071917 daily corinthian e edition

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Alcorn County Former Southwest fire department treasurer gets probation

Garden Crape myrtle is garden must-have

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Wednesday July 19,

2017

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 121, No. 171

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

Alcorn sheriff works City to pursue to reduce contraband $2 million bond BY JEBB JOHNSTON BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Sheriff Ben Caldwell talked about efforts to curtail contraband at the Regional Correctional Facility with the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors during Monday’s meeting. With a limited number of ways for contraband to enter the facility housing Mississippi Department of Corrections inmates,

“We’re working with the police department and some of our surrounding agencies to help us.” Ben Caldwell Sheriff

Please see CONTRABAND | 6A

Festival winners

jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

“Infrastructure” is at the top of the list again as the Corinth Board of Aldermen pursues a new general obligation bond issue of up to $2 million. The funds will “be going toward continued improvements in our community,” including drainage work and street work, said Mayor Tommy Irwin during Tuesday’s meeting. Specific projects were not yet named. City Clerk Vickie Roach said the bond sale will likely happen during the winter

months, and no tax increase is anticipated in connection with the bond issue. It will be on a 20-year term. The available funds could also help jump start some of the ideas coming out of the Envision Corinth 2040 plan, said Alderman Ben Albarracin. The city’s last bond issue, totaling $1.6 million, was in 2013 and also went toward infrastructure. The board approved a resolution of intent and engaging of legal services to begin the Please see BOND | 2A

No tax increase yet for county schools BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

Photo by Lisa Lambert

Ashlyn Inman, 19, of Walnut won the senior division of the Garrett Eye Clinic Slug Voice singing competition held last week during the 30th Annual Slugburger Festival.

‘Great crowds’ attend annual Slug events BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

The 30th Annual Slugburger Festival is in the books and officials have deemed the threeday event a success.

Main Street Corinth Director Angela Avent reported “great crowds” and while weather was a factor on Saturday, Thursday and Friday attendance was impressive she said.

“We were very happy with the turnout – both for the entertainment and the Midway,” she said. “Thankfully rain didn’t Please see FESTIVAL | 2A

The Alcorn School District isn’t asking for a tax increase now, but that may change next year. Finance Director Kimberly Woodard told board members during Monday’s budget workshop that the district’s operational millage tax rate would remain 49.76 mills, a percentage that hasn’t changed since 2008. “We will not be asking for a millage rate increase this year,” said Woodard. “The millage amount will increase, but only because tax collections this year exceeded what we had requested in prior years due to new properties being added to the tax rolls.” The operational millage rate is used to help fund the district’s main operating fund and district maintenance fund. An additional 3 mills is also collected for debt service. “Thus, the total millage rate is 52.76 for the 2018 fiscal year,” said Woodard. The district hasn’t asked for a tax increase since 2010 and one hasn’t actually been approved since 2008 when the millage went from 45.24 to 49.76. The max amount a school district can receive is 55 mills. Superintendent Larry B. Mitchell said he plans to ask the board to approve a 2 mill

Superintendent Larry B. Mitchell said he plans to ask the board to approve a 2 mill increase for the 2019 fiscal year. increase for the 2019 fiscal year with the vote taking place in August 2018. “We need that extra 2 mills to be used completely on technology,” he told the board. “We need as much technology in the hands of these students as possible, and a 2 mill tax increase can help us do that.” According to Woodard, many districts in the state have a much higher millage rate. “We have always been way below,” she said. The millage rate is the amount per $1,000 used to calculate taxes on property. Millage rates are most often found in personal property taxes, where the expressed millage rate is multiplied by the total taxable value of the property to arrive at the property taxes due. Woodard also presented what she called a “sound and balanced budget” for the upPlease see SCHOOLS | 6A

Three Bridges will perform at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at First Baptist Church in Corinth. The concert is part of the church’s annual Summer Concert Series.

Church continues tradition of music, faith BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

It is a annual event which provides music for the soul and an outreach of faith to the community. Continuing a tradition, First

Baptist Church of Corinth, located at 501 Main Street, will host the last two concerts of their annual Summer Concert Series with more music to uplift the weary soul. This Sunday beginning at

6:30 p.m., FBC will host the group, Three Bridges. The trio’s blending style of “southern and black gospel” music has made them an “internationally-acPlease see CONCERT | 2A

25 years ago

10 years ago

Richard Clark is named the new minister at Farmington Baptist Church.

The Siege and Battle of Corinth announces approval of a grant from Preserve America for marketing Civil War assets.

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2A • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

FESTIVAL CONTINUED FROM 1A

drive away the crowd at the eating contest and both the pageant and Slug Voice gave youngsters their time to shine.” Avent said 26 girls entered the pageant that saw 17-year-old Bailey McWilliams of Tuscumbia, Ala., take the Miss Slugburger Festival crown. “It was really amazing,” she said. “We hope to work hard and grow it next year.” Slug Voice organizer Brett Garrett said even though only eight people participated in the Thursday night local singing competition, the overall quality was great. “Trevyn Blakney, a season 12 finalist on American Idol, performed an incredible first song and was leading through round one, but he was ousted by Ashlyn Inman in the second round of the senior division,” said Garrett, whose Garrett Eye Clinic sponsored the event. “In the junior division, Lori Stutts led the first and second round to become

Staff photo by Mark Boehler

Newly crowned Miss Slugburger Festival Bailey McWilliams, 17, of Tuscumbia, Ala., and World Slugburger Eating Champion Joey Chestnut stand together last weekend at the Corinth Depot. the winner. Lori had never competed in any type of similar competition.” Garrett said a singersongwriter from Walnut also put on a show. “Jonathan Shaw was heavily favored through the first round of performances in the senior division,” added Garrett. “He also competed in The Voice auditions.” The night’s highlight was Addie Page Pratt

who performed three new songs, added Garrett. The 6th Annual World Slugburger Eating Championship proved to again be a fan favorite as more than 150 people braved downpour rains and lightning to see the contest. Joey “Jaws” Chestnut defended his title by devouring 41 slugburgers in 10 minutes. Major League Eating emcee Sam Barclay was

Photo by Lisa Lambert

Lori Stutts, 16, of Adamsville, Tenn., won the junior division of Garrett Eye Clinic Slug Voice during the 30th Annual Slugburger Festival last week. more surprised so many locals hung out through the weather. “It was bucketing rain less than 15 minutes ago,” he said prior to last weekend’s contest at the Corinth Depot. “The peo-

ple of this city are what makes this city great and nothing is more evident of that then this dedication.” Last week marked Barclay’s fifth visit to Corinth for the MLE contest and he said he plans to return.

CONCERT

BOND

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claimed Gospel group — one that is known for tight harmonies, a unique vocal style, an exciting and energy packed stage presence and, most importantly, for spreading the joy of the Good News of Christ,” according to information about the trio. Three Bridges consists of Elliott McCoy (founder, manager and baritone), Shannon Smith (lead) and Jeremie Hudson (tenor). On Sunday, July 30, beginning at 6:30 p.m., FBC wind up their Summer Concert Series with the FBC Men’s Quar-

“Unique foods, like the slugburger, are what make Major League Eating events the best,” he said. “Being able highlight really interesting regional cuisine is what we are all about.”

The FBC Men’s Quartet will wrap up the final night of First Baptist Church’s Summer Concert Series on Sunday, July 30, beginning at 6:30 p.m. tet. The quartet consists of Randy Richey, Phil Mathis, Colon McGee and Sammy Allred, all Corinth residents, who love to get together and share their music.

“Almost every year we have a local group perform and sometimes it’s a group from our church. This year the local group is our own and they have a very powerful ministry.

It’s a wonderful outreach. They are very dedicated and very talented,” said Royce Wilder, FBC Associate Pastor of Music and Worship. The series of summer concerts has already seen some great artists. It began this year on July 9, with the Freedom Quartet, who had been voted “Favorite New Traditional Male Quartet” by readers of Singing News Magazine. On June 16, the concert series continued with Tim Lovelace — a Grammy and Dove-nominated music artist and comedian. The Summer Concert Series has been hosted by

FBC for many years and Wilder said it provides variety for the congregation, but there’s also another purpose in mind. “This is an outreach to our community for people that enjoy this style of worship,” said Wilder. The concert series is free and open to the public. However, there will be a love offering, but 100 percent of whatever is collected goes to the artists that perform, said Wilder. (For more information about the concert series, contact First Baptist Church at 662-2862208.)

CONTINUED FROM 1A

process. In other business, the board joined with the county in accepting a grant of $230,901 for the CorinthAlcorn County Airport for improvements to the fuel facility. The city and county each have a small match toward the grant. Airport Manager Donna Briggs said the proposed work includes a number of improvements, including pumps for receiving fuel to reduce costs, replacement of the asphalt fuel truck access road with concrete, installation of longer fueling hoses and lighting improvements.

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Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Today in History Today is Wednesday, July 19, the 200th day of 2017. There are 165 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On July 19, 1961, TWA became the first airline to begin showing in-flight movies on a regular basis as it presented “By Love Possessed” to firstclass passengers on a flight from New York to Los Angeles.

On this date In 1553, King Henry VIII’s daughter Mary was proclaimed Queen of England after pretender Lady Jane Grey was deposed. In 1848, a pioneering women’s rights convention convened in Seneca Falls, New York. In 1903, the first Tour de France was won by Maurice Garin. In 1941, Britain launched its “V for Victory” campaign during World War II. In 1944, the Democratic national convention convened in Chicago with the nomination of President Franklin D. Roosevelt considered a certainty. In 1952, the Summer Olympics opened in Helsinki, Finland. In 1967, the movie “Up the Down Staircase,” an adaptation of the Bel Kaufman novel starring Sandy Dennis as an idealistic schoolteacher, opened in Los Angeles.

Local/Region

Daily Corinthian • 3A

Across the Region Oxford Sentencing delayed again for Verona bank robber OXFORD – A man who has admitted robbing a Verona bank last December will have to wait a little longer to find out his sentence, reported the Daily Journal. Larry Donnell Spencer pleaded guilty in March to the robbery of the Renasant Bank branch in Verona. His medical condition will force his sentencing hearing to be delayed again. Instead of learning his fate July 19, he will have to wait until July 25 to be sentenced. This is the second sentencing delay. Spencer is being held by U.S. Marshals at the West Tennessee Detention Center in Mason, Tennessee. Spencer has to undergo dialysis treatments on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, forcing the sentencing hearing to be postponed to a Tuesday or Thursday. Spencer pleaded guilty on March 21 to one count of bank robbery, which carries up to 25 years in prison and/or up to a $250,000 fine. As part of the

plea agreement, the U.S. government dropped a weapons charge. The last person to rob the same branch bank in May of 2015 accepted a similar plea agreement. Michael Oliver of Saltillo was sentenced to 15 years. According to court documents, Spencer is accused of entering the Renasant Bank at 5033 Raymond Ave. around 11:45 a.m. on Dec. 1, 2016 and leaving with $2,064 in cash. A bank employee returning from lunch at 11:30 a.m. noticed a black male wearing a reddish wig, large glasses and pink lipstick in the bank’s north parking lot. The man was so suspicious, the employee mentioned him to other employees as soon as she walked into the bank, Federal Bureau of Investigation special agent John Quaka said in his affidavit. The robber placed on the teller counter a black revolver and a note that read, “Put all the money on the counter right now or die.” The teller complied, and the robber grabbed the cash and left through the north door. Two weeks later, an anonymous caller told Crime Stop-

pers of North Mississippi that the suspect receives dialysis in Tupelo and that they saw the suspect removing a wig, glasses and lipstick at the medical facility. The investigation led authorities to Spencer, who lived in a Mitchell Road apartment with his grandmother.

into her possession while she served as the treasurer of the fire department. The crime occurred between 2014 and December 2015. Fair was also ordered to pay restitution of over $21,000 to the fire department.

Alcorn County

Police searching for man accused of armed robbery

Former fire department treasurer gets probation According to the Associated Press, a former treasurer with a volunteer fire department has pleaded guilty to an embezzlement charge. The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reports 39-yearold Barbara Ellen Fair entered the plea Monday and was sentenced to 20 years in prison. However, the sentence was suspended and Fair was placed on supervised probation for five years. Fair was a treasurer with the Southwest Volunteer Fire Department in Alcorn County. According to an indictment, Fair improperly handled more than $25,000 that was put

Columbus COLUMBUS – Police in Columbus are searching for a man accused of holding up a store at gunpoint, reported WTVA. The incident happened at the convenience store at 822 Main Street at approximately 9:28 p.m. Columbus police say the robber entered the store and displayed a handgun demanding money. Police say the robber exited the store with an undetermined amount of cash and ran south on 9th Street. The robber is described as a black man with dreadlocks, 5’8” in height, with a medium build. Police say he was wearing all black clothing with a white cloth covering his face.

Local students graduate from ICC Several area residents were among those who earned Associate of Arts or Associate of Applied Science degrees or certificates at the conclusion of the 2017 spring semester at Itawamba Community College. They include: Baldwyn – Montana R. Connally (A.A.), Jessica

L. Bishop (A.A.), Connor B. Flaherty (A.A.), Jordan R. Gong (A.A.), Lashunda T. Meardith (A.A.), Teah A. Pearson (A.A.), Lana M. Prather (A.A.), Allie M. Scott (A.A.), Annie G. Scott (A.A.), Brittney N. Walden (A.A.), Zachary W. Winstead (A.A.), Kayla D. Barnes (A.A.S.), Jacob N. Dixon (A.A.S.),

Lindsey G. Gardner (A.A.S.), Jamie M. Grisham (A.A.S.), Brittany H. Horn (A.A.S.), Hannah K. Roberts (A.A.S.); Booneville – Anna G. Elliott (A.A.), Faith D. Hawkins (A.A.S.), Rebecca L. Stroupe (A.A.S.); Burnsville – Tererra D. Vanderford (A.A.S.); Corinth – Madison

N. Colley (A.A.), Catherine E. Hutchens (A.A.), Kathryn M. Knippers (A.A.), Bennett R. Mills (A.A.), Carleigh M. Mills (A.A.), Alyssa G. Park (A.A.), Hannah N. Parks (A.A.S.); Dennis – Kyle E. Granath (A.A.), Matthew T. Hester (A.A.), Jonathan M. Payne (A.A.),

Kristie L. Whitehead (A.A.); Iuka – Ashlie B. Richardson (A.A.S.); Marietta – Austin H. Black (A.A.), Madison E. Dickinson (A.A.), Lacy A. Dillard (A.A., A.A.S.); Tishomingo – Shelby H. Bobo (certificate); Walnut – Courtney L. Bayless (A.A.)

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4A • Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

Cool treats define summer Cold, delicious and on a stick. Who do we have to thank for that combo? Well, if it weren’t for Frank Epperson, we wouldn’t have the Popsicle. And if it weren’t for his kids, we’d be licking Epsicles, which sounds almost obscene. One night in 1905, when Frank was 11, he left a glass filled with water, Kool-Aid (or its 1905 equivalent) and the Lenore stick he was stirring them with Skenazy out on his porch. This was in Oakland, CA. The sweetened water froze Columnist solid. Frank pulled it out by the stick and — well, I think you can tell where this is going. He made these stick treats for his friends and, years later, he made them for his kids, too, calling them “Epsicles” — a mashup of his name + icicles. But his kids called them Pop’s Icles, because they were made by their pop. And they convinced him to change the name. The ’sicles shot to stardom. By May of 1923, a single stand at Coney Island sold 8000 in a day. That same year, Epperson got a patent on his frozen treat. But, debt pressing down, he quickly sold the patent to a guy named Joe Lowe. Lowe expanded the business and, when the Depression hit, made the brilliant move of selling a TWO-stick Popsicle for the same price — 5 cents — so two kids could break them in half and share them. In 1986, the Popsicle company finally stopped selling doubles, supposedly swayed by moms who complained they were too messy. One has to wonder if that was truly the case, or if 50 years after the Depression someone on staff pointed out: Why are we still selling two for one? Anyway, now Popsicle is owned by Unilever, and Epperson is buried in the same California cemetery as another food genius: Trader Vic, inventor of the Mai Tai. And what of the yin to the Popsicle’s yang: The Good Humor bar? Well, it’s complicated — and parallel. In 1922, an Iowa schoolteacher patented the Eskimo Pie, a square of vanilla ice cream enrobed in a chocolate shell. At about the same time, in Youngstown, Ohio, Harry Burt invented a chocolate coating that also enrobed a slab of vanilla ice cream. But when his daughter said it was too messy, he inserted a stick. He called it the Good Humor Bar and started selling them from a fleet of 12 trucks outfitted, originally, with the bells from his son’s bobsled. Burt applied for a patent, but the officials in D.C. demurred, concerned his invention was too similar to the Eskimo Pie. Frustrated, Burt took a bucket of Good Humor bars to D.C. and passed them around the patent office to demonstrate the difference: His had a STICK. Thus satisfied (or bribed, or just plain happy), the authorities gave him his patent. Burt sued turned right around and sued Lowe — the guy who bought the Popsicle company — for copyright infringement. How dare Lowe sell something ELSE frozen on a stick? By 1925, the suit was settled out of court and the deal was basically this: Popsicle could sell ICE on a stick and Good Humor could sell ice CREAM. And sell they did. By the 1950s, there were 2000 Good Humor trucks plying the streets of suburbia. But by the ’70s, with gas prices, insurance and competition all going up, the company’s profits melted. Good Humor didn’t become profitable again till the ’80s, and by then, the bars were sold in stores, not streets. Today, Good Humor is owned by Unilever, too. The bars are still delicious, but like Frank Epperson’s invention, they are no longer a mom and (wait for it!) Popsicle business. Lenore Skenazy is author of the book and blog, “Free-Range Kids,” and a hilarious keynote speaker at conferences, companies and schools. Run out and get her book, “Has the World Gone Skenazy?”

Prayer For Today Lord of strength, I pray that while I may lay a strong foundation for my life, I may remember that I should not delay the building by neglecting to complete the plans. May I look to-day and see if I am making my words stronger than my life. With thy wisdom help me to realize that the test of life is made with the soul. Amen.

A Verse To Share For the LORD watches over the way of the righteous, but the way of the wicked leads to destruction. — Psalm 1:6

‘Silo’ generation seeks ‘everything’ cities OXFORD — The new crop of Americans has several markers, experts say. One helps explain why fewer of them choose to live in Mississippi. First, some of the other distinctions: A primary trait is their tendency to “silo.” The internet has changed how we communicate, and it has changed how we make choices about what to read or watch. In years past, if a young person became interested in baking, the Dallas Cowboys or fashion, there were limits. Information about baking was in cookbooks. Information about the Cowboys was sometimes in the newspaper; sometimes the team could be seen on TV. Information about fashion was in magazines. That was it, pretty much. Today, any young person interested in any topic can scour the internet, watch videos all day and all night and still experience only a bit of what’s available. YouTube offers 250 videos in multiple languages on “how to make biscuits.” A Google search of “Dallas Cowboys” takes .96 seconds and generates 46 million hits. There are 222 million sites (approximately) selling women’s clothing online. Obsess is a strong word. But the ability to deep dive into a single topic has led youths to do so. Because

there are still only 24 hours in a day, attention devoted to one interest comes at the Charlie expense of Mitchell variety. The result is more Columnist specialists in their own silos, so to speak, and fewer generalists with broaderbased knowledge. Younger people are also expert fraud detectors. This skill springs from the overwhelming number of “inputs” their brains receive each and every day. Unlike any humans before them, they have learned to (1) type with their thumbs and (2) scroll through a digital feed at lightning speed. In addition to speed-sorting information for relevance, there is a companion quest: truth. Yes, it’s still possible to fool some of the people some of the time, but authenticity resonates with the rising generation. They cast aside words or images that don’t inform or entertain or otherwise resonate. “Don’t have time for that,” the saying goes. One interpretation of this is to carp about shorter attention spans. Another complaint is that young people are self-centered. Maybe, but both descrip-

tions are way too confining. A better view is they simply don’t allocate time to topics or information not interesting to them. Don’t think they lack intellect. They’re smart. What they know, they know chapter and verse. Now to the factor relating to the great exodus from Mississippi. Headlines affirmed this state leads in the proportion of young people choosing to live their adult lives elsewhere. There has been a net decline of 3.9 percent in the total population of Millennials (born between 1981 and 2000) since the 2010 census. Some reacting by blaming Republicans. Some people blamed racism. Some people blamed the state’s hostility to gay rights, on clinging to the Confederacy, on too few jobs and lower than normal wages and salaries. And they were all correct. Those are likely factors, along with heat, mosquitoes and water moccasins, which people forgot to mention. Problem is, Mississippi far from alone in young people’s rear view mirrors. Millennials are leaving California, Michigan, New York … Mississippi doesn’t need to beat itself up about this. Another trait identified among younger people applies: They are more “holistic” than previous generations. They may dwell in

their own silos of interest, but they seek a quality of life that offers endless options. They want parks and natural areas that are respected and preserved. They want rapid transit and lots of dining options. They want personally and financially rewarding employment. They want to contribute to a better world. They want to be away from crime and violence and poverty. And they can be. At first it may seem wanting the lights of Broadway and the quiet of an isolated beach (both with highspeed wifi) is inconsistent, but there are areas — mostly progressive urban areas such as Nashville, Houston, Orlando — that are bursting with energy and innovation. If leaders if Mississippi are interested in reversing the drain, they’d be welladvised to look at what’s drawing hearts and minds. It’s not high pay alone. It’s not entertainment alone. It’s not natural areas or any of the other plus factors. It’s all of them. Generations before have created a country where their progeny can seek, in holistic terms, the good life. We can’t fault them for doing it. Charlie Mitchell is a Mississippi journalist. Write to him at cmitchell43@yahoo. com.

Look at the Russia baiters and Putin haters “Is Russia an enemy of the United States?” NBC’s Kasie Hunt demanded of Ted Cruz. Replied the runner-up for the GOP nomination, “Russia is a significant adversary. Putin is a KGB thug.” To Hillary Clinton running mate Tim Kaine, the revelation that Donald Trump Jr., entertained an offer from the Russians for dirt on Clinton could be considered “treason.” Treason is giving aid and comfort to an enemy in a time of war. Are we really at war with Russia? Is Russia really our enemy? “Why Russia is a Hostile Power” is the title of today’s editorial in The Washington Post that seeks to explain why Middle America should embrace the Russophobia of our capital city: “Vladimir Putin adheres to a set of values that are antithetical to bedrock American values. He favors spheres of influence over self-determination; corruption over transparency; and repression over democracy.” Yet, accommodating a sphere of influence for a great power is exactly what FDR and Churchill did with Stalin, and every president from Truman to George H. W. Bush did with the Soviet Union. When East Germans, Hungarians, Czechs, Poles rose up against Communist regimes, no U.S. president

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press foreman

Patrick Buchanan Columnist

intervened. For those nations were on the other side of the Yalta line agreed to in 1945. When did support for spheres of influence become un-

American? As for supporting “corruption over transparency,” ex-Georgia President Mikheil Saakashvili resigned in disgust as governor of Odessa in November, accusing Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, our man in Kiev, of supporting corruption. As for favoring “repression over democracy,” would that not apply to our NATO ally President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey, our Arab ally Gen. AbdelFattah el-Sissi of Egypt, and our Philippine ally Rodrigo Duterte? Were U.S. Cold War allies like the Shah of Iran and Gen. Augusto Pinochet of Chile all Jeffersonian Democrats? Have we forgotten our recent history? The Post brought up the death in prison of lawyeractivist Sergei Magnitsky in 2009. Under the Magnitsky Act of 2012, Congress voted sanctions on Russia’s elites. Yet China’s lone Nobel Peace Prize laureate, Liu Xiaobo, sentenced to 11 years

in prison for championing democracy, died Thursday of liver cancer, with police in his hospital room. Communist dictator Xi Jinping, who makes Putin look like Justin Trudeau, would not let the dying man go. Will Magnitsky Act sanctions be slammed on China? Don’t bet on it. Too much trade. Congress will do what comes naturally — kowtow. Yet our heroic Senate voted 98-2 to slam new sanctions on Russia. What are the roots of this hostility to Russia and hatred of Putin, whom a Fox analyst called “as bad as Hitler”? Putin’s Russia is called imperialist, though Estonia, next door, which Russia could swallow in one gulp, has been free for 25 years. Russia invaded Georgia. Well, yes, after Georgia invaded the seceded province of South Ossetia and killed Russian peacekeepers. Russia has taken back Crimea from Ukraine. True, but only after a U.S.-backed coup in Kiev replaced the elected pro-Russian regime. Russia has intervened to back Bashar Assad in Syria. Yes, but only after our insurgent allies collaborated with al-Qaida and ISIS to bring him down. Is Russia not allowed to support an ally, recognized by the U.N., which provides its only naval base on the Med?

