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Daily Corinthian Vol. 121, No. 175

• Corinth, Mississippi •

Partly sunny Today

Tonight

94

75

30% chance of rain

20 pages • Two sections

Drugs, property crimes draw pleas glary of a dwelling and possession of methamphetamine — Five years to serve in custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections followed by five years of probation. He must pay restitution. • Barbara Ellen Fair, embezzlement — Suspended 20-

BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Several defendants entered guilty pleas in Alcorn County Circuit Court this week. Sentences handed down by Judge Thomas Gardner III, according to court records, are: • Brandon Wheeler, 33, bur-

year sentence and five years of probation. She was ordered to pay restitution of $21,569.79 to the Southwest Volunteer Fire Department in monthly $1,000 installments beginning Sept. 1. • Joshua Neil Malone, 37, possession of methamphetamine — Sentenced to one year

in the house arrest program followed by five years of probation • Eddie Woods Jr., possession of marijuana with intent and possession of methamphetamine — Three years to serve followed by four years of probation on count two and a

California competing

Corinth man honored as Top in Tech

Students experience national convention BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

Looking toward the future of education is what helped one Corinth man win a Top in Tech award for 2017. Recently, 38-year-old Chandler Gray, along with his wife, Ashley, traveled down to Jackson where he received the 2017 “Top in Tech” award from the Mississippi Business Journal. The award winner said he still doesn’t know who originally put his name out there for the award. He learned about the honor through an e-mail. “Someone nominated me. I wish I knew who, so that I could thank them. I just got an e-mail saying that I had been nominated for the Top in Tech Leaders with the Mississippi Business journal,” said Gray. Gray is a native of Jackson and said his wife is from Florida. They lived in the sunshine state when they were first married, but when it came time to move back and start a family, they chose Corinth as a place to live. They have called Corinth home for about 12 years. For the past five years, Gray has worked in the Corinth School District. For the first four of those years, he worked Please see GRAY | 2A

The bigger picture of success. It’s exactly what four Alcorn Central High School students recently learned after climbing the Future Business Leaders of America competition ladder. Students Luke Price, Katelyn Mathis, John Mask and Chris Miller joined advisor Twila Bridges on a trip to nationals, otherwise known as the Future Business Leaders of America’s National Leadership Conference in Anaheim, Calif., on June 29-July 2. “I love taking students to the National Leadership Conferences because our students step out of what’s comfortable for them and see a bigger picture of success,” said Bridges. “They see and compete against excellent students. This is no easy competition for them and I know it motivates them to aspire to be better and step up their performance in the classrooms, as well as in the business world. They see what success looks like and want to strive for that more.” To get to nationals, the students each had to place at the district level at Northeast Mississippi Community

suspended five-year sentence on count one • Cajee Curlee, accessory after the fact to armed robbery — One year in the house arrest program followed by five years of probation Please see PLEAS | 2A

Man dies from crash injuries BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

Alcorn Central High School students Luke Price, Katelyn Mathis, John Mask and Chris Miller joined advisor Twila Bridges recently on a trip to the Future Business Leaders of America’s National Leadership Conference in Anaheim, California. College in February. After placing in the top six there, they competed at the Mississippi Leadership Conference in Jackson in April. At the state level, however, only the top few places were given the opportunity to continue representing Mississippi at the national level. At the nationals, the students participated in the

opening ceremony, individual competitions and the awards program. Although not all events had call-backs for final competition, many did. “ACHS was very fortunate to have had John Mask and Chris Miller in one of the 15 groups called back to comPlease see STUDENTS | 2A

TISHOMINGO COUNTY — A Friday evening crash has resulted in the death of a 25-year-old Corinth man. According to an preliminary report from Tishomingo County Sheriff John Dennis Daugherty, Orion Hughey was the name released by Tishomingo County Coroner Mack Wilemon as having been killed in a wreck which occurred around 5:30 p.m. Friday evening. The crash happened in a wreck on Old Steel Bridge Road in Tishomingo County when the vehicle Hughey was in apparently left the road, struck a power pole and then a tree. Daugherty said whomever was driving may have lost control in a curve, but the wreck is still being investigated and a formal report is pending. There were three people traveling in the vehicle when it crashed and one or more of them may have been ejected. Hughey was reportedly pronounced dead at North Mississippi Medical Center in Iuka. The other two individuals were flown for medical treatment, but it is unknown at this time which medical facility or their conditions.

Friend of the Forest: Mynatt reflects on career BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

A bit of chance brought Glen Mynatt to Alcorn County, where he made a home and spent most of a forestry career. The longtime friend of Alcorn County’s forest land recently retired after spending 28 years with the Mississippi Forestry Commission. A native of the Lake Center

area of Marshall County, he first became a county forester in 1989 in southwest Mississippi’s Jefferson County after finishing studies at Mississippi State University. As a fan of the outdoors, he was naturally interested in forestry work. A few years later, he was on track to become forester for Yalobusha County when his predecessor in Alcorn County, Bob

McGregor, took an interest in the Yalobusha job because he had family there. As a result, Mynatt took the Alcorn County job, “which was a blessing in disguise,” he said, “because it’s a good place to live, to raise a family, and good folks to work with.” Twenty-four years later, he remains a happy resident with wife Pherbia. The forestry job put him fre-

quently in touch with landowners to help them make decisions about the planting of timber and related issues. Responding to wildfires, often at the request of the local volunteer fire departments, was also a big part of the job. “I really enjoyed working with Alcorn County and Tippah Mynatt

Please see MYNATT | 2A

25 years ago

10 years ago

Magnolia Hospital installs its first automated phone system to deal with increasing call volume rising to as many as 2,000 calls per day.

Crossroads area residents join in Potter mania at area bookstores as the final book of the Harry Potter series is released.

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2A • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

GRAY CONTINUED FROM 1A

Young quilters Recently the Tishomingo County Needle Chasers sponsored its annual quilting class for youngsters. Fifteen students, the largest class to date, signed up; the oldest being 15 and the youngest were 6 year-old twins. Kits were prepared prior to the class by Needle Chasers members with sufficient blocks and batting for each child to complete a quilt which would measure approximately 50� by 60.� The students selected a kit and began laying three pieces together and sewing an “X� on each set of squares before deciding on a layout of their colors and joining the blocks together. The students showed discipline and determination to have the quilt put together by day’s end,which they proudly displayed as shown in this picture. The oldest participant, a boy, and the youngest twins were not available for pictures.The students took their quilts home to clip the large seams so they would fray during a subsequent washing and drying.

PLEAS CONTINUED FROM 1A

• Heather Marie Jordan, 29, possession of methamphetamine with intent — Suspended 20-year sentence followed by five years of probation • Tammy Renee King, identity theft — Suspended 10-year sentence followed by five years of probation. She must pay restitution. • Michael Dyson, 33, burglary of a building and grand larceny — Sus-

pended seven-year sentence on count one followed by five years of probation and suspended five-year sentence on count two • Stephen Hardin, 39, possession of methamphetamine — Suspended three-year sentence followed by 30 months of probation • Jonathan Millmeyer, felony taking of a motor vehicle — Suspended five year sentence followed by five years of probation. He must pay restitution.

as curriculum coordinator and director for professional development. He said he did a lot of training for teachers and sta on various aspects of education — one of those being technology. He helped a lot with the programs that were being instituted, such as technology programs that the teachers are using. “I tried to help them find things that would allow them to reach their students and increase their educational experience,â€? said Gray. For the last year, he was the director of one of the district’s newest programs — the Corinth Technology and Integration Center — known as C-Tech. The program is housed at the Northeast at Corinth facility and he believes the C-Tech program is part of the reason he was chosen to receive the award. The program allows students to follow their interests and develop them with guidance so they can graduate high school with dierentiated diplomas while earning credits toward an associate’s degree, according to a previous explanation by Corinth School District Superintendent Lee Childress. Gray explained that the hope is to utilize technology and use everything, including career onsite visits, to teach students — not only in today’s society, but in the future society — how to utilize their chances to increase the uses of technology. “I have to give all the credit to the teachers and the students, as they were just wonderful in what they do,â€? said Gray. The education administrator expressed humility regarding winning the Top in Tech award.

Chandler Gray, Corinth School District administrator, recently won the 2017 Top in Tech award by the Mississippi Business Journal.Â

“I have to give all the credit to the teachers and the students, as they were just wonderful in what they do.� Chandler Gray Corinth School District administrator “It is by the grace of God that puts you in places where you get to work with kids and allows you to do things that increase His glory ... I don’t know how or why I was chosen for someone to nominate, but I was glad to get the award. I give all the glory to God for that,� he said. Gray and his wife have two children, Maddie, 11, and Parker, 9. Currently, they are in the process of preparing for a move to Oxford, where Gray has

taken an assistant principal position at Oxford High School. “We love Corinth and the people have been wonderful to us. It’s really bittersweet, but we’re excited about it,� said Gray, regarding the move. The position will be a good fit for Gray, who is also working toward a doctoral degree at the University of Mississippi. His wife works in Tupelo at the North Mississippi Medical Center.

July 1, the local area now includes Alcorn, Tishomingo and Prentiss counties. “If it gets dry, it will be rough on folks,â€? he said. Mynatt believes Alcorn County’s forest land is doing well today, perhaps better than in the past. “People have been good about replanting,â€? he said. Mississippi State University Extension Service Agent Patrick Poindexter praised Mynatt’s eorts through the years and expects to see him remain active in retirement. “Glen did a tremendous job for Alcorn County as a forester as far as helping people with tree plantings,â€? said Poindexter. “He’s always bee a very valuable resource to the county and the extension service.â€?

Natural Resources Conservation Service District Clerk Sandy Mitchell said Mynatt is very knowledgeable and always eager to help. “He’s been a really good asset for us to have here in the county as far as our forestry industry goes,� she said. Mynatt has been involved with educational outreach, helping each year with the Arbor Day tree giveaway and presentations to local fifth-grade students. He has donned the Smokey the Bear costume on a number of occasions. He believes it is important to talk to youth about the importance of forest land. “We all depend on it so much for everything from our houses to the paper we use,� said Mynatt.

MYNATT CONTINUED FROM 1A

County landowners,â€? said Mynatt. “Most folks are 100 percent on wanting to do the right thing.â€? During his time as forester, his area of coverage expanded from just Alcorn County to include Tippah County. With a reorganization eective

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pete for the top ten places in the nation in Entrepreneurship,� said Bridges. “Although these young men represented ACHS and the state very well, they did not place in the top 10, but they are two of only a handful of students from ACHS who have advanced to a competitive finish.� A junior, Mask said he jumped at the opportunity to take part in such an educational journey. “Competing with FBLA has been a great experience and I am proud to be a part of such a fun organization,� said the teen. “Our trip to California was eye-opening and very memorable. It has taught me to appreciate the support that I constantly receive from my school, my friends and my family. I want to thank God for allowing me the chance to compete for such a sup-

portive school and for giving my team the ability to do so well.� Bridges said competition was intense. “This brings together the best of the best of students from across the country and world,� she added. The students and their school were responsible for paying costs involved in traveling to a conference. The FBLA Foundation and the state FBLA donated a small amount toward the expenses, added Bridges. “Luckily, most of these students were joined by at least one of their parents or close relatives and everyone enjoyed the trip and the fellowship immensely,� she said Between events and competitions, the extended group from ACHS visited Disneyland, Knott’s Berry Farm, Santa Monica Pier and Hollywood.


Sunday, July 23, 2017

Today in History Today is Sunday, July 23, the 204th day of 2017. There are 161 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On July 23, 1967, five days of deadly rioting erupted in Detroit as an early morning police raid on a “blind pig” (an unlicensed bar) at the intersection of 12th Street and Clairmount Avenue resulted in a confrontation with local residents that escalated into violence that spread into other parts of the city; 43 people, mostly blacks, were killed.

On this date In 1885, Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th president of the United States, died in Mount McGregor, New York, at age 63. In 1914, AustriaHungary presented a list of demands to Serbia following the killing of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by a Serb assassin; Serbia’s refusal to agree to the entire ultimatum led to the outbreak of World War I. In 1962, the first public TV transmissions over Telstar 1 took place during a special program featuring live shots beamed from the United States to Europe, and vice versa. In 1977, a jury in Washington, D.C., convicted 12 Hanafi Muslims of charges stemming from the hostage siege at three buildings the previous March. In 1982, actor Vic Morrow and two child actors were killed when a helicopter crashed on top of them during filming of a Vietnam War scene for “Twilight Zone: The Movie.” (Director John Landis and four associates were later acquitted of manslaughter.) In 1986, Britain’s Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at Westminster Abbey in London. (They divorced in 1996.) In 1997, the search for Andrew Cunanan, the suspected killer of designer Gianni Versace and others, ended as police found his body on a houseboat in Miami Beach, an apparent suicide. In 2011, singer Amy Winehouse, 27, was found dead in her London home from accidental alcohol poisoning.

Local/Region

Daily Corinthian • 3A

Across the Region Booneville

Tishomingo County

Neighborhood watch program seeks support

Local man receives leadership award

BOONEVILLE — Members of the Booneville’s neighborhood watch program appeared before the board of aldermen Tuesday to ask for more support. Teresa Burcham, speaking on behalf of the neighborhood watch and Citizens for a Better Booneville, told the board they are very concerned about the large amount of drug activity in the city as well as the amount of substandard rental property and the city’s lack of a rental code. She said these issues are leading to deterioration and blight in many neighborhoods and they hope city leaders will help them with efforts to make improvements. She said the police department has done an excellent job of responding to their concerns and working to address the issues, but they know more must be done by the city to improve the community. The mayor said he and the board are committed to addressing the group’s concerns and will be taking part in future neighborhood watch meetings in order to learn how to better support their efforts. In other business, the board: • Approved up to $10,000 for paving related to the replacement of the bridge on Jefferson Street going toward Cunningham Boulevard. Lindley said the county has received a grant to replace the bridge but the city will be responsible for paving work on the project. • Approved the termination of Casey Irwin at the gas and water department on the recommendation of utility department office manager Cindy Steward following a closed session to discuss a personnel matter within the department. • Accepted the low bid of $2,800 from Eddie Allen Construction for the demolition of a dilapidated property at 203 Stanley Street Extended. Burns Dozer Service submitted the only other bid at $3,500. • Approved promoting Blake Burress to full-time police officer. • Approved spending up to $700 per full-time police officer in funds already budgeted for uniforms and equipment. • Approved hiring Sabrina Welch as full-time administrative assistant at City Hall. • Appointed McCoy as mayor pro-tem for the new term. • Welcomed First Pentecostal Church minister Jonathan Sodum who lead the invocation at the opening of the meeting and members of Boy Scout Troop 111 from Wheeler who presented the colors and led the Pledge of Allegiance to open the meeting.

TISHOMINGO COUNTY — Northeast Mississippi Community College technology specialist Jeffrey Powell of Tishomingo became the first recipient of the Olon E. Ray Leadership and Innovation Award at the 2017 Creating Futures Through Technology Conference in Biloxi during the 2017 spring semester. Northeast president Ricky Ford of Booneville presented Powell with the award at the end of the three-day technology conference. During the conference entitled, “Disrupt. Transform,” presentations focused on digital transformations in the classroom and the disruptions that occur when changes are enabled by digital technologies. Through insightful lectures, participants are able to learn about their ability to accelerate the transformations in learning and teaching, business activities and processes that have an impact on society. Powell’s award was named for the 2016 legacy award winner Dr. Olon Ray, who was honored for his exemplary leadership and visionary accomplishments. Powell is an Apple Distinguished Educator and has been a presenter at the Creating Futures Through Technology Conference in the past. In his nomination packet, Powell was noted as, “a leader and innovator in the implementation of transformational technology,” at Northeast. Powell has also traveled the southeastern United States giving insight into what it takes for teachers to stay on the cutting edge of technological advancements in the educational arena. Powell, a native of Tishomingo, has served as webmaster for the college since the turn of the century and has developed a passion for technology that the Northeast alum passes on to others.

Selmer Some vaccines required before school starts SELMER, Tenn. — Preventing an illness is always better than trying to treat it once it occurs. That’s why doctors with the Tennessee Department of Health encourage people of all ages to talk with their healthcare providers about the immunizations needed for lifelong protection. “Vaccines aren’t just for kids. They provide protection against many potentially serious and preventable illnesses that can strike an individual, a family or a community without warning,” said TDH Commissioner John

Dreyzehner, MD, MPH. “We see deadly influenza every year; mumps outbreaks have been ongoing in the U.S., including Tennessee; measles outbreaks have surged worldwide because too many people have been misled by just plain wrong, unscientific information about vaccines. The bottom line is this: Nothing is zero risk. We all depend on each other to be current on vaccines to protect each other and communities because no vaccine is 100 percent effective and not every person can take vaccine. Many people doing the right thing protects all of us, especially the most vulnerable among us.” In recent years, new vaccines have been added to the healthy living toolbox to protect adults better than ever before. Nonetheless, most adults in Tennessee and around the country have not yet taken advantage of them. Tennesseans over age 65 are pretty good about getting pneumococcal and influenza vaccines, but fewer than one in four younger adults whose health, lifestyle or occupation may put them at risk for certain infections such as hepatitis B, pneumococcal disease or pertussis, have actually gotten these important vaccines.

