ 11036.72 10877.94 11012.24 +229.42 +2.13% +22.73%S&P 500 3387.89 3355.46 3380.35 +46.66 +1.40% +4.63%S&P 400 1966.94 1948.35 1958.29 +13.15 +0.68% -5.08%Wilshire 5000 34592.34 34370.71 34525.86 +461.91 +1.36% +4.98%Russell 2000 1595.12 1574.25 1583.25 +8.15 +0.52% -5.11%

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG %CHG YTDStocksRecap

AT&T Inc T 26.08 4 39.70 30.18 -.02 -0.1 s s t -22.8 -6.6 15 2.08f

Ametek Inc AME 54.82 0 102.31 101.23 +1.98 +2.0 s s s +1.5 +17.1 42 0.72

Anheuser-Busch InBev BUD 32.58 4 98.34 56.93 +1.00 +1.8 s s s -30.6 -41.6 14 1.10e

Bank of America BAC 17.95 5 35.72 26.73 -.19 -0.7 s s s -24.1 -2.4 10 0.72

Capital City Bank CCBG 15.61 4 30.95 21.35 +.17 +0.8 s s s -30.0 -11.7 2 0.56

CenturyLink Inc CTL 8.16 4 15.30 10.79 -.25 -2.3 s s s -18.3 +11.7 4 1.00

Citigroup C 32.00 5 83.11 53.35 -.41 -0.8 s s s -33.2 -15.5 7 2.04

Disney DIS 79.07 8 153.41 131.79 +1.30 +1.0 s s s -8.9 -5.2 18 1.76

Duke Energy DUK 62.13 6 103.79 84.32 +.65 +0.8 t s s -7.6 -2.6 21 3.86f

EPR Properties EPR 12.56 4 79.80 33.08 -.52 -1.5 s s t -53.2 -52.0 10 4.32

Equity Commonwealth EQC 27.62 5 35.08 30.84 -.04 -0.1 t t t -6.1 +1.9 31 2.50e

Exxon Mobil Corp XOM 30.11 4 75.18 44.09 -.51 -1.1 s t t -36.8 -31.6 10 3.48

Ford Motor F 3.96 6 9.65 7.11 -.12 -1.7 s s s -23.5 -20.3 6 ...

Gen Electric GE 5.48 2 13.26 6.72 -.01 -0.1 s t t -39.8 -26.0 dd 0.04

HCA Holdings Inc HCA 58.38 8 151.97 132.13 +.54 +0.4 s s s -10.6 +4.2 20 1.72f

Home Depot HD 140.63 0 279.37 281.58 +6.66 +2.4 s s s +28.9 +33.6 28 6.00

Intel Corp INTC 43.63 3 69.29 49.19 +1.00 +2.1 s t t -17.8 +7.6 17 1.32

IBM IBM 90.56 6 158.75 126.70 -.05 ... s s s -5.5 -2.1 13 6.52

LKQ Corporation LKQ 13.31 9 36.63 32.31 +.85 +2.7 s s s -9.5 +23.7 18 ...

Lowes Cos LOW 60.00 0 155.42 156.63 +2.76 +1.8 s s s +30.8 +58.4 35 2.20

McDonalds Corp MCD 124.23 9 221.02 206.02 +1.02 +0.5 s s s +4.3 -5.1 31 5.00

Microsoft Corp MSFT 132.25 0 217.64 209.19 +5.81 +2.9 t s s +32.7 +49.1 41 2.04

Motorola Solutions MSI 120.77 4 187.49 145.01 +2.14 +1.5 s s s -10.0 -17.6 27 2.56

NextEra Energy NEE 174.80 0 289.41 284.59 +6.80 +2.4 t s s +17.5 +30.8 21 5.60

Piedmont Office RT PDM 12.86 4 24.78 16.66 -.06 -0.4 t s s -25.1 -11.2 8 0.84

Regions Fncl RF 6.94 5 17.54 11.92 -.01 -0.1 s s s -30.5 -14.5 9 0.62

Smucker, JM SJM 91.88 7 125.62 114.96 +2.25 +2.0 s s s +10.4 +3.9 15 3.60f

Texas Instru TXN 93.09 0 138.83 138.64 +2.60 +1.9 s s s +8.1 +15.8 25 3.60

UniFirst Corp UNF 121.89 9 217.90 200.30 -.04 ... s s s -0.8 +2.4 23 1.00

Verizon Comm VZ 48.84 8 62.22 58.60 +.09 +0.2 s s s -4.6 +9.3 13 2.46

Vodafone Group VOD 11.46 5 21.72 15.75 +.25 +1.6 s t t -18.5 -8.5 0.97e

WalMart Strs WMT 102.00 0 134.13 131.89 +1.69 +1.3 s t s +11.0 +22.9 76 2.16f

Walgreen Boots Alli WBA 36.65 2 64.50 41.82 -.03 -0.1 s s t -29.1 -17.3 8 1.87f

52-WK RANGE CLOSE YTD 1YR NAME TICKER LO HI CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN P/E DIV

Stocks of Local Interest

Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date.PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

The burger chain said the virus pan-demic caused it to make a big loss in the second-quarter.

The maker of computer servers and other IT hardware gave investors a weak third-quarter profit forecast.

The Denver-based owner of Euro-pean broadband and mobile assets is buying Sunrise Communications Group.

The payments processor is buying Linx, a retail management software maker.�

The biotechnology company made a deal to supply 100 million doses of its potential COVID-19 vaccine to the U.S. government.

The electric vehicle maker an-nounced a stock split, increasing the number of shares while cutting their price.

SOURCE: FIS AP

Stocks rose Wednesday, briefly nudging the S&P 500 above its all-time closing high set before the pandemic led to a historic market plunge. The benchmark index notched a 1.4% gain, its eighth in nine days. It ended within 0.2% of its record high on Feb. 19.

5001,0001,500

$2,000

M AJ J

Tesla TSLAClose: $1,554.76 180.37 or 13.1%

$211 $1,794Vol.:Mkt. Cap:

21.7m (1.7x avg.)$289.8 b

52-week range

PE:Yield:

809.1...

406080

$100

M AJ J

Moderna MRNAClose: $69.52 0.55 or 0.8%

$12.47 $95.21Vol.:Mkt. Cap:

50.3m (1.9x avg.)$27.4 b

52-week range

PE:Yield:

...

...

20

40

$60

M AJ J

StoneCo STNEClose: $49.29 -3.10 or -5.9%

$17.72 $55.00Vol.:Mkt. Cap:

8.4m (2.4x avg.)$8.8 b

52-week range

PE:Yield:

72.6...

202224

$26

M AJ J

Liberty Global Plc. LBTYAClose: $22.37 0.32 or 1.5%

$15.24 $28.48Vol.:Mkt. Cap:

2.3m (1.6x avg.)$4.1 b

52-week range

PE:Yield:

...

...

202530

$35

M AJ J

Super Micro Computer SMCIClose: $26.01 -4.47 or -14.7%

$15.76 $33.30Vol.:Mkt. Cap:

2.3m (3.5x avg.)$1.4 b

52-week range

PE:Yield:

16.3...

51015

$20

M AJ J

Red Robin Burgers RRGBClose: $9.58 -1.32 or -12.1%

$4.04 $37.29Vol.:Mkt. Cap:

3.7m (2.9x avg.)$123.7 m

52-week range

PE:Yield:

...

...

Interestrates

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 0.80% on Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mort-gages and other consumer loans.

NET 1YR TREASURIES LAST PVS CHG AGO

3.254.755.25

.131.632.38

PRIMERATE

FEDFUNDS

3-month T-bill .10 .10 ... 2.006-month T-bill .12 .12 ... 1.9552-wk T-bill .13 .14 -0.01 1.842-year T-note .14 .14 ... 1.655-year T-note .29 .22 +0.07 1.567-year T-note .49 .48 +0.01 1.6110-year T-note .80 .66 +0.14 1.6830-year T-bond 1.36 1.34 +0.02 2.13

NET 1YRBONDS LAST PVS CHG AGO

Barclays Glob Agg Bd .82 .82 ... 1.27Barclays USAggregate 1.03 1.03 ... 2.23Barclays US Corp 1.82 1.82 ... 2.92Barclays US High Yield 6.35 6.35 ... 6.09Moodys AAA Corp Idx 2.15 2.06 +0.09 3.0110-Yr. TIPS 0 0 ... .05

LAST6 MO AGO1 YR AGO

CommoditiesEnergy prices were mostly higher, with crude oil prices rising 2.5%. Gold prices rose slightly while sil-ver fell. In crops, soybean prices rose while wheat fell.

Crude Oil (bbl) 42.67 41.61 +2.55 -30.1Ethanol (gal) 1.23 1.22 +1.07 -10.6Heating Oil (gal) 1.26 1.24 +1.52 -38.0Natural Gas (mm btu) 2.15 2.17 -0.88 -1.7Unleaded Gas (gal) 1.24 1.20 +3.26 -26.4

FUELS CLOSE PVS %CHG %YTD

Gold (oz) 1934.90 1932.60 +0.12 +27.3Silver (oz) 25.96 26.04 -0.31 +45.6Platinum (oz) 959.20 971.40 -1.26 -1.3Copper (lb) 2.89 2.87 +0.52 +3.3Palladium (oz) 2164.80 2171.60 -0.31 +13.4

METALS CLOSE PVS %CHG %YTD

Cattle (lb) 1.06 1.05 +1.62 -14.7Coffee (lb) 1.14 1.14 +0.57 -11.9Corn (bu) 3.15 3.12 +0.96 -18.9Cotton (lb) 0.62 0.63 -2.03 -9.9Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 706.00 681.50 +3.60 +74.1Orange Juice (lb) 1.15 1.15 +0.74 +18.8Soybeans (bu) 8.90 8.78 +1.42 -5.6Wheat (bu) 4.91 4.95 -0.76 -12.1

AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS %CHG %YTD

American Funds AmrcnBalA m 29.24 +.21 +3.9 +12.1 +8.8 +8.7 CptWldGrIncA m 52.50 +.82 +1.4 +13.5 +7.7 +7.4 CptlIncBldrA m 60.05 +.68 -3.4 +4.3 +3.5 +4.3 FdmtlInvsA m 61.76 +.85 +1.6 +15.7 +10.2 +10.9 GrfAmrcA m 59.23 +1.10 +15.8 +29.5 +16.9 +14.3 IncAmrcA m 22.44 +.19 -1.8 +6.7 +5.8 +6.6 InvCAmrcA m 40.42 +.56 +3.4 +15.5 +10.0 +9.7 NwPrspctvA m 52.71 +1.12 +11.5 +25.3 +13.9 +12.2 WAMtInvsA m 46.55 +.50 -2.3 +8.4 +9.6 +10.1Dodge & Cox Inc 14.85 -.02 +7.6 +9.2 +5.9 +5.2 Stk 173.72 +1.08 -8.1 +4.8 +5.7 +7.7Fidelity 500IdxInsPrm 117.38 +1.64 +5.9 +19.5 +13.7 +12.4 Contrafund 16.28 +.28 +19.5 +31.7 +18.9 +15.5 TtlMktIdxInsPrm 95.27 +1.28 +5.5 +18.7 +13.1 +11.8 USBdIdxInsPrm 12.63 -.03 +7.5 +7.8 +5.4 +4.3Schwab SP500Idx 52.28 +.73 +4.4 +16.4 +13.1 +12.1T. Rowe Price BCGr 150.48 +2.76 +21.0 +32.5 +21.3 +17.3Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 312.46 +4.35 +5.8 +19.5 +13.6 +12.4 DivGrInv 30.78 +.28 +1.6 +8.8 +13.0 +11.4 GrIdxAdmrl 114.59 +2.26 +22.7 +38.3 +21.4 +16.7 InTrTEAdmrl 14.83 -.01 +4.1 +4.2 +4.1 +3.8 IntlGrAdmrl 129.51 +2.79 +26.0 +47.8 +17.0 +15.3 MdCpIdxAdmrl 220.52 +1.73 +0.8 +11.0 +9.6 +8.6 PrmCpAdmrl 146.34 +2.48 +1.5 +16.6 +13.2 +13.0 STInvmGrdAdmrl 10.99 -.01 +4.0 +5.0 +3.6 +3.1 TrgtRtr2025Inv 20.66 +.16 +4.1 +12.1 +8.0 +7.4 TrgtRtr2030Inv 37.83 +.34 +3.8 +12.7 +8.2 +7.8 TtBMIdxAdmrl 11.70 -.03 +7.4 +7.8 +5.4 +4.3 TtInBIdxAdmrl 23.19 -.05 +3.1 +2.3 +4.9 +4.2 TtInSIdxAdmrl 28.73 +.45 -3.1 +9.7 +3.2 +4.6 TtInSIdxInv 17.18 +.27 -3.1 +9.7 +3.2 +4.5 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 83.31 +1.11 +5.5 +18.6 +13.1 +11.8 TtlSMIdxInv 83.28 +1.11 +5.5 +18.5 +13.0 +11.7 WlngtnAdmrl 76.18 +.59 +3.1 +12.1 +9.5 +9.0 WlslyIncAdmrl 67.98 +.07 +4.3 +8.8 +7.5 +7.3

TOTAL RETURNFAMILY FUND NAV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR* 5YR*

MutualFunds

*– Annualized; d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. m - Multiple fees are charged, usually a marketing fee and either a sales or redemption fee. x - fund paid a distribution during the week.

Interestrates

(Previous and change �gures re�ect current contract.)

THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 A9BUSINESSCITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

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PAINT, ROOFING, PEST CONTROL,

PLUMBING & MUCH MORE FOR

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Mask are suggested for attendees and vendors. Hand sanitizer will be available.

000YW1C

Stocks rebound

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OPINIONPage A10 - THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020

Prendergast brings wisdom, experienceIt is a distinct honor and

privilege for me to endorse Sheriff Mike Prendergast for re-election as Sheriff of Cit-rus County.

Mike is a member of my church and a fellow member of the Knights of Columbus. He is an active participant in many worthwhile activities in his church and the Knights. I personally know him to be a very good man willing and able to help his church, com-munity, veterans and his fel-low man.

His wife, Naomi, is a won-derful person. No one could ask for a better partner to help Mike serve his commu-nity. Together they have aided numerous families in need during these trying times.

While his empathy toward the people of his community is second to none, his accom-plishments as our sheriff have been equally outstand-ing. His record of attacking the drug problem in our com-munity is documented to be well above the efforts of his predecessor’s administra-tions. This campaign is still ongoing and I can think of no one who could even begin to maintain this effort to crush this plague in our community. Ample reason to demonstrate our need for Mike’s continued leadership during another term as our sheriff.

Equally important is Mike’s amazing background in law enforcement and the military. No other candidate in this race brings to the community that kind of wisdom and expe-rience during these uncertain times of irrational acts like the Parkland shooting and the civil lawlessness we see every day across our country. Mike is the man we need to lead the sheriff ’s office as it is faced with the potential of these types of occurrences.

He is a great leader. He is honest and unquestionably puts service above self as our sheriff and our neighbor. We could not find a better Sheriff and it simply makes good, common sense to reelect Mike Prendergast Sheriff of Citrus County.

Ervin C. Sharpe major general (Ret), USAF

Beverly Hills

Fundraiser canceled because of COVID-19

As we all face unprece-dented times due to COVID-19, the Citrus Aid Cancer Founda-tion continues to support local patients during their cancer journey. Our neighbors who are fighting this disease still need help, and we will con-tinue our mission to find re-sources to assist those currently under treatment.

The “Swing for a Cure” Golf Tournament is the signature fundraising event for the Cit-rus Aid Cancer Foundation, and we cannot convey our ap-preciation for the continued support our community has given to this event over the years. Our sponsors and partic-ipants are vital in our efforts to raise money, and we thank you for your commitment to help our organization.

After much consideration, we have decided to cancel the golf tournament this year. Our goal is always to create an en-vironment where others feel comfortable, and we know many of our local businesses have been hit hard during these last few months.

Even though the tourna-ment will not take place this year, the needs of our local cancer patients have not gone away. We know times are tough, and many in our com-munity are struggling to meet their own needs due to COVID-19. If you are able, please consider a monetary donation or gift card donation (gas, grocery, etc.) to Citrus Aid Cancer Foundation this year. You can give directly on our website. If you are unable to support us financially, please like our Facebook page, and continue to help us

spread the word about Citrus Aid Cancer Foundation so we may reach every patient who can benefit from our help.

We plan to hold the 2021 “Swing for a Cure” Tourna-ment, so look next summer for the date! Again, we ap-preciate your continued sup-port, and please stay safe.

Wendy Hall Citrus Aid Cancer Foundation

Lecanto

Thanks for Realtors endorsement

On Aug. 3, I received a most welcome letter from the Real-tors Association of Citrus County. In that letter, the board recommended me for election to the Citrus County Commission, District 3.

I could not be more hum-bled and grateful that they did so.

According to Lindsay Sparz Mason, the association’s re-gional director of Advocacy and Public Policy for Central Florida, they rated me “the highest among all candidates for this position during the recent candidate screening session.”

I am very thankful that the Realtors Association of Citrus County has endorsed me.

And if you have not voted yet, I’m asking for your vote by Tuesday, August 18, in the County Commission, District 3 race, not matter how you choose to vote. It’s a universal primary so any party affilia-tion can vote for me.

Ruthie Davis SchlabachLecanto

We must look out for each other

I read in the paper that 140,000 people died from the initial attack of the atomic bomb over Hiroshima 75 years ago. Eventually it is estimated that 300,000 folks died from later radiation-related cancers. Comparatively, over 165,000 Americans have died so far from COVID-19. It is expected that by the fall that 135,000 more will succumb bringing our deaths to 300,000. The big difference is that our deaths are preventable with proper precautions.

We recently got take out at a local restaurant. No one was wearing masks, there was little social distancing. What is wrong with us? Why can’t we understand that we are the ones who must look out for each other and safely live our lives. This is not a ‘free-dom’ issue but one of care for one another. Please follow the Golden Rule and care for your neighbors.

Bob BennerHernando

EOC should stay with sheriff’s officeThe county commissioners

are considering managing the 911 Emergency Operations Center operated and managed by the Citrus County Sheriff ’s Office. No way should the com-missioners be involved in the managing and operation of the Operations Center. The Emer-gency Operations Center (911) is a second-by-second opera-tion handling life-threatening situations every minute. Every second counts.

Presently, the sheriff ’s 911 Emergency Operations Cen-ter dispatches the Fire De-partment, the ambulance and the sheriff ’s office patrol. They may have to notify the

state police, wildlife officers, Coast Guard, forestry and other departments as need be for emergencies. In addition to the emergency dispatch, at the same time the dispatcher is providing medical informa-tion to the person who called 911. The operators are trained in first aid and pro-vide emergency information such as CPR, Heimlich ma-neuver and other emergency medical procedures to assist the caller who is waiting for assistance. Some calls are not emergencies but still require information to assist the caller. The Poison Control Center may be called and the information provided to the caller as well as the phone number.

The National Weather Bu-reau has a teletype in the 911 center with weather updates, especially about hurricanes, thunderstorms and flooding.

The Red Cross, YMCA and other agencies may be noti-fied in reference to fires, storms or other disasters.

The 911 operators are highly trained by the sheriff ’s office. They also work with the state Motor Vehicle De-partment for classified infor-mation of driver’s license registration of vehicles and boats. The state gives each 911 operator a computer test, which they have to pass be-fore they are privy to the “wanted” individuals, State drivers and registration infor-mation. You would not want the commissioners to have this information, as it is very personal to the people who live in our county. Some of the personal information could involve suicide, drug use and other information which could impact people’s lives.

