080917 daily corinthian e edition

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Home & Garden Summer citrus growth brings autumn harvest

Tishomingo Co. School board revises student transfer policy

Prentiss Co. District focuses on high efficiency

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Wednesday August 9,

Daily Corinthian

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2017

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two pages

County hears 11 budget requests BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

As the local governments get deeper into budget season, requests are piling up from a number of agencies that rely on funding from the city and county. The Alcorn County Board of Supervisors had 11 requests

from various agencies on Monday’s agenda, and the board is gathering for a work session on the fiscal 2017 budget today. Among those presenting Monday were The Alliance, which is seeking a $35,000 increase to $315,000. The Alliance’s county funding is derived from a set millage amount.

Alliance President Clayton Stanley explained that the increase will support intensified efforts to market local sites to industrial prospects. “Putting us in front of our prospects is what we are aiming to do more and more,” he said. “The days of sitting here and waiting for the state or TVA

Please see BUDGET | 2A

BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

The City of Corinth has issued a building permit for an outlet store locating in a portion of the old Kmart building at Fulton Crossing. Building Inspector Greg Tyson said the store is Ollie’s Bargain Outlet, which will occupy 30,000 square feet. Ollie’s describes itself as “one of America’s largest retailers of closeouts, excess inventory and salvage merchandise,” with goods including housewares, food, books and stationery, bed and bath, floor coverings, toys, hardware and other categories. The store’s

BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

Please see MCDOWELL | 2A

Executive Director Dee Hare told the board of her request for a 10 percent funding increase from the counties in the regional library system to offset drastic cuts in library funding at the state level and maintain services, as previously reported. The

New outlet coming to K-mart building

McDowell still loves to perform after 40 years Ronnie McDowell is a widely-known singer with many hits and a long history of performing and he says he still loves what he does after 40 years. “I’m still having fun,” said the performer. “Not many people get to do what I do, so I’m blessed.” Billy’s Entertainment will present Ronnie McDowell Friday at the Corinth Coliseum Civic Center beginning at 7 p.m. The doors will open at 5 p.m. and a portion of the proceeds from the concert will benefit the American Legion Post 6. “When we come to town, we just have a good time. I’ll be performing songs I recorded through the years and some new songs, too,” said McDowell. While McDowell’s fans are well aware of his musical prowess, many might be interested to know he is also an artist. He has painted several noted pieces, including the well known George Jones painting “Last Chance,” which he said he was commissioned to do by George Jones. There is also the “Reflections of a King” painting which hangs at Elvis’ birthplace in Tupelo. He has also been painting for the Disney Corporation for the past four years, painting everything from Donald Duck, to Mickey Mouse to Buzz Lightyear. How does one reconcile the man renowned for music with the artist? “It’s like I have two careers and live in two different worlds,” said McDowell. The singer/artist said he has been drawing since 1956, around the time he was in the first grade. He said he still paints all the time. Originally from Portland, Tenn., right outside of Nashville, McDowell said he moved to Hendersonville, Tenn., in 1987, after country legend Conway Twitty “talked him into it.” He has five children and eight grandchildren. He is a Vietnam veteran, having landed in Saigon on Oct. 26, 1968. He did tours in 1969 and 1975, as well. He’s also a song writer. With all his talents, McDowell is remarkably humble about his achievements.

to call us and tell us they’ve got somebody who wants to come to Corinth or Alcorn County are gone. We’ve got to go and get them.” With the aid of TVA, more than $1 million is going into development of the rail hub site east of Corinth. Northeast Regional Library

tagline is “good stuff cheap.” The permit is for a $745,000 remodel of the existing store space. “They are actually using the existing storefront of the old Kmart building,” said Tyson. The construction project is Please see OLLIES | 2A

Property owners to get new value assessments BY JEBB JOHNSTON

jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Photo courtesy of Webster PR

Country music star Ronnie McDowell will be coming to Corinth’s Coliseum Civic Center as he celebrates his 40th anniversary touring. The show will be held this Friday, beginning at 7 p.m. Doors will open at 5 p.m.

Alcorn County property owners will soon learn new appraised values as the required reappraisal process nears completion. Tax Assessor Kenneth Brawner submitted the preliminary total assessed value to the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors — essential information they will need as they begin to formulate the next fiscal year’s budget. In Monday’s meeting, the board voted to accept the rolls and begin the tax equalization process. Brawner told the board his office will mail out notices this week or next week, and property owners will have

the opportunity to respond to the new appraisals, which are used to calculate property taxes. The 2017 tax roll “looked good,” he said, with an increase in assessed value of $20.3 million, or about 8 percent, from 2016. The early numbers put the total assessed value at $263,729,560. The land roll valuation, at $142,435,330, is up about $10.6 million. Tax Collector Larry Ross reported it’s also nearing time for the annual tax sale for properties with past-due taxes. The sale will take place on Aug. 28, and the first publication of Please see PROPERTY | 2A

Heroes Hunt lauds veterans, emergency workers BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

Heroes will be honored during a special hunting event in September. Registration has begun for the second annual Heroes Hunt, a free dove hunt presented by the Alcorn County Chapter of the Delta Waterfowl. Sponsored by Magnolia Re-

gional Health Center, the hunt is set for Saturday, Sept. 9 from 12 to 5:30 p.m. The event will take place at Quail Hollow Ranch, located north of Corinth near Ramer, Tenn. “This hunt started as a way to do something free of charge for all Alcorn County veterans (wounded, retired and active), members of the Corinth Police Department, the Alcorn Coun-

ty Sheriff’s Department, EMS, Air Evac, firefighters and other first responders,” said Alcorn County Delta Waterfowl Chapter Chairman Franz Schnabl. “This year we’re also inviting those members from other parts of the region. The hunt is not just for locals anymore.” Schnabl said the event is also a way to remember 9/11. “It’s all about honoring those

who serve and protect,” he said. “The hunt was inspired by the selfless actions of law enforcement and in remembrance of 9/11.” New this year, the event will allow both Mississippi and Tennessee residents to hunt and if the participate has a active hunting license in one of Please see HUNT | 2A

25 years ago

10 years ago

The city of Corinth receives a $280,000 grant from the U.S. Department of the Interior to help protect battlefield sites.

Alcorn County First District Supervisor Keith Fields and Fourth District Supervisor Gary Ross are re-elected as other races move to runoffs in the county primary election.

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“We’ve also added the ability to register on our website at alcorndeltawaterfowl.com. It’s quick and easy.” Franz Schnabl

Alcorn County Delta Waterfowl Chapter chairman

HUNT CONTINUED FROM 1A

the two states than an additional license is not required. “We’ve also added the ability to register on our website at alcorndeltawaterfowl.com,” said Schnabl. “It’s quick and easy.” Up to 70 hunters may harvest no more than 15 doves on the 10-area ranch during the hunt. A presentation of colors and an opening ceremony will be held, as well as the serving of a free barbecue lunch prepared by Danny Montgomery.

All expenses are being covered courtesy of the Waterfowl Heritage Fund which is made up of 25 percent of the proceeds raised from the chapter’s annual banquet. (To register, visit alcorndeltawaterfowl.com, contact Schnabl at 662-4152377 or C.J .Gamer at 662-293-1603. Quail Hollow Ranch is located at 1731 Gay Thompson Road in Ramer, Tenn. For more information about Quail Hollow Ranch and for directions, visit quailhranch.com or call 901-8700846.)

PROPERTY CONTINUED FROM 1A

delinquent taxes in the newspaper will be this weekend. The county has been averaging more than 400 properties going to the tax sale each year. In other business before the board this week: • Supervisor Tim Mitchell expressed concern that the county being behind on audits is costing the county opportunities to pursue certain grant funds. The 2015 audit is near completion. The process apparently fell behind when the State Auditor’s Office began its extensive investigation of Alcorn County

and the regular audit in progress at the time was put on hold. • The board approved participating in the Mississippi Association of Supervisors Inmate Medical Cost Containment Program, which is expected to reduce costs and paperwork for the correctional staff. • The board approved the hiring of Edith Simpson as a part-time employee at the veterans’ service office. • The board approved Girl Scout Caroline Grisham’s request to establish reserved parking spaces at certain locations for military veterans. The city also previously gave approval.

OLLIES CONTINUED FROM 1A

expected to move quickly. Also moving quickly under the same roof is the interior work for Harbor Freight, the tool store occupying about 15,000 square feet. It is nearing completion, Tyson said. With 100,000 square feet in the entire building, the developer will still have space to add additional retailers

in the former Kmart store space. Ollie’s opened its 250th store last week and has stores in 20 states. At the end of the first quarter, the company reported net sales increased 17.5 percent to $227.6 million from $193.7 million in the first quarter of fiscal 2016. The news of Ollie’s follows recent retail announcements including Hobby Lobby, Marshalls and ALDI.

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Charter school hearing set Associated Press

CANTON — One Mississippi community will get its say on a plan to open a charter school. The Charter School Authorizer Board will hold a public hearing Thursday in Canton to hear community thoughts on a plan for the SR1 College Preparatory and STEM Academy. The board will vote on SR1’s application next month. The school would start with kindergarten and first graders in

MCDOWELL CONTINUED FROM 1A

“I am a jack of all trades, master of none. You have to be humble, lest ye stumble,” he said. Singer, song writer, performer and artist — McDowell said he enjoys it all and doesn’t seem to have a preference for one passion over another. “I totally enjoy it all ... all the creative process. I will never stop. I always want to be creating things,” said McDowell. Although McDowell has had his own impressive string of hits, one cannot ignore the success he has seen preforming Elvis’ hits. McDowell achieved notoriety when he sang 36 songs on the soundtrack “Elvis,” the Dick Clark-produced television movie that featured Kurt Russell as the performer, according to information provided by Webster PR. He also was the singing voice for the television movie “Elvis And Me,” the ABC television series about the early years of Elvis’ career titled simply “Elvis” as well as, the 1997 Showtime special “Elvis Meets Nixon.” Following the death of

fall 2018, growing to a K-12 school with 975 students by 2029. The organization, which has run enrichment programs, says Canton needs a charter school because of low achievement levels. The hearing will be at 6 p.m. at the Canton Multipurpose Center, 501 Soldiers Colony Road. Written comments can be emailed to the board at charterschools@mississippi.edu or mailed to 239 N. Lamar St., Suite 207, Jackson MS 39201.

“The show will be a time for people to come and enjoy themselves. They can forget their worries and their woes for a while.” Ronnie McDowell Elvis Presley in 1977, McDowell came out of nowhere to dazzle the world with his heartfelt and self-penned tribute song “The King Is Gone” on the independent Scorpion label. The record took off immediately, gaining airplay on country and pop stations across the country and around the world. To date, “The King Is Gone” has sold more than five million copies. McDowell scored a second hit for the Scorpion label titled “I Love You, I Love You, I Love You” before being wooed and signed by CBS Records – Epic label in 1979. McDowell has had an impressive singing career with a string of hit singles for Epic from 1979 to 1986. Every single release with the exception of just one became a Top 10 Hit, including the chart toppers “Older Women” and “You’re Gonna Ruin My Bad Reputation.” Other hits during his Epic years

included “Watchin Girls Go By,” “Personally,” “You Made A Wanted Man Of Me,” “All Tied Up,” and “In A New York Minute.” While the concert headliner is McDowell, there will be other great talent to enjoy. Also performing will be Charley Kyles, Bonnie Crum and Ruth Calicutt. The MC for the evening will be Superstar Bill Dundee. “The show will be a time for people to come and enjoy themselves. They can forget their worries and their woes for a while,” said McDowell. Advance tickets for the show are $15; tickets at the door with be $20; and VIP tickets are $25. VIP tickets will get attendees reserved seating.

total of $149,896. At worst, the regional library will look at closing smaller branches and trimming hours at others.

The North Mississippi Chapter of the American Red Cross, which got a bump from $3,000 to $6,000 in the county’s FY 2016 budget, is seeking the same amount this year. Michael Upton, representing the Tupelo-based chapter, said most of the organization’s local aid is in response to home fires. The chapter provided assistance after 20 home fires in Alcorn County in its last fiscal year. “We served 56 clients, and we gave them direct financial assistance of $12,815,” said Upton. “The money that you help support us goes right back to your residents when they’ve had a disaster. We also connect them with other social services and agencies to help them get back on their feet.” The Northeast Mississippi Business Incubation System, which is now 24 years old, is requesting level funding of $14,700.

(Tickets can be purchased in advance at Mattress Gallery, or Kim’s Auto Repair and Towing, both in Corinth, or by calling Billy at 662664-1836.)

BUDGET CONTINUED FROM 1A

library system is requesting an additional $13,627 from Alcorn County for a

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Local/Region

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Today in History Today is Wednesday, Aug. 9, the 221st day of 2017. There are 144 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On August 9, 1945, three days after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, a U.S. B-29 Superfortress code-named Bockscar dropped a nuclear device (“Fat Man”) over Nagasaki, killing an estimated 74,000 people.

On this date In 1854, Henry David Thoreau’s “Walden,” which described Thoreau’s experiences while living near Walden Pond in Massachusetts, was first published. In 1902, Edward VII was crowned king of Britain following the death of his mother, Queen Victoria. In 1936, Jesse Owens won his fourth gold medal at the Berlin Olympics as the United States took first place in the 400-meter relay. In 1942, British authorities in India arrested nationalist Mohandas K. Gandhi; he was released in 1944. In 1967, Ethel Le Neve, the mistress of notorious convicted wife killer Hawley Harvey Crippen, died in Croydon, England, at age 84. In 1969, actress Sharon Tate and four other people were found brutally slain at Tate’s Los Angeles home; cult leader Charles Manson and a group of his followers were later convicted of the crime.

Daily Corinthian • 3A

Across the Region Tishomingo Co. School board revises student transfer policy TISHOMINGO COUNTY — Ahead of the start of the 2017-18 school year, Tishomingo County Schools Board of Education revised the district’s transfer policy. The district will begin using the electronic school zone database when determining transfers. Transfers to a school other than the designated attendance zone will only be considered upon parent or guardian request made to the school based on one of a few requirements. Those include a student requires a course of student not offered at the school, a student has an emotional or medical condition or a change of environment is recommended by the court or police. If a student has been attending a school in a zone other than the zone in which the student resides, the student will be allowed to continue to attend the same school. Other considerations include where the student’s siblings attend school.

Booneville

BOONEVILLE — Booneville School District officials are not seeking an increase in operational millage for the new fiscal year, though they are asking for an increase in funding for a bond payment. Superintendent Todd English said they plan to keep the district’s millage rate at the current 45.6 mills and are asking only for the increase of approximately $50,000 that rate should generate due to a rise in assessed property values within the district. They will add 1 mill to the

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rate for the district’s general obligation bond issued more than a decade ago to cover a rise in payments on the bond. English noted the rate of 45.6 mills is among the lowest in the region, though the district is rated as one of the best in the state. The average millage rate for adjacent districts is 50.01 mills with only Corinth, at 45.2 mills, lower than Booneville’s rate. The superintendent said they work hard to be efficient and he believes they are one of the most efficient districts in the state. He said only six districts in Mississippi spend a larger percentage of their budget directly on instruction. The district has gained 53 students in the past seven years while eliminating 17 positions by not filling positions as staff has retired or resigned. English emphasized that with all of these efforts to reduce spending and increase efficiency, they remain one of the top rated districts in the state, receiving an A rating for the past five years and six of the last 10 years and re the only A rated district east of Oxford and north of Meridian.

TIPPAH COUNTY —  Mississippi is one of five states to win the 2017 Gold Shovel award from Area Development Magazine for its economic development efforts, reported the Southern Sentinel. The annual Gold and Silver Shovel Awards recognize states for their achievements in attracting high-value investment projects that will create a significant number of new jobs in their communities. Area Development magazine collected information from all 50 states about their top 10,

job creation and investment projects initiated in 2016. In selecting the Gold Shovel awards, the magazine weighed many factors including the number of new jobs to be created in relation to the state’s population, the combined dollar amount of the investments, the number of new facilities and the diversity of industry represented. The states with the highest weighted overall scores in their population category were awarded Gold Shovels. Mississippi won for the state with a population less than three million category. The other state winners were Illinois, Georgia, Arizona and Kentucky. “By winning the Gold Shovel Award, Mississippi proves that it can compete and win in global economic development,” said Tippah County Development Foundation Executive Director Matthew Harrison. Included among the top 10 projects Area Development Magazine looked at for Mississippi was $2.5 million project by Bauhaus Furniture in Ripley.

Calhoun City

Couple pleads guilty in 2016 Bruce killing CALHOUN CITY — A Calhoun County couple avoided a possible death penalty by pleading guilty to lesser charges Monday, reported the Daily Journal. JaShon Coleman, 22, of Derma, and Breanna Westmoreland, 18, of Banner, were originally charged with capital murder in the February 2016 death of James Pratt in Bruce. Coleman pleaded guilty to second degree murder and was sentenced to 40 years in prison and probation. Westmoreland pleaded guilty to accessory after the fact to second degree murder. She was sentenced to 5 years, but that was suspended to just time served. Pratt, 31, of Weir, was found

just after midnight by a Bruce police officer in a car in a bait shop parking lot. He had been shot multiple times. Coleman and Pratt worked together at a nearby plant, and the investigation revealed Coleman intended to rob Pratt, who resisted and was killed. Coleman got into the car with his then 17-year-old girlfriend, Westmoreland, and fled the scene.