Representatives from several different areas of the college will be on hand to answer any questions that students and parents may have. Northeast’s Help Desk will be set up during the August Orientation to aid students with any technical support that a student may need. For more information about Northeast’s August Orientation contact the college’s Guidance/ Counseling Center locally at 662-720-7313 or toll free at 1-800-555-2154.

Tupelo School stage where Presley sang renovated TUPELO (AP) — One of the first stages Elvis Presley sang on has been refinished during the renovation of the auditorium at his elementary school in Mississippi. Presley was a student at Lawhon Elementary School during the early 1940s. Recent renovations included restoration of the auditorium’s original hardwood floors and seats. Tupelo public schools maintenance director Kirk Kitchens says an auditorium seat has been marked where a young Presley sat. Another seat is engraved, “Elvis was here.” Elvis Presley Birthplace employee Judy Schumpert said Presley’s time at Lawhon was instrumental in helping him pursue music as a boy. Schumpert says Presley’s fifth-grade teacher, Oleta Grimes, entered him in his first talent competition.

Booneville Northeast officials ready to welcome students BOONEVILLE — Northeast Mississippi Community College is offering an August Orientation for any first-year student, who does not have a schedule for the fall semester. Northeast’s August Orientation will be held on Thursday, Aug. 3, starting at 8 a.m. for those wishing to take part in the orientation process. Check in and registration for the August Orientation is set for the Bonner Arnold Coliseum. Orientation at Northeast is designed to assist incoming freshman with a means to make a smooth transition into college life. Northeast’s orientation provides students with the opportunity to learn about college life, the campus, meet former, current and other new students, sit with an advisor to discuss their area of concentration, learn about the technologies offered by the college and make a 2017 fall schedule. Participants need to bring a one-time $25 Orientation fee when they register for the August Orientation in the form of cash or check, which covers an Orientation T-shirt and meal ticket for the day. A session specifically for parents is also part of the agenda. During the Parent Session, information will be given concerning important dates, privacy issues, contact information, etc.

Tupelo City leadership mulls future plans TUPELO — Standing at the very outset of a new term, Mayor Jason Shelton huddled with key local government figures Wednesday morning to sketch out priorities for the future and assess ongoing initiatives, reported the Daily Journal. Speaking to department heads within his administration, City Council members and citizen volunteers that sit on certain task forces, the second-term mayor touted the continuing use of a written policy blueprint dubbed the TUPELO Plan. The plan began life in 2013 as Shelton’s campaign platform and morphed once he took office into a collaborative document between Shelton, council members and department heads. Speaking Wednesday, Shelton highlighted successes of the last four years, including increased pedestrian accessibility across the city, improved disaster response readiness and intensive focus on continued neighborhood development.

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Opinion

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4A • Sunday, July 23, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

Porking out with your money Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW), a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization working to eliminate governmental waste and fraud, just released its “2017 Congressional Pig Book,” an annual publication highlighting wasteful government spending that should embarrass each and every member of Congress. While it is true that most government spending is for “entitlements” and other fixed costs, the “Pig Book” properly ridicules politicians who waste significant amounts of money on questionable programs. In 2011, Congress promised Cal to go on the wagon when it Thomas came to pork. That didn’t last long because pork to politiColumnist cians is like blood to a vampire. Members promised to swear-off earmarks, which is spending attached to bills that don’t go through the appropriations process. As CAGW notes, despite that supposed moratorium, earmarks keep showing up in numerous bills. The “Pig Book” exposes 163 earmarks in the fiscal 2017 budget, an increase of 32.5 percent from 123 in fiscal 2016. You owe it to yourself to get this book at cagw.org. Check your outrage meter when you’re done. In 2014, Sen. John McCain (RAriz.) called earmarks “a corrupt system.” And it’s bipartisan, perhaps the only activity that qualifies for such a designation in divided Washington. There’s $150 million going to the Department of Defense for the National Guard Counter-Drug Program. The Drug Enforcement Administration, which has a budget of $2.1 billion, is already responsible for these activities, but duplication is no reason to stop the spending. How about $15 million for alternative energy research within the Combat Vehicle and Automotive Technology program? Since FY 2004, Congress has used the Defense Appropriations bill as a vehicle to insert 27 earmarks worth $289.9 million for this purpose, despite the billions already appropriated for alternative energy research through the Energy and Water Development Appropriations Act. Aren’t we already exporting natural gas and headed toward energy independence with less reliance on Middle East oil? “Legislators have long treated the Army Corps of Engineers as a prime repository of pork,” notes CAGW, “and it is among the most heavily earmarked areas of the federal budget. Since FY 1996, members of Congress have added 6,916 earmarks for the Corps, costing taxpayers $12.8 billion.” A lot of this spending, of course, goes straight to a member’s state or congressional district and is designed to sustain politicians in office. Back to the “Pig Book”: $2.387 million for “advanced materials and structural safety within the Airport and Airways Trust Fund (AATF), through which the Federal Aviation Administration finances infrastructure improvements for airports.” The CATO Institute, a public policy think tank based in Washington, D.C., has noted that the AATF has the indirect effect of preventing competition among airlines at airports. Because the AATF allows for only limited funding for maintenance and improvements, airports are limited in the number of gates they can build. As a result, airports ration gate access through long-term contracts with established companies, creating a barrier for potential competitors. I’m betting that some of the recipients of this largesse probably contribute to their benefactor’s political campaigns. It’s the way Washington works, or more accurately, doesn’t work, at least not to the benefit of taxpayers. The larger point is not whether any of these earmarks produce anything that benefits anyone other than the recipients of the money. It is whether all this spending is constitutional and something the federal government should be doing in an age when the national debt continues to grow. Don’t read the “Pig Book” and weep. Read it, get angry, call your representatives and ask them to give up earmarks for good.

Prayer For Today My Lord and my strength, I pray that I may possess that expectancy which comes in joyous hope and have the endurance that is controlled by courage and energy. Grant in the future that I may be less concerned about my living and more anxious for what I make of my life. Amen.

A Verse To Share “I issue a decree that in every part of my kingdom people must fear and reverence the God of Daniel. “For he is the living God and he endures forever; his kingdom will not be destroyed, his dominion will never end. — Daniel 6:26

Is Iran in our sights now? “Iran must be free. The dictatorship must be destroyed. Containment is appeasement and appeasement is surrender.” Thus does our Churchill, Newt Gingrich, dismiss, in dealing with Iran, the policy of containment crafted by George Kennan and pursued by nine U.S. presidents to bloodless victory in the Cold War. Why is containment surrender? “Because freedom is threatened everywhere so long as this dictatorship stays in power,” says Gingrich. But how is our freedom threatened by a regime with 3 percent of our GDP that has been around since Jimmy Carter was president? Fortunately, Gingrich has found a leader to bring down the Iranian regime and ensure the freedom of mankind. “In our country that was George Washington and ... the Marquis de Lafayette. In Italy it was Garibaldi,” says Gingrich. Whom has he found to rival Washington and Garibaldi? Says Gingrich, “Maryam Rajavi.” Who is she? The leader of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, or Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, which opposed the Shah, broke with the old Ayatollah, collaborated with Saddam Hussein, and, until 2012, was desig-

nated a terrorist organization by the U.S. Department of State. At the NCRI conferPatrick ence in Paris Buchanan in July where Gingrich Columnist spoke, and the speaking fees were reportedly excellent, John Bolton and Rudy Giuliani were also on hand. Calling Iran’s twiceelected President Hassan Rouhani, “a violent, vicious murderer,” Giuliani said, “the time has come for regime change.” Bolton followed suit. “Tehran is not merely a nuclear weapons threat, it is not merely a terrorist threat, it is a conventional threat to everybody in the region,” he said. We will all celebrate in Tehran in 2019, Bolton assured the NCRI faithful. Good luck. Yet, as The New York Times said yesterday, all this talk, echoed all over this capital, is driving us straight toward war. “A drumbeat of provocative words, outright threats and actions -- from President Trump and some of his top aides as well as Sunni Arab leaders and American activists — is raising tensions that could lead to armed

conflict with Iran.” Is this what America wants or needs — a new Mideast war against a country three times the size of Iraq? Bolton calls Iran “a nuclear weapons threat.” To ascertain the truth, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee should call the heads of the CIA and DIA, and the Director of National Intelligence, to testify in open session. We are told we are menaced also by a Shiite Crescent rising and stretching from Beirut to Damascus, Baghdad and Tehran. And who created this Shiite Crescent? It was George W. Bush who ordered the Sunni regime of Saddam overthrown, delivering Iraq to its Shiite majority. It was Israel whose invasion and occupation of Lebanon from 1982 to 2000 gave birth to the Shiite resistance now known as Hezbollah. As for Bashar Assad in Syria, his father sent troops to fight alongside Americans in the Gulf War. The Ayatollah’s regime, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Basij militia are deeply hostile to this country. But Iran does not want war with the United States -- for the best of reasons. Iran would be smashed like Iraq, and its

inevitable rise, as the largest and most advanced country on the Persian Gulf, would be aborted. Moreover, we have interests in common: Peace in the Gulf, from which Iran’s oil flows and without which Iran cannot grow, as Rouhani intends, by deepening Iran’s ties to Europe and the advanced world. And we have enemies in common: ISIS, al-Qaida and all the Sunni terrorists whose wildest dream is to see their American enemies fight their Shiite enemies. Who else wants a U.S. war with Iran, besides ISIS? Unfortunately, their number is legion: Saudis, Israelis, neocons and their think tanks, websites and magazines, hawks in both parties on Capitol Hill, democracy crusaders, and many in the Pentagon who want to deliver payback for what the Iranian-backed Shiite militias did to us in Iraq. President Trump is key. If he does the War Party’s bidding, that will be his legacy, as the Iraq War is the legacy of George W. Bush. 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.”

Looking back at the Detroit riots Fifty years ago this weekend, a deadly urban riot began in Detroit. It started around 3:30 a.m., when police arrested 85 patrons of a blind pig — an illegal afterhours bar — in the midst of an all-black neighborhood that had been all-white 15 or 20 years before. The statistics are horrifying. Rioting went on for six nights, with some 2,500 stores looted and burnt, some 400 families displaced and property damage was estimated around $300 million in 2017 dollars. Fortythree people, many of them innocent bystanders, were killed. More than 1,000 people were wounded. The reality was even more horrifying. That summer, I had wangled a job as an intern in the office of Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, a young, bright and ambitious liberal. Elected with nearunanimous support of black voters, he had aggressively launched anti-poverty programs, trying to make the nation’s fifth largest municipality a model of the Great Society’s War on Poverty. He had not succeeded, however, in changing the modus operandi of a police department that was only 5 percent black in a city with a 38 percent black population. In retrospect, this was a tragic consequence of the migration of one-third of American blacks between 1940 and 1965 from the

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mostly rural South to the big cities of the North. That meant that Detroit, which Michael had about Barone 1 5 0 , 0 0 0 black resiColumnist dents before World War II, had about 600,000 a generation later. At a time when almost no whites would remain in neighborhoods with a significant black population, and when there were significant differences in the mores and culture of blacks and whites, this was inevitably going to be problematic. Notwithstanding Cavanagh’s liberal policies, and those of Michigan’s Republican Governor George Romney, the riot should not have been the surprise it was. If it was more destructive than the riots in so many other cities, well, Detroit was bigger than just about all those other cities and had had a larger influx of Southern blacks than all but Chicago and New York. I arrived at the City County Building on the warm morning of Sunday, July 23, and spent the next six nights at work. Unfortunately, I made no notes at the time and so my vivid memories may not be entirely accurate. But they show how fragile the web of civilization

can be, just as what happened to Detroit over the next decades show how difficult they are to repair after they’re torn to shreds. I remember listening after sundown in the police commissioner’s office to the police radio, as one officer after another reported abandoning another neighborhood — whole square miles — to the rioters. I remember the mayor, concerned about the triggerhappy performance of National Guard troops, trying to persuade the governor to demand federal troops from a reluctant President Lyndon Johnson and Attorney General Ramsey Clark. I remember riding around in a (nonpolice) car with Congressman John Conyers, then in his second term and now the senior member of Congress, as he told young black men to cool it and stop the violence. After several days, the experienced (and not allwhite) 101st Airborne came in and calmed the city down. Johnson summoned the Kerner Commission, which blamed the Detroit riot on white racism and called for massive federal spending to somehow overcome it. What followed was the cycle of vastly increased violent crime and welfare dependency that nearly tripled in the 1965-75 decade and was not reversed until the 1990s. White flight re-

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duced Detroit’s population from 1,670,144 in 1960 to 1,027,974 in 1990; black flight reduced it from that to 713,777 in 2010. It has become the fashion to call the Detroit riot a “rebellion,” though it was not premeditated and had no explicit policy goals. It was the product of expectations combined with a certain understandable discontent. People throw bottles, break windows, loot stores and set fires when they think that enough other people will be doing the same as to make them immune from punishment. Riots in American cities proliferated from Los Angeles’s Watts in 1964 to the multiple riots following the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968. They have been rare in the 49 years since; the 1992 Los Angeles riot ended after 18 hours and the dispatch of 25,000 federal troops — more than double the number in Detroit. Lessons learned these last 50 years: Riots hurt, not help, people like the rioters. Riots can be stopped, and prevented, by authorities willing to deploy overwhelming force. Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and longtime co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.

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Editorials represent the voice of the Daily Corinthian. Editorial columns, letters to the editor and other articles that appear on this page represent the opinions of the writers and the Daily Corinthian may or may not agree.


Daily Corinthian • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • 5A

NEMCC to offer app development course BOONEVILLE — Northeast Mississippi Community College will become one of the first colleges in the state of Mississippi to offer a discipline in iOS App Development during the fall 2017 term. As part of the college’s Information Systems Technology program, students will be able to select either a cyber defense, system administration or an iOS App Development emphasis to complement their Associate of Applied Sciences degree from the college. During their time in the Information Systems Technology program, students will learn the necessary skills necessary to work with not only mobile devices but mobile networks as well. Northeast will offer specific courses to the iOS App Development concentration that addresses communication, security, networking and a working knowledge and mastery of the Swift programming language. “The Information System Technology (IST) curriculum was rewritten to be conducive to the IT industry,” said Northeast IST instructor Natasha Lewis. “We need to offer our students the skills that will get

“We need to offer our students the skills that will get them employed, not just give them a brief overview of everything; they need a discipline to concentrate on and that is where the iOS App Development comes into play.” Natasha Lewis Northeast IST instructor them employed, not just give them a brief overview of everything; they need a discipline to concentrate on and that is where the iOS App Development comes into play.” In addition to being able to compete in one of the fastestgrowing industries in information systems technology, students will have a chance to earn industry-standard certifications such as the CompITA certifications that are recognized as one of the best ways to break into the Information Systems Technology field and build a career. CompTIA A+, Network+ and Security+ certifications are all built into the curriculum for the Information Systems Technology applied sciences degree at Northeast.

Lewis and the participants in the program will be using Swift, which is one of the world’s most popular programming languages during their time in the iOS App Development emphasis. Students will learn to code and design fully functioning applications by gaining critical skills that are important to future employers. “Coding is important because we are in the technology age, where everyone is attached to a smart device.,” Lewis said. “Therefore, coding is a necessity; it is just as important as speaking English.” Apple, Incorporated announced a partnership with six community college organizations during the summer of 2017 where it will help commu-

nity colleges teach the necessary skills needed to be proficient in iOS App Development. Apple’s curriculum is offered by Alabama Community College System, Columbus State Community College, Harrisburg Area Community College, Houston Community College, Mesa Community College and San Mateo Community College District. “We’ve seen firsthand the impact that coding has on individuals and the US economy as a whole. The app economy and software development are among the fastest-growing job sectors in America and we’re thrilled to be providing educators and students with the tools to learn coding,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook. “Community colleges play a critical role in helping students achieve their dreams, and we hope these courses will open doors for people of all ages and backgrounds to pursue what they love.” Northeast’s curriculum will closely follow the Apple, Incorporated curriculum. Participants need a composite score on the ACT of 17 for entrance into the Northeast Information Systems Technology program.