I have personal knowledge and experience as a 911 opera-tor. After five years employed by a city fire department and then a county sheriff ’s depart-ment for 30 years, I retired as a senior investigator and moved to Citrus County 31 years ago. Then I worked for Citrus County 911 for five years. What great people to work with. Twenty-four hours every day they work to keep you safe. I enjoyed every minute of the emergency center’s emergency service as a 911 operator.

Thank you, Sheriff Dean, Sheriff Dawsy and the pres-ent Sheriff Mike Prendergast, who is now supervising the Emergency Operations Center.

The commissioners’ thoughts of controlling the Emergency Operations Center are for naught. This center is respon-sible for people’s lives and de-serves to be supervised by those who are highly trained as the sheriff ’s office is.

Roger M. PrebleHomosassa

Prendergast will county safe

Mike Prendergast is a sheriff for the people, a sheriff you can trust. He has a reputation for honesty and integrity. As a grandmother of three young girls, it is important for me to know that our streets are safe and that the parents of this county can breathe a sigh of re-lief knowing that Mike Pren-dergast is in control of the situation by cleaning up our community of drug crime.

As a result of the first and second phases of Operation Coin Toss, which occurred in 2019, Mike Prendergast and his team made a total of 54 arrests and continues to get the hard core drug dealers off the streets. Sheriff Mike Prender-gast needs your voice heard at the polls. He needs your vote so he can continue to serve the citizens of Citrus County!

Maureen MorraLecanto

“We can see through others only when we can see through ourselves.

Bruce Lee

HELPING HANDS

United Way’s COVID Relief Fund

provides emergency assistance

The year 2020 surely hasn’t turned out to be the year most antici-

pated it to be. The unex-pected pandemic has brought hardship and financial struggles to countless Ameri-can families now barely scraping by each month to pay for rent, utili-ties and basic essentials.

Nobody could foresee the great impact COVID-19 would have on the residents of Citrus County — the need for assistance has grown tre-mendously over the past few months as many face missed payments, shut offs, repos-sessions and sometimes even homelessness.

The United Way of Citrus County began to gather do-nations specially earmarked for those directly affected by COVID-19 in March at the onset of the pandemic, and has seen an incredible surge in pleas for aid. CEO Meghan Pitzer reviewed a myriad heart wrenching stories of struggle and loss as applica-tions were received by the local United Way office. And as the pandemic continues, more and more appeals for help are sent in.

The Kings Bay Rotary Club recently took initia-tive to give $15,000 of its

annual Stone Crab Jam pro-ceeds to the United Way COVID Relief Fund after Pitzer shared some of the struggles that have been re-

ceived by the local UW office. Other Rotary clubs in Citrus have also de-cided to gener-ously give to the fund.

I n d i v i d u a l s and clubs are encouraged to donate to the COVID Relief Fund to help those in deep

difficulty.While it’s understandable

that not everyone has a lot to give away right now, every little donation counts to make a big difference. Now is the time to help your fellow neighbor in need.

Even a $5 or $10 contribu-tion can do so much good.

The United Way is trying to help on a local level, and do-nations given stay in the county to help Citrus indi-viduals and families. This is a time that measures the good will of our community. The need is out there. Will you help meet it?

To make a donation to the United Way’s COVID Relief Fund, send mail gifts to the United Way office at 1582 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429, or call 352-795-5483.

THE ISSUE: Community

needs increase during pandemic.

OUR OPINION:Help others

and donate to the United Way COVID Relief Fund.

LETTERS to the Editor

OPINIONS INVITED

� Viewpoints depicted in political cartoons, columns or letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the editorial board.

� We reserve the right to edit letters for length, libel, fairness and good taste.

� Letters must be no longer than 400 words, and writers will be limited to four letters per month.

� SEND LETTERS TO: The Editor, 1624 N. Meadowcrest Blvd., Crystal River, FL 34429; fax to 352-563-3280; or email to [email protected].

Thanks for helping with my car problemThis morning I was going to

pay a bill and my car stalled out because of no gas and I sat there 20 minutes with no-body to help me on Florida Avenue. Finally, a guy named Tony and his girlfriend came and helped me and I just wanted to say thank you to Tony for helping me today, OK? But these other people, they don’t care.

Keep your trash to yourself

This is for the person who lives in Pine Ridge on West Rocky Road. I live there. How-ever, they walk down the block

— I don’t know who it is, be-cause they come in the night — and they put their trash in my Advanced garbage bin that I put

out every night in front of my driveway because they pick it up on Wednesday. They appar-ently come in the night to throw their trash in my bin. I think this is a lot of nerve and I think that they should be ashamed of them-selves. Either go to the dump or buy a garbage bin and sign up for ser-

vice. Don’t be using my pail for your trash.

Trucks not using headlights

Commercial trucks are re-quired to travel with headlights on. Where’s law enforcement?

THE CHRONICLE invites you to call “Sound Off” with your opinions about local or statewide subjects. You do not need to leave your name, and have less than a minute to record. COMMENTS will be edited for length, libel, personal or political attacks and good taste. Editors will cut libelous material. OPINIONS expressed are purely those of the callers.

CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE

SOUND OFF

CALL

563-0579

CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE

Founded by Albert M. Williamson

“You may differ with my choice, but not my right to choose.”— David S. Arthurs publisher emeritus

E D I T O R I A L B O A R DGerry Mulligan .......................................... publisherMike Arnold .....................................................editorCurt Ebitz ........................................citizen memberMac Harris .......................................citizen memberRebecca Martin ..............................citizen memberJeff Bryan ............................ managing editor, newsSarah Gatling ...............managing editor, copy deskGwen Bittner ................................community editor

The opinions expressed in Chronicle editorials are the opinions of the newspaper’s editorial board.

CHRONICLE ENDORSEMENTS� Commissioner, District 5 — Holly Davis

� Commissioner, District 3 — Ruthie Davis Schlabach

� Supervisor of Elections — Maureen “Mo” Baird

� Circuit Court Judge — George Angeliadis

� School Superintendent — Sandra “Sam” Himmel

� Property Appraiser — Cregg Dalton

� School Board, District 2 — Virginia “Ginger” Bryant

� Sheriff — Mel Eakley

ENDORSEMENT LETTERS DEADLINE

n With the primary election approaching, the deadline for endorsement letters is 5 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 13.

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For the RECORDCitrus County

Sheriff’s Office

DUI arrests� Michael Boyer, 60, of Pi-

nellas Park, at 9:55 p.m. Aug. 7 on a misdemeanor charge of driving under the influence with property damage. His bond was set at $500.

� Robert Pintze, 38, of Crystal River, at 11:02 p.m. Aug. 7 on a felony charge of battery on a law enforcement officer and misdemeanor charges of driving under the influence with property dam-age and leaving the scene of an accident. He was also charged with felony violation of probation stemming from an original charge of assault on a law enforcement officer.

Domestic battery arrests

� Corey Feronti, 44, of Dunnellon, at 9 a.m. Aug. 7 on a misdemeanor charge of do-mestic battery.

� Timothy Lowe, 45, of Dunnellon, at 12:55 p.m. Aug. 7 on a misdemeanor charge of violating an injunc-tion for protection against do-mestic violence.

� Casey Creager, 27, of Inverness, at 7:12 p.m. Aug. 7 on a misdemeanor charge of domestic battery.

Other arrests� Shirley Dixon, 62, of

South Greenfield Avenue, Flo-ral City, at 2:11 a.m. Aug. 7 on an active Sumter County war-rant for felony violation of pro-bation stemming from an original charge of grand theft. She was already incarcerated at the Citrus County Detention Facility on unrelated charges.

� Raymond Osteen, 32, of Northwest Second Avenue, Crystal River, at 1:11 a.m. Aug. 7 on an active warrant for felony violation of probation stemming from an original charge of possession of methamphetamine.

� Amanda Davis, 38, of West Sunripe Loop, Crystal River, at 7:11 p.m. Aug. 7 on a felony charges of possession of a controlled substance. Ac-cording to her arrest affidavit, Davis was pulled over for a cracked windshield and ap-proximately 7.92 grams of methamphetamine were found in her possession. Her bond was set at $2,000.

Stephens said. “things you expect the leader-ship to provide for the wellbeing of you and your family, those popu-lation numbers are es-sential to get those resources.”

In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, when emergency man-agement is being stretched and carefully shared, it’s more import-ant than ever to be counted so the help goes where it’s needed.

“Every community de-serves its fair share,” Ste-phens said, “and you cannot get your fair share unless those numbers support the need.”

Responding to the cen-sus can be done online, at 2020census.gov; over the phone, at 844-330-2020; or through the question-naire, which was mailed out March 12 to house-holds nationwide.

Questions can be asked in 12 non-English lan-guages, including Creole.

Sept. 30 is the official deadline to respond to the census, four weeks earlier than planned.

According to The Cen-ter Square, the early deadline could result in a severe undercount, costing Florida $1.5 tril-lion over the next decade and a third congressio-nal seat.

When 1.4 million Flo-ridian households failed to respond to the 2010 census, it cost their state more than $20 billion in federal allocations until 2020, The Center Square reported.

Roughly 500,000 cen-sus enumerators started Tuesday, Aug. 11, rapping on the doors of at least 60 million unresponsive households nationwide to follow up with them, according to the The Center Square and Stephens.

So far, nationwide, the response rate for the 2020 census was at 63.4% as of Wednesday, Aug. 12, 2020,

according to the U.S. Cen-sus Bureau.

Citrus County’s re-sponse rate was at 65.7%, above Florida’s 60.3% of participation. During the 2010 census, 65.6% of the county and 63% of the state responded.

Stephen said Florida’s participation must be strong because it will bet-ter capture the state’s eclectic and age-varied population, of which 42% were born in the Sun-shine State, which also has two of the oldest coun-ties in the U.S.

“Florida has far more challenges than other states,” she said, “because its diversity is much more broad than people realize.”

County Administrator Randy Oliver quipped he’d like to have 100% participation from county households.

“But that’s not realis-tic,” he said.

Oliver stressed the im-portance of being counted by citing the federally- allocated CARES Act, which has dolled out $6.5 million to Citrus County in COVID-19 relief based on its 2010 census population.

How much more money would’ve been given to the county if more locals decided to be counted?

“It’s to everybody’s ben-efit,” Oliver said.

Crystal River’s re-sponse rate so far was at 51.2%, compared to its 54.8% from 2010; and 64.9% of Inverness house-holds responded in 2020, down from the 65.9% who reported in 2010.

Ken Frink, Crystal Riv-er’s city manager, is pleased to see the city’s participation is much higher than it was a month ago but he urged his city’s households to keep responding.

“It’s a quick and pain-less process,” he said, “and the rewards far out-weigh the little bit of time it’s going to take to fill it out.”

With many projects on its horizon, including the Riverwalk, Crystal River will be applying for

outside funding priori-tized by lawmakers. An-swering the census can better secure those resources.

“We want to be able to capitalize on any grants available,” Frink said, “and we don’t want to lose any votes up in Washing-ton D.C.”

Inverness City Manager Eric Williams said census participation is crucial because it not only gauges a community’s economic status but its growth as well.

“We’re very supportive of it,” he said, adding the city’s response is the same as the last decade consid-ering the two rates’ mar-gin of error.

Williams said the city has been pushing the cen-sus hard in its recent pub-lic relations statements.

“I think it’s important communities promote the census and do what they can to get the word out,” he said.

The U.S. Census Bu-reau even coined the slo-gan “Avoid the Knock” to encourage participation.

Stephens said the num-ber one reason why households don’t answer the census “is because of fear and mistrust of gov-ernment,” believing au-thorities can use census answers to incriminate them.

“All of the responses to the census are protected by law,” Stephens said, adding no court or presi-dent can subpoena or de-mand an individual’s census response. “We can only publish infor-mation in statistical form, nothing that can identify people or households.”

Even census workers are sworn to a lifetime oath, meaning they must ensure confidentiality to their graves.

Census skeptics date back to the 1950s and be-yond, Stephens said, when families would hide relatives, especially c h i l d r e n , f r o m enumerators.

“I know it’s going to come as a shock, but some people don’t cooperate with the enumerators,”

Stephens said about tradi-tions carrying on.

Stephens said census participation grew when people had the option, starting in the 1960s, to self-report with the mailed questionnaire.

It wasn’t until 2000 when people could re-spond via the internet, which gave users trouble at first, Stephens said.

Census workers are working with their out-reach partners — trusted organizations within com-munities — to spread the word of how anonymous the census is to the vul-nerable people who de-serve to be counted, Stephens said.

Also important to re-member: census re-sponses acquire data on the country’s residency, not citizenship.

“Many foreign-born residents who live in the U.S. are counted,” Ste-phens said. “We want people to be communi-ties of one.”

Contact Chronicle re-porter Buster Thompson at 352-564-2916 or bthompson @chronicleonline.com.

THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 A11CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

000YW

1V

000YSDP

CENSUSContinued from Page A1

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NothiNg below piNk l iNe

Swimming

Associated PressA boy swims in the cool waters of the Comal River as temperatures hit triple digits Wednesday in New Braunfels, Texas.

Hundreds of thousands

without power in Midwest

IOWA CITY, Iowa — Hundreds of thousands of households in Iowa and Illi-nois remained without elec-tricity Wednesday, two days after a rare wind storm that hit the Midwest devastated parts of the power grid, flat-tened valuable corn fields and killed two people.

Much of Iowa and parts of several other states suf-fered outages Monday as straight-line winds toppled trees, snapped poles and downed power lines. The storm known as a derecho had winds of up to 112 mph near Cedar Rapids, as pow-erful as a hurricane, as it tore from eastern Nebraska across Iowa and into Wis-consin, Illinois and Indiana.

The derecho produced seven tornadoes in the Chi-cago metropolitan area, in-cluding an EF-1 tornado with 110 mph winds that hit the Rogers Park neighbor-hood on the city’s north side before moving onto Lake Michigan as a waterspout, the National Weather Ser-vice said.

— From wire reports

Nation BRIEFS

Heatwave

Associated PressA woman cools off with her dog under a public shower Wednesday along the Seine river in Paris. Temperatures in Paris were expected to hit 100.4 Fahrenhei t Wednesday afternoon.

3 dead, 6 in hospital after train derails in Scotland

LONDON — A passen-ger train derailed in north-east Scotland after stormy weather, killing three people and injuring six others Wednesday, authorities said.

The train’s driver is be-lieved to be among the dead, but formal identifica-tion has yet to take place, the British Transport Police force said. Six people were hospitalized, but their inju-ries are not considered serious.

“I would like to reassure the public that this was not a busy service, and from (closed circuit television) in-quiries and witness state-ments we believe all passengers have been ac-counted for,” British Trans-port Police chief superintendent Eddie Wylie said. “However, once the area has been made safe, then a full and thorough search will be conducted, which is likely to take some time.’’

World BRIEFS

— From wire reports

RETURN EXCELLENCE TO CITRUS COUNTY!

www.EakleyforSheriff.com Paid by Mel Eakley, Republican for Citrus County Sheriff.

Paid by Mel Eakley, Republican for Citrus County Sheriff.

Technology Vision - Technology in Law Enforcement is about efficiency, accuracy, and a reduction in duplicity. Ridding an agency of information silos and placing it at the fingertips of the members is a key to success.

Stratified Policing - Intelligence-Led Policing. Proactive responses to areas of crime trends, patterns focusing on ongoing criminal activity and their associates ensure those arrested are not one-off criminals but those who are preying on our citizens, neighborhoods, and communities.

Quality Of Life - Quality of Life focused policing is more than just attempting to arrest your way out of issues like drugs, homelessness, and mental health. My plan will improve our quality of life.

Community Engagement - My leadership will focus on building trust and transparency. My approach is focused on being proactive and preventative. You have my commitment to bring about this change of culture in the organization.

Employee Focused - Law enforcement employment is a public service calling from clerks to cops. The foundation of a servant leadership style is centered on employee development, recognition, and compensation.

000YULF

THE MEL EAKLEY COMPACT WITH CITRUS A Plan for a Safer Citrus County

A12 THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 NATION & WORLD CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

Companies test antibody drugsTo treat, prevent

COVID-19MARILYNN

MARCHIONEAP chief medical writer

With a coronavirus vac-cine still months off, com-panies are rushing to test what may be the next best

thing: drugs that deliver antibodies to fight the virus right away, without having to train the im-mune system to make them.

Antibodies are proteins the body makes when an infection occurs; they at-tach to a virus and help it be eliminated. Vaccines work by tricking the body into thinking there’s an in-fection so it makes anti-bodies and remembers how to do that if the real bug turns up.

But it can take a month or two after vaccination or infection for the most ef-fective antibodies to form. The experimental drugs shortcut that process by giving concentrated ver-sions of specific ones that worked best against the coronavirus in lab and an-imal tests.

“A vaccine takes time to work, to force the develop-ment of antibodies. But when you give an antibody, you get immediate protec-tion,” said University of

North Carolina virologist Dr. Myron Cohen. “If we can generate them in large concentrations, in big vats in an antibody factory ... we can kind of bypass the immune system.”

These drugs, given through an IV, are believed to last for a month or more. They could give quick, temporary immunity to people at high risk of in-fection, such as health workers and housemates of someone with COVID-19.

No crowd, plenty of historyBiden introduces

running mate Kamala Harris

BILL BARROW, ALEXANDRA JAFFE AND WILL WEISSERT

Associated Press

WILMINGTON, Del. — Demo-cratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and his newly chosen running mate Kamala Harris campaigned to-gether for the first time Wednesday, as the former primary rivals sought to solidify their advantage over Pres-ident Donald Trump and secure their place in American history.

Biden, a 77-year-old white man, embraced the significance of naming the first Black woman to a major par-ty’s presidential ticket, but he fo-cused on other attributes Harris brings to the ticket. He hailed the California senator, the 55-year-old former prosecutor who a year ago ex-coriated Biden on a primary debate stage, as the right woman to help him defeat Trump and then lead a nation facing crises in triplicate: a pan-demic, wounded economy and long-simmering reckoning with sys-temic racism.

Harris, Biden said at a high school gymnasium in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, is “smart, she’s tough, she’s experienced, she’s a proven fighter for the backbone of this country.”

“Kamala knows how to govern.

She knows how to make the hard calls. She’s ready to do this job on day one,” he continued.

Harris, the daughter of immigrants from India and Jamaica, sat feet away from Biden, listening with her mask off.

The event began an hour late. A momentous candidacy aside, the sur-real nature of the scene was not only a woman of color stepping into the role of would-be national executive but doing so in a mostly empty high

school gym. Masked reporters nearly outnumbered campaign aides and the candidates’ families members in a grim reminder of a coronavirus pandemic that has killed 165,000 Americans, while yielding Depression-level unemployment and World War II-level national deficits.

Harris was considered a favorite throughout Biden’s search, and she’s been a regular surrogate campaigner and fundraiser for him since he be-came the presumptive nominee.

Associated PressDemocratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden and his running mate Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., arrive Wednesday to speak at a news conference at Alexis Dupont High School in Wilmington, Del.

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FLAIR FOR FOODSection B - THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020

CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE

Gloria YoderTHE AMISH COOK

I’ve been blessed too richly for words. I told Daniel I feel like a

spoiled queen.Never before have I

had a time where I had someone for two months to actually stepped in to take over with the many demands that go with cooking, cleaning, laun-dry and the 101 other things that moms do to keep the house afloat.

Daniel’s sister Mary who is a few years older than myself, has truly been heaven-sent. She has a natural knack of taking responsibility and doing whatever needs to be done.

I know for sure that my shelves with canned goods would be quite bare without her zip and will-ingness to just go at it and can peaches, green beans, pickles and the likes.