Tupelo

Bond set for husband accused of killing wife TUPELO — A 24-year-old man is being held on a $2 million bond, accused of the fatal shooting of his wife, reported the Daily Journal. Carol Sharp, 23, of Tupelo, was pronounced dead at the North Mississippi Medical Center on Sunday morning around 8:30 by Lee County Coroner Carolyn Green. She died from a single gunshot wound, suffered about nine hours earlier. While the wife was transported to the hospital, James R. Sharp, 24, of 202 Milford St., Apt. 189, Tupelo, was taken to the Lee County Adult Jail, charged with aggravated domestic violence. Following the death of Carol Sharp, the charges against James Sharp were upgraded to first degree murder when he had his initial appearance Monday afternoon before Lee County Justice Court Judge Sadie Holland. When asked if he understood the charges against him, James Sharp meekly said, “Yes, ma’am,” to the judge. Officials say James Sharp has been cooperating with authorities. Since this is an ongoing investigation, police are not releasing many details of the case. It is not known where Carol Sharp was shot or what type of weapon was used.

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Reece Terry, publisher

Common sense often uncommon in Washington “Sound practical judgment that is independent of specialized knowledge, training, or the like; normal native intelligence.” -- Dictionary. com’s definition of common sense. Cal Sometimes what used to be Thomas called “common sense” can seem radical in Washington, Columnist which is used to practicing senseless policies and funding programs that don’t work. Immigration is a perfect example. Everyone says the system is broken. There have been no substantive policy changes since the ‘60s, but until last week few had put forth a sensible and credible plan for fixing what ails it. Thanks to Senators Tom Cotton (R-AR) and Sonny Perdue (R-GA), we now have a plan worthy of serious consideration, even implementation. Last week, they introduced legislation that, according to USA Today, that would “overturn the rules for becoming an American citizen and cut in half the number allowed in.” There are three keys to their proposal. The first is that people seeking to immigrate to America must possess skills qualifying them for a job, or have a job waiting so they would not become part of our bloated welfare and dependency culture. The second key concerns numbers and the goal of eliminating chain migration. Despite counter arguments based on the Emma Lazarus poem about the world sending America its “tired and poor,” poems are not the Constitution, or the law, otherwise Emily Dickinson might have become president. Poems are about sentiment. The right immigration policy is about survival. Key number three is language. It isn’t difficult for immigrants to learn enough English to function in America. I meet them in Washington and everywhere I travel. Here’s the official government position for becoming a citizen: “To become a naturalized U.S. citizen, you must pass the naturalization test. At your naturalization interview, you will be required to answer questions about your application and background. You will also take an English and civics test unless you qualify for an exemption or waiver.” Under current policy, non-citizens don’t have to take an English test if they are 50 years old, or older, and have lived in the U.S. as permanent residents for at least 20 years. If someone has lived in America for 20 years and still can’t speak English, doesn’t that suggest a problem? The Cotton-Perdue measure would also eliminate the Green Card Lottery, which, in an effort to add diversity to the country, grants 50,000 green cards each year to countries that don’t normally send many immigrants to the U.S. Anyone who thinks immigration is a partisan issue should take note, as the Center for Immigration Studies has done, of a similar plan proposed in the mid-’90s by Rep. Barbara Jordan (D-Texas), who as chair of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform, advocated for increased restrictions on immigration. Her effort was squashed by a combination of the corporate right (which wants cheap labor) and the cultural left (which wants more votes for Democrats). President Trump says he will sign a bill containing the Cotton-Perdue language, but as with so much else in dysfunctional Washington, its success will depend on whether Congress has any common sense left to do something that is transparently necessary and will benefit the country. After the debacle over health insurance, raising the debt ceiling (more debt), suggestions that tax reform may have to wait until after a budget is passed (more spending) and a new poll showing public approval of Congress at just 10 percent, no one should be optimistic.

Prayer for today My Lord, if I may be walking through fields that are rough with grief and care, may I have the courage to continue on to the smooth pastures, where I may walk with comfort and peace. May I not let the weariness and sorrow that may come to my heart to-day dwarf my hope and enjoyment of the future. Amen.

A verse to share A person’s wisdom yields patience; it is to one’s glory to overlook an offense. —Proverbs 19:11

Opinion

Mark Boehler, editor

4A • Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

What happens after the coup? That the Trump presidency is bedeviled is undeniable. As President Donald Trump flew off for August at his Jersey club, there came word that Special Counsel Robert Mueller III had impaneled a grand jury and subpoenas were going out to Trump family and campaign associates. The jurors will be drawn from a pool of citizens in a city Hillary Clinton swept with 91 percent of the vote. Trump got 4 percent. Whatever indictments Mueller wants, Mueller gets. Thanks to a media that savages him ceaselessly, Trump is down to 33 percent approval in a Quinnipiac University poll and below 40 percent in most of the rest. Before Trump departed D.C., The Washington Post ran transcripts of his phone conversations with the leaders of Mexico and Australia. Even Obama administration veterans were stunned. So, it is time to ask: If this city brings Trump down, will the rest of America rejoice? What will be the reaction out there in fly-over country, that land where the “deplo-

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president and Australia’s prime minister. When reporter Greg Miller got these transcripts, his editors plastered them on Page 1. The Post was letting itself be used by a leaker engaged in disloyal and possibly criminal misconduct. Yet the Post agreed to provide confidentiality and to hide the Trump-hater’s identity. This is what we do, says the Post. People have a right to know if President Trump says one thing at rallies about Mexico paying for the wall and another to the president of Mexico. But there is a far larger story here, of which this Post piece is but an exhibit. It is the story of a concerted campaign, in which the anti-Trump media publish leaks, even criminal leaks, out of the FBI, CIA, NSA and NSC, to bring down a president whom the Beltway media and their deepstate collaborators both despise and wish to destroy. And if there is an unfolding silent coup by the regime Americans repudiated in 2016, is that not a story worth covering as much as what Trump said to Pena Nieto? Do the people not have

a right know who are the snakes collaborating with the Never-Trump press to bring down their head of state? Is not discovering the identities of deep-state felons a story that investigative reporters should be all over? If Greg Miller is obligated to protect his source, fine. But why are other journalists not exposing his identity? The answer suggests itself. This is a collaborative enterprise, where everyone protects everyone else’s sources, because all have the same goal: the dumping of Trump. By colluding, the mainstream media, deep state, and the special prosecutor’s button men, with a license to roam, may bring down yet another president. So doing, they will validate John Adams’s insight: “Democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide.” 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.”

The ‘anti-diversity screed’ that wasn’t

The first thing to know about the instantly infamous “anti-diversity screed” written by an anonymous Google software engineer is that it isn’t anti-diversity or a screed. The loaded description, widely used in the press and on social media, is symptomatic of the pearl-clutching over the memo, which questions the premises and effectiveness of Google’s diversity policies. The document was meant as an internal conversationstarter. The author posits that innate differences between the sexes may account for the disparity between men and women in the male-dominated world of high-tech. He states repeatedly that he believes in diversity, and there’s no reason to doubt his self-description as a classical liberal. His exclamation-point-free memo is hardly a rant. He expresses the hope that “open and honest discussion with those who disagree can highlight our blind spots and help us grow.” How naive. The witless and inflamed reaction to his document instead underlines his point about “a polit-

Reece Terry

rables” dwell who produce the soldiers to fight our wars? Will they toast the “free Patrick press” that Buchanan b r o u g h t down the Columnist president they elected, and in whom they had placed so much hope? My guess: The reaction will be one of bitterness, cynicism, despair, a sense that the fix is in, that no matter what we do, they will not let us win. If Trump is brought down, American democracy will take a pasting. It will be seen as a fraud. And the backlash will poison our politics to where only an attack from abroad, like 9/11, will reunite us. Our media preen and posture as the defenders of democracy, devoted to truth, who provide us round-theclock protection from tyranny. But half the nation already sees the media as a propaganda arm of a liberal establishment that the people have rejected time and again. Consider the Post’s publication of the transcripts of Trump’s calls with Mexico’s

press foreman

ically correct monoculture that maintains its hold by shaming dissenters into silence.” Rich It is one Lowry thing to disagree with National the memo; Review it is another thing to believe the views therein should be forbidden. Former Google engineer Yonatan Zunger says that if it were up to him, the author would be summarily fired and escorted from the building immediately by security (you can’t take a chance with such a danger). Entrepreneur Elissa Shevinsky believes that the memo could run afoul of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act -- i.e., it might be illegal. Google’s diversity officer, Danielle Brown, didn’t quite go that far. She offered a pro forma assurance that different views are welcome at Google. Nevertheless, she stipulated the opinions of the author are “incorrect” and added, ominously, that any discussion needs to be in accord with “our Code of Conduct, policies, and antidiscrimination laws.”

Her case would have been stronger if she had rebutted any of the author’s statements about sex differences -- assuming that she could. A line in the memo about women being more prone to anxiety has drawn particular ire -- as if the author made this up. As the publication Stanford Medicine notes, “Women are twice as likely as men to experience clinical depression in their lifetimes; likewise for post-traumatic stress disorder.” An article in the journal Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews likewise says that “femalebiased conditions include depression, anxiety disorder, and anorexia nervosa.” This doesn’t mean that men are superior, just that they are different, and more prone to other problems -among them, alcohol- and drug-dependency, schizophrenia, dyslexia, autism, Tourette syndrome and attention deficit disorder. It’s not bias against men, or in favor of women, to note these tendencies. Sex differences are value-neutral. From Stanford Medicine again: “Women excel in several measures of verbal ability -- pretty much all of them, except for ver-

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bal analogies.” On the other hand, men “have superior visuospatial skills.” Which is better? It depends on who’s asking, and why. Women tend to be better with people, men with things. Is either superior? Women tend to put more emphasis on family, men on status. Does that speak better of women or men? As the Google author cautions, “Many of these differences are small and there’s significant overlap between men and women, so you can’t say anything about an individual given these population level distributions.” In light of these differences, it is foolhardy to expect 50/50 gender parity in professional life, and otherworldly to believe such differences don’t have a role in the predominance of men in, say, software engineering. Obviously, the field should be open to women, and Neanderthal behavior in the workplace should be stamped out. But a company that believes implicit bias accounts for gender imbalances must be allergic to certain inconvenient facts. The Google author raised them, and will probably pay the price.

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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 • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • 5A

BMAD assists college student with new laptop BY KENDALL PATTERSON For the Daily Corinthian

Corinth’s Brother’s Making a Difference (BMAD) has definitely made a difference in the life of a Corinth High School Class of 2017 graduate. BMAD awarded Christian Peterson one of the latest HP laptop computer in order to help him in his endeavors at college. “I was surprised,” Peterson said. “I was figuring out how I was going to get one.” Peterson will be leaving for the Tuskegee University on Aug.11 to begin his life in college on Aug. 14. While he is at Tuskegee, Peterson will be majoring in Veterinarian Sciences in order to reach his dream of being a future veterinarian. “As long as I can remember I’ve had animals in the house ... and just by being around them I’ve grown to really care for them,” Peterson said. BMAD is a 501c3 non-profit organization of African Ameri-

can men founded in 1999 that strives to help their community and help African Americans grow and be successful. Every year, they award an African American graduate with a computer laptop as they enter college. Other ways they help the community include taking youth on college campus tours, trips to area museums and fishing adventures. Recently BMAD has received generous gifts from CARE, Kimberly Clark and the community which all go toward helping younger generations have better lives. Members of BMAD are Lamar “Jake” Keith, Fred Taylor, Tim Wade, Ronald Edmond, Stacy McKinnon, Henry Damon, Alec Gardner, Dexter Gardner, Jody Trice, Steve Hill and Jimmy Hughey. (Kendall Patterson is an Ole Miss junior journalism major.)

Engineer sues utility over retaliation firing BY JEFF AMY Associated Press

JACKSON — A fired engineer at a now-aborted Mississippi Power Co. plant sued the utility’s parent company Tuesday, saying an order to reinstate him is being ignored. Brett Wingo of Homewood, Alabama, filed the whistleblower retaliation case in federal court in Birmingham, Alabama. Wingo says in the suit that he tried to tell executives with Atlanta-based Southern Co. that construction at the Kemper County power plant wouldn’t meet deadlines promised to investors. Wingo says he raised concerns with executives as high as CEO Tom Fanning before he was fired, and describes that firing as retaliation. Spokespersons for Southern didn’t immediately return phone calls and emails seeking comment. The suit says Wingo sought to report safety concerns and unrealistic construction schedules internally, but was ignored and then was warned that he was “digging a hole” for his career. Wingo complained to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which ruled in January that Southern should rehire Wingo and pay back wages and benefits, but Southern has yet to act on that order. Wingo’s suit demands double back pay, plus additional damages.

The $7.5 billion Kemper plant was designed to gasify soft lignite coal, strip out much of the carbon dioxide and other pollutants and burn the gas to generate power. But the plant ended up more than $4.5 billion over budget and three years behind schedule, with many of the delays Wingo foretold. “The Kemper project stands as a monument to the consequences of concealment of the truth, and what too often happens to those who step forward to reveal the truth: they are retaliated against, rather than embraced and protected,” Wingo’s lawyers wrote. The Mississippi Public Service Commission in June ordered the utility and regulatory staff to negotiate a settlement aimed at running the plant only on natural gas and shielding customers from paying for the gasifier. A regulatory staff attorney said Tuesday that those talks continue. Southern wrote off $2.8 billion worth of gasifier investment when it announced quarterly earnings last week, adding to $3.1 billion it had earlier lost on the project. Wingo’s suit said he warned supervisors as early as summer 2012 that the company couldn’t complete Kemper before the then-promised deadline of May 2014, and later began telling executives they would illegally mislead shareholders by promising that date.

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Brothers Making a Difference (BMAD) member Fred Taylor gives Christian Peterson his brand new HP laptop computer. Peterson begins college this month.

Across the State Associated Press

Men impersonating officers invade home COLUMBUS — Police in one Mississippi city are investigating burglars invaded a house impersonating police officers. The Columbus Police Department tells local media that two men broke into a house about 3 a.m. Monday yelling “CPD! CPD!” A 27-year-old woman was home in bed with her two children. Police say both men were dressed in black and had their faces covered. One fired a gun, but didn’t injure anyone. Police say the suspects appear to have broken in through a locked back door. Capt. Brent Swan says the incident is being investigated as an attempted armed robbery.

$51M plan could triple jail space TUPELO — A northeast Mississippi county could build a $51 million jail that would hold three times more inmates than today’s 200-bed jail. The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reports that Lee County supervisors on Monday set the plan for a final

vote on Aug. 21, following a public hearing next week. County supervisors had discussed a referendum on the question, but most appear to now lean away from a countywide vote. Only Supervisor Tommie Lee Ivy opposed presenting the plan at a public hearing, saying he still wants a referendum. Architects propose a 600-bed facility immediately north of the current jail, including courtrooms and a crime lab. Supervisor Phil Morgan sought a 500-bed jail, estimated to cut $4 million from construction costs. But Sheriff Jim Johnson says he wants the additional cells.

Royce to retire in May after 15 years CLINTON — Mississippi College’s president plans to retire in May. Lee Royce said in a statement that he announced his plans to trustees Monday, later sending a message to faculty, staff and students. Royce has led Mississippi College, a 5,200-student Baptist institution since 2002. Earlier, he was president of Anderson University in South Carolina.

The outgoing president says his achievements include increasing enrollment from 3,200 students, recruiting international students and boosting Mississippi College’s endowment from $36 million to $81 million. The school also moved its athletic program to NCAA Division II. Trustees say they will search nationally for a new president, aiming to hire a new leader by fall. Royce’s retirement had been expected. He says he and his wife Rhoda intend to retire to a location near their son in Virginia.

Justice Dickinson will run foster care JACKSON — One former state supreme court justice is leaving his post running Mississippi’s foster care system, but another justice will leave the court to take over. Gov. Phil Bryant announced Tuesday that he’s naming Supreme Court Presiding Justice Jess H. Dickinson to lead the Department of Child Protective Services effective Sept. 18. Current Commissioner David Chandler will retire Sept. 15. The department,

which oversees Mississippi’s foster care system, is subject to a 13-year-old federal lawsuit alleging children are abused because of state failings. The plaintiffs agreed to a timeout to allow Chandler to try to improve the department, which was split from the Department of Human Services.

Jury deliberations start in Smith case JACKSON — Jurors began deliberations after closing arguments Tuesday in the retrial of the district attorney of Mississippi’s largest county. Hinds County District Attorney Robert Shuler Smith is charged with two counts of conspiring to hinder prosecution and one count of unlawfully providing advice to a criminal defendant. If convicted, Smith would be removed from office. Local media report defense lawyers argued that Smith had “genuine concern” about whether a drug defendant was framed, and that doesn’t equal a crime. Smith chose not to testify on his own behalf. Lawyers from Attorney General Jim Hood’s office, prosecuting the case, argue Smith acted illegally.


6A • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Trump warns North Korea of ‘fire, fury’ Associated Press

B R I D G E WAT E R , N.J. — President Donald Trump threatened North Korea “with fire and fury like the world has never seen� on Tuesday after suggestions the communist country has mastered one of the final hurdles to being able to strike the United States with a nuclear missile. North Korea said it was examining its operational plans for attacking Guam — a U.S. territory about 2,100 miles away — in order to contain U.S. military activity there. The North Korean army said in a statement distributed Wednesday by the staterun news agency that it is studying a plan to create an “enveloping fire� in areas around Guam with medium- to longrange ballistic missiles. Guam is home to Andersen Air Force Base. The competing

threats escalated tensions between the foes even further. Although it wasn’t clear if Trump and the Koreans were responding directly to each other, the heightened rhetoric added to the potential for a miscalculation that might bring the nuclear-armed nations into conflict. Trump’s stern words to the camera at his golf course in Bedminster, New Jersey, came hours after reports indicating North Korea can now wed nuclear warheads with its missiles, including those that may be able to hit the American mainland. The isolated and impoverished dictatorship has strived for decades to have the ability to strike the U.S. and its Asian allies, and the pace of its breakthroughs is already having far-reaching consequences for stability in the Pacific and beyond.