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Russia has meddled in our election. And we have meddled in the affairs of half a dozen nations with “color-coded revolutions.” The cry of “regime change!” may daily be heard in the U.S. Capitol. Putin is not Pope Francis. But he is not Stalin; he is not Hitler; he is not Mao; and Russia today is not the USSR. Putin is an autocrat cut from the same bolt of cloth as the Romanov czars. His cooperation is crucial to the peace of the world, the freedom of the Baltic States, an end to the Syrian civil war, tranquility in the Persian Gulf, and solving the North Korean crisis. While our tectonic plates may rub against one another, we are natural allies. The Russia of Tolstoy, Pushkin, Solzhenitsyn and the Orthodox Church belongs with the West. If America stumbles into a war with Russia that all our Cold War presidents avoided, the Russia baiters and Putin haters will be put in same circle of hell by history as the idiot war hawks of 1914 and the three blind men of Versailles in 1919. Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of a new book, “Nixon’s White House Wars: The Battles That Made and Broke a President and Divided America Forever.”

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Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • 5A

Rural people will have few insurance choices BY TRUDY LIEBERMAN Rural Health News Service

As Obamacare approaches its fifth sign-up season, policyholders in many parts of the country are facing a marketplace with fewer choices and higher premiums. A New York Times analysis has found that 45 percent of U.S. counties probably will have either just one insurer or no insurers to choose from. That means some 3 million people in nearly 1,400 counties might have only one carrier and about 35,000 people could have none. Many of those counties are in rural states like Nevada, Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Ohio, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi, and North Carolina. In dollars and cents that means those living in areas without a carrier must buy coverage in the regular marketplace where they will get no subsidies to help pay their premiums. Subsidies are available only for people buying Obamacare policies on the state shopping exchanges. About 85 percent of the 12 million Americans with Obamacare policies get subsidies, which make it possible to afford coverage. For people with a single carrier in their county, limited options could mean high premiums for the policies available. “Blue Cross is out of Wisconsin, Indiana, Iowa, and Nebraska,” says Washington D.C. insurance consultant Robert Laszewski. “In Tennessee Blue Cross is out of two major cities and for the carriers staying in, the rate increases are through the moon.” The carrier will also be out of Ohio next year, a state where it had been a major insurer. This is not exactly the outcome that supporters of Obamacare had hoped for. The politicians who wrote the law and its advocates

tried to defy the basic laws of insurance. They wanted to keep the private insurance market and still allow everyone sick or well to get coverage. In other words, Obamacare tried to square the circle. But insurers make money by selling to healthy people while trying to minimize the claims they get from the sick. The ACA called for insurers to issue policies to everyone regardless of their health status. That meant thousands of very ill people came into the risk pool, and in many areas not enough healthy people signed up for coverage to balance them out. Laszewski noted that only 40 percent of eligible people signed up, a recipe for trouble in too many counties. “The most difficult place to make the marketplace work is in rural areas,” says Timothy McBride, a health policy professor at Washington University in St. Louis. “It’s an intractable problem in some places,” largely because rural communities have low populations, and the percentage of unhealthy people tends to be higher than in the cities. “Policymakers were hoping they’d get this fixed, but they haven’t been able to do that.” Many carriers leaving the market, however, are blaming the Trump administration for causing market uncertainty. A press release from Blue Cross Blue Shield announcing a 21 percent rate increase in the parts of Tennessee where it will continue to sell noted “two significant uncertainties.” How will the risk pool change if the requirement to buy insurance is no longer enforced? (The Trump administration has loosened enforcement.) Will the government continue providing cost-sharing subsidies to people with low incomes? This year individuals with incomes below $30,000 and a

family of four with about $62,000 get extra help paying deductibles and coinsurance. I have no clue how politicians will solve this. I do know one thing: The cost of medical care continues to rise and that will be factored into everyone’s premiums each year. Unless there’s some serious cost control built into whatever comes out of Washington, premium increases could become very steep in the coming years taking health insurance out of reach for many Americans. Cost containment has barely been discussed. It’s the elephant in the room. For one thing, insurers’ operating costs, which eat up about 18 cents of every premium dollar, are about twice as high as those costs in other countries. They include: determining eligibility, processing claims, enforcing controls on care like preauthorizing procedures - and negotiating fees with thousands of hospitals, doctors, and other sellers of care. Then there’s the matter of new healthcare technology and more use of older technology, which may account for as much as 50 percent of the increase in annual healthcare costs. At the end of June, for example, the New York Legislature passed a law mandating insurers pay for 3-D mammography without requiring women to pay deductibles or coinsurance and without the blessing of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force which has made clear that evidence for its use is lacking and “many important questions remain.” The cost of a mammogram could rise by a third. This is just the tip of the proverbial iceberg. I will explore technology and its costs in a future column.

Trump declares ‘let Obamacare fail’ as GOP plan collapses Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declared Tuesday it’s time to “let Obamacare fail” after the latest GOP health care plan crashed and burned in the Senate, a stunning failure for the president, Republican leader Mitch

McConnell and a party that has vowed for years to abolish the law. In a head-spinning series of developments, rank-and-file Republican senators turned on McConnell and Trump for the third time in a row, denying the votes to move forward with a plan for a straight-

up repeal of “Obamacare.” This time, it was three GOP women — Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Shelley Moore Capito of West Virginia — who delivered the death blow. Please see PLAN | 6A

Girl to compete in state pageant RIENZI — Millie Claire Morelock of Rienzi, will be a contestant in the statewide Little Miss and Mr. Magnolia State Pageant finals in Vicksburg on July 22-23. Millie Claire is the daughter of Nathan and Amanda (Essary) Morelock. Over 200 contestants ages 0-11 will be competing in the state finals to win of the coveted titles of Little Miss or Mr. Magnolia State. The Little Miss and Mr. Magnolia State Pageant is the largest pageant in the state of Mississippi. This pageant is unique where the children do not wear glitzed-out pageant attire or anything fake, such as hair, spray tans, etc. The winners of each division will receive a $1,000 cash scholarship for their future educations. Pageant competition will take place Saturday and the crowning ceremonies will take place Sunday. To support one’s hometown contestant, you may

Millie Claire Morelock visit the “Miss Magnolia State Pageant Facebook Page” and vote for one’s favorite contestant for the Viewer’s Choice Award. Millie Claire is Contestant #4 in the Baby Miss Division. It is free to vote and just a great way to show support. The contestant in each age group that has the most “likes” will be crowned Viewer’s Choice winner in each age division. You may also learn more about the pageant at missmagnoliastate.com.

Local students awarded presidential scholarships SENATOBIA — Several incoming freshmen at Northwest Mississippi Community College have been awarded the college’s Presidential Scholarship. These scholarships are awarded based on student’s ACT. Students must be entering freshmen and must enroll in and maintain 15 semester hours as well as the required cumulative grade point average. Among those receiving Presidential Scholarships for the 2017-2018 school year are: Timantha Turner

of Corinth, Tamara Tyes of Corinth, Kimberly Vogel of Iuka and Rodnesha Washington of Ashland. Open registration for Fall 2017 semester day/online classes is Aug. 10-11 from 8 a.m.- 3:30 p.m. and for evening/online classes is Aug. 8-9 from 4:30- 7 p.m. Classes begin on Monday, Aug. 14. Call the Recruiting Office at 662-562-3222 for academic scholarship information. For more information, visit the college’s website at northwestms.edu.

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6A • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Wife of former state lawmaker will plead guilty to kickbacks Associated Press

JACKSON — The wife of a former Mississippi lawmaker said she wants to plead guilty to paying kickbacks to the state’s former corrections commissioner. Teresa Malone pleaded not guilty in July 2016 to paying Christopher Epps $1,000 to $1,750 “regularly” over almost four years. She’s one of two defendants charged in the scandal over bribes involving Mississippi state

prison contracts, though prosecutors have promised more indictments. Epps acknowledged accepting more than $1.4 million in bribes from private contractors and is serving a nearly 20-year prison sentence. Seven other people have been convicted so far, while an eighth person, former Harrison County Supervisor William Martin, killed himself in 2015, hours before he was due in federal court

on bribery charges. Malone, of Carthage, is the wife of former state Rep. Bennett Malone, 73, a Democrat who was the onetime chairman of the House Corrections Committee. Prosecutors say payments from Teresa Malone to Epps were kickbacks from a $5,000-a-month consulting contract Epps steered to her from a health care consultant. Malone allegedly got more than $170,000.

County schools will see more than a $618,500 decrease in state funding due to continued MAEP cuts. Woodard said Chickasaw state funds will also decrease by more than $54,000. District debt heading into the new year sits at $3,356,000 not including the $4.25 million bond note approved last month. Woodard said student enrollment stands at 3,216, which is down 32 students. In the coming year, the district will spend approximately $95 per student. The monies will be allocated to each school’s local

budget to spend where needed and deemed by school administrators. Total district employees stand at 456 including 266 teachers and 46 assistant teachers. More than 77 percent of the district’s total budget will be used for salaries and benefits, which is “very normal compared to other districts,” said Woodard. Included in this year’s budget is $37,500 for instructional supplements, $127,500 for technology and $8,775 for band. The finalized budget will be presented to the board for a vote on Aug. 14.

SCHOOLS CONTINUED FROM 1A

coming school year. She anticipates revenues of $29,428,391 and expenditures of $29,166,453 for the district. They will receive the majority of their monies from the Mississippi Adequate Education Program, Chickasaw Cession funds, federal programs and national board reimbursement. She reported the district would receive $8,116,815 from local sources with $6,848,762 coming from tax collections and revenues received from activity funds.

Child Abduction Prevention Seminar Presented by: Crossroads Martial Arts Family Karate Center Every 40 seconds in the U.S., a child becomes missing or is abducted. Don’t let your child become the next victim. The goal of this FREE course is to help develop awareness of the dangers of child abduction and to demonstrate valuable techniques to help prevent it from happening. When: Saturday, July 22nd. 11 am Where: Crossroads Martial Arts Family Karate Center 1407 N. Harper Road #C, Corinth, MS. 38834 For more information, call 662-286-2904 Sponsored by:

Deaths Rev. David Mills

Celebration of Life service for David D. Mills, 79, is set for 11 a.m. Friday at Memorial Funeral Home with the Rev. Larry Lovett and Paul Peterson officiating. Burial with Military Honors will be held at Corinth National Cemetery. Family will receive friends Thursday from 5 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home. He went to be with the Lord on Saturday, July 15, 2017, at his residence. He was born Dec. 20, 1937 in Rocky Mount, N.C. He enMills tered the Army in 1954, served 24 years, he was the recipient of the Purple Heart, Silver Star, 2 Bronze Stars, Combat Infantry Badge, Air Medal and the Legion of Merit. He served in Vietnam from 1965-1966 in the 1st Calvary division and 1968-1969 in the 4th Infantry Division. He retired in 1979 with the rank of Command Sergeant Major. After military retirement he went to work for the U.S. Post Office and retired in 1999 after 20 years and had worked at McPeters Funeral Directors. He was former Pastor of Kossuth Worship Center retiring from there in December of 2008. Rev. Mills served as Pastor of God’s Church in Biggersville until his retirement in 2016 due to health reasons. David was the Chaplin of the Purple Hearts, Corinth Division 813 and one of the founding members. He enjoyed gardening, restoring antique cars, skeet/trap shooting, collecting guns, coins, traveling and spending time with his family and friends. He is survived by his wife, Wilma Mills; sons, Kevin (Mary) Mills, Michael (Sarah) Mills, Stephen (Tonya) Gayer, Robert Gayer, Kenny Gayer; daughters, Joy (Richard) Trout, Jessica Gayer; sister, Patricia Bracy; grandchildren, Jeff (Kim) Swindle, Jason (Abby Conner) Swindle, Joshua Mills, Monique (Andy) Wright, Amanda Mills, David Mills, Corey (Liz) Mills, Olivia Mills, Rachel Mills, Summer Witt, Suzie Witt (his blue hair girl), Justin Jacobi, Will Bauer; great- grandchildren Joshlyn Mills, Jacob Wright, Jack Mills, Dax Mills; sisterin-law, Peggy Mills; honorary children, Jacky (Stacy) Bauer, Paul Peterson, Tommy Yeager, Angela Hall; his mother-in-law, Dorothy Whitaker; sistersin-law, Iva Desoier (Brian Wamsley), Thelma Price; Brothers-in-law, George

Tommy Ray Phillips

Funeral services for Tommy Ray Phillips, 75, of Corinth, are scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at Corinthian Funeral Home Chapel. Burial will be at the Shiloh Baptist Church Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 5 until 7 p.m. Thursday and from noon until service time Friday at the funeral home. Mr. Phillips died Monday, July 17, 2017. He was born on Aug. 9, 1941, in Alcorn County, the son of Ray and Vadene Abel Phillips. In addition to being a Game Warden for the State of Mississippi, he was a member of Shiloh Baptist Church. Survivors are his wife, Phyllis Osborne

Whitaker, Mark (Angel) Whitaker, Gilbert (Rose) Whitaker and a host of other family and friends. He was preceded in death by his parents, Julius Ceaser “J.C.” Mills Sr. and Ruth Mae Womble Mills; mother of his children, Sarah Vernell Mills; greatgranddaughter, Zoy Swindle; brothers, Julius C. “J.C.” (Joyce) Mills Jr., Billy Mills, John Mills; sister, Iva (Frank) Mays; brother-in-law Winford Bracey; sister-in-law, Sabrina Whitaker; brothers-in-law, Robert Decker and John Whitaker; fathers-in-law, Doyle Decker and Jerold Whitaker. Pallbearers will be Jacky Bauer, Tommy Yeager, Bobby Rodgers, Terry Kono, Justin Jacobi, Trea Yeager, Jonathan Brawner and Andrew Feazell. Honorary Pallbearers will be Robert Rodgers, Military order of the Purple Hearts Chapter 813, 3/8 of 4th Infantry Division/Ivy Dragons D Company and the 1st Infantry Calvary Division. Condolences can be left online at memorialcorinth.com. Arrangements are under the care of Memorial Funeral Home.

Stan Smith

Funeral services for Stanley “Stan” R. Smith, 63, are set for 2 p.m. Thursday at Memorial Funeral Home with Bro. Dennis Smith officiating. Burial will be at Henry Cemetery. Visitation will be tonight from 5 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home. Mr. Smith passed away Tuesday, July 18, 2017 after a brief illness at Whitfield Nursing Home. He was a member of Mt. Vernon Presbyterian Church. He was born Sept. 25, 1953 and was a selfemployed contractor who enjoyed fishing and camping. He is survived by his mother, Emma Lee Newcomb, brothers, Scotty (Cheryl) Smith of Corinth and Billy (Valene Kane) Smith of Mount Airy, North Carolina; his sister, Patti Potts of Jacksonville, FL, his step-siblings, Ricky (Mary) Newcomb and Becky (Dave) Shanklin both of Corinth; nine nieces and nephews and many wonderful friends. He was preceded in death by his father, Bill Smith and step-father, James Newcomb. Memorial donations can be made to the Children’s Ministry at First Baptist Church or St. Jude Children’s Hospital. Online condolences may be left at memorialcorinth.com Memorial funeral home is in charge of arrangements. Phillips; sons, Timothy Ray (Rebecca) Phillips, Jason Shane (Melody) Phillips; step-son Randy (Peggy) Dotson; a stepdaughter Michelle (Robert) Mayhall and a sister, Faye Mohundro. He leaves three grandchildren: Timothy Justin Phillips, Joshua Casey (Rebecca) Phillips, Casey Ray Phillips; three great-grandchildren; four step-grandchildren and five stepgreat-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, his first wife, Sue Luker Phillips, and son, Willard Morris Phillips. Bro. Dwight Massengill and Bro. Alan Parker will officiate the service. Corinthian Funeral Home has the arrangements.

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perimeter surveillance coverage has been increased to deter people from throwing items over the fencing. “We have addressed some of that by adding cameras and turning some of our perimeter lights away from the facility out towards the woods,” said Caldwell. Employees are another potential means of cell phones and other contraband coming into the prison. “There are some concerns I have about employees involved in bringing contraband in,” the sheriff said. “We are investigating that right now. We have already taken some steps to try to correct that.” One former employee recently pleaded guilty to introducing contraband. He believes inmates may have had people apply for a job only for the purpose of working there long enough to sneak

items into the facility. With manpower being an issue in conducting a shakedown, “We’re working with the police department and some of our surrounding agencies to help us be able to do this more often — to be able to come in with overwhelming manpower and take control and do a complete, thorough search,” said Caldwell. Supervisor Steve Glidewell suggested better pay would help with staffing. Pay for correctional officers was increased substantially at the beginning of Caldwell’s time in office, but he said it would be hard to do now without an increase in the number of inmates housed or an increase in the daily reimbursement amount. Last week’s shakedown was the ninth conducted by MDOC at the 15 regional facilities, which have been warned to “expect an unexpected visit” in a press release about the Alcorn County inspection.

PLAN CONTINUED FROM 5A

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All had been shut out of McConnell’s initial allmale working group on health care. The successive defeats made clear that despite seven years of promises to repeal former Presi-

dent Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, Republicans apparently cannot deliver. At the White House, Trump appeared to recognize defeat, at least for the moment, while insisting he bore none of the blame.


Wednesday, July 19, 2017

State/Nation

Across the Nation Associated Press

Trump, Putin have 2nd conversation WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump had a second, previously undisclosed conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin at a summit in Germany earlier this month. White House spokesman Sean Spicer says Trump and Putin spoke during a world leaders’ dinner at the Group of 20 summit in Hamburg. The two had a formal meeting that lasted more than two hours earlier that day. It was not immediately clear how long the informal conversation lasted or what was discussed. U.S. intelligence officials have accused the Russian government of meddling in the 2016 election to help Trump win.

Opioid suspected in boy’s death MIAMI (AP) — A 10-year-old boy from a drug-ridden Miami neighborhood apparently died of a fentanyl overdose last month, becoming one of Florida’s littlest victims of

the opioid crisis, authorities said Tuesday. But how he came into contact with the powerful painkiller is a mystery. Fifth-grader Alton Banks died June 23 after a visit to the pool in the city’s Overtown section. He began vomiting at home, was found unconscious that evening and was pronounced dead at a hospital. Preliminary toxicology tests showed he had fentanyl in his system, authorities said. The case has underscored how frighteningly prevalent fentanyl has become — and how potent it is. Exposure to just tiny amounts can be devastating.

Dog saves baby deer from water PORT JEFFERSON, N.Y. — A dog that saw a baby deer in danger of drowning in New York jumped in and dragged it to shore. The daring rescue in Long Island Sound was caught on video by his owner Mark Freeley. He tells WCBS-TV that he was taking the English golden retriever named Storm on a walk Sunday morning when Storm Ask about our

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“just plunged into the water and started swimming out to the fawn, grabbed it by the neck, and started swimming to shore.” Video shows Storm pushing the deer to shore, lying next to the fawn and nudging it with his nose. Freeley says animal rescuers soon arrived and the deer ran back into the water. They used a rope to pull the fawn back in.

Man threatens to pull gun over taco LOS ALAMOS, N.M. — A New Mexico man is facing charges after police say he threatened to pull a gun on a taco shop employee for giving him the wrong order. The Los Alamos Monitor reports that Lex Norman Deines was arrested Sunday following a heated exchange with an employee at Rigoberto’s Taco Shop near one of the nation’s premiere weapons labs. Los Alamos Police Department Cpl. Jemuel Montoya says an employee said Deines promised to retrieve a gun out of his car over the allegedly botched tacos.

Associated Press

3rd West Nile virus case confirmed JACKSON — Mississippi health officials report the third human case of West Nile virus this year. The Mississippi State Department of Health says the reported case is in Forrest County, where the state’s first confirmed case was located. The other case was in Rankin County. The department only reports laboratory-confirmed cases. In 2016, Mississippi had 43 West Nile virus cases and two deaths. State officials, in a news release Tuesday, noted that people throughout Mississippi are at risk of the disease and should protect themselves against mosquito bites by using mosquito repellant that contains DEET and removing standing water sources to prevent breeding.

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cott over the Confederate emblem on the state flag. Mississippi House Speaker Philip Gunn tells The Clarion-Ledger 13 members of the state’s Legislative Black Caucus will attend a meeting of the Southern Legislative Conference. Republican Gunn is chairman of the conference, which meets July 29-Aug. 2 in Biloxi. Black Caucus Chairwoman Sonya WilliamsBarnes, a Democrat from Gulfport, said in May that boycotting the meeting could pressure Mississippi to change the flag. Gunn says the Confederate emblem is of-

fensive and should be removed, but he says there’s no consensus in the House to make the change.

Man opens fire into car, girl shot in neck JACKSON — Police say a 7-year-old girl has been shot in the neck by a gunman who fired shots into a car. WLBT-TV reports that the shooting happened Monday night in Jackson, and the car stopped at a fast-food restaurant to get help. Police say a 3-year-old child was also in the car, but was not injured.

Some black officials ignore flag boycott JACKSON — Some of Mississippi’s black lawmakers will attend a regional meeting in the state, ignoring colleagues’ decision to boy-

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8A • Daily Corinthian

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Penney PeopUtdF PepsiCo PetrbrsA Petrobras Pfizer PhilipMor PhysRltTr PiperJaf PlainsAAP Potash PwShs QQQ ProLogis PrUltPQ s PUVixST rs PrUCrude rs ProShtVx s ProctGam ProgsvCp PrUShSP rs PUShtQQQ PShtQQQ rs PUShtSPX PSEG PulteGrp PumaBiotc

16 4.92 -.18 19 17.62 -.12 24 115.01 +.08 ... 8.19 +.09 ... 8.58 +.12 14 33.36 +.11 25 119.64 +.64 21 18.42 -.22 18 64.45 -.10 30 26.85 +.42 17 17.66 -.04 q 143.14 +.95 26 60.12 +1.60 q 109.80 +2.14 q 31.66 -.80 q 14.97 +.30 q 88.41 +1.19 23 88.64 +1.09 26 45.34 -.11 q 49.14 -.06 q 16.08 -.22 q 28.56 -.57 q 14.92 -.04 16 43.56 +.33 14 24.16 -.20 dd 93.45 +7.35

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20.22 18.68 109.25 78.90 2.43 111.83 51.63 6.87 9.54 23.34 186.85 55.93 9.42 8.88 17.16 67.51 22.14 20.03 19.17 86.91 25.25 32.93 79.90 225.67 83.57 42.37 56.25 42.09 8.40 43.36 35.46 15.20 11.49 97.58 77.59 123.03 9.70 76.20 78.67 4.23 54.80 94.27 5.13 41.76 31.15 46.40 65.63 2.51 31.55 3.65

-.35 -.17 +3.24 +6.72 -.53 -.02 -.35 -.13 -.16 -.26 -.26 -.99 +.03 +.27 +.01 -.40 +.05 +.35 -.74 -.14 -.52 +.82 +.13 -.16 +.05 +.03 -.21 -.10 -.39 +.03 -.06 +.28 -.02 -.12 -.65 -.07 +.04 -.24 -.03 -.09 +.43 -.08 -.02 +.14 -.05 -2.04 +.07 -.40 +.08 -.57 -.25 -.04 +.06 +.40 -.23 +.06 +.41 -.31 -.04 -.16 +.26 -.04 +.15 -.01 -.12 -.19 -.08 -.29 +.56 +.32 +.70 -.66 -.07 -.05 -.58 +.05 -.32 -.10 +.01 +1.94 -.41 +.03 -.04

YOUR FUNDS

What’s important to you? Let’s talk. Eric M Rutledge, CFP®, AAMS® Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suit 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409

Steven D Hefner, CFP® Financial Advisor 413 Cruise Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471

Chris Marshall Financial Advisor 401 E. Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-7885

Q-R-S-T

www.edwardjones.com

Member SIPC

Tale of 2 deficit estimates economic program of tax cuts, deregulation and tougher enforcement of trade laws will boost growth to healthy annual rates of 3 percent. The CBO says the Trump program will result in average annual growth of around 1.9 percent. The CBO believes Trump's budget proposals will reduce deficits over the next decade to a total of $6.84 trillion, compared to $10.11 trillion in deficits if nothing is done. Trump’s budget projects a smaller 10-year deficit figure of $3.15 trillion. Here is a year-by-year look at the Trump and CBO deficit forecasts:

The budget proposal President Donald Trump unveiled in May promised to eliminate annual budget deficits over the next decade, achieving a small surplus of $16 billion in 2027. But a review of his proposals released July 13 by the Congressional Budget Office projects a far different outcome. It says the deficit in 2027 will not be eliminated but instead will total $720 billion. That would be larger than last year’s deficit of $585 billion. A major difference in the two forecasts is the estimate of how fast the economy will grow over the next decade. The administration believes its

Trump budget estimate

Disconnect? The Congressional Budget Office’s projections of the Trump budget are vastly different from the White House. The difference lies in estimates of how fast the economy will grow.