And oh, our freezer, I’ve never seen it fill up so fast before. We have 60 quarts of frozen peaches in there, plus 90 little con-tainers with just the right amount in each one for Julia to grab one for her dinner bucket once school starts.

Ya, and then there are hundreds of little energy balls we made for quick dessert to eat with iced coffee. Julia wants to put some of them in individ-ual baggies for her lunch for easy packing on busy school mornings. (I’ll be filling you in on more school details soon.)

Cooking is probably one of Mary’s favorites, and we have been the lucky ones to eat many tasty dishes prepared by her. She got me started on guacamole. I never really cared for it before, now it’s one of my favorites and is quite nutritious besides.

After halving and scrap-ing out a ripe avocado, she mashes it a bit with a fork and adds a scant ta-blespoon lemon juice, 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon garlic salt and a pinch regular salt.

Mmm. It can be used as a dip, enjoyed plain, or alongside any hot dish or sandwich.

Oh, and you should have been here for our supper on Friday evening when she made barbe-cued ribs and onion rings. It was a hit for all, from the youngest to the oldest.

And listen to this, after supper, I noticed a cook-book on the counter open to the onion ring recipe.

Glancing at it, I read the words I penned be-side the recipe almost six years ago. This is what it said: “Mary made these when ‘mauding’ (being our maid) after Austin’s birth.”

It happened to be the same recipe she used back then and now here she was again, treating all of us to onion rings six years later.

“I wonder what will be in six years from now,” I mused. Hmm ... I don’t know.

With a chuckle I won-der what it would be like if we’d have another five children in the next six years like we did the last six.

Who knows, but most likely not.

ELIZABETH KARMELAssociated Press

There was a time when I liked burgers based mostly on their toppings. I might order a Swiss cheese and bacon burger, or one topped with blue cheese and caramel-ized onions, and that, I thought, was where the flavor was.

Then I realized I could make my own burger blend with better quality cuts of beef. This changed the way I make and eat burgers.

When I am making my own blend, I choose bits of short rib, brisket, hanger steak and ribeye. All the rich cuts. Add a bit of aged beef too, and you get a swoon-worthy, slightly funky, slightly nutty aroma and flavor.

Today, you can buy these specialty burger blends already made and conveniently pack-aged in 1-pound “bricks” or pre-made burg-ers. When you are shopping, follow the advice of meat scientist Diana Clark from Certified Angus Beef: For a thick, gourmet-like burger, look for a blend of 80% lean, 20% fat.

“The extra fat is going to melt and make a juicy, tasty burger,” she advises.

There are many butchers who sell burger blends online and at grocery stores. My fa-vorites include Pat LaFrieda and Schweid and Sons. I have purchased the pre-made burgers, but I prefer the bricks because I can make my signature square burgers from them easily.

The meat is vacuum-sealed, which means it is as close to fresh as you can buy without grinding it yourself. With vacuum-sealed meat, the oxygen is almost eliminated, so the rate of deterioration is much slower. Fresh meat wrapped in brown butcher paper will last a maximum of three days re-frigerated, while vacuum-sealed meat will last up to 2 weeks in the refrigerator and much longer in a freezer.

To make square burgers from the bricks, carefully remove the meat from the packag-ing and, using a fine serrated knife, cut it into four equal, quarter-pound shares. I round the sharp edges of each square in my hands, as I would soften a lump of clay, being careful not to make it too round. I want to keep the thick square shape.

After it is smooth and even, I make a de-pression in the center so the burger will cook evenly and not puff up like a meatball.

Because you are buying premium ground beef blends, you don’t need to add anything to make it taste great. A generous sprinkle of fresh-ground black pepper and coarse ko-sher salt is all you need. My ratio is 1 tea-spoon Morton kosher salt to 1/3 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper. Mix the salt and pepper together and season both sides of the burger.

I like to place my burgers on the grill for about 3-4 minutes per side for a thick patty like this one. You will get great grill marks, and the middle will still be medium-rare to medium. If you buy the pre-made patties,

cook them a little less because they are not as thick as my homemade square burgers.

If you don’t have a grill, or you run out of gas, these are equally good made in a cast-iron pan. Preheat the pan on your stovetop over medium-high heat, and the oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit. Don’t put anything in the pan — no butter, no oil. Once it is hot enough for a drop of water to dance across the surface, place the four patties on the hot cast-iron skillet and let cook for 2 minutes or until the burgers develop a good crust. Flip them and let cook on the stovetop for 2 more minutes. Then place the skillet with burgers in the pre-heated oven for 5 minutes.

If you’re making cheeseburgers, add the

cheese during the last 2 minutes of cooking. Remove the burgers to a platter and let them rest for five minutes.

In this stripped-down version of my cur-rent favorite burger, less is more. A good blend eliminates the need for most tradi-tional condiments, but if you crave them, use them.

For me, the perfect bite is a dill pickle chip, melty American cheese and the hot crusty burger between a potato bun.

Elizabeth Karmel is a grilling, barbecue and Southern foods expert, and the author of four cookbooks. Her website is www.elizabethkarmel.com.

Culinary.net

Among the many monthly ex-penses that are simply unavoid-able, buying groceries is one of the few that’s squarely in your own control. While it’s a neces-sity you can’t eliminate from your budget completely, there are some simple ways to save a few bucks during future grocery runs.

Plan aheadOne of the easiest ways to

spend more money (and time) than you intend to at the store is to go in without a list of items you need. Spend a few moments considering the meals you’d like

to make in the near future then write down exactly which ingre-dients you need.

Shopping frequencyOverbuying perishables like

fruits and veggies is one of the many ways food is wasted, but going to the store every day is an inefficiency all its own. Try mak-ing a grocery trip once per week on a day you have ample time to think through what you need, how much you need and how long it will last.

Say no to snacksIt might be difficult to avoid

the temptation, but skipping the

snack aisles can improve your fi-nances and your diet.

While it’s unnecessary to com-pletely eliminate your favorite snacks, limiting your consump-tion of foods like potato chips, candy and more can save you money and lead to more nutri-tious eating habits down the line.

Unnecessary purchasesSimilar to walking past the

snack section, pay careful atten-tion to how often you load your cart with items from special stands and end-of-aisle displays.

For one, these foods are un-likely to be part of your

“must-have” list, and second, there’s a decent chance these are specialty items with marked up prices.

Store food properlyWhile it may not directly per-

tain to shopping, learning how to store the foods you do purchase can help them stay fresh longer, which can help cut down on trips to buy more. Freezing meat in freezer-safe bags, keeping po-tatoes in a cool area and other appropriate food storage meth-ods can lead to more efficient use.

Find more food tips and tricks at Culinary.net.

Onion rings repeat

See AMISH/Page B2

ELIZABETH KARMEL/Via Associated PressIn this stripped-down version of my current favorite burger, less is more. A good blend eliminates the need for most traditional condiments, but if you crave them, use them. For me, the perfect bite is a dill pickle chip, melty American cheese and the hot crusty burger between a potato bun.

Think pre-seasoning to enhance flavor with a medley of scrumptious meats

5 ways to save money at the grocery storeMetroCreative

Let’s Eat ...The Chronicle distributes a FREE weekly food newsletter via email. Let’s Eat has links to stories about food, drink, restaurants and recipes. To sign up, visit https://tinyurl.com/ya9pk6bq

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Though we haven’t de-cided for sure we’ll most likely discontinue our fos-ter license after the adop-tion has been finalized. With having five children age 5 and younger, our ca-pacity will be legally filled for a number of years.

By the way, thanks to those of you who have been inquiring about the adoption. I wish I had a better update for you, but then it’s all in God’s hands. The supposed date when the Native Ameri-can search would be com-pleted was May 31, then it got bumped out to July 13; now that report came back as not yet completed, so we continue waiting.

We have no idea when it’ll be completed. This all is no surprise for God; he knew all about it, so we’ll keep trusting.

You know, if our faith would never get tested we also would not have a chance to exercise it or really strengthen it! I think God wanted to teach me that He really is more important and bigger than this long, eagerly awaited occasion.

OK, let’s wrap up with Mary’s onion rings:

CRUNCHY ONION RINGS� 1 egg� 1/2 cup flour� 1/2 teaspoonbaking powder� 1/2 teaspoon salt� 1/2 teaspoonseasoning salt� 1/4 cup milk� 2 tablespoonvegetable oil� 2 onions� Cooking oil or shortening for deep fryingPour 1 inch oil into a deep

frying pan, heat to 375 degrees. Beat egg then add rest of ingredients.

Cut onions in 1/4-inch rings. Separate rings and dip into batter, one at a time, then drop into hot oil.

Fry until golden brown; flip and continue to fry other side. Place onto a paper towel-lined platter.

Gloria Yoder is a young Amish mother, writer and homemaker in rural Illinois. The Yoders travel primarily by horse-drawn buggy and live next to the settlement’s one-room schoolhouse. Readers with culinary or culture questions or stories to share may write Gloria directly at: Gloria Yoder, 10510 E. 350th Ave., Flat Rock, IL 62427.

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AMISHContinued from Page B1

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Culinary.net

Feeding an entire family can be difficult enough on its own with busy evenings full of hustle and bustle. One additional factor that can cause even more headaches is dealing with a picky eater, espe-cially a child whose preferred menu ranges from hot dogs to candy.

If you’re looking to widen the palate of your picky eater (or eat-ers), consider these tips to start down a path toward a more expan-sive slate of family meals.

Start slowLoading up your little ones’

plates with steamed veggies and sauteed fish may be a surefire way to send them to the pantry for a less nutritious snack. Instead, try combining personal favorites with small portions of foods you’d like to introduce, such as chicken nug-gets alongside green beans or top-ping pizza with black olives.

Don’t force itWhile it can be frustrating to

constantly hear “no” to fruits and

veggies, forcing them upon chil-dren may turn them away for good. In addition, a struggle over eating certain foods may create a con-stant sense of frustration around mealtime, which may only de-crease a child’s desire to expand his or her horizons.

Create a fun experienceRemember not every meal has to

include something new. On occa-sion, mix up mealtime by serving

your children’s favorites, even if it’s as simple as a hamburger or as creative as breakfast for dinner.

Bring kids to the storeIntroducing your children to the

place your family’s food comes from may help them feel more comfortable with new flavors. Plus, by letting them in on the shopping process, you can have some help choosing foods they’re more likely to be willing to try.

Let children help cookMuch like choosing their own in-

gredients increases the likelihood they’ll try something new, perhaps becoming part of the cooking pro-cess can help children see how a meal comes together. It doesn’t have to be a gourmet experience — simply seasoning roasted aspar-agus with salt and olive oil, for ex-ample, can introduce your up-and-coming chefs to the kitchen while helping make the cooking (and eating) process a fun adventure.

For more food tips and kid-friendly recipes, visit Culinary.net.

5 tips to encourage picky eaters

Photo courtesy of Getty ImagesA snack as simple as Ranch dressing with raw veggies can be a healthy learning experience for picky eaters.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 B3TV AND MORECITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

(Answers tomorrow)DITTY FAINT BATTEN PEPPERYesterday’s Jumbles:

Answer: The man who’d been waiting for hours to see the doctor was a — PATIENT PATIENT

Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, assuggested by the above cartoon.

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAMEBy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Unscramble these Jumbles,one letter to each square,to form four ordinary words.

©2020 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

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the

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MB

LE a

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Fol

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Play

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THURSDAY EVENING AUGUST 13, 2020 C: Comcast, Citrus S: Spectrum D/I: Comcast, Dunnellon & Inglis F: Oak Forest H: Holiday Heights

C S D/I F H 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 (WESH) NBC 19 19 News News ET Holly Coronavirus Ellen’s Game Law & Order: SVU News J. Fallon

# (WEDU) PBS 3 3 14 6 World News

BBC News PBS NewsHour (N) (In Stereo) Å

WEDU Arts Plus

WEDU Quest ‘G’

Doc Martin “S... Happens” ‘PG’ Å

Death in Paradise (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries ‘PG’ Å

% (WUFT) PBS 5 5 DW News BBC PBS NewsHour (N) Old House The War Newsreels of troops killed. ‘14’ BBC House

( (WFLA) NBC 8 8 8 8 8 News Nightly News

NewsChannel 8

Extra (N) ‘PG’

Coronavirus & the Classroom (N) Å

Ellen’s Game of Games ‘PG’ Å

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit ‘14’

NewsChannel 8

Tonight Show

) (WFTV) ABC 20 7 20 News at 6pm

World News

Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’

Wheel of Fortune

Holey Moley (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

Don’t “Don’t Quit Your Day Job” ‘14’

To Tell the Truth (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

WFTV Tonight:

Jimmy Kimmel

* (WTSP) CBS 10 10 10 10 10 10 Tampa Bay

Evening News

Wheel of Fortune

Jeopardy! (N) ‘G’

Big Brother (N) ‘PG’ Å Young Sheldon

The Unicorn ‘PG’

Bull “The Flying Carpet” ‘14’ Å

10 Tampa Bay

Late-Colbert

(WTVT) FOX 13 13 13 13 News MLB Pregame

MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals vs Chicago White Sox. From Field of Dreams in Dyersville, Iowa. (N) (In Stereo Live) Å

FOX13 10:00 News (N) (In Stereo) Å

FOX13 11:00 News (N) (In Stereo) Å

4 (WCJB) ABC 11 News ABC ET Inside Ed. Holey Moley (N) ‘PG’ Don’t (In Stereo) ‘14’ To Tell the Truth (N) News J. Kimmel

6 (WCLF) IND 2 2 2 22 22 Christian Fitness

Joyce Meyer

Bay Focus Great Awakening with Awake Quiet Brain Andrew Wom

Abundant Life

Sound of Awak

Phil Driscoll ‘G’

Great

8 (WYKE) FAM 16 16 16 15 Vegas Unveiled: A Virtual Vegas

Daily Flash ‘G’

Citrus Today

Sully’s Biz Brew (Off Air) Vegas Unveiled: A Virtual Vegas

Citrus Court

Citrus Today

< (WFTS) ABC 11 11 11 11 ABC Action News

World News

Inside Edition

The List (N) ‘PG’

Holey Moley (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

Don’t “Don’t Quit Your Day Job” ‘14’

To Tell the Truth (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

ABC Action News

Jimmy Kimmel

@ (WMOR) IND 12 12 5 The Goldbergs

The Goldbergs

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Mom ‘14’ Å

Mom ‘14’ Å

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Big Bang Theory

How I Met Family Guy ‘14’

Family Guy ‘14’

F (WTTA) MNT 6 6 6 9 9 Extra ‘PG’ ET FamFeud FamFeud NewsChannel 8 Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Seinfeld Seinfeld H (WACX) TBN 21 21 S.Channel The 700 Club Å Involved Impact Peter Power Jeffress S.Channel S.Channel Faith Prince

L (WTOG) CW 4 4 4 12 12 Mike & Molly ‘14’

Mike & Molly ‘14’

Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

Killer Camp “A Killer Finale” ‘14’

Penn & Teller: Fool Us ‘PG’ Å

CW44 News (N)

CW44 News (N)

2 Broke Girls ‘14’

2 Broke Girls ‘14’

R (WVEA) UNI 15 15 15 15 14 Noticias Noticiero Rosa de Guadalupe Te doy la vida ‘PG’ Amor eterno (N) ‘PG’ Como tú no hay dos Noticias Noticiero S (WOGX) FOX 13 7 7 Fox 51 Fox 51 MLB Baseball St. Louis Cardinals vs Chicago White Sox. (N) Å FOX 51 News Dateline ‘14’ Å ≤ (WXPX) ION 17 Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’ Chicago P.D. ‘14’

(A&E) 54 48 54 25 27 The First 48 “Crossroads” ‘14’ Å

The First 48 “Trap House” ‘14’ Å

The First 48 “1,000 Cuts; Draw” ‘14’

The First 48 “Death in Desire” (N) ‘PG’

Court Cam ‘14’

Court Cam ‘14’

The First 48 “Family First” ‘14’ Å

(ACCN) 99 College Football College Football From Oct. 18, 2019. ‘G’

(AMC) 55 64 55 ››‡ “Jurassic Park III” (2001, Adventure) Sam Neill, Tea Leoni. ‘PG-13’ Å

›››‡ “Ghostbusters” (1984) Bill Murray. Four paranormal investigators battle mischievous ghouls.

››‡ “Ghostbusters II” (1989) Bill Murray. ‘PG’ Å

(ANI) 52 35 52 19 31 Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Deadliest Catch (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

(BET) 96 71 96 ››› “Hustle & Flow” (2005) ‘R’ Å

No Limit: Chronicles ‘14’ Å

No Limit: Chronicles ‘14’ Å

No Limit: Chronicles ‘14’ Å

No Limit: Chronicles “The Reckoning” ‘14’

No Limit: Chronicles ‘14’ Å

(BIGTEN) 742 809 Michigan State

Michigan State Football Classic Å

The B1G Show

Michigan State Football Classic Å

Michigan State Football Classic Å

The B1G Show

Michigan State Football Classic Å

Michigan State

(BRAVO) 254 51 254 Southern Charm ‘14’ Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Watch “A League of Their Own” (1992)

(CC) 27 61 27 33 The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Office ‘14’ Å

The Daily Show

The Office ‘14’ Å

(CMT) 98 45 98 28 37 Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

››› “Smokey and the Bandit” (1977, Comedy) Burt Reynolds, Sally Field, Jackie Gleason. ‘PG’ Å

›› “Smokey and the Bandit II” (1980) Burt Reynolds. ‘PG’

(CNN) 40 29 40 41 46 Situation Room Erin Burnett OutFront Coronavirus: Facts Cuomo Prime Time CNN Tonight CNN Tonight (ESPN) 33 27 33 21 17 MLB Baseball NFL Live Å To Be Announced SportsCenter (N) (ESPN2) 37 28 34 43 49 SportsCenter (N) WNBA Basketball: Sparks vs Mystics WNBA Basketball: Lynx vs Aces NFL Live Å (FBN) 106 149 106 99 41 The Evening Edit (N) Lou Dobbs Tonight The Evening Edit Strange Strange Lou Dobbs Tonight The Evening Edit

(FLIX) 118 170 ›› “Fear” (1996, Suspense) Mark Wahlberg, William Petersen. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å

›› “When a Stranger Calls” (1979) Charles Durning. ‘R’ Å

›››› “A Clockwork Orange” (1971, Science Fiction) Malcolm McDowell. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å

(FNC) 44 37 44 32 Special Report The Story Tucker Carlson Hannity (N) Å The Ingraham Angle Fox News at Night (FOOD) 26 56 26 Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay Restaurant: Impossible (N) ‘G’ Beat Flay Beat Flay Beat Flay

(FREEFORM) 29 52 29 20 28 “Wedding Sing.”