Deaths Ray Reeves

RAMER, Tenn. — Funeral services for Ray Reeves, 69, are scheduled for 11 a.m. Thursday at Shackelford Funeral Home in Selmer, Tenn., with J. D. Matlock officiating. Burial will follow at the Lake Hill Memorial Gardens at Bethel Springs, Tenn. Visitation will be held from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and from 10 a.m. until service time Thursday at the funeral home. Mr. Reeves died Monday, Aug. 7, 2017 in Ramer, Tenn. He was born Jan. 12, 1948 in Rienzi, the son of Mae Dru Sweeney Reeves and the late Hollis Reeves. He was united in marriage to Betty Elliot on Jan. 12, 1967. He was Baptist in faith and worked for 30 years at Quebecor World in Corinth. He is survived by his wife Betty Elliot Reeves of Michie, Tenn.; his mother, Mae Dru Sweeney Reeves; three daughters: Renee Hembree (Darryl Weatherford) of Bethel Springs, Tenn., Lynn Dimmick (Ronnie Mathis) of Michie, Tenn.,

Tuesday, August 22 Dr. Roc Collins Director of TN Baptist Mission Board

Dr. Johnny Hunt-Pastor First Baptist Church Woodstock

Charles Stevens

GLEN — Funeral services for Charles Robert Stevens, 82, are scheduled for 2 p.m. Thursday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with Masonic Rites. Bro. Alan Parker will officiate. Burial will follow at Pleasant Ridge Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 12

p.m. until service time Thursday at the funeral home. Mr. Stevens died Monday, Aug. 7, 2017, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. He was born Sept. 23, 1934. Stevens He was a retired machine operator for Tyrone Hydraulics. He was of the Methodist faith and a member of the Masonic Lodge #116. He is survived by his daughter, Rhonda Cole (Ricky) of Glen; grandchildren, Joshua Cole and Jordan Cole and his brother, Elbert Ray Stevens (Chris) of Glen. He was preceded in death by his wife of 38 years, Bonnie Stevens; grandson, Jacob Cole; parents, Elbert Lee Stevens and Lucille Morrow Stevens; sisters, Mildred Sue Burcham and Shirley Mae Stevens; half-sister, Martha Britton and half-brother, C.L. Stevens. Magnolia Funeral Home has the arrangements.

Marines eye plan to put women Former DJ in West Coast combat training testifies in Swift case BY LOLITA C. BALDOR Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Marine Corps for the first time is eyeing a plan to let women attend what has been maleonly combat training in Southern California, as officials work to quash recurring problems with sexism and other bad behavior among Marines, according to Marine Corps officials. If approved by senior Marine leaders, the change could happen as soon as next spring. And it could be the first step in a broader campaign to give male Marines who do their initial training on the West Coast the opportunity to work with female colleagues early

“Terrific Tuesdays� in August @ 6:30PM Tuesday, August 15

Tammy Kelley (Curt) of Bethel Springs, Tenn.; a son, Nathan Reeves (Shawna) of Bethel Springs, Tenn.; two sisters, Wyvonne Pickens (Billy) of Stantonville, Tenn., Joanne Bell of Savannah, Tenn.; a brother, Robert Reeves (Jewel) of Booneville; nine grandchildren: Eric Hembree, Colee Hembree Johnston (Craig), Zachary Weatherford, Megan Martin Robertson (Jimmy), Lane Dimmick, Morgan Reeves, Emma Kelley, Lauren Kelley and Caden Butler; and six great grandchildren. Shackelford Funeral Home in Selmer, Tenn., has the arrangements. Â

in their career. Marine leaders are also considering allowing women to attend boot camp in San Diego, the officials said. Currently all women recruits go through boot camp at Parris Island, South Carolina, while male recruits go either there or to San Diego. The combat training comes after troops have finished boot camp, and is done both in South Carolina and at Camp Pendleton in Southern California, but women attend the course only on the East Coast. The officials were not authorized to publicly discuss the matter because final decisions have not been made, so they spoke on condition of anonymity. The boot camp decision is still under discussion. Asked about the ongoing discussions, Gen. Glenn Walters, assistant

commandant of the Marine Corps, said Tuesday that all options are being considered, and decisions will depend on the analysis, including logistics, personnel and cost benefits. “If we’re going to change the culture of the Marine Corps, we need to change how we’re organized. Our recruit training is a component of that,� he said, adding that Marine leaders want to go after any “unconscious bias� that may exist in the Corps. Marine leaders have come under persistent criticism from members of Congress because the Corps is the only military service to separate men and women for portions of their boot camp. And only the Marine Corps allows half of its recruits to go through initial training without any female colleagues.

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Associated Press

DENVER — A former radio disc jockey accused of groping Taylor Swift before a concert testified Tuesday that he may have touched the pop superstar’s ribs with a closed hand as he tried to jump into a photo with her but insisted he did not touch her backside as she claims. David Mueller told jurors at the civil trial on dueling lawsuits filed by Mueller and Swift that he and the singer-songwriter were trying to reach around one another and “our hands touched and our arms touched� during a photo opportunity he estimated lasted no more than 40 seconds. Under questioning by his attorney, Mueller said he may have touched Swift’s “rib cage, or rib, or ribs.� The 2013 photo of Swift, Mueller and Mueller’s girlfriend taken at the pre-concert event in Denver is a key piece of evidence in Mueller’s suit claiming he was fired after being falsely accused by Swift. He is seeking at least $3 million. The photo shows Mueller with his hand behind Swift, just below her waist. Both are smiling. Her lawyers have called the photo “damning� proof that Mueller groped her. Mueller’s lawyer, Gabriel McFarland, showed jurors the photograph during his opening remarks. Two jurors stared at the photo on their computer monitors while a few others kept glancing at it as McFarland spoke. “If you look at that photograph, his hand is not underneath Miss Swift’s skirt, and her skirt is not rumpled in any fashion,� McFarland said, noting that no one on Swift’s concert team saw anything amiss.

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Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • 7A

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

Pickin’ on the Square

Special guests for Pickin’ on the Square for Thursday, Aug. 10 will be Wayne Jerrolds and Savannah Grass.

Fish on Friday

From 4 to 6 p.m. every Friday, the Easom Foundation will sell eatin or carry-out farm-fed catfish dinners for $6 to support the hot meals program. The meal includes coleslaw or salad, French fries or roasted potatoes, hush puppies, catfish and a dessert.

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 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.

Art Exhibit

The Corinth Artist Guild 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

The Corinth VFW located on Purdy School Road will host a free dance from 7 until 11 p.m. every Tuesday. 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.

Senior Connectors Meeting

The Senior Connectors, a group consisting of senior citizens from Alcorn and surrounding counties, will meet for their monthly luncheon on Thursday, Aug. 10 at Ryan’s. Please RSVP to The Alliance 287-5269 as seating is limited to 50 guests. The luncheon begins at 11 a.m. and is Dutch Treat. The August speaker will be Samantha Justice, nurse practitioner from Corinth Community Health Center. The subject is the 340B federal grant program for medication cost reduction.

CHS 60th Class Reunion

The Corinth High School Class of 1957 will celebrate its 60th class reunion on at Chapman’s Restaurant at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 12. For further information, call Beverly Trimble at 662-284-5872 or Greta Fraley Martin at 662808-1056.

KHS 50th Class Reunion

Kossuth High School Class of 1967 will have its 50-year class reunion at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 12 at Catfish Country, located on U.S. 45 in Booneville. For more information, contact Kathryn Chapman at 287-2091.

Spamalot at CT-A

Corinth Theatre-Arts will present Spamalot again this weekend at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and Saturday Aug. 11-12 and at 2 p.m. on Sunday, 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 www.corinththeatrearts.com. Call 662-287-2995 for more information.

Oasis Parenting Class Oasis Medical Center will offer parenting classes beginning at 3 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 15. Classes will last for four weeks and cover child development information as well as needs a child must have at home. Interested persons can come by Oasis to register and complete a short registration form. For more information, contact Kelly Rinehart at 662-287-8001.

Rorie Reunion

The Rorie Family Reunion will be held Saturday, Aug. 19 at the Jacinto Community Center. Please bring your family and make this a special time of fellowship.

Pet Adoption Event

The Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter will host a pet adoption event at Petsense in Corinth from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 19. The shelter will offer adoption discounts on puppies and young adult dogs adopted during the event. Donations will also be accepted. For more information, contact the shelter at 662-284-5800 or visit corinthalcornanimalshelter.com.

MCHS Class of 1977

The McNairy Central High School Class of 1977 is holding a 40th Class Reunion at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 26 at Hope Vineyards located at 2190 Houston Cemetery Road, Ramer. Cost is $15 for single or $25 per couple. Send payment to Marc Anderson, 1370 Pickwick Street, Savannah, Tenn. 38372; or PayPal — marcusanderson77@yahoo.com.

Artifact Show

The Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society will host a Civil War and Native American Artifact Show from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 2 at the Old Tishomingo County Courthouse Museum at 203 East Quitman Street in Iuka. Educators interested in providing 15 to 30 minute lectures are being sought at this time. The show is in conjunction with the Iuka Heritage Day Festival and Mississippi Bicentennial. For additional information call Billy at 662-2793986 or email btt44@

Well Day Take a day off work and indulge yourself with a relaxing massage.

hotmail.com or papahamrick@gmail.com.

Green Market

The Green Market at the Corinth Depot is from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 2 at the Crossroads Museum and Corinth Depot at 221 North Fillmore Street in Corinth. Browse 75 high-quality, handmade only vendors featuring an eclectic mix of regional artisans and craftsmen, handcrafted live music and gourmet eats. Presented by the Daily Corinthian, Magnolia Regional Health Center, CB&S Bank, Coca-Cola, H&R Block and Visit Corinth, the Green Market is free to the public. Future Green Market dates are Oct. 7 and Nov. 18. For more information, visit corinthgreenmarket. com.

Hearn Family Reunion

The Hearn Family Reunion will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 2 at Boone’s Camp Event Hall located at 101 East Church Street in Booneville. Please bring a dish to share for pot luck lunch, family photos and plenty of memories to share. For more information call Margaret Vanstory at 662-415-0191.

Community Yard Sale

The Daily Corinthian Community Yard Sale is from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Crossroads Museum and Corinth Depot at 221 North Fillmore Street in Corinth. Browse yard sale items like clothing, furniture, glassware, antiques, toys, electronics, handcrafted items, baked goods and commercial products at this free

event to the public. Rent a 10 x 10 Booth Space for a $25 donation to the Crossroads Museum. All proceeds benefit the Crossroads Museum Save the Fire Truck Campaign. Signup at the Daily Corinthian, Crossroads Museum or crossroadsmuseum.com. Day of event signups are welcome. Have stuff to get rid of? Donate it to the museum for the yard sale.

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 Ad-

amsville 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. Please note: A valid U.S. Passport is 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 662-2876106. • 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.

Come Home To Glendale! Revival Services August 13-16

Warren Jones Speaker

Sunday @ 11am/6:30pm Monday-Wednesday @ 6:30pm

Melvin Steed Music

Glendale Homecoming

Sunday, September 10, 2017 @ 11:00am Carl Weeden, Speaker Mike Brown, Music

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P/E Last

A-B-C-D

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11.38 21.10 5.42 38.36 48.88 71.47 61.33 13.11 115.41 39.58 157.50 239.74 12.99 22.87 11.39 59.86 65.38 3.50 989.84 6.16 50.00 12.13 85.94 64.57 13.37 44.21 9.19 12.18 18.99 191.98 44.12 46.10 160.08 43.90 71.20 27.04 42.24 24.99 7.90 29.75 6.91 108.51 2.75 30.09 2.94 28.44 48.25 36.54 12.42 229.45 41.09 10.15 6.83 24.90 53.79 11.41 16.50 176.43 .52 85.46 .59 9.03 33.79 239.50 26.51 56.90 56.91 64.08 12.25 12.90 32.22 8.98 65.70 31.49 50.14 78.57 24.57 10.43 14.00 98.63 68.03 13.56 114.41 1.76 9.65 2.78 8.32 16.59 29.05 14.12 21.87 47.20 42.60 4.40 110.35 16.41 25.41 31.67 15.27 27.13 68.88 35.34 7.48 47.83 45.60 70.28 14.46 39.92 32.16 6.34 34.19 15.75 45.63 10.35 32.44 29.30 36.29 19.90 16.73 92.75 10.78 15.42 14.03 .64 10.01 36.25 18.96 77.49 80.27 11.86 132.02 .09 50.31 1.44 6.15 17.99 32.14 .29 11.98 11.25 29.57 16.42 29.76 16.43 6.62 55.04 61.96 24.30 106.98 77.96 63.41 1.43 86.60 28.74 18.65 8.28

E-F-G-H

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Chg ExpScripts 10 62.24 ExxonMbl 30 79.96 Facebook 35 171.23 +.28 FairmSant dd 2.59 +.03 FedExCp 17 207.00 -.09 FiatChrys ... 11.88 -.16 FibroGen dd 49.50 -.42 FifthThird 14 27.45 +.25 FireEye dd 14.14 -1.18 FstData n ... 18.05 -.32 FstHorizon 18 17.87 -7.67 FMajSilv g cc 6.09 +1.59 FirstEngy 12 31.95 -1.34 Fitbit n dd 5.89 -1.48 Flex Ltd 15 15.99 -.26 Fluor 17 39.19 +.05 FootLockr 10 50.04 -.39 FordM 12 10.89 -.17 Fossil Grp 7 11.84 -.61 FrptMcM dd 14.47 -.14 Frontr rs ... 15.20 -2.43 GATX 11 64.17 +.01 GGP Inc 12 22.51 -.58 GalenaBi rs dd .41 +.14 Gam&Lsr n 22 37.79 +.09 Gap 14 24.58 -.41 GastarExp dd .69 -.53 GenDynam 21 198.80 -.16 GenElec 24 25.56 +.09 GenMills 18 55.78 +.08 GenMotors 5 35.39 -.53 Gentex 14 17.44 +1.37 Genworth dd 3.72 -.27 Gerdau ... 3.63 +.50 GileadSci 8 73.27 +1.27 Globalstar 19 2.04 -.06 GluMobile dd 3.13 +1.51 GoldFLtd ... 4.01 -.32 Goldcrp g 39 12.55 -.20 GoldmanS 12 232.05 -.35 GoPro dd 10.52 -.21 Groupon dd 4.07 -.31 GrubHub 85 56.09 -.17 GulfportE dd 11.00 -3.66 HCA Hldg 12 78.13 +.08 HCP Inc 12 29.61 -3.30 HP Inc 12 19.32 -.02 HalconRs n ... 6.16 +.36 Hallibrtn cc 41.03 +.09 Hanesbds s 14 24.62 -.21 HeclaM 48 4.84 -.12 HertzGl ... 14.28 +2.29 Hess dd 42.62 -.08 HP Ent n 20 17.63 +.13 HimaxTch cc 8.75 -.06 HollyFront 17 29.63 -.06 Hologic 14 38.96 +.08 HomeDp 23 153.35 +.32 HopFedBc 27 14.32 -.07 HorizPhm dd 12.25 -1.61 HostHotls 11 18.21 -.47 HuntBncsh 19 13.35 -3.59 I-J-K-L -.01 66 5.28 -.07 IAMGld g ... 9.17 -.06 ICICI Bk q 12.12 -.73 iShGold q 38.74 -.25 iShBrazil q 42.03 -4.82 iShEMU q 30.88 +.61 iShGerm q 24.65 -1.31 iSh HK q 68.81 +.07 iSh SKor q 15.56 +.90 iShSilver -.10 iShChinaLC q 43.31 q 44.26 -.06 iShEMkts q 120.19 +1.18 iShiBoxIG q 124.62 -.44 iSh20 yrT q 67.13 +.52 iS Eafe q 88.08 -.55 iShiBxHYB q 140.00 +.25 iShR2K q 80.12 +.10 iShREst -.18 ImpaxLabs dd 15.10 dd 9.14 +.05 Infinera 19 36.53 +.03 Inphi 16 36.41 -.56 Intel 11 142.11 -.30 IBM 15 21.15 +.18 Interpublic -.06 iShJapan rs q 55.06 q 37.36 -.06 iSTaiwn rs q 53.34 +.08 iShCorEM ... 12.67 +.71 ItauUnibH cc 48.15 +.31 JD.com +.54 JPMorgCh 15 93.68 q 28.56 -.47 JPMAlerian 20 30.77 -2.57 Jabil JetBlue 11 21.81 -.55 20 132.27 +.05 JohnJn +.57 JohnContl n 27 39.61 17 28.25 +.16 JnprNtwk dd 17.36 +.23 KBR Inc 17 18.35 -.17 Keycorp 16 20.47 -.23 Kimco 68 19.75 +.35 KindMorg 59 4.13 -.16 Kinross g 14 42.82 -.01 Kohls 7.08 -.28 KosmosEn dd +.26 KraftHnz n 35 86.16 12 24.13 -.04 Kroger s 12 42.67 +.69 L Brands 16 12.18 -.02 LaredoPet 26 61.00 +.31 LVSands 6.45 -.58 LendingClb dd 31 56.55 -.19 Level3 +.02 LibtyGlobA dd 33.82 ... 32.52 -.54 LibtyGlobC +.46 LibQVC A 38 21.89 cc 37.86 +.35 LiveNatn ... 3.51 -.42 LloydBkg 19 77.21 +.06 Lowes -1.63 Lumentm n dd 59.25 -.14 M-N-O-P +.84 -2.60 MGM Rsts 47 31.55 9 23.52 +.11 Macys ... 38.19 -.22 Mallinckdt 7.80 -.16 Manitowoc dd ... 20.48 -.05 Manulife g dd 12.37 -.13 MarathnO 27 103.95 -.16 MarIntA 30 209.87 +.51 MartMM -1.38 MarvellTch 49 15.60 25 18.41 -1.16 Mattel 21 6.61 -3.11 McDrmInt McDnlds 26 154.92 +2.06 2.19 -.01 McEwenM dd 18 83.83 -.44 Medtrnic MeetGrp 12 3.96 +.13 -3.09 MelcoResE 67 20.80 16 62.32 -.24 Merck 10 48.77 -.26 MetLife 13 45.25 -.02 MKors 11 28.84 -.22 MicronT 25 72.79 -.37 Microsoft ... 45.80 +.07 Momo 33 43.64 +.11 Mondelez MonstrBv s 42 52.63 -.11 14 47.93 +.18 MorgStan 51 21.54 +.18 Mosaic dd 25.95 -.56 MurphO 6 31.79 +.57 Mylan NV +.05 MyoKard n dd 36.20 24 24.25 +.63 NRG Egy dd 7.05 +.04 Nabors 75 31.29 -.47 NOilVarco cc 178.36 +.13 Netflix s 56 3.38 +.34 NwGold g +.32 NY CmtyB 12 12.67 +.25 NewellRub 20 50.76 -.32 NewfldExp 15 26.34 NewmtM 30 35.74 Nielsen plc 24 41.94 24 59.46 +.25 NikeB s 5 3.39 +1.48 NobleCorp +1.12 NobleEngy cc 25.39 ... 6.44 -1.00 NokiaCp 6 1.00 -.03 NthnO&G +2.32 NorthropG 24 269.82 NorwCruis 22 59.42 -.10 dd .97 -.48 Novavax 54 170.30 +.16 Nvidia -1.13 NxStageMd dd 29.32 dd 8.03 -.60 OasisPet dd 61.35 -.40 OcciPet 12 9.23 -.17 Oclaro 13 6.11 -.49 OfficeDpt 30 16.44 +.50 OnSmcnd dd 6.14 -.07 OpkoHlth 23 49.10 +6.96 Oracle -1.22 PDC Engy dd 39.70 18 103.40 +.16 PPG s dd 8.65 -4.10 Pandora 92 25.65 +.51 ParsleyEn dd 17.79 -.01 PattUTI 24 55.04 -3.20 Paychex 47 59.48 +.20 PayPal n

Today

Economic bellwether New government data should provide insight into how the U.S. economy is doing. The Labor Department releases its latest quarterly measure of productivity today. The productivity of American workers was flat in the first quarter after rising at a 1.8 percent annual rate in the final quarter of 2016. Economists project that productivity grew 0.6 percent in the April-June quarter.