CBO estimate

$0 bil. -200 -400 -600 -800

’16

’17

’18

’19

’20

’21

’22

’23

’24

’25

’26

’27

Martin Crutsinger; J. Paschke • AP

Sources: Office of Management and Budget; Congressional Budget Office

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 21,681.53 17,883.56 9,763.66 7,622.92 738.82 616.19 11,918.17 10,281.48 6,341.70 5,028.24 2,463.54 2,084.59 1,771.05 1,475.38 25,615.39 21,583.94 1,434.44 1,156.08

Name Dow Industrials Dow Transportation Dow Utilities NYSE Composite Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 S&P MidCap Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Last 21,574.73 9,633.05 711.78 11,877.42 6,344.31 2,460.61 1,763.04 25,587.72 1,427.61

Dow Jones industrials

21,720

Close: 21,574.73 Change: -54.99 (-0.3%)

21,480 21,240

22,000

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg -54.99 -.25 +9.17 +16.25 -65.15 -.67 +6.51 +21.00 +1.67 +.24 +7.91 +.13 -13.09 -.11 +7.42 +10.40 +29.88 +.47 +17.86 +25.97 +1.47 +.06 +9.91 +13.72 -5.11 -.29 +6.17 +14.32 +10.22 +.04 +9.23 +14.22 -3.99 -.28 +5.19 +18.92

10 DAYS

21,500 21,000 20,500 20,000 19,500

J F M A M J J +.02 +.22 +.41 -.03 TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST +8.67 YTD YTD +.12 Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg +.50 Name 3.88 21 124.57 -.12 +9.2 AFLAC 1.72 12 77.87 +.12 +11.9 KimbClk -.02 AT&T Inc 1.96 14 35.99 -.40 -15.4 Kroger s .50f 11 22.55 -.32 -34.7 -.37 ... 87 22.51 -.13 +25.4 Lowes 1.64f 19 75.96 -.47 +6.8 -5.25 AerojetR 3.80 23 145.24 -.31 +1.0 McDnlds +.19 AirProd 3.76 28 153.96 -1.30 +26.5 -.01 AlliantEg s 1.22 21 40.28 +.15 +6.3 OldNBcp .52 16 16.85 -.10 -7.2 -.07 AEP 2.36 17 68.36 -.19 +8.6 Penney ... 16 4.92 -.18 -40.8 -.01 1.46 15 91.37 -1.34 +16.9 PennyMac +.04 AmeriBrgn 1.88 14 17.58 -.17 +7.4 -.23 ATMOS 1.80 24 84.08 +.08 +13.4 PepsiCo 3.22 24 115.01 +.08 +9.9 BB&T Cp 1.20 16 44.61 -.30 -5.1 PilgrimsP 2.75e 12 22.20 -.37 +16.9 2.38 52 34.83 -.09 -6.8 RegionsFn -.23 BP PLC .36f 16 14.54 -.16 +1.3 -.14 BcpSouth .50 20 30.25 -.05 -2.6 SbdCp 3.00 14 3966.67 +51.67 +.4 +.20 Caterpillar 3.12 33 107.07 -.99 +15.5 -.88 SearsHldgs ... ... 9.01 -.03 -3.0 4.32 ... 103.72 -.49 -11.9 +.01 Chevron Sherwin 3.40 29 358.17 -1.23 +33.3 -.20 CocaCola 1.48 27 44.67 -.06 +7.7 SiriusXM .04 36 5.41 -.05 +21.6 -.40 Comcast s .63 22 39.18 -.02 +13.5 +.11 SouthnCo 2.32 16 47.12 +.08 -4.2 CrackerB 4.80f 24 156.06 -1.00 -6.5 +.09 SPDR Fncl .46e ... 24.80 -.04 +6.7 -.01 Deere 2.40 22 126.09 +.21 +22.4 Torchmark .60 17 78.09 -.28 +5.9 +.50 Dillards .28 12 60.35 -.69 -3.7 -.27 Total SA 2.71e ... 49.68 +.19 -2.5 Dover 1.76 26 84.46 -.01 +12.7 +.12 1.12 16 51.63 -.40 +.5 .88 45 72.45 -.21 +7.6 US Bancrp +.08 EnPro 2.04 17 76.20 -.17 +10.2 -.21 FordM .60a 6 11.75 +.01 -3.1 WalMart +.08 1.52 13 54.80 +.09 -.6 .24 ... 6.63 +.10 -64.3 WellsFargo +.16 FredsInc .28 43 15.44 -.22 +14.2 .56 21 51.34 -.17 +6.3 Wendys Co -.02 FullerHB .76 22 69.38 -1.03 +23.9 +.09 GenElec .96 19 26.89 +.07 -14.9 WestlkChm +.33 1.60 ... 59.12 -.61 +16.4 Goodyear .40 10 35.70 -.61 +15.6 WestRck -.12 1.24 28 33.08 -.32 +9.9 2.66 20 135.19 -.07 +16.7 Weyerhsr +.17 HonwllIntl +.02 Intel ... 10 29.30 -.05 +27.4 1.09f 15 34.53 +.06 -4.8 Xerox rs +.17 Jabil .32 20 30.55 +.05 +29.1 YRC Wwde ... 51 12.13 -.16 -8.7 -.18 +.07 -.02 +.09 -.03 -.30 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) +.14 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg -1.00 Name +.44 BkofAm 1020261 23.90 -.12 WillVV pfA 7.04 +1.99 +39.4 TileShop 15.00 -5.25 -25.9 +.75 AMD 740478 13.48 -.32 BiondVx wt 2.84 +.59 +26.2 CrossrdS rs 2.22 -.71 -24.3 -.82 RiteAid 712613 2.58 +.27 Moleculin n 2.05 +.35 +20.6 ShiftPixy n 7.74 -2.05 -20.9 -1.65 Annaly 573068 11.77 -.49 CymaBay 6.94 +.96 +16.1 Danaos 2.45 -.55 -18.3 -.26 Netflix s 384137 183.60 +21.90 Akoustis n 7.84 +.94 +13.6 Ericsson 6.07 -1.22 -16.7 -.17 316820 1.45 +.31 Netflix s 183.60 +21.90 +13.5 MauiLand 16.50 -3.30 -16.7 -.51 Novavax 316226 1.36 +.68 T2 Biosys 2.99 +.33 +12.4 Soligenix n 2.49 -.33 -11.7 -.06 Capricor AT&T Inc 286872 35.99 -.40 RiteAid 2.58 +.27 +11.7 Tillys 10.17 -1.22 -10.7 +.09 255400 73.30 -.05 Tantech n 2.88 +.29 +11.2 CryoPrt wt 2.15 -.25 -10.4 -.30 Microsoft 247834 9.84 -.20 Dynatronic 2.55 +.25 +10.9 SenesTc n 4.46 -.49 -9.9 -.04 Cemex -.13 -.29 YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY +.28 1,393 Total issues 3,028 Advanced 1,261 Total issues 3,063 -.23 Advanced 1,494 New Highs 120 Declined 1,572 New Highs 109 +.06 Declined Unchanged 141 New Lows 23 Unchanged 230 New Lows 35 +.21 Volume 2,822,190,460 Volume 1,672,848,837 +.07

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MARKET SUMMARY G

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Trading boost?

Eye on housing

Morgan Stanley serves up its second-quarter earnings today. The wealth management and investment banking firm is expected to show that its earnings and revenue increased from a year earlier. The company, which delivered improved results in the first quarter, has benefited from growth in its investment bank and trading business.

The pace of new U.S. home construction has been slowing of late. Builders broke ground on new apartments and single-family homes at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.09 million units in May, the third monthly decline in a row. Despite the slowdown, home construction through May remained ahead of the pace in the same period last year. The Commerce Department reports today its home construction data for June.

N

D

seasonally adjusted annual rate 1.5 million

1.29 1.24 1.19

est. 1.16

1.16 1.09

0.9

J

F

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AB DiversMunicipal14.44 +0.02 +2.9 AMG YacktmanI d 23.34 +0.02 +9.1 AQR MgdFtsStratI 8.86 ... -4.9 American Beacon LgCpValInstl 29.63 -0.12 +7.5 SmCpValInstl 28.04 -0.13 +1.5 American Century EqIncInv 9.29 ... +6.3 GrInv 32.91 +0.09 +18.4 MidCpValInv 17.99 -0.07 +4.9 UltraInv 41.52 +0.19 +19.0 ValInv 8.91 -0.03 +1.5 American Funds AMCpA m 29.98 +0.13 +11.7 AmrcnBalA m 26.50 +0.02 +8.0 AmrcnHiIncA m10.47 +0.01 +5.1 AmrcnMutA m 39.32 -0.02 +7.8 BdfAmrcA m 12.96 +0.03 +2.9 CptWldGrIncA m50.14+0.17 +15.7 CptlIncBldrA m61.87 +0.05 +9.1 CptlWldBdA m 19.90 +0.09 +5.9 EuroPacGrA m53.48 +0.16 +21.0 FdmtlInvsA m 60.17 +0.05 +12.3 GlbBalA m 31.93 +0.11 +9.4 GrfAmrcA m 48.70 +0.28 +15.8 IncAmrcA m 22.75 ... +6.5 IntlGrIncA m 32.69 +0.08 +17.0 IntrmBdfAmrA m13.44 +0.01 +1.4 InvCAmrcA m 39.50 +0.04 +9.9 NewWldA m 62.10 +0.13 +20.7 NwPrspctvA m42.52 +0.17 +20.4 SmCpWldA m 53.54 +0.08 +16.4 TheNewEcoA m43.58 +0.34 +21.2 TxExBdA m 12.97 +0.02 +3.6 WAMtInvsA m 42.84 -0.07 +8.1 Angel Oak MltStratIncIns 11.30 ... +3.9 Artisan IntlInstl 31.58 ... +22.6 IntlInv 31.38 ... +22.5 IntlValueInstl 37.81 +0.03 +16.2 Baird AggrgateBdInstl10.91 +0.03 +3.2 CorPlusBdInstl 11.26 +0.02 +3.4 BlackRock EngyResInvA m16.25 -0.09 -18.6 EqDivInstl 24.08 -0.04 +7.2 EqDivInvA m 24.01 -0.04 +7.1 GlbAllcIncInstl 19.91 +0.03 +8.9 GlbAllcIncInvA m19.77+0.03 +8.7 GlbAllcIncInvC m17.93+0.03 +8.3 HYBdInstl 7.80 ... +5.3 HYBdK 7.81 ... +5.5 StrIncOppsIns 9.94 +0.01 +2.9 Causeway IntlValInstl d 16.01 -0.03 +15.4 ClearBridge AggresivGrA m208.66 -0.57 +10.4 LgCpGrI 42.61 +0.09 +13.9 Cohen & Steers PrfrdScInc,IncI 14.23 +0.01 +8.8 Columbia ContrarianCorZ25.38 +0.02 +12.8 DivIncZ 20.68 -0.01 +9.2 DFA EmMktsCorEqIns21.37+0.06 +23.8 EmMktsInstl 28.25 +0.06 +24.8 EmMktsSmCpInstl22.41+0.07 +21.2 EmMktsValInstl 29.18 +0.02 +22.1 FvYrGlbFIIns 11.00 +0.02 +2.0 GlbEqInstl 21.44 -0.01 +11.1 GlbRlEsttSec 10.87 +0.04 +4.5 IntlCorEqIns 13.46 +0.02 +17.0 IntlRlEsttScIns 5.06 +0.06 +7.7 IntlSmCoInstl 20.39 +0.08 +18.8 IntlSmCpValIns 22.21 +0.06 +17.1 IntlValInstl 18.70 ... +13.6 OneYearFIInstl 10.31 +0.01 +0.7 RlEsttSecInstl 35.03 -0.04 +3.0 STExtendedQlIns10.86 ... +1.8 TAUSCorEq2Instl16.71 -0.03 +7.7 TwYrGlbFIIns 9.97 +0.01 +0.9 USCorEq1Instl 20.91 -0.02 +9.3 USCorEqIIInstl 19.89 -0.04 +7.7 USLgCo 19.14 +0.01 +11.0 USLgCpValInstl37.17 -0.12 +6.9 USMicroCpInstl21.27 -0.07 +2.1 USSmCpInstl 34.59 -0.11 +2.7 USSmCpValInstl36.88 -0.16 -1.1 USTrgtedValIns23.99 -0.11 +0.4 Davis NYVentureA m32.72 +0.01 +11.3 Delaware Inv ValInstl 20.10 -0.03 +3.0 Dodge & Cox Bal 106.85 -0.16 +6.0 GlbStk 13.52 -0.02 +13.5 Inc 13.81 +0.02 +3.2 IntlStk 44.89 -0.17 +17.8 Stk 194.50 -0.58 +7.8 DoubleLine CorFII 10.99 ... +3.3 TtlRetBdI 10.73 +0.02 +2.9 TtlRetBdN b 10.70 ... +2.5 Eaton Vance AtlntCptSMIDCI31.16 -0.02 +11.9 FltngRtInstl 9.00 ... +2.6 GlbMcrAbRtI 9.13 ... +2.7 Edgewood GrInstl 28.43 +0.29 +28.0 FPA Crescent d 34.44 -0.03 +6.8 NewInc d 9.98 ... +1.5 Federated InsHYBdIns d 10.13 +0.01 +5.8 StratValDivIns 6.26 -0.01 +8.1 TtlRetBdInstl 10.94 +0.02 +3.2 Fidelity 500IdxIns 86.10 +0.05 +11.1 500IdxInsPrm 86.10 +0.05 +11.1 500IndexPrm 86.10 +0.05 +11.1 AsstMgr20% 13.47 +0.02 +4.3 AsstMgr50% 18.02 +0.04 +8.5 Balanced 24.03 +0.04 +10.0 BalancedK 24.03 +0.05 +10.0 BlueChipGrowth83.27 +0.47 +23.6 BlueChipGrowthK83.40+0.47 +23.7 Capital&Income d10.14+0.01 +7.8 Contrafund 117.97 +0.75 +20.6 ContrafundK 117.94 +0.75 +20.7 CptlApprec 35.57 +0.09 +12.3 DiversIntl 39.34 -0.04 +18.1 DiversIntlK 39.28 -0.04 +18.2 DividendGrowth34.91 +0.01 +8.4 EmMkts 19.80 +0.08 +26.1 EmMktsF 19.86 +0.08 +26.2 EqDividendInc 27.88 -0.04 +5.0 EqIncome 59.40 -0.07 +5.4 ExtndMktIdxPr 59.51 -0.10 +8.4 FltngRtHiInc d 9.66 ... +2.2 FourinOneIdx 42.12 +0.02 +10.8 Frdm2015 13.16 +0.02 +8.8 Frdm2020 16.16 +0.02 +9.5 Frdm2025 13.95 +0.02 +10.2 Frdm2030 17.37 +0.02 +11.9 Frdm2035 14.50 +0.01 +12.9 Frdm2040 10.18 +0.01 +13.1 FrdmK2015 14.04 +0.02 +8.8 FrdmK2020 15.03 +0.02 +9.5 FrdmK2025 15.85 +0.02 +10.3 FrdmK2030 16.37 +0.03 +12.0 FrdmK2035 17.18 +0.02 +13.1 FrdmK2040 17.21 +0.02 +13.2 FrdmK2045 17.75 +0.02 +13.1 FrdmK2050 17.90 +0.02 +13.1 GNMA 11.45 +0.02 +1.3 Growth&Inc 35.09 -0.03 +7.0 GrowthCompany169.26+0.83 +23.7 GrowthCompanyF16.59+0.08 +24.2 GrowthCompanyK169.17+0.83 +23.8 IntlDiscv 43.98 +0.06 +20.6 IntlGr 15.46 +0.01 +20.8 IntlGrF 15.51 +0.02 +21.0 IntlIdxInstlPrm 41.16 ... +16.6 IntlIdxPremium 41.16 ... +16.6 IntlVal 10.39 -0.02 +13.4 IntlValF 10.42 -0.01 +13.5 IntrmMuniInc 10.40 +0.02 +3.3 InvmGradeBd 11.29 +0.02 +3.1 InvmGradeBd 7.93 +0.02 +2.9 InvmGradeBdF 11.30 +0.03 +3.2 LargeCapStock31.29 -0.04 +8.0 LatinAmerica d23.56 +0.18 +23.7 LowPricedStock53.72 -0.06 +8.6 LowPricedStockK53.70 -0.05 +8.6 Magellan 98.27 +0.30 +13.9 MidCapStock 37.10 -0.11 +9.8 MunicipalIncome13.17 +0.03 +4.4 NewMktsInc d 16.29 +0.04 +7.4 OTCPortfolio 105.59 +0.61 +26.7 Overseas 47.53 ... +20.2

Puritan 22.55 +0.04 +10.4 PuritanK 22.53 +0.03 +10.4 ShortTermBond 8.63 ... +1.1 SmCpDiscv d 31.23 -0.10 +2.8 StkSelorAllCp 41.68 +0.09 +14.5 StrategicIncome11.05 +0.02 +5.5 TelecomandUtls26.02 ... +6.5 TotalBond 10.70 +0.02 +3.1 TtlMktIdxF 71.07 +0.01 +10.6 TtlMktIdxInsPrm71.05 +0.01 +10.6 TtlMktIdxPrm 71.06 +0.01 +10.6 USBdIdxInsPrm11.64 +0.03 +2.7 USBdIdxPrm 11.64 +0.03 +2.7 Value 119.03 -0.42 +8.4 Fidelity Advisor NewInsightsA m30.63 +0.12 +16.9 NewInsightsI 31.27 +0.12 +17.1 Fidelity Select Biotechnology215.17 -0.21 +23.6 HealthCare 226.20 -0.13 +22.4 Technology 169.64 +1.97 +34.7 First Eagle GlbA m 58.53 +0.02 +7.9 Franklin Templeton CATxFrIncA m 7.47 +0.02 +4.2 FdrTFIncA m 12.03 +0.02 +2.5 GlbBdA m 12.31 -0.05 +4.3 GlbBdAdv 12.26 -0.05 +4.4 Gr,IncA m 26.42 -0.08 +12.1 GrA m 89.15 +0.08 +16.4 HYTxFrIncA m10.25 +0.02 +3.1 IncA m 2.36 ... +5.3 IncAdv 2.34 ... +5.4 IncC m 2.39 ... +5.3 InsIntlEqPrmry 21.54 -0.03 +15.5 MutGlbDiscvA m32.98 -0.10 +7.9 MutGlbDiscvZ 33.63 -0.10 +8.0 MutZ 30.02 -0.09 +6.4 RisingDivsA m 57.22 ... +9.4 GE RSPUSEq 55.44 +0.04 +12.5 GMO IntlEqIV 22.54 +0.04 +15.5 Goldman Sachs HYMuniInstl d 9.50 +0.02 +6.8 Harbor CptlApprecInstl 69.23 +0.62 +22.2 IntlInstl 68.82 +0.22 +17.8 Harding Loevner ... +19.7 IntlEqInstl d 21.35 Hartford CptlApprecA m40.89 +0.11 +15.0 INVESCO ComStkA m 24.49 -0.07 +4.3 DiversDivA m 19.79 -0.04 +3.3 EqandIncA m 11.00 -0.02 +4.9 HYMuniA m 10.07 +0.02 +6.0 IVA WldwideI d 18.58 +0.01 +8.1 JPMorgan CoreBondI 11.67 +0.03 +3.0 CoreBondR6 11.68 +0.02 +3.0 CorePlusBondR68.31 +0.02 +3.2 DisciplinedEqR626.03 +0.02 +11.1 EquityIncomeI 16.00 -0.02 +6.2 HighYieldI 7.49 +0.01 +4.7 LargeCapGrowthI39.80+0.25 +25.3 MidCapValueL 38.97 -0.15 +7.1 USLgCpCorPlusI31.37 +0.03 +11.6 Janus Henderson BalancedT 31.80 +0.04 +9.7 GlobalLifeSciT 54.92 +0.04 +21.7 ResearchD ... +17.3 John Hancock BdI 15.96 +0.04 +3.9 DiscpValI 20.84 -0.04 +7.6 DiscpValMCI 23.17 -0.05 +7.9 MltmgrLsBal1 b15.50 +0.03 +9.5 MltmgrLsGr1 b16.43 +0.02 +11.8 Lazard EMEqInstl 18.90 +0.08 +18.4 IntlStratEqIns 14.49 +0.03 +16.5 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.32 +0.03 +7.0 GrY 14.54 +0.08 +21.3 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m 16.21 -0.02 +7.0 FltngRtF b 9.16 ... +1.7 ShrtDurIncA m 4.29 ... +1.6 ShrtDurIncC m 4.32 ... +1.5 ShrtDurIncF b 4.29 ... +1.9 ShrtDurIncI 4.29 ... +1.9 MFS GrI 90.36 +0.49 +20.9 InstlIntlEq 24.19 -0.01 +19.4 TtlRetA m 19.12 ... +7.0 ValA m 39.37 -0.05 +9.9 ValI 39.58 -0.05 +10.1 Matthews ChinaInv 21.02 +0.04 +35.9 IndiaInv 31.78 -0.35 +23.9 Metropolitan West TtlRetBdI 10.68 +0.02 +2.6 TtlRetBdM b 10.68 +0.02 +2.4 TtlRetBdPlan 10.05 +0.02 +2.6 Northern IntlEqIdx d 12.32 ... +16.7 StkIdx 29.64 +0.01 +11.0 Nuveen HYMuniBdI 17.12 +0.03 +7.3 Oakmark EqAndIncInv 32.65 +0.01 +7.3 IntlInv 27.35 -0.03 +20.5 Inv 79.63 -0.04 +9.9 SelInv 45.96 -0.09 +6.8 Oberweis ChinaOpps m 14.41 +0.15 +31.7 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCpStrat17.01 -0.02 +11.6 LgCpStrats 14.39 +0.01 +12.2 StratOpps 8.04 ... +8.1 Oppenheimer DevelopingMktsA m39.93+0.19 +23.2 DevelopingMktsY39.42+0.18 +23.3 GlbA m 91.43 +0.06 +22.4 IntlGrY 40.80 +0.03 +17.6 MnStrA m 52.09 +0.05 +10.9 Osterweis StrInc 11.39 +0.01 +3.9 PIMCO AlAstAllAthIns 8.92 ... +7.7 AlAstInstl 11.94 ... +8.3 CmdtyRlRtStrIns6.54 ... -5.3 FrgnBdUSDHdgIns10.52 ... +1.2 HYInstl 9.04 +0.01 +5.5 IncA m 12.37 ... +5.4 IncC m 12.37 ... +5.0 IncD b 12.37 ... +5.5 IncInstl 12.37 ... +5.7 IncP 12.37 ... +5.6 InvmGrdCrpBdIns10.56 ... +5.5 LowDrInstl 9.86 +0.01 +1.1 RlEstRlRtStrC m6.57 -0.01 +1.4 RlRetInstl 10.96 ... +1.8 ShrtTrmIns 9.84 -0.01 +1.3 TtlRetA m 10.27 +0.03 +3.8 TtlRetIns 10.27 +0.03 +4.0 PRIMECAP Odyssey AgrsGr 39.81 -0.01 +18.9 Gr 33.47 -0.04 +16.9 Stk 29.45 -0.09 +13.8 Parnassus CorEqInv 42.20 +0.05 +8.0 Principal DiversIntlIns 13.11 +0.04 +19.2 Prudential TtlRetBdZ 14.50 +0.04 +4.6 Putnam EqIncA m 22.73 -0.03 +7.7 MltCpGrY 91.88 +0.28 +18.6 Schwab FdmtlUSLgCIdx16.09 -0.02 +5.6 SP500Idx 38.24 +0.03 +11.1 Schwab1000Idx59.50 +0.03 +11.0 TtlStkMktIdx 43.95 +0.01 +10.6 State Farm Gr 74.99 +0.07 +6.6 T. Rowe Price BlueChipGr 90.03 +0.62 +24.0 CptlAprc 28.85 +0.01 +10.2 DivGr 40.91 +0.01 +10.7 EMBd d 12.68 +0.02 +6.9 EMStk d 39.97 +0.29 +26.2 EqIdx500 d 66.14 +0.04 +11.0 EqInc 33.27 -0.06 +6.6 GlbTech 17.72 +0.13 +34.0 GrStk 65.49 +0.32 +23.0 HY d 6.78 ... +5.1 HlthSci 71.45 -0.05 +20.9 InsLgCpGr 36.20 +0.21 +23.8 InsMdCpEqGr 53.65 ... +16.8 IntlStk d 18.45 +0.03 +20.7 IntlValEq d 14.81 ... +15.6 LatinAmerica d23.60 +0.14 +21.9 MdCpGr 87.52 -0.01 +16.1 MdCpVal 30.31 -0.08 +4.3 NewHorizons 51.85 +0.11 +19.7

Lackluster quarter?