›‡ “The Waterboy” (1998, Comedy) Adam Sandler. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å

››‡ “Jumanji” (1995) Robin Williams. A sinister board game puts its players in mortal jeopardy. ‘PG’

The 700 Club (In Stereo) Å

(FS1) 732 112 732 Pregame Hub Formula E MotoAmerica Rewind NHRA Drag Racing Lucas Oil Summernationals. Å (FSNFL) 35 39 35 Warriors Marlins MLB Baseball Miami Marlins at Toronto Blue Jays. Postgame Marlins World Poker

(FX) 30 60 30 51 ›› “xXx: Return of Xander Cage” (2017)

›››‡ “The Martian” (2015) Matt Damon. A stranded astronaut tries to survive on Mars. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å

›››‡ “The Martian” (2015) Matt Damon, Kristen Wiig. (In Stereo) ‘PG-13’ Å

(GOLF) 727 67 727 Golf Central (N) ‘G’ Golf U.S. Amateur Championship, Round of PGA Korn Ferry Tour PGA Golf

(HALL) 59 68 39 45 54 “Sun, Sand & Romance” (2017, Drama) Tricia Helfer, Paul Campbell. ‘NR’ Å

“The Perfect Bride” (2017, Romance) Pascale Hutton, Kavan Smith. ‘NR’ Å

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

(HBO) 302 201 302 2 2 ›››‡ “Jojo Rabbit” (2019) Å

Perry Mason “Chapter Seven” ‘MA’

Perry Mason “Chapter Eight” ‘MA’ Å

››‡ “Aquaman” (2018) Jason Momoa. Aquaman must save Atlantis from his power-hungry brother. Å

I May Destroy You

(HBO2) 303 202 303 ›››‡ “The Talented Mr. Ripley” (1999) Matt Damon. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å

I Know This Much Is True ‘MA’ Å

I Know This Much Is True ‘MA’ Å

I Know This Much Is True ‘MA’ Å

I Know This Much Is True ‘MA’ Å

(HGTV) 23 57 23 42 52 Home Town “Putting Down Roots” ‘G’

Home Town “A Second Chance” ‘G’

Christina/Coast

Christina/Coast

Christina on the Coast (N) ‘G’

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

(HIST) 51 54 51 32 42 Mountain Men ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

Mountain Men ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

Mountain Men “Strike it Rich” ‘PG’

Mountain Men Josh hits the jackpot. ‘PG’

Alone “Pins and Needles” (N) (In Stereo) ‘14’ Å (DVS)

Mountain Men ‘PG’

(LIFE) 24 38 24 21 Wife Swap (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Married at First Sight ‘14’ Å

Married at First Sight (N) ‘14’ Å

Married at First Sight (N) ‘14’ Å

Married at First Sight (N) ‘14’ Å

Married at First Sight ‘14’ Å

(LMN) 119 50 119 “Kidnapped by a Classmate” (2020, Suspense) Andrea Bogart. ‘NR’ Å

“Into the Arms of Danger” (2020, Suspense) Cathy Moriarty. ‘NR’ Å

“Dying for Motherhood” (2020, Suspense) Emmanuelle Vaugier. ‘NR’ Å

(MSNBC) 42 41 42 The Beat With The ReidOut (N) All In With Rachel Maddow The Last Word The 11th Hour

22 August 9 - 15, 2020 Viewfinder Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe

What are the seven deadly sins? It depends on whom you ask. Tradi-tion has it that they are pride, cov-etousness, lust, anger, gluttony, envy and sloth. But George Ber-nard Shaw — in “Major Barbara” — proclaimed them to be food, clothing, firing, rent, taxes, respect-ability and children.

Playing with only seven trumps can be deadly. The opponents are only one behind and threatening to

take control. If you must struggle with this minimum majority, usu-ally it is best to pick a 7-0 or 6-1 fit, especially if the long hand has a strong suit. 5-2 and 4-3 tend to be more awkward.

Still, if you are going to play in one of those fits, it pays to know the basic approaches. Today’s deal highlights a common technique. Against four spades, the defenders started with three rounds of dia-monds. What should South have done?

After the first three bids, North couldn’t bid no-trump without a stopper in the unbid diamond suit, couldn’t rebid hearts without at least six, couldn’t support clubs with only two, and shouldn’t imme-diately raise spades without four. The artificial fourth-suit game-forc-ing rode to his momentary rescue. Then, when South didn’t bid no-trump to indicate a diamond stop-per, North judged well to go with the 4-3 spade fit.

There were 10 tricks via four spades, one heart and five clubs. But that was true only if declarer could draw trumps before running the clubs. The secret, as I’m sure you have seen, was not to ruff at trick three. Instead, South dis-carded his inevitable heart loser. Another diamond was ruffed high in the dummy, trumps drawn and those 10 tricks taken.

Citrus County (FL) ChroniCLe Viewfinder August 9 - 15, 2020 23

THURSDAY EVENING AUGUST 13, 2020 C: Comcast, Citrus S: Spectrum D/I: Comcast, Dunnellon & Inglis F: Oak Forest H: Holiday Heights

C S D/I F H 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30 (NBCSN) 448 26 730 NHL Top

10 ‘G’To Be Announced American Ninja Warrior

(In Stereo) ‘PG’

(NGEO) 109 65 109 Life and Death Row “Judgement” ‘14’

Life and Death Row “Execution” ‘14’

Life and Death Row “Crisis Stage” ‘14’

Life and Death Row “No Appeal” ‘14’

Life and Death Row “Punishment” ‘14’

Life and Death Row “Truth” ‘14’ Å

(NICK) 28 36 28 35 25 Casagran Casagran Sponge. Sponge. ››‡ “The Karate Kid” (2010) Jaden Smith. ‘PG’ Å Friends Friends (OWN) 125 24 103 20/20 on OWN ‘14’ 20/20 on OWN ‘14’ 20/20 on OWN ‘14’ 20/20 on OWN ‘14’ 20/20 on ID ‘14’ 20/20: Homicide (OXY) 123 44 123 Killer Couples ‘14’ Killer Couples ‘14’ Killer Couples ‘PG’ Killer Couples ‘14’ Killer Couples ‘PG’ Dateline: Secrets

(PARMT) 37 43 37 27 36 Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

Two and Half Men

›››‡ “Big” (1988) Tom Hanks. A wishing machine turns boy into a man with a job and girlfriend.

›››‡ “Big” (1988) Tom Hanks. (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

(SEC) 745 72 The Paul Finebaum Show (N) (Live)

SEC Now (N) (Live)

SEC Now SEC Now SEC Now SEC Now SEC Now The Paul Finebaum Show

(SHOW) 340 241 340 “Countdown” ›‡ “Jexi” (2019) Adam Devine. (In Stereo) ‘R’ Å

Shameless “Father’s Day” ‘MA’ Å

On Becoming a God in Central Florida

We Hunt Together ‘MA’ Å

Desus & Mero (N)

“Countdown”

(SUN) 36 31 36 MLB Baseball Tampa Bay Rays at Boston Red Sox. (N) (Live)

Rays Postgame

Florida Insider Fishing Report (In Stereo)

To Be Announced Florida Insider Fishing Report (In Stereo)

(SYFY) 31 59 31 26 29 ›› “Resident Evil: Retribution” (2012)

››› “Beetlejuice” (1988, Comedy) Michael Keaton, Alec Baldwin. ‘PG’ Å

››› “Twister” (1996) Helen Hunt. Storm chasers race to test a new tornado-monitoring device. ‘PG-13’

“Trick ’r Treat” ‘R’

(TBS) 49 23 49 16 19 Fam. Guy Fam. Guy Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Lost Resort (N) Conan Lost

(TCM) 169 53 169 30 35 ››› “Maytime” (1937, Musical) Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy. ‘NR’ Å

›››› “Grand Hotel” (1932, Drama) Greta Garbo. ‘NR’ Å (DVS)

›››› “Dinner at Eight” (1933, Comedy) Marie Dressler. ‘NR’ Å (DVS)

(TDC) 53 34 53 24 26 Great White Double Trouble Å

Extinct or Alive: Land of Lost Sharks

Air Jaws 2020 (N) (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Sharkadelic Summer (N) (In Stereo) Å

Mako Nation (N) (In Stereo) ‘PG’ Å

Expedition Unknown (N) ‘PG’ Å

(TLC) 50 46 50 29 30 Dr. Pimple Popper Dr. Pimple Popper Dr. Pimple Popper Dr. Pimple Popper Dr. Pimple Pop Feet-Killing Me

(TMC) 350 261 350 ›››‡ “Casino” (1995) ‘R’ Å

››› “The Firm” (1993) Tom Cruise. A law-school grad signs on with a sinister Tennessee firm. ‘R’ Å

››› “The Pelican Brief” (1993) Julia Roberts. An inquisi-tive law student becomes the target of assassins.

(TNT) 48 33 48 31 34 NBA Basketball

NBA Basketball (N) (In Stereo Live) Å NBA Basketball (N) (In Stereo Live) Å Inside the NBA (N)

(TOON) 38 58 38 33 Apple Gumball Gumball We Bare Burgers Burgers American American Rick Rick Fam. Guy Fam. Guy (TRAV) 9 106 9 44 Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures Ghost Adventures The Dead Files ‘PG’ Osbournes- Bel. (truTV) 25 55 25 98 55 Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Tacoma Tacoma Jokers Jokers (TVL) 32 49 32 34 24 Andy G. Andy G. Andy G. Andy G. Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King

(USA) 47 32 47 17 18 ››› “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” (2009) Daniel Radcliffe. ‘PG’

Cannonball (N) ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

Chrisley Knows

Chrisley Knows

Cannonball ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

Cannonball ‘PG’ Å (DVS)

(WE) 117 69 117 Law & Order: Criminal Intent ‘14’ Å

Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars ‘14’

Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars ‘14’

Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars (N) ‘14’

Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars ‘14’

Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars ‘14’

(WGN-A) 18 18 18 18 20 Blue Bloods ‘14’ Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother Mother

BESTTONIGHT’S

8 p.m. on LKiller Camp

In “A Killer Finale” for Season 1, the surviving campmates cast their final votes for who they think the killer is, but two campers get into a conflict over clues they’ve received and mount a final desperate effort to persuade their fellow camp-ers that they’re innocent. Be-fore the hour is up, the killer is

revealed, although the ultimate fight to prevail could go either way. Bobby Mair is the host.

8 p.m. on (TDC)

Air Jaws 2020Shark Week celebrates 20 years of flying sharks with Jeff Kurr, Andy Chivell, Chris Fallows and many more familiar faces from “Air Jaws” as they reflect on some of the most popular and iconic moments in the his-tory of this franchise.

9 p.m. on (HIST)

Mountain MenOn his determined quest to find gold, Josh finally hits the jack-pot in the season finale, “The Big Reckoning.” Elsewhere, Jake braces himself to make a last desperate stand against a massive predator, while Tom puts his homemade dugout canoe to the test. Meanwhile, Kidd and Harry fulfill a lifelong ambition to secure a future for themselves in the mountains, but a heartbroken Eustace watches as his dream of keeping his new land goes up in flames.

9:01 p.m. on (TDC)

Sharkadelic SummerRapper and TV host Snoop Dogg explores the question of why more and more Great White sharks seem to be making them-selves at home in the waters just off several American shores. As he investigates, Snoop breaks down some of the most unbeliev-able shark attacks ever caught on tape and meets with experts who are hoping to save many lives by unlocking the secrets behind this invasion of Great Whites.

10 p.m. on (TBS)

Lost ResortRobin finds herself up against pretty much everyone else as the mother-daughter drama continues to play out in this new episode. Maco winds up in a very un-comfortable and unconventional therapy session with Acqua and Vairrun. Meanwhile, a grieving Pastor Becca struggles to process the death of her stillborn son.

10 p.m. on (TruTV)

Tacoma FDHoping to impress Vicky (Heather Mazur), Terry (Kev-

in Heffernan) picks up some smooth dance moves in the new episode “Firefighter’s Ball Part 1.” Meanwhile, Ike (Gabriel Hogan) agrees to play wingman for Andy (Eugene Cordero), and Lucy (Hassie Harrison) discovers her date is a lot more like her mother than she had realized. Elsewhere, Eddie (Steve Lemme) learns he’s up for a big promotion, unless Terry blows it for him. Marcus Hen-derson also stars.

10:03 p.m. on (HIST)

Alone

As the remaining survivalists start to enter the frigid heart of winter, food becomes terrify-ingly scarce for all of them in the new episode “Pins and Nee-dles.” One participant gets a lucky break, only to be crushed when things don’t turn out to be as they first appear. While another contender struggles with his own inner demons, an-other’s time here in the Arctic comes to an explosive end.

Acqua Xena Heart

Bridge PHILLIP ALDER

Newspaper Enterprise Assn.

MORE PUZZLESn Find the daily crossword puzzle inside the Chronicle’s

classified pages, along with Sudoku, Wordy Gurdy and a word puzzle.

Dear Annie: I realize that this is a difficult issue on which to offer advice,

but I suspect it might have widespread interest.

I have found that many friends with whom I have cof-fee in the morning talk in an exuberant way, and in the pro-cess, spew pieces of bagels, croissants and more across the table, often into my face or food. This is also a frequent, if not in-evitable, o c c u r -rence at cocktail parties , in which h o r s d’oeuvres a r e p a s s e d around to p e o p l e who may not have the clearest aware-ness of what is going on.

I have resolved not to be a participant in this “wood chip-per” game by chewing slowly and carefully and not speaking while I’m chewing. But I won-der how you would advise stay-ing out of the fray of unwelcome food particles while not insulting well- meaning people. — No Wood Chipper

Dear NWC: Nobody likes a salivary shower, but if you find yourself irritated with most of your friends over this, the problem might be on your side of the table. I suggest you plan your socializing around activi-ties that don’t involve eating — going for a walk, taking a hike, volunteering together —as much as possible, and keep a wide berth the rest of the time.

Dear Annie: I am 77 years old and have known for most of my life that I’m not beautiful. I have a sharp chin and nose and have actually had a few warts removed. I realized when I was a child that I was not cute — a fact that was reinforced through my teen and young adult years. In my late teens, I was thrilled to marry a hand-some “bad boy” type. You can imagine how that turned out!

I persevered and developed a successful career, plenty of friends and a church family. I gained a level of self-confi-dence. Then I married the most kind, gentle, caring man. We raised a family, and I felt we had a very successful mar-riage. He encouraged me in many endeavors such as re-turning to school and finding a more suitable career.

One problem is that my hus-band is so kind that he would never criticize anything about me, especially my appearance.

And now, since the pan-demic, I’ve been stuck at home, with no weekly visit to the beauty salon and no makeup or fashionable clothes. These past few months have made me painfully aware that I’m “ugly”!

Recently, a neighbor came to call (admittedly, not a very smart person) and related how when she first met me, I looked just like a friend of hers who she said looked “just like a witch” as she got older.

That was all it took! I now doubt why my husband mar-ried someone who looks like me. Does everyone I meet im-mediately also think I resem-ble a witch? I feel all of my qualities as an empathetic, successful person are of no avail. — Witchy Woman

Dear WW: I know it’s been said so many times that the words practically have no meaning, but it still bears re-peating: Real beauty is on the inside. A loving heart means infinitely more than a pretty face. And when you exude warmth and empathy, there’s no way anyone would mistake you for a witch. Be as kind to yourself as you are to others: Start each morning and end each night by looking in the mirror and saying, “I love you.”

Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@ creators.com.

Annie offersadvice

DEAR ANNIE

LOCAL SUPPORTnThe Centers: 352-628-

5020

nNAMI - Citrus hotline: 844-687-6264 (toll free)

Page 16: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

B4 THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 COMICS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

LOCAL THEATER INFORMATION

All Regal Cinemas are closed during the coronavirus outbreak. For more

information, visit online at www.fandango.com. Fandango also provides some

movie trailers, movie news, photographs and editorial features.

VALERIE THEATRE CULTURAL CENTER

The Valerie Theatre is closed during the coronavirus outbreak. For more

information, visit online at www.valerietheatre.org.

Peanuts

Pickles

Garfield

For Better or For Worse

Sally ForthBeetle Bailey

Dilbert The Grizzwells

The Born Loser Blondie

Doonesbury Flashbacks

Moderately Confused Rubes Dennis the Menace The Family Circus

Betty

Big Nate

Arlo and Janis

Frank & Ernest

Today’s MOVIES

“ G V H P F Z T P Z A J H X N P B N H M . . . M N N C

P H N P X M A X J Z G A O U A H Z T N R A A B A U

Z T N V X P O N Z P O B P X X D T A G O T P E G Z

G Z . ” — B A O I T N P B X N

P r e v i o u s S o l u t i o n : “ I l a u g h m y h e a d o f f e v e r y d a y w i t h m y h u s b a n d a n d m y k i d s w h o a r e m o o n i n g m e a n d s i n g i n g m e

s o n g s . ” — M e l i s s a M c C a r t h y

Today’s clue: F e q u a l s Y

WJUF-FM 90.1 National PublicWHGN-FM 91.9 ReligiousWXCV-FM 95.3 Adult Mix.WXOF-FM 96.7 Classic HitsWEKJ FM 96.3, 103.9 Religious

WSKY 97.3 FM News TalkWXJB 99.9 FM News TalkWXCZ 103.3 Country

WYKE-FM 104.3 Sports TalkWDUV 105.5 FM HudsonWJQB-FM 106.3 OldiesWFJV-FM 107.5 Classic RockWRZN-AM 720 Adult Mix

Local RADIO

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 2020 B5CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

Discover Photo Contest We are looking for your exciting, interesting and unique Citrus County photos. Your photo could be among those chosen to be displayed in the 2020-2021 Discover Magazine. Please submit only photos taken in Citrus County and include a brief description, which includes where it was taken along with who took it.

By submitting the photo, you are acknowledging that you are the photographer

and the photo is your personal property. Once the

photo is submitted it becomes property of the

CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE and we reserve the right to use the photo in Discover

as well as other publications as we deem fit.

Submit your photos by going to ChronicleOnline.com/Contests and click on Discover Photosor go to: ChronicleOnline.com/Contests/DiscoverPhotos/#/Rounds/1/Gallery

THURSDAY,AUGUST 13, 2020 B5CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CLASSIFIEDS

Email: [email protected] - Website: www.chronicleonline.com

To place an ad, call (352) 563-5966

SAR002800

Sell Your StuffGeneral Merchandise

6 lines10 Days

In Print & Online

$1150*

*Any 2 items total under $200

LOOKINGfor a NewCareer?

Register today!

submit yourresume

Newopportunities

at yourfingertips!

Employmentin Citrus County

andsurrounding

areas

http://jobs.chronicleonline

.com/

NOW HIRING!

WELL DRILLERS

* Must have 2 - 3 years well drilling

experience.

* Must be able to drill steel wells with arotary machine.

Starting yearlysalary 72k-120k

(Depending on EXP)

For more informationPLEASE CALL386-867-0572

Staff Assistant II-StudentServices

Part-Time position

How to ApplyGo to

http://www.cf.edu/community/cf/hr/Select one of the

followingonline portals

Administrative/Faculty/Adjunct CareerOpportunities or

Professional/Career/Part-time CareerOpportunities.

Submit an electronicapplication, a copy of

unofficialtranscripts andresume online.

A copy of transcripts from an accreditedinstitution must be submitted with the

application.

3001 SW College Road, Ocala, FL

34474CF is an Equal

OpportunityEmployer

SUPPORTCOORDINATOR

Full - TimePosition Available

Serving Individuals w/ Developmental

Disabilities

MUST HAVE:**Bachelor’s degree

** 2 yearsProfessional exp. in

Social/ HumanServices

**Ability to pass a background

screening to meet State requirements.

RESUMES may be emailed to

[email protected]

AccountingSpecialist III

Full-Time position

How to ApplyGo to

http://www.cf.edu/community/cf/hr/Select one of the

followingonline portals

Administrative/Faculty/Adjunct CareerOpportunities or

Professional/Career/Part-time CareerOpportunities.

Submit an electronicapplication, a copy of

unofficialtranscripts andresume online.

A copy of transcripts from an accreditedinstitution must be submitted with the

application.

3001 SW College Road, Ocala, FL

34474CF is an Equal

OpportunityEmployer

jobs.chronicleonline.com

Looking For A New Career?

Register Today!

Submit Your Resume!

New opportunitiesat your fingertips in Citrus County and surrounding

areas.