Don’t magnify your problems A small object viewed enables you to see things through a magnifying in a much more positive lens appears larger than it light. Worrying about endreally is. The more powerful the lens, the bigger an less “what if” scenarios is object looks. The actual another problem magnisize of the object has not fying strategy. Worry is changed, just your per- a useless activity which produces no posiception. tive results. Instead Your mind is caof worrying, take pable of the same action to solve the result; making problem at hand. small problems apPositive action repear larger than duces stress by exthey are. When this energy to happens, you deal Bryan pending reduce a problem’s with the perceived Golden size. size of a problem, Conjuring up rather than the Dare to Live which actual size. When Without Limits problems don’t even exyou face something which isn’t real, making ist magnifies the probappropriate decisions is lems which do exist. Now you have created an impossible. Certain emotions mag- overwhelming scenario nify your problems. Stress based on your imaginaand anxiety cause you tion. When in this mode, to perceive situations as there’s no limit to the more dire than they re- nightmare you can create ally are. Your nerves are for yourself. Stop obsessfrayed. Your tolerance ing about what has not Concentrate level is suppressed. Your occurred. coping skills are impaired. your energy on what does Your ability to make good exist. Projecting a future decisions is diminished. It’s very difficult to based on past experimake sound decisions ences also magnifies your when under stress. Re- problems. Previous expeducing your stress, any- riences do not guarantee way you can, becomes a future events. The past is pressing need. This objec- over; it does not define tive diminishes your abil- your future. Rather, the past preity to think clearly. This is why it is so important to pares you for the future, calm yourself down be- which is shaped by your fore deciding how to deal thoughts and actions. You are therefore in control of with problems. Expecting the worst your future, not chained magnifies problems. An- to your past. Fear magnifies your ticipating a really bad outcome makes circum- problems because you stances appear worse are afraid of all the posthan they are. Change sible negative outcomes. your approach so you ex- Fear causes you to fixpect the best. Anticipate ate on problems instead that all will work out sat- of working on solutions. isfactorily. This strategy This process intensifies

your perception of your problems. There’s no advantage to living in fear. Concentrate on the present while preparing for tomorrow. Blowing circumstances out of proportion magnifies problems. Most situations are just not that big of a deal in the long run. Look back on the “big” problems you had five years ago. Chances are you won’t remember why they seemed so huge back then. So stay focused on the big picture. If something won’t really matter five years from now, it shouldn’t consume you today either. Keep everything in perspective. The opinions of others can magnify your problems. This happens when an issue, which you see as no big deal, is blown out of proportion by someone else. You get drawn into their hysteria and begin doubting your original assessment. As a result, you magnify your problem. Formulate your own accurate and objective assessment of a problem and ignore those who always see doom and gloom. It’s your mind which

Training completed U.S. Air Force Airman 1st Class Logan J. Toth graduated from basic military training at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, San Antonio, Texas. The airman completed an intensive program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical fitness, and Toth basic warfare principles and skills. Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force. Toth is the son of Melissa A. Toth and Stephen Toth, brother of Britny N. Pittman and Tamara J. Toth, grandson of Etta Thomason, and husband of Ana D. Toth, all of Iuka. He is a 2012 graduate of Tishomingo County High School.

State civil rights marker returns after damage fixed

magnifies your problems. Since you have total control over your thoughts, you have the power to stop magnifying your problems. By doing so, you greatly improve your problem solving ability. NOW AVAILABLE: “Dare to Live Without Limits,” the book. Visit www.BryanGolden.com or your bookstore. Bryan is a management consultant, motivational speaker, author, and adjunct professor. E-mail Bryan at bryan@columnist.com or write him c/o this paper.

BY EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS Associated Press

JACKSON — A civil rights marker in Mississippi has been repaired and will be put back in place, weeks after being vandalized. The marker commemorates black teenager Emmett Till, who was kidnapped and lynched in 1955 after whistling at a white woman working in a rural grocery store. The slaying galvanized civil rights activists when Till’s mother had an open-casket fu-

neral in Chicago to show how her 14-year-old son had been brutalized. The marker was put up in 2011 outside the store in Money. Someone scratched the sign with a blunt tool in May. Tourists noticed in June that vinyl panels with photographs and text were peeled off the metal marker. The state paid about $500 for repairs and the marker will be dedicated Tuesday, which would have been Till’s 76th birthday.

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6A • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Democrats herald pact on Russia sanctions bill fore Congress breaks for the August recess, puts Capitol Hill on possible collision course with Trump. The White House had objected to a key section of the bill that would mandate a congressional review if Trump attempted to ease or end the sanctions against Moscow. But if Trump were to veto the bill, he risks sparking an outcry from Republicans and Democrats and having his decision overturned. The sanctions review was included in the bill because of wariness among lawmakers from both parties over Trump’s affinity for Putin. The precise mechanics of how involved House Democrats would be in the review process had been a key sticking point, but Hoyer said he’s satisfied with the outcome. “The legislation ensures that both the majority and minority are able to exercise our

BY RICHARD LARDNER Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Congressional Republicans and Democrats announced Saturday they had reached an agreement on a sweeping Russia sanctions package to punish Moscow for meddling in the presidential election and its military aggression in Ukraine and Syria. Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 House Democrat, said lawmakers had settled lingering issues with the bill, which also includes stiff economic penalties against Iran and North Korea. The sanctions targeting Russia, however, have drawn the most attention due to President Donald Trump’s persistent push for warmer relations with President Vladimir Putin and ongoing investigations into Russia’s interference in the 2016 campaign. Passage of the bill, which could occur be-

Deaths

oversight role over the administration’s implementation of sanctions,” Hoyer said. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called the sanctions legislation “strong” and he expected the legislation to be passed promptly. “Given the many transgressions of Russia, and President Trump’s seeming inability to deal with them, a strong sanctions bill such as the one Democrats and Republicans have just agreed to is essential,” said Schumer, D-N.Y. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy posted a legislative business schedule that shows the sanctions bill will be voted on Tuesday. McCarthy, R-Calif., had pushed to add the North Korea sanctions to the package. The House had overwhelmingly passed legislation in May to hit Pyongyang with additional economic sanctions, but the Senate had yet to take up the bill.

Trump: USS Ford is ‘message to world’

‘Home Alone’ dad dies at 71

tion to the U.S. manufacturing industry. “American steel and American hands have constructed this 100,000-ton message to the world,” Trump said of the Ford during a speech that praised the bravery and spirit of U.S. service members and referenced his desire for a buildup after years of spending restrictions. “American might is second to none and we’re getting bigger and better and stronger every day of my administration. That I can tell you,” Trump told thousands of service members and guests, including former defense secretaries Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, and Govs. Terry McAuliffe of Virginia and Rick Snyder of Michigan, who were packed into the steamy hangar bay on the main deck. “Wherever this vessel cuts through the horizon, our allies will rest easy and our enemies will shake with fear because everyone will know that America is coming, and America is coming strong,” Trump said.

NEW YORK — Actor John Heard, whose many roles included the father in the “Home Alone” series and a corrupt detective in “The Sopranos,” has died. He was 71. Heard was found dead Friday in a hotel in Palo Alto, California, the Santa Clara County Medical Examiner’s office said. An investigation which includes a toxicology test is underway to determine the cause of death, but so far there is no evidence of foul play. TMZ reported that a representative for Heard said he was staying in the hotel while he recovered from back surgery at Stanford University Medical Center. Heard played Peter McCallister, the father of Kevin, played by Macaulay Culkin, in “Home Alone” and “Home Alone 2: Lost in New York.” He said in later interviews that he sought a movie with kids in it so his son, age 5 at the time, could come to the set and have someone to play with. After it became a big hit, he was reluctant to revisit the role. But his agent convinced him the money was too good to pass up.

Associated Press Associated Press

NORFOLK, Va. — With praise and a blessing for the military, President Donald Trump helped hand over the USS Gerald R. Ford to the Navy on Saturday and said the state-of-the-art aircraft carrier will send a “100,000-ton message to the world” about America’s military might when it is ultimately deployed. U.S. allies will rest easy, Trump said, but America’s enemies will “shake with fear” when they see the Ford cutting across the horizon. The president, who is commander in chief of the U.S. armed forces, likened the $12.9 billion warship to “an incredible work of art” and boasted about the American labor that went into building a vessel that eventually will house thousands of sailors and crew members. Trump’s participation in the ceremony also capped “Made in America” week at the White House, during which the president and administration officials sought to draw atten-

WE SEE EYES

Peggy Owens

son (Fred) of Hinkle, Jean Crum (Odell) of Eads, Tenn., Stepgrandchildren: April Lowry, Dianan and Daniel Young, sistersin-law: Janice Ross, Margie Johnson and Pauline Reece, all of Owens Booneville, special nephews Randy Ross and Brian Mason, 5 step-grandchildren of Baldwyn, a host of step-great grandchildren, her extra family who call her “Mommy Peggy” and “Mawmaw Peggy,” Susan Nunley Barnett (Tracy), Caleb Barnett (Casey), Logan Barnett, Tristian Nunley, Rilee Barnett and unborn Madelyn Barnett, all of Hinkle, and Ricky Hall of Texas. She was preceded in death by her husband, Charles Ray Owens, her parents, three brothers, James Ellis Ross, Dan Ross, and Kenneth Ross, two sisters, Mae Bell Johnson and Betty Elaine Ross; three sisters-inlaw; Kay Johnson Ross, Sue Ross, and Faye Ross, two brothers-in-law Hershel Sims and Gerry Johnson, and two step-children.

Sue Brown

He is survived by his wife, Martha Lou Hughes Montgomery of Walnut; daughters, Johnnie Smith and Bonnie Jones (Terry), all of Walnut; son, Zack Montgomery of Walnut; six grandchildren, 15 great-grandchildren; and five greatgreat-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, Luther and Viola Wilbanks Montgomery; a sister, Clara Vee Thomas; brothers, L.Z. Montgomery, Carl Montgomery, Marshall Montgomery, Tommy Montgomery and Charles Montgomery. Bro. Gary Porterfield and Bro. Kevin Lindley will officiate the service.

A celebration of life service for Peggy Ruth Owens, 65, will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Mills Community Baptist Church with Bro. Donnie Davis, Bro. Robby Johnson and Bro. David Basden officiating. Interment will be at the church cemetery. Visitation will be from 4 until 8 p.m. tonight at the funeral home and Monday from 11 a.m. until service time at the church. Mrs. Owens passed Friday, July 21, 2017, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. She was born in Alcorn County, Mississippi to Joseph “Joe” and Cora Downs Ross on Dec. 30, 1951. She had worked in several garment factories as a seamstress, Gaines Furniture Company, and a homemaker. She was a faithful member of the Mills Community Baptist Church. Those to carry on her memory include one daughter, Jennifer Kennedy (Wesley) of Hinkle, one granddaughter, whom she adored, Maketa LaRae Kennedy of Hinkle, one brother, Teddy Wayne Ross of Hinkle, three sisters, Dorothy Sims of Pisgah, Eva Nell Ma-

IUKA — Betty Sue Brown, 71, died Friday, July 21, 2017, at her residence. She was born Jan. 27, 1946. She served as Activity Director and Social Worker at Tishomingo Manor for many years. She was a member of the Baptist faith. She is survived by her son, Brandon Michael Brown (Latasha) of Iuka; grandchildren, Brown Landon Brown and Brianna Brown; brother, Bob Pannell (Sandra) of Iuka; and sister, Angie Barnett of Iuka. She was preceded in death by her husband, Larry Gene Brown; father, Eugene (Bud) Pannell; mother, Stella Smith Pannell; brother, Tony Pannell; and sisters, Marcy Lademan and Cindy Clement. A private memorial service will be held at a later date. Magnolia Funeral Home has the arrangements.

Johnnie Montgomery

WALNUT — Funeral services for Johnnie Lee Montgomery, 93, are scheduled for 3 p.m. today at McBride Funeral Home Chapel. Burial will follow at Campground Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 2 p.m. until service time at the funeral home. Mr. Montgomery died Friday, July 21, 2017, at his home. He was born Oct. 7, 1923. He was a retired farmer and security guard at Oil Dri in Middleton, Tenn. He was a veteran of the United States Navy, serving on the USS Neshanic tanker in the Pacific. He was a member at Campground Methodist Church.

Mary Sue Taylor Ozbirn

PISGAH — Funeral services for Mary Sue Taylor Ozbirn, 84, are scheduled for 3 p.m. today at McMillan Funeral Home Chapel. Burial will follow at the Pisgah Cemetery. Visitation was be held from 6 to 8 p.m. Saturday and will continue from 2 p.m. until service time today. Mrs. Ozbirn died Friday, July. 21, 2017, at Rest Haven Health and Rehabilitation in Ripley. She was born Oct. 21, 1932, to Robert and Mattie Taylor in Boyle. She was a member of East Booneville Baptist Church. She was a substitute teacher for the North Tippah School District. She is survived by her four children; one daughter, Shirley (Jimmy) Lassiter of Pisgah; three sons, Harvey (Sue Ann) Ozbirn of Lafayette, Louisiana, Wesley (Sandy) Ozbirn of Senatobia and Glenn (Felicia) Ozbirn of Pisgah, along with seven surviving grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband of 52 years John Allen Ozbirn. Bro. Ben Parman will officiate the service. Memorial donations may be made to a charity of the donor’s choice.

Counties close bridges amid safety concerns Associated Press

NATCHEZ — Supervisors in some Mississippi counties are closing bridges that inspectors say are unsafe. Washington County recently closed nine bridges, bringing the total closed there to 18. Three bridges were recently closed in Adams County. Two in Oktibbeha County are closed for repairs. Officials say people ignore signs that show the weight limit for bridges. Trucks

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Daily Corinthian • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • 7A

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

School orientations Corinth and Alcorn County schools scheduled orientations and open houses include: Corinth: CES Pre-K, July 25, 9 a.m.-12 p.m.; CES Kindergarten, July 24, 9 a.m.-12 p.m.; CES 1st-4th grades, July 27, 5-7 p.m.; CMS 5th grade, July 25, 5:30-7:30 p.m.; CMS 6th-8th grades, July 27, 5:30-7:30 p.m.; CHS freshmen, July 25, 5:30-7:30 p.m.; CHS sophomores, juniors and seniors, July 27, 5:307:30 p.m. Alcorn Central: ACES Pre-K, Aug. 1, 5 p.m.; ACES Kindergarten, Aug. 1, 6 p.m.; ACES 1st grade, Aug. 1, 5 p.m.; ACES 2nd grade, Aug. 1, 6 p.m.; ACES 3rd grade, Aug. 1, 5 p.m.; ACES 4th grade, Aug. 1, 6 p.m.; ACMS 5th grade, July 27, 5-6 p.m.; ACMS 7th and 8th grades, July 27, 6:307:30 p.m.; ACHS freshmen, July 25, 7 p.m.; ACHS sophomores, July 25, 5 p.m.; ACHS juniors, July 24, 7 p.m.; ACHS seniors, July 24, 5 p.m. Biggersville: BES PreK and Kindergarten, July 31, 5:30 p.m.; BES 1st6th grades, Aug. 1, 5:307 p.m.; BHS 7th and 8th grade, July 27, 1 p.m. or 5:30 p.m.; BHS freshman, July 26, 1 p.m. or 5:30 p.m.; BHS juniors and sophomores, July 25, 1 p.m. or 5:30 p.m.; BHS seniors, July 24, 1 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. Kossuth: KES Pre-K4th grades, Aug. 1, 4-7 p.m.; KMS 5th grade, July 26, 3-6 p.m.; KMS 6th grade, July 27, 3-6 p.m.; KMS 7th grade, July 31, 3-6 p.m.; KMS 8th grade, Aug. 1, 3-6 p.m.; KHS freshman, July 27, 3-5 p.m.; KHS sophomores, July 26, 3-5 p.m.; KHS juniors, July 25, 3-5 p.m.; KHS seniors, July 25, 12:30-2:30 p.m.

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.

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 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.

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.

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

Duffel Bag Workshop There will be Duffel Bag Workshop on Thursday July 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.

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.

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

Private Applicator Training 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.

Hunter’s Safety Class 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 begins at 8 a.m. with a one-hour break for at-

tendees to eat lunch at a place of their choice. This class is free but everyone must pre-register by going online at mdwfp.com.

Spamalot at CT-A 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.

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.

Free Medical Clinic The Living Healthy Free Medical Clinic, where residents with no way to pay can get free medical treatment, welcomes adults and children age 12 and up with no income and no health insurance. The clinic, now located at 2668 South Harper Road Suite 3 next to Physicians Urgent Care in the former Oasis Medical Center, will be open on the second Wednesday and fourth Saturday of every month from 1-5 p.m. The clinic is always looking for both medical and non-medical volunteers. Medical and non-medical volunteers should contact Ann White at eaw3@comcast. net or 662-415-9446.

Niagara Falls Trip The McNairy County Senior Center in Adamsville will be offering a 7-day, 6-night trip to Niagara Falls and Toronto, Canada on Sept. 24-30. Cost is $599 per person for double occupancy. Valid U.S. Passport is

Legal Scene Your Crossroads Area Guide to Law Professionals

Contact Skylar Mincey at 662-287-6111 to advertise your Law Firm on this page.

required for the trip. Included in the trip cost is transportation, lodging, meals, guided tours, visits to attractions and a Niagara cruise. For more information contact Cindy Thrasher at 731-6320302.

VFW Post 3962 • VFW Post 3962 will host Lady’s Night from 7 to 11 p.m. every Wednesday. For more information contact Mike or Yogi at 662-287-6106. • VFW Post 3962 will host live music at 8 p.m. every Friday. Danny Briggs also provides music at the VFW at 8 p.m. every Saturday Dance Night. Country music is played both nights with a great dance floor and great people. All are encouraged to come out and support local veterans. • VFW Post 3962 will hold its monthly meetings at 6 p.m. on the third Thursday of each month with a Fellowship Brunch. The VFW and VFW Auxiliary will have a joint meeting at 7 p.m. The Post is located at 1 Purdy School Road in Corinth. For questions and more information call 662-287-6106.

Just Plain Country Live band Just Plain Country performs every Saturday from 7-10 p.m. at the Tishomingo County Fairgrounds in Iuka. Join for a night of dancing and clean, family fun. Only $5 admission to help cover expenses.

Sharing Hearts Sharing Hearts is an adult care program offering a one day a week day care for adults suffering from Alzheimer’s or any other form of dementia. Volunteers and participants meet each Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at First Baptist Church, located at 501 Main Street in Corinth. For more information, call Melinda Grady at 662-808-2206. The program is designed to offer caregivers a day of rest and their family members a day of caring supervision along with music, games, lunch, exercise and crafts, all designed to entertain and provide social interaction.