Housing starts

1.2

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

M A 2017

M

J

Source: FactSet

Wall Street expects that Qualcomm’s latest quarterly results declined from a year earlier. Financial analysts predict the chipmaker will report today lower earnings and revenue for its fiscal third quarter. That would be a step back for Qualcomm, which delivered earnings growth and revenue growth in the previous two quarters. Investors will also be listening for an update on Qualcomm’s licensing fee dispute with Apple.

$80

NewInc 9.52 +0.03 OverseasStk d10.73 +0.02 RlEstt d 28.33 -0.05 Rtr2015 15.37 +0.03 Rtr2020 22.44 +0.04 17.24 +0.03 Rtr2025 25.31 +0.04 Rtr2030 Rtr2035 18.45 +0.02 Rtr2040 26.46 +0.04 17.84 +0.02 Rtr2045 Rtr2050 15.00 +0.02 SmCpStk 47.90 -0.16 SmCpVal d 47.21 -0.06 SpectrumInc 12.73 +0.02 SummitMnIntr 11.92 +0.02 Val 36.99 -0.07 TCW TtlRetBdI 10.01 +0.02 TIAA-CREF BdIdxIns 10.87 +0.03 EqIdxIns 18.34 ... IntlEqIdxIns 19.32 +0.01 LgCpValIdxIns 18.95 -0.04 LgCpValIns 18.96 -0.06 Thornburg InvmIncBldrC m20.98 -0.04 LtdTrmMnI 14.45 +0.01 Tweedy, Browne GlbVal d 27.93 -0.04 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 227.37 +0.13 500IdxInv 227.36 +0.14 BalIdxAdmrl 33.11 +0.04 BalIdxIns 33.11 +0.03 CAIntTrmTEAdmrl11.81+0.02 CptlOppAdmrl147.08 -0.13 DevMIdxAdmrl 13.52 +0.02 DevMIdxIns 13.53 +0.02 DivGrInv 25.47 -0.04 EMStkIdxAdmrl35.16 +0.05 EMStkIdxIns 26.73 +0.03 EngyAdmrl 91.40 -0.27 EqIncAdmrl 72.76 -0.02 EqIncInv 34.71 -0.01 ExplorerAdmrl 90.41 -0.13 ExtMktIdxAdmrl78.41 -0.14 ExtMktIdxIns 78.41 -0.14 ExtMktIdxInsPls193.49 -0.36 FAWexUSIAdmr31.79 +0.03 FAWexUSIIns 100.78 +0.10 GNMAAdmrl 10.54 +0.02 GNMAInv 10.54 +0.02 GlbEqInv 29.13 +0.06 GrIdxAdmrl 66.95 +0.22 GrIdxIns 66.95 +0.21 HCAdmrl 89.55 -0.11 HCInv 212.29 -0.26 HYCorpAdmrl 5.97 ... HYTEAdmrl 11.32 +0.03 HiDivYldIdxInv 31.22 -0.01 InTrBdIdxAdmrl11.48 +0.04 InTrInvGrdAdmrl 9.83 +0.02 InTrTEAdmrl 14.19 +0.03 InTrTrsAdmrl 11.22 +0.02 InflPrtScAdmrl 25.78 +0.08 InflPrtScIns 10.50 +0.03 InsIdxIns 224.36 +0.13 InsIdxInsPlus 224.38 +0.14 InsTtlSMIInPls 55.17 +0.01 IntlGrAdmrl 86.48 +0.21 IntlGrInv 27.20 +0.07 IntlValInv 37.04 +0.06 LTInvmGrdAdmrl10.54 +0.07 LTTEAdmrl 11.64 +0.03 LfStrCnsrGrInv 19.45 +0.03 LfStrGrInv 31.71 +0.03 LfStrModGrInv 26.00 +0.03 LgCpIdxAdmrl 56.97 +0.03 LtdTrmTEAdmrl10.99 +0.01 MdCpGrIdxAdmrl51.40 -0.03 MdCpIdxAdmrl179.14 -0.38 MdCpIdxIns 39.57 -0.09 MdCpIdxInsPlus195.17 -0.41 MdCpValIdxAdmrl54.02 -0.18 MorganGrAdmrl89.47 +0.30 PrcMtlsMngInv 10.32 +0.07 PrmCpAdmrl 127.55 -0.10 PrmCpCorInv 25.57 -0.04 PrmCpInv 123.10 -0.09 REITIdxAdmrl 118.50 -0.18 REITIdxIns 18.34 -0.03 STBdIdxAdmrl 10.48 +0.01 STBdIdxIns 10.48 +0.01 STBdIdxInsPlus10.48 +0.01 STFederalAdmrl10.70 ... STInfPrScIdAdmr24.71+0.02 STInfPrScIdIns 24.72 +0.02 STInfPrScIdxInv24.69 +0.02 STInvmGrdAdmrl10.70 +0.01 STInvmGrdIns 10.70 +0.01 STInvmGrdInv 10.70 +0.01 STTEAdmrl 15.80 ... STTrsAdmrl 10.64 ... SeledValInv 31.43 -0.08 SmCpGrIdxAdmrl51.89 -0.05 SmCpIdxAdmrl 65.63 -0.15 SmCpIdxIns 65.62 -0.15 SmCpIdxInsPlus189.42 -0.43 SmCpValIdxAdmrl53.27-0.18 StarInv 26.13 +0.04 StrEqInv 34.36 -0.19 TrgtRtr2010Inv 26.63 +0.04 TrgtRtr2015Inv 15.50 +0.03 TrgtRtr2020Inv 30.58 +0.04 TrgtRtr2025Inv 17.86 +0.03 TrgtRtr2030Inv 32.15 +0.04 TrgtRtr2035Inv 19.68 +0.02 TrgtRtr2040Inv 33.77 +0.02 TrgtRtr2045Inv 21.18 +0.01 TrgtRtr2050Inv 34.07 +0.02 TrgtRtr2055Inv 36.89 +0.03 TrgtRtrIncInv 13.35 +0.02 TtBMIdxAdmrl 10.80 +0.03 TtBMIdxIns 10.80 +0.03 TtBMIdxInsPlus10.80 +0.03 TtBMIdxInv 10.80 +0.03 TtInBIdxAdmrl 21.70 +0.03 TtInBIdxIns 32.57 +0.05 TtInBIdxInv 10.85 +0.01 TtInSIdxAdmrl 28.54 +0.04 TtInSIdxIns 114.12 +0.16 TtInSIdxInsPlus114.14 +0.16 TtInSIdxInv 17.06 +0.02 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 61.48 +0.02 TtlSMIdxIns 61.49 +0.02 TtlSMIdxInv 61.45 +0.01 TxMgCptlAprAdmr126.07+0.05 TxMgSmCpAdmrl56.75 -0.21 ValIdxAdmrl 37.98 -0.06 ValIdxIns 37.98 -0.06 WlngtnAdmrl 71.26 ... WlngtnInv 41.26 ... WlslyIncAdmrl 64.04 +0.12 WlslyIncInv 26.44 +0.05 WndsrAdmrl 75.76 -0.19 WndsrIIAdmrl 66.90 -0.17 WndsrIIInv 37.70 -0.10 WndsrInv 22.46 -0.06 Victory SycmrEstbValI 38.45 -0.14 Virtus VontobelEMOppI11.36 -0.01 Waddell & Reed Adv AcculativeA m 10.15 -0.01 SciandTechA m16.50 +0.12 Western Asset CorBdI 12.58 ... CorPlusBdI 11.83 ... CorPlusBdIS 11.82 ... iShares S&P500IdxK 293.65 +0.18

+2.6 +2.7 +10.5 +16.7 +5.2 +4.9 +7.1 +2.7 +11.5 +11.1 +11.0 +7.4 +7.4 +3.9 +18.4 +17.0 +16.9 +10.4 +19.0 +19.0 -9.2 +7.8 +7.8 +12.5 +8.4 +8.5 +8.4 +17.4 +17.4 +1.4 +1.4 +17.4 +17.5 +17.5 +18.1 +18.1 +5.5 +5.0 +5.7 +3.6 +3.6 +3.7 +2.2 +1.4 +1.4 +11.1 +11.1 +10.6 +28.4 +28.4 +16.7 +7.2 +4.3 +6.4 +11.0 +8.7 +11.3 +2.3 +13.4 +10.7 +10.7 +10.7 +8.3 +18.6 +9.8 +17.2 +15.3 +17.2 +3.1 +3.1 +1.4 +1.4 +1.4 +0.9 +0.3 +0.3 +0.2 +1.9 +1.9 +1.8 +1.1 +0.6 +9.2 +11.3 +6.8 +6.8 +6.8 +3.3 +11.1 +6.1 +5.1 +6.8 +8.2 +9.2 +10.1 +10.9 +11.8 +12.1 +12.1 +12.1 +5.1 +2.8 +2.8 +2.8 +2.7 +0.6 +0.7 +0.6 +17.5 +17.5 +17.5 +17.4 +10.6 +10.6 +10.6 +11.4 +3.4 +6.1 +6.1 +7.0 +7.0 +5.3 +5.2 +10.3 +8.4 +8.3 +10.3 +6.8 +26.0 +9.6 +21.0 +3.4 +5.2 +5.2 +11.1

$56.29

QCOM $57.10

’17

Operating EPS

$1.16

est. $0.81

Q3 ’16

Q3 ’17

70

+3.1 +18.3 +0.5 +8.4 +9.9 +11.2 +12.3 +13.3 +14.0 +14.2 +14.2 +6.6 +4.6 +4.6 +3.4 +9.9

60 50

Price-earnings ratio: 32 based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $1.56 Div yield: 2.1 % Source: FactSet


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • 9A

Community Events (Editor’s note: We recommend Community Events be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event.) Â

Family reunion Descendants of John Mecinas Burcham are having a reunion Saturday at the Jacinto Community Center. John Mecinas, born Feb. 16, 1840, was the third of 10 children of Henry and Nancy Jamison Searcy Burcham and the grandson of Levi Henry and Ann Wyatt Burcham. The Burcham family moved from Hickman County, Tenn., to the Holts Spur community of old Tishomingo County around 1843. John Mecinas and Mary Ann Childers married in 1871 and were the parents of five children: Louisa Burcham Borden Miller, Isaac Greenberry Burcham, Nancy Ellen Burcham Pollard, Washington Andrew Burcham and Robert Jefferson Burcham. Except for Greenberry, all lived in the north Altitude area of Prentiss County. Greenberry would marry and raise his family in the Farmington area of Alcorn County. If you are a descendant of any of these families, you are cordially invited to come catch up with your long-lost cousins. Lunch will be catered, but feel free to bring something if you want to. Old family pictures and stories are also welcomed. For more information, contact Marsha Holder at 662.462.5166. Â

School registration First Baptist School is still taking registrations for its Preschool and Kindergarten for the upcoming school year. There are a few spots left in the classes for 3 year olds, 4 year olds and Kindergarten students. The school provides an academically challenging education while at the same time teaching biblical principles and teaching the children about the saving love of Jesus. The school is a halfday program, but does offer an extended day three days a week. The school is licensed by the Mississippi Department of Health. For more information call school director Jackie Huskey at 662-286-2208. Â

child as soon as possible. The following documents are needed: child’s Social Security card, child’s certified birth certificate, child’s Mississippi immunization Form 121 and two proofs of residency. The child needs to be present at the time of registration to take a short new student assessment. For more information, contact the school office at 662286-5245. Â

Cruise-In The Magnolia Car Club will begin its Cruise-In at Arby’s restaurant in Corinth from 1-4 p.m. on the fourth Sunday of every month now through September. Registration is $5. All participants will be entered into a drawing at the end of each Cruise-In to win $20. For more information, call 662-415-2582 or visit magnoliacarclub.net. Â

Healthy Pregnancy Class Oasis Medical Center will host a Healthy Pregnancy Class for women in their first few months of pregnancy. It will be held the at 10:30 a.m. on the first Wednesday of every month and at 3:30 p.m. on the third Wednesday of the month. The class will last for one hour. Interested women should go to the center and fill out a registration form. For more information, contact Kelly Rinehart at 662-287-8001 Â

Reiselt at 662-415-1042 or Cindy Johnson at 662415-4647. Â

Pickin’ on the Square The guest for Thursday, July 20, will be the Hatchie Bottom Boys for the Courthouse Pickin’ on the Square. Pickin’ on the Square is a free community event. Bring a lawn chair to downtown Corinth at the Alcorn County Courthouse and enjoy some of the best bluegrass music the area has to offer. The event begins at dusk. Â

Karaoke and Kickball We Are Corinth will have karaoke (for teens and adults) at Easom Courtyard on Thursday, July 20, at the Easom Courtyard. There will be kickball on Friday, July 21, beginning at 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at Easom. There will be cokes and hotdogs. There will also be kickball on Friday, July 28, from 7 until 8:30 p.m at Easom. There will be cokes and hotdogs. Â

Duffel Bag Workshop There will be Duffel Bag Workshop on Thursdays July 20, 27, and Aug. 3 from 5 – 7 p.m. at the Alcorn County Extension Office. Registration fee is $5. Sewing machines will be provided. Please call or come to

the Extension Office at 2200 Levee Road in Corinth to register. Call 662-286-7756 for more information. Â

Art Exhibits • The Corinth Artist Guild Gallery is hosting a memorial exhibition of works by Bruce Bigelow of Tupelo through July 29. He was a commercial artist who served a number of furniture manufacturers and operated the Sundown Studio near Tupelo. Bigelow was a past first-place winner in a competition at the Corinth Gallery. • The gallery is also hosting an exhibit of work produced by children ages 7 to 13 who participated in the summer art camp. Matted prints and note cards made from the images are available. The exhibit runs through Aug. 11 at 609 North Fillmore. Hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday. Contact the gallery at 665-0520 for more information. Â

Clothing Give-Away

Free Dance Beginning July 25, at the Corinth VFW, located

798 S Cass Street S CORINTH

Corinth High School Class of 1977 will meet at Shiloh Ridge Golf Course at 2 p.m. today. Please help plan the 40-year reunion which will be in September. For questions call Doug

Corinth Theatre-Arts will present Spamalot on two weekends at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday, Aug. 4-5 and Aug. 11-12 and at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 6 and Aug. 13 at the Crossroads Playhouse. Winner of the Tony Award for Best Musical in 2004-05, it’s a musical comedy take from the 1975 film, Monty Python and the Holy Grail. Adult tickets are $15 and students, $10. Season tickets for seven performance visits are also available for $75. Purchase tickets at CT-A or go to corinththeatrearts. com. Call 662-287-2995 for more information. Â

Virginia Trip The Selmer Senior Center will make a trip to Virginia Beach, Colonial Williamsburg and Historic Norfolk on Oct. 15-21. Double occupancy is $749 per person. $100 deposit is due at time of signing. Final balance will be due by Aug. 8. Sign up now to reserve your seat before the deadline of Aug. 8. For more information, contact Rowena at 731-645-7843. Jaye Smith, RMT #67 Krisy Evans, RMT #136

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CES registration Registration at Corinth Elementary School for the 2017-18 school year is ongoing for all grades with an emphasis on registering incoming PreKindergarten and Kindergarten students. Please register your

Spamalot at CT-A

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Street Address City, State Zip 000-000-0000 Mon.-Fri. 7:00-7:00

begins at 8 a.m. with a one-hour break for attendees to eat lunch at a place of their choice. This class is free but everyone must pre-register by going online at mdwfp.com. Â

Phone: 662-284-9880 1908 Proper Street Corinth, MS 38834

CASS C A S S STREET, S T R E E T CCORINTH, ORINTH M MSS 704 South Cass Street Corinth ,MS 38834 Phone: 662-287-5151 Hours:Monday- Friday 10am-5pm www.plunkscomputers.com

Oakland Baptist Church in Corinth will host a Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks Hunter’s Education Class on Saturday, Aug. 5. The class is for anyone 10 years of age and older. This 10-hour course

662-665-0753

Southgate Shopping Center Plunk’s Computers

There will be Private Applicator Training held at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, July 25 at the MSU Extension Service office in Alcorn County. This training is for farmers who need their private applicator certificate. The cost is $20. If you need additional information or would like to attend, please call the Alcorn County Extension service at 662-286-7755. Â

HAVE YOUR OWN RELAXATION VACATION!

We can get your planns across the finish linee!

CHS Class of 1977

Private Applicator Training

Hunter’s Safety Class

There will be free clothes and shoes given away from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday, July 22 at Holly Baptist Church located at 172 CR 713, Corinth. Â

Race into your Spring Fling!

on Purdy School Road, there will be a free dance from 7 until 11 p.m. every Tuesday evening. The dance is hosted by Tubby Aldridge, who used to host dances at the Lazy L in Alcorn County. He has obtained one of the best DJ’s he can find, DJ Randy, whom he knew from the Lazy L. Tubby has lung cancer and wants to do something good before his time comes to an end. He asks all his old friends to load up and come out, have a good time, visit with him and make some new friends. Â

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10A • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

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Goldbergs Speechless Modern Housewife Modern Goldbergs Local 24 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel Family Family News Live Big Brother (N) Salvation (N) Criminal Minds News Ch. 3 Late Show-Colbert In the Kitchen With David “PM Edition” (N) Big Brother (N) Salvation (N)

11:30 (:37) Nightline James Corden

Best Dressed Loungewear News Late Show-Colbert James Corden Little Big Shots: ForCarmichael Carmichael This Is Us “The Trip” News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyever Young (N) ers Arrow Felicity faces a DC’s Legends of ToCW30 News at 9 (N) Simpsons Family Guy Modern Modern new threat. morrow Family Family Goldbergs Speechless Modern Housewife Modern Goldbergs News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightFamily Family 10pm Live line Little Big Shots: ForCarmichael Carmichael This Is Us “The Trip” News at Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyever Young (N) Ten ers Big Pacific Filming wild- Nature’s Great Race NOVA “Life’s Rocky KeepWaiting for Tavis NHK Newslife. (N) “Caribou” (N) Start” Appear God Smiley line Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Criminal Minds

Big Pacific Filming wild- Nature’s Great Race NOVA “Life’s Rocky Tales, Pal- Charlie Rose (N) World life. (N) “Caribou” (N) Start” aces News MasterChef (N) The F Word With Gor- Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 (:35) TMZ (:05) Dish Ac. Holdon Ramsay (N) News (N) Nation lywood Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Arrow Felicity faces a DC’s Legends of ToPIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends new threat. morrow } ›› Constantine (05, Fantasy) Keanu Reeves, (:05) } ››› Deadpool (16, Action) Ryan Reyn(10:55) } ›› Eraser Rachel Weisz. olds, Morena Baccarin. (96, Action) } ›› Snowden Former CIA employee Edward (:15) } ››› Primal Fear Richard Gere. A high-profile murder } HallowSnowden leaks classified info. intrigues a publicity-hungry lawyer. een } ›› Independence Day: Resurgence (16) Liam Game of Thrones “Drag- Pharmacy (:45) } ››› Friday (95) Ice Cube, onstone” Hemsworth, Jeff Goldblum. Chris Tucker. Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV (6:00) MLB Baseball: St. Louis Cardinals at New MLB Baseball: Washington Nationals at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. From Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, Calif. York Mets. (N) (Live) Lip Sync (5:30) } ›› The Day After Tomor- Lip Sync } ›› The Day After Tomorrow (04) Global warming leads to Battle (N) Battle (N) worldwide natural disasters. row (04) Dennis Quaid. Law & Order: Special Suits “The Statue” (N) Modern Modern Modern Modern (:01) Suits “The Statue” Victims Unit Family Family Family Family Thunder Nicky Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Alaskan Bush People: Alaskan Bush People (:01) Homestead Res- (:02) Alaskan Bush (:03) Homestead Rescue Off the Grid (N) “Episode 28” cue (N) People Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Wars Wars Wars (N) Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars BIG3 Basketball Three-on-three basketball featuring former NBA greats and World Poker Tour Preds In the Spotplayers. (N) Snapshot light } ››› Hitch (05) Will Smith, Eva Mendes. To Be Announced (:15) Martin Property Brothers Property Brothers -House Hunters Listed Sisters (N) Property Brothers -Buying & Selling Hunters Int’l Buying & Selling Hollywood Medium Hollywood Medium Hollywood Medium E! News “Today’s Top Stories” (N) American Pickers American Pickers: Bo- (:03) Amelia Earhart: The Lost Evidence: En(:05) American Pickers nus Buys (N) hanced Edition International Champions Cup 2017 Final Table Prev. Arm Wrestling SportsCenter (N) I Am Jazz: More I Am Jazz “Dating in the (:03) Hair Goddess (N) (:06) I Am Jazz (:06) Hair Goddess Jazz (N) Dark” (N) To Be Announced To Be Announced Cooks vs. Cons “High Cooks vs. Cons “Patty To Be Announced Steaks” (N) Meltdown” Bonanza Walker, Ranger The Virginian “The Stranger” The Virginian Little Women: LA The Little Women: LA (N) (:02) } › What Happens in Vegas (08) Cameron (:02) Little Women: LA ladies reunite. Diaz, Ashton Kutcher. John Turning Prince S. Fur Livg BlessLife John Drive Think Duplantis } ››› Twister (96) Helen Hunt. Storm chasers race to test a } ››› Avatar Sam Worthington. A former Marine falls in love new tornado-monitoring device. with a native of a lush alien world. 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M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Younger Raymond King King King King Gold Cup Gold Cup 2017 CONCACAF Gold Cup MLB Whiparound NASCAR The Strain “The Worm (6:30) } ››› Guardians of the Galaxy (14) Chris Snowfall “Slow Hand” (N) Snowfall “Slow Hand” Turns” Pratt, Zoe Saldana. Sh US Im Shootout Rifleman Shooting USA Holly Gunny Stories Sh US Im Shootout 2017 Tour de France: Stage 17. Xtreme Engine Tour de France Queen Sugar Queen Sugar Queen Sugar (N) Queen Sugar Queen Sugar Tucker Carlson The Five (N) Hannity (N) Tucker Carlson The Five Pit Bulls-Parole Animal Cops Animal Cops Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole The Mistletoe Promise Two strangers pretend to be The Middle The Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden a couple for the holidays. Girls Girls Girls Girls Stuck/ Andi Mack Descendants A teenage king must deal with the L&M:Cali L&M:Cali Stuck/ Andi Mack Middle offspring of numerous villains. Style Style Middle Blood Drive “Booby (6:00) } ››› Gladiator (00, Historical Drama) (9:58) } › The Legend of Hercules (14, AdvenTraps” (N) Russell Crowe, Joaquin Phoenix. ture) Kellan Lutz, Scott Adkins.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Check out our Back to School special section coming up Sunday in the Daily Corinthian.

Aunt seeks the right approach to niece in need of guidance Abigail Van Buren Dear Abby

D E A R ABBY: I am concerned about my niece. She’s 18 and a senior in high school. Her father -- my younger brother -- is incarcerated and has been for 13

years. Our families have been alienated, but I’m trying to reach out to my niece. Although she has been hesitant to get close, we’ve had a couple of face-toface visits during the past year. She is needy for family, and I know her mother has been overwhelmed having had to raise her on her own. Long story short, my niece has been dating -- for the second time -- a man her father’s age. She lives a few hours away, so most of what I see is on social media. I don’t understand how this man thinks it’s OK. My niece looks like she’s only 13. It makes me cringe, yet I feel this isn’t my business or within my power to change. You can tell me this is none of my business and I should just walk away, but my niece

is vulnerable and I’m worried about her. -- WORRIED AUNT IN TEXAS DEAR WORRIED AUNT: Your niece may be vulnerable in your opinion, but she is also 18. She may have father issues that need to be ironed out, but considering the man has been absent since she was 5, that’s not surprising. I agree that this isn’t within your power to change. My advice is to be there for her when she will allow it, be as supportive as you can, resist the urge to try to fill a parental role and do a lot of listening. DEAR ABBY: I am 64. When I was an insecure 15-year-old, I liked showing off for my two best friends. We often made fun of other kids behind their backs. With them, my smart mouth got me the attention I craved. One day I slipped up and whispered something too loudly. The girl heard what I said about her, and the stricken look on her face told me how much it hurt. I looked for her at our 20th reunion wanting to apologize, but she was absent. I wish I could take back what I said, but I can’t. However, I have spent the last 49 years trying to be kind to others to make up for it.