MATTRESSQUEEN Serta Perfect

Sleeper Mattress- CLEAN

(352) 422-3015

BIG Local boat run SHRIMP $7.99 lb.

(13-15) or 5 lbs for $35.BEST Smoked Fish in town! Rio’s Blue Crab Shack 352-651-8801

ChihuahuaF, 3½ lb, chestnut

color, long hair, N.Gray Ter & Land-mark Dr, Cit. Spgs

Missing since 7/10/19(352) 651-2001, LM

Accountant III

Part-Time position

How to ApplyGo to

http://www.cf.edu/community/cf/hr/Select one of the

followingonline portals

Administrative/Faculty/Adjunct CareerOpportunities or

Professional/Career/Part-time CareerOpportunities.

Submit an electronicapplication, a copy of

unofficialtranscripts andresume online.

A copy of transcripts from an accreditedinstitution must be submitted with the

application.

3001 SW College Road, Ocala, FL

34474CF is an Equal

OpportunityEmployer

Today’sNew Ads

BEVERLY HILLSFri & Sat 8a-3p

Furn, tools and misc1830 West La Bonte

Circle

INVERNESSFri. & Sat. 8a - 2p33 & 1/3 Country

records/ smoke - free Longaberger bskts, etc.

1320 S Bea Ave

Must See toAppreciate!

36’ Travel Trailerin Excellent Cond!

NEW reclining loveseat,dining table, QN sz

Bed,& flooring. NEW LG custom deck w/ built in

lights. Storage Shed Never Used! Located

in Natures Resort Campground w/ all the

amenities of Homosassa right off the

river. Will only sell alltogether. Listed at

$13,900 734-634-9835 or 352-442-0764

SEA ARK14’ x 67”w, 15 Yamaha

4 stk, 15-25 hrs, new axels, springs. Deck w/ carpet & radio $3400

(352) 726-3760

Vietnam VeteranNewly Lic. HandymanWill Mow, trim, blow Plus Other Services

Wesley 352-364-2917

FREEI WILL REMOVE

ANTENNA TOWERS For Free 352-322-6277

BOOKLETSGeneral Info about

raising and caring forBonsai Plants ALL 5 -

Free (352) 344-1515

FREE... FREE...FREE...Removal of scrap metal a/c, auto’s, appliances

& dump runs. 352-476-6600

MATTRESSKING Serta Perfect Sleeper Mattress w/

Pillowtop(352) 422-3015

Today’sNew Ads

DUNNELLONFri, Sat, Sun 8a-2pHousehold items,

furniture, yard equip.8972 SW 196th Ct

Fairway Estate West

F&S Lawn Main.Landscaping, Tree Trimming, Sprinklers,

Sod InstallationLic/Ins (352) 560-1546

Gerard “Jerry” BoveeRealtor

Multi Million Dollar Producer

THINKING ABOUT SELLING?

Let’s talk about aCASH OFFER!

Call or text metoday.

352-270-6038 CellParsley Real Estate

Tell that special person

Happy Birthday with a

classified adunder

Happy Notes.

Only $23.50includes a photo

Call ourClassified Dept.

for details352-563-5966

* New subscription must have not been subscribed in the past 60 days.Subscription includes delivery coast and applicable Florida Sales tax. 0

00PF6D

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Classified Adswork!

Sell yourtreasures today!

Call �352-563-5966

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ALL CLASSIFIED ADS ARE

NON-REFUNDABLE

ALL CLASSIFIED ADS ARE

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Page 18: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

B6 THURSDAY,AUGUST 13, 2020 CLASSIFIEDS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

AVAILABLE for all types of sewingprojects -Contact

me at nitastitch.com

SMITTYSAPPLIANCE REPAIR

352-564-8179

Why go to a nursing hm? Call- Crystal

Always There AFCH-Lic’d- Affordable Rates

(352) 400-3672

Carpentry & Mobile Home Repair- Decks

30yrs exp. Hourly rates.352-220-4638

JEFF’SCLEANUP / HAULING

Clean outs / Dump runs, Brush Removal.Lic./Ins. 352-584-5374

PLUS handyman, floor-ing, painting. Pressure wash.free est. Veteran owned 352-949-2760

CURB APPEALDecorative Landscape Curbing, Epoxy River

Rock, Reseals & Repair352-364-2120

BIANCHI CONCRETEINC.COM Lic/Ins #2579Reputable for 21 yrs.

352-257-0078

Danny Works ConcreteAll type of concrete work Resurfacing & PaintingCredit Cards accepted.Lic/Ins 352-302-2606

ROB’S MASONRY & CONCRETE Driveways tear outs, tractor work Lic#1476 726-6554

ALL Tractor & Tree Work Land Cleared, Deliver dirt & rock,

1 time cleanup, Drive-ways (352) 302-6955

A-1 RepairsPress. Wash, Painting

(Int/Ext) 25 yrs, Ref, Lic #39765, 352-513-5746

COUNTY WIDEDRY-WALL 30 Yrs

Exp. Lic. #2875. All your drywall needs!! Ceiling

& Wall Repairs-Popcorn Removal 352-302-6838

DUN-RITE ELECTRICSince 1978 � Free Est.

Lic. EC 13002699** 352-726-2907 **

CITRUS HANDYMANSERVICES & FENCING

We have our bus. lic., $2 mil. liability Ins., & St Certification. Be Safe! Fair Pricing. Free Est.

352-400-6016

Alex’ FlooringHome & RV. Install,

repair, restretch. Dust-less tile removal. Lic/Ins. 30 yrs ex. 352-458-5050

Vinyl, wood & tilePLUS Handyman,

Pressure Wash, FREE EST. Veteran owned

352-949-2760

Get your mind out of the gutter! Cleaning

$25-$40 & Handyman Mark: 352-445-4724

M&W INTERIORSBath, kitchen, floors,

walls, ceilings.Lic/Ins 352-537-4144

ANDREW JOEHL HANDYMAN

Gen. Maint/Repairs Pressure Cleaning

0256271• 352-465-9201

Affordable Handyman• FAST • 100% Guar.

• AFFORDABLE•RELIABLE • Free Est.

352-257-9508

Affordable Handyman• FAST • 100% Guar.

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352-257-9508

Affordable Handyman• FAST • 100% Guar.

• AFFORDABLE•RELIABLE • Free Est.

352-257-9508

PLUS Handyman, Flooring, Painting.

interior doors, FREE EST. Veteran owned

352-949-2760

Pressure Wash, Coolseal, general handy-

man. Call Stewart352-201-2169

Tile Bathroom Remodel & Repair specializing in no curb role in showers

352-794-1799

Heavy Bush-HoggingLand Clearing, Fill DirtSeeding,Tree Removal Lic/Ins 352-563-1873

CURB APPEALDecorative Landscape Curbing, Epoxy River

Rock, Reseals & Repair352-364-2120

AFFORDABLE LAWN CARE & CLEAN UPS.

Starting at $20. WE DO IT ALL! 352-563-9824

F&S Lawn Main.Landscaping, Tree Trimming, Sprinklers,

Sod InstallationLic/Ins (352) 560-1546

Gails Landscapingthe Lady Landscaper

Mow, trim, blowPlus Other ServicesGail 352-436-7604

GREENLADY CUTS LLC

mow, edge, blow,weeding & trim. Call

Crystal (352) 400-3672

H & H Lawn Care PlusRegistered & Insured. Reliable & Prof. (352)796-8517 or 453-7278

Vietnam VeteranNewly Lic. HandymanWill Mow, trim, blow Plus Other Services

Wesley 352-364-2917

Vietnam VeteranNewly Lic. HandymanWill Mow, trim, blow Plus Other Services

Wesley 352-364-2917

A-1 Complete RepairsPres. Wash, Painting

(Int/Ext) 25 yrs, Ref, Lic #39765, 352-513-5746

PLUS handyman, floor-ing, painting. Pressure wash.free est. Veteran owned 352-949-2760

SANDERS PAINTING Quality Craftsmanship40 yrs exp, Sr.Citz Disc.,

Lic/Ins 352-423-0116

PLUS handyman, floor-ing, painting. Pressure wash.free est. Veteran owned 352-949-2760

Pressure Wash, Coolseal, general handy-

man, Call Stewart(352) 201-2169

FREE Estimate/30 yrs Experience.Lic# CCC057537

352-563-0411

Re-Roofs & Repairs,All Types 1. Call the

Owner/Contractor Keith Hayes 352-895-4476 toSchedule your free noobligation, No Contact

inspection. 2. Weinspect & price the job. 3. Work is performed to your Satisfaction at your conv. LIC/INS 1331389

Home of the“Attitude of Gratitude!”

WHY REPLACE IT, IFI CAN FIX IT?

Same owner since 1987 ROOF Leaks, Repairs, Coating & Maintenance

Lic. #CC-C058189Gary : 352-228-4500

Bob’s DISCARDEDLawn Mower Service � FREE PICK-UP �

352-637-1225

StumpGrindingCheap!!!

Avg 16” stump $25.No stump to big or to small. Ask about our Disc: Vet, Vol., & Sr’s.Free Est. Cheapest price guaranteed.

Call Rich 352-586-7178CitrusStump

Grinding.com

� A ACE �TREE CARE

lic/inc since 1991free est,vet/Sr disc

� 637-9008 �

� A ACTION TREE(352) 726-9724

ProfessionalArborist

Serving Citrus 30 yrs.

Licensed & Insured

A TREE SURGEON Proudly serving Citrus

Co. Since 2001. Lic/Ins. Lowest rates! Free est.

352-860-1452

ALL Tractor & Tree Work Land Cleared, Deliver dirt & rock,

1 time cleanup, Drive-ways (352) 302-6955

CLAYPOOL’S Tree Service - Lic/Ins.

352-201-7313For stumps:

352-201-7323

Heavy Bush-HoggingLand Clearing, Fill DirtSeeding, Tree removal

& Debris removal.Lic/Ins 352-563-1873

StumpGrindingCheap!!!

Avg 16” stump $25.No stump to big or to small. Ask about our Disc: Vet, Vol., & Sr’s.Free Est. Cheapest price guaranteed.Rich: 352-586-7178

CitrusStumpGrinding.com

AttentionConsumers!The Citrus County

Chronicle wants toensure that our ads meet the require-ments of the law.

Beware of any service advertiser that cannot

provide proof ofoccupational

license or insurance. For questions about

business require-ments, please

call your city or countygovernment offices.

000YTVK

HOMOSASSA100 x 150 vacant loton Homosassa Trailacross from Payless

Septic. Orig price $30k will accept $15,000

(813) 469-4267

Mike Czerwinski

Specializing InGOPHER TORTOISE

SURVEYS &RELOCATIONS

WETLAND SETBACKLINES

ENVIRONMENTALASSESSMENTS

Michael G. Czerwinski, P.A

ENVIRONMENTALCONSULTANTS

352-249-1012mgcenvironmental

.com30+ Yrs. Experience

DAVID KURTZRealtor

VacantLand

SPECIALIST

Let me help youBuy, Sell, Invest.

Free/ No Obligation Market Analysis

for your property.Residential

& Commercial

Century 21 J.W.Morton Real Estate, Inverness, Fl. 34450

CELL 954-383-8786Office 352-726-6668

DUNNEL-LON

North Williams St3000 SF MOL;

Commercial building on .042 acre

**For sale or lease**Call for details

Contact: Al Isnetto,Palmwood Realty.352-597-2500 x202

3/2/2 Princeton LaneHighlands Home

$119K Can be seen onSundays Only! Please Call (352) 637-1173

Remodeled Villa inInverness Landing1431 Longboat Pt.

Lg end unit on priv st. 1471 sf; 3BR, 2BA.

New kit cab. & applis. New flooring and paint throughout. Many amenities indevelopment. Priv boat launchwith

docks, heated pool,& club house. Call to

view this gem. 980-621-8227

2/1, 1972 Single Wide in Homosassa 55+

Park. Furn., carport, storage shed, Nice,

CLEAN & QUIET$12.5K 352-564-0201

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CRYSTAL RIVERBest Tennants WantedNice 3/2, Huge Fenced Yard, Newly Furnished,

w/wo Huge garage,(540) 720-0098

HOMOSASSA2/1, CHA, No Pets,

$650./mo., 1st , last + Sec. (352) 628-4210

Room to rent - Inv.2 mi from Applebee, Female only, no pets, furnished, access to

home. $400/mo. Call Rick (352) 942-9242

PUBLISHER’SNOTICE:

All real estateadvertising in this

newspaper is subject to Fair Housing Act

which makes it illegal to advertise “any

preference, limitation or discrimination

based on race, color, religion, sex, handi-

cap, familial status or national origin, or an

intention,to make such prefer-ence, limitation or

discrimination. “ Fa-milial status includes

children under the age of 18 living with

parents or legal cus-todians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18.

This newspaper will not knowingly accept

any advertising for real estate which is in

violation of the law.Our readers are

hereby informed that all dwellings adver-

tised in this newspa-per are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of

discrimination call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777.

The toll-free telephonenumber for the

hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

BICYCLES 2 of themRoadmaster 21

SPEED 26 only 50.00each 352-464-0316

2 Golf Bags, 1 set of clubs complete, 1 partial set, 1 Hand Buggy, ALLfor $99 -INVERNESS

(352) 201-6924

DRESSER/CHANGING TABLE blonde finish has storage area in

good condition $100. 352-613-0529

I buy, jewelry, silver, gold, paintings, instru-

ments, records, an-tiques, coins,watches

& MORE! 352-454-0068

WANTEDJUNK & ESTATE

CARSUp to $1,000. & MORE

(352) 342-7037

Wanted Model Trains $ INSTANT CASH $For old Lionel & other

model trains, anyquantity- one piece

or a house full! 330-554-7089

GERMAN SHEPHERDPUPPIES

AKC, White-3 fem, 3 male, health cert’s, 95% potty-trained. Avail. Aug

29th; $600 per pup. 352-419-4400 / leave

message or text

2/1, 1972 Single Wide in Homosassa 55+

Park. Furn., carport, storage shed, Nice,

CLEAN & QUIET$12.5K 352-564-0201

Mobile HM on 2.36acres, w/ 30 x 50 Metal Garage, 14’ Overhead Door, fits motorhomes.

Mobile HM is 1600 sqft, 3/2, ALL NEW in 2019. Partial Fence w/ Gate, 2267 N Donovan Ave,

Crystal River, FL - Ride by then CALL/ asking

$209,000 603-860-6660

TIME TO BUYOR SELL

YOUR MOBILEIn A Leased Land

Park?

CALLLORELIELEBRUN

Licensed Realtor & Mobile Home Broker

Century 21Nature Coast,

835 NE Highway 19, Crystal River Fl,

Office 352-795-0021Direct 352-613-3988

CRYSTAL RIVERAnnual Sites

Available Startingat $585 a monthPlease Call Rock

Crusher Canyon RV Resort Today 352-564-9350

INVERNESS2/2, fully furn.-1035sqft

55+, No Pets, $980 Many Amenities

Incl.\ 360-808-6210

ALL CLASSIFIED ADS ARE

NON-REFUNDABLE

Record CollectionLP’s, Country/Western & Gospel, 30 ALBUMS

TOTAL. ONLY $30(352) 344-1515

TIRENew 125/80/16 donut

tire and jack kit for Kia soul. Paid $165 $100

352-465-6619

TOMMY BAHAMA SEAT CUSHIONS New Palm Tree design - $20 ea

352-513-5339

TOMMY BAHAMA Val-ance, New, Beaded Palm Tree 97”x 13”Retail $24.95-Sell$20 352-513-5339

TOW BARDraw-Tite / factory

made in USA/ FIXED Triangular Shape $65

352-464-0316

V W BUS HUBCAPS For a bus - good shape -

surface rust inside-ONLY $100.00352-464- 0316

VINTAGE WATER PITCHER CERAMIC

Large Fruit Decor Ex-cel Cond $10 352-513-5339

WESTERN BELTSILVER BUCKLE TONY LAMA 38” Like New-Retail $100 Sell $25

352-513-5339

WICKER WINE STAND Excel Cond holds

wine or liquor 14” x 12” x 17” High $20 352-513-5339

WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE

Thru wall installation-45”W 36”T 25”D -

300ft+ Pipe- Excellent Condition! - great for Hunting Cabin - $600

obo (352) 601-0265

Work Benchold wood, you fix

$75(352) 563-0225

HOSPITAL BEDAll Electric w/ Remote

GOOD CONDITION!U-Pick Up$500 obo

(352) 601-0265

SHOWER CHAIR18” wide, goes in

the tub, w/ back rest.$30 352-464-0316

SHOWER CHAIR LARGE/ Aluminum

and fiberglass- Strad-dles the tub — slide in.

$35 352-464-0316

TOILET SEAT RISERSElongated With

handles VERY NICE! $35 each

352-464-0316

TRANSPORT CHAIR (SMALL WHEELS)

with Footrests.NEARLY NEW! ONLY $75 352-464-0316

TREADMILLall digital lights up

belt won’t turncould be a fuse 40.00

352-464-0316

WALKER8” wheels

Good Condition$50. 352-419-4066

WHEELCHAIRlike new, seat 20”

high $75352-419-4066

WHEELCHAIRMANUAL

with footrests.Used little only

$100 352-464-0316

WHEELCHAIRVERY LARGE - 24”

seat- good shape,some surface rust

only $75 352-464-0316

LANTERNS10 -10.00 each

call for email pic 352-423-4163 Linda

VACUUMBISSELL / model 82HI Upright / Helix system$30 (352) 344-1515

EXERCISE BICYCLEWeslo, just like new,

with monitor$120

(352) 341-3535

RECUMBENT EXERCISE BIKE Nordic trac

no electronicsonly 60.00

352-464-0316

STATIONARY EXERCISE BIKE Older type wheel in front.Good shape. 60.00 Need a ph # for

pics 352-464-0316

BEVERLY HILLSFri & Sat 8a-3p

Furn, tools and misc1830 West La Bonte

Circle

DUNNELLONFri., Sat., Sun., 8a-2p

Household items,furniture, yard equip.8972 SW 196th Ct

Fairway Estate West

INVERNESSFri. & Sat. 8a - 2p33 & 1/3 Country

records/ smoke - free Longaberger bskts, etc.

1320 S Bea Ave

4 Tempered Safety Glass Patio Doors

w/ Aluminium Tracks3’ x 6.5’ $70 obo(352) 344-1515

AP CRASH COURSE BOOKS 6 books total, call for more details. Asking for $40 for all.

(352)547-6479

BATHROOM VANITY LIGHTS 4 chrome 34” shaded lights in good

condition $30. 352-613-0529

DANSK BISTROCOBALT BLUE DISHES plates salad bowls

mugs $10 each 352-513-5339

DRAPES RED 95” X 54” ROOM DARKENING lined Xcel cond 10

panels - $10 a panel. 352-513-5339

FISH PLATTERGLASS -Clear -no chips $5

352-513-5339

GENERALMERCHANDISE

SPECIALS!

6 lines - 10 days(up to 2 items

per ad)

$1 - $200$11.50

$201-$400$16.50

$401-$800$21.50

$801-$1500 $26.50

352-563-5966Classified Dept.

GLASS GOBLET SETComes in a set of 10, can send pictures,

asking $5 352-547-6479

GUN SAFE30in by 24in by 5ft, older model with combination lock, $250. Pics availa-

ble. 352-586-0493

ICE CREAM SHOP/Restaurant Turn-key One of a kind Ice Cream/food Shop for sale. Stayed open thru pandemic. My loss is

your gain. $45,000 FIRM Serious inquiries only, call for details

(352)651-2104

PLATES AND BOWLS SET 15 pieces total,no serious cracks.