-.08 -.20 -.75 -.26 -1.37 -.23 +16.10 +.42 -.25 -.13 +.13

+.16 +.16 -.15 +.01 +1.20 -.03 +.64 -.23 -.71 +.56 -.27 -.15 -.64 +.54 +.08 -2.34 -.07 -.60 +.09 +.12 +.15 -.05 -.17 +.04 +.04 +.06 -.01 -.87 +.36 -.05 -.87 -.23 -.36 +.05 +.10 -.42 +.33 -.05 -.96 -.24 -.09 -.86 -.07 +.03 -1.05 -.53 +.07 +.06 -.14 +.02 -.07 -.23 -.13 +.07 -.59 +.23 +.31 +.01 -.58 -.45 -.36 -.38 -.44 -.44 -.11 +1.10 -.02 +.14 -.40 -.06 -.06 -.03 +.13 +.59 -.34 -.84 -.26 -.33 -.59 -.17 -.04 +.26 +.03 +.01 -.40 +.10 +.23 -.86 -.24 -.70 -.18 -.07 +.99 -.70 -.55 -.58 -2.34 -.03 -.01 -1.11 +.50 -.31 -.04 -2.74 +.39

What’s important to you? Let’s talk.

Penney 17 5.39 PensarAc n ... 9.69 PensareAc wt ... .44 PensrAc rt ... .34 PensarA un ... 10.23 +.16 PetrbrsA ... 8.61 -.03 Petrobras ... 8.90 -.04 Pfizer 14 33.28 -.03 PhilipMor 24 114.67 -1.19 PioNtrl cc 135.38 +5.74 PiperJaf 14 59.70 -3.60 PitnyBw 8 13.37 +.21 PlainsAAP 16 20.32 -4.88 PlainsGP rs 22 21.04 -4.79 PlatfmSpc 30 13.74 -.55 PlugPowr h dd 2.17 -.21 Potash 22 17.65 -.01 PwShs QQQ q 144.31 -.25 PrecDrill dd 2.93 +.02 PrUltPQ s q 112.27 -.42 PUVixST rs q 30.71 +1.67 PrUCrude rs q 16.50 -.16 ProShtVx s q 89.38 -2.59 ProctGam 24 91.58 +.14 PrUShSP rs q 48.56 +.20 PUShtQQQ q 15.84 +.06 PShtQQQ rs q 27.89 +.14 PUShtSPX q 14.69 +.11 PulteGrp 15 25.31 -.15

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Q-R-S-T dd 18 dd dd 16 18 19 16 cc ... 30 39 23 19 87 11 dd q q q q q q q q q dd 37 24 dd 58 29 17 1 8 23 cc 20 ... 37 ... 17 15 47 10 dd dd q q q q q q q q q dd 28 26 28 ... dd 9 12 16 dd dd 12 dd 23 20 8 ... 60 12 ... ... dd dd dd 8 24 cc 24 ... 8 49 33 16 dd ... dd 10 13

7.45 52.29 31.74 36.84 88.53 16.97 18.26 14.86 27.37 47.29 29.64 2.35 125.70 55.92 57.25 60.63 14.72 220.69 119.86 247.26 27.86 37.10 54.71 41.11 30.71 30.66 8.37 17.18 18.99 4.47 65.49 42.72 87.80 .34 32.99 45.00 12.76 17.80 2.76 5.55 13.02 49.12 54.81 5.18 8.30 8.40 26.02 54.18 79.28 55.22 91.29 64.99 25.28 68.67 57.88 54.17 10.19 54.52 23.80 146.14 32.88 9.35 7.05 15.90 58.05 9.74 28.49 30.72 3.57 52.08 71.50 5.21 36.70 91.52 58.74 22.95 28.13 14.28 .06 365.22 18.29 82.45 12.69 206.43 51.19 8.57 39.55 3.25 28.03 2.39 33.58 16.15 9.93 65.02

-.04 -.41 +.97 -3.63 +10.38 -.38 -.25 -.01 +.29 -.56 +2.34 -.09 -1.37 +.52 -.13 -1.23 +.29 -.16 +.35 -.61 -.12 -.11 +.08 -.22 -.05 -.10 +.05 -.14 -.14 -.07 -1.06 -.16 +.14 -.00 -.49 +1.14 -.85 +.10 +.07 -.04 -.37 +.12 -.56 -.02 -.05 -.22 +.34 -.43 -.37 -.21 +.05 -.15 -.07 -.21 -.08 +.22 +.01 -.86 -.04 -.59 -.13 -.41 -.37 -.37 -.01 -.59 -.38 +.32 -.28 -.40 +1.13 +.06 -.09 +1.00 +.86 +.18 -.19 -2.41 +.00 +10.05 -.30 +.28 -.27 -1.01 -.53 -.18 -.01 -.01 -.17 -.08 +3.05 -.25 +.10 -1.88

Eric M Rutledge, CFP®, AAMS® Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suit 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409

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

Is Spirit too low?

Shares of Spirit Airlines dropped when the extent of a price war with United Airlines became clear. Now some analysts think that investor sentiment about Spirit has gotten too bleak. Spirit grew by using rock-bottom fares to poach customers from bigger airlines. Over the last couple years, however, Delta, American and United have fought back, competing more aggressively on price. CEO Robert Fornaro told analysts last month that Spirit saw the most price-slashing in Chicago, Houston, Denver and Newark, New Jersey — all of which are important hub airports for United.

Spirit’s price war with its competitors has had a negative effect on the stock price, yet some analysts think its plan could work.

20%

P/E ratio: 11* 5-Year Avg.: 17

S&P 500

Dividend yield: none

0

Avg. broker rating (13 analysts) Spirit

-20

-40

J

F

M

A

M

Sell

Hold

Buy

Target price: $51.31

J

J

$37

A

52-week range:

60

2017 David Koenig; J. Paschke • AP

Source: FactSet *trailing PE

52-Week High Low 22,121.15 17,883.56 9,763.66 7,712.13 738.82 616.19 12,012.65 10,281.48 6,460.84 5,034.41 2,484.04 2,084.59 1,795.14 1,475.38 25,845.72 21,583.94 1,452.09 1,156.08

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

Last 22,085.34 9,232.85 735.68 11,949.98 6,370.46 2,474.92 1,748.01 25,670.04 1,410.15

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg -33.08 -.15 +11.75 +19.17 -51.81 -.56 +2.09 +17.81 +2.09 +.28 +11.53 +6.52 -37.79 -.32 +8.08 +10.60 -13.31 -.21 +18.34 +21.91 -5.99 -.24 +10.55 +13.44 -4.89 -.28 +5.26 +11.87 -75.35 -.29 +9.58 +13.39 -4.01 -.28 +3.91 +14.48

22,200

Dow Jones industrials

Close: 22,085.34 Change: -33.08 (-0.1%)

21,940 21,680

22,500

10 DAYS

22,000 21,500 21,000 20,500 20,000

F

M

A

M

J

J

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name AFLAC AT&T Inc AerojetR AirProd AlliantEg s AEP AmeriBrgn ATMOS BB&T Cp BP PLC BcpSouth Caterpillar Chevron CocaCola Comcast s CrackerB Deere Dillards Dover EnPro FordM FredsInc FullerHB GenElec Goodyear HonwllIntl Intel Jabil

Div 1.72 1.96 ... 3.80 1.22 2.36 1.46 1.80 1.32f 2.38 .56f 3.12 4.32 1.48 .63 4.80f 2.40 .28 1.88f .88 .60a .24 .56 .96 .40 2.66 1.09 .32

PE 13 14 ... 22 21 19 14 25 16 27 19 30 63 28 22 24 23 15 25 49 12 ... 21 24 9 20 16 20

Last Chg 81.24 +.14 38.36 -.16 26.97 -.09 145.85 -1.45 41.57 +.29 71.35 +.55 80.33 -.25 87.59 +.71 48.25 +.09 36.54 -.21 30.05 +.05 114.41 -.30 110.35 +.57 45.60 -.04 39.92 +.31 151.67 -.71 132.02 +2.06 73.62 -.99 86.87 -.38 73.24 -1.12 10.89 -.03 6.53 -.04 50.99 -.07 25.56 -.07 31.48 +.02 138.67 -.29 36.41 -.02 30.77 -.26

YTD %Chg +16.7 -9.8 +50.3 +1.4 +9.7 +13.3 +2.7 +18.1 +2.6 -2.2 -3.2 +23.4 -6.2 +10.0 +15.6 -9.2 +28.1 +17.4 +15.9 +8.7 -10.2 -64.8 +5.5 -19.1 +2.0 +19.7 +.4 +30.0

Name KimbClk Kroger s Lowes McDnlds OldNBcp Penney PennyMac PepsiCo PilgrimsP RegionsFn

Div 3.88 .50f 1.64f 3.76 .52 ... 1.88 3.22 2.75e

PE Last 20 121.44 12 24.13 19 77.21 26 154.92 16 16.60 17 5.39 14 17.47 24 116.71 14 25.76

Chg +.02 -.24 -1.11 -.05 +.15 ... +.21 -.25 -.25

A

YTD %Chg +6.4 -30.1 +8.6 +27.3 -8.5 -35.1 +6.7 +11.5 +35.7

+.02 U-V-W-X-Y-Z -2.22 -4.14 US Silica dd 25.47 -1.04 -.08 UndrArm s 33 19.25 +.69 -.37 UnAr C wi ... 17.21 +.58 UnionPac 19 103.06 +.49 -.05 UPS B 19 111.89 +.03 -.04 US Bancrp 16 53.19 +.07 .36 16 14.86 -.01 +3.5 -.54 US NGas q 6.31 +.01 SbdCp 3.50 15 4348.75 -26.25 +10.0 -.20 US OilFd q 10.06 -.04 -.05 USSteel dd 24.17 -.02 SearsHldgs ... ... 8.87 +.28 -4.5 -.52 UtdTech 18 118.19 -.33 Sherwin 3.40 27 332.50 -1.89 +23.7 +.24 UrbanOut 11 18.92 +.21 +8.02 VEON SiriusXM .04 37 5.55 -.04 +24.7 ... 4.16 +.25 VF Corp 22 62.61 -.33 SouthnCo 2.32 17 49.12 +.12 -.1 +.39 Vale SA ... 10.20 -.15 SPDR Fncl .46e ... 25.28 -.07 +8.7 -.19 Vale SA pf ... 9.57 -.12 -.35 ValeantPh Torchmark .60 17 79.27 +.29 +7.5 3 15.64 +.27 -.24 ValeroE 22 67.79 -.21 Total SA 2.71e ... 51.19 -.53 +.4 -.38 VanEGold q 22.25 +.05 US Bancrp 1.12 16 53.19 +.07 +3.5 -.43 VnEkRus q 20.30 +.05 +.08 VnEkSemi WalMart 2.04 18 81.59 +.31 +18.0 q 86.94 -.26 -.21 VEckOilSvc q 23.46 -.43 WellsFargo 1.52 13 52.71 +.17 -4.4 +4.75 VanE JrGld q 32.24 +.02 -.25 Wendys Co .28 42 15.22 -.25 +12.6 VangEmg q 43.52 -.06 WestlkChm .76 20 69.57 -.84 +24.3 VangEur q 56.91 -.38 -.50 VangFTSE q 42.54 -.22 WestRck 1.60 ... 56.56 -.60 +11.4 -2.97 Vantiv 40 65.06 +.21 -.02 Weyerhsr 1.24 27 32.46 -.26 +7.9 Vereit 15 8.59 +.03 +.02 -.26 Xerox rs .25p 12 32.31 -.20 +40.5 -.55 VerizonCm 10 48.60 8 30.77 +.19 YRC Wwde ... 52 12.55 -.11 -5.5 -.10 ViacomB 26 12.11 -.11 -.43 Vipshop Visa s 33 101.28 -.21 -1.14 31 8.28 +.55 -.33 Vonage 37 118.39 -2.43 -.19 VulcanM WPX Engy dd 10.30 +.07 -.15 18 81.59 +.31 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) -.06 WalMart AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) WalgBoots 17 81.08 -.43 Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Wayfair dd 75.52 -5.05 +.24 dd 4.11 -.14 BkofAm 685247 24.90 -.06 FibroGen 49.50 +16.10 +48.2 Depomed 6.15 -3.09 -33.4 +2.77 WeathfIntl +.01 WeiboCorp ... 86.26 19.29 +3.71 +23.8 Airgain n 10.57 -3.08 -22.6 TevaPhrm 499737 18.29 -.30 Triple-S 42 45.99 +2.86 AMD -2.05 WtWatch 458282 13.11 -.32 StneEn wt 2.55 +.47 +22.6 CmclVehcl 6.95 -1.90 -21.5 WellsFargo 13 52.71 +.17 -.35 45.25 +8.02 +21.5 AtkoreInt n 16.28 -4.39 -21.2 ValeantPh 443841 15.64 +.27 MKors -.25 +.23 Wendys Co 42 15.22 32.25 +5.60 +21.0 DeanFoods 11.86 -3.11 -20.8 Vale SA 441843 10.20 -.15 Cutera 12 81.34 +.37 -.48 WDigital 355606 160.08 +1.27 ION Geo rs 5.25 +.90 +20.7 PlainsAAP 20.32 -4.88 -19.4 -.08 Apple Inc +.46 WstnUnion 11 19.30 LendingClb 332613 6.45 +.99 Adomani n 7.70 +1.21 +18.6 SykesEnt 27.01 -6.42 -19.2 -.06 WheatPr g 25 19.60 +.09 SnapInc A n 297151 13.02 -.37 StoneEng rs 25.72 +4.03 +18.6 PlainsGP rs 21.04 -4.79 -18.5 4.86 -.04 +.11 WhitingPet dd -.83 -17.7 271860 4.40 +.05 LendingClb 6.45 +.99 +18.1 GlblScape 3.87 -.18 WholeFood 30 41.85 +.03 ChesEng 251054 10.89 -.03 Tabula n 17.42 +2.56 +17.2 EvolentH n 19.85 -4.10 -17.1 44 30.49 -.53 FordM -.54 WmsCos 2.07 -.05 -5.37 Windstm rs dd dd 2.48 +.02 -1.29 Yamana g YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY cc 41.69 -.04 +.05 Yelp 3,013 Advanced 1,059 Total issues 3,080 1,156 Total issues dd 25.94 -2.02 Advanced +.59 Zendesk 146 Declined 1,829 New Highs 134 1,684 New Highs ... 47.93 +.43 Declined -.53 ZillowC n 60 Unchanged Unchanged 125 New Lows 68 240 New Lows 30 60.00 -1.83 -.90 Zoetis Volume 3,209,220,455 Volume 1,848,356,676 dd 3.71 +.11 -.14 Zynga

MARKET SUMMARY G

N

4%

3.3

3

1.8

2 1 -0.7 -0.1 Q1

Q2

D

Mixed results?

seasonally adjusted annual rate

-1

J.P. Morgan airline analyst Jamie Baker said there was a growing perception that Spirit’s business model of an ultra-low-cost carrier might be “inherently suboptimal” at hub airports dominated by a bigger carrier. But after Spirit shares were battered, Baker upgraded the stock to “overweight” from “neutral” last week. Morgan Stanley analyst Rajeev Lalwani says route overlap with United and American is a risk for Spirit. Yet he tells clients that the discount-airline model can still work, and the recent price cut could be a chance for investors to get in on Spirit stock.

Spirit Airlines (SAVE) v. S&P 500 index

Sell or hold?

Productivity

0

Steven D Hefner, CFP® Financial Advisor

flat Q3

Q4 ’16

Q1 ’17

est. 0.6

Q2

Source: FactSet

Twenty-First Century Fox reports its latest quarterly results today. Financial analysts predict that the media company’s fiscal fourth-quarter earnings declined versus a year earlier. They also expect that revenue improved in the same period. Twenty-First Century Fox turned in better earnings and revenue in the previous three quarters.