If there are people who read your column who remember a stinging remark that was aimed at them, please let them know that some of us regret it very much. I hope they find forgiveness so they can be free of bitterness and hurt. I am truly sorry. -- MISS SMART MOUTH IN OKLAHOMA DEAR MISS SMART MOUTH: I’m glad you wrote because I’m sure more than one reader has been the target of unkind remarks at one time or another, and even may have made a few themselves. An apology to your classmate was definitely in order, even if 20 years late. Too bad the woman wasn’t around to hear it. I’ll share something with you a trial lawyer once told me. He said, “You can’t unring the bell.” What he meant by it was that a judge can instruct a jury to “disregard that statement,” but once something is out there, it’s very hard to erase from memory. The context may be different, but it applies to relationships, too. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). You are fighting a nagging feeling that you should be doing something more important with your time. That feeling is not a lie. If you accept it instead of fight it, you’ll get onto something more worthwhile. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Much will be said and not meant. More will be meant and not said. If you’re not feeling your way through the relationship, you’ll get lost pretty quickly. Close your eyes. Cover your ears. Listen with your heart. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Whether or not you’re really in control of your situation could be debated from here to eternity, but that would rob you of the chance to experience (maybe even enjoy) what’s going on regardless of your level of control over it. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Distraction is the death of meaning. Don’t fill the hours with amusement, because it will only rob you of the chance to find your real purpose in the situation. Dig deeper.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Most days you follow the rules, but sometimes you feel bigger than society -- like you can do your thing without getting boxed in by other people’s expectations. For the rest of this week you may swing from one extreme to another. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The passive approach would work if you were on a raft floating down a river with its own agenda. But you’re not. You’re standing on the path that splits into many possible directions, and you have to decide which way to walk. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). People tend to admire the different talents of those who excel in fields foreign to them and tend to have grudges against those who excel in their own fields, regarding them as competitors. Don’t waste time on jealousy. Learn the tricks. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Why is your stomach so wise? It is unencumbered by thought. It just knows. Your stomach processes life in terms of “use” and

“waste.” Turn your difficult questions to your stomach, and accept its simple yes-or-no answer. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). The believer is usually happier than the doubter, proving that wisdom and happiness often have very little to do with one another. But there’s a peace that comes with wisdom, and that should count for something today. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Beware of the life equivalent of soda pop and candy. You need real sustenance. Seek nutritive experiences. Avoid things that are filled to the brim and yet still unfulfilling. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Who might you be now if you’d taken that turn you missed back there? Well, the option is coming up again. Take it, and you’ll know a different version of yourself soon enough. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). As for this real life story you’re living, there’s a lot of exposition to get through today. One boring chapter doesn’t discount the value of the whole adventure.


NEXT UP...

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • 11A

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES

XFINITY SERIES

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES

Race: Brickyard 400 Where: Indianapolis Motor Speedway When: Sunday, 2:30 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC 2016 Winner: Kyle Busch (right)

Race: Lilly Diabetes 250 Where: Indianapolis Motor Speedway When: Saturday, 3:30 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC Sports Network 2016 Winner: Kyle Busch

Race: Eldora Dirt Derby Where: Eldora Speedway When: July 19, 9:30 p.m. (ET) TV: Fox Business 2016 Winner: Kyle Larson

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12A • Daily Corinthian

New Photo Feature

Sports

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Braves face season with fresh hope BY KENT MOHUNDRO kmohundro@dailycorinthian.com

A new feature has arrived here at the Daily Corinthian sports department, and we want you to be part of it. It’s called “At Play in the Crossroads.” We’re encouraging you to snap photos of kids, as well as adults, playing sports and send them to us here for publication. Photos need to be of good quality, and you will need to identify the individuals in the photo. We’ll also need to know where it was taken and who snapped it. Photos can be submitted from anywhere in the Daily Corinthian coverage area and should be tagged with “At Play in the Crossroads” when being emailed to kmohundro@dailycorinthian.com. As they begin to arrive, we will begin publishing them in the sports section. This feature belongs to you and should be fun and entertaining as we seek to highlight as many faces as possible of people “At Play in the Crossroads.”

Local Schedule HS Football Thursday, Aug. 10 Corinth will hold an intrasquad scrimmage and Meet The Warriors at Warrior Stadium II, 6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 11 — Jamborees Alcorn Central @ Biggersville, 7 Kossuth @ Pontotoc, 7 Booneville @ Hatley, 7 Tishomingo Co. @ Itawamba AHS, 7 McNairy Central @ Hardin Co., 7 Friday, Aug. 18 — Opening Week Corinth @ Shannon, 7 Tishomingo Co. @ Alcorn Central, 7 Middleton (Tenn.) @ Biggersville, 7 Independence @ Kossuth, 7 Ashland @ Walnut, 7 New Site @ Thrasher, 7 Mooreville @ Booneville, 7 Freedom Prep @ McNairy Central, 7

Shorts ■ Corinth junior golfers ages 11-18 are invited to compete in the AJGT Blue harbor Point Stroke Play championship at Beau Chene Golf Club in Mandeville, Louisiana, July 22-23. The two-day, 36-hole tournament is ranked by the Junior Golf Scoreboard and hosted by the Arrowhead Junior Golf Tour. Tournament fee is $195 and includes two days of green fees, tee gifts and trophies in four age divisions. Registration deadline is 3 p.m. today; to enter, contact Diane Ford at 985-630-3066 or enter online at www.arrowheadjgt.com. Recommended accommodations are available at Country Inn & Suites in Covington, Louisiana; call 985-809-0467 for reservations and group rates. ■ Ramer City Park will conduct fall soccer sign-ups beginning July 22 at the park concession stand from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. for four consecutive Saturdays. The “early bird” sign-up special is on July 22 with the registration fee of $30 per child. The three successive Saturdays — July 29, Aug. 5 and Aug. 12 — the fee will be $40 per child. Multi-child discounts of $10 for each additional child will be available. The league is open for ages 2-14 with a birthday cutoff of Sept. 1. Teams will be coed. For more information, contact Elizabeth Cooper (731-610-6063) or Tom Court (731-610-5750) or by email at ramersports@yahoo.com or on facebook at Ramer Soccer League. ■ A ladies’ football forum will be held Saturday, Aug. 5, at Tishomingo County High School. Ladies who are curious about football and want to learn more about the game, the school, the coaches and want to help support the athletic program then are encouraged to attend. Registration will be from 9-9:30 a.m. in the football field end zone closest to the fieldhouse. Participants will receive a group number and T-shirt at registration. The fee is $40 and can be mailed to Lauren Thompson, 73 CR 178, Iuka, MS 38852; pick up can be arranged by contacting Thompson at 662-574-8236 or Ginger Pannell at 662-424-2607. For more information, contact Thompson at Lauren22Thompson@gmail.com. ■ The Booneville Kiwanis Club will host its fifth annual Back To School 5K Glow Run at 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 11, at Booneville City Park. There will be an overall male and female winner along with first-, second- and third-place winners in each age group — 0-10, 11-15, 16-20, 21-25 etc. Registration prior to the event is $10 for ages 10 and under or $20 for those over 10. Race night registra-

Please see SHORTS | 13A

Tishomingo County football fans are anxious for the 2017 season to kick off and there’s a legitimate reason. The Braves enter the upcoming campaign coming off their second straight 3-8 campaign, but harbor positive feelings about their new coach and their new system. New head coach Ray Weeks takes over a program hungry for a winning season and maybe even their first playoff appearance in several years. Weeks is not a magician and realizes it will take some time to get the program where it desires to be, but he’s confident TCHS can be a playoff team this season if a couple of things happen. “The kids have bought in and have worked extremely hard this spring and summer,” Weeks said. “If they go out on that field every week believing they can win instead of just hoping then yes I believe the playoffs are a possibility. “We also need to win key games on our schedule to continue and build that belief.” That will begin with a trip to Alcorn Central in Week 1. Before we preview this season’s schedule let’s take a brief look back at what happened last season. In what has become a recent routine Tishomingo County won its first three games against Mantachie (28-6), Alcorn Central (28-0) and Belmont (52-20) before dropping games at Kossuth (56-20) and Caledonia (49-6) with a home loss to Booneville (33-14) sandwiched between. Then came the Division 1-4A schedule where the Braves couldn’t buy a win although they had their chances. It began with a 28-12 home loss to Shannon where they were in it until a bad break late in the game cost them. A road trip to Corinth came next, and it was same song different verse. The Warriors won 21-12, but TCHS had several opportunities to record a victory.

Photo by Kent Mohundro

New Tishomingo County head coach Ray Weeks and the Braves kick off the 2017 season at Alcorn Central looking for a win and a positive start. Their hopes will likely rest on how they fare in Division 1-4A play. Then came “murderers’ row” with lop-sided losses to Pontotoc, Amory and Itawamba AHS. Another 3-8 season where TCHS faded after winning a few games early on left fans, coaches and players saying “Wait ‘til next year.” Well, next year is here and there is fresh hope in Braves country. Weeks has been successful everywhere he’s coached, including an 11-year run at Hamilton. He employs the triple-option offense with several variances, which is extremely difficult to defend at any level if run properly. It will likely take the Braves a few games to iron out the wrinkles, but Weeks believes he has the athletes to be effective on both sides of the ball. The Braves will have a chance to begin the 2017 season on a positive note with that afore-

mentioned week one contest at Alcorn Central. The Bears’ defense is geared to stop the run so it will be interesting to see how this game plays out. Central finished last season 3-8, but its record doesn’t indicate its improvement from Week 1 through Week 11. Tishomingo County will open its home slate Week 2 by hosting McNairy Central. The Bobcats were 5-5 last season with one of those wins coming on a forfeit against Chester County. This will be a border-rival contest and should be entertaining. The Braves will travel to Belmont for a Week 3 matchup. The Cardinals made the playoffs last season despite winning only three games including the finale against Alcorn Central. Two-time defending 1-3A champion Kossuth invades Iuka for a Week 4 showdown. The Aggies finished 11-2 last

season and advanced to the second round of the playoffs. They eased past Tishomingo County 56-20 last season at home. It won’t be any easier for the Braves in Week 5 as they travel to Booneville. The Blue Devils finished 7-4 last season with a first round playoff loss to Independence. They will be among the division favorites this fall. Weeks’ squad will have a golden opportunity for a win in Week 6 when it hosts Holly Springs. The Hawks were 1-10 in 2016 with a majority of those losses coming in blowout fashion. New Division 1-4A resident Ripley will pay TishomingoCounty a visit in Week 7 after posting a 6-5 record last season in Division 2-4A. They registered impressive wins against the likes of North Pontotoc and Senatobia. The Tigers were eliminated from the playoffs in the first round 43-0 by Pontotoc. The Braves will travel to Corinth for the second straight season in Week 8, hoping to reverse the outcome of last years’ game. The Warriors were 4-7 in 2016, but should be muchimproved themselves this season. Tishomingo County will play two of its final three games at home featuring matchups against new division entries New Albany (5-7 last year with a first-round playoff exit) and Byhalia (2-8 in 2016). A Week 10 trip to new Division 1-4A foe Senatobia rounds out the 2017 schedule. The Warriors were highly successful last season producing an 8-4 record including and a narrow second-round playoff loss at perrenial power Noxubee County (24-21). The 2017 season has a chance to be a good one for Tishomingo County, but the Braves will have to win a couple of division games for a chance at a playoff berth. Weeks believes it can be done. So do the players. Will they get it done? We’ll find out in a few weeks.

Myles added to Wuerffel Trophy Watch List Mississippi State Sports Information

STARKVILLE — Mississippi State senior wide receiver and Starkville native Gabe Myles has been added to the preseason watch list for the Wuerffel Trophy, presented to college football’s top community servant. Myles is entering his fourth season with the Bulldogs, and has played in 36 games with sevens starts in that time. He has been named to the SEC Academic Honor Roll three times. Myles has logged countless hours of community service, including participating in the Read Across America program, a nation wide reading celebration that takes place annually on March 2. He is also a member of the Phi Beta Sigma fraternity, a social/ service and professional fraternity on campus. He is one of 108 players in the nation named to the watch list. The award is presented annually by the All Sports Association in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Semifinalists for the award will be announced on Nov. 2, while finalists will be unveiled Nov. 22. The winner will be announced on Dec. 5. Myles was also nominated to the Allstate AFCA Good Works Team. The winners of the Wuerffel award will be announced in September. Once announced, fans will be able to vote for the 2017 Allstate AFCA Good Works Team Captain on ESPN.com

Photo courtesy MSU sports information

Mississippi State wide receiver Gabe Myles has been named to the Wuerffel Award watch list for 2017.

Cowboys still exploring latest Elliott incident The Associated Press

FRISCO, Texas — Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Tuesday the team is still gathering details over Ezekiel Elliott’s involvement in an altercation at a Dallas bar, the latest off-field incident for the star running back. Elliott, who was already facing a potential suspension over the NFL’s investigation of a year-old domestic case, was involved in a dispute Sunday night that led to a man getting punched in the nose and being taken to a hospital. Dallas police said the 30-year-old man didn’t know who punched him, and the report does not mention Elliott. Dallas police also are investigating the incident. Jones said he didn’t want to speculate about a possible suspension. An NFL spokesman said the league is look-

ing into the latest incident “to understand the facts.” One of Elliott’s representatives didn’t return a message seeking comment. Authorities in Columbus, Ohio, declined to prosecute the former Ohio State star over a domestic dispute with his ex-girlfriend before Elliott’s first training camp with the Cowboys last year. But the NFL’s investigation continued , and the league hasn’t cleared Elliott. Elliott also drew unwanted attention last season when he visited a legal marijuana shop before a preseason game in Seattle. Last spring, he pulled down a woman’s shirt during a St. Patrick’s Day parade. The 21-year-old Elliott, who led the NFL in rushing as a rookie and helped the Cowboys to the top seed in the NFC playoffs with a 13-3 record, can get suspended

without any convictions, although the now-mandatory six-game ban without pay for a domestic incident is unlikely without legal involvement. “Because of his style, personality, (he’s) like a rock star wherever he goes in terms of attention,” Jones said. “Certainly Zeke is evolving and being subject to needing to learn how to deal with the media and social media the way it is today.” Jones said he had discussed Elliott’s latest incident with the running back but declined to provide details. Elliott said during the offseason program that he was going out less while understanding more the scrutiny he faces. But now he’s had another incident. “Like all of us, we do good some days and don’t do good the others,” Jones said. “That’s not to be confused

with tolerating bad behavior or illegal behavior. That’s not what I’m talking about. I’m talking about just learning that your every move will be scrutinized and how in this day and time it will be looked at from many vantage points.” Elliott was a star before the Cowboys drafted him fourth overall last year, having led Ohio State the first championship in the four-team playoff. He ran for an Ohio State bowl-record 246 yards and four touchdowns in the title game on his future home field in the NFL. With 1,631 yards rushing last season, Elliott powered the Dallas offense alongside fellow rookie sensation Dak Prescott, who took now-retired Tony Romo’s job with the best debut season for a quarterback in franchise history.


Scoreboard

13A • Daily Corinthian

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High Games: Dennis Patterson, 279; Mark Suffling, 256; Jamie Fowler, 242; Bud Brooks, 228; Clay Young, 223; Steve Alexander, 220; Dustin Howie, 200.

SHORTS ute Golf Tournament at Shiloh Ridge on Friday, tion will be $15 for 10 Aug. 11 with registration and under and $25 for and lunch at 11:30 a.m. those over 10. You can with a shotgun start at register at https://rac1 p.m. The cost is $75 esonline.com/events/ per person or $300 per back-to-school-5k-glow team. Sponsorships are or call (662) 663-0308 also available at three for more information. All levels: hole sponsors are participants will receive $250, hole sponsorship a Kiwanis logo water plus team are $375 or bottle and two glow corporate sponsorship sticks to wear throughfor $1,250. For more inout the run. Participants formation, contact Scott are encouraged to bring Nicholson at (662) 891their own glow sticks. 1100 or at snicholson@ The Booneville Kiwanis fca.org. Club is an IRS desig■ Shiloh Ridge will host nated non-profit organi- the fifth annual Corinth zation and funds raised Professionals Golf Scramfrom this event will help ble on Thursday, Aug. 17. the Booneville Kiwanis This is a joint event of Club with its community the Corinth Alliance and service programs. Corinth Professionals. ■ The first annual golf Registration is at 12:30 tournament for Havis’ p.m. Shotgun start is 1 Kids that was rained p.m. The fee for the fourout in June has been person scramble is $50 re-scheduled for Friday, per person or $200 per Aug. 11 at Big Oaks team and includes the Golf Course in Saltillo. 18-hole scramble, carts Registration is at 8 a.m. and green fees, plus with a shotgun start at prizes and food by Gilm9 a.m. The fee for the ore’s. There will also be four-person scramble fun and prizes for the winis $400. There will be ning team, the closest-toprize money along with the-pin, longest drive and food and drinks. Havis’ attendance. Registration Kids is a non-profit can be emailed, faxed or organization started in mailed to The Alliance, 2011 and raises money 502 Wick St., Corinth, MS for local families with 38834. For more informaspecial needs children tion, contact Virginia-Boyd in Northeast Mississippi James at (662) 287to take them to Disney 5269 or at virginiaboyd@ World. Parents volunteer corinthalliance.com. to provide these chil(If you have an item dren with an enjoyable for Sports Shorts, please Disney vacation. For email it to sports editor more information about Kent Mohundro at kmothe tournament, call hundro@dailycorinthian. (662) 871-8994 or (662) com or drop it by or mail 397-5374. it to Daily Corinthian, In addition, Havis’ 1607 South Harper Rd., Kids is sponsoring a Corinth, MS 38834.) Disney ticket drawing fundraiser. Tickets can be purchased for $25 each or five for $100. To claim the trip, the winner must present the winning ticket to Havis Hurley on May 6, 2018. The Disney ticket is good for a family of four and must be used the week of Oct. 7-13, BUY 1 - GET 1 2018; it includes a five-day premium park hopper or a four-day preOn Alcoholic Beverages mium park-hopper with Mon, Thurs, Sat one two-park ticket to Sundays After 1pm Universal and six nights at Disney’s All-Star (72 E. Location Only) Sports Resort. For more information, including the list of ticket sellers, contact Hurley at (662) Mi Toro #1: 101 Hwy. 72 643-3561. ■ Modern Woodmen Fraternal Financial and FCA present the third annual Dennis Shirley TribCONTINUED FROM 12A

Baseball AL STANDINGS East Division W L Pct GB Boston 52 42 .553 — Tampa Bay 50 44 .532 2 New York 47 44 .516 3½ Toronto 43 49 .467 8 Baltimore 43 49 .467 8 Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 48 43 .527 — Minnesota 47 45 .511 1½ Kansas City 45 46 .495 3 Detroit 42 49 .462 6 Chicago 38 52 .422 9½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 62 31 .667 — Seattle 47 47 .500 15½ Texas 45 47 .489 16½ Los Angeles 46 49 .484 17 Oakland 42 51 .452 20 Monday’s Games Baltimore 3, Texas 1 Toronto 4, Boston 3 Minnesota 4, N.Y. Yankees 2 Seattle 9, Houston 7, 10 innings Detroit 10, Kansas City 2 Tampa Bay 3, Oakland 2 Cleveland 5, San Francisco 3 Tuesday’s Games Baltimore 12, Texas 1 Toronto at Boston (n) L.A. Dodgers at Chicago White Sox (n) N.Y. Yankees at Minnesota (n) Seattle at Houston (n) Detroit at Kansas City (n) Tampa Bay at Oakland (n) Washington at L.A. Angels (n) Cleveland at San Francisco (n) Today’s Games N.Y. Yankees (Montgomery 6-4) at Minnesota (Berrios 8-3), 12:10 p.m. Seattle (Paxton 8-3) at Houston (Morton 7-3), 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Faria 4-0) at Oakland (Gray 5-4), 2:35 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 10-4) at San Francisco (Cain 3-8), 2:45 p.m. Texas (Perez 5-6) at Baltimore (Gausman 5-7), 6:05 p.m. Toronto (Sanchez 1-2) at Boston (TBD), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 7-4) at Chicago White Sox (Rodon 1-2), 7:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 5-7) at Kansas City (Hammel 4-8), 7:15 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 8-4) at L.A. Angels (Nolasco 4-10), 9:07 p.m. Thursday’s Games Toronto at Boston, 12:35 p.m. Texas at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 6:15 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

NL STANDINGS East Division W L Pct GB Washington 56 36 .609 — Atlanta 45 45 .500 10 New York 41 48 .461 13½ Miami 41 49 .456 14 Philadelphia 30 60 .333 25 Central Division W L Pct GB Milwaukee 52 42 .553 — Chicago 46 45 .505 4½ St. Louis 44 47 .484 6½ Pittsburgh 44 48 .478 7 Cincinnati 39 53 .424 12 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 64 29 .688 — Arizona 53 39 .576 10½ Colorado 53 41 .564 11½ San Diego 40 51 .440 23 San Francisco 35 58 .376 29 Monday’s Games Washington 6, Cincinnati 1 Pittsburgh 4, Milwaukee 2 Miami 6, Philadelphia 5, 10 innings St. Louis 6, N.Y. Mets 3 Chicago Cubs 4, Atlanta 3 Colorado 9, San Diego 6 Cleveland 5, San Francisco 3 Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh 4, Milwaukee 3 Arizona 11, Cincinnati 2 Philadelphia 5, Miami 2 St. Louis 5, N.Y. Mets 0 Chicago Cubs at Atlanta (n) L.A. Dodgers at Chicago White Sox (n) San Diego at Colorado (n) Washington at L.A. Angels (n) Cleveland at San Francisco (n) Today’s Games Chicago Cubs (Montgomery 1-6) at Atlanta (Dickey 6-5), 11:10 a.m. Philadelphia (Pivetta 2-5) at Miami (Straily 7-4), 11:10 a.m.

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San Diego (Richard 5-9) at Colorado (Gray 2-1), 2:10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco 10-4) at San Francisco (Cain 3-8), 2:45 p.m. Milwaukee (Davies 11-4) at Pittsburgh (Cole 7-7), 6:05 p.m. Arizona (Greinke 11-4) at Cincinnati (Adleman 5-7), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Leake 6-7) at N.Y. Mets (deGrom 10-3), 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 7-4) at Chicago White Sox (Rodon 1-2), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Gonzalez 8-4) at L.A. Angels (Nolasco 4-10), 9:07 p.m. Thursday’s Games St. Louis at N.Y. Mets, 11:10 a.m. Arizona at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m. Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 11:35 a.m. Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.

Cycling Tour de France Results Tuesday, 16th Stage at Romans-surIsere, France — a 102.5-mile ride from Le Puy-en-Velay to Romans-sur-Isere, with early Category 3 and 4 climbs. 1. Michael Matthews, Australia, Sunweb, 3:38:15. 2. Edvald Boasson Hagen, Norway, Dimension Data, same time. 3. John Degenkolb, Germany, TrekSegafredo, same time. 4. Greg Van Avermaet, Belgium, BMC Racing, same time. 5. Christophe Laporte, France, Cofidis, same time. 6. Jens Keukeleire, Belgium, OricaScott, same time. 7. Tony Gallopin, France, Lotto Soudal, same time. 8. Tiesj Benoot, Belgium, Lotto Soudal, same time. 9. Maciej Bodnar, Poland, Bora-Hansgrohe, same time. 10. Romain Hardy, France, FortuneoOscaro, same time. 11. Reinardt Janse van Rensburg, South Africa, Dimension Data, same time. 12. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Cannondale Drapac, same time. 13. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, same time. 14. Simon Yates, Britain, Orica-Scott, same time. 15. Mikel Landa, Spain, Sky, same time. 16. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, same time. 17. Damiano Caruso, Italy, BMC Racing, same time. 18. Fabio Aru, Italy, Astana, same time. 19. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, same time. 20. Imanol Erviti, Spain, Movistar, same time. Also 31. Daniel Martin, Ireland, Quick-Step Floors, :51 behind. 78. Nate Brown, United States, Cannondale Drapac, 2:51. 116. Andrew Talansky, United States, Cannondale Drapac, 7:02. 169. Taylor Phinney, United States, Cannondale Drapac, 16:19. Overall Standings (After 16 stages) 1. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, 68:18:36. 2. Fabio Aru, Italy, Astana, :18. 3. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La Mondiale, :23. 4. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Cannondale Drapac, :29. 5. Mikel Landa, Spain, Sky, 1:17. 6. Simon Yates, Britain, Orica-Scott, 2:02. 7. Daniel Martin, Ireland, Quick-Step Floors, 2:03. 8. Louis Meintjes, South Africa, UAE Team Emirates, 6:00. 9. Damiano Caruso, Italy, BMC Racing, 6:05.