Authentic from China, $5 (352)547-6479

PROPANE STOVEColeman

Be prepared2 burners, only 30.00

352-464-0316

Security lightsDefiant, three motion,unused LED $25 each

TOOL KART For Work-shop or garage. On

wheels need ph num-ber for pictures only 50.00 352 464 0316

TV 25” VIZIO flat screen has HDMI port & remote good con-dition delivery availa-ble $80. 352-613-0529

TV 38” INSIGNIA flat screen 3 HDMI ports &

remote good cond. delivery available

$100. 352-613-0529

HARDWARE 18 hidden door hinges, 9 satin

nickel cabinet knobs, 7 satin nickel drawer

pulls $35 352-201-0876

MEDICINE CABINETS 2 recessed mirrored cabinets $8 each or

both for $10. 352`201-0876

MIRROR42”X47” $5

352-201-0876

MORTAR MIXER7 hps, Wis. Engine.

Excellent condition. $1200 firm

352-697-0458

BAR STOOLSset of 3 solid wood maple brown 29”excellent condition $60 352-613-0529

BED FRAME (METAL)KING SZ, $60352-613-0529

BOX SPRINGS2 SIMMONS Twin SZ BOX SPRINGS for aKING SZ bed, $80

352-613-0529

China Cabinet1 Glass Front Wood

China Cabinet, $50 obo(352) 344-1515

COMPUTER DESKOld, must get rid of soon, willing to send

pictures, $5 (352)547-6479

CURIO CABINET large white wash finish 82”HX40”WX13”D

needs door replaced. $100 352-613-0529

DESK1 Wood Office Desk, Lshaped for corner $50 obo (352) 344-1515

Gas GrillWeber, includes gas

tank, and covergood Cond $100(352) 513-5600

Large two PieceL-shaped Sectional w/

Chaise Lounge &Cocktail Ottoman $250

Rocking Chair w/ Gold color stenciling

and seat pads for $100352-303-8011

Mattress twin size with box spring, frame &

headboard maple fin-ish in good cond.

$100. 352-613-0529

OAK TOP TABLE53” round w/ 4 OAK Chairs, Black Cloth

Seats -VERY GOODCONDITION! $130

352- 513-4311

RECLINERVERY GOODCONDITION!

Fabric Brownish Color $95 352- 513-4311

TWIN BED SETwith frame

65.00352- 423-4163 Linda

Bob’s DISCARDEDLawn Mower Service � FREE PICK-UP �

352-637-1225

Craftsman Lawnmower6.75HP Self-propelled & Home Lite Weed Eater

Taking Offers352-423-4381

LADY PALM TREE6 Ft Tall, perfect shape

$125(352) 527-0663

Let us be yourone stop shop

forEmployment

needs.

Your job will be featured on Top

National Websites such

asINDEED.COM

and many MORE &IN PRINT

Call yourClassified

Representative for details at 352-563-5966

CITRUS COUNTY

CHRONICLEServing Our

County Since 1894

The Oldestbusiness

Supporting our Community

ALL CLASSIFIED ADS ARE

NON-REFUNDABLE

FRAMED FLOWERPORTRAIT Very nice measuring 17x14.Only asking for $5

(352)547-6479

Antique BottleCollection

Old Soda Pop and other Vintage pieces $40 obo

(352) 344-1515

Dale Earnhardt Jr. Budweiser Number 8 Display Car - Plastic42 inches Long $100

352-303-8011

CHEST FREEZER Sears Kenmore used 15.1

cubic feet $200 352-527-0982

MAYTAG WASHING MACHINE Large ca-pacity good shape.

Can’t beat a Maytag 75.00 352-464-0316

SMITTYSAPPLIANCE REPAIR

352-564-8179

Real-time Online Auction

By Order of the BankDesign Scapes of Manasota, Inc.Tues, August 18,

2020 at 10:00 A.M.Live audio stream-ing auction event consisting of Vehi-cles, Trucks, Trailers and Landscaping

Equipment including 2015 Ford F-750,

2014 Isuzu NPR HD Truck, Skid Steers

and more!Registration, cata-

log, photos and terms available at

www.moeckerauctions.com

Pick-up/removal: Tampa, FL.

Preview: 08/17 by appointment.Call for details(954) 252-2887(800) 840-BIDS

AB-1098 AU-3219, Eric Rubin

PATIO/ GUTTERALUMINUMINSTALLER

FULL TIME

*Competitive Pay*Must Have valid Drivers License*Bkgrnd check

*Drug Free Workplace

Send Resume totknight@

chronicleonline.com or

Mail Resume to1624 N. Box # 1975Meadowcrest Blvd.

Crystal River, FL34429

PROPERTYMANAGEMENT

TEAM

Needed to manage 37 unit apartment

complex. USDARural Development 515 and tax credit.

Experiencerequired.

AC certified.Send resume to:

[email protected]

EQUIPMENTOPERATOR

FULL-TIME

Tree Work &Land Clearing

* MUST BE Versatile

* MechanicallySkilled a Plus

To Apply:Please Call

(352) 563-1873

ROOFERS,CARPENTERS,& LABORERS

NOW HIRING!

We are looking for hard working,

reliable construction workers!

MUST HAVE:• Driver’s License or a Dependable Ride.

• Your Own Hand Tools

Apply at :Stonegate

Homes5310 W Tortuga Loop, Lecanto,

FL 34461(352) 270-8878

EOE/DFWP

SEEKING

CARRIERS

EARN BETWEEN$200 - $300per week.

$150sign on bonus.

Paid Training!

The Citrus County Chronicle has

immediate openings for newspaper

delivery drivers inINVERNESS,

HERNANDO, HOMOSASSA,CRYSTAL RIVER

Routes take approx. 3-5 hours to

complete in the early morning hours.Must have reliable

insured vehicle and valid driver’s license.

Apply in person at:Citrus County

Chronicle1624 North

Meadowcrest BlvdCrystal River, Fl

8am-5pm Mon-Fri

Classified Adswork!

Sell yourvehicle today!

Call �352-563-5966

Classified Adswork!

Sell yourtreasures today!

Call �352-563-5966

Page 19: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

THURSDAY,AUGUST 13, 2020 B7CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CLASSIFIEDS

5719-0903 THCRNPrice, Kasey Larue 2019-DP-022 Notice of Action

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

Case No.: 2019-DP-022Division: Juvenile

IN THE INTEREST OF:R.J.B. (F) D.O.B.: 04/08/2009

A Child.

NOTICE OF ACTION, SUMMONS AND NOTICE OFADVISORY HEARING AS TO THE FATHER FOR

TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS

THE STATE OF FLORIDA

TO: Kasey Larue Price, Father of R.J.B.

You are hereby notified that a petition under oath has been filed in the above-styled court for the termination of your parental rights as to R.J.B., a female child born on April 8, 2009, in the State of Florida, for placement of the child with the Florida Department of Children and Families for subsequent adoption, and you are hereby commanded to be and appear before the General Magistrate Keith Schenck of the Circuit Court or any judge assigned to hear the above cause, at the Advisory Hearing for Termination of Parental Rightson September 21, 2020 at 10:45 AM via THE “ZOOM” APPLICA-TION.

SAR011149

DEBTHOMPSON

* One call away for your buying and

selling needs.* Realtor that you can refer to your

family and friends.* Service with a smile

seven daysa week.

Parsley Real EstateDeb Thompson352-634-2656

[email protected]

debthompson.com

GARY & KARENBAXLEY

GRI Realtors

Your ChristianRealtor

connectionto your

next transaction

352-212-4678 Gary352-212-3937 Karen

[email protected]

Tropic ShoresRealty

Is it TIME to$$ CASH IN $$

on yourInvestment?

It MAY be the PERFECT TIME While $$ are at

their PEAK!* * *

* * *Specializing in

MEADOWCREST serving ALL ofCitrus County

DEBRA CLEARY(352) 601-6664

Tropic Shores Realty

Les J. Magyar,

REALTOR

“Simply PutIntegrity #1”

352-220-1786Lmagyar01@

gmail.comCraven Realty,

Inc.352-726-1515

Mortgage Loan Originator

Should yourefinance?

If you’repaying 4.25%or more…YES!

Dianne Perkins 352-464-0719

NMLS #1410743

Equal Housing Lender

I put the REAL in REAL ESTATE!

JIM THE “REAL”MCCOY

CALL & GETRESULTS!

(352) 232-8971

Is it TIME to$$ CASH IN $$

on yourInvestment?

It MAY be the PERFECT TIME While $$ are at

their PEAK!* * *

* * *Specializing in

MEADOWCREST serving ALL ofCitrus County

DEBRA CLEARY(352) 601-6664

Tropic Shores Realty

Gerard “Jerry” BoveeRealtor

Multi Million Dollar Producer

THINKING ABOUT SELLING?

Let’s talk about aCASH OFFER!

Call or text metoday.

352-270-6038 CellParsley Real Estate

SUGARMILLWOODS

Sellers & Buyers FRUSTRATED?NEEDING HELP? CALL ME, NOW.

Hello I’m

Wayne CormierKey One

352-422-0751

[email protected]

“Have a great day and God Bless”

.. Nick Kleftis ..

Now is the time to consider listing your home, inventory is down and buyers

are ready.

Call me for a free market analysis.

Cell: 352-270-1032Office: 352-726-6668

email: [email protected]

BETTY J. POWELLRealtor

“ Your SUCCESSis my GOAL...

Making FRIENDS along the way

is my REWARD! “

BUYING ORSELLING?!

CALL ME: 352-422-6417 bjpowell72@

gmail.comERA American

Realty & Investment

BOBBI DILEGO352-220-0587

SELLING?

GET TOP DOLLAR& TOP SERVICE!

FREEHOME MARKET

ANALYSIS

FREEHOME WARRANTY

26 yrs in Real Estate36 yr Citrus County

ResidentERA American Realty

IS A MOVE IN YOUR FUTURE?

For your next move, you deserve the best. Phyllis has sold real estate in 6 states for

25 years.Now exclusively

in Florida, See how you can put

HER experience towork for YOU

by contacting herTODAY.

Phyllis EGarrett,

Realtor 352-445-1393

Coldwell BankerInvestors Realtyof Citrus County

It’s a GREATTIME TO

SELL!Deb Infantine

Realtor

I have 36 yearsReal Estateexperience!

Call me:352-302-8046

Only Way RealtyCitrus

DEB INFANTINERealtor

KAREN ARCE352-634-5868

Full Time Realtor Since 2003!

Multi Million DollarProducer!

Discover the BESTWhen Buying or

Selling Your Home.

“Let Me Put MyExperience & Energy To Work For You!”

I Service Citrus County and The Surrounding

Counties.

FREE Home Market Analysis

ERA American Realty

LaWanda Watt

THINKING ABOUT

SELLING?Inventory is down

and we needlistings!!

Call me for a FreeMarket Analysis!352-212-1989

[email protected]

Century 21J.W. Morton

Real Estate, Inc.

MICHELE ROSERealtor

“Simply putI’ll work harder”

352-212-5097isellcitruscounty

@yahoo.com

Craven Realty, Inc.

352-726-1515

Pick Jeanne Pickrel for all your RealEstate needs!

Certified Residential Specialist.

Graduate of RealEstate Institute.352-212-3410

Call for a FREEMarket Analysis.

[email protected]

Century 21JW Morton

Real Estate Inc.

Stefan StuartREALTOR

Let me help you find your next home or sell

your current one.352-212-0211

[email protected]

Century 21J. W. Morton

Real Estate, Inc.

Tim FergusonRet. Marine Corpsveteran known forhis integrity and

reputation forbeing fair and

consistent.

My 30 years of exp. are the foundationof my Real Estate

Career.

Call me anytimewithout obligation.

I’m ready to fight to protect your interests

in the purchase or sale of real estate

Tim FergusonRealtor

(352) [email protected]

EXIT RiversideRealty

� � � � �

� � � � �

Our office covers all of CITRUS and

PINELLAS Counties!

**FREE**Market Analysis

PLANTATIONREALTY

LISA VANDEBOEBROKER (R)

OWNER352-634-0129

www.plantationrealtylistings.com

ALL PARTIES SHALL APPEAR BY ELECTRONIC MEANS, ONLY. UNLESS OTHERWISE ARRANGED BY A PARTY, THE HEARING WILL OCCUR BY VIDEO/TELEPHONE USING THE ZOOM APPLI-CATION.

To appear by video: Please click on the hyperlink you received via email (best method), or type https://zoom.us in your web browser, click on Join Meeting, then enter the Meeting ID (936 6266 0108) and Password (930021) per the prompts. You will be admitted to the hearing by the Magistrate.

To appear by phone: Please call (786) 635 1003 US (Miami) or (646) 558 8656 US (New York) and enter the Meeting ID (936 6266 0108) and Password (930021) when prompted. You will be ad-mitted to the hearing by the Magistrate.

*PLEASE EMAIL THE MAGISTRATE [email protected] IF YOU ARE NOTABLE TO ATTEND BY TELEPHONE OR VIDEO ON THE ZOOM APPLICATION.

FAILURE TO PERSONALLY APPEAR AT THIS ADVISORYHEARING OR THE TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS TRIALCONSTITUTES CONSENT TO THE TERMINATION OF PARENTALRIGHTS TO THIS CHILD, IF YOU FAIL TO APPEAR ON THE DATE AND TIME SPECIFIED, YOU MAY LOSE ALL LEGAL RIGHTS TO THE CHILD NAMED IN THE PETITION.

YOU ARE ENTITLED TO HAVE AN ATTORNEY PRESENT TO REPRESENT YOU IN THIS MATTER. IF YOU WANT AN ATTOR-NEY, BUT ARE UNABLE TO AFFORD ONE, YOU MUST NOTIFYTHE COURT, AND THE COURT WILL DETERMINE WHETHER YOU QUALIFY FOR AN ATTORNEY TO BE APPOINTED TO REP-RESENT YOU IN THIS MATTER.

If you are a person with a disability who needs any accom-modation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are enti-tled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator at the Office of the Trial Court Administrator, Citrus County Courthouse, 110 North Apopka Avenue, Inverness, FL 34450, Telephone (352) 341-6700 within seven (7) working days of your receipt of this notice; If you are hearing or voice impaired call 1-800-955-8771, Florida Relay Service 711.

THIS NOTICE shall be published once a week for four consecu-tive weeks in the Citrus County Chronicle’s Classified Section.

Dated this 7th day of August, 2020, at Inverness, Citrus County, Florida.

ANGELA VICK, Clerk of Courts{{ COURT SEAL }}

By: Lindsey C Thomas, Deputy Clerk

Published August 13, 20, 27, and September 3, 2020

HONDA2001Goldwing GL1800

28,500 miles. Manyextras. Excellent cond.Ultimate touring bike. Black/chrome. $7950

352-270-8089

HONDA2009 Shadow 750 Exc. con. 1 owner, garage kept, Very low mi 3514$3600 561-777-6014

SCOOTER2007 Moto Mojo

Uptown 49cc Scooter 770 Miles, Street Legal,

Two seater, Remote Start, Alarm system,3 lockable storage

compartments $850 352-897-5339

SUZUKI ‘06Burgman 400, Motor

Scooter, SHARP,Runs Great - Very

Dependable! $1750 OBO 352-251-5868

NO TEXTS

Harley-Davidson2003 100th Aniv. EditionV Rod, Black & Silver,

Vance & Hines, 13,000mi, $4,950 obo

516-819-9196

Harley-Davidson2020 Softail Slim S

107ci, ONLY 400 mi, For SALE or TRADE

for a 3/4 TonPick-up Truck - 4WD

352-634-1789

HONDA1989 Goldwing SE

1500 CC, Blue/green.Only 11,401 mi., bought

brand new. Perfect cond. Hardly driven. $6000 obo Tony:

352-527-8950Pictures avail. online!

Harley-Davidson‘08 FLHX Street Glide, Very Clean, Low Miles,

$8900 OBO352-277-9175

jobs.chronicleonline.com

Looking For A New Career?

Register Today!

Submit Your Resume!

New opportunitiesat your fingertips in Citrus County and surrounding

areas.

DODGE2002 Ram Diesel - 2500 Cums/ BLK / 181K mi / 1

owner/ Tow pkg/ Ext. cab / Great Cond. - a/c $11,500 352-601-0383

FORDF350 Diesel King

Ranch Crew Cab 4 x 4 108K mi/ Rear Ent./Retractable Tonneau

Cover-1 owner- ALL svc rec’s/ Mint Condition!

$20,900 352-497-6945

LINCOLN‘02 Blackwood - Good Cond.-ONLY 3K madeFULLY LOADED $8500

352-489-4129

SELLYOUR VEHICLE

IN THE

Classifieds

ONLY

$19.95for 7 days

$29.95for 14 days

$49.95for 30 days

$69.95Run ‘til it sells

* Call yourClassified

Representativefor details.

352-563-5966

WINNEBAGO2017 Travel Trailer

Used 4 weekend trips in FL only. New roof,

new AC. Call forpictures. $20,000

518-929-4789

BRAKE PROfor tow car, $200 352-613-2620 or

352-726-6461

~$69.95~

Run ‘til it sells

Applies to all vehicles, boats, RV’s, campers & motorcycles.

Call yourClassified

Representativefor details.

352-563-5966

CASH FOR CARS & TRUCKS Running or Not TOP $$$$$ PAID� 352-771-6191 �

WANTEDJUNK & ESTATE

CARSUp to $1,000 & MORE

(352) 342-7037

CHEVROLET1991Corvette, 94k mi, targa top, good cond

new injectors & fuel pump. $7,000812-946-4489

FORD2007 FIVE HUNDRED4DR, 116K mi, NEWA/C, Good Condition!

$5000 (352) 628-2298

GMC2011 Terrain, SLT, 4 dr, 77K mi., Great cond.

can be towed behind RV, blue Ox hitch incl.$11,900 Can be seen @ Letgo. 352-613-2620

or 352-726-6461

MERCURY2002 Cougar/ Gold / 3 DR / Auto/ New Battery

& Tires $2100 Call

SELLYOUR VEHICLE

IN THE

Classifieds

ONLY

$19.95for 7 days

$29.95for 14 days

$49.95for 30 days

$69.95Run ‘til it sells!!

* Call yourClassified

Representativefor details.

352-563-5966

BUICK1965 Electra 225

V8 wildcat, 45k orig mi, cold AC$13,500 OBO

352-436-7485 aft 1pm

CHEVROLET1936 5 Window Coupe

350 V8, 10 bolt rear end, all steel body, all

power, cold A/C. $26,500 352-302-6979

CHEVROLET1969 CAMARO - 454 Engine / 700R4 trans., MANY upgrades! Call

for details! $40,000 810-841-2692

CHEVY1933 Chevy Hotrod350 Automatic, Steel

body, A/C- MUST SELL!$27K 352-342-8170

FORD1930 Model A

5 Window Coupe, 76 K mi./ EXCELLENT Cond. $16,000 352-795-3510

PLYMOUTH1934 Sedan, Chevy V8

Auto, 9” Ford Rear, Nice street rod.

$17,500 OBO603-660-0491

TOYOTA2000 MR2 5sp, 4cylSilver Convertible w/

86K mi, A FUN car that RUNS GREAT!