Legacy Hospice Legacy Hospice is looking for caring and compassionate volunteers to spend time with

patients and families in the surrounding area to provide companionship, friendship, and support to patients and families. Volunteers are also need in our office to place phone calls, file, make gifts for our patients and participate in community event. Volunteering is a great way to enhance resumes and gain community service hours. For more information and to volunteer, contact Sherry Dalton, Volunteer Coordinator, at 662-286-5333 or sherry. dalton@legacyhospice. net.

Exercise Class The Boys and Girls Club is holding an exercise class for women on Monday and Wednesday nights at 6:15 p.m.

Line Dancing Line dancing will be held from 6 to 8 p.m. each Tuesday night at the American Legion.

SOAR The Steelworkers Organization of Active Retirees “SOAR” will have regular monthly meetings every second Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Union Hall. These are retirees of Intex-MS Polymer Plastic’s Plant.

American Legion Post 6 • American Legion Post 6, located on South Tate St. will have Bingo every Friday. Doors will open at 4 p.m. with sales starting at 5:30 p.m. Games will begin at 6:30 p.m. A full concession stand will be available. Senior Bingo will be held at 10 a.m. every Monday for $5. Lunch is provided. • American Legion Post 6 will hold their monthly meeting at 6 p.m. with a potluck meal on the 2nd Thursday of each month. • American Legion Post 6 has Senior Bingo every Monday at 10 a.m. Cost is $5 for bingo and lunch with everyone welcome.

Musicians Needed A volunteer opportunity is available for a guitar or banjo musician to play with a band as part of a nursing home ministry during special programs held at 2 p.m. twice a month at Cornerstone and Mississippi Care Center. For more information call 662-2873560.


8A • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

THE WEEK IN REVIEW WEEKLY DOW JONES Dow Jones industrials Close: 21,580.07 1-week change: -57.67 (-0.3%) 22,000

-8.02

-54.99

66.02

-28.97 -31.71

MON

TUES

WED

THUR

Business

FRI

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

J

F

M

A

M

J

J

WEEKLY STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS

u

NYSE 11,924.61 +27.29

u

NASDAQ 6,387.75 +75.28

u

S&P 500 2,472.54 +13.27

MARKET SUMMARY: NYSE AND NASDAQ GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name

Last Chg %Chg Name 2.87 +1.79 +165.7 DryShips s 2.17 3.34 +1.64 +96.5 Adomani n 8.80 3.70 +1.81 +95.8 ShiftPixy n 6.46 6.12 21.76 +8.08 +59.0 Ominto n 13.53 +4.05 +42.7 ChinLend h 2.95 TileShop 13.95 37.71 +10.49 +38.5 7.75 +2.10 +37.2 PernixT rs 3.43 8.94 +2.29 +34.4 Proteos n 3.51 3.15 +.75 +31.3 MarineMx 14.65 5.19 +1.21 +30.4 DareBio rs 5.26 2.68 +.61 +29.4 InovioPhm 6.01 Last

AEtern g rs TearLab rs BiondVx wt Sevcon AkceaTh n Quidel CymaBay Qualstar rs AcelRx AgileThera Soligenix n

Chg -3.93 -6.32 -3.74 -3.52 -1.41 -6.25 -1.39 -1.30 -4.95 -1.74 -1.95

%Chg -64.4 -41.8 -36.7 -36.5 -32.3 -30.9 -28.8 -27.0 -25.3 -24.9 -24.5

ACTIVES ($1 OR MORE) Name

Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm AMD RiteAid GenElec Microsoft FordM AT&T Inc Vale SA Annaly ChesEng AEtern g rs

3862096 2943978 2270205 2165298 1541464 1323144 1276796 1272571 1266042 1185833 1151247

23.80 13.88 2.48 25.91 73.79 11.53 36.51 9.02 11.87 4.69 2.87

-.41 -.04 +.15 -.87 +1.01 ... +.21 -.23 -.46 -.18 +1.79

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name

Ex

Wk Wk YTD Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg

AFLAC NY 1.72 AK Steel NY ... AT&T Inc NY 1.96 AMD Nasd ... AEtern g rs Nasd ... Alibaba NY ... Annaly NY 1.20 NY 1.44 Aon plc Apple Inc Nasd 2.52 BP PLC NY 2.38 BcpSouth NY .50 BkofAm NY .48 B iPVxST rs NY ... Bemis NY 1.20 CSX Nasd .80 Caterpillar NY 3.12 ChesEng NY ... Chevron NY 4.32 Cisco Nasd 1.16 Citigroup NY 1.28 CocaCola NY 1.48 Comcast s Nasd .63 Deere NY 2.40 Delcath rs Nasd ... Dover NY 1.76 DowChm NY 1.84 EnCana g NY .06 EnPro NY .88 ENSCO NY .04 ExxonMbl NY 3.08 Facebook Nasd ... FstHorizon NY .36 FordM NY .60 FrkUnv NY .47 FredsInc Nasd .24 FrptMcM NY ... GenElec NY .96 iShEMkts NY .84 iShR2K NY 1.77 Intel Nasd 1.09 IBM NY 6.00 KimbClk NY 3.88

77.57 -.30 -0.4 +11.5 6.20 -.30 -4.6 -39.3 36.51 +.21 +0.6 -14.2 13.88 -.04 -0.3 +22.4 2.87+1.79+165.7 -20.3 151.89 +.06 ... +73.0 11.87 -.46 -3.7 +19.1 139.14+2.92 +2.1 +24.8 150.27+1.23 +0.8 +29.7 34.68 -.27 -0.8 -7.2 30.35 -.10 -0.3 -2.3 23.80 -.41 -1.7 +7.7 11.20 -.81 -6.7 -56.1 46.12 -.16 -0.3 -3.6 51.68 -3.40 -6.2 +43.8 106.59 -1.40 -1.3 +14.9 4.69 -.18 -3.7 -33.2 103.25 -1.19 -1.1 -12.3 31.84 +.42 +1.3 +5.4 66.00 -.72 -1.1 +11.1 45.03 +.35 +0.8 +8.6 39.63 +.43 +1.1 +14.8 125.75 +.28 +0.2 +22.0 .14 +.00 +0.7 -84.3 82.87 -1.45 -1.7 +10.6 66.14 -.10 -0.2 +15.6 9.83 +.38 +4.0 -16.3 72.62 -.77 -1.0 +7.8 5.39 +.21 +4.1 -44.5 80.12 -1.16 -1.4 -11.2 164.43+4.46 +2.8 +42.9 17.62 -.15 -0.8 -11.9 11.53 ... ... -4.9 7.27 +.12 +1.7 +8.8 6.67 +.27 +4.2 -64.1 13.01 +.41 +3.3 -1.4 25.91 -.87 -3.2 -18.0 43.63 +.21 +0.5 +24.6 142.55 +.82 +0.6 +5.7 34.73 +.05 +0.1 -4.2 147.08 -7.16 -4.6 -11.4 125.28 +.77 +0.6 +9.8

Name

Ex

Wk Wk YTD Div Last Chg %Chg %Chg

KindMorg NY .50 Kroger s NY .50 Lowes NY 1.64 MarathnO NY .20 McDnlds NY 3.76 MicronT Nasd ... Microsoft Nasd 1.56 Netflix s Nasd ... NY Times NY .16 NiSource s NY .70 NorthropG NY 4.00 Novavax Nasd ... Nvidia Nasd .56 OrbitATK NY 1.28 Penney NY ... PepsiCo NY 3.22 NY 1.28 Pfizer PwShs QQQNasd 1.52 PUVixST rs NY ... ProctGam NY 2.76 RegionsFn NY .36 RiteAid NY ... S&P500ETF NY 4.13 SpdrOGEx NY .73 SearsHldgs Nasd ... Sherwin NY 3.40 SouthnCo NY 2.32 SwstnEngy NY ... SP Engy NY 2.04 SPDR Fncl NY .46 Torchmark NY .60 Twitter NY ... US OilFd NY ... Vale SA NY .29 VanEGold NY .12 WalMart NY 2.04 WeathfIntl NY ... Wendys Co Nasd .28 WestRck NY 1.60 Weyerhsr NY 1.24 WhitingPet NY ... Xerox rs NY .25

20.69+1.15 +5.9 23.26 +.25 +1.1 73.84 -2.22 -2.9 11.85 +.20 +1.7 153.92 -1.36 -0.9 32.01 +.22 +0.7 73.79+1.01 +1.4 188.54+27.42+17.0 18.10 +.50 +2.8 25.98 +.23 +0.9 265.30 +.47 +0.2 1.48 +.31 +26.5 168.10+3.15 +1.9 103.25+1.32 +1.3 5.08 +.14 +2.8 116.63+1.70 +1.5 33.48 +.05 +0.1 144.11+1.99 +1.4 29.79 -4.45 -13.0 88.61+2.20 +2.5 14.23 -.45 -3.1 2.48 +.15 +6.4 246.88+1.32 +0.5 31.65 -.26 -0.8 8.83 +.77 +9.6 352.17 -4.30 -1.2 47.88 +.62 +1.3 5.77 -.24 -4.0 65.11 -.29 -0.4 24.80 -.12 -0.5 78.32 +.17 +0.2 20.11 +.47 +2.4 9.34 -.25 -2.6 9.02 -.23 -2.5 22.41 +.61 +2.8 76.15 -.19 -0.2 4.38 +.19 +4.5 15.86 +.22 +1.4 58.70 -.95 -1.6 34.43+1.28 +3.9 5.04 -.10 -1.9 29.45 +.03 +0.1

-.1 -32.6 +3.8 -31.5 +26.5 +46.0 +18.7 +52.3 +36.1 +17.3 +14.1 +17.5 +57.5 +17.7 -38.9 +11.5 +3.1 +21.6 ... +5.4 -.9 -69.9 +10.4 -23.6 -5.0 +31.0 -2.7 -46.7 -13.6 +6.7 +6.2 +23.4 -20.3 +18.4 +7.1 +10.2 -12.2 +17.3 +15.6 +14.4 -58.1 +28.0

AGRICULTURE FUTURES WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Sep 17 Dec 17 Mar 18 May 18 Jul 18 Sep 18 Dec 18

393.25 406.75 417 421.50 425.75 424.25 428

370.50 383.50 394.25 399.50 404 404.25 409

379.75 393.50 404.50 409.50 414.25 414.50 419.25

+3.50 +4 +4.25 +4.50 +4.50 +6.25 +5.75

SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Aug 17 Sep 17 Nov 17 Jan 18 Mar 18 May 18 Jul 18

1017.25 1022.25 1031.25 1039.50 1040.25 1042.75 1049

981.75 985.25 993.75 1002.25 1005.50 1011.50 1018.25

WkHigh WkLow Settle WkChg CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Aug 17 Oct 17 Dec 17 Feb 18 Apr 18 Jun 18 Aug 18

118.20 119.30 119.85 120.45 119.65 112.70 110.50

114.32 116.05 116.70 117.37 116.85 110.12 108.00

1009 1014.25 1022.25 1030.75 1033.50 1037.50 1043.75

+20 +21.50 +20.75 +20.50 +19.50 +18.75 +18.75

Aug 17 Oct 17 Dec 17 Feb 18 Apr 18 May 18 Jun 18

83.02 69.55 63.87 67.95 71.07 76.00 78.82

79.77 66.90 61.75 65.85 69.47 75.05 77.22

COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.

Sep 17 Dec 17 Mar 18 May 18 Jul 18 Sep 18 Dec 18

Oct 17 Dec 17 Mar 18 May 18 Jul 18 Oct 18 Dec 18

495 518.75 538.50 549.25 554.25 564 577

-1.38 -1.17 -.83 +.15 -.05 ... +.25

81.10 67.22 61.97 66.95 70.65 75.87 78.60

+1.20 +.05 -.25 +.80 +.78 +.67 +1.28

69.14 68.42 68.11 68.62 69.14 67.69 68.01

+1.96 +1.84 +2.00 +1.91 +1.86 +1.72 +1.50

HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel 517.75 541.50 560.75 570.25 574.50 578.25 593.75

116.42 117.40 118.17 119.37 118.57 111.82 110.00

499.25 -11.50 522.50 -12.25 543 -11.25 553 -12 558 -11 567.25 -9.50 580.75 -6.50

69.77 69.25 68.80 69.32 69.78 ... 68.54

67.06 66.60 66.20 66.78 67.42 ... 66.65

Tables show seven most current contracts for each future. Grains traded on Chicago Board of Trade; livestock on Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on Intercontinental Exchange.

MUTUAL FUNDS Name

Total Assets Obj ($Mlns) NAV

Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl LB Vanguard TtlSMIdxAdmrl LB Vanguard InsIdxIns LB Vanguard TtlSMIdxInv LB Vanguard TtInSIdxInv FB Vanguard InsIdxInsPlus LB Vanguard TtlSMIdxIns LB Fidelity Contrafund LG Vanguard WlngtnAdmrl MA Vanguard TtInSIdxInsPlus FB American Funds GrfAmrcA m LG Vanguard TtBMIdxAdmrl CI American Funds IncAmrcA m AL American Funds CptlIncBldrA m IH Fidelity 500IndexPrm LB Dodge & Cox Stk LV Dodge & Cox IntlStk FB American Funds InvCAmrcA m LB American Funds AmrcnBalA m MA Vanguard TtInSIdxAdmrl FB American Funds CptWldGrIncA m WS American Funds WAMtInvsA m LV PIMCO TtlRetIns CI American Funds FdmtlInvsA m LB Dodge & Cox Inc CI Vanguard InTrTEAdmrl MI Metropolitan West TtlRetBdI CI Vanguard PrmCpAdmrl LG Franklin Templeton IncA m CA DoubleLine TtlRetBdI CI Vanguard STInvmGrdAdmrl CS Vanguard InsTtlSMIInPls LB T. Rowe Price GrStk LG American Funds NwPrspctvA m WS Vanguard WlslyIncAdmrl CA PIMCO IncInstl MU Vanguard HCAdmrl SH Vanguard TtBMIdxIns CI Vanguard TrgtRtr2025Inv TG Vanguard WndsrIIAdmrl LV

205,334 170,070 132,229 116,115 106,254 96,676 95,458 81,886 81,168 80,564 79,863 76,965 75,585 70,977 67,576 66,135 61,462 60,515 59,280 58,090 54,102 53,883 53,297 50,198 49,991 49,375 47,959 46,664 45,925 44,457 40,615 39,844 39,453 39,140 38,371 38,360 37,665 36,483 35,372 34,142

228.51 61.80 225.49 61.78 17.15 225.50 61.81 118.64 71.43 114.70 49.06 10.82 22.81 62.23 86.53 195.98 45.18 39.72 26.63 28.68 50.46 43.03 10.28 60.59 13.83 14.22 10.70 127.83 2.36 10.73 10.70 55.46 66.09 42.86 64.24 12.39 91.45 10.82 17.93 67.07

Total Return/Rank Pct Min Init 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt +1.6 +1.8 +1.6 +1.8 +3.5 +1.6 +1.8 +2.5 +0.9 +3.5 +3.1 +0.1 +0.8 +1.3 +1.6 +2.4 +4.1 +2.1 +1.2 +3.5 +3.1 +1.2 +0.4 +2.2 +0.4 +0.3 +0.2 +1.8 +1.7 0.0 +0.3 +1.8 +2.7 +2.8 +0.6 +0.6 +1.5 +0.1 +1.5 +1.5

+16.6/B +15.0/A +16.9/B +15.0/B +16.6/B +15.1/A +16.8/B +14.9/B +20.2/B +8.5/C +16.6/B +15.1/A +16.9/B +15.0/A +22.8/A +15.5/B +11.3/B +10.5/A +20.3/B +8.6/C +22.0/B +16.5/A 0.0/E +2.0/D +8.5/E +9.5/D +8.0/D +7.8/B +16.6/B +15.0/A +25.5/A +16.8/A +27.7/A +11.4/A +15.2/D +14.5/B +10.6/B +10.9/A +20.2/B +8.6/C +18.1/C +11.9/B +14.2/C +13.5/B +2.1/A +2.6/B +19.3/A +15.5/A +2.9/A +3.3/A +0.6/A +2.9/B +0.6/D +3.3/A +26.8/A +19.1/A +11.0/A +7.4/A +1.8/B +3.4/A +1.4/B +2.1/A +16.9/B +15.1/A +28.1/A +17.4/A +21.2/A +13.7/A +5.0/E +7.1/A +8.8 +7.8 +10.1/D +19.0/C 0.0/E +2.0/D +11.4/B +9.5/B +15.9/B +13.2/C

NL 10,000 NL 10,000 NL 5,000,000 NL 3,000 NL 3,000 NL200,000,000 NL 5,000,000 NL 2,500 NL 50,000 NL100,000,000 5.75 250 NL 10,000 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 10,000 NL 2,500 NL 2,500 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 10,000 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 1,000,000 5.75 250 NL 2,500 NL 50,000 NL 3,000,000 NL 50,000 4.25 1,000 NL 100,000 NL 50,000 NL200,000,000 NL 2,500 5.75 250 NL 50,000 NL 1,000,000 NL 50,000 NL 5,000,000 NL 1,000 NL 50,000

CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, FB -Foreign Large Blend, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value, MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MI -Muni National Intermediate, TG -Target Date 2021-2025, WS -World Stock, Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar. Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d = Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = not available. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution during the week. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

Polish Salon ribbon cutting The Alliance recently welcomed new member Polish Salon with a red ribbon ceremony. Owner/stylist Taylor McDonald cut the ribbon, along with associate/cosmetologist Ashley Reid. Mayor Tommy Irwin assisted, along with family, friends, and other city and county officials. Polish Salon is located at 1812 E. Shiloh Road and phone is 662-603-1304. Also on hand to celebrate the ribbon cutting were Pam McDonald, Rob Bailey and Shirley McDonald.