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Today’s Television Lineup AUTO RACING 4 p.m. — (FS1) NASCAR, Camping World Truck Series, Eldora Dirt Derby, qualifying, at New Weston, Ohio 6:30 p.m. — (FS2) NASCAR, Camping World Truck Series, Eldora Dirt Derby, heat races, at New Weston, Ohio 8:30 p.m. — (FOX BUSINESS) NASCAR, Camping World Truck Series, Eldora Dirt Derby, at New Weston, Ohio CYCLING 5 a.m. — (NBCSN) Tour de France, Stage 17, La Mure, France to Serre-Chevalier, France DIVING 11:30 a.m. — (NBCSN) World Championship, women’s 10-meter final, at Budapest, Hungary GOLF 12:30 a.m. — (GOLF) British Open, first round, at Southport, England MLB BASEBALL 11 a.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Chicago Cubs at Atlanta OR Philadelphia at Miami 2:30 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Cleveland at San Francisco OR Tampa Bay at Oakland 6 p.m. — (ESPN) St. Louis at N.Y. Mets 9 p.m. — (ESPN) Washington at L.A. Angels SOCCER 5 p.m. — (FS1) CONCACAF Gold Cup, quarterfinal, Costa Rica vs. Panama, at Philadelphia 7 p.m. — (ESPN2) International Champions Cup, AS Roma vs. Paris Saint-Germain, at Detroit 8 p.m. — (FS1) CONCACAF Gold Cup, quarterfinal, United States vs. El Salvador, at Philadelphia WNBA BASKETBALL 10 a.m. — (NBA) Connecticut at New York 10. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar, 6:16. 11. Alberto Contador, Spain, TrekSegafredo, 7:10. 12. Warren Barguil, France, Sunweb, 8:48. 13. Pierre-Roger Latour, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 14:32. 14. Alexis Vuillermoz, France, AG2R La Mondiale, 15:45. 15. Mikel Nieve, Spain, Sky, 16:25. 16. Emanuel Buchmann, Germany, Bora-Hansgrohe, 20:28. 17. Carlos Betancur, Colombia, Movistar, 23:50. 18. Guillaume Martin, France, WantyGroupe Gobert, 28:19. 19. Brice Feillu, France, Fortuneo-Oscaro, 28:41. 20. Tiesj Benoot, Belgium, Lotto Soudal, 30:10. Also 38. Nate Brown, United States, Cannondale Drapac, 1:16:36. 56. Andrew Talansky, United States, Cannondale Drapac, 1:35:53. 167. Taylor Phinney, United States, Cannondale Drapac, 3:16:30.

Transactions Tuesday’s Deals BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned 1B Sam Travis and LHP Robby Scott to Pawtucket (IL). Recalled LHP Brian Johnson and RHP Hector Velazquez from Pawtucket. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned OF Tyler Naquin to Columbus (IL). Recalled LHP Ryan Merritt from Columbus. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Sent LHP Tyler Skaggs to the AZL Angels for a rehab assignment. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Named Ashwin Puri vice president of strategy and business operations, effective Sept. 5. SEATTLE MARINERS — Optioned OF Boog Powell to Tacoma (PCL). Recalled RHP Sam Gaviglio from Tacoma. Sent RHP Shae Simmons to Tacoma (PCL) for

a rehab assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Designated RHP Jumbo Diaz for assignment. Selected the contract of RHP Andrew Kittredge from Durham (IL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Designated RHP Lucas Harrell for assignment. Recalled RHP Dominic Leone from Buffalo. National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Sent RHP Arodys Vizcaino to Gwinnett (IL) for a rehab assignment. Transferred RHP Armando Rivero to the 60-day DL. CINCINNATI REDS — Placed RHP Scott Feldman on the 10-day DL. Optioned OF Jesse Winker to Louisville. Recalled RHPs Sal Romano and Lisalverto Bonilla from Louisville. Sent C Devin Mesoraco to Louisville for a rehab assignment. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Sent LHP Grant Dayton to Rancho Cucamonga (Cal) for a rehab assignment. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Agreed to terms with 1B Chris Colabello on a minor league contract. NEW YORK METS — Optioned RHP Chasen Bradford to Las Vegas (PCL). Recalled RHP Hansel Robles from Las Vegas. Sent LHP Josh Smoker to Binghamton (EL) for a rehab assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Placed OF Aaron Altherr on the 10-day DL, retroactive to Saturday. Reinstated 2B Cesar Hernandez from the 10-day DL. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SAN ANTONIO SPURS — Signed F/C Joffrey Lauvergne. COLLEGE EMORY & HENRY — Announced the resignation of strength and conditioning coach Josh Bullock. GEORGETOWN — Named David Shriver assistant men’s lacrosse coach. STANFORD — Named Jessica Allister softball coach. TULANE — Named Nathan Quebedeaux trainer. UALR — Named Sharde’ Collins director of women’s basketball operations.


14A • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Crape myrtle is garden must-have in the South There is one plant that absolutely is the flower of the South: the crape myrtle. Who can resist the colorful flower clusters on display from early summer through Gary late fall? T h e Bachman spectacular flowers Southern Gardening are actually large panicles, or branching clusters composed of many small flowers. These panicles can be more than 8 inches long, and colors range from white, to shades of pink and purple, to rich reds. There are even bicolor flowers like my favorite Pink Peppermint. It seems there is controversy everywhere these days, and the garden is no exception. Sides form up over whether you spell the plant’s name “crape” or “crepe.” The small flowers do have a crinkled edge resembling crepe paper, but regardless of how you spell it, you need this flowering tree in your Mississippi landscape. Crape myrtles have oth-

er outstanding ornamental and aesthetic qualities. As the trees mature, the bark begins to peel or exfoliate, revealing inner bark colors ranging from gray-green to dark cinnamon-red. The leaves also change color, as the solid-green summer foliage transitions to a bright red-orange in the fall. There seems to be a bazillion varieties of crape myrtles on the market, and more are introduced every year with an emphasis on burgundy and even black leaves. One I’m excited about was developed at Mississippi State University: Delta Jazz. This variety was one of the first to have unusual dark foliage. It emerges rich raspberrymaroon and then matures to dark mahogany brown. This foliage color accents the clusters of mediumpink flowers in late summer. Delta Jazz makes a fantastic landscape feature plant either pruned to tree form or allowed to grow as a large landscape shrub. Mississippi State has developed five more new varieties, so be on the lookout for these in the future.

Since this week’s column is about crape myrtles, I need to address the incorrect pruning practice known as crape murder. This happens every spring where someone hard prunes their crape myrtles back to the trunk or a major branch. Crape myrtles are extremely resilient, and since they bloom on the current season’s growth, the bad pruning mistakes are soon glossed over. This heavy pruning is usually used to control size and shape, but in fact, it destroys the tree’s natural form. You don’t need to prune a crape myrtle to control its size. Instead, choose the right plant to fit the space. This is a step many gardeners neglect. For example, if you want a white-flowering crape myrtle, consider the mature height of these varieties: Pixie White, 3 feet; Delta Moonlight, 10 feet; Acoma, 14 feet; Byer’s White, 20 feet; and Natchez, 30 feet. There are similar sizes available for all of the crape myrtle colors. So, decide what color you want, and then find a variety that grows to the correct height for your space.

Photo by MSU Extension/Gary Bachman

Gardeners sometimes use heavy pruning to control crape myrtle size and shape, but these goals are better achieved by choosing the right plant to fit the space. This Bourbon Street Dwarf Crape Myrtle is an excellent choice for a small area. My last advice is to be on the lookout for a new threat to our beloved crape myrtles. Crape myrtle bark scale, or CMBS, is a relatively new, imported insect pest first reported

in 2004. If you have this pest, the first sign you might see is the presence of a lot of scaly, flaky, black, sooty mold on the tree itself. CMBS exude a sticky “honeydew” that rains down on anything below. I’ve experienced this falling honeydew, and it feels like being out in a fine, misting rain. You can treat for CMBS by applying systemic in-

secticides to the plant root zone during May and July. Systemic insecticides include dinotefuran (Greenlight Tree and Shrub Insect Control with Safari) and imidacloprid (Bayer Advanced Garden Tree and Shrub Insect Control). Allow several weeks for these insecticides to work because they must spread through the plant.

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Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Taste

Daily Corinthian • 1B

BY KATIE WORKMAN Associated Press

Green Goddess Dressing was created at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco, an opulent 19th century hotel noted for its celebrity chefs. In those days, celebrity chefs were not Food Network Stars, but usually white-toqued men either from, or trained in, Europe. No one was yelling “Bam!” so much back then. Chef Philip Roemer debuted the dressing in 1923 to honor actor George Arliss, who stayed at the hotel while performing in William Archer’s hit play “The Green Goddess.” The original recipe is reported to have contained mayonnaise, sour cream, parsley, chives, anchovies, lemon juice and vinegar, but it has been tinkered with over the years by countless chefs and home cooks, including yours truly. A modernized version recently served at the hotel includes additional ingredients like spinach and chervil and capers, and a homemade mayo with raw egg yolks. The dressing may have different versions, but it’s always creamy and vibrant with herbs, piquant with a bit of acidity, and salty-savory from anchovies. This is my most recent version, and I will surely continue to play with this dressing forever. You can use it as a salad dressing on any kind of lettuce or vegetable salad, or as a dip with crudites. For a vegetarian version, substitute a tablespoon of rinsed capers for the anchovies.

Green Goddess Dressing & Dip Start to finish: 10 minutes Ingredients 2 canned (jarred) anchovies, rinsed & chopped 1 clove garlic, chopped 1 cup parsley leaves 1/4 cup roughly chopped fresh basil 2 tablespoons fresh tarragon leaves 4 scallions, trimmed and cut into pieces 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar 3/4 cup mayonnaise 3/4 cup sour cream 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard Salt & pepper to taste Directions Place all the ingredients except the salt and pepper into a food processor or blender. Process until fairly smooth. Add salt and pepper to taste. Nutrition information per serving: 151 calories; 124 calories from fat; 14 g fat (4 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 24 mg cholesterol; 514 mg sodium; 2 g carbohydrate; 0 g fiber; 1 g sugar; 4 g protein. Katie Workman has written two cookbooks focused on easy, family-friendly cooking, “Dinner Solved!” and “The Mom 100 Cookbook.” She blogs at http://www.themom100.com/about-katie-workman . She can be reached at Katie@themom100.com.

Associated Press

Green Goddess Dressing and dip in New York.

Associated Press

BY SARA MOULTON Associated Press

One time many years ago, I was riffling through my grandmother Ruth’s box of handwritten recipe cards when I pulled up short at the sight of the title of this recipe for Cheese Sandwich Souffle. Souffle? Fancy! But reading the details, I quickly understood that this item was nothing more or less than the wedding of a ham-and-cheese sandwich and some French toast. But that didn’t make it a souffle. It required no separating of eggs, nor any beating of egg whites. Once I actually made the recipe, however, the title didn’t seem like such a stretch. Fresh out of the oven, these sandwiches have puffed up in a very souffleish way. Similarly, they boast the moistness and airiness of a souffle. This recipe can be customized in all sorts of ways. You can swap out the ham for smoked turke, prosciutto or your meat of choice. You can lose the Gruyere in favor of provolone, cheddar, mozzarella, or your favorite cheese. Vegetarians in the family? Say goodbye to the meat and hello to a hearty vegetable like grilled eggplant or sauteed Portobello mushrooms. Want to make a slimmer version? Use low-fat cheese and non-fat milk.

Cheese Sandwich Souffle Ingredients Butter for buttering the baking pan 8 slices homemade-style white or wholewheat bread, crusts removed 1/4 lb. thin sliced cheese (Cheddar, provo-

lone, etc.) 2 oz. thinly sliced ham, prosciutto or smoked turkey 3 large eggs 2 cups whole milk Directions In a lightly buttered 8-inch-square baking dish, arrange 4 slices of the bread flat on the bottom, trimming the slices if necessary to fit snuggly in one layer. Cover each slice with one-fourth of the cheese and onefourth of the meat and top each one with another slice of bread to form a sandwich. In a bowl beat the eggs lightly with the salt, add the milk and beat until combined well. Pour the mixture over the sandwiches, cover and chill 1 hour. Preheat the oven to 350 F. Bake the sandwiches on the middle shelf of the oven uncovered until they are browned around the edges and just set in the center, about 40 to 45 minutes. Nutritional information: 454 calories; 205 calories from fat; 23 g fat (11 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 223 mg cholesterol; 1,113 mg sodium; 36 g carbohydrates; 2 g fiber; 9 g sugar; 26 g protein. Sara Moulton is host of public television’s “Sara’s Weeknight Meals.” She was executive chef at Gourmet magazine for nearly 25 years and spent a decade hosting several Food Network shows, including “Cooking Live.” Her latest cookbook is “HomeCooking 101.”

A cheese sandwich souffle on June 30, in New York.


2B • Daily Corinthian

Variety

Wednesday, July 19, 2017

Crossword

BEETLE BAILEY

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Lower in price 5 Try 10 Nutmeg spice 14 Actor La Salle 15 Crams, with “up” 16 Sea of __: Black Sea arm 17 Innate talent 20 “Wicked Game” singer Chris 21 Shuttle flight phase 22 Broadcaster’s transmission to affiliated stations 25 “My gal” of song 26 Carpentry joints 31 Barbecue accessory 35 “I Put a Spell on You” singer Simone 38 Full range 39 Sharp-smelling air pollutant 42 Writer of tales with talking animals 43 Dental alternatives to pastes 44 Angers 45 Fireplace inserts 47 Springfield presidential library nickname 49 Hardly any time at all 56 Legendary Rhine siren 59 Cruller coating 60 With “The,” Tchaikovsky work that ends with “Waltz of the Flowers” 63 Physics particle 64 French term of endearment 65 List component 66 Tiny sound 67 County near London 68 Mil. medals DOWN 1 Russian Revolution leader 2 Backspace, perhaps 3 Occupy, as a desk 4 __ Valley, Calif.: 1960 Winter Olympics site

5 Sched. uncertainty 6 Big name in ISPs 7 Wolf (down) 8 Conical shelter 9 Regard highly 10 Damon of “We Bought a Zoo” 11 Blue sky color, in Calais 12 Showman Buffalo Bill 13 Morn’s counterpart 18 Bygone theaters 19 Spectrum shade 23 Jingled 24 __ light: filming tool 27 Roll along the runway 28 Qatari ruler 29 Far from polite 30 Some Fr. martyrs 31 Unexpected obstacle 32 Harbor sight 33 “__ deal!” 34 Run leisurely 36 Storm direction: Abbr. 37 Dwight’s opponent 40 Swiss army knife tool

41 Copyright pg. ID 46 Comfort in grief 48 Flan ingredients 50 Computer repair experts 51 Backpacking activities 52 Transmission lubricant 53 Milks, in Marseilles 54 Tenochtitlán native

55 Abounds (with) 56 Minstrel’s instrument 57 Plains native 58 Law gp. that now only uses horses for ceremonial events 60 Go out for a bit? 61 Ode preposition 62 “Toy Story” dinosaur

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Bruce Venzke and Gail Grabowski ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

07/19/17

07/19/17

Obsessions can cause problems WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: I’m young, and as most young adults do, I have an interest in musicians, authors, artists, etc. For me, especially, I find myself engrossed in YouTubers. These are kids who are around my age, 18 or 19. They make funny videos and do ridiculous things that keep me entertained for hours. This is where the problem comes in. I found that I’m always drawn to be obsessed with people who are internet-famous. I feel as though I may be this way because of my lack of actual friends, so I think I understand it. But understanding the problem doesn’t necessarily help me sleep at night. All my life, I’ve been battling being an obsessive person. As a preteen, I would become enraged if someone pointed out my interest had become an obsession. Now that I’m 18, I’ve changed my reaction from enraged at the other person to just plain irritated with myself. I feel as if obsessions are taking over my life. I’ve tried countless times and ways to stop myself, such as putting my phone down, disconnecting from the internet for hours or getting outside to be active, but at the end of the day, I’m still hooked. No matter how hard I try

Dear Annie to turn my obsession into a “positive addiction,” it always seems to fail, and I’m then sucked into my phone and watching videos again. Every time I try to address the issue with my therapist, I become too embarrassed and change the subject. I want to help myself because I’ve become so depressed about these obsessions, but I’m just not sure what to do. — Obsessed and Tired Dear Obsessed: Celebrity “obsessions” and fanaticism have been a normal part of adolescence since the advent of mass media. But the internet has made celebs seem closer to us than ever. We not only can spend endless hours reading up on the details of their lives but also may even get a chance to interact with them on social media. This is even truer for internet celebrities, who inherently have close relationships to their fan bases. With this sort of access, it’s easy to see how a young person could get carried away.

But there is so much good news in your letter. You have a thorough understanding of your issue. You realize it’s impacting your life negatively. You want to change. And you’re in therapy — which brings me to my ultimate point. Talk to your therapist about this. Knowing the full details of your life and background, he or she can help address the underlying problems that are driving your obsessive behavior. And I promise your therapist won’t judge you. Dear Annie: This is not a question, only a comment. I have read advice columns in the paper for 40 years. In that time, I have never seen advice given that is as appropriate and impressive as yours. It is without a doubt the best column in the paper. Thank you! — Dale B. Dear Dale B.: Thank you for making my day. It’s an honor to have this platform, and I’ll keep doing my best not to disappoint. I hope to keep you as a reader for years to come. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • 3B

ANNOUNCEMENTS

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GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES 7+85 )5, ,QVLGH 6DOH 7DWH 6W DFURVV IURP &LQG\ V 6FUROO 6DZ 6DQGHU RQ VWDQG GHVN QHZ )XWRQ &XULR &DELQHW &KLQD &DELQHW 7RS %RRN 6KHOYHV 6PDOO 5HIULJ 7RROV %UDVV <DUG ,WHPV + + ,WHPV &ORWKHV %R\G %HDUV

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FARM MERCHANDISE

0232 GENERAL HELP CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true�, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better Business Bureau at 1-800-987-8280.

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

FARM

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

COMMERCIAL FAN like new paid 246.00 $190 it's y o u r s , u l i t e c h , , 731.610.1112,like new,3 1/2 ft high and wide

OLD COLECO head to ( %522.( $376 %5 State laws forbid dishead baseball game $15 %$ ' : LFHPDNHU crimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of call (662)603-1382 VT IW real estate based on 48((1 0$775(66 factors in addition to 6 S U L Q J V 9 H U \ * R R G : ( $ 9 ( 5 $ 3 7 6 those protected under 6KDSH 1 &DVV %5 SRUFK Z G federal law. We will not XWLO knowingly accept any advertising for real esREVERSE YOUR MOBILE HOMES tate which is in violaAD FOR $1.00 0675 FOR RENT tion of the law. All persons are hereby inEXTRA formed that all dwellCall 662-287-6111 ings advertised are for details. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE available on an equal opportunity basis. TPX AIRATTACK base-

LOUISVILLE SLUGGER CASE XX medium stock- fastpitch bat 30in 22oz $10 man 00786 knife 3 blade (662)603-1382 $35 call (662)603-1382 COMMERCIAL UII tech MERRELL BROWN leathfan, like new, $180. firm. e r s l i p o n s h o e s s i z e 11boys $20. 731.610.1112 662-603-1382 DOUBLE STROLLER $60 MISS STATE purse $5 (662)603-1382

UNFURNISHED 0610 APARTMENTS

ball bat 2 3/4 barrel 33in FOUR 225- 60-16 two (662)603-1382 29oz $25 call HOMES FOR brand new, on four abs, 0710 SALE MIZUNO JENNY finch fastwheels $300. ( 6 6 2 ) 6 0 3 1 3 8 2 pitch bat 29in 17.5oz MERCHANDISE 731.610.1112 HUD $50.00 USED FENCE post driver PUBLISHER’S HONDO GUITAR amp $20 $15 call (662)603-1382 (662)603-1382 NOTICE call (662)603-1382 WANTED TO real estate adver0554 RENT/BUY/TRADE LITTLE TIKES REMOTE NEW AMES Splitting axe WICKED FASTPITCH bat All 32in 22oz $ 2 0 tised herein is subject CONTROL tire twister $15 $15 (662)603-1382 ( 6 6 2 ) 6 0 3 - 1 3 8 2 to the Federal Fair : $ 1 7 7 2 U H Q W Q L F H call (662)603-1382 Housing Act which KRXVH LQ &RULQWK RU $O makes it illegal to adNEW BAMA roll tide bottle FRUQ &RXQW\ LQ VHFWLRQ cap necklace $5 (662)603REAL ESTATE FOR RENT vertise any preference, VWDQGDUG 3HUIHFW UHQW limitation, or discrimi1382 UHFRUG nation based on race, NEW MASON jar cocktail color, religion, sex, UNFURNISHED MISC. ITEMS FOR shaker $5.00 0610 APARTMENTS handicap, familial status 0563 SALE or national origin, or in(662)603-1382 %5 %$ : ' KRRN tention to make any 225-60-16 abs wheels and :$17 72 PDNH FHUWDLQ tires, 2 of the tires are new, \RXU DG JHWV DWWHQWLRQ? NEW ROUNDUP 365 $15 X S V 4 X L H W O R F D W L R Q such preferences, limi&+ $ 6HLQRU IULHQGO\ tations or discrimina$300.00 $VN DERXW DWWHQWLRQ (662)603-1382 731.610.1112. JHWWLQJ JUDSKLFV tion.

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES ),1$/ 029,1* 6$/( /276 2) 2''6 (1'6 6DW &KHVWQXW 'ULYH

6$7 XQWLO $IWRQ 3W 5HPRGHOLQJ %RRN FDVH 5XJV :RRG 0DQWOH /LJKWLQJ 3LFV %HGGLQJ 7UHDGPLOO 0LVF 7+85 30 )UL 6DOHP 5G &KXUFK 3HZ &ORWKHV 7R\V 6RXWKHUQ /LYLQJ ,WHPV +RPH 'HFRU

2009 Pontiac G6

Super Nice, Really Clean, Oil changed regularly, Good cold air and has good tires. 160k

Asking $4800. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @ 662-319-7145

2008 HYUNDAI ELANTRA BLACK 4 CYL, 4 DR, 120K MILES GOOD TIRES CLEAN $2750.00 662-603-2535

1997 FORD MUSTANG GT 4.6 V8

RED & TAN LEATHER 91,668 MILES EXTRA CLEAN NEW TOP & TIRES $4,800. CASH

662-462-7634 664-0789 RIENZI

2000 BUICK PARK AVENUE Am/Fm radio, auto., runs good. Serious inquiries only.

$3900 obo.

CALL 662-396-6492 or 662-212-4888

1978 Lincoln Continental Mark V Power steering, disc brakes, seat ,windows Automatic trans. Low mileage. New brakes, battery, fuel tank. Runs and drives great.$3500.00 662-415-9965

2006 PONTIAC G6 BLACK 4DR, V6 NEW TIRES 130K MILES $2750.00 662-603-2535

REDUCED

350, Auto, PS, PW, AIR T-TOPS, Red with Gray Leather Interior

$8800.00 $9800.00 662-665-1019 662-665-1019

1972 MERCURY COUGAR CONVERTIBLE $12,000.00 AS IS 662-415-5071

2005 JAGUAR X-TYPE AWD 127,784 MILES UNDER WARRANTY $6000.00 $5,500.00 662-664-4776 231-667-4280

1996 FORD COMPANION VAN 7 PASS., TV/VCR LEATHER SEATS STORAGE EXTRA CLEAN 40K MILES

286-6707

93 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

1977 CORVETTE

For Sale or Trade 1978 Mercedes 6.9 Motor 135,000 miles. Only made 450 that year. $1,900. OBO Selling due to health reasons. Harry Dixon 286-6359

79k miles Red w/ Black Top 40th Anniv. Ed. Great shape. $9,500 obo 662-212-4096

1989 Mercedes Benz 300 CE 145K miles, Rear bucket seats, Champagne color, Excellent Condition. Diligently maintained. $4000.00 $5000.00 662-415-2657

2013 Z71 Chevy Silverado Crew Cab 49,000 miles Asking $26,000.00 662-415-4396

conversion van, 246,000 miles,one owner lady driven. Loaded, leather, heated seats, new transmission, ready to tailgate. $ 00 obo. 662-287-4848

white, V-6, with 4-door extended cab, in great cond., cold air, very clean, plus new tires. MUST SEE & DRIVE

$7,500.00

CALL 662-284-6724

2010 Chevy Equinox LS 02 TOYOTA SIENNA VAN 145K MILES SILVER COOL AIR 3 ROW SEATING GOOD GAS MILEAGE GOOD SOUND & CLEAN VEHICLE

2,850 286-5180 $

00

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

$10,500 662-415-8343 or 415-7205

1986 Corvette

official pace car convertible, automatic 90,000 miles, 350 motor red in color air and heat lots of new parts $7500.00 obo

662-223-0865 no text please

2014 Toyota Corolla S 1.8 LOW MILES!!

$15,999 (Corinth Ms)

Silver 2014 Toyota corolla S 1.8: Back-up camera; Xenon Headlights; Automatic CVT gearbox; Paddle Shift; 25k miles LOW MILES !!! Up to 37mpg; One owner! Perfect condition!

(205-790-3939)

2002 MERCURY SABLE 3.0 V6, AUTOMATIC NEW AIR LOW MILES CD PLAYER

1985 Mustang GT,

1989 Corvette

HO, 5 Speed, Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner Last year of carburetor, All original. $16,500

662-287-4848

1973 CUTLASS 2 DOOR •••••

$4,500.00 662-415-5071

2014 HYUNDAI ACCENT HATCHBACK STANDARD SHIFT LIKE BRAND NEW! ONLY 44,000 MILES AND GETS 34 MPG!

662-287-0145

D L SO

King Cab Nissan Frontier XE Pickup. 2001 Model, AC, Power windows, power locks, power mirrors, factory running boards, sliding rear window, factory bed liner, pioneer stereo with disc and USB player, AT with overdrive, rear jump seats, 24 mpg 4cyl, NEW radial white letter tires, bought new and regularly serviced in Corinth. 2nd adult driver, 194,000 gentle miles. $6500. 662-284-6813.