$7500 352-527-1832

TRIUMPH1973 TR6, 4 spd, 6 cyl, 2 Tops, Red w/ BlackInterior $15,000 Firm

352-503-6859

‘08 FORD RANGER Ext Cab 4WD -4.0L V6 Auto -NEW Computers & 4WD controls, High

Miles- $7500(352) 601-0265

FORD2002 F450 Lariat

141k mi, 7.3 diesel, Jake brake, 5th wheel body. Western hauler

$21,950 502-345-0285

14 ft AIR BOATChevy 454 engine,

Trolling motor, Carbon Fiber Prop, $12K or

Trade (car or something fun) 352-344-0997

16ft C-DoryCruiser

50HP Honda, just over 1 yr old, Garage Kept,

$30K / Make Offer

16’ Flat Bottom Boatw/ NEW trailer

15HP 4 stroke elec start motor, Asking $5200 -

765-720-0024or 812-797-2845

17’ BOSTON WHALER / Montauk Ed. / 90HP Yamaha 4

Stk, Low Hrs. Comes W/ easy loader roll on trailer

$6000 352-603-0831

JOHNSON‘90, fiberglass, 14’10” CC,25 HP Evinrude +trolling mtr; galv. trailer. $2375 (352) 795-7335

MONTEREY2000 MONTURA

23½’, VG cond, too many extra’s to list, $9,000 or best offer

(352) 563-0074

SAILBOAT1980 41’ Ketch Taiwan

Built, center cockpit, Blue Water Cruiser,

Withlacoochee River, Inglis. $21,000 Charlie: 352-447-5171 Lv. Msg.

SEA ARK14’ x 67”w, 15 Yamaha

4 stk, 15-25 hrs, new axels, springs. Deck w/ carpet & radio $3400

(352) 726-3760

YAMAHA17 FT, 2004 G3, 60 hp Yamaha, 4 stroke, Troll-ing, Hummingbird Fish

Finder & Bimini352-726-0415

Gulf Stream2018 motor home,

model 6238, 4500 mi self contained, slide out $47,500 352- 212-6949

Holiday Rambler1991 / 27ft “C” Very

Good Cond./ Sleeps 6 / 351W eng/ 6 NEW tires $12,000 352-436-9718

Holiday Rambler2012 / 32ft Class A, Gas, 7500 mi, Just

SVC’d, fireplace, out-side ent., +more.

Price Reduced -$52K 352-489-8901

~$69.95~

Run ‘til it sells

Applies to all vehicles, boats, RV’s, campers & motorcycles.

Call yourClassified

Representativefor details.

352-563-5966

5th WHEEL2012 Winslow

Model #34RLS, $24,995Solid Wood Cabinetry

352-795-7820

DAMON2011 Tuscany - 43 footBath & a half, King size bed. 44K mi. Exc cond

MUST SEE !!352-601-0310

FIFTH WHEEL2017 Heartland PioneerPI 276 -32ft./ 2 slides, Auto Leveling, Rear

Bunks, $24,500352-634-2247

Forrest RiverSalem

2017- 24RLSHLCall for photos, $18K

HEARTLAND2008 Big Country 5th Wheel, 32’, 2 Slides/

Newer tires/ Loveseat/T.V. 810-705-2539

Holiday Rambler2002 Presidential, 5th Wheel, 36 Feet Long3 slides, fiberglass, NEW roof - $6500

(352) 212-6298

Must See toAppreciate!

36’ Travel Trailerin Excellent Cond!

NEW reclining loveseat,dining table, QN sz

Bed,& flooring. NEW LG custom deck w/ built in

lights. Storage Shed Never Used! Located

in Natures Resort Campground w/ all the

amenities of Homosassa right off the

river. Will only sell alltogether. Listed at

$13,900 734-634-9835 or 352-442-0764

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Page 20: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

B8 THURSDAY,AUGUST 13, 2020 CLASSIFIEDS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

8039-0820 THCRNMansfield, Lynne 2018 CA 000597 A Notice of Sale

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITIN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 2018 CA 000597 A

THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON TRUST COMPANY, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PROD-UCTS, INC., MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFI-

8031-0813 THCRNSullivan, Marvin 08-2019-CA-000574 A Notice of SaleIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDACASE NO.: 08-2019-CA-000574

VILLAGE CAPITAL & INVESTMENT, LLC,Plaintiff,

VS.UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, SURVIVING SPOUSE, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEE, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, AND ALL OTHER PARTIES CLAIMING AN INTEREST BY, THROUGH, UNDER, OR AGAINST THE ESTATE OF MARVIN SULLIVAN, DECEASED; et al,

Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sale will be made pursuant to an Order or Final Judgment. Final Judgment was awarded on March 11, 2020 in Civil Case No. 08-2019-CA-000574 A, of the Circuit Court of the FIFTH Judicial Circuit in and for Citrus County, Florida, wherein, VILLAGE CAPITAL & INVESTMENT, LLC is the Plaintiff, and MARVIN SULLIVAN; DEBRA KAY MURPHY A/K/A DEBRA KAY SULLIVAN; LINDSAY SULLIVAN; CATLIN SULLI-VAN; KERRIE DOW; UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, SURVIVING SPOUSE, GRANTEES, AS; ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER AND AGAINST THE HEREIN NAMED INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANT(S) WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWN PAR-TIES MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST AS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS are Defendants.

The Clerk of the Court, Angela Vick will sell to the highest bid-der for cash at www.citrus.realforeclose.com on August 27, 2020 at 10:00:00 AM EST the following described real property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to wit:

E 1/2 OF THE NW 1/4 OF THE SE 1/4 OF THE SW 1/4 OF SECTION 21, TOWNSHIP 17 SOUTH, RANGE 17 EAST, LESS THE SOUTH 25.00 FEET FOR ROAD RIGHT OF WAY. BEING LOT 7 OF SEVEN RIVER FARMS, AN UNRECORDED SUBDIVISION.

TOGETHER WITH THE MOBILE HOME SITUATED THEREON WHICH IS AFFIXED TO THE AFOREMENTIONED REAL PROPERTY AND INCOR-PORATED HEREIN AND WHICH IS INTENDED BY ALL PARTIES TO CONSTITUTE A PART OF THE REALTY AND TO PASS WITH IT.

SAID MOBILE HOME IS IDENTIFIED AS FOLLOWS:

YEAR/MAKE(MANUFACTURER)/MODEL: 2002 SHADOWMAS-TERSERIAL/VIN NUMBER(S): FLA14616648A AND FLA14616648B

COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 9653 WEST 7 RIVER FARMS STREET, CRYSTAL RIVER, FL 34428

PARCEL NUMBER: 17E17S212A0000070

Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim before the clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed.

Dated this 14 day of July, 2020.

ALDRIDGE PITE, LLP Attorney for Plaintiff1615 South Congress Avenue Suite 200, Delray Beach, FL

33445Telephone: 561-392-6391 Facsimile: 561-392-6965

By: Zachary Ullman, Esq. FBN: 106751Primary E-Mail: [email protected]

IMPORTANTAMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT: If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to partici-pate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Co-ordinator for Citrus County, John Sullivan, at (352) 341-6700 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or im-mediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.

Published August 6 & 13, 2020. 1100-345 B

CATES SERIES 2006-RP4,Plaintiff,

VS.UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, SURVIVING SPOUSE, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEE, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES AND ALL OTHER PARTIES CLAIMING AN INTEREST BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST THE ESTATE OF CAROL LYNNE MANSFIELD A/K/A CAROL MANSFIELD, DECEASED; et al,

Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALEPURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sale will be made pursuant to an Order or Final Judgment. Final Judgment was awarded on March 5, 2020 in Civil Case No. 2018 CA 000597 A, of the Circuit Court of the FIFTH Judicial Circuit in and for Citrus County, Flor-ida, wherein, THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON TRUST COM-PANY, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR RESIDENTIAL ASSET MORTGAGE PRODUCTS, INC., MORTGAGE ASSET-BACKED PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES SERIES 2006-RP4 is the Plaintiff, and UNKNOWN HEIRS, BENEFICIARIES, DEVISEES, SURVIVING SPOUSE, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEE, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES AND ALL OTHER PARTIES CLAIMING AN INTEREST BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST THE ESTATE OF CAROL LYNNE MANSFIELD A/K/A CAROL MANSFIELD, DECEASED; UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF VALERIE SUE JOSLIN; SALLY E. COTTON; BRET DAVIS MANSFIELD; ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UN-DER AND AGAINST THE HEREIN NAMED INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANT(S) WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWN PARTIES MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST AS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIM-ANTSNOS are Defendants.

The Clerk of the Court, Angela Vick will sell to the highest bid-der for cash at www.citrus.realforeclose.com on September 10, 2020 at 10:00:00 AM EST the following described real property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to wit:

LOT 32 BLOCK B, COUNTRY OAKS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 12, PAGE 17 OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF CITRUS COUNTY FLORI-DA

Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim before the clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed.

Dated this 16 day of July, 2020.

ALDRIDGE PITE, LLP Attorney for Plaintiff1615 South Congress Avenue Suite 200

Delray Beach, FL 33445Telephone: 561-392-6391 Facsimile: 561-392-6965

By: Jennifer Travieso, Esq. FBN: 0641065Primary E-Mail: [email protected]

IMPORTANTAMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT: If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to partici-pate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Co-ordinator for Citrus County, John Sullivan, at (352) 341-6700 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or im-mediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.

Published August 13 & 20, 2020. 1221-2034 B

8033-0813 THCRNCarter, Debra Jean 2020-CP-406 Notice to CreditorsIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDACase Number: 2020-CP-406 Probate Division

IN RE: ESTATE OF DEBRA JEAN CARTER a/k/a DEBRA JEANNE CARTER a/k/a DEBBI CARTER a/k/a DEBRA J. CARTER a/k/a DEB-ORAH CARTER a/k/a DEBRA PHELPS a/k/a DEBRA JEANNE BAUER,

Deceased.NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The administration of the Estate of DEBRA JEAN CARTER a/k/a DEBRA JEANNE CARTER a/k/a DEBBI CARTER a/k/a DEBRA J. CARTER a/k/a DEBORAH CARTER a/k/a DEBRA PHELPS a/k/a DEBRA JEANNE BAUER, deceased, whose date of death was April 12, 2020, is pending in the Circuit Court for Citrus County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 110 North Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Florida, 34450. The name and ad-dress of the Personal Representative and the Personal Representative’s Attorney are set forth below.ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:

All creditors of Decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the Decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice has been served must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THE LATER OF THREE (3) MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR THIRTY (30) DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.

All other creditors of the Decedent and other persons hav-ing claims or demands against the Decedent’s estate must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THREE (3) MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.

NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.The date of first publication of this Notice is August 6, 2020.

Personal Representative:DANIEL GAGE PHELPS

465 Boas Drive, Santa Rosa, California 95409Attorney for Personal Representative:James David Green, Esquire Florida Bar Number 0241430GREEN & GREEN, P.A. 9030 West Fort Island Trail, Suite 5,Crystal River, FL 34429-8011 Tel: 352/795-4500 Fax:352/795-3300Published August 6 & 13, 2020.

8034-0813 THCRNMCELROY, KIMBERLY D. 2020 CP 78 Notice to CreditorsIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND

FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISIONCASE NO.: 2020 CP 78

IN RE: ESTATE OF KIMBERLY D. MCELROY,Deceased.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The Administration of the Estate of KIMBERLY D. MCELROY, deceased, whose date of death was November 3, 2019, is pending in the Circuit Court for Citrus County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 110 N. Apopka Avenue, Inver-ness, Florida 34450. The names and addresses of the Co-Personal Representatives and the Co-Personal Representa-tives’ Attorney are set forth below.

All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s Estate on whom a copy of this Notice has been served must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THE LATER OF THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR THIRTY DAYS AF-TER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ONTHEM.

All other creditors of the decedent and persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s Estate must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THREE 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 OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.The dates of the first and second publications of this Notice are August 6 and August 13, 2020.

Co-Personal Representatives:KATELYN HOWARD

57 So. Monroe Street, Beverly Hills, FL 34465Co-Personal Representatives:

CAROLYN HANDLEY5855 N. Bonview Point, Citrus Springs, FL 34434

Attorney for the Co-Personal Representatives:KAREN O. GAFFNEY, Esquire Florida Bar No.: 500682Karen O. Gaffney, P.A. 205 West Dampier Street, Inverness,FL, 34450 Telephone: (352) 726-9222E-Mail Address: [email protected] August 6 & 13, 2020.

8035-0813 THCRNStanton, Goodwin G. 092020CP000542XXXXXXIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY STATE OF FLORIDACASE NO.: 092020CP000542XXXXXX Division: Probate

IN RE: ESTATE OF GOODWIN G. STANTON,Deceased.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION AND NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The administration of the Estate of GOODWIN G. STANTON, deceased, Case No.: 2020 CP 000542, is pending in the Circuit Court for Citrus County, Probate Division, the address of which is 110 N. Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Florida 34450. The name and address of the Personal Representative and the Personal Representative’s attorney are set forth below.

ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:All persons on whom this Notice is served who have objec-

tions that challenge the validity of the will, the qualifications of the Personal Representative, venue or the jurisdiction of this Court are required to file their objections with this Court WITHIN THE LATER OF THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF FIRST PUBLICA-TION OF THIS NOTICE OR THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERV-ICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.

All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is served within three months after the date of first publication of this notice must file their claims or de-mands WITHIN THE LATER OF THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.

All other creditors of decedent and persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s estate must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS AND OB-JECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.The date of first publication of this notice is August 6, 2020.

Personal RepresentativeSusan K. McAuley 241 Boonesboro Rd., Gray, TN 37615

Attorney for Personal RepresentativeSean W. Scott, Esquire Florida Bar No. 8709003233 East Bay Drive Suite 104 Largo, FL 33771-1900Telephone: (727) 539-0181Primary Email: [email protected] Email:[email protected] August 6 & 13, 2020.

8036-0813 THCRNBurgess, Patsy Lynn 2020-CP-00413 (Admin.)

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITIN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 2020-CP-00413IN RE: ESTATE OF: PATSY LYNN BURGESS

Deceased,NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION

The administration of the Estate of PATSY LYNN BURGESS, Case Number, 2020-CP-00413, is pending in the Circuit Court for Citrus County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is: Probate Division, Clerk of Circuit Court, Citrus County Courthouse, 110 North Apopka Avenue, Inverness, FL 34450. The names and addresses of the Personal Representative and the Personal Representative’s attorney are set forth below.

All interested persons are required to file with this court, WITHIN THREE MONTHS OF SERVICE OF THIS NOTICE: (1) all claims against the estate and (2) any objection by an inter-ested person on whom this notice was served that challenges the validity of the will, the qualifications of the personal repre-sentative, venue, or jurisdiction of the court.

Additionally, persons who may be entitled to exempt prop-erty under F.S. 732.402 will be deemed to have waived their rights to claim that property as exempt property unless a peti-tion for determination of exempt property is filed by such per-sons or on their behalf on or before the later of the date that is 4 months after the date of service of a copy of the notice of administration on such persons or the date that is 40 days after the date of termination of any proceeding involving the con-struction, admission to probate, or validity of the will or involv-ing any other matter affecting any part of the exempt prop-erty.

Further, any interested person on whom a copy of the notice of administration is served must object to the validity of the will, the qualifications of the personal representative, the venue, or the jurisdiction of the court by filing a petition or other pleading requesting relief in accordance with the Florida Probate Rules on or before the date that is 3 months after the date of service of a copy of the notice of administration on the objecting per-son, or those objections are forever barred.ALL CLAIMS AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER

BARRED.The date of the first publication of this Notice will be onAugust 6, 2020.

JOSHUA SCOTT BURGESS6421 W. Sunrise Lane Homosassa, FL 34446

Personal Representative of the Estateof PATSY LYNN BURGESS, Deceased

Leon M. Boyajan II Florida Bar No. 358312LEON M. BOYAJAN, II, P. A. 2303 Highway 44 West, Inverness, FL 34453-3809 Telephone: (352) 726-1800Published August 6 & 13, 2020.

8037-0813 THCRNTolmach, Linda Barbara 2020 CP 000524 Notice to

CreditorsIN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT

IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDACASE NO.: 2020 CP 000524

IN RE: ESTATE OF LINDA BARBARA TOLMACH,Deceased.

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The administration of the estate of Linda Barbara Tolmach, deceased, whose date of death was June 20, 2020, is pending in the Circuit Court for Citrus County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 110 N. Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Flor-ida 34450. The names and addresses of the personal repre-sentative 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 on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME 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 hav-ing claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their 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 FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.

NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.

The date of first publication of this notice is August 6,2020.

Personal Representative:Brandon Tolmach

3224 Coolidge Street, Hollywood, FL 33021Attorney for Personal Representative:/s/ Dawn Ellis, Esq. for the firm Florida Bar Number: 091979My Florida Probate, P.A.P.O. Box 952, Floral City, FL 34436-0952(352) 726-5444 E-mail Address: [email protected] August 6 & 13, 2020.

8046-0820 THCRNBarnett, Joshua Oliver 2020-CP-481 Notice to Creditors

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDAPROBATE DIVISION

File No. 2020-CP-481 Division ProbateIN RE: ESTATE OF JOSHUA OLIVER BARNETT

Deceased.NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The administration of the estate of Joshua Oliver Barnett, deceased, whose date of death was June 14, 2020, is pending in the Circuit Court for Citrus County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 110 N. Apopka Ave., Inverness, FL 34450. The names and addresses of the personal representa-tive and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth be-low.

All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME 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 hav-ing claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.

ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVERBARRED.

NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.

The date of first publication of this notice is August 13,2020.

Personal Representative:Tracey Ann Kaufman

255 Berkshire Dr., Youngstown, OH 44512Attorney for Personal Representative:H. Michael Evans, Esq., Attorney Florida Bar Number: 25167420668 W. Pennsylvania Ave., Dunnellon, FL 34431Telephone: (352) 489-2889 Fax: (352) 489-0852E-Mail: [email protected]

Published August 13 & 20, 2020.

jobs.chronicleonline.com

Looking For A New Career?Register Today! Submit Your Resume!

New opportunities at your fingertips in Citrus County and surrounding areas.

Page 21: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

THURSDAY,AUGUST 13, 2020 B9CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE CLASSIFIEDS

8040-0820 THCRNLauderbaugh, Joseph D. 2019 CA 001024 Notice of Sale

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITIN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO.: 2019 CA 001024

LAKEVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC.,Plaintiff,

VS.JOSEPH D. LAUDERBAUGH; et al,

Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALEPURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that sale will be made pursuant to an Order or Final Judgment. Final Judgment was awarded on March 5, 2020 in Civil Case No. 2019 CA 001024, of the Circuit Court of the FIFTH Judicial Circuit in and for Citrus County, Flor-ida, wherein, LAKEVIEW LOAN SERVICING, LLC. is the Plaintiff, and JOSEPH D. LAUDERBAUGH; ALTO MANAGEMENT, LLC; ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER AND AGAINST THE HEREIN NAMED INDIVIDUAL DEFENDANT(S) WHO ARE NOT KNOWN TO BE DEAD OR ALIVE, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWN PARTIES MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST AS SPOUSES, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS areDefendants.

The Clerk of the Court, Angela Vick will sell to the highest bid-der for cash at www.citrus.realforeclose.com on September 10, 2020 at 10:00:00 AM EST the following described real property as set forth in said Final Judgment, to wit:

ALL THAT PROPERTY SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF CITRUS AND STATE OF FLORIDA, BEING DESCRIBED AS:

LOT 9, THE EAST 165 FEET OF THE WEST 330 FEET OF GOVERNMENT LOT 2, SECTION 35, TOWNSHIP 19 SOUTH, RANGE 20 EAST; EX-CEPT THE SOUTH 781.00 FEET THEREOF.SUBJECT TO AN EASEMENT ACROSS THE WEST 25 FEET THERE-OF.