CB&S Bank names new president CB&S Bank headquartered in Russellville, Alabama, recently announced that longtime President and Chief Executive Officer Dennis Upchurch has announced his retirement effective July 31, ending a 29-year tenure as the top executive of the fifth largest bank headquartered in Alabama. Upchurch will remain on the Board of Directors of CB&S Bank and hold responsibilities on various committees. As a result, the Bank announced that Mike Ross, a native of Montgomery, Alabama, will be named the new president and chief executive officer of CB&S Bank effective upon Upchurch’s retirement. Ross joins CB&S Bank from Renasant Bank where he held several leadership positions, most recently as Central

Region president and chief commercial officer. In that role, he led the retail franchise in the states of Alabama and Florida as well as the commercial banking strategy, lines of business, and product lines that supported the $8.8 billion, five state bank franchise. Prior to joining Renasant Bank, he served as executive vice president, commercial middle market sales executive with Regions Financial Corporation. Ross holds a Masters of Business Administration degree through the Executive Program of the Manderson Graduate School of Business at the University of Alabama. “We are thrilled that with Mike, we have someone who has the experience, business insight, and visionary thinking to lead CB&S Bank into the future.” said Upchurch. “Under Mike’s leadership,

the bank will continue to grow and strengthen its commitment to customers, employees, and the communities we serve. After 29 years of leading this great company, I am confident that CB&S Bank is in excellent and capable hands.” “On behalf of the board of directors of CB&S Bank, we welcome Mike to our organization. His extensive banking experience, along with his values-driven philosophy are a great combination and will fit well with our Bank’s culture,” stated Greg Batchelor, chairman of the board for CB&S Bank. “I am delighted and honored to have the opportunity to serve the customers, employees, and shareholders of CB&S Bank. This company has such a long heritage of outstanding service to its communities and I look

Ross forward to being a part of continuing that tradition,” said Ross. CB&S Bank is a $1.6 billion community bank, headquartered in Russellville, Alabama, operating over 50 offices in the Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee markets. The company offers a complete line of fullservice banking products and other related financial services to retail and commercial customers through its subsidiaries.

SERVPRO honored with platinum award Jeff & Dana Eldridge of SERVPRO of Corinth/ Iuka joined a group of high-performing franchisees who were recognized during an Awards Extravaganza event at the recent SERVPRO Annual Convention. SERVPRO of Corinth/ Iuka received the DIRECTOR’S Platinum award. More than 2,500 owners, key staff, and corporate representatives attended the annual event, which was held in Seattle at the Sheraton Seattle Hotel on June 24-28. “We have a dedicated group of disaster remediation professionals at SERVPRO of Corinth/ Iuka, and we’re proud to accept this award on behalf of the entire team,” said Jeff Eldridge, SERVPRO of Corinth/ Iuka Owner. “Our business is just one of many extraordinary small businesses in the SERVPRO Franchise System, all of which benefit from the innovative tools, the business framework, and the ongoing training SERVPRO provides. This support is a big part of the reason why SERVPRO has been an industry leader in disaster cleanup, restoration and remediation services for 50 years.” Each year, the Awards Extravaganza event is a highlight of the convention. The 2017 convention theme, “Every Day is GAMEDAY,” was a thread

“This annual gathering is our opportunity to share the latest in technology and insights with our owners, to congratulate this year’s award winners, and thank the extraordinary entrepreneurs-the team that has kept us at the top of our business category year after year.” Sue Steen Chief executive officer of Servpro Industries

running through the 50 breakout sessions and three general sessions available to franchise owners and key team members in attendance. In keeping with the theme, the keynote speaker was Ross Bernstein, an inspirational business speaker and best-selling sports author. Bernstein’s signature program, “The Champion’s Code: Building Relationships Through Life Lessons of Integrity and Accountability from the Sports World to the Business World” (www.rossbernstein.com), reinforces the concept that individuals win games, but TEAMS win championships. “As we celebrate our 50th year of providing world-class service to home and business owners who find themselves faced with sudden and unexpected disasters, the message that Bernstein delivers resonates. Our company’s success is built on the professional-

ism, caring, and integrity of our individual franchisees, like this year’s award winners. But the focus of the company as a whole is on providing the tools and training

these individuals need to succeed,” said Sue Steen, chief executive officer of Servpro Industries, Inc. “This annual gathering is our opportunity to share the latest in technology and insights with our owners, to congratulate this year’s award winners, and thank the extraordinary entrepreneurs-the team that has kept us at the top of our business category year after year.” For more information about SERVPRO of Corinth/Iuka, please contact Jeff Eldridge at 662287-7881 or jeldridge@ servproofcorinth.com or visit www.SERVPRO. com.

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

www.edwardjones.com

Member SIPC


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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Why was Crossroads Magazine named one of the best in the state by the Mississippi Press Association last year? Find out in the special Dream Homes Edition coming out Saturday, July 29, where readers will learn how a Corinth man took a rundown downtown building and turned it into an upscale apartment complex.

Parents grin, bear the bill for man’s upscale appetite DEAR ABBY: Our son-in-law, “Brody,” has a very different lifestyle than ours and the one in which we raised our daughter. I pointed it out to her while they were dating, and she was not pleased. I decided to say no more and try to accept him as best as possible, although I admit my husband has been better at it than I have. Abigail One thing Van Buren that continues to bother us is that Dear Abby whenever we invite them out for dinner, Brody will order the most expensive thing on the menu. He also has a couple of drinks, upgrades his salad and orders dessert. By the time he’s done, the cost of his meal is double that of everyone else’s. Although we can afford it, we feel this is bad manners. I’m not sure if he’s trying to take advantage of us or if he just thinks he is entitled. Our daughter thinks he’s wonderful and doesn’t seem to mind that he does this. I worry that it may reflect bad-

ly on her when they are out with others. Is this acceptable? Do we grin and bear it? Or should we say something and, if so, what do we say? -- PAYING DEARLY IN MONTANA DEAR PAYING: If you bring the subject up, I can almost guarantee that what you say will not be well received. What your son-in-law is doing is “acceptable” in light of the fact that you say you can afford it. If you couldn’t, I assume those dinner invitations would be few and far between, and you would have had to explain the reason to your daughter. When they dine out with contemporaries, presumably the bill is split between the couples. If that isn’t the case, it probably wouldn’t happen twice because the other couple would likely request separate checks. DEAR ABBY: I am the editor of a local newspaper and manage two others. Your message about it being “too late” to run a wedding announcement is nonsense. We regularly receive announcements six to seven months after weddings. Also, the announcement does not have to be submitted by the couple.

Grandparents or parents in the community can send them, too. Young people today think that once something is on social media it is “official,” forgetting that not everyone is on social media, and not everyone is connected to their profiles. So please tell the person who wrote that letter to send in that wedding announcement and enjoy having the hard copy memento of a happy occasion. I wouldn’t be surprised if someday those newlyweds will be very happy to have a physical copy of their announcement. -- NEWSPAPER LADY IN KANSAS DEAR NEWSPAPER LADY: I’m glad you wrote because I’m sure many readers will benefit from it. However, the writer of that letter stated that her daughter-inlaw said she didn’t want the announcement in the newspaper and her son agreed. I cannot “bless” the writer going against their wishes, which were made clear. 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). Staying within the scope of your own preferences will only lead to a small and not very creative existence. It’s why you push yourself every so often to do what’s uncomfortable and a little scary. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Regardless of how much formal schooling you have, there are holes in your education. (There are holes in everyone’s education!) Fill them and the benefits come almost instantly -- money, social ease and more. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Repeated actions create neural pathways in your brain. That’s why it’s easy to make the same mistake multiple times. You can change this with a conscious pattern interruption. CANCER (June 22-July 22). It doesn’t usually come down to this, but when there’s a power struggle, there’s a power adjustment. Take control or be controlled. It will help to decide where to draw the line before you’re in a position to draw it.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Give yourself the leeway to experiment and try things on for size. Play around awhile, because the spirit of play is what will help you with the small tangles and then with the bigger issues. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Beauty and pain are often linked. Every rose has its thorns. A good florist will handle the danger. And when there’s no one to take away the prickly truth of the matter, go on and assume the role of protector. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ve developed such a specific and ranging skill set that sometimes it seems a bit arbitrary to you. You may wonder whether your talents matter to anyone outside the niche. You’ll get evidence that they do today. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Even though you believe that some of the rules guiding your group are unfair, be careful not to break them today. Eyes are on you. There will be a time for rebellion and change, but you’ve much learning to do still to get

ready. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). People tend to decide what they want and then figure out the reasons it’s a good idea. This is, of course, completely backward and leads to faulty logic, but that’s only a problem if what’s wanted is amoral. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You don’t know how long a thing takes until you do it. That’s why impatience is for amateurs. The pros get it all done -- methodically, one step at a time -with no rushing or time wasted. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’ll be baby-sitting children and/or people who act like children. Don’t expect typical responses or behavior you can make sense of. In solving the problems of the day, creativity will serve you better than logic. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). There are many good reasons to show up. You don’t want to miss out. If you don’t show up, you won’t know. They always talk about the one who’s not there, etc. So go. It’s a no-brainer.


10A • Daily Corinthian

Sports

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Coming Up This Week Coming up this week in the Daily Corinthian sports pages, Kent’s Corner returns on Tuesday with a POV look at the messy situation facing Ole Miss football. Then on Wednesday, we’ll continue our summer series of area high school football schedule previews by taking a look at Walnut and what Wildcat fans should expect this fall. Ask Kent returns on Thursday attempting to answer the question “Who is the best quarterback in the SEC?” And there’s sure to be more information available on the Hugh Freeze and Ole Miss situations. We’ll bring you the latest. Don’t miss these features and much more this week in The Daily Corinthian sports pages.

Local Schedule Photo by Kent Mohundro

HS Football Thursday, Aug. 10 Corinth will hold an intrasquad scrimmage and ‘Meet The Warriors’ at Warrior Stadium II, 6 pm 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 Friday, Aug. 25 — Week 2 Tupelo @ Corinth, 7 Kossuth @ Ripley, 7 McNairy Central @ Tishomingo Co., 7 Biggersville @ New Site, 7 Baldwyn @ Booneville, 7 Alcorn Central @ Middleton (Tenn.), 7 Walnut @ Falkner, 7 Friday, Sept. 1 — Week 3 Corinth (open) Thrasher @ Alcorn Central, 7 Baldwyn @ Kossuth, 7 TCPS @ Biggersville, 7 McNairy Central @ Covington, 7 Byers @ Walnut, 7 Tishomingo Co. @ Belmont, 7 Booneville @ Nettleton, 7

Shorts ■ Ramer City Park is holding fall soccer sign-ups on Saturdays — July 29, Aug. 5 and Aug. 12 — from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. at the park concession stand. The fee is $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. For more information, contact Elizabeth Cooper (731-610-6063) or Tom Court (731610-5750) 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 registration will be $15 for 10 and under and $25 for those over 10. You can register at https://racesonline.com/events/back-to-school-5kglow or call (662) 663-0308 for more information. All participants will receive a Kiwanis logo water bottle and two glow sticks to wear throughout the run. Participants are encouraged to bring as many glow sticks of their own as you like. The Booneville Kiwanis Club is an IRS designated non-profit organization and funds raised from this event will help the Booneville Kiwanis Club with its community service programs. ■ The first annual golf tournament for Havis’ Kids that was rained out in June has been re-scheduled for Friday,

Please see SHORTS | 11A

Max Evans, Jackson Allen, Eli Cooper, Sam Evans and Philip Tate (from left) participated in the first annual Kids Clinic, which wrapped up Saturday after lunch at Gilmore’s on the campus of the Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club. The campers received professional instruction in golf and tennis etiquette and skills and were taught to show total respect above all. The second annual event is in the early planning stages and could transition into a one-day clinic next year.

Shiloh Ridge experiencing growth, improvements BY KENT MOHUNDRO Sports Editor kmohundro@dailycorinthian.com

Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club and Golf Course in Corinth is trending upward and is experiencing a recent renaissance as it looks to offer you as many features as possible at a reasonable cost. During media day on Saturday as the first annual Kids Clinic came to an end, pro shop supervisor and special events coordinator Katie Foster supplied a comprehensive tour of the facilities and the upgrades and additions that have been made over the past couple of years to make Shiloh Ridge unique. “When people come here, we want them to see everything we offer,” Foster said. “We have experienced many improvements over the last couple of years and our staff works hard every day to make sure our members — as well as visitors to our campus — are well taken care of and informed so they

are aware of every feature available for them to enjoy.” The list of features is numerous and offers a variety of options for any member of the family. The scenic and challenging 18-hole golf course and driving range are the most visible, along with two chipping and putting greens. The spacious pool has seen improvements, too, with a waterslide on one end and an appealing and relaxing water feature on the other. There is also a multi-level fitness center complete with weights and various other modern exercise equipment. As for the rest of the campus, Shiloh Ridge offers a conference room, pro shop with a full line of golf equipment and accessories, two tanning beds plus two sauna and steam rooms for men and women, fitness classes and four tennis courts. You’ll also enjoy the benefits of on-site chiropractor Randy Beatty and the recently refur-

Photo by Kent Mohundro

The downstairs fitness and weight room at Shiloh Ridge is one of a number of features making the Athletic Club a popular choice for locals. There is also a separate fitness room upstairs that overlooks the pool. bished Gilmore’s restaurant, featuring a wide variety of dishes and a Sunday buffet. “Our goal here at Gilmore’s is for people to have a good time, make good friends and make that ‘mmm face’ as they en-

joy their meal,” said head chef Jay Luker. “Our Sunday lunch buffet begins around 10:30 and runs til 2. We’re also open Thursday through Saturday Please see SHILOH | 11A

Luke pulling together Ole Miss program The Associated Press

The task of pulling together Mississippi’s shattered football program is now in the hands of interim coach Matt Luke. The 40-year-old was promoted from co-offensive coordinator on Thursday night in the stunning aftermath of coach Hugh Freeze’s resignation for a “pattern of personal misconduct” that started with the school’s investigation into a call to an escort service . It’s just the latest issue facing

the embattled Rebels. While Luke has been an assistant at Ole Miss during Freeze’s entire five-plus year tenure, his name has not been linked to the ongoing NCAA investigation of the program. Luke also has deep family ties to the university and north Mississippi, playing offensive line for the Rebels from 1995-98. Now he has a 12-game audition for the full-time job. It’s not an ideal situation , but it’s not completely bleak either.

“Matt is a great coach,” Bjork said when announcing Thursday the school was turning the program over to Luke. “He’s a leader. He’s a rock. He’s an Ole Miss Rebel. And I’m confident — and especially even more confident after watching him address the team — that he will lead this team and program through this difficult time.” Bjork also noted that Wesley McGriff, the team’s defensive coordinator, has been promoted to associate head coach.

Luke was not immediately available for interviews in the aftermath of Freeze’s resignation. Luke is now in charge of a program that still has a talented roster — especially on offense — but is in the midst of longrunning NCAA investigation that’s already caused the school to impose a one-year bowl ban for the upcoming season. The offense features several Please see LUKE | 11A

Cowboys training camp is opening Monday Coming off a 13-4 season, the Dallas Cowboys will open their training camp on Monday in Oxnard, California.

Last year Sensational rookie combo of QB Dak Prescott and RB Ezekiel Elliott powered Cowboys to top seed in NFC before divisional playoff loss to Green Bay.

Prescott, NFL Offensive Rookie of Year, had one of best debut seasons for QB in NFL history after replacing injured Tony Romo, who never got back starting job and retired to broadcast booth after season. Elliott was NFL rushing leader with 1,631 yards. Dez Bryant, 2014 All-Pro WR, had production similar

to that season in second half of last year. Bryant participated in offseason for first time since 2014 and is expecting big results. TE Jason Witten returns for 15th season after becoming franchise leader in starts (213) and consecutive starts (163). Defense was mediocre again, and Cowboys let sev-

eral veterans go in free agency in signal talent upgrade was needed. Now Dallas is gambling that young players will be productive quickly, particularly in secondary. Oft-injured LB Sean Lee was healthy for all 16 games for first time in career, which led to first All-Pro nod. CowPlease see COWBOYS | 11A

Striped bass has become common in river system The striped bass (Morone saxatilis), or “striper,” is native to most of the East Coast and along portions of the Gulf of Mexico. While stripers mostly inhabit the whole coast surf, reefs, tide rips, in-shore bars, estuaries and bays, they have also been widely introduced in the Mississippi River system. They are particularly active in areas with tidal currents and in the wash of breaking waves. Striped bass are the largest fish in the temperate bass

Conservation

Corner By: James L. Cummins

family and grow as long as 6 feet. While the striped bass lives mostly in Coastal marine waters, they are anadromous and will swim into fresh water to spawn.