D L SO

2002 Chevy Trailblazer

Blue, runs good Maintained regularly New front tires 250K Miles

$1,250 662-808-4079

2007 Lexus IS 250 loaded sunroof, CD, leather, AWD, GPS, Bluetooth, V6, $7500 firm, only 2 owners

Call 662-720-6661

95’ CHEVY ASTRO

Cargo Van Good, Sound Van

$2700

872-3070

2014 Nissan Pathfinder SV

662-286-2470 OR 662-603-7072

$3000.00

2016 GMC TERRAIN SLE 7000 MILES $21,500.00 CALL OR TEXT 662-212-3510

06 Chevy Trailblazer Power everything! Good heat and Air $3,250 OBO 662-319-7145

TRANSPORTATION FINANCIAL LEGALS

0955 LEGALS 75867((6 127,&( 2) 6$/( :+(5($6 RQ -XO\ -HUU\ 'DYLG /DVVLW HU H[HFXWHG D 'HHG RI 7UXVW WR )UHG & 3HU PHQWHU -U 7UXVWHH IRU WKH EHQHILW RI 7KH

1970 MERCURY COUGAR FOR SALE Excel. Cond. 70K Miles 57,000 Miles, back up camera, towing package, Bluetooth and in Excellent Condition. Asking $16,800 $19,500. Call 662- 594-5271

2008 FORD RANGER

2004 GMC Explorer

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

Black/Red Int. 350 Motor Auto Trans. 101,500 Miles Good Cond. REDUCED $5500 $6000. Call for Pictures 662-223-0942

2006 Ford F-150 Extended cab truck 175,000 miles $8,400. 662-808-7677 2008 Ford Focus SES One Owner Red, 4-door, CD Player, Sync System, Power windows & door locks, Excellent Condition 155,000 miles Price: $4200. OBO Call: 662-415-0313 or 662-643-7982

Inside & Out All Original

$$

6,900 8,9000000 662-415-0453 662-664-0357

1998 Cadillac DeVille Tan Leather Interior Sunroof, green color, 99,000 miles

$700.00 (662) 603-2635 212-2431

2011 SILVER NISSAN MURANO Black interior, Leather seats 98,000 miles Heated seats front and back Electronic trunk opener sunroof and moonroof blue tooth for phone navigation system Wanting $15,000

662-479-5033

1993 Chevy Explorer Limited Extra Clean Exc. Condition $4000.00 OBO 284-6662

1995 GMC Z-71 1987 $5800.00 FORD 250 DIESEL UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK $4000. IN GOOD CONDITION

731-645-8339 OR 731-453-5239

GOOD COND. NEEDS TIRES FOR MORE INFO. CALL 662-415-3408

832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

2006 HONDA VTX 1800

2001 Ford Explorer Sport Trac 4WD Truck 2002 Chevy Silverado Z71 2 Person Owner Heat & Air, 4 Wheel Drive, Works Great New Tires, 5.1 Engine Club Cab and Aluminum Tool Box AM/FM Radio, Cassette & CD Player Pewter in Color Great Truck for $7000.00 662-287-8547 662-664-3179

2000 GMC DENALI 4 WD BODY & MOTOR IN GOOD COND.

901-485-8167

ATV FOR SALE

HONDA 3 WHEELER

KICK START, RUNS GOOD, MIGHT NEED TIRES. $

750 OBO

Call: 662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

2015 MASSIMO ATV 4-WHEEL DRIVE 4 PASS. TN TITLE MOP ALLIGATOR 700-4 LIKE NEW 731-689-3211

HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE 2005 Harley Davidson Trike

D L SO

with winch, front and back baskets very good shape 690 hrs

$3,550.00

also 2003 HONDA Foreman 350 with baskets, 464 hrs, new tires, $1,850.00 or both for $5,000.00

Contact Paul 901-486-4774 Walnut, MS.

CALL OR TEXT 662-396-1105

Nice, $23,500. REDUCED

2,650 OBO Call: 662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464 $

662-415-7407 662-808-4557

14K MILES EXC. COND. RADIO, USB PORT $6500. OBO CASH TALKS!!! NO TRADES

662-284-6653

MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE

07 YAMAHA CLASSIC V STAR 650 CC, GOOD CONDITION, RUNS GOOD.

24,000 miles, Ultra Classic

2WD TWO SETS TIRES WHEELS & RACK $2000.00 662-603-8749

Leather seats with sunroof and low miles.

2006 Toyota Camry LE Silver, Clean Well Maintained Good Air & Tires 185K - $3800. 286-3979

662-415-5071 2006 YAMAHA 1700 GREAT CONDITION! APPROX. 26,000 MILES $4350 (NO TRADES) 662-665-0930 662-284-8251

D L SO

1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color: blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles, $7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

D L SO

1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

2013 Arctic Cat

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO

308 miles 4 Seater w/seat belts Phone charger outlet Driven approx. 10 times Excellent Condition Wench (front bumper)

662-808-2994

(662)279-0801

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER

07 HONDA RANCHER ES 2005 HONDA 500 Rubicon

$3,900

2009 HARLEY DAVIDSON Ultra Classic, 1 owner, 2005 Heritage Softail 12,000 miles, 32,000 Miles Super Bike very clean. Super Price $14,500.00. $7800.00 OBO 256-810-7117. 662-212-2451

D L SO

YAMAHA V STAR 650

22,883 MILES $2,350.00 665-1288

2nd Owner, Great Condition Has a Mossy Oak Cover over the body put on when it was bought new. Everything Works. Used for hunting & around the house, Never for mud riding. $1500 Firm. If I don’t answer, text me and I will contact you. 662-415-7154

D L D L O O S S $3,125.00 2005 EZ GO 36 Volt

Golf Cart with 4" Jake Lift and Cargo

Seat. New batteries.

662-665-2044

2007 Yamaha V-Star 1100 Classic New Rear Tire, New Battery Approximately 13000 miles Charcoal in color, Great Bike, Road Ready. $4700. Call Kevin 662-772-0719

2008 Yamaha V-Star 1300 Touring Edition New Tires, New Battery and New Hard Bags, less than 18000 miles. $5900.00 Great Bike, Road Ready call Kevin at 662-772-0719

D L SO

5’x10’ Wells Cargo Motorcycle Trailer $ 2,500 662-287-2333 Leave Message


4B • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

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GENERAL HELP

Corinth/Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department Corinth/Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department is currently accepting applications for: Special Events/Marketing Coordinator. Must be a graduate from an accredited four year university or college with a degree in Recreation/Leisure Management, Marketing or related area with experience in administration of recreation/special events/marketing with 2 plus years’ experience. Applicants must be certifiable as a NRPA Parks and Recreation Professional (CPRP), or Therapeutic Recreation Specialist (CTRS) within one year of employment. Applications are being accepted until filled. Job description is available with application. No phone calls please. Applications are available at: 309 South Parkway Street, Corinth, MS 38834, or you may forward resume to rholloway@co.alcorn.ms.us.

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

FRQYH\ RQO\ VXFK WLWOH DV LV YHVWHG LQ KLP DV hereby give notice that on July 26, 2017, between 11:00 7UXVWHH o'clock a.m. and 4:00 o'clock :,71(66 0< 6,*1$ p.m., being the legal hours of 785( WKLV WKH WK GD\ sale, I will proceed to sell at public outcry, to the highest RI -XQH bidder for cash, at the South )5(' & 3(50(17(5 Main Door of the Alcorn County Courthouse in Cor-5 75867(( inth, State of Mississippi, the 3 8 % / , 6 + following real property de DQG scribed and conveyed in said Deed of Trust, lying and be ing situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, and being more SUBSTITUTED particularly described as folTRUSTEE'S NOTICE lows, to-wit: OF SALE Tract 1: WHEREAS, on May 7, 2010, Bobby Reid Commencing at the SouthBrawner executed a Deed of east corner of the Southeast Trust to T. Harris Collier, III, Quarter of Section 14, TownTrustee for the benefit of ship 2, Range 7 and run Trustmark National Bank, as North 342 feet, more or less, recorded in the office of the to a point due east of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn South line of the garden County, Mississippi, as Instru- fence, as now located, for a ment 201002219; and, true starting point; run WHEREAS, Trust- thence North along the East mark National Bank, the hold- line of said quarter section er of said Deed of Trust and 270 feet, more or less, to the the Note secured thereby, Northeast corner of the 10substituted J. Mark Franklin, acre tract conveyed as deIII as Trustee therein, as au- scribed in deed of record in thorized by the terms there- Deed Book 85 at Page 392 in of, by instrument dated Feb- the Chancery Clerk's office of ruary 22, 2017, and recorded Alcorn County, Mississippi; as Instrument 201700911 in run thence West 237 yards; the office of the Chancery thence South 270 feet, more Clerk aforesaid; and, or less, to a point at the WHEREAS, de- West end of a straight line, fault having been made in the running from the true startterms and conditions of said ing point and along the South Deed of Trust, and the entire line of the garden and barn debt secured thereby having lot fence as now located; run been declared to be due and thence East along the said line payable in accordance with extended and along the South the terms of said Deed of line of the garden and barn Trust, and the legal holder of lot fence as now located on said indebtedness having re- the true starting point, same quested the undersigned Sub- being 237 yards, and said tract stituted Trustee to execute containing 4-1/2 acres, more the Trust and sell said land or less. and property in accordance with the terms of said Deed Tract 2: of Trust for the purpose of raising the sums due thereun- Commencing at the Southder, together with attorney’s east corner of the Northeast fees, Substituted Trustee's Quarter of Section 18, Townfees and expenses of sale; ship 3 South, Range 7 East, NOW, THERE- Alcorn County, Mississippi; FORE, I, the undersigned J. thence run North 1,485 feet Mark Franklin, III, being the along the East boundary line Substituted Trustee, do

s e l a S o GUARANTEEDAut FOR SALE 2002 Keystone Sprinter 31’

- EXTRA CLEAN - 2 SLIDES, SLEEPS 6 - COMPLETE WORKING ORDER - NON-SMOKING - FURNISHED - BATH TOWELS & DISHES

$9800

662-808-2629 662-808-1645

2005 ALLERGO BUS 40 FT., 4 SLIDES LESS THAN 10K MILES 400 CAT DIESEL ALLISON TRANSMISSION WASHER/DRYER KING SIZE BED 1 OWNER

PHAETON 2004 MOTOR HOME 40’ with 3 slides. Less than 50K miles Cat. Diesel

$103,000. 662-284-5925 LEAVE MESSAGE

662-284-5598

MOTOR HOME 1969 ULTRA VAN

Good condition $10,000 or make us a good offer.

662-415-1026 or 662-286-8948

2007 JAYCO OCTANE TOY HAULER

SOLD

$9,000.00

662-212-3883

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

of said Northeast Quarter of said section to an iron pin; thence run West 474 feet to the center of a creek for a true Point of Beginning; thence run North 40 degrees 19 minutes West 1,510.74 feet along the centerline of said creek to the North line of said quarter section; thence run West 1,180 feet, more or less, to the Northwest corner of said quarter section; thence run South 1,155 feet; thence run East 2,166 feet to the beginning point, being situated in the Northeast Quarter of Section 18, Township 3 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi.

AND ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:

LESS AND EXCEPT: The following property as described in Authority for Partial Release of Deed of Trust recorded as Instrument 201200724 in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk: Situated in County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit: Commencing at the Southeast corner of the Northeast Quarter of Section 18, Township 3 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; thence run North 1485 feet along the East boundary line of said Northeast Quarter of said Section to an iron pin; thence run West 474 feet to the center of a creek for a true point of beginning; thence run North 40 degrees 19 minutes West 1510.74 feet along the centerline of said creek to the North line of said quarter section; thence run West 1180 feet, more or less, to the Northwest corner of said quarter section; thence run South 1155 feet; thence run East 2166 feet to the beginning point. Being situated in the Northeast Quarter of Section 18, Township 3 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi.

REDUCED

WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOME 1989 40' Queen Size Bed • 1 Bath Sleeps 6-7 people comfortably

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT

30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$8,500.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

2003 W/W HORSE TRAILER

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH EQUIPMENT POWER STEERING GOOD PAINT

662-415-5071

The following property as described in Partial Release of Deed of Trust recorded as Instrument 201702258 in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk: Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, towit: Commence at the Southeast corner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 14, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; thence run North 342 feet to the Northeast corner of a 2.4 acre tract owned by James Edward Newcomb and Bonetha Newcomb, also being the Southeast corner of a 4.5 acre tract owned by Bobby Reid Brawner, said point being the point of beginning; thence continue North 61.27 feet; thence run West 711 feet to the West boundary line of said Brawner tract; thence run South along said West boundary line 61.27 feet to the Southwest corner of said Brawner tract; thence run East along the common boundary line between said Brawner tract and afore-mentioned Newcomb tract 711 feet to the point of beginning, containing 1.0 acre, more or less. Being the same property conveyed by Bobby Reid Brawner to James E. Newcomb and wife, Bonetha H. Newcomb, in Warranty Deed dated April 23, 1990, recorded in Book 248 at Page 70 in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, MS. AND ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT: The following property as described in Partial Release of Deed of Trust recorded as Instrument 201702258 in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk:

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30’long motor home, new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

JAYCO CAMPER 29FT. FEATHERLITE ONE SLIDE 2006 BOUGHT FROM CORINTH RV. EVERYTHING WORKS $8500.00 662-462-5525 662-415-9306

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD

SOLD

2003 CHEROKEE 285 SLEEPS 8 EXCELLENT CONDITION EVERYTHING WORKS 5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER CENTRAL HEAT & AIR ALL NEW TIRES & NEW ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER

$7500 $8995

CALL RICHARD 662-416-0604 Call Richard 662-664-4927

1959 MASSEY FERGUSON 35

FOR SALE

LIVE PTO GAS ENGINE RUNS GOOD EXC. COND. WITH 5 FT. BUSH HOG

4020 JOHN DEERE TRACTOR

$4500.00 $3950.00 731-926-0006

LD 51,000 SOMILES SLEEPS 6

662-415-0399 662-419-1587

$4300 662-415-5247

SOLD

1997 JOHN DEERE 670 FRONT LOADER 4 WHEEL DRIVE EVERYTHING WORKS GOOD 850 HOURS 662-396-1202

WINNEBAGO JOURNEY CLASS A , RV 2000 MODEL 34.9 FT. LONG 50 AMP HOOKUP CUMMINS DIESEL FREIGHTLINER CHASSIS LARGE SLIDE OUT ONAN QUIET GENERATOR VERY WELL KEPT. ,500. 662-728-2628

SOLD

1974 JOHN DEERE TRACTOR MODEL 1530 WITH DISK AND BUSH HOG. NEW HYDRAULIC PUMP SYSTEM.

$6500. CALL 662-279-3683

SOLD

850 John Deere tractor 1664 hrs all original & 6’John Deere finishing mower

$5000.00

662-603-4400

2x5 tube frame 2500 lb axles with breaks. Brand New 6ply tires and led lights. 52 inch ramp All metal deck, sides, ramp. No wood. 1,950 obo. 662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464.

CHEVY 1 TON, SILVERADO DIESEL, 8000 LB WARN WINCH, 230K MILES, 1500 WATT POWER INVERTOR, 2 NEW BATTERIES, GOOD TIRES, ALUMINUM TOOL BOXES AND STEEL RACK, AIR BAG OVER LOAD $

8,500 OBO

Call: 662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

95 Dodge v-10 1 TON, NEW BATTERY, READY TO WORK!

$

1,500 OBO

CALL: 662-286-1717 OR 662-808-4464

$

200000

662-286-1519 662-287-9466

10FT GOOD SHAPE PRO FLEX 120 MODEL

good grass cutter

CALL 662-665-8838

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

$5000.00 $3500.00

$ 0.00 662-416-5191

Gravely zero turn, one owner, 650 obo.

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

FOR SALE

86 chevy 4 wdr,

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

5000.00.00 6000

$$

662-286-6571 662-286-3924

1956 FORD 600

PROGRESSIVE TURF MOWER

FOR SALE 7x19 heavy duty trailer

EXTRA TALL, SADDLE RACK, ESCAPE DOOR. FULL OR HALF REAR DOORS, GREAT SHAPE

57 Chevy 4 door.

1 ton, miliary, diesel, new battery, 54,000 miles. 1,850 obo.

No motor or trans. Original title. No bad rust, good glass, most all parts there. Come get it. 2,500 obo.

1993 model, 30 ft, 4 cyl., gas powered sissor lift with 6x12 work deck and heavy duty tilt trailer $8500-OBO

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 662-808-4464

5x10 aluminum box trailer, ramp door, out rigger supports, stainless steel side and bottom, side and rear awnings, roof vent. 12 gallon portable water tank on roof with faucet. 1,750 obo 662-286-1717 or 663-808-4464

For sale, like new Husqvarna 54" cut lawn tractor. Only 105 hours. Always garage kept. Save $1000 versus new. $1500/OBO. Call 662-415-7552/leave msg.

5 FT. WOODS GROOMING MOWER

$1000.00 662-462-5525 662-415-9306

804 BOATS

FOR SALE 2014 Nitro Z7 boat, motor and trailer for sale. Dual consoles, 75 pound thrust Motor Guide, 24 volt digital trolling motor, 3 bank charger, custom paint with keel guard, 3 Lowrance graphs, HDS7, Mark 5 Pro, and Elite 5XHD. Under warranty until 2019. Been in water 6 times. 75 hours. $25000 OBO. 662-284-6233

1989 FOXCRAFT

1986 ASTROGLASS 15’ BASS BOAT 90 HP EVINRUDE

$1800 662-415-9461

18’ long, 120 HP Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot control.

$4500. 662-596-5053

2004 21’ PONTOON Suntracker w/trailer, 50 HP Johnson, 24 volt trolling mtr., hummingbird depth finder, bikini top, bath, table,

$7000 obo. 662-603-3902

2001 Crownline 202 BR Ski Boat w/ Prestige trailer. Mercruiser V8 inboard/ outboard. ONLY 75 HOURS! Like New! Must see to appreciate MSRP over $60,000. new. $19,950 OBO. Donnie 415-0119, Chad 665-1140

FOR SALE RIVER TRAIL BOAT Model 1551 with brand new 25 H.P. Yamaha 4 stroke motor with electric start, Minn Kota trolling motor, Avery pop up blind with camouflage,storage box, marine battery. Priced to sell $5,500.00. Call 901-486-4774 Walnut, Ms.

Imagine owning a likenew, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a High Five stainless prop,

for only

7995.

$

Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

DECK BOAT BAYLINER CLASSIC

1993 21FT TRACKER PONTOON

15 FT Grumman Flat BOAT Bottom Boat BOAT MOTOR 25 HP Motor TRAILER $2700.00 $6,00000 Ask for Brad: 731-453-5521 284-4826

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

16 FT ALUMINUM FLAT BOTTOM BOAT DEALER REBUILT 25HP MERC. MOTOR TANDEM TRAILER GOOD TIRES 462-8030

2012 Lowe Pontoon 90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer Still under warranty. Includes HUGE tube $19,300 662-427-9063

01 COBRA BOAT & TRAILER

03 225 OPTI • 833 HOURS SPIDER RIGGS 3 GPS DEPTH FINDER 24 V TROLLING MOTOR

$17,500. OBO JOE R. MILLER 662-660-4151 662-423-8874

BOAT & TRAILER 13 YR OLD M14763BC BCMS Includes Custom Trailer Dual 19.5 LONG Axel-Chrome BLUE & WHITE Retractable Canopy $4500.00 REASONABLY PRICED 662-660-3433 662-419-1587 1985 Hurricane-150 Johnson engine


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • 5B

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

South Bank, the holder of said Situated in County of Alcorn, Deed of Trust and the Note secured thereby, substituted State of Mississippi, to-wit: Scot P. Goldsholl as Trustee Commence at the Southeast in place of the afore-mencorner of the Southeast tioned original Trustee, as auQuarter of Section 14, Town- thorized by the terms thereship 2 South, Range 7 East, of, as evidenced by an instruAlcorn County, Mississippi; ment recorded as/in Instruthence run North 342.00 feet ment No. 201702403 in the to the Northeast corner of Office of the Chancery Clerk the original James Edward of Alcorn County, Mississippi; Newcomb 2.4 acre tract; and thence continue North 61.27 WHEREAS, default having feet to the Northeast corner of a 1.0 acre tract owned by been made in the terms and James Edward Newcomb, ref- conditions of said Deed of erenced by deed recorded in Trust, and the entire debt seDeed Book 248 at Page 70 in cured thereby having been the Chancery Clerk's Office declared to be due and payof Alcorn County, Mississippi, able, and the legal holder of being also the Southeast said indebtedness, Bancorpcorner of the Bobby Reid South Bank, having requested Brawner 3.5 acre tract; the undersigned Substitute thence run West along the Trustee to execute the trust c o m m o n b o u n d a r y l i n e and sell said land and propbetween the James New- erty in accordance with the comb and Bobby Brawner terms of said Deed of Trust properties and partially along for the purpose of raising the a fence 200.00 feet to a cross sums due thereunder, togethtie post for the point of be- er with attorney's fees, Subginning; thence continue stitute Trustee's fees and exWest partially along said penses of sale. fence line 511.00 feet to a NOW, THEREFORE, fence corner; thence run North partially along a fence I, Scot P. Goldsholl, Substiline 208.73 feet to a fence tute Trustee, will on July 26, corner being the Northwest 2017, offer for sale at public corner of the Bobby Brawner outcry to the highest bidder property; thence run East for cash, within legal hours along an old fence line and (between the hours of 11:00 along the North line of said a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) at the Brawner tract 511.0 feet to a South front door steps of the cross tie post; thence run Alcorn County Courthouse in South 208.73 feet to the Corinth, Alcorn County, Mispoint of beginning, containing sissippi, the following-described property: 2.45 acres, more or less. Being the same property conveyed by Bobby R. Brawner a/k/a Bobby Brawner to James Edward Newcomb, Rebecca Ann Shanklin, and Ricky Edward Newcomb in Warranty Deed dated July 15, 2003, recorded in Book 326 at Page 443 in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, MS. I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 22nd day of June, 2017. _/a/ J. Mark Franklin, III J. MARK FRANKLIN, III S U B S T I T U T E D T R U S T E E J. Mark Franklin, III MCKAY LAWLER FRANKLIN & FOREMAN, PLLC Attorneys at Law Post Office Box 2488 Ridgeland, Mississippi 391582488 (601) 572-8778 POSTED: June 23, 2017 PUBLISHED: June 28, 2017, July 5, 2017, July 12, 2017, and July 19, 2017 15956 SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

INDEXING INSTRUCTIONS: NE 1/4 of Section 4, Township 3, Range 7, Alcorn County, MS. The land situated in Alcorn County, State of Mississippi, described as follows: Commencing at a point in the South line of the Northeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter of Section 4, Township 3, Range 7 in Alcorn County, Mississippi, where the West right of way line of Highway #45 crosses or intersects the same in 1962, and run North along West line of Highway 45 as said right of way existed in 1962, 13 rods to the Northeast Corner of the D. P. Nunley 5 acre tract as it intersected with Highway 45 in 1962; and continuing on North 173 feet to the Northeast Corner of the 1-1/2 acre tract conveyed to James Nunley August 21, 1958, by deed recorded in land Deed Book 110, Page 171, as it intersected with Highway 45 in 1962, this being the beginning point of lot being conveyed hereby; thence run on North 175 feet; thence West 250 feet; thence South 175 feet to the James Nunley North line; and thence East 250 feet to said beginning point. ·

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

/s/ Scot P. Goldsholl, Substitute Trustee 1501 N. University Avenue, Suite 930 Little Rock, AR 72207-5238 Telephone No. (501) 6644808 THIS DOCUMENT PREPARED BY: Scot P. Goldsholl Mickel Law Firm, P.A. 1501 N. UNIVERSITY PROSPECT BUILDING, SUITE 930 LITTLE ROCK, AR 72207 Ph: (501) 664-4808 Fax: (501) 664-0631 Mickel Case No. 102195-1 s.goldsholl@mickellaw.com PUBLISH ON THESE DATES: July 5, 2017 July 12, 2017 July 19, 2017 15959

0955 LEGALS

Association, As Trustee for J.P. Morgan Alternative Loan 0955 LEGALS Trust 2006-S2, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2006-S2, by instruSUBSTITUTED ment dated February 27, 2017 TRUSTEE'S NOTICE and recorded in Instrument OF SALE No. 201701404 of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk's office; WHEREAS, on October 21, and 2005, Larry J. Fuller, an unmarried man, executed a cer- WHEREAS, U.S. Bank Nationtain deed of trust to First al Association, As Trustee for American Title, Trustee for J.P. Morgan Alternative Loan the benefit of Mortgage Elec- Trust 2006-S2, Mortgage tronic Registration Systems, Pass-Through Certificates Inc., as nominee for Coldwell Series 2006-S2, has heretoBanker Mortgage, its suc- fore substituted Shapiro & cessors and assigns which Massey, LLC as Trustee by indeed of trust is of record in strument dated June 7, 2017 the office of the Chancery and recorded in the aforesaid Clerk of Alcorn County, State Chancery Clerk's Office in Inof Mississippi in Instrument strument 201702446; and No. 200508638; and WHEREAS, default having WHEREAS, said Deed of been made in the terms and Trust was subsequently as- conditions of said deed of signed to U.S. Bank National trust and the entire debt seAssociation, As Trustee for cured thereby having been

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

Full time 3-11 RN Charge Nurse & L.P.N.s PRN Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri. 8 – 4:30 E.O.E.

is looking for a

BURNSVILLE 40 ACRES OF WOODED LAND $80,000. OR $65,000. CASH CALL 662-808-9313 OR 662-415-5071

First Presbyterian Church is seeking an individual to work in our nursery and assist with children. $10 per hour. You must be at least 18 years of age to apply. A background check and drug screening is required. An application may be picked up at: First Presbyterian Church Office 919 E Shiloh Road, Corinth To set up an interview, call Kimberly (662) 284-7498.