L

N

D

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AB DiversMunicipal14.48 ... +3.3 AMG YacktmanI d 23.46 -0.02 +9.7 AQR MgdFtsStratI 8.78 -0.01 -5.8 American Beacon LgCpValInstl 29.71 -0.08 +7.8 SmCpValInstl 27.68 -0.03 +0.2 American Century EqIncInv 9.39 -0.03 +7.5 GrInv 32.74 -0.09 +17.8 UltraInv 42.15 -0.03 +20.8 ValInv 8.92 -0.02 +1.6 American Funds AMCpA m 29.96 -0.08 +11.6 AmrcnBalA m 26.67 -0.05 +8.7 AmrcnHiIncA m10.49 ... +5.6 AmrcnMutA m 39.74 -0.05 +9.0 BdfAmrcA m 12.97 -0.01 +3.1 CptWldGrIncA m50.51 -0.07 +16.6 CptlIncBldrA m62.32 -0.13 +9.9 CptlWldBdA m 20.09 -0.02 +6.9 EuroPacGrA m54.59 -0.01 +23.5 FdmtlInvsA m 60.66 -0.09 +13.2 GlbBalA m 32.11 -0.08 +10.0 GrfAmrcA m 48.73 -0.11 +15.9 IncAmrcA m 22.88 -0.04 +7.1 IntlGrIncA m 33.20 ... +18.8 IntrmBdfAmrA m13.46 ... +1.6 InvCAmrcA m 39.48 -0.12 +9.8 NewWldA m 62.86 -0.01 +22.2 NwPrspctvA m42.93 -0.08 +21.5 SmCpWldA m 53.54 -0.10 +16.4 TheNewEcoA m43.70 +0.01 +21.6 TxExBdA m 13.01 ... +4.1 WAMtInvsA m 43.52 -0.04 +9.9 Angel Oak MltStratIncIns 11.30 ... +4.2 Artisan IntlInstl 31.92 -0.05 +24.0 IntlInv 31.72 -0.04 +23.9 IntlValueInstl 38.28 -0.01 +17.7 Baird AggrgateBdInstl10.91 -0.01 +3.4 CorPlusBdInstl 11.26 -0.01 +3.7 ShrtTrmBdInstl 9.71 -0.01 +1.4 BlackRock EngyResInvA m15.97 +0.03 -20.0 EqDivInstl 22.24 -0.06 +8.4 EqDivInvA m 22.18 -0.05 +8.2 GlbAllcIncInstl 20.07 -0.03 +9.9 GlbAllcIncInvA m19.95 -0.03 +9.7 GlbAllcIncInvC m18.08 -0.03 +9.2 HYBdInstl 7.84 ... +6.3 HYBdK 7.84 -0.01 +6.3 StrIncOpIns 9.94 ... +3.2 Causeway IntlValInstl d 16.31 +0.01 +17.6 ClearBridge AggresivGrA m207.00 -1.30 +9.6 LgCpGrI 42.50 -0.14 +13.6 Cohen & Steers PrfrdScInc,IncI 14.28 -0.03 +9.6 Columbia ContCorZ 25.56 -0.09 +13.6 DivIncZ 20.85 -0.02 +10.1 DFA EMktCorEqI 21.71 -0.02 +25.8 EMktSCInstl 22.74 -0.04 +23.0 EmMktsInstl 28.76 -0.01 +27.0 EmMktsValInstl 29.81 -0.07 +24.7 FvYrGlbFIIns 11.01 ... +2.1 GlbEqInstl 21.58 -0.06 +11.8 GlbRlEsttSec 10.93 -0.05 +5.1 IntlCorEqIns 13.67 -0.05 +18.8 IntlRlEsttScIns 5.14 -0.01 +9.4 IntlSmCoInstl 20.68 -0.06 +20.5 IntlSmCpValIns 22.66 -0.06 +19.5 IntlValInstl 19.15 -0.09 +16.3 OneYearFIInstl 10.30 ... +0.7 RlEsttSecInstl 35.03 -0.17 +3.0 ShTrmExQtyI 10.86 ... +2.0 TAUSCorEq2Instl16.75 -0.03 +7.9 TMdUSMktwdVl29.43 -0.05 +7.1 TwYrGlbFIIns 9.97 ... +0.9 USCorEq1Instl 20.99 -0.05 +9.8 USCorEqIIInstl 19.94 -0.04 +7.9 USLgCo 19.27 -0.05 +11.8 USLgCpValInstl37.49 -0.07 +7.8 USMicroCpInstl21.05 -0.04 +1.1 USSmCpInstl 34.18 -0.10 +1.5 USSmCpValInstl36.44 -0.08 -2.3 USTrgtedValIns23.72 -0.08 -0.7 Davis NYVentureA m32.51 -0.07 +10.6 Delaware Inv ValInstl 20.35 -0.06 +4.3 Dodge & Cox Bal 107.35 -0.13 +6.5 GlbStk 13.69 -0.01 +14.9 Inc 13.86 -0.01 +3.5 IntlStk 45.81 -0.03 +20.2 Stk 195.63 -0.30 +8.4 DoubleLine CorFII 11.02 ... +3.8 TtlRetBdI 10.72 ... +3.1 TtlRetBdN b 10.71 -0.01 +2.9 Eaton Vance AtlntCptSMIDCI30.96 -0.16 +11.2 FltngRtInstl 9.02 ... +3.1 GlbMcrAbRtI 9.10 ... +2.7 Edgewood GrInstl 28.63 -0.17 +28.9 FPA Crescent d 34.18 -0.09 +6.0 NewInc d 10.00 ... +1.7 Federated InsHYBdIns d 10.13 -0.01 +6.2 StratValDivIns 6.31 -0.03 +9.1 TtlRetBdInstl 10.95 -0.01 +3.5 Fidelity 500IdxIns 86.68 -0.20 +11.8 500IdxInsPrm 86.68 -0.20 +11.8 500IndexPrm 86.68 -0.20 +11.8 AsstMgr20% 13.51 -0.01 +4.7 AsstMgr50% 18.14 -0.02 +9.2 BCGrowth 84.26 -0.16 +25.1 BCGrowthK 84.40 -0.15 +25.2 Balanced 24.14 -0.06 +10.5 BalancedK 24.14 -0.06 +10.5 Cap&Inc d 10.17 -0.01 +8.3 Contrafund 119.09 -0.30 +21.7 ContrafundK 119.07 -0.29 +21.8 CptlApprec 36.16 -0.14 +14.1 DivGro 35.21 -0.08 +9.3 DiversIntl 40.08 -0.11 +20.4 DiversIntlK 40.02 -0.11 +20.4 EmMkts 20.28 ... +29.2 EmMktsF 20.34 ... +29.2 EqDividendInc 28.27 -0.07 +6.5 EqIncome 59.76 -0.16 +6.1 ExMktIdxPr 59.19 -0.20 +7.9 FltngRtHiInc d 9.68 ... +2.7 FourinOneIdx 42.40 -0.10 +11.6 Frdm2015 13.24 -0.02 +9.5 Frdm2020 16.27 -0.03 +10.3 Frdm2025 14.05 -0.03 +11.0 Frdm2030 17.51 -0.04 +12.8 Frdm2035 14.63 -0.04 +13.9 Frdm2040 10.27 -0.03 +14.1 FrdmK2015 14.13 -0.02 +9.5 FrdmK2020 15.14 -0.02 +10.3 FrdmK2025 15.96 -0.03 +11.0 FrdmK2030 16.50 -0.03 +12.9 FrdmK2035 17.33 -0.04 +14.1 FrdmK2040 17.36 -0.04 +14.2 FrdmK2045 17.91 -0.04 +14.1 FrdmK2050 18.06 -0.04 +14.2 GNMA 11.45 -0.01 +1.4 GroCo 170.62 -0.78 +24.7 GroCoF 16.73 -0.08 +25.2 GroCoK 170.54 -0.78 +24.8 Growth&Inc 35.19 -0.08 +7.3 IntlDiscv 45.00 -0.16 +23.4 IntlGr 15.49 -0.09 +21.0 IntlGrF 15.53 -0.09 +21.1 IntlIdxInstlPrm 41.82 -0.11 +18.5 IntlIdxPremium 41.82 -0.11 +18.5 IntlVal 10.54 -0.04 +15.1 IntlValF 10.57 -0.03 +15.1 IntrmMuniInc 10.43 ... +3.8 InvmGradeBd 11.31 -0.01 +3.5 InvmGradeBd 7.94 -0.01 +3.2 InvmGradeBdF 11.31 -0.01 +3.4 LargeCapStock31.41 -0.08 +8.4 LatinAmerica d24.05 -0.01 +26.2 LowPrStk 54.76 +0.04 +10.7 LowPrStkK 54.74 +0.04 +10.7 Magellan 99.35 -0.27 +15.1 MidCapStock 37.10 -0.13 +9.8 MuniInc 13.22 ... +4.9 NewMktsInc d 16.35 ... +8.1 OTCPortfolio 107.01 -0.29 +28.4

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

YOUR FUNDS Overseas 48.40 -0.17 Puritan 22.76 -0.03 PuritanK 22.74 -0.03 ShTrmBd 8.63 ... SmCpDiscv d 30.77 -0.12 StkSelorAllCp 41.95 -0.10 StratInc 11.10 -0.01 TelecomandUtls27.02 -0.05 TotalBond 10.71 -0.01 TtlMktIdxF 71.40 -0.18 TtlMktIdxInsPrm71.38 -0.18 TtlMktIdxPrm 71.39 -0.18 USBdIdxInsPrm11.64 -0.01 USBdIdxPrm 11.64 -0.01 Value 119.30 -0.55 Fidelity Advisor EmMktsIncI d 14.15 ... NewInsA m 30.84 -0.10 NewInsI 31.49 -0.10 Fidelity Select Biotechnology214.62 -2.27 HealthCare 224.31 -1.39 Technology 172.23 -0.15 First Eagle GlbA m 58.68 -0.15 Franklin Templeton CATxFrIncA m 7.49 ... FdrTFIncA m 12.04 ... GlbBdA m 12.17 +0.01 GlbBdAdv 12.12 +0.01 Gr,IncA m 26.42 -0.04 89.04 -0.36 GrA m HYTxFrIncA m10.27 -0.01 IncA m 2.36 ... IncAdv 2.34 ... IncC m 2.39 ... InsIntlEqPrmry 21.75 -0.04 MutGlbDiscvA m32.96 -0.06 MutGlbDiscvZ 33.62 -0.05 MutZ 29.88 -0.07 RisingDivsA m 57.02 -0.36 GE RSPUSEq 55.80 -0.16 GMO IntlEqIV 22.78 -0.11 Goldman Sachs HYMuniInstl d 9.53 ... ShrtDurTxFrIns10.57 +0.01 Harbor CptlApprecInstl 70.57 -0.20 IntlInstl 68.63 -0.35 Harding Loevner IntlEqInstl d 21.64 ... Hartford CptlApprecA m40.78 -0.14 INVESCO ComStkA m 24.87 -0.03 DiversDivA m 20.03 -0.02 EqandIncA m 11.08 ... HYMuniA m 10.06 -0.01 IVA WldwideI d 18.73 -0.04 JPMorgan CPBondR6 8.31 -0.01 CoreBondI 11.66 -0.01 CoreBondR6 11.68 ... DisEqR6 26.20 -0.04 EqIncI 16.12 -0.03 HighYieldI 7.50 ... LCapGrI 39.75 -0.13 MCapValL 39.23 -0.07 USLCpCrPlsI 31.40 -0.03 Janus Henderson BalancedT 32.02 -0.05 GlobalLifeSciT 54.26 -0.10 ResearchD ... John Hancock BdI 15.97 -0.01 DiscpValI 20.97 -0.04 DiscpValMCI 23.01 -0.04 MltMgLsBlA b 15.58 -0.03 MltmgrLsGr1 b16.54 -0.03 Lazard EMEqInstl 19.11 ... IntlStratEqIns 14.73 -0.05 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.28 -0.01 GrY 14.48 -0.09 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m 16.27 -0.03 FltngRtF b 9.18 -0.01 ShrtDurIncA m 4.29 ... ShrtDurIncC m 4.32 ... ShrtDurIncF b 4.29 ... ShrtDurIncI 4.29 ... MFS InstlIntlEq 24.66 -0.03 TtlRetA m 19.10 -0.06 ValA m 39.32 -0.11 ValI 39.53 -0.11 Matthews ChinaInv 21.85 +0.06 32.42 -0.22 IndiaInv Metropolitan West TtlRetBdI 10.68 -0.01 TtlRetBdM b 10.68 -0.01 TtlRetBdPlan 10.05 -0.01 Northern IntlEqIdx d 12.51 -0.04 StkIdx 29.84 -0.07 Nuveen HYMuniBdA m17.16 -0.01 HYMuniBdI 17.16 -0.01 Oakmark EqAndIncInv 32.76 -0.04 IntlInv 28.03 -0.01 Inv 80.08 -0.32 SelInv 45.67 -0.40 Oberweis ChinaOpps m 15.03 +0.09 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCpStrat16.98 -0.03 LgCpStrats 14.51 -0.04 StratOpps 8.10 -0.01 Oppenheimer DevMktsA m 40.80 +0.05 DevMktsY 40.29 +0.05 GlbA m 92.44 -0.51 IntlGrY 41.25 -0.27 MnStrA m 52.33 -0.19 Osterweis StrInc 11.41 ... PIMCO AlAstAllAthIns 9.04 -0.01 AlAstInstl 12.09 -0.01 CmdtyRlRtStrIns6.68 +0.03 FBdUSDHdgI 10.60 ... HYInstl 9.05 -0.01 ... IncA m 12.39 IncC m 12.39 ... IncD b 12.39 ... IncInstl 12.39 ... IncP 12.39 ... InvGdCpBdIns 10.60 -0.02 LowDrInstl 9.87 -0.01 RlEstRlRtStrC m6.60 ... RlRetInstl 11.02 +0.01 ShrtTrmIns 9.84 ... TtlRetA m 10.28 -0.01 TtlRetIns 10.28 -0.01 PRIMECAP Odyssey AgrsGr 38.71 -0.15 Gr 32.94 -0.07 Stk 29.21 -0.05 Parnassus CorEqInv 42.10 -0.15 Principal DiversIntlIns 13.38 ... Prudential TtlRetBdZ 14.51 -0.02 Putnam EqIncA m 22.89 -0.03 MltCpGrY 91.80 -0.32 Schwab FdmtlUSLgCIdx16.24 -0.03 SP500Idx 38.49 -0.09 Schwab1000Idx59.85 -0.14 TtlStkMktIdx 44.15 -0.11 T. Rowe Price BCGr 91.06 -0.30 CptlAprc 28.77 -0.10 DivGr 41.02 -0.17 EMBd d 12.70 ... EMStk d 41.02 +0.05 EqIdx500 d 66.58 -0.15 EqInc 33.57 -0.08 GlbTech 17.76 -0.03 GrStk 66.28 -0.23 HY d 6.81 ... HlthSci 70.95 -0.50 InsLgCpGr 36.83 -0.11 InsMdCpEqGr 53.67 -0.20 IntlStk d 18.70 -0.04 IntlValEq d 15.04 -0.06 LatinAmerica d24.27 +0.06 MdCpGr 87.55 -0.31 MdCpVal 30.25 -0.08

Housing barometer

+22.4 +11.4 +11.4 +1.1 +1.2 +15.3 +6.1 +10.6 +3.4 +11.1 +11.1 +11.1 +2.8 +2.8 +8.7 +8.2 +17.7 +17.9 +23.3 +21.4 +36.8 +8.1 +4.8 +2.9 +3.1 +3.2 +12.1 +16.2 +3.5 +5.7 +5.8 +5.7 +16.6 +7.8 +8.0 +5.9 +9.0 +13.3 +16.7 +7.4 +2.2 +24.6 +17.5 +21.4 +14.6 +5.9 +4.5 +5.7 +6.2 +9.0

+3.4 +3.1 +3.2 +11.8 +7.0 +5.4 +25.1 +7.8 +11.7 +10.4 +20.2 +16.6 +4.2 +8.3 +7.2 +10.0 +12.5 +19.7 +18.4 +6.9 +20.8 +7.4 +2.2 +1.8 +1.6 +2.1 +2.2 +21.7 +7.1 +9.8 +9.9 +41.2 +26.4 +2.7 +2.5 +2.8 +18.5 +11.8 +7.8 +7.9 +7.7 +23.5 +10.5 +6.1 +37.4 +11.4 +13.1 +8.9 +25.8 +26.0 +23.7 +18.9 +11.4 +4.1 +9.2 +9.7 -3.3 +2.0 +5.9 +5.9 +5.4 +5.9 +6.1 +6.1 +6.2 +1.3 +1.9 +2.5 +1.4 +4.0 +4.2 +15.7 +15.0 +12.9 +7.7 +21.6 +4.9 +8.5 +18.5 +6.6 +11.8 +11.6 +11.1 +25.4 +9.9 +11.0 +7.5 +29.5 +11.7 +7.6 +34.3 +24.5 +5.9 +20.1 +26.0 +16.8 +22.3 +17.4 +25.4 +16.2 +4.1