A schooling species, striped bass move about in small groups during the first two years of life. After this period, they feed and migrate in large schools. The size of the adult striped bass serves to separate it from any other bass, except the white bass. With silvery sides dressed with seven to eight dark horizontal stripes extending from the back of the head to the base of the tail, it is easy to see how they were named. However, a small

striper and a white bass held together look nearly identical but for one trait: the striper has two parallel patches of teeth on the tongue while the white bass only has one. Striped bass can live up to 30 years, reaching weights of up to 100 pounds. However, an adult striper is more commonly around 50 pounds, with the female reaching a significantly greater size than the male. Please see BASS | 11A


11A • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard Baseball AL STANDINGS East Division W L Pct GB 55 43 .561 — 50 45 .526 3½ 51 47 .520 4 46 50 .479 8 44 53 .454 10½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 50 45 .526 — Kansas City 49 47 .510 1½ Minnesota 48 47 .505 2 Detroit 44 51 .463 6 Chicago 38 56 .404 11½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 64 32 .667 — Seattle 48 50 .490 17 Texas 47 50 .485 17½ Los Angeles 47 51 .480 18 Oakland 43 54 .443 21½ Saturday’s Games Cleveland 2, Toronto 1, 10 innings N.Y. Mets 6, Oakland 5 Texas 4, Tampa Bay 3 Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 2 Houston at Baltimore (n) Detroit at Minnesota (n) Boston at L.A. Angels (n) N.Y. Yankees at Seattle (n) Boston New York Tampa Bay Baltimore Toronto

Photo by Kent Mohundro

Gilmore’s head chef Jay Luker displays his grilled salmon and asparagus plate complete with grilled pineapple and garnished with green onions. Gilmore’s is yet another distinguishing feature on the Shiloh Ridge campus and features a scrumptuous and inviting menu along with a lunch buffet every Sunday.

SHILOH CONTINUED FROM 10A

from 5-9 with a full menu.” The rest of the Shiloh Ridge staff includes Austin McCalister, Issac Byrom, Monica Hutchens, Liv Aday, Tayton Smith, Jay Coln and Zach Shawl — all of whom are part of the pro shop along with various other duties. Jonathan Enzor does a tremendous job as course superintendent and keeps the course looking beautiful and fresh. “Jonathan has done a phenomenal job upgrading the quality of the course,” Foster mentioned. “He works as hard as anyone and is dedicated to making this the best golf course possible. We consider it a blessing to have him here.” Hal Jordan serves as the maintenance supervisor, while Sharon Woodruff is the bookkeeper and office manager. “Sharon is the glue that holds Shiloh Ridge together,” said Foster. “I don’t know what we’d do without her.” Last but not least is owner Carroll Little who bought the business from originating owner Harold Patrick over 10 years ago. “Carroll is the man behind it all, “Foster continued. “He’s extremely humble but very successful. He tells us all the time if there’s anything we need or need to know he’s glad to help anytime. He’s always happy to teach, but he wants this to be about our customers and staff and not about him.” The recently completed three-day Kids Clinic was a success, but Foster said she is looking for more partici-

pation next year, especially with young ladies. “We had several inquiries about the clinic this year, but I believe the heat and humidity kept several people away,” said Foster. “Next year, we may shorten it to a one-day event and encourage more girls to attend, but overall the clinic went well, and the kids had a blast. They were able to learn skills and etiquette in both golf and tennis from our staff pros Bill Phillips and Willy LeFerney. And above all they learned respect.” Shiloh Ridge will offer an upcoming tennis academy in August. Foster and her team are working on a golf academy in the fall. There’s also a bit of history involving the campus of Shiloh Ridge. Famed local pilot Roscoe Turner used the property that now features hole No. 9 as a short runway and included a hanger for his plane. Some local historians might know that Turner had a pet lion that flew with him by the name of Gilmore — thus the name of the on-site restaurant. There are also numerous earthworks scattered around the golf course that were used by soldiers during the Civil War as shelter from enemy fire as well as a place to safely return fire. If it’s been a while since you visited the Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club and Golf Course, you owe it to yourself to visit and see just what you might be missing. You’re also encouraged to call the pro shop at (662) 286-8000 for details about memberships, benefits and course fees along with open and close times.

Photo by Kent Mohundro

SHORTS CONTINUED FROM 10A

(662) 397-5374. In addition, Havis’ Aug. 11, at Big Oaks Kids is sponsoring a Golf Course in Saltillo. Disney ticket drawing fundraiser. Tickets can Registration is at 8 a.m. be purchased for $25 with a shotgun start at 9 a.m. The fee for the each or five for $100. To four-person scramble is claim the trip, the winner $400. There will be prize must present the winning ticket to Havis Hurley money along with food and drinks. Havis’ Kids is on a on May 6, 2018. a non-profit organization For more information, started in 2011 and rais- including the list of ticket es money for local famisellers, contact Hurley at (662) 643-3561. lies with special needs (If you have an item children in Northeast Mississippi to take them for Sports Shorts, please to Disney World. Parents email it to sports editor volunteer to provide Kent Mohundro at kmothese children with an en- hundro@dailycorinthian. com or drop it by or mail joyable Disney vacation. it to Daily Corinthian, For more information about the tournament, 1607 South Harper Rd., call (662) 871-8994 or Corinth, MS 38834.)

NL STANDINGS East Division W L Pct GB Washington 57 38 .600 — Atlanta 47 48 .495 10 New York 45 50 .474 12 Miami 43 51 .457 13½ Philadelphia 33 61 .351 23½ Central Division W L Pct GB Milwaukee 52 47 .525 — Chicago 50 46 .521 ½ Pittsburgh 49 48 .505 2

Today’s Television Lineup AUTO RACING 1:30 p.m. — (NBC) NASCAR, Monster Energy Series, Brickyard 400, at Indianapolis BASKETBALL 11 a.m. — (ESPN) The Basketball Tournament, Regional final game, at New York 1 p.m. — (ESPN) The Basketball Tournament, Regional final game, at New York 3 p.m. — (ESPN2) The Basketball Tournament, Regional final game, at New York 5 p.m. — (ESPN2) The Basketball Tournament, Regional final game, at New York CYCLING 9:30 a.m. — (NBCSN) Tour de France, Stage 21 (final), Montgeron, France to Paris (Champs-Élysées)

St. Louis Cincinnati

47 50 .485 4 40 56 .417 10½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 66 31 .680 — Arizona 56 40 .583 9½ Colorado 56 42 .571 10½ San Diego 42 55 .433 24 San Francisco 38 61 .384 29 Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 3, St. Louis 2 San Francisco 5, San Diego 4, 12 innings N.Y. Mets 6, Oakland 5 Milwaukee at Philadelphia (n) Miami at Cincinnati (n) Pittsburgh at Colorado (n) Washington at Arizona (n) Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers (n) Today’s Games Miami at Cincinnati, 12:10 p.m. Oakland at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 12:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at Colorado, 2:10 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers, 3:10 p.m. Washington at Arizona, 3:10 p.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 7:05 p.m. Monday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m. Houston at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m. Miami at Texas, 7:05 p.m.

DRAG RACING 2 p.m. — (FOX) NHRA, Mopar Mile-High Nationals, finals, qualifying, at Denver GOLF 6 a.m. — (NBC) British Open, final round, at Southport, England 3 p.m. — (GOLF) PGA Tour, Barbasol Championship, final round, at Auburn, Ala. 8 p.m. — (GOLF) LPGA Tour, Marathon Classic, final round, at Sylvania, Ohio (sameday tape) HORSE RACING 3 p.m. — (FS2) Saratoga Live, Coaching Club American Oaks, at Saratoga Springs, N.Y. MLB BASEBALL 12:30 p.m. — (TBS) Houston at Baltimore 3:30 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Washington at Arizona OR N.Y. Yankees at

Colorado at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m. Atlanta at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.

Transactions Saturday’s Deals BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Placed LHP Boone Logan on the 10-day DL. Recalled LHP Tyler Olson from Columbus (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Recalled RHP Frankie Montas and 1B/OF Matt Olson from Nashville (PCL). Signed 1B-DH to a minor league contract and assigned to Nashville. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Agreed to terms with OFs Kristian Robinson and Jorge Barrosa, INFs Liover Peguero and Neyfy Castillo, and C Sergio Gutierrez. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Optioned RHP Sam Tuivailala to Memphis (PCL) and OF Magneuris Sierra to Springfield (TL). Designated C Eric Fryer for assignment. Recalled C Carson Kelly from Memphis. Activated OF Randal Grichuk from the 10-day DL and LHP Zach Duke from the 60-day DL. Acquired OF Tyler O’Neill from Seattle for LHP Marco Gonzales.

Seattle (subject to blackout in local areas) 7 p.m. — (ESPN) St. Louis at Chicago Cubs SOCCER 4 p.m. — (ESPN) International Champions Cup, Real Madrid vs. Manchester United, at Santa Clara, Calif. 5:30 p.m. — (FS1) MLS, Portland at Vancouver 8 p.m. — (FS1) CONCACAF Gold Cup, semifinal, Jamaica vs. Mexico, at Pasadena, Calif. SWIMMING 1 p.m. — (NBCSN) FINA World Championships, semifinals and finals, at Budapest, Hungary (same-day tape) VOLLEYBALL 3 p.m. — (NBCSN) AVP Pro Beach Tour, at Hermosa Beach, Calif.

Spieth round away from 3rd leg of Grand Slam The Associated Press

SOUTHPORT, England — Jordan Spieth is one round away from the third leg of the career Grand Slam, and one year removed from a reminder that it won’t be easy. On the horizon is a chance to join Jack Nicklaus as the only players to win three different majors at age 23. In the past was his last time leading a major, when he let a five-shot lead get away from him on

the back nine a year ago at Augusta National. All that mattered to him was the present. Spieth did his part on an extraordinary day of scoring in the British Open, capping off his 5-under 65 by seizing on a good break and making a 20-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole for a three-shot lead over Matt Kuchar, who did his best to keep pace with a 66. Spieth had one of seven rounds at 65 or lower at

Royal Birkdale, which was never more vulnerable with a light breeze and a clear sky until the final hour. He was warming up on the range when Branden Grace shot 62, the lowest 18-hole score over 157 years of major championships. Spieth then delivered his second bogey-free round of the week in which he never came seriously close to a bogey. “Pretty stress-free,” Spieth said. “On a Saturday

with a lead in a major, that’s as good as I can ask for.” He was at 11-under 199, breaking by six shots the 54-hole record at Royal Birkdale that Tom Watson set in 1983. Not only did that last birdie give him a three-shot lead, no one else was closer than six shots. This will be Spieth’s third time taking the lead into the final round of a major.

foods, including other fish, such as flounder, alewives, smelt, silver hake, eels and silversides, as well as crabs, soft clams, lobsters, sea worms, small mussels and squid. Although some feeding occurs throughout the day, they feed most actively at dusk and dawn. However, around midsummer they tend to become more nocturnal and feed throughout the night. Angling after dusk or

dawn is successful for most of the season, but around midsummer, night fishing is best. Fishing the shoreline proves to be most successful in areas where tidal rips, strong currents or wave action creates turbulent waters. When trolling for bass along shoreline areas, the rod should be equipped with a high ratio conventional reel and either silicon carbide or aluminum oxide

guides to prevent line wear. By choosing among monofilament, lead core or wire lines, trolling can be done at depths ranging from the surface to the bottom. James L. Cummins is executive director of Wildlife Mississippi, a non-profit, conservation organization founded to conserve, restore and enhance fish, wildlife and plant resources throughout Mississippi. Their web site is www. wildlifemiss.org.

Important losses

offensive line. Returning CBs Orlando Scandrick and Anthony Brown will be in mix with newcomers, and La’el Collins appears set for move from LG to RT with Free’s retirement. Former top 10 pick Jonathan Cooper, late-season add last year, could be new LG. Smith’s progress will have plenty of say on what happens at MLB.

BASS CONTINUED FROM 10A

Spawning takes place in late spring to early summer when water temperatures are around 60 degrees. The stripers ascend rivers and congregate in swift waters where mating occurs. Fertile eggs are buoyant and drift for three days while they incubate. If the eggs do not stay adrift, they sink to the bottom and suffocate. Stripers eat a variety of

COWBOYS CONTINUED FROM 10A

boys hope Jaylon Smith can join him as standout after 2016 second-round pick took last season to recover from devastating college knee injury. Pass rush was problem once again, and Cowboys focused on that need with first-round pick Taco Charlton.

Important additions

Scenic hole No. 8 on the backside of the Shiloh Ridge 18-hole golf course is just one example of what a golfer can expect at the Athletic Club located on Shiloh Road in Corinth.

Today’s Games Oakland at N.Y. Mets, 12:10 p.m. Texas at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m. Toronto at Cleveland, 12:10 p.m. Houston at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Kansas City, 1:15 p.m. Boston at L.A. Angels, 2:37 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 3:10 p.m. Monday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m. Houston at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Oakland at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m. Kansas City at Detroit, 6:10 p.m. Miami at Texas, 7:05 p.m. Boston at Seattle, 9:10 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Sunday, July 23, 2017

Charlton and fellow DE Charles Tapper, rookie CBs Chidobe Awuzie and Jourdan Lewis, CB Nolan Carroll; rookie WR/KR Ryan Switzer.

Sounds like recording, but pass rush still tops list. Dallas has addressed DE at or near top of draft three times in four years and needs to start seeing results to make long postseason run. Cowboys have to sort out spots in secondary and

Prescott will hear phrase “sophomore slump” in weeks leading to season. If the former Mississippi State star avoids it, the Cowboys

have strong chance to remain contender after failing to follow up NFC Eastwinning season in 2014 and falling to last place a year later. Dallas hasn’t had consecutive winning seasons since last of five straight in 2009. Defense has to be more dynamic for Cowboys to reach NFC championship game for first time since last Super Bowl title following 1995 season. Cowboys may have to brace for suspension of Elliott, under investigation by NFL for domestic issue in Ohio last year.

was under a lot of stress even before Freeze’s resignation. The Rebels are in the middle of an NCAA rules infractions case that includes 21 charges of academic, booster, and recruiting misconduct. Fifteen of those allegations are currently classified as Level I, which the NCAA deems most serious. The school has already self-imposed several sanctions, including the postseason ban, scholarship restrictions and recruiting restrictions. More penalties could be coming after an NCAA decision in the case, which is expected later this year. It remains to be seen if Freeze’s resignation will hurt or help Ole Miss when it argues its case in front of the NCAA infractions committee. The school has

staunchly defended Freeze in the past, saying the coach emphasized rules compliance during his tenure. Bjork indicated on Thursday that view hadn’t changed. He added that Freeze’s resignation is strictly because of personal conduct and not related to the NCAA investigation. “He has an established record that’s well documented in terms of how he ran the program around compliance,” Bjork said. “And we still believe in that.” One small silver lining for Ole Miss is that the program should be on solid financial footing whenever officials hire a full-time coach — whether that’s Luke or someone else. Freeze had multiple years remaining on a contract that paid him more than $5 mil-

lion annually. Bjork said that if Freeze had not resigned, he would have been fired with cause under a morals clause in the contract. Because of that, the AD said there is “no buyout, no settlement” moving forward. But money can’t fix the Rebels in the immediate future. Freeze was allowed to address coaches and players after he announced his resignation and Bjork said the meeting was tough. “I saw some heads go down, as you might expect, but I thought (the players) handled it very maturely,” Bjork said. “Several of them came up and hugged me and Matt Luke and the coaches and from what I could tell initially, they’re ready to move forward.”

CBs Brandon Carr and Morris Claiborne, Ss Barry Church and J.J. Wilcox, DT Terrell McClain, DE Jack Crawford, T Doug Free.

Camp needs

Expectations

LUKE CONTINUED FROM 10A

promising young players, including sophomores like quarterback Shea Patterson, left tackle Greg Little and receivers A.J. Brown and D.K. Metcalf. Luke needs to hold on to them to have success. But it is unclear if any players on the current roster will transfer in the wake of Freeze bombshell. Bjork said “it’s hard to say” if there will be any roster changes. He said players are currently in summer workouts and several are in summer school. They’ll also have a few days off before preseason camp on Aug. 2. “We will give them space. We will listen,” Bjork said. “And whatever they decide to do, we will support them.” The Ole Miss program


12A • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

to transfer your specialty medications today!