MS CARE CENTER

cured thereby having been declared to be due and payable in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust, U.S. Bank National Association, As Trustee for J.P. Morgan Alternative Loan Trust 2006-S2, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2006-S2, the legal holder of said indebtedness, having requested the undersigned Substituted Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust and for the purpose of raising the sums due

pose of raising the sums due thereunder, together with attorney's fees, trustee's fees and expense of sale.

highest and best bidder for cash the following described property situated in Alcorn County, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Shapiro & Massey, LLC, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, will on August 9, 2017 offer for sale at public outcry and sell within legal hours (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the South Main Door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, located at Corinth, Mississippi, to the highest and best bidder for

Lying and being in the Northwest Quarter of Section 19, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, more particularly described as follows: Commencing at the intersection of the West right-of-way line of Mississippi Highway 2 and the South boundary line of the Northwest Quarter of

4-day

Job Fair Tues. - July 18 & 25 Thurs. - July 20 & 27 9:00 am to 4:00 pm each day at The WIN JOB Center

Corinth, MS

Our company is looking for individuals possessing a strong work ethic to join our team. You must have verifiable work/attendance records. CURRENT OPENINGS: Furnace Operator: If you have experience in industrial/production manufacturing, farming, logging (physical work), can work in elevated heat, rotating 12-hour shifts, then we would like to talk to you.

Multi-craft Maintenance & Industrial Electrical Maintenance Technicians: We are looking for multi-craft maintenance experience, and maintenance personnel with industrial electrical experience. Our electrical personnel MUST have experience

working with high voltage - 24VDC to 480VAC circuits, 4-20mA loops, and troubleshooting analog/digital inputs to be considered.

Mississippi Silicon LLC provides competitive wages, benefits and is an EOE.

FOR SALE OR RENT

86 CR 173 CORINTH, MS 4 BR - 2.5 B, LR, DR KIT, DEN W/FP LG. FAMILY ROOM IN GROUND POOL WITH NEW LINER AND WARRANTY TRANSFERS TO NEW OWNER. CABANA 3 STORAGE AREAS WITH ELEC. FENCED BACK YARD WITH UNDER GROUND SPRINKLER SYSTEM BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT 3.5ACS.

3BR, 1 1/2 BATH 1300+ SQ. FT. ON 1/2 ACRE LOT KOSSUTH SCHOOL DIST. NEAR AIRPORT, 16 CR 626 OWNER WILL FINANCE WITH DOWN PAYMENT $700. RENT OR $675. IF YOU DO YARD NEWLY UPDATED PH. LARRY @ 662-284-9285 PH. FREIDA @ 662-286-1472

D L SO

SHOWN BY APPT. 662-808-0285 OR 662-808-0287

$179,500

HOUSE FOR SALE

BUSINESS & SERVICE PRIME LOCATION!

D E S A LE IN EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER HWY 72 EAST. CALL 662-415-9187

805 CONFEDERATE ST. 918 SQ. FT. 2BR, 1 BATH OUTSIDE SHED CARPORT STORM SHELTER 1/2 ACRE LOT $32,500.00 662-415-8335

g GRISHAM INSURANCE

662-286-9835

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand We Haul:

• Driveway Slag (Any Size Rock) • Crush and Run • Iuka Gravel • Masonry Sand • Top Soil • Rip-Rap • Washed Gravel • Pea Gravel

Loans $20-$20,000 CHRIS GRISHAM

Home Life

Auto Health

Medicare Supplements “I will always try to help you”

Nursery/Childcare Position

0955 LEGALS

FOR LEASE

Full-Time Cook Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri. 8 – 4:30 E.O.E

0955 LEGALS

Property Directory

Subject to U.S. Highway 45 WHEREAS, on July 20, right of way on the East side 2016, James Garland Pettigo of said lot. executed a Deed of Trust to J. Patrick Caldwell as Trustee Title to the above defor the benefit of Bancorp- scribed property is believed South Bank, which Deed of to be good, but I will convey Trust was recorded as/in In- only such title as vested in me strument No. 201603087 in as Substitute Trustee. the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, MisWITNESS my signasissippi; and ture on this 26th day of June, 2017. WHEREAS, BancorpSouth Bank, the holder of said / / S P G ld h ll S b i

MS CARE CENTER

0955 LEGALS

1900 E. Shiloh Road • Corinth, MS 38834

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

• • • • •

We also do: Dozer Back-Hoe Track-Hoe Demolition Dig Ponds and Lakes

662-286-9158 or 662-287-2296

Hat Lady

1299 Hwy 2 West (Marshtown) Structure demolition & Removal Crushed Lime Stone (any size) Iuka Road Gravel Washed gravel Pea gravel Fill sand Masonry and sand Black Magic mulch Natural Brown mulch Top Soil “Let us help with your project” “Large or Small”

Bill Jr., 284-6061 G.E. 284-9209

Mary Coats Thank you for

17 YEARS!! Call me with your vehicle needs, new, certified, and pre-owned. Come by, text or call today!!! Long Lewis Ford Lincoln of Corinth (662)664-0229 Cell / (662)287-3184 Offi ce mcoatsllf@yahoo.com

TORNADO SHELTERS 40 Years FORESTRY MULCHER SERVICES

Looking to clear some land or clean up a property but don’t want to deal with a bulldozer, dump truck, burn piles, etc? Call us. We have a forestry mulcher that will turn a 6” to 8” tree into mulch. It’s great for cleaning up underbrush, cutting fire lanes in timber, clearing out spaces for food plots, and cleaning up property. Call us for a free estimate today! 662-287-2828

MAGNOLIA STUMP GRINDING REASONABLE RATES FREE ESTIMATES 662-415-2425 VISIT US AT OUR NEW LOCATION

CROSSROADS

CHIROPRACTIC, LLC

is looking for

C.N.A.s 2nd & 3rd shifts Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri. 8 – 4:30 E.O.E

Dr. Richard Alexander 3263 N Polk Street Corinth, MS 662-415-5432 Now Accepting New Patients Committed To Your Complete Health with A Natural Method of Care.


6B • Wednesday, July 19, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

0848 AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES

Back to School Specials! We Always Sell For Less 2011 Chevy Malibu, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise, Gray ................................... $6,800 2012 Chevy Malibu LT,, Fully Equipped, Air, Cruise ................................ $7,800 2012 Chevy Impala LT, Tilt, Cruise, Auto, Air ........................................... $6,800 2005 Nissan Maxima, Leather, Tilt, Cruise, Sunroof ......................... $5,800 2007 Nissan Maxima SE, Black, Fully Loaded .................................... $6,800 2011 Chevy Traverse, Gray, Auto, Tilt, Cruise, Air ...................................... $6,900 2013 Ford Escape XLT, Gray, Air, Cruise, Super Clean ...................... $9,000 2010 Ford Ranger, White, Hard to Find, Priced to Sell .................................. $6,500 2003 Buick Lesabre Limited, Leather, Only 57,000 Miles ......................$5,500 2004 Ford Taurus, Red Only 89,000 Miles ...........................................$4,500

See Gene Sanders

Corinth Motor Sales 108 Cardinal Drive just East of Caterpillar - Corinth, MS 662-287-2254 or 665-2462

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

of the Northwest Quarter of Section 19, Township 2 South, Range 7 East; thence run North 32 degrees 22 minutes 00 seconds East 1131.78 feet; thence run North 32 degrees 20 minutes 20 seconds East 51.51 feet; thence run North 71 degrees 34 minutes 24 seconds West 401.51 feet; thence run North 71 degrees 34 minutes 24 seconds West 159.57 feet; thence run North 74 degrees 58 minutes 21 seconds West 393.13 feet; thence run North 74 degrees 58 minutes 21 seconds West 250.00 feet to a steel pin and metal post found on the North right-ofway of Alcorn County Road 616 and the point of beginning; thence run along said North right-of-way North 75 degrees 06 minutes 42 seconds West 26.21 feet, North 66 degrees 48 minutes 14 seconds West 49.70 feet, North 66 degrees 00 minutes 00 seconds West 292.35 feet to a spike set on the South right-of-way of Alcorn County Road 615; thence run along said South right-of-way North 37 degrees 46 minutes 15 seconds East 345.59 feet, North 59 degrees 12 minutes 59 seconds East 139.96 feet, North 59 degrees 20 minutes 37 seconds East 117.26 feet to a fence corner; thence run along a wire fence South 25 degrees 26 minutes 12 seconds East 77.20 feet to a fence corner; thence run South 89 degrees 24 minutes 52 seconds East 159.00 feet to a 1/2 inch steel pin; thence run South 382.90 feet to a steel pin and metal post found; thence run North 82 degrees 59 minutes 02 seconds West 131.25 feet to a steel pin and metal post found; thence run North 75 degrees 11 minutes 48 seconds West 125.00 feet to a steel pin and metal post found; thence run South 13

found; thence run South 13 degrees 58 minutes 43 seconds West 148.00 feet to the point of beginning, containing 4.70 acres, more or less.

legal hours for such sale, will offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash the said property conveyed to me by said WHEREAS, on July 28, deed of trust described as fol2 0 1 0 , J o n a t h a n H e r s e y , lows: (Grantor), executed and delivered to Don Detter, trust- Situated in the County of Alee, a deed of trust on the corn, State of Mississippi, toproperty hereinafter de- wit: scribed to secure payment of an indebtedness therein men- A part of the Northwest tioned owing to Fort Finan- Quarter of Section 5, Townc i a l C r e d i t U n i o n , F o r t ship 4 South, Range 8 East, Wayne, Indiana, beneficiary, which deed of trust is recor- Alcorn County, MS described ded in the office of the Chan- as follows: cery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument Commencing at the NorthNumber 2010003241; and east corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section 5, WHEREAS, Fort Fin- Township 4 South, Range 8 ancial Credit Union, legal East, Alcorn County, Missisholder and owner of said sippi, thence run West along deed of trust and the in- the North boundary line of debtedness secured thereby the Quarter Section 1670 substituted Arch Bullard as feet, more or less, to the trustee by instrument dated point where the East right-ofJune 27th, 2017, and is recor- way line of Alcorn County ded in the office of the Chan- Road 451 crosses the North cery Clerk of Alcorn County, boundary line of the said Mississippi, as Instrument Quarter Section for the Number 201702546; and POINT OF BEGINNING. Run thence in a SouthwestWHEREAS, said in- erly direction along the East debtedness has matured in its boundary line of said road entirety and is now past due, 330 feet, more or less, to the unpaid and in default, the pro- North right-of-away line of a visions of said deed of trust paved County road somehave been broken by said times referred to as the Rinegrantors and have not been hart Road, being Alcorn cured and the said beneficiary, County Road 450; run thence the present holder of said in- in an Easterly direction along debtedness, has requested the North right-of-way line of the undersigned to foreclose said Rinehart Road 420 feet; said deed of trust pursuant to thence run at a 90 degree the provisions thereof to en- angle from the paved County force payment of said debt; Road a distance of 300 feet, more or less, to the North NOW, THEREFORE, L i n e o f t h e N o r t h w e s t notice is hereby given that I, Quarter of Section 5, Townthe undersigned substituted ship 4 South, Range 8 East; trustee, on July 27, 2017, at thence run West 400 feet, the front doors of the county more or less, to the East courthouse of Alcorn County, right-of-way line of Alcorn Mississippi, in the City of County Road 451 and the Corinth, Mississippi, within Point of Beginning. legal hours for such sale, will

SUBJECT TO right-of-way for public roads and utilities. This sheet constitutes a portion of the deed of trust from Larry J. Fuller, a single person, to Coldwell Banker Mortgage dated October 21, 2005. I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 28th day of June, 2017. Shapiro & Massey, LLC SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232 (601) 981-9299 30 County Road 615 Corinth, MS 38834 17-018721GW Publication Dates: July 12, 19, 26, August 2, 2017 15961

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0955 LEGALS

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE’S SALE

HOT SUMMER SPECIALS AT BROSE! 2010 NISSAN

2008 MAZDA

1998 CHEVROLET

2013 NISSAN

2008 NISSAN

2013 CHEVROLET

2012 BUICK

2014 CHEVROLET

FRONTIER SE

3

MONTE CARLO

ROGUE SPECIAL EDT.

ALTIMA 2.5S

MALIBU LTZ

REGAL PREMIUM

TRAVERSE LT

STK#23203U

STK#23193U

STK#23185U LEATHER!

STK#23186U LEATHER!

STK#23162A LEATHER!

STK#23167A 3RD SEAT!

PRICED TO SELL! SUNROOF! CLEAN!

STK#23190U

STK#23192U

9 PRE-OWNED ROGUES!

CLEAN!

*$

9,995 LOW MILES! ONE OWNER!

2005 DODGE GRAND

2003 CHEVROLET

2003 CHEVROLET

2014 HONDA

2005 NISSAN

2003 CADILLAC

2016 CHRYSLER

2015 CHRYSLER

CARAVAN SXT

AVALANCHE Z66

TAHOE LT 4x4

ACCORD SPORT

TITAN LE

DEVILLE

200S

300 LTD

STK#23150U POWER LIFT GATE!

STK#23195U

DUAL POWER SLIDERS! STOW-N-GO!

LOCAL TRADE! MUST SEE!

2016 CHRYSLER

2011 DODGE

STK#23191U

STK#23138U

ONE-OWNER! TRADE-IN!

LOCAL TRADE!

2005 DODGE

2015 DODGE

2014 FORD F150

2006 FORD F250

2015 GMC

DART SXT

XLT 4x4 CREW

4x4 POWERSTROKE

TERRAIN SLE

STK#23187U

2016 DODGE

TOWN&COUNTRY TOURING CALIBER MAINSTREET CHARGER RT HEMI DURANGO LTD 4x4 HEMI

STK#23143U

STK#22726A NAV! LOADED!

*$

STK#22843U LOADED!

*$

13,990 *$16,990

2,499

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

I will sell and convey only I N T H E C H A N C E R Y such title as is vested in me by C O U R T O F A L C O R N COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI said deed of trust. Signed, posted and published RE: THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF BERNICE this 12th day of July, 2017. RAY, DECEASED /s/ Arch Bullard CAUSE NO. 17-286-02 ARCH BULLARD Publication Dates: July 12, 2017; July 19, 2017; NOTICE TO CREDITORS July 26, 2017; and August 2, NOTICE IS GIVEN that Let2017. ters Testamentary were on 15975 the 7th day of June, 2017 , 1 7 + ( & + $ 1 & ( 5 < granted the undersigned Ex& 2 8 5 7 2 ) $ / & 2 5 1 ecutrix of the Estate of BER& 2 8 1 7 < 0 , 6 6 , 6 6 , 3 3 , NICE RAY, Deceased, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and all 7+( 3(7,7,21 2) persons having claims against 1,&+2/$6 6+$1( said Estate are required to 0($'2:6 $ 1 ' $ / , 6 + $ 1 , & 2 / ( have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of 0($'2:6 said Court within ninety (90) )25 7+( $'237,21 days after the date of the first 2) $ 0,125 &+,/' publication of this Notice, ,'(17,),(' ,1 7+( which is the 19th day of July, 3(7,7,21 2017 or the same shall be &$86( 12 forever barred. WITNESS OUR SIGNATURE(S), this the 17th day of July, 2017.

6800216 7+( 67$7( 2) 0,66,66,33,

AUDREY WALLS 72 7KH 8QNQRZQ )DWK EXECUTRIX HU RI D PDOH FKLOG ERUQ 0D\ LQ $OFRUQ W. JETT WILSON, &RXQW\ 0LVVLVVLSSL MSB#7316 <RX KDYH EHHQ PDGH ATTORNEY FOR EXECD 'HIHQGDQW LQ WKH VXLW UTRIX ILOHG LQ WKLV &RXUW E\ 505 E. WALDRON STREET 1LFKRODV 6KDQH 0HDG POST OFFICE BOX 1257 RZV DQG $OLVKD 1LFROH CORINTH, MS 38835 0HDGRZV 3HWLWLRQHUV (662) 286-3366 VHHNLQJ WHUPLQDWLRQ RI \RXU SDUHQWDO ULJKWV DQG 3t 7/19, 7/26, 8/2/17 DGRSWLRQ RI \RXU FKLOG 15978 7KHUH DUH QR GHIHQG DQWV RWKHU WKDQ \RX LQ WKLV DFWLRQ WILL SELL for wrecker & storage fees: <RX DUH VXPPRQHG WR DSSHDU DQG GHIHQG DJDLQVW WKH FRPSODLQW 2013 Mazda RU SHWLWLRQ ILOHG DJDLQVW vin#JM1NC2JF4D0229458 \RX LQ WKLV DFWLRQ DW R FORFN $ 0 RQ WKH UG Wayne's Wrecker GD\ RI $XJXVW LQ Service W K H & K D Q F H U \ 205 S. Tate St. FRXUWURRP RI WKH /HH Corinth MS 38834. &RXQW\ -XVWLFH &HQWHU 662-808-5556. DW 7XSHOR 0LVVLVVLSSL DQG LQ FDVH RI \RXU IDLO Will Sale on 8/8/2017 at XUH WR DSSHDU DQG GH IHQG D MXGJPHQW ZLOO EH 6:30AM at 205 S. Tate Street. Corinth, MS 38834 HQWHUHG DJDLQVW \RX IRU 15979 WKH PRQH\ RU RWKHU WKLQJV GHPDQGHG LQ WKH FRPSODLQW RU SHWLWLRQ

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

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STORAGE, INDOOR/ OUTDOOR $0(5,&$1 0,1, 6725$*( 6 7DWH $FURVV )URP :RUOG &RORU

*UHJ <RXQJHU &KDQFHU\ &OHUN RI $OFRUQ &RXQW\ 0LVVLVVLSSL

0255,6 &580 0,1, 6725$*(

%\ .DUHQ 'XQFDQ ' & 'HSXW\ &OHUN W STK#23101A

STK#23188U LOADED!

SEVERAL VANS IN STOCK!

STK#22964U

JUST IN! *$22,444

2014 HYUNDAI

2014 HYUNDAI

ELANTRA SE

STK#22975U LOADED!

*$

3,490

2016 JEEP

SANTA FE SPORT RENEGADE LATITUDE

STK#22820A LOADED!

*$

11,890

STK#23128U

STK#23192U CLEAN!

CARFAX ONE-OWNER!

*$

5,999

STK#22994U LOADED!

*$

16,940

2004 NISSAN

2000 NISSAN

2014 NISSAN

1999 SATURN

2014 TOYOTA

MAXIMA SL

XTERRA XE

FRONTIER PRO 4-X CREW

SL2

COROLLA LE PLUS

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

Smith Discount Home Center 412 Pinecrest Road 287-2221 • 287-4419

STK#23066U ONE OWNER!

STK#23134U

STK#23158U

*$

11,990 MUST SEE! 2 IN STOCK!

STK#23160U LOADED!

*$

3,999

STK#23002U

STK#23093U

STK#23175U AUTO! PW!

*$

1,999 LOADED!

*$

1,695

STK#22993U

CARFAX ONE-OWNER!

2016 TOYOTA

RAV4 LTD EDITION

W E H AV E S E V E R A L NISSAN CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLES! CHECK THEM OUT!

STK#23078U LOW MILES!

LOCAL! ONE OWNER!

BUT THAT’S NOT ALL!

SEE EVEN MORE OF OUR BEST DEALS AT B R O S E A U T O P L E X . C O M !

*: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE $399. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. BHPH PROGRAM EXCLUDED. PRIOR DEALS OR OFFERS EXCLUDED. SEE SALESPERSON FOR WARRANTY COMPONENT COVERAGE ON NISSAN CPO UNITS. DEDUCTIBLE AND RESTRICTIONS APPLY. GOOD TILL 7/24/17.

Summer Time Savings! New Shipment of Wood Look Porcelain Tile!

289 $ 19 Corrugated Metal 1 $ 95 4x8 Cement Siding 10 $ 95 4x10 Cement Siding 14 2 X 4 X 92 5/8� Stud .....

$

.............

BRAND NEW

per sheet

2017 SENTRA S

w/ POWER DRIVER SEAT!

1095 $ 1295 $

Crossties .................................... Paneling .................. Starting at

BRAND NEW

2017 ALTIMA 2.5S

li. ft.

per sheet

...

BROSE

each

per sheet

3/8� Engineered $ Hardwood.................................

169 Tile 69¢ ¢-$ 19 Laminate Floor From 79 1 $ 00-$ 00 *#^^^$ *#^^^$ 2 7 17,443 14,944 Pad for Laminate Floor 5 $ 1095 PRICE! PRICE! Area Rugs 69 $ 12995 SEE MORE GREAT DEALS AT WWW.BROSENISSAN.COM! • SEE MORE GREAT DEALS AT WWW.BROSENISSAN.COM! Handicap Commodes $ 3/4â€? Plywood 2195 2017 FRONTIER SV KINGCAB 2WD 2017 ROGUE S $ 1650 1/2â€? Plywood $ 95 25 Year 3 Tab Shingle 46 sq. ft.

sq. ft.

.................................................. Starting at

AT THIS

NISSAN REBATES...*#$4,000 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$2,611 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE..... SA

*^^^$

17,443

^^RATED 39 MPG HIGHWAY!

STK# 3195N, 3199N • MODEL# 13117 • VIN# HN308709 • DEAL# 58040

AT THIS

NISSAN REBATES...*#$2,000 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$871 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE.....*^^^$14,944 SA

sq. ft.

^^RATED 37 MPG HIGHWAY!

STK# 3271N, 3285N, 3291N, 3296N, 3299N, 3301N, 3313N • MODEL# 12017 • VIN# HY289930 • DEAL# 68029

.................Starting at

#INCLUDES $1000 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

.......

BRAND NEW

BRAND NEW

each .....................

w/ AUTO, AIR, POWER PKG, CRUISE, BEDLINER & MUCH MUCH MORE!

each.....................

.

35 Year Architectural

4

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES...*#$2,750 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$1,086 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE.....*^^^$20,014 SA

*#^^^$

20,014

STK# 3081NT, 3082NT, 3083NT, 3093NT • MODEL# 31317 • VIN# HN739867 • DEAL# 63639

11

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES...*#$2,250 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$1,836 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE.....*^^^$19,714 SA

Shingle ........................................... *#^^^$

19,714

STK# 2976NT, 2984NT, 2993NT, 3015NT, 3019NT, 3021NT, 3025NT, 3031NT, 3032NT, 3044NT, 3045NT • MODEL# 22117 • VIN# HP501907 • DEAL# 57678

#INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

*: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES, INCLUDING ANY HOLIDAY BONUS CASH, ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE PRICE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY; NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372, 38375, OR (&) 38852 WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIGNATED MARKET AREA (DMA) ALIGNMENT WHICH MAY AFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES, WHICH BROSE HAS NO CONTROL OVER. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 84MO, 5.5APR, TIER 1-2 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. #: INCLUDES THE NMAC FINANCE REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN. ^: SEE SALESPERSON FOR COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAM DETAILS. CERTAIN TERMS & CONDITIONS MAY APPLY. ^^PRICING INCLUDES BROSE TRADE-IN BONUS WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO HAVE A MOTORIZED VEHICLE TRADE IN TO GET THE LOWEST PRICE ADVERTISED. SEE SALESPERSON DETAILS. DEALS GOOD UNTIL 7.24.17.

+:< ($67

&25,17+ 06

%526(

5595

$

Croft Windows ...................................................... Tubs & Showers.. starting at

21500

$

The Best Deals on Building & Remodeling Products!! Check Here First!


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