BEING THE SAME PROPERTY CONVEYED TO MARTIN D. KELLY, IN DEED DATED 2/15/2017, RECORDED 2/16/2017, IN BOOK 2811, PAGE 980, IN THE COUNTY OF CITRUS AND STATE OF FLORIDA.

MORE COMMONLY KNOWN AS: 4645 S. IRONWOOD PT, INVER-NESS, FLORIDA 34450PARCEL/TAX ID: 20E19S35 4A000 0090

Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim before the clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed.

Dated this 17 day of July, 2020.

ALDRIDGE PITE, LLP Attorney for Plaintiff1615 South Congress Avenue Suite 200

Delray Beach, FL 33445Telephone: 561-392-6391 Facsimile: 561-392-6965

By: Zachary Ullman, Esq. FBN: 106751Primary E-Mail: [email protected]

IMPORTANTAMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT: If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in order to partici-pate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Co-ordinator for Citrus County, John Sullivan, at (352) 341-6700 at least 7 days before your scheduled court appearance, or im-mediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.

Published August 13 & 20, 2020. 1184-1152 B

8041-0820 THCRNStino, Tonya Roi 2019 CA 000270 A Notice of Sale

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITOF FLORIDA IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY

GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISIONCASE NO. 2019 CA 000270 A

NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC D/B/A MR. COOPER,Plaintiff,

vs.TONYA ROI STINO, et. al.,

Defendants.

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Summary Final Judg-ment of Foreclosure entered September 26, 2019 in Civil Case No. 2019 CA 000270 A of the Circuit Court of the FIFTH Judicial Circuit in and for Citrus County, Inverness, Florida, wherein NA-TIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC D/B/A MR. COOPER is Plaintiff and TONYA ROI STINO, et. al., are Defendants, the Clerk of Court, ANGELA VICK, will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash by electronic sale at www.citrus.realforeclose.com in accord-ance with Chapter 45, Florida Statutes on the 3rd day of Sep-tember, 2020 at 10:00 AM on the following described property as set forth in said Summary Final Judgment, to-wit:

8042-0820 THCRNGold, Dale Paul 2019-CA-000764A Notice of Sale

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITIN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

CIVIL DIVISIIONCASE NO: 2019-CA-000764A

CAPITAL CITY BANK,Plaintiff,

v.THE UNKNOWN HEIRS AND/OR DEVISEES OF DALE GOLD a/k/a DALE PAUL GOLD, Deceased; ANDREA GOLD, as a surviving heir of Dale Gold a/k/a Dale Paul Gold, Deceased; and JOHN DOE and JANE DOE (Unknown Tenant-Occupants),,

Defendants.

NOTICE OF ONLINE FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to the Final Summary Judgment of foreclosure dated June 4, 2020, and entered in Case No. 2019 CA 000764A of the Circuit Court of the Fifth Judi-cial Circuit, in and for Citrus County, Florida, wherein Capital City Bank is the Plaintiff and the Unknown Heirs and/or Devisees of Dale Gold a/k/a Dale Paul Gold, Deceased, Andrea Gold, as a surviving heir of Dale Gold a/k/a Dale Paul Gold, De-ceased, Citrus County, a political subdivision of the State of Florida, and Lisa Blankenship, are the Defendants, that the Cit-rus County Clerk of Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, in accordance with Chapter 45, Florida Statutes, using the following method: by electronic sale beginning at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time on September 3, 2020 at www.citrus.realforeclose.com, the following described real property as set forth in said Final Judgment:

Lot 13: Commence at the NW corner of Lot 7, CARDINAL ACRES, recorded in Plat Book 6, Page 109, of the Public Records of Cit-rus County, Florida, thence S 0 Degrees 30’50” W, along the West line of said Lot 7, and along the West line of Lot 6, as shown on said Plat, a distance of 509.34 feet; thence N 89 De-grees 07’40” E, 256.62 feet to the Point of Beginning; thence continue N 89 Degrees 07’40” E, 128.31 feet; thence N 0 De-grees 30’35”E, 169.78 feet; thence S 89 Degrees 07’40” W, 128.30 feet; thence S 0 Degrees 30’40” W, 169.78 feet to the Point of Beginning. Together with a 2007 destiny double wide mobile home, ID#DISH02231 A&B (also described as ID#DISH 02231GA A&B) located on the premises.

Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim within sixty (60) days after thesale.

DATED this 8th day of June, 2020./s/ J. Marshall Conrad

KENNETH R. HART (FBN 192580)[email protected]; [email protected]

J. MARSHALL CONRAD (FBN 0015272)[email protected]; [email protected]

Ausley McMullen123 South Calhoun Street (32301)

Post Office Box 391Tallahassee, Florida 32302

Phone: 850-224-9115; Fax: 850-222-7560Attorneys for Plaintiff

If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommo-dation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are enti-tled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator at the Office of the Trial Court Administrator, Citrus County Courthouse, 110 North Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Florida 34450, Telephone (352) 341-6700, at least 7 days before your scheduled court appear-ance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.

Published August 13 & 20, 2020.

8043-0903 THCRNNorris, Effie Jane 2019-CA-901 Notice of Action

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE NO. 2019-CA-901

JOSEPH M. FREEMANPlaintiff,

vs.EFFIE JANE NORRIS a/k/a EFFIE JANE FINCH, JOSEPH TOBYNORRIS, deceased, et al.

Defendants.

AMENDED NOTICE OF ACTION

To: EFFIE JANE NORRIS a/k/a EFFIE JANE FINCH, last known ad-dress unknown and JOSEPH TOBY NORRIS, deceased, and/or their successors, trustees, if alive, and if dead, their unknown spouses, heirs, devisees, grantees, creditors, and all other par-ties claiming by, through, under or against said parties; and all unknown natural persons, if alive, and if dead or not known to be dead or alive, their several and respective unknown spouses, heirs, devisees, grantees, and creditors, or other par-ties claiming by, through or under those unknown natural per-sons; and the several and respective unknown assigns, succes-sors in interest, trustees or any other person or entity claiming by, through, under or against any entity named as a defendant; and all claimants, persons, parties, natural or corporate, or whose exact legal status is unknown, claiming under any of the above named or described defendants or parties or claiming to have any right, title or interest in the property hereafter de-scribed, AND ALL OTHERS WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:

YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for a quiet title on the property located in CITRUS County, Florida and described as follows:

SEE EXHIBIT ‘A’ ATTACHED HERETOAND MADE A PART HEREOF.

has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on Robert D. Wilson of Wilson & Williams, P.A., Plaintiffs attorneys, whose address is 954 East Silver Springs Boulevard, Suite 101, Ocala, Florida 34470, on or before 30 days from first publication, and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on Plaintiffs attorney or immediately thereafter; a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the

8044-0820 THCRNFrazier, Michael E. 2020 CA 000084 A Notice of Action

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 5TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

CASE No. 2020 CA 000084 A

REVERSE MORTGAGE FUNDING LLC,Plaintiff

vs.UNKNOWN SPOUSE, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, AND ALL OTHER PARTIES CLAIM-ING AN INTEREST BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST THE ESTATE OF MICHAEL E. FRAZIER AKA MICHAEL EDWARD FRAZIER, DE-CEASED, et. al.,

Defendants

NOTICE OF ACTION

TO: UNKNOWN SPOUSE, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGN-EES, LIENORS, CREDITORS, TRUSTEES, AND ALL OTHER PARTIES CLAIMING AN INTEREST BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST THE ESTATE OF MICHAEL E. FRAZIER AKA MICHAEL EDWARD FRAZIER, DECEASED 34 BYRSONIMA COURT S., HOMOSASSA, FL34446.

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a mortgage on the following described property located in Cit-rus County, Florida:

LOT 91 OF HAMMOCKS OF SUGARMILL WOODS, A REPLAT, AC-CORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 14, PAGE(S ) 6-9, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA.

has been filed against you, and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to this action, on Green-spoon Marder, LLP, Default Department, Attorneys for Plaintiff, whose address is Trade Centre South, Suite 700, 100 West Cy-press Creek Road, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309, and file the origi-nal with the Clerk within 30 days after the first publication of this notice in CITRUS COUNTY CHRONICLE, on or before; otherwise a default and a judgment may be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint.

WITNESS MY HAND AND SEAL OF SAID COURT on this 1st day of April, 2020.

ANGELA VICK, As Clerk of said Court( COURT SEAL)

By: J. Steelfox, As Deputy Clerk

Published August 13 & 20, 2020. 58341.0651

8045-0820 THCRNRusu, Lois 09-2020-CA-000041 Notice of Action

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUITIN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA CIVIL ACTION

CASE NO.: 09-2020-CA-000041 DIVISION:

BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON TRUST COMPANY, N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR MORTGAGE ASSETS MANAGEMENT SERIES I TRUST,

Plaintiff,vs.LOIS RUSU, et al,

Defendant(s).

NOTICE OF ACTION

To: LOIS RUSU Last Known Address: 6343 E Morley Street,Inverness, FL 34452 Current Address: Unknown

YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose a mortgage on the following property in Citrus County, Florida:

LOT 32, BLOCK 372, INVERNESS HIGHLANDS WEST, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 5, PAGES 19 THROUGH 33, PUBLIC RECORDS OF CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDAA/K/A 6343 E MORLEY STREET, INVERNESS FL 34452

has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses within 30 days after the first publi-cation, if any, on Albertelli Law, Plaintiff’s attorney, whose ad-dress is P.O. Box 23028, Tampa, FL 33623, and file the original with this Court either before service on Plaintiff’s attorney, or im-mediately thereafter; otherwise, a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint or peti-tion.

This notice shall be published once a week for two consecutive weeks in the Citrus County Chronicle.

WITNESS my hand and the seal of this court on this 6 day of August, 2020.

Angela Vick, Clerk of the Circuit Court( COURT SEAL )

By: Barbara Mulder, Deputy Clerk

**See the Americans with Disabilities ActIf you are a person with a disability who needs an accommo-dation in order to participate in a proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator for the Courts within 2 working days of your receipt of your notice to appear in Court at: Citrus County, John Sullivan, (352) 341-6700.

Published August 13 & 20, 2020. 19-025902

Complaint.

WITNESS my hand and the seal of this Court on this the 5th day of August , 2020.

ANGELA VICK, Clerk of the Court( COURT SEAL )

By Jennifer Steelfox, Deputy Clerk

If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommo-dation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are enti-tled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator at the Office of the Trial Court Administrator, Citrus County Judicial Center, 110 N Apopka Avenue, Inverness, Florida 34450, Telephone (352)341-6700, at least 7 days before your scheduled court ap-pearance, or immediately upon receiving notification if the time before the schedule appearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.

EXHIBIT A

Begin at the Northwest Corner of the Southwest 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of Sec-tion 33, Township 20 South, Range 20 East, run thence North 89°59’20” East, 331.36 feet to the Northeast corner of said South-west 1/4 of Southwest 1/4 of Southwest 1/4 of Southwest 1/4, thence South 00°11’10” East, a distance of 158.02 feet to a point, thence run South 89°57’20” West, 331.36 feet to a point, thence run North 00°11’10” West, 158.21 feet to the Point of Be-ginning.

LESS AND EXCEPT:

The Easterly 170 feet of the following described property:Begin at the Northwest Corner of the Southwest 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of the Southwest 1/4 of Sec-tion 33, Township 20 South, Range 20 East, run thence North 89°59’20” East, 331.36 feet to a point, thence South 00°11’10” East, a distance of 158.02 feet to a point, thence run South 89°57’20” West, 331.36 feet to a point, thence run North 00°11’10” West, 158.21 feet to the Point of Beginning.

Together with an Easement for ingress and egress over the re-maining property by the grantor to the nearest public road-way.

Published August 13, 20, 27 & September 3, 2020.

Lot 5, Block 982 of Citrus Springs Unit 16, according to the plat thereof, as recorded in Plat Book 6, Page(s) 145 through 150, of the Public Records of Citrus County, Florida.

Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens, must file a claim before the clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed.

Robyn Katz, Esq. Fla. Bar No.: 146803McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLC

Attorney for Plaintiff110 SE 6th Street, Suite 2400Fort Lauderdale, FL 333011

Phone: (407) 674-1850 Fax: (321) 248-0420Email: [email protected]

If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommo-dation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are enti-tled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact the ADA Coordinator at the Office of the Trial Court Administrator, Citrus County Courthouse, 110 N. Apopka Avenue, Inverness, FL 34450, (352) 641-6700, at least seven (7) days before your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon receiving this notification if the time before the scheduled appearance is less than seven days; if you are hearing or voice impaired, call 711.

Published August 13 & 20, 2020 19-00402-2

8032-0813 THCRNWhite, Jeremy J. 2019-CA-000200 Notice of Sale

IN THE 5th JUDICIAL CIRCUIT COURT IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDA

Case No. 2019-CA-000200

21ST MORTGAGE CORPORATION,Plaintiff,

vs.JEREMY J. WHITE; UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JEREMY J. WHITE; JO-ANN SMITH; UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JOANN SMITH; PATRICIA WHITE; and UNKNOWN TENANT

Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to a Final Judgment dated January 30, 2020, entered in Case No.: 2019-CA-00200 of the Circuit Court in and for Citrus County, Florida, wherein JEREMY J. WHITE; UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF JEREMY J. WHITE, and PATRICIA WHITE are the Defendants, that the Clerk of the Circuit Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash, at www.citrus.realforeclose.com, on AUGUST 27, 2020, at 10:00 a.m., the following described real property as set forth in the Fi-nal Judgment:

LOT 5, BEING FULLY DESCRIBED AS THE NORTH 1/2 OF THE NORTH 1/2 OF THE EAST 1/2 OF LOT 43, GREEN ACRES ADDITION NO. 1, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 5, PAGES 6 AND 7, PUBLIC RECORDS OF CITRUS COUNTY, FLOR-IDA TOGETHER WITH A 2008 DESTINY, DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME, LOCATED ON THE PREMISES.TOGETHER WITH A 2008 DESTINY E564-230-96T 52 X 32MODEL MANUFACTURED HOME BEARING VIN/SERIAL NO.’S:DISH03754GAA AND DISH03754GAB.

NOTICE If you are a person with a disability who needs any ac-commodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assis-tance. Please contact the ADA Court Administration at 352-341-6410, within two working days of your receipt of this notice; if you are hearing impaired, call 1-800-955-8771; if you are voice impaired, call 1-800-955-8770.

By: Leslie S. White, for the firm Florida Bar No. 521078Dean, Mead, Egerton, Bloodworth, Capouano & Bozarth,

P.A.Post Office Box 2346 Orlando, FL 32802-2346

Telephone 407-841-1200 Facsimile: 407-423-1831primary email: [email protected]

secondary email: [email protected]

Published August 6 & 13, 2020.

Page 22: bloximages.newyork1.vip.townnews.com · AUGUST 13, 2020  HIGH Scattered showers and thunderstorms. PAGE A4 TODAY & next morning THURSDAY Classifieds. . . . . . . .B5 Comics

B10 THURSDAY,AUGUST 13, 2020 CLASSIFIEDS CITRUS COUNTY (FL) CHRONICLE

Solution to Wednesday’s puzzle

Complete the

grid so each row,

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contains every

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on how to solve

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© 2020 The Mepham Group. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency. All rights reserved.

Level 1 2 3 4

8/13/20

5715-0820 THCRNNotice of Public Meeting

DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

The Department of Environmental Protection announces a public meeting to which all persons are invited.

DATE: September 1, 2020

TIME: 3:00 p.m. EDT

PLACE: Webinar Registration:h t t p s : / / a t t e n d e e . g o t o w e b i n a r . c o m / r e g i s -ter/3459538978486855948

5717-0813 THCRNPUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Citrus County, a political subdivi-sion of the State of Florida, will conduct collective bargaining talks with The Local 4562 Professional Firefighters of Citrus County, Inter-national Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF) August 18th and 19th at 9:00am until 12:00pm. Meetings will be held at the Lecanto Govern-ment Building, 3600 W. Sovereign Path, room 280, Lecanto, FL. 34461. These discussions are open to the public.

Any person requiring a reasonable accommodation at any of these meetings because of a disability or physical impairment should contact the Human Resources Department, 3600 West Sovereign Path, Lecanto, FL., 34461, (352)527-5370 at least two days before any meeting.

Published August 13, 2020

GENERAL SUBJECT MATTER TO BE CONSIDERED: The Acquisi-tion and Restoration Council (ARC), as defined in Section 259.035, F.S., announces the September 1, 2020, public meeting to which all interested parties are invited. The purpose of this meeting is for Council to take public testimony on the 2020 Florida Forever Cycle 2 project proposals for Abington Ranch, Bluefield to Cow Creek and Withlacoochee River Addition as well as existing land acquisition projects.

Interested persons may obtain a copy of the agenda by contacting Shauna R. Allen with the Division of State Lands at [email protected], or by visiting the Department of Environmental Protection website at https://floridadep.gov/lands/environmental-services/content/acquisition-and-restoration-council-arc.

Public comments and any pertinent materials may be submitted by September 23, 2020 for ARC consideration by: (1) emailing [email protected]; (2) during the webinar; or (3) by U.S. mail addressed to: Florida Department of Environmental Protection, attn: Shauna R. Allen, 3900 Commonwealth Blvd, Mail Station 140, Tallahassee, Florida 32399.

Published August 6, 2020

5718-0813 THCRN (8/28)NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE: GS AUTO TOWING gives Notice of Foreclosure of Lien and intent to sell these vehicles at 9:00 AM on August 28, 2020 at 61 NE US HWY 19, Crystal River, FL 34429, pursuant to subsection 713.78 of the Florida Statutes. GS Auto Tow-ing reserves the right to accept or reject any and/or all bids.

VIN # Year/Model Vehicle1G4GE5ED2BF316245 2011 / BUICKJTKKU10448J028727 2008 / SCION

Published August 13, 2020

8038-0820 THCRN

Brenton, April M. 2019 CA 000704 A Notice of SaleIN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,

IN AND FOR CITRUS COUNTY, FLORIDACASE NO.: 2019 CA 000704 A

DITECH FINANCIAL LLC F/K/A GREEN TREE SERVICING LLC,PLAINTIFF,

VS.APRIL M. BRENTON, ET AL.

DEFENDANT(S).

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pursuant to the Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated March 5, 2020 in the above action, the Cit-rus County Clerk of Court will sell to the highest bidder for cash at Citrus, Florida, on September 3, 2020, at 10:00 AM, at www.citrus.realforeclose.com for the following described prop-erty:

Lot 3, in Block 166 of CITRUS SPRINGS UNIT 2, according to the

Plat and Map thereof recorded in Plat Book 5, Pages 108-115,

Public Records of Citrus County, Florida

Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens must file a claim before the clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed. The Court, in its discretion, may enlarge the time of the sale. Notice of the changed time of sale shall be published as provided herein.

Tromberg Law Group, P.A. Attorney for Plaintiff1515 S. Federal Highway, Suite 100 Boca Raton, FL 33432

Telephone #: 561-338-4101 Fax #: 561-338-4077Email: [email protected]: Princy Valiathodathil, Esq. FBN 70971

If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommo-

dation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are enti-

tled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance.

Please contact ADA Coordinator Citrus County, Trial Court Ad-

ministrator at 352-341-6700, fax 352-341-7008 or at

[email protected], Citrus County Courthouse, 110 North

Apopka Avenue, Inverness, FL 34450 at least 7 days before

your scheduled court appearance, or immediately upon re-

ceiving this notification if the time before the scheduled ap-

pearance is less than 7 days; if you are hearing or voice im-

paired, call 711.

Published August 13 & 20, 2020 19-000784

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