Features

1B • Daily Corinthian

Sunday, July 23, 2017

New novel brings thrills, chills BY TERRI SCHLICHENMEYER The Bookworm Sez

“Carnivalesque” by Neil Jordan c.2017, Bloomsbury $27.00 / $36.00 Canada 282 pages

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our hair looks fine. It should; you’ve checked it a dozen times since you got out of bed this morning. Your hair, your teeth, your skin, your eyes, you want to make sure you look your best so you peek in the mirror as often as possible. But in the new book “Carnivalesque” by Neil Jordan, what you see is not what you get. As an only child, Andy Rackard was a bit indulged. Maybe it had to do with the tension between his parents, maybe not, but it didn’t really matter. When Andy asked for something – say, a

side-trip to the carnival while heading to the mall – the car turned toward his wishes. So, while his parents gaped at carnival sideshows and gasped at neon-lit rides, Andy slipped away to Burleigh’s Amazing Hall of Mirrors. And he didn’t come out. Instead, someone who looked like him did: a different Andy who left with the real Andy’s parents, while the real Andy was stuck inside the mirror. Stuck fast, until a girl who seemed to be his same age decided that his name was Dany, and pulled him out with hands that belied her age. She called herself Mona, and she told Dany that he’d make a fine roustabout for the carnival. He was just as capable as the other rousties in their odd-fitting dungarees, and so she decided

to keep him. She had wanted a child for way too long. Eileen Rackard cried a lot those days. Jim, her husband, was obsessed with marmalade; true, it was his job, but it wasn’t his life. She felt so useless, and it didn’t help that Andy seemed distant, as if he didn’t remember how things once were. She chalked it up to adolescence, and hoped things might return to normal – until a local girl accused Andy of assault, flying ants began to plague the townspeople, and something emerged from the moss near the water… Beginning with such promise, “Carnivalesque” is a nearly-instant bloodchiller. When young Andy is sucked into the mirror and replaced, it’s as if a childhood horror has come to life and everything comfortable

is snatched away. Homesickness, even to a small degree, may also appear in a sentimental reader but don’t lose focus: observations are made in those pages, and they’ll become important. It’s a good beginning. Sadly, you’ll then need to muddle awhile, since this book begins to crack under its own story-weight, somewhere shortly before the middle: there are gonowhere plot-lines and empty back-story that seem awfully extraneous, as though author Neil Jordan sprinkled pepper into his tale for flavor, but it ruins the recipe. It’s told in a dreamy, otherworldly way, which can be that part’s only saving grace. Fear not, though: despite a clunky middle, the ending of this book is just as creepy as the beginning, and readers ages 15-to-adult will love

every chill. If you like that kind of novel and if you can get that far, “Car-

nivalesque” could be a book you can see yourself reading.

Riveting ‘Dunkirk’ is Nolan’s, and the year’s, best film BY LINDSEY BAHR AP Film Writer

“Dunkirk “ is not a typical war movie. There are no brothers in arms, no flashbacks to simpler times and pretty wives and girlfriends left behind, no old men in situation rooms pontificating about politics or helping with exposition. There’s no talk of Hitler, or Germans or battlefields or trauma or mothers. In fact, there’s hardly any talk at all, or, for that matter, even any characters in the traditional sense. But don’t be mistaken: Christopher Nolan’s “Dunkirk” is a stone cold

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masterpiece. It’s a stunningly immersive survival film told in 106 thrillingly realized minutes. Nolan puts the viewer right in the action whether it’s on the beach with 400,000 men queued up and waiting for a rescue that may never come, on the waters of the English Channel in the little civilian ship headed into hostile waters with only an aging man and two teenage boys aboard, or in the air above in the two lone Spitfires that are quickly running out of fuel. I’ve never experienced anything quite like “Dunkirk’s” intoxicating

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immediacy. The screen and images envelope you with urgency, dread and moments of breathtaking beauty and grace as you wait with the soldiers, as the title card at the beginning says, for deliverance. The story begins on the ground, with a young soldier, Tommy (newcomer Fionn Whitehead) wandering the deserted streets of Dunkirk looking for water and a place to relieve himself. Propaganda flyers float down to the ground reminding the soldiers of something they’re already well aware of — that they’re surrounded. “Surrender + Survive!” the flyers read

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67 CR 224

This beautiful 3 BR, 2 1/2 BA, 2577 Sq Ft, brick home is located in the Shiloh Ridge Subdivision. Featuring, Open living/dining, Great looking kitchen with breakfast area, gas fireplace, Master suite with a whirlpool tub, sep shower, & Dry ( 2 seat ) Sauna! 4 yr old (5 ton) heat pump, 3 yr old roof, 5 phase sprinkler system. Beautiful landscaping.. You must see this home!!

957 CR 400

$29,500 22 CR 215

This 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath home is in need of some TLC. Its being sold “ AS IS “. Located close in and would be a great for rental property and/or anyone wanting a small home.

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883 CR 400

Come home and enjoy the beauty and serenity this 3 Bedroom 2 bath home has to offer. This home has been very well maintained and sits on a beautiful 3.6 acre lot!! Features include an Oversized Detached 2 Car Garage, + a carport & a large storage building, Spacious great room, kitchen with breakfast bar, dining room , Laundry Room PLUS a HUGE 48x29 BASEMENT.

Renovated family home BACK ON MARKET! This beautiful place has over 2200 sq. ft with 3 bedrooms and 2.5 baths. There is a large den that could be used as a 4th bedroom. Beautiful yard with carriage house that will store a car and a boat and still have room left over. A detailed list of renovations available. Roof, windows, cabinetry and more. Call me for info. Marea Wilson 643.7298.

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$109,900 326 CR 512

Spacious home with 5 beds/4 baths. 2 masters plus 2 guest rooms on the main floor plus a master and bonus room upstairs. New hardwood floors, windows, roof, bathrooms, and more. Abundant natural light. Private, fenced yard. Two over-sized attached garages plus utility shed for tools and toys. Lots of parking with two driveways. Serious cooks will love the commercial grade kitchen.

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Michael McCreary

Rick Jones

Neil Paul

Audrey McNair

Marea Wilson

John & Brenda Hayes

Alexis Rudd

Roger Clark

Carl Jones

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2782 S Harper Rd

www.jumperrealty.com

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$154,000 3 Northtowne

This 4 bedroom 2.5 bath on Orchard Lane has a screened in porch and a swimming pool that would make the perfect family home. There is a large den, updated kitchen and updated master bath. Kitchen appliances stay! Call for an appointment before its too late! Marea Wilson 643.7398.

$195,000

Beautiful 4 bedroom 3 full bath home set on 4.75 acres with 30 x 35 shop and carport. Home has large eat in kitchen with 3 ovens, large family room with an attached office. Grounds have fruit trees and pond view. This is rural living at its best.

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1706 Fieldstone Farms $369,000 1207 Orchard Lane

Doug Jumper

$95,500 4583 CR 200

Looking for a well established neighborhood? Want to be close to everything but yet, away from it all? You need to check out this 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home with Sun Room, new flooring, new roof, new patio, concrete walkway and concrete drive with a nice level yard that is not to big or to small!

662.643.7298 for info.

ANNIVERSARY 2007-2017

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1302 Orchard

Immaculate 5 bedroom 3 bath home situated on 2.45 acres! Vaulted Ceiling and Fireplace in Den, Master and Guest room downstairs with remaining beds upstairs and a bonus room on the 3rd Floor! Partially fenced backyard with above ground pool and decks! Detached Shop as well! Call Robert to preview at 662-415-7000

$74,900 38 CR 116

Fantastic 4 Bedroom, 2.5 bath home w/ 2 story ceiling This beautiful home has 4 bdrms, a bonus room and 3 baths. Amazing home in the coveted Fieldstone Farms. This in Foyer and Living Room, fireplace, open kitchen w/ The kitchen has been remodeled to open up the floor plan 4 bedroom 3.5 bath home is nestled in 4.2 acres. 3 bar and breakfast area & a separate formal Dining and has quartz countertops and custom cabinets. Sit on your bedrooms downstairs with 1 and bonus room upstairs. Room. The Master is located on the main level and covered back porch and enjoy the 3.5+/- acres of land. Master Large kitchen with cozy keeping room. Wood floors and boasts a sitting area, 2 closets and an en suite which bath is second to none with soaking tub and tile shower. There lots of windows along with granite countertops and tons has a jetted tub. Separate shower and double vanity. is a formal dining and a rock fireplace in the den with gas logs. of storage make this home perfect for anyone, especially Upstairs boasts 3 more bedrooms and 1 full bath. Must see! Call Marea 643.7298. a growing family. Beautifully landscaped yard. Call

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$240,000

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$75,000 67 CR 238

$179,900 67 Quail Run

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445 Lick Creek Rd.

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Just the right size for a starter home or for retirement. Brick Great home available in the Farmington community! This home with metal roof on large lot with plenty of room to do home features 3 bedrooms and 1.5 bathrooms! The roof was what you want. Close in to town. Laminate floors C/A and recently replaced with a metal one and the central heat/air heat. One car carport. 1269 Sq ft. is about 5 years old! The lot is a 124 X 210 (0.6 acres) and the home is hooked on to community sewer. Paved driveway with 1 car carport too. Don’t miss out on this one! Agents see private remarks in MLS.

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3510 Old Ashbrook

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Lowden). They get to be the lofty, classical heroes of war films past as they shoot down the enemy. Hardly has a film ever made you feel as in the moment as this. And on the sea, the three civilians, Mr. Dawson (Mark Rylance), Peter (Tom Glynn-Carney) and George (Barry Keoghan) who, like so many during the Dunkirk evacuation, took it upon themselves to captain their own small vessel and journey into war dressed in their seaside knits and armed only with lifejackets and blankets to help save their country’s stranded men.

off the beach at any cost. We accompany Tommy as he tries to achieve that objective which eludes him with almost comic frequency. He’s the unluckiest lucky fellow out there. Occasionally we get the sobering perspective of the higher ups, compliments of the great Kenneth Branagh as Commander Bolton. In the air there are the two Spitfire pilots, Farrier (played by Tom Hardy, whose face is once again largely obscured but who can act circles around many of his contemporaries even with just the use of his eyes and eyebrows) and Collins (Jack

Convenient location to Pickwick, Corinth, Savannah, & Selmer Don’t miss this one, call & schedule your private viewing today.

Cute log sided home with large wrap around Deck overlooking the woods. Wood burning fireplace. Metal roof. Located on 1 acre of land. Large kitchen, Hardwood floors . All appliances stay including washer and dryer. Would make a great home or a great place to get away for the weekend.

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$168,500 3501 Shiloh Ridge Rd. $249,000 71 CR 180

Well kept 3 bed 2 bath home on 3 acres in Tishomingo! 2,000 +/- square feet. Central heat/air. Metal roof. 2 car garage. Kitchen appliances stay! Sunroom included. Fireplace. Large walk in closets. Acreage includes pond. Must see!

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If you are looking for space for your family, then look no more. This beautiful home located on N Madison has over 3700 sq. ft. Walk in from the front porch to an open foyer with an office on the left and formal dining on the right. It has 3 large bedrooms, 2.5 baths and a cooks kitchen. There is a deck out back and a large separate 2 car garage.

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$176,500 2900 N Madison St.

Great vacation home with awesome water view of pickwick This very Private home is located on 8.67 mostly wooded Acres ( lake. very close to Aqua marina the largest marina the lake. approx 2 AC yard ). Home features,, 2527 sq ft, 3 BD, 2 1/2 BA, Big Enjoy the tranquility of a mountain setting with a beautiful 14’ x 16’ laundry RM , Screened in 10’ x 20’ patio, Security system, view of the majestic waters of Pickwick Lake where 3 states join. 4 yr old roof, Rod Iron security doors, outside 24’ x 35’ shop with 2nd level storage, circular driveway. Look under documents for more details. Call John Hayes , 662-255-2626

469 MS 365

as Hans Zimmer’s gently ominous score plays in the background telling us that while it may be calm for a moment, it is not safe. A deafening gunshot breaks the silence, and, fair warning, your racing heart will not stop for quite some time. Nolan follows Tommy back to the beach where soldiers stand in long lines that stretch to the water, where no boats approach. His part is nearly silent, his motivations unknown. They are all haunted shells, stripped of meaningful weapons and a military purpose. He and the rest just know they need to get

$229,000

BRAND NEW Craftsman inspired home in Corinth’s hottest new subdivision - The Stones at Northtowne! Appx. 2800 sq.ft, 4 BR, 2.5 baths, TONS of granite, over/under cabinet lighting, stainless appliances INCLUDED, vaulted living room ceiling, sitting area in MB room, hardwood floors, electric fireplace w/ beautiful Spanish cedar mantel & stacked stone; BEST NEW CONSTRUCTION DEAL IN TOWN! OWNER AGENT.


2B • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Engagement

Seacrest back as host of ‘Idol’ BY FRAZIER MOORE AP Television Writer

Taylor Alece Wilson and Evan Mac Johnson

Wilson—Johnson Miss Taylor Alece Wilson and Mr. Evan Mac Johnson will be married on Saturday, July 29, 2017, at Hope Vineyards in Ramer, Tennessee, at 6 p.m. The bride-elect is the daughter of Randy and Marta Wilson of Booneville. She is the granddaughter of Freda Wilson of Booneville, the late Junior Wilson of Booneville, Brenda and Gary Langley of Helena, Alabama, and the late Robert Hunkapiller of Booneville. She is the great-granddaughter of Eva Carpenter and the late C.A. Carpenter of Booneville. The prospective groom is the son of Gary and Gloria Johnson of Corinth. He is the grandson of

Carolyn Bain of North Carolina, the late Albert Johnson of Corinth, and the late Margaret Ervin of Corinth. The bride-elect is a 2008 graduate of Alcorn Central High School. She received her Bachelor of Science in Education from Mississippi State University. She is presently employed at Northeast Mississippi Community College. The prospective groom is a 2009 graduate of Alcorn Central High School. He attended Mississippi State University and is currently employed at FedEx Express in Corinth. All friends and relatives of the couple are invited to attend the ceremony and the reception which follows.

Rey finally gets place in Star Wars Monopoly sets sold in United States BY MICHELLE R. SMITH Associated Press

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Hasbro is now offering a “Star Wars” Monopoly set for sale in the U.S. that includes the female character Rey after an uproar that started 18 months ago with an online plea by an 8-year-old girl to include her. The company began selling the set on its website a few days after The Associated Press reported Rey fans were still waiting to buy Monopoly sets that included the main character of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” after Hasbro promised in January 2016 to sell one. The Pawtucket-based game maker had been selling a version of the game that had only male characters, prompting 8-year-old Annie Rose Goldman, of Evanston, Illinois, to write a letter in January 2016 telling the company “girls matter.” The letter went viral, and Hasbro promised to make what it called “a running change” to include Rey in sets it said would be available later in the year. Hasbro told the AP last week that while it made

such sets, there was “insufficient interest” among American retailers, so they were never sold in the U.S. It said some retailers sold the sets overseas. Customers who bought the set and wanted a Rey token would have to call the company and have one shipped. The story revived the #WheresRey hashtag on social media and prompted a tweet from “The Force Awakens” director J.J. Abrams’ production company, Bad Robot: “For those ‘sufficiently interested’ contact Hasbro customer service to get your Rey Monopoly token!” A spokeswoman for Hasbro did not answer when asked how many people called to request a token. The listing on Hasbro’s website says the game will be available on July 25. Earlier this week, the site placed a limit of one set per household, but that line was removed after the AP asked about it. The company says it has many other products that include Rey, and it plans to reveal more this week at San Diego Comic-Con.

Cryptoquip

NEW YORK — Seacrest in! Ryan Seacrest will be back hosting “American Idol” when it returns for its first season on ABC. Kelly Ripa made the announcement on Thursday’s “Live with Kelly and Ryan,” which she has co-hosted with Seacrest since he joined her in May. “I am happy to confirm ... that Ryan Seacrest is returning as the host of ‘American Idol,’” said Ripa as the studio audience whooped. Seacrest said he was excited to be doing it again. “I don’t know if you’ve ever been in a 15year relationship and then, for a reason that you really don’t know, you break up,” he said. “I thought, ‘Gosh, it

would be great to get back together at some point.’” Seacrest had a grand history with “Idol” during its smash-hit run on Fox from 2002 through 2016. Reclaiming that job now gives him an additional role in the Disney family, which owns ABC and produces the syndicated “Live.” His potential return to “Idol” had sparked much speculation since ABC announced in May that it would revive the talent competition. The program airs from Los Angeles and “Live” airs weekday mornings from New York. But the 42-year-old Seacrest is no stranger to a packed work schedule and cross-country flights. “You can have all the tickets you want,” he told Ripa, “and you can come back and forth with me any weekend.” Seacrest will also con-

tinue his syndicated Los Angeles morning-drivetime radio show, as well as a nationally syndicated Top 40 radio show, from his iHeartMedia studio in the same Manhattan complex where “Live” is telecast. He also hosts and executive produces ABC’s annual “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest,” and is a busy producer of series in which he doesn’t appear, including “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” and its many spin-offs. ABC Entertainment President Channing Dungey called Seacrest’s talent “limitless, and I can’t think of a more appropriate person to honor the ‘Idol’ legacy as it takes on new life than the man who has been there through it all.” On Fox, “Idol” dominated TV in the 2000s and minted stars like

Carrie Underwood, Jennifer Hudson and Kelly Clarkson, while making its judges, such as Randy Jackson and Simon Cowell, household names. It was the No. 1 series for nine years, peaking with 30 million viewers each episode in 2006. But by its last season the average audience had dipped to 11 million and skewed older, and NBC’s “The Voice” surpassed it in popularity. Fox eliminated it. Even so, in today’s television world, an audience of 11 million would rank it among TV’s top 20 shows, a fact that clearly didn’t escape ABC’s notice. On the final Fox edition, a hopeful Seacrest told viewers, “Goodbye — for now.” The nationwide search for the first ABC-aired “Idol” begins next month. ABC has not announced a premiere date.