NewHorizons 51.93 -0.19 NewInc 9.52 -0.01 OverseasStk d10.91 -0.04 RlEstt d 28.51 -0.13 Rtr2015 15.46 -0.03 Rtr2020 22.59 -0.05 Rtr2025 17.37 -0.04 Rtr2030 25.51 -0.06 Rtr2035 18.61 -0.04 Rtr2040 26.69 -0.07 Rtr2045 18.00 -0.05 Rtr2050 15.13 -0.04 SmCpStk 47.79 -0.09 SmCpVal d 47.07 -0.05 SpectrumInc 12.78 -0.01 SummitMnIntr 11.95 ... Val 37.18 -0.13 TCW TtlRetBdI 10.00 -0.01 TIAA-CREF 10.87 -0.01 BdIdxIns EqIdxIns 18.43 -0.04 IntlEqIdxIns 19.60 -0.09 LgCpValIdxIns 19.08 -0.04 LgCpValIns 19.02 -0.07 Thornburg InvmIncBldrC m21.33 -0.04 LtdTrmMnI 14.49 ... Tweedy, Browne GlbVal d 28.13 -0.06 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 228.89 -0.53 500IdxInv 228.87 -0.52 BalIdxAdmrl 33.22 -0.06 BalIdxIns 33.22 -0.07 CAITTxExAdm 11.85 ... CptlOppAdmrl144.81 -0.60 DevMIdxAdmrl 13.68 -0.05 DevMIdxIns 13.70 -0.05 DivGrInv 25.64 -0.04 EMStkIdxInAdm36.16 +0.02 EMStkIdxIns 27.50 +0.02 EngyAdmrl 91.63 -0.01 EqIncAdmrl 73.17 -0.14 EqIncInv 34.91 -0.06 ExplorerAdmrl 89.57 -0.36 ExtMktIdxAdmrl77.98 -0.25 ExtMktIdxIns 77.98 -0.25 ExtMktIdxInsPls192.45 -0.61 FAWexUSIAdmr32.28 -0.09 FAWexUSIIns 102.33 -0.29 GNMAAdmrl 10.54 -0.01 GNMAInv 10.54 -0.01 GlbEqInv 29.27 -0.06 GrIdxAdmrl 67.13 -0.20 GrIdxIns 67.13 -0.20 HCAdmrl 88.04 -0.39 HCInv 208.71 -0.92 HYCorpAdmrl 5.98 ... HYTEAdmrl 11.35 -0.01 HiDivYldIdxInv 31.46 -0.05 InTrBdIdxAdmrl11.48 -0.01 InTrInGdAdm 9.84 ... InTrTEAdmrl 14.23 ... InTrTrsAdmrl 11.22 -0.01 InflPrtScAdmrl 25.88 +0.02 InflPrtScIns 10.54 +0.01 InsIdxIns 225.86 -0.52 InsIdxInsPlus 225.88 -0.52 InsTtlSMIInPls 55.42 -0.13 IntlGrAdmrl 89.26 -0.08 IntlGrInv 28.07 -0.03 IntlValInv 37.88 -0.04 LTInGrdAdm 10.53 -0.03 LTTEAdmrl 11.67 -0.01 LfStrCnsrGrInv 19.55 -0.03 LfStrGrInv 31.95 -0.07 LfStrModGrInv 26.16 -0.05 LgCpIdxAdmrl 57.34 -0.14 ... LtdTrmTEAdmrl11.02 MCpGrIdxAdm 50.91 -0.29 MCpVlIdxAdm 54.15 -0.15 MdCpIdxAdmrl178.58 -0.75 MdCpIdxIns 39.45 -0.16 MdCpIdxInsPlus194.56 -0.81 MorganGrAdmrl90.08 -0.21 PrcMtlsMngInv 10.31 -0.01 PrmCpAdmrl 125.80 -0.44 PrmCpCorInv 25.22 -0.07 PrmCpInv 121.40 -0.43 REITIdxAdmrl 118.38 -0.53 REITIdxIns 18.32 -0.08 SCpGrIdxAdm 51.46 -0.19 SCpValIdxAdm 52.98 -0.17 STBdIdxAdmrl 10.48 ... STBdIdxIns 10.48 ... STBdIdxInsPlus10.48 ... STInfPrScIdAdmr24.79+0.02 STInfPrScIdIns 24.80 +0.01 STInfPrScIdxInv24.76 +0.01 STInvmGrdAdmrl10.70 ... STInvmGrdIns 10.70 ... STInvmGrdInv 10.70 ... STTEAdmrl 15.82 ... STTrsAdmrl 10.65 ... SeledValInv 31.49 +0.02 SmCpIdxAdmrl 65.19 -0.22 SmCpIdxIns 65.19 -0.21 SmCpIdxInsPlus188.16 -0.63 StarInv 26.24 -0.05 StrEqInv 33.91 -0.15 TMCapApAdm126.86 -0.32 TMSmCpAdm 56.07 -0.21 TrgtRtr2015Inv 15.58 -0.02 TrgtRtr2020Inv 30.77 -0.05 TrgtRtr2025Inv 17.97 -0.04 TrgtRtr2030Inv 32.37 -0.07 TrgtRtr2035Inv 19.83 -0.04 TrgtRtr2040Inv 34.04 -0.08 TrgtRtr2045Inv 21.35 -0.06 TrgtRtr2050Inv 34.35 -0.08 TrgtRtr2055Inv 37.19 -0.09 TrgtRtrIncInv 13.41 -0.01 TtBMIdxAdmrl 10.80 -0.01 TtBMIdxIns 10.80 -0.01 TtBMIdxInsPlus10.80 -0.01 TtBMIdxInv 10.80 -0.01 TtInBIdxAdmrl 21.80 -0.01 TtInBIdxIns 32.71 -0.01 TtInBIdxInv 10.90 -0.01 TtInSIdxAdmrl 28.97 -0.08 TtInSIdxIns 115.85 -0.33 TtInSIdxInsPlus115.88 -0.33 TtInSIdxInv 17.32 -0.05 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 61.74 -0.16 TtlSMIdxIns 61.75 -0.16 TtlSMIdxInv 61.72 -0.15 ValIdxAdmrl 38.35 -0.07 ValIdxIns 38.35 -0.07 WlngtnAdmrl 71.66 -0.11 WlngtnInv 41.50 -0.06 WlslyIncAdmrl 64.22 -0.11 WlslyIncInv 26.51 -0.05 WndsrAdmrl 75.62 -0.12 WndsrIIAdmrl 66.49 -0.16 WndsrIIInv 37.47 -0.09 WndsrInv 22.42 -0.04 Victory SycEsVlI 38.33 -0.15 Virtus VontobelEMOppI11.54 ... Waddell & Reed Adv AcculativeA m 10.09 -0.02 SciTechA m 16.41 -0.11 Western Asset CorBdI 12.62 -0.02 CorPlusBdI 11.87 -0.02 CorPlusBdIS 11.87 -0.02 iShares S&P500IdxK 296.29 ...

+19.9 +3.2 +20.3 +1.2 +9.0 +10.7 +12.1 +13.2 +14.2 +15.0 +15.2 +15.1 +6.4 +4.3 +5.2 +3.8 +10.5 +2.7 +2.9 +11.1 +18.4 +5.9 +5.3 +9.0 +3.1 +12.3 +11.8 +11.8 +7.8 +7.8 +4.4 +16.5 +18.3 +18.4 +11.1 +22.4 +22.5 -8.9 +8.4 +8.4 +11.4 +7.8 +7.9 +7.9 +19.2 +19.2 +1.6 +1.5 +17.9 +17.8 +17.8 +16.1 +16.1 +6.0 +5.5 +6.5 +3.8 +3.9 +4.2 +2.3 +1.8 +1.8 +11.8 +11.8 +11.1 +32.6 +32.5 +19.3 +7.4 +4.8 +7.0 +11.8 +9.4 +12.0 +2.7 +12.4 +8.6 +10.3 +10.3 +10.3 +19.4 +9.7 +15.6 +13.7 +15.5 +3.0 +3.0 +10.4 +2.7 +1.5 +1.5 +1.5 +0.6 +0.6 +0.5 +2.0 +2.0 +1.9 +1.3 +0.8 +9.4 +6.1 +6.1 +6.1 +11.6 +4.8 +12.1 +2.2 +7.4 +8.9 +9.9 +10.9 +11.8 +12.7 +13.0 +13.0 +13.0 +5.5 +3.0 +3.0 +3.0 +2.9 +1.2 +1.2 +1.1 +19.3 +19.3 +19.3 +19.2 +11.1 +11.1 +11.0 +7.1 +7.1 +7.6 +7.6 +5.6 +5.5 +10.1 +7.7 +7.7 +10.1 +6.4 +27.9 +9.0 +20.3 +3.9 +5.8 +5.9 +12.1

Mortgage applications survey Mortgage rates have edged seasonally adjusted percent change lower in recent weeks, making 8% it more affordable to borrow -6.3 money on a home loan. The trend has spurred more 4 would-be homebuyers to 1.4 est. 0.4 -2.8 -7.4 -6.2 apply for a mortgage, nudging 0 home loan applications mostly higher. Did the trend continue -4 last week? Find out today, when the Mortgage Bankers -8 Association reports its weekly 6/23 6/30 7/7 7/14 7/21 7/28 survey of mortgage applicaWeek ending Source: FactSet tions.


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • 9A

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(N) Ten ers Ethan Bortnick: Generations of Roy Orbison: Black & White Night 30 Play the Ukulele With Tavis NHK NewsMusic the Atomic Smiley line Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Mindfulness Goes Main- Rhythm and Blues 40: A Soul Spectacular Suze Orman’s Financial Solutions for You stream MasterChef (N) The F Word With Gor- Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 (:35) TMZ (:05) Dish Ac. Holdon Ramsay (N) News (N) Nation lywood Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Arrow “Kapiushon” Supernatural “The British PIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends Invasion” } ›› The Scorpion King (02) The (:35) } ›› The Purge: Election Year (16) Frank (:25) } ››› The Last Boy Scout Rock, Steven Brand. Grillo, Elizabeth Mitchell. (91, Action) Bruce Willis. (:35) Ray Donovan } ››› The Babadook (14) Essie (:35) } ›› I Am Number Four (11, Action) Alex Twin Peaks “Abby” Davis, Daniel Henshall. Pettyfer, Timothy Olyphant. Game of Thrones (:35) Game of Thrones Hard } ››› Hacksaw Ridge (16, War) Medic Desmond Doss beKnocks comes a hero during World War II. Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV (6:00) MLB Baseball: Boston Red Sox at Tampa SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt (N) Bay Rays. (N) (Live) Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Law & Order: Special Suits “Brooklyn Hous(:01) The Sinner “Part Law & Order: Special (:02) Suits “Brooklyn Victims Unit ing” (N) II” (N) Victims Unit Housing” Thunder Thunder Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Alaskan Bush People: Alaskan Bush People (:02) Darkness “Forgot- (:02) Alaskan Bush (:02) Alaskan Bush Off the Grid (N) “Episode 29” ten Tomb” People People Wahlburg- Wahlburg- Wahlburg- Wahlburg- Lowe Files (:32) The Lowe Files Lowe Files Wahlburg- Wahlburgers ers ers (N) ers (N) ers ers BIG3 Basketball Three-on-three basketball featuring former NBA greats and World Poker CBR Bull Riding: Champlayers. (N) pionship. } ›› A Thin Line Between Love and Hate (96) Martin Martin Martin Martin Property Brothers Property Brothers: Buy- House Hunters Listed Sisters (N) Property Brothers: Buying & Selling Hunters Int’l ing & Selling Hollywood Medium Hollywood Medium Hollywood Medium E! News “Today’s top stories” (N) American Pickers American Pickers “Fan (:11) American Pickers (:10) American Pickers (:03) American Pickers Favorites” (N) Little League Baltimore Boys Morningside 5 30 for 30 I Am Jazz: More I Am Jazz Jazz has a (:03) Growing Up Evan- (:06) I Am Jazz “In the (:06) Growing Up Jazz (N) final consultation. cho (N) Line of Fire” Evancho To Be Announced To Be Announced Cooks vs. Cons (N) Cooks vs. Cons “Tarts To Be Announced and Hearts” Bonanza Walker, Ranger The Virginian “Riff-Raff” The Virginian “Impasse” Little Women: LA (N) Little Women: LA (N) (:02) So Sharp Todd (:02) Dance Moms (:02) Little Women: LA pushes the girls. (N) John Turning Prince S. Fur Livg BlessLife John History Jesus Duplantis } ›››› GoodFellas (90) Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta. An Irish-Italian hood } ››› The Italian Job A thief and his crew plan joins the 1950s New York Mafia. to steal back their gold. } Zookee (:20) } ››› Coming to America (88) An African prince and his The 700 Club } ›› Good Burger Kel Mitchell. royal sidekick come to Queens. } ›› That Funny Feeling (65) Sandra Dee, } ›› The Restless Years (59, Drama) John } ››› Romanoff and Bobby Darin. Saxon, Sandra Dee. Juliet (61) } ››› A Few Good Men (92) Tom Cruise, Jack Nicholson. A Navy lawyer (:01) } ››› American Sniper (14, War) Bradley defends two Marines in a comrade’s death. Cooper, Sienna Miller. Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Full Frontal Conan Actor Wesley Seinfeld Conan Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Snipes. (N) FamFeud FamFeud Emogen Emogen Idiotest Idiotest Cash Cash Emogen Emogen King/Hill American Cleve American Burgers Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Mike Ty. M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Younger Raymond King King King King Golf: U.S. Women’s 2016 U.S. Open Speak for Yourself MLB Whiparound BIG3 Basketball Snowfall “A Long Time (:04) Snowfall “A Long (:08) The Strain “New (6:00) } ››› Kingsman: The Secret Service Coming” (N) Time Coming” Horizons” (14) Colin Firth, Michael Caine. Shots Shootout Rifleman Shooting USA Holly Gunny Stories Shots Shootout Ninja Warrior Ninja Warrior Ninja Warrior Ninja Warrior Ninja Warrior Greenleaf Greenleaf Greenleaf Greenleaf Greenleaf Tucker Carlson The Five (N) Hannity (N) Tucker Carlson The Five Treehouse Masters: Branched Out (N) Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters: Branched Out Last Man Last Man The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Standing Standing Girls Girls Girls Girls Stuck/ Bunk’d Raven’s Andi Mack K.C. Under- K.C. 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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian The nearby Dismals Canyon, area canoe and kayak float trips and the Horse Creek Wildlife Sanctuary and Wildlife Refuge — see these stories with photos, plus photos from the Slug Voice competition in Crossroads Magazine Outdoors Edition coming out on Aug. 26.

Woman’s dangerous dating habits frighten her friend

D E A R ABBY: I’m worried about a close friend I have known for about 10 years. She’s wellAbigail e d u c a t e d , Van Buren independent and familyoriented. She Dear Abby has been online dating for quite a while and continually meets guys who have criminal backgrounds. She dated one of them on the down low for two years because she was embarrassed by how he behaved in public. The most recent man served a 16-year prison sentence for being involved in a murder. She tells me she doesn’t see a future with any of them, but goes on multiple dates and defends them with, “He seems like a nice guy.” In the next breath, she’ll claim to want a steady and meaningful relationship. I have voiced my concerns. I asked her what she’d say to me if the tables were turned, and her responses mimic the concern I show her. I suggested she try a different website or mode of meeting potential partners, but it hasn’t made a difference.

I believe in second chances up to a point, but now I’m genuinely worried for her safety. Is there anything else I can do to convince her to have safer boundaries? -- CONCERNED ABOUT CRIMINALS DEAR CONCERNED: No, you have done enough. Until your friend admits to herself that she’s fishing for trout in the wrong stream, she’ll continue to reel in sharks. DEAR ABBY: Is it normal for men to sulk or get angry when they don’t get sex when they want it? I’ve been married to my husband for more than 30 years. I run several miles a day and, with all the work I do, I don’t always feel like having sex. Lately, I have been under a lot of stress, so I haven’t been in the mood. The other night, he did his usual sulking. Then, as he often does, he tossed about in bed, repeatedly and roughly, while we’re trying to sleep. The whole bed shook. Another night, he stuck his elbow in my ribs to be sure he got my attention. Sometimes he’ll grab my butt really hard while I’m trying to sleep -- in the middle of the night, mind you. I end up having sex with him so he leaves me alone and I can sleep. I have tried sleeping in another bed. But then he comes to that

room and repeatedly kicks the mattress. If I lock the door, he kicks the door. So, I have sex with him so I can live in peace. Do most men do this when they don’t get sex as often as they like? -- SPOUSE SULKING IN THE NORTH DEAR SPOUSE: You have tolerated this for 30 years? What you have described is spousal abuse. Most men do not behave the way your husband does, bullying and coercing their wives into marital relations. Please discuss this with a licensed mental health professional. His behavior is off the charts, and you need more help than I can give you in a letter. DEAR ABBY: I have a question. If you are traveling with a group of friends on a plane, is it rude for one couple to upgrade to first class? This was a group trip traveling to go on a cruise together. -- JUST WONDERING IN FLORIDA DEAR JUST WONDERING: I wouldn’t call it a breach of etiquette. However, it’s less than an expression of solidarity with the friends who are sitting in the back. Personally, I think it sends a wrong message and could cause resentment unless there’s a practical reason the couple needs the extra space -long legs, a bad back, a weight problem, etc.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). Should you sacrifice your needs for those of another? Of course! But how often? That’s the crux of it. Sacrifice should feel like a choice, not a character trait. Your needs are important, too. Examine the balance in relationships. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). As social as you can be, your solitude is at times so sweet that no one can compete. When you need to be alone, you really need it and enjoy it thoroughly. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The ones worth impressing aren’t excited by high-dollar items that anyone with money can obtain. Taste, style and emotional satisfaction have more to do with specificity of choice and the reasoning behind it. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Lifestyle changes come about in interesting ways for you. Your next great change will start with a pang of dissatisfaction then a judgement that spreads over your being as a realization. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22).

