Two longtime friends ended up in jail in central Florida thanks to a “bucket list” that included the exciting experience of “stealing from a store. 

Police say 36-year-old Andrea Mobley and 38-year-old Jennifer Morrow face petty theft charges after shoplifting bathing suits and beef jerky during a trip to Wal-Mart.

A loss prevention officer told police Mobley was eating beef jerky in the store and Morrow concealed items inside her purse. They were detained after taking the items from the store without paying.

The Ocala Star-Banner reports the women told police they hadn’t seen each other in years and stealing from a retail store was on the “bucket list.”

Mobley told the newspaper they were just “two stupid women” doing something they’d never done before. She added she’s ashamed.

Perhaps their bucket list should have included the “and not getting caught” part.

Source: Ocala (Fla.) Star-Banner, http://www.starbanner.com/

–––––––––––––––––

Completed with a “Capitol” C

How would you celebrate your 65th wedding anniversary? A Texas couple traveled to Augusta to watch the Maine Legislature at work.

Really.

The Portland Press Herald reports that 86-year-old Marcine Webb and his wife, 81-year-old Nita Lou Webb, were in Augusta to complete their state capitol bucket list. 

They arrived just in time to watch lawmakers in the House debate L.D. 837, an Act to Clarify the Laws Establishing the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry.

Not that they’re much interested in agriculture policy. The point of their journey was to be here, in the back row of the House gallery, fulfilling a lifelong quest to visit every state capitol.

Maine’s was 50th on their list.

When House Speaker Mark Eves announced the reason for their visit, the state representatives jumped to their feet and cheered.

The Webbs, who live in the West Texas city of San Angelo, were accompanied by their two daughters. 

After L.D. 837 was passed to be endorsed by a committee amendment and sent to the Senate for concurrence, the visitors headed to lunch at the cafeteria in the adjacent Cross Office Building. 

So, they were asked, how does Maine’s State House – designed by the renowned Boston architect Charles Bulfinch – stack up with the capitols in the 49 other states?

“It’s medium,” quipped the straight-talking Marcine Webb, a retired plant manager for the El Paso Natural Gas Co.

In terms of architecture, their favorite is New Mexico’s capitol, in Santa Fe, the only round state capitol. When viewed from above, the building resembles the Zia sun symbol. 

Their least favorite? Louisiana’s capitol.

The 34-story Art Deco building in Baton Rouge is the tallest capitol in the United States. And it still has the bullet holes in the walls where Gov. Huey Long was assassinated in 1935. But Marcine Webb said the building’s materials are cheap, with wood painted to look like marble.

The 49th capitol the Webbs visited was Alaska’s, in Juneau. That was five years ago. Because of Marcine Webb’s poor health in recent years, they haven’t traveled at all.

So, for all that time, Maine’s capitol was the last remaining stop on their “bucket list.”

Marcine’s health has improved lately, so the couple’s daughters, Becky Perrine and Penny Chilton, decided to take them to Maine as a gift for their 65th wedding anniversary, which they will celebrate in August.

After finally making it to Maine’s capitol, the couple gave it high marks for its warm and friendly atmosphere. 

“People welcome you with open hearts,” said Nita Lou Webb. “You have honest and caring people here.”

Source: Portland Press Herald, http://www.pressherald.com