Plans for new rides, more at Disney parks Associated Press

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Disney is calling upon the “Guardians of the Galaxy” and a cohort of blockbuster movies to help modernize its amusement parks. Walt Disney Parks and Resorts Chairman Bob Chapek unveiled the upcoming attractions at both international and domestic Disney parks during its D23 fan expo in Anaheim, California, on July 15. Most of the upcoming projects are expected to be completed by Disney World’s 50th anniversary in 2021. Here’s a recap of some of the big announcements, including a legendary mascot finally getting his own ride.

Star Wars sleepers

A themed resort will join the family of “Star Wars” attractions at Disney World in Orlando, Florida, including Star Tours and the previously announced Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge land expansion. Chapek emphasized the resort’s “100 percent immersive” experience, saying it is Disney’s most experiential park concept to date. Guests can become citizens of the Star Wars galaxy, including the chance to dress in proper attire.

Epcot overhaul

Epcot, Disney World’s second-oldest park, is receiving a much-needed update. Chapek said the makeover boosts Epcot’s relevance and family appeal. A “Guardians of the Galaxy” ride in Future World will buoy the park’s space travel theme, replacing the Universe of Energy attraction closing this summer. Ratatouille: The Adventure ride, which originated at Disneyland Paris, is headed to Epcot’s France Pavilion. Shanghai Disneyland’s TRON Lightcycle Power Run attraction is also coming stateside,

making a second home in the Magic Kingdom.

Pixar Pier

Pixar Pier is replacing Paradise Pier at Disney California Adventure as an immersive hub for all Pixar characters. The announcement reinforces Disneyland as the premiere location for Pixar, also home to a land themed on “Cars” and a previously announced “Toy Story” land. The forthcoming attractions are expected to open in time for a limited-run Pixar Fest in 2018.

Mickey Mouse Mickey Mouse is getting his own ride. Mickey and Minnie’s Runaway Railway will replace The Great Movie Ride at Hollywood Studios, which closes this summer. An opening date for the new attraction was not announced.

Double the ships

Disney Cruise Line is adding a seventh ship to its roster. Two upcoming ships were announced last year with Chapek unveiling a third is in the works. All three are still early in development but

Crossword

are set to be completed by 2023. They’re expected to be slightly larger than the current Disney Cruise Line ships.

Marvel mania

The “Guardians of the Galaxy” are making a stop in France. Disneyland Paris is reimagining its Disney’s Hotel New York with a focus on Tony Stark and his legion of superhero friends. Chapek announced plans for a reimagined Disney’s Hotel New York - The Art of Marvel, saying he hopes to make Stark proud.


Daily Corinthian • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • 3B ANNOUNCEMENTS

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE %87/(5 '28* )RXQGD WLRQ IORRU OHYHOLQJ EULFNV FUDFNLQJ URWWHQ ZRRG EDVHPHQWV VKRZHU IORRU 2YHU \UV H[S )5(( (67,0 $7(6 RU

PETS

FARM

<$5' 02:,1* :HHG (DWLQJ $OO PDQQHU RI \DUG ZRUN

0430 FEED/FERTILIZER GARAGE /ESTATE SALES EMPLOYMENT

%(508'$ 64 KD\ )HU WLOL]HG OLPHG VSUD\HG

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.

Property Directory

0244 TRUCKING (;3(5,(1&(' 758&. 'ULYHUV QHHGHG /RFDO +DXO 0XVW KDYH &ODVV $ RU &ODVV % OLFHQVH &DOO

WANTED TO 0554 RENT/BUY/TRADE :$17 72 UHQW QLFH KRXVH LQ &RULQWK RU $O FRUQ &RXQW\ LQ VHFWLRQ VWDQGDUG 3HUIHFW UHQW UHFRUG

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

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

FOR SALE OR RENT

D L SO

CALL 662-415-9187

GRISHAM INSURANCE

662-286-9835

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

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

CHRIS GRISHAM

Home Life

Auto Health

1900 E. Shiloh Road • Corinth, MS 38834

2012 Chevy Malibu LT,, Fully Equipped, Air, Cruise ................................ $7,800

$32,500.00 662-415-8335

Loans $20-$20,000

“I will always try to help you�

2011 Chevy Malibu, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise, Gray ................................... $6,800

918 SQ. FT. 2BR, 1 BATH OUTSIDE SHED CARPORT STORM SHELTER 1/2 ACRE LOT

& Business

Medicare Supplements

Back to School Specials! We Always Sell For Less

805 CONFEDERATE ST.

– Run Your Ad On This Page For $165 Mo. –

This feature returning by popular DEMAND!

0848 AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES

HOUSE FOR SALE

D E S A LE IN EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER HWY 72 EAST.

Travels

Submit information about when and where photo was taken, who is in the photo, and describe the trip. Send the photo and contact information to: editor@dailycorinthian.com

$179,500

PRIME LOCATION!

It’s back!

The Daily Corinthian in the past has been to the top of Pike’s Peak, to the bottom of the Great Barrier Reef.

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

FOR LEASE

'$<6 D ZHHN WR +UV $SSO\ LQ SHUVRQ 0RQ 6DW 3URSHU 6W &RULQWK $OFRUQ $Q )7 6800(5 :$9(6 6:,00,1* 322/ LPDO 6KHOWHU $QLPDO +DQGOHU PXVW EH DEOH WR 1(('6 3803 KDQGOH ODUJH DQLPDOV

Going somewhere? Pack your Daily Corinthian print edition and have a photo taken with your paper on the trip. Try to take photos at fun, unexpected places or with famous landmarks in the background.

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

225-60-16 abs wheels and tires, 2 of the tires are new, $300.00 731.610.1112.

Corinthian

86 CR 173 CORINTH, MS

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

• • • • • • •

We also do: Dozer Back-Hoe Track-Hoe Demolition Dig Ponds and Lakes Tree Removal Service Crane Service

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 Office mcoatsllf@yahoo.com

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

2011 Chevy Traverse, Gray, Auto, Tilt, Cruise, Air ...................................... $6,900

CROSSROADS

CHIROPRACTIC, LLC

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

Dr. Richard Alexander 3263 N Polk Street Corinth, MS 662-415-5432

2004 Ford Taurus, Red Only 89,000 Miles ...........................................$4,500

See Gene Sanders

Corinth Motor Sales

Now Accepting New Patients

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

Committed To Your Complete Health with A Natural Method of Care.

Follow Daily Corinthian on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to see local news ďŹ rst online.

Follow us on Twitter: Like us on Facebook: Follow us on Instagram: @dailycorinthian facebook.com/dailycorinthianms @dailycorinthian


4B • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

BOBBY WILBANKS.

We most appreciate the visits that lifted his spirit, the food and anyone who helped in any way. Special thanks to Dr. Leonard Pratt, Dr. Kerry Morgan, and Dr. B. Wayne McAlpin for their care and concern, to Ronna, Serra Beth, Jonathan and the entire Kindred Home Health staff for loving care, to Memorial Funeral Home and staff for the compassionate way they honored him. We will be forever humbled by the Union Center/Theo Volunteer Fire Department escort, and the loving words spoken by Brother Skippy Rowland and Brother Alan Parker. Special thanks to the pall bearers and honorary pall bearers for their love and service to him, to Hatchie Chapel Church for the kindness to all of us. We appreciate the donations to the fire department, the flowers and other gifts in memory of Bobby. There is a big empty space in our lives that can never be filled, but we will be with him one day soon. May God Bless anyone who touched his life. Maxine, Levoyd, Pat, Shirley, Tammy and families.

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

ENROLL NOW &

SAVE $30

Each year, H&R Block teaches thousands of people to prepare taxes. Take the H&R Block Income Tax Course to learn how to prepare taxes like a pro. Class times and locations are flexible to fit your current job, school and family schedules. Successful completion of this course could mean extra income as a tax professional for you.*

Enroll now! Save $30** USE COUPON CODE 90820 WHEN YOU ENROLL ONLINE OR BY TELEPHONE.

Spanish course materials and language support available as needed.

GATEWAY PLAZA, 401 S GLOSTER ST STE 106, TUPELO, MS 38801 FOR CLASS TIMES AND LOCATIONS, VISIT HRBLOCK.COM/CLASS | 662-842-1937 Classes are taught in English and the instructor or assistant will be able to answer questions in Spanish as needed. Course materials will be provided in English with a Spanish e-book available for qualifications may be required. Enrollment restrictions apply. There is no tuition fee for the H&R Block Income Tax Course. However, you may be required to purchase printed course materials, which may be non-refundable. State restrictions may apply. Additional training may be required in MD and other states. Valid at participating locations only. Void where prohibited. H&R Block is an equal opportunity employer. This course is not intended for, nor open to any persons who are either currently employed by or seeking employment with any professional tax preparation company or organization other than H&R Block. During the course, should H&R Block learn of any student's employment or intended employment with a competing professional tax preparation company or service, H&R Block reserves the used on initial purchase only. Not valid on subsequent payments. Expires January 31, 2018. CTEC# 1040-QE-0887 ©2017 HRB Tax Group, Inc.

GENERAL HELP

Corinth/Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department

*$/ )RRG *UDGH %DU UHOV 0HWDO ZLWK ORFNLQJ OLG 3ODVWLF :$17 72 PDNH FHUWDLQ %XUQ %DUUHOOV \RXU DG JHWV DWWHQWLRQ" $VN DERXW DWWHQWLRQ JHWWLQJ JUDSKLFV ALL METAL tilt trailer, 4 1/2 x 7,,,,$450. NEW 5X8 all metal tilt trail731.610.1112 er, brake lights and all red, new tires, $550. COMMERCIAL FAN like 731.610.1112 new paid 246.00 $190 it's y o u r s , u l i t e c h , , NEW HUSQVARNA self 731.610.1112,like new,3 propelled push mower with 1/2 ft high and wide Honda engine, new $454. Will take $350. & 5 $ ) 7 6 0 $ 1 5 , ' , 1 * 731.610.1112. 02:(5 &87 +3 1(('6 02725 :25. REVERSE YOUR +$6 %$**(5 .,7 1(: AD FOR $1.00 7,5(6 EXTRA ),5(6721( 3 5 VHW RI FDOO FOUR 225- 60-16 two brand new, on four abs, wheels $300. 731.610.1112

0220

HOMES FOR 0620 RENT %5 %$ Z RSHQ NLW FKHQ /LYLQJ 5RRP 'LQ LQJ 5RRP &5 :HVW ILUVW UG RQ 5 DIWHU &OD\WRQ +RPHV KRXVH RQ / 6HFWLRQ DYDLO DEOH 'DQ QLH :DONHU 5HI 5HT

MOBILE HOMES 0675 FOR RENT %5 %$ 'EO :LGH PR GHS RU

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

Call 662-287-6111 HOMES FOR 0710 SALE for details. 6(7 2) 5 7,5(6 &$//

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

MEDICAL/DENTAL

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

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.

UNFURNISHED 0610 APARTMENTS :($9(5 $376 1 &DVV %5 SRUFK Z G XWLO

4FT 10 inch by 8ft 4 inch tilt trailer, it's green. $350. 731.610.1112

Words can never express the appreciation we feel for all the acts of kindness for us during the sickness and death of

0232

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

0232 GENERAL HELP

0121 CARD OF THANKS

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

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

TRANSPORTATION

0232 GENERAL HELP

FINANCIAL

MS CARE CENTER

LEGALS HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

is looking for a

STORAGE, INDOOR/ OUTDOOR $0(5,&$1 0,1, 6725$*(

Full-Time Cook Classes/Training

Miscellaneous

INDEPENDENCE UNIVERSITY. Offering Associate’s, Bachelor’s and Master’s Degree Programs. Study online around your schedule! Healthcare, Business, Technology, Graphic Arts, more! Financial Aid for those that qualify! Call 1-855-993-0086 for info! Accredited member, ACCSC.

DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Running or not! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details. 855-400-8263

Employment - Trucking DRIVER - CDL A TRAINING. $500 $1,000 Incentive Bonus. No Out of Pocket Tuition Cost!. Get Your CDL in 22 Days. 6 Day Refresher Courses Available. Minimum 21 Years. 877-899-1293 EOE. www.kllmdrivingacademy.com L. E. TUCKER & SON, INC. Team drivers needed to run from S.E. to West Coast. Late model conventional tractors. Home weekly. Benefits package. Pearl, MS. 1-800-647-5494. www.tuckerandson.com

Insurance SAVE ON YOUR MEDICARE SUPPLEMENT! FREE QUOTES from top providers. Excellent coverage. Call for a no obligation quote to see how much you can save! 855-400-8352

Land For Sale

SMITH LAKE

LAKEFRONT Was... $99,900

NOW... $79,900 Direct dockable waterfront. Deep year round water. Motivated seller! Water and power already.

1-877-452-8406 SMITH LAKE LIQUIDATION SALE Dockable Waterfront Was $34,900 NOW $19,900 Adjacent to Bankhead National Forest. Privacy, maintained roads and electric. Excellent financing available.

Call 877-420-5269

Services-General CUT THE CABLE! CALL DIRECTV. Bundle & Save! Over 145 Channels PLUS Genie HD-DVR. $50/month or 2 Years (with AT&T Wireless.) Call for Other Great Offers! Call 1- 800-215-6713 DISH NETWORK. TV for Less, Not Less TV! FREE DVR. FREE Install (up to 6 rooms.) $49.99/mo. PLUS Hi-Speed Internet - $14.95/mo (where available.) CALL 1-877-628-3143

Services-Medical

Services-Legal DIVORCE WITH OR WITHOUT CHILDREN. $125. Includes name change and property settlement agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast and easy. 1-888-7337165. Call us toll FREE 24/7. NEED LEGAL REPRESENTATION? We can help with your new personal injury, DUI, criminal defense, divorce or bankruptcy case. 888-641-7560 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY? Up to $2,671/mo. (Based on paid-in amount.) FREE evaluation! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-800-706-3616. Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL., member TX/NM Bar.

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

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

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

Advertise Your Product or Service

STATEWIDE In 100 Newspapers! To order, call your local newspaper or MS Press Services at 601-981-3060.

STATEWIDE RATES: Up to 1 col. 1 col. 1 col.

25 words.....$210 x 2 inch.......$525 x 3 inch.......$785 x 4 inch.....$1050

Services-Medical A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE - no obligation. Call 1-800-514-5471. Attention: VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! A cheaper alternative to high drugstore prices! 50 Pill Special - $99 + FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW: 844-821-3242 GOT KNEE PAIN? BACK PAIN? SHOULDER PAIN? Get a pain-relieving brace at little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients call Health Hotline Now! 1-800971-0493 OXYGEN - ANYTIME. ANYWHERE. No tanks to refill. No deliveries. The AllNew Inogen One G4 is only 2.8 pounds! FAA approved! FREE info kit: 888-9640893

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

STOP OVERPAYING FOR YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS! SAVE! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy, compare prices and get $25 off your first prescription! Call 866-508-2084 GENERAL HELP VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! Cut your 0232 drug costs! SAVE $$! 50 pills for $99. FREE shipping! 100% guaranteed and discreet. Call 1-800-721-9639.

Services-Financial SAVE YOUR HOME! Are you behind paying your MORTGAGE? Denied a Loan Modification? Is the bank threatening foreclosure? CALL Homeowner's Relief Line now for Help, 866-948-7316

6 7DWH $FURVV )URP :RUOG &RORU

******

Nationwide Placement Available ******

Digital Advertising Available starting at $699 statewide. ******

Call Sue at

MS Press Services 601-981-3060

Week of July 16, 2017

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.

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

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.


Daily Corinthian • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • 5B

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. 816 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

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

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

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

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

2003 CHEROKEE 285 SLEEPS 8

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,

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

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

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


6B • Sunday, July 23, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. 868 AUTOMOBILES

REDUCED 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

D L SO

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

1977 CORVETTE 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

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

145K MILES SILVER COOL AIR 3 ROW SEATING GOOD GAS MILEAGE GOOD SOUND & CLEAN VEHICLE

2,85000 286-5180 $

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

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

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)

2013 Z71 1973 CUTLASS Chevy 2 DOOR Silverado ••••• Crew Cab $4,500.00 49,000 miles 662-415-5071 Asking $26,000.00 662-415-4396

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

2004 GMC Explorer 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

D OLD L S 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.

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

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

1985 Mustang GT,

1989 Corvette

$3000.00

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

662-287-4848

2014 2014 HYUNDAI HYUNDAI ACCENTHATCHBACK HACHBACK ACCENT STANDARD SHIFT STANDARD SHIFT

LIKE BRAND BRAND NEW! LIKE NEW! ONLY 44,000 MILES ONLY 44,000 MILES AND GETS 34 MPG!AND GETS 34 MPG! $10,000 662-287-0145 662-287-0145

2008 FORD RANGER

2010 Chevy Equinox LS 02 TOYOTA SIENNA VAN

1986 Corvette

1970 MERCURY COUGAR FOR SALE Excel. Cond.

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

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

06 Chevy Trailblazer 1995 GMC Z-71 1987 Power $5800.00 FORD 250 DIESEL everything! UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK GOOD COND. Good heat $4000. NEEDS TIRES and Air IN GOOD CONDITION FOR MORE INFO. $3,250 OBO 731-645-8339 OR CALL 662-415-3408 662-319-7145 731-453-5239 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 OMILES 22,883 S $2,350.00 YAMAHA V STAR 650

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


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