Truly, when you make a decision about how malleable your mood will be, you’ll have the power to stick to it. So it will be entirely up to you: Your smile could change the day, or the day could change your smile. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The attitudes of people and the feeling of situations will matter even more than usual. In fact, in most things you encounter today, the tone will trump the content. Reactions will be kneejerk and gut-level. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). In the current milieu, you are surrounded by artfully scribed declarations and advice. The decor, the coffee mug, the shirt, the bracelet -- they all seem to be barking orders. You’ll rebel. You don’t need to be told how to do you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You may contradict yourself, and that’s just part of being a complex human with broad interests and a mind that can travel through time and span a universe of ideas, many of which are bound to clash.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’ll consider going out of your way to make a favorable impression or to please someone. Before you do, examine your motives. If it’s approval you seek, you don’t need it. If it’s for fun or experimentation, you can’t lose. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The observations others make of you may clash with your self-concept now. It may feel greedy to take a compliment and rude to deflect it. Avoid both modes by focusing on the graciousness of others. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your restrictions, real or imagined, are legitimate. The latter is harder to break free from than the former. That’s what makes today’s small victory so important. This is only the beginning. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Deprivation is a severe and impractical approach. Many things are better regulated than restricted. This guiding principle will help you navigate the tricky issues of the day.


NEXT UP...

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • 11A

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES

XFINITY SERIES

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES

Race: Pure Michigan 400 Where: Michigan International Speedway When: Sunday, 3 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC Sports Network 2016 Winner: Kyle Larson (right)

Race: Mid-Ohio Challenge Where: Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course When: Saturday, 3:30 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC Sports Network 2016 Winner: Justin Marks

Race: LTi Printing 200 Where: Michigan International Speedway When: Saturday, 1 p.m. (ET) TV: FS1 2016 Winner: Brett MofďŹ tt

NOTEBOOK

Martin Truex Jr. scored his fourth win of the season and the 11th of his career on Sunday at Watkins Glen International by employing a strategy not often used by the veteran driver of the No. 78 Toyota from Furniture Row Racing. Most of Truex’s victories have been earned by raw speed. On Sunday, he won the I Love New York 355 on the road course at Watkins Glen in large part because he backed off in the latter stages of the race, saving enough fuel to make it to the finish line. Truex, who had one of the faster cars all afternoon, allowed several drivers, including Ryan Blaney and Brad Keselowski, to motor by him late in the race. When Blaney, who had inherited the lead with four laps remaining when Keselowski pitted for fuel, ran dry himself, Truex rolled by, led the last three laps and held off a fast-closing Matt Kenseth to get the win at what the Mayetta, New Jersey, native considers one of his home tracks. “Been wanting to win here a long time,� Truex said in his winner’s interview. “Been coming here a long time.� Truex said he considers all the NASCAR tracks in the Northeast — Pocono, Dover, New Hampshire and Watkins Glen — his home tracks. “These are the Northeast tracks, where we grew up racing,� he said. “This is where my family raced. This is where my dad raced. This is really the group of tracks that got me an opportunity to drive cars for a living. “Really cool to check this one off the list as well as everybody wants to win on road courses because it’s kind of a feather-in-the-

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s final season as a fulltime Cup driver has hit a slump. His 37thplace finish on Sunday at Watkins Glen was his sixth straight race without a top-10 finish, and three of those races saw him finish 32nd or worse. Earnhardt struggled to find speed all weekend at Watkins Glen then dropped out after just 22 laps with engine problems. “It’s been a really difficult week,� Earnhardt told reporters after exiting his No. 88 Chevrolet. “We’ve been way down on speed, and we had a pretty good car at Sonoma [the other road course on the Cup circuit], so I was kind of looking forward to coming here. “But, the guys worked really hard. ... I think we had a shot at maybe a top 20 at best. But man, we showed up and we were about four seconds off [per lap].� He closed his comments by thanking the staff and fans at Watkins Glen for their support over the years. “I sure have enjoyed racing here and really appreciate the fans here; and the track and the staff, they’ve treated us so good every time we’ve been here,� he said. “So it’s been a blessing.�

Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images for NASCAR

Members of Martin Truex Jr.’s No. 78 Furniture Row Racing team line the wall to high ÀYe their driYer following his win in the I /oYe New York 355 Sunday at Watkins Glen International.

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cap type of deal. Now to have one at each of the road courses [Sonoma Raceway and Watkins Glen International] is pretty special.� Truex said his fuel-saving measures seemed extreme. “As slow as I felt like I was going, I felt like I could have run 10 more laps,� he said, adding that even as he slowed, his crew chief, Cole Pearn, kept telling him to back off the gas even more. “It’s excruciating to go that slow here and to try to save that much fuel,� Truex said. “I was barely using any brake at all at the highest braking race track we go to, so that tells you how much I was letting off the throttle early. It was definitely tough. “The toughest part really was just watching [Keselowski] pass and go on and then watching [Blaney] pass and go on. It’s like: ‘All right, if they don’t run out of gas, we’re going to look really dumb.’� But the strategy worked, and it left Truex encouraged about future fuel-mileage contests. Matt Kenseth finished second ahead of Daniel Suarez, Denny Hamlin and Clint Bowyer. Blaney recovered to finish eighth, while Keselowski fell to 15th after being penalized for driving through too many pit boxes on his final stop for fuel. Pole-sitter Kyle Busch won the first stage, but had a lug nut hang on a pit stop, necessitating a second trip to pit road. Then he spun after contact with Brad Keselowski, leading to a second unscheduled pit stop. Still, he finished seventh.

“Everybody’s got to dial it back. ... And that’s the same with the drivers’ contracts. A lot of these veteran drivers are getting paid multimillion dollars, and a lot of these guys coming in are getting a fraction of that.� Earnhardt also said that even veterans are being paid differently today, and the change started when the economy took a dive several years back. “Drivers started taking more of the purse,� he said. “I don’t know everybody’s contract situation, but there is a less of a base and more purse-driven.� “You can’t pay a driver five to eight million dollars a year if you ain’t got but $10 million worth of sponsorship. That ain’t going to work. Guys aren’t getting 20, 30, 40 million [dollars] a year on sponsorship.� Earnhardt also said that the changes in driver pay are good for the sport. “Somewhere in a quote years ago, I do believe I admitted to being overpaid, but I wasn’t going to complain,� he said. “That’s a shift that’s going to be better for the sport and get those salaries into a realistic range for how much money we have from corporate America. All those things have to change, drivers’ salaries included.� But he admitted that his fellow veteran drivers may not agree with him. “Yeah, all those drivers out there in the garage are going to say: ‘That’s easy for him to say,’� Earnhardt said with a laugh.

Sean Gardner/Getty Images for NASCAR

Kyle Busch’s No. 18 and Joey Logano’s No. 12 lead the pack in Saturday’s Zippo 200 ;Ànity Series race at Watkins Glen.

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through too many pit boxes. But he took the lead for good from Brendan Gaughan with 22 laps remaining and prevailed on a late-race restart to get the win over polesitter Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Justin Allgaier and Paul Menard. “I feel like we’ve been so close so many times and had fast race cars so many times, and something has kind of kept us out of victory lane,� Busch said in his winner’s interview. “Sounds a lot like this year, I guess.� Busch said having a fast car allowed him to overcome his early mistakes. “The guys gave me such an awesome race car that we could make it back up, and we were able to do that,� he said.

NASCAR CUP DRIVER STANDINGS 1. Martin Truex Jr., 881 2. Kyle Busch, 765 3. Kyle Larson, 759

Kasey Kahne and Hendrick Motorsports to part ways after the 2017 season

4. Kevin Harvick, 746 5. Denny Hamlin, 687 6. Brad Keselowski, 681 Brian Lawdermilk/Getty Images for NASCAR

With the announcement on Monday that he and Hendrick Motorsports are parting company after this season, Kasey Kahne joins a growing list of veteran drivers who aren’t ready to retire but don’t have rides secured for next season. That list currently includes Matt Kenseth and Kurt Busch, but could grow as the season winds to a close. Kahne, who three races ago got the biggest win of his career in the Brickyard 400, has 18 victories in his 14-year career, six of them since joining the No. 5 team at Hendrick. Kahne had a year remaining on his contract, but with sponsorship for his team drying up, he and Hendrick mutually agreed to go their separate ways, according to a release from Hendrick Motorsports. “I’d like to thank Rick and everyone at Hendrick Motorsports for their hard work and dedication, along with providing me a great opportunity and success over the last six years,� Kahne said in the news release. “We still have a lot of racing left in 2017, and finishing strong is our top priority.� Hendrick Motorsports said it will announce its future plans at a later Kasey Kahne, left, and team owner Rick Hendrick celebrate Kahne’s Yictory in the Brickyard 00 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in July. date, and added that it plans to continue with a four-driver operation.

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Kyle Busch victorious again in Xfinity Series With a win in Saturday’s Xfinity Series race at Watkins Glen, Kyle Busch knocked another track off the list of those where he had yet to win an Xfinity race. It came a week after he won a Cup race at Pocono Raceway, leaving only one track, Charlotte Motor Speedway, where he hasn’t won a Cup race. At Watkins Glen, Busch led three times for a race-leading 43 laps to win for the first time in 10 tries. Busch’s drive to his 90th Xfinity win — extending his all-time record in the series — wasn’t a rout, and it wasn’t a mistake-free performance. He spun in Turn One while leading on Lap 17 of 82, and later was penalized for driving

'ale (arnhardt Jr. Ànished in 37th place Sunday at Watkins Glen after being forced from the race with engine trouble after just 22 laps of the 0 lap eYent.

SPEAKING

Junior talks NASCAR salaries and sponsorships as his retirement approaches In the past, NASCAR drivers have been reluctant to talk publicly about the salaries they receive. Most of the time, any information about driver pay came to light only when reporters scoured lawsuits between drivers and the team owners who employed them. During a media session at Watkins Glen, Dale Earnhardt Jr. offered a rare insight into driver pay. Even though he didn’t give specifics, his comments did go a long way in explaining some of the driver changes that are occurring in the sport these days, with veteran drivers like Matt Kenseth and Kurt Busch uncertain about their futures, and youngsters like Alex Bowman, Erik Jones and Ryan Blaney securing top rides. Last week, Busch acknowledged to reporters at Watkins Glen that his Stewart-Haas Team hasn’t picked up his current option, but he still could re-sign with Stewart-Haas and has had offers from other teams. Earnhardt said young drivers are signing contracts for far less pay than veterans are accustomed to receiving. “One thing that’s changed is that you’ve got a lot of young guys coming in being offered and accepting contracts that are a fifth to a 10th of what veterans are getting paid,� he said. “And, that’s money that can go into the team.� Earnhardt explained that sponsors are putting fewer dollars into the sport today, and that leads to a shrinking of spending all around. “These sponsors aren’t giving teams the money that they used to, so the owners and everybody’s got to take a little cut,� he said.

Jonathan Ferrey/Getty Images for NASCAR

Earnhardt’s last ride at the Glen ends abruptly

Jeff ZeleYansky/Getty Images for NASCAR

Fuel strategy propels Martin Truex Jr. to fourth win

7. Chase Elliott, 648 8. Jamie McMurray, 643 9. Matt Kenseth, 637 10. Clint Bowyer, 609


12A • Daily Corinthian

Sports

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Coming up Alcorn Central hoping this is the year Thursday BY KENT MOHUNDRO

kmohundro@dailycorinthian.com

Coming up in Thursday’s Daily Corinthian sports pages, we’ll continue our daily feature of area high school football season previews. We’ll also have the latest on the Mississippi State and Ole Miss Fall training camps. Plus we’ll have all the local, regional and national headlines to keep you in the know. Don’t miss these features and more in Thursday’s print edition of the Daily Corinthian sports pages.

Local Scores Tuesday, Aug. 8

Players To Watch: Jacob Holloway (OL), SR: 6-2, 275 According to head coach Brandon Cherry Holloway has the size, speed, strength and football IQ to be highly successful. “I believe he’ll be playing at the next level,” said Cherry. Will Ray (RB), JR: 6-0, 205 Ray is an aggressive player who not only has good size but good speed as well. Plus, he catches the ball well out of the backfield. “He started at defensive end for us last year so he knows the system and I believe he’ll have a very good

year,” Cherry mentioned. Harley Barnes (RB), SO: 5-9, 205 Barnes has the size of a fullback with the speed of a tailback according to Cherry. “He’s very aggressive with great vision and balance,” Cherry said. “His low center of gravity will only make him better. It usually takes two or three players to bring him down. He’s definitely a load.” • Alcorn Central won only three times last season but head coach Brandon Cherry hopes his Golden Bears can put a few more W’s in the bag this year and qualify for the playoffs for the first time since before any of the current players were born.

“I wanna see us play a complete four quarters every game this year,” said Cherry. “I expect to see our Cherry kids play for each other a lot more plus I want to see us be more physical.” “We made a name for ourselves last season for being a physical team but I’d like to see us take it up a notch this Fall. We can’t be taking plays off. My goal for the guys this year is that at the end of every game the opponent will have had to buckle up their chin straps and earn everything

they get on every play. I expect us to be the kind of team that plays hard and physical and that causes the other teams on our schedule to know they’ve been in a fight.” Central will operate out of the single-wing for the second consecutive year and Cherry says the players have a much better grasp on the system now and it should show on the field. Kameron Rorie will be the trigger man at the QB position while the running back slots will be filled primarily by Harley Barnes and Will Ray. Both are very capable and physical runners who go Please see HOPING | 13A

HS Volleyball @ Alcorn Central Alcorn Central 3, Pontotoc 0 ACHS 25 25 25 PHS 13 16 19 *AC plays Thursday @ Corinth @ Biggersville Biggersville 3, Baldwyn 1 Bigg 25 25 22 25 Bald 22 15 25 14 *Bigg plays Thursday @ Baldwyn

Local Schedule Thursday, Aug. 10 HS Football Corinth will hold an intrasquad scrimmage and ‘Meet The Warriors’ at Warrior Stadium II, 6 pm HS Volleyball Alcorn Central @ Corinth, 5

Friday, Aug. 11 HS Football Jamborees Alcorn Central @ Biggersville, 7 Kossuth @ Pontotoc, 7 Booneville @ Hatley, 7 Tishomingo County @ Itawamba AHS, 7 McNairy Central @ Hardin County, 7

Saturday, Aug. 12 HS Slow-Pitch Softball Thrasher Tournament Corinth @ East Union Classic, TBA

Tuesday, Aug. 15 HS Slow-Pitch Softball New Site @ Booneville (V & JV), 5 Tishomingo County @ Houlka (JV & V), 5 Corinth @ Myrtle (V & JV), 5:30 Kossuth @ Thrasher (V & JV), 5 Blue Mountain @ Walnut (Varsity only), 5

Friday, Aug. 18 HS Football/Opening Week Corinth @ Shannon, 7 Tishomingo County @ Alcorn Central, 7 Middleton (TN) @ Biggersville, 7 Independence @ Kossuth, 7 Ashland @ Walnut, 7 New Site @ Thrasher, 7 Please see SCHEDULE | 13A

Shorts • Ramer City Park will hold it’s final Fall soccer sign-up Saturday Aug. 12 at the park concession stand from 10 a.m. — 1 p.m.. The fee is $40 per child and there will be multi-child discounts with cost reduced $10 for each additional child. The league is open for ages 2-14 and will be coed with a birthday cutoff of Sept. 1. For more information call Elizabeth Cooper (731-610-6063) or Tom Court (731-610-5750). You can also reach them by email at ramersports@yahoo.com or find them on facebook at Ramer Soccer League. • The Booneville Kiwanis Club will host their 5th annual ‘Back To School 5K Glow Run’ at Booneville City Park beginning at 8:00 p.m. on Friday Aug. 11. 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. All participants will receive a Kiwanis logo water bottle as well as 2 glow sticks to wear throughout the run but you’re encouraged to bring as many glowsticks of your own as you like. There will be an overall male and female winner along with 1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners in each age group. The age groups will be arranged from 0-10, 11-15, 16-20, 21-25 etc. The cost prior to race night is $10 for those 10 and under and $20 for those over 10. Race night it will be $15 for 10 and under and $25 for those over 10. You can register for the event at https://racesonline.com/events/backto-school-5k-glow or call (662) 6630308 for more information.

Photo by Kent Mohundro

Brianna Barnes (14) and Lauren Young (25) watch as Mallory Wigginton sets up for a kill against Pontotoc Tuesday evening at Golden Bear gym. Alcorn Central swept the Lady Warriors 3-0 to stay perfect on the young season. The Lady Bears have an opportunity to begin 4-0 if they can knock off perennial 4A power Corinth at Warrior gym on Thursday.

Alcorn Central, Biggersville win at home BY KENT MOHUNDRO

kmohundro@dailycorinthian.com

Alcorn Central is expected to win when it comes to volleyball but this whole thing is new to Biggersville. Both schools won their respective matches Tuesday night on their home floors. Alcorn Central 3 Pontotoc 0 The Lady Bears learned prior to game time that head coach Eric Lancaster would be hospitalized overnight with what was believed to be kidney stones. When they stepped on the court at Golden Bear gym

Tuesday afternoon they were all business from the beginning as they dominated the visiting Lady Warriors in straight sets by scores of 2513, 25-16 and 25-19. Pontotoc has an established program and AC assistant coach Hailee Bell knew they would be a challenge for Central. But after some nipand-tuck action in the early stages of each game, the Lady Bears pulled away down the stretch on each occasion to complete the sweep. “They (Pontotoc) are in 4A and we’re 3A so we knew they would be good,” said

Bell. “Our girls were playing especially for coach Lancaster tonight and they certainly didn’t wanna let him down.” “I’ve seen us play better and I’ve seen us play worse but I thought overall each girl did their job and did it well.” Central ran away in game one with very little challenge from the Lady Warriors to claim a 12-point win to gain the early advantage. For the most part the Lady Bears were crisp with their serves and sets and threw in a few impressive kills. Pontotoc played Central close in the second set before the

purple and gold turned a 5-3 lead into an 18-10 advantage more than midway thru the set and eventually won by nine. The third set was a bit closer at the end but after all was said and done it was a clean sweep for Central as they move to 3-0 for the season ahead of their huge showdown match at Corinth this Thursday. Several Lady Bears put their names in the stats book. Olivia Wilson recorded five kills along with an assist and Please see HOME | 13A

Ole Miss’ Knox ready to step into new role Ole Miss Sports Information

OXFORD — Dawson Knox knows he has big shoes to fill. He is tasked with replacing four-year starter Evan Engram, Ole Miss’ all-time leader in receptions, receiving yards and touchdowns by a tight end. “Nobody can replace Evan Engram,” Knox said. “He was a special player, but it is humbling to be able to try

to fill his shoes this year. He was a great mentor and a great friend. He did some great things last year, and I am excited to go out there and be able to try to do some of those things.” The 6-foot-4, 250-pound sophomore brings is certainly up to the task physically. “Dawson has really im-

pressed me with his physicality,” head coach Matt Luke said. “He’s really been throwing it up in there with no brakes.” Knox’s large frame is beneficial to serving as a blocker as part of the Rebels’ exterior offensive line, something that he says he has put an emphasis on in fall camp.

“One of the biggest things I am working on right now is really blocking,” Knox said. “I have been used to some of the route running and catching. That is my strong suit right now. But my focus this camp has been on the blocking game, getting low under people’s pads and moving them off of the ball.”

Photo by Michael H Miller

Nationally ranked Tigers ready to go A group of Northeast Tiger players run onto the field prior to a home game last fall. Northeast ended last season 6-3 and nationally ranked and will begin the season the same way. They open the season Aug. 31 with a road date at Pearl River.


Scoreboard

13A • Daily Corinthian

Baseball AL STANDINGS

Photo by Kent Mohundro

Good crowd for Meet The Aggies A large crowd of Kossuth fans packed into Larry B Mitchell Stadium Saturday for Meet The Aggies. They were treated to an hour-long football scrimmage, cheer and dance routines by the cheerleading and dance squads and introductions of each player, coach and manager of every fall sport.Â

HOME CONTINUED FROM 12A

an ace while Mallory Wigginton turned in two assists with a kill and an ace. Brianna Barnes was solid as well with four kills, three blocks and five aces while Mary Fran Robbins chalked up six kills, four aces and a block. Lauren Young led the way in assists with 10 to go along with a kill and Madison Cornelius recorded seven assists and a kill. Rounding out the superlatives Julianna Potts had a pair of aces and a kill while Kaylee Wigginton and Madison Burnett each had two kills. Biggersville 3 Baldwyn 1 Coach Blake Hendrix had been telling his Lady Lions that they would remember forever if they

won the first-ever match at Biggersville. And they didn’t disappoint. Biggersville, playing their inaugural match at home, topped Baldwyn 3-1 with game scores of 25-22, 25-15, 22-25 and 25-14 to give the Lady Lions new program the kind of start they had been hoping for. “I feel really good with the effort of each girl on the team tonight,� Hendricks said. “Everyone did what they had to do and as far as what I anticipated our weaknesses would be the girls stepped up and played well and those weaknesses didn’t show as much.� No further scoring information was available but Biggersville will return the match by visiting Baldwyn this Thursday beginning at 5:30.

HOPING CONTINUED FROM 12A

north and south. Jonathan Derrick will be at one tight end slot while Homer Pitts will be at the other. Jake Pellizer and Terry Wooley will rotate in and out at fullback. Across the offensive line will be Toby Crum at right tackle, Bryce Palmer at right guard, Gerald Jones at center, Jacob Holloway at left guard and Jacob Winters in the left tackle slot. Derrick will serve as the long snapper for kicks while Kevin Hernandez will handle the kicking

duties once again. Wooley and Holloway will serve as Central’s bookend defensive end’s while BJ Blackburn will be at nose guard and Justin Simmons at defensive tackle. The linebacker spots will be filled by Jacob Smith, Pitts, Gavin Lowery and Jaxon Bailey with Ray rotating in occasionally. Pellizer will line up at safety while Gage Porterfield and Seth Jones will be the corners. The Golden Bears will open the regular season next Friday when they host Tishomingo County.

SCHEDULE CONTINUED FROM 12A

Mooreville @ Booneville, 7 Freedom Prep @ McNairy Central, 7

Friday, Aug. 25 HS Football/Week 2

Tupelo @ Corinth, 7 Kossuth @ Ripley, 7 McNairy Central @ Tishomingo County, 7 Biggersville @ New Site, 7 Baldwyn @ Booneville, 7 Alcorn Central @ Middleton (TN), 7

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East Division W L Pct GB Boston 63 49 .563 — New York 59 51 .536 3 Tampa Bay 58 55 .513 5½ Baltimore 56 56 .500 7 Toronto 52 59 .468 10½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 59 50 .541 — Kansas City 57 54 .514 3 Minnesota 54 56 .491 5½ Detroit 51 60 .459 9 Chicago 41 68 .376 18 West Division W L Pct GB Houston 71 40 .640 — Seattle 57 56 .504 15 Los Angeles 55 58 .487 17 Texas 53 58 .477 18 Oakland 50 62 .446 21½ Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 3, Detroit 0 Minnesota 5, Milwaukee 4 St. Louis 11, Kansas City 3 Baltimore 6, L.A. Angels 2 Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh 6, Detroit 3 Toronto 4, N.Y. Yankees 2 Boston 2, Tampa Bay 0 Cleveland 4, Colorado 1 N.Y. Mets 5, Texas 4 Houston at Chicago White Sox (n) Milwaukee at Minnesota (n) St. Louis at Kansas City (n) Seattle at Oakland (n) Baltimore at L.A. Angels (n) Today’s Games Colorado (Senzatela 10-4) at Cleveland (Bauer 10-8), 11:10 a.m. Texas (Griffin 5-2) at N.Y. Mets (Montero 1-7), 11:10 a.m. Seattle (Gallardo 5-7) at Oakland (Cotton 5-8), 2:35 p.m. Baltimore (Gausman 8-7) at L.A. Angels (Scribner 1-0), 2:37 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 8-10) at Toronto (Valdez 1-1), 6:07 p.m. Boston (Porcello 5-14) at Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 6-4), 6:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Nova 10-8) at Detroit (Verlander 7-7), 6:10 p.m. Houston (McHugh 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (Gonzalez 5-10), 7:10 p.m. Minnesota (Colon 3-9) at Milwaukee (Woodruff 1-0), 7:10 p.m. Kansas City (Cahill 4-3) at St. Louis (Leake 7-10), 7:15 p.m. Thursday’s Games Pittsburgh at Detroit, 12:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Kansas City at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Houston at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. Baltimore at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

NL STANDINGS

East Division W L Pct GB Washington 66 44 .600 — Miami 52 58 .473 14 Atlanta 51 59 .464 15 New York 49 60 .450 16½ Philadelphia 40 69 .367 25½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 59 52 .532 — Milwaukee 59 55 .518 1½ St. Louis 56 56 .500 3½ Pittsburgh 55 57 .491 4½ Cincinnati 46 66 .411 13½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 79 32 .712 — Colorado 64 48 .571 15½

Arizona 63 48 .568 16 San Diego 49 62 .441 30 San Francisco 44 70 .386 36½ Monday’s Games Pittsburgh 3, Detroit 0 Washington 3, Miami 2 Cincinnati 11, San Diego 3 Minnesota 5, Milwaukee 4 St. Louis 11, Kansas City 3 Chicago Cubs 5, San Francisco 3 Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh 6, Detroit 3 Toronto 4, N.Y. Yankees 2 Boston 2, Tampa Bay 0 Cleveland 4, Colorado 1 N.Y. Mets 5, Texas 4 Houston at Chicago White Sox (n) Milwaukee at Minnesota (n) St. Louis at Kansas City (n) Seattle at Oakland (n) Baltimore at L.A. Angels (n) Today’s Games Colorado (Senzatela 10-4) at Cleveland (Bauer 10-8), 11:10 a.m. Texas (Griffin 5-2) at N.Y. Mets (Montero 1-7), 11:10 a.m. Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 4-4) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 1-5), 2:45 p.m. Miami (Conley 4-4) at Washington (Gonzalez 9-5), 6:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (Nova 10-8) at Detroit (Verlander 7-7), 6:10 p.m. San Diego (Wood 2-3) at Cincinnati (Wojciechowski 2-1), 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Eickhoff 2-7) at Atlanta (Newcomb 1-6), 6:35 p.m. Minnesota (Colon 3-9) at Milwaukee (Woodruff 1-0), 7:10 p.m. Kansas City (Cahill 4-3) at St. Louis (Leake 7-10), 7:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Wood 13-1) at Arizona (Greinke 13-4), 8:40 p.m. Thursday’s Games San Diego at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m. Pittsburgh at Detroit, 12:10 p.m. Miami at Washington, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Kansas City at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m. Minnesota at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.

Football NFL Preseason Thursday’s Games Dallas 20, Arizona 18 Wednesday, Aug. 9 Houston at Carolina, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 10 Minnesota at Buffalo, 6 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 6 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 6:30 p.m. Jacksonville at New England, 6:30 p.m. Denver at Chicago, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Philadelphia at Green Bay, 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 11 Pittsburgh at N.Y. Giants, 6 p.m. Tampa Bay at Cincinnati, 6:30 p.m. San Francisco at Kansas City, 8 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 12 Tennessee at N.Y. Jets, 6:30 p.m. Dallas at L.A. Rams, 8 p.m. Oakland at Arizona, 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 13 Detroit at Indianapolis, 12:30 p.m. Seattle at L.A. Chargers, 7 p.m.

Transactions Tuesday’s Deals BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed 3B Matt Davidson on the 10-day DL, retroactive to Friday. Reinstated OF Avisail Garcia from the 10-day DL. DETROIT TIGERS — Recalled 3B Jeimer Candelario from Toledo (IL). KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned RHP Jake Junis to Omaha (PCL).

The Associated Press

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The start of the preseason may finally begin shedding light on the New York Giants’ offensive line and their running game. Since training camp opened two weeks ago, no parts of the team have been watched more closely than the line and the running backs. The line was horrible last season and the backs are a major question mark with the release of veteran Rashad Jennings. General manager Jerry Reese gambled in the offseason, basically keeping his line together and only adding veteran D.J. Fluker for depth. The lone loss was right tackle Marshall Newhouse, who signed with Oakland as a free agent. Bobby Hart has replaced Newhouse. The rest of the line is the same

Race into your Spring Fling!

with Ereck Flowers at left tackle, Justin Pugh at left guard, Weston Richburg at center and John Jerry at right guard. So there should be more cohesion this season. Paul Perkins, who showed flashes as a rookie, is the No. 1 running back, with veterans Shane Vereen and Orleans Darkwa and rookie Wayne Gallman, a fourthround draft pick out of Clemson, pushing him for playing time. So far, the running game has been inconsistent in camp. While the line has provided an occasional push, there have

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Television

Today’s Lineup

BASEBALL 2 p.m. — (ESPN) Little League, Southeast Regional, championship game, at Warner Robins, Ga. 6 p.m. — (ESPN2) Little League, Southwest Regional, championship game, at Waco, Texas GOLF 5 p.m. — (FS1) USGA, U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship, round of 64, at Chula Vista, Calif. HORSE RACING 3 p.m. — (FS2) Saratoga Live, Quick Call Stakes, at Saratoga Springs, N.Y. MLB BASEBALL 11 a.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Colorado at Cleveland OR Texas at N.Y. Mets 2:30 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Chicago Cubs at San Francisco OR Seattle at Oakland 6 p.m. — (ESPN) Boston at Tampa Bay 9 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, L.A. Dodgers at Arizona OR Minnesota at Milwaukee (games joined in progress) NFL FOOTBALL 6:30 p.m. — (NFL) Preseason, Houston at Carolina TRACK & FIELD 1 p.m. — (NBCSN) IAAF, World Championships, at London NEW YORK YANKEES — Recalled RHP Bryan Mitchell from Scranton/WilkesBarre (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned OF Boog Powell to Nashville (PCL). Assigned C Ryan Lavarnway outright to Nashville. SEATTLE MARINERS — Placed RHP David Phelps on the 10-day DL. Optioned RHP Cody Martin to Tacoma (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Sent 3B Chris Coghlan to Dunedin (FSL) for a rehab assignment. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Placed LHP Robbie Ray on the 10-day DL. CINCINNATI REDS — Placed C Devin Mesoraco on paternity leave. Recalled RHP Austin Brice from Louisville (IL). PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Placed C Andrew Knapp on the 10-day DL, retroactive to Friday. American Association GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS — Signed RHP Sam Myers. Can-Am League OTTAWA CHAMPIONS — Released INF Ryan Brockett. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association DETROIT PISTONS — Promoted executive vice president and chief marketing officer Charlie Metzger to chief revenue and marketing officer. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS — Signed RB Kelvin Taylor. GREEN BAY PACKERS — Released DT Letroy Guion. JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Placed OT Branden Albert on the reserve/retired list. MIAMI DOLPHINS — Signed QB Jay Cutler to a one-year contract. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Waived/ injured CB Zach Franklin. Signed CB Asa

Jackson to a one-year contract. Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — WR Addison Richards announced his retirement. HOCKEY National Hockey League ST. LOUIS BLUES — Signed a one-year affiliation agreement with Tulsa (ECHL) for the 2017-18 season. American Hockey League SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGE — Signed Fs Alex Belzile and Thomas Frazee and D Gabriel Verpaelst. ECHL ADIRONDACK THUNDER — Announced a one-year affiliation agreement with the New Jersey Devils and Binghamton (AHL) Devils. Named Brad Tapper coach and director of hockey operations. READING ROYALS — Agreed to terms with F Mark Naclerio. Signed D Chase Golighty and Nick Luukko and Fs Michael Huntebrinker, Ryan Penny, Emil Romig, Matt Salhany, Adam Schmidt and Matt Wilkins. SOFTBALL USA SOFTBALL — Named Gregg Leather men’s national team coach. COLLEGE COLGATE — Named David Riggs director of ticket operations and marketing assistant. DUKE — Named Tracey Griesbaum volunteer assistant field hockey coach. EMORY — Named Luke Johnson assistant track and field coach. EMORY & HENRY — Named Mike Caro strength and conditioning coach. FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON — Promoted director of men’s basketball operations Peter Lappas to assistant coach. GEORGETOWN — Named Michael Phipps assistant men’s lacrosse coach. TEXAS RIO GRANDE VALLEY — Named Taylor Cipicchio assistant track and field coach.

Giants’ running game under microscopeÂ

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been other plays where the backs have been stuffed. Perkins did have a big run on Tuesday in a team drill, but Flowers struggled at times. “I think we just understand the run game as a whole better,� Richburg said Tuesday. “We’ve had time in the offseason to talk about it and think it over, go over some things that didn’t go well last year and put those things into practice this year. I think we’ve made some good strides so far.� The problem in getting the running game going is the missed blocks. Too many times someone whiffs and the play breaks down, and it not just the linemen missing their assignments. “In the game, it’s going to take all 11,� Richburg said. “So I think we’ve done a better job of all 11 guys being on the same page, and we’ve just got

to continue with that consistency and carry that in through the preseason and regular season.� If the Giants can get the running game going, it will make their receiving corps and offense even more dangerous. A year ago, Eli Manning had two mains targets in Odell Beckham Jr. and rookie Sterling Shepard. Veteran Brandon Marshall was signed as a free agent to give Manning a threat on the other side of Beckham. Tight end Evan Engram, the first- round pick, has been creating matchup problems for the defense with his speed down the middle. “We have to run the ball better, and I think that a bunch of different moves we made throughout this offseason will help us,� Pugh said. “There’s competition at the offensive line position right now.�

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Home & Garden

14A • Daily Corinthian

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Summer citrus growth brings autumn harvest Although we’re in the size, their weight does not middle of a blazing hot threaten even small trees. summer, I find my gar- They are perhaps the most dening thoughts wan- cold tolerant of the citrusdering to the coming fall es. (Photo by MSU Extenseason. You may think sion/Gary Bachman) Satsuma oranges are you know why I’m looking forward to the cooler related to mandarins weather, but the main and are winter favorites because they are reason is that the easy to peel. I’m citrus in my home always astonished grove will start to at the number of ripen. oranges that will While August is be set on my satsutoo early to think ma trees. My first about harvestgrowing this ing fruit, it is time Gary year citrus, there were to start thinking Bachman so many flowers about planting on my little tree I your own citrus. Southern went ahead and You can plant citGardening removed about rus in the ground half because if or, my preferred they all had produced a method, in containers. Photo by MSU Extension/Gary Bachman I’ve written before about fruit, the tree would have Satsuma oranges are winter favorites that grow well in Mississippi. Their heavy the various citrus trees snapped. As it was, my fruit load can overwhelm small trees. that I’ve tried to grow in little tree had 13 oranges the past. I’ve told of being that almost bent the trunk unable to resist a key lime to the ground. I enjoy growing and I saw in the garden center, but it didn’t survive the caring for Meyer lemons, “brutal” coastal Mississip- which are not like the tart, grocery pi winter. I’ve tried grow- thick-skinned ing the eerily fascinating store offerings. This fruit Buddha’s hand citron, but -- long-overlooked in the it also didn’t make it past culinary world -- is a cross winter. between a lemon and an I’ve finally learned to orange, making it thingrow citrus that is hardy skinned and really sweet. for my garden with mini- Each year, my crop is desmal cold protection. I’ve tined for a batch of homesettled on three consistent made limoncello, which is performers: satsuma or- a holiday family treat. ange, Meyer lemon and The citrus crop I’m kumquat. most excited about are the Kumquats produce fruit kumquats. These fruits in astonishing numbers, are produced in astonishbut due to their small ing numbers; because of size, their weight does not the number of flowers, threaten even small trees. my trees are buzzing with They are perhaps the most what seems like hundreds cold tolerant of the cit- of native bumblebees. The ruses. (Photo by MSU Ex- number of kumquats detension/Gary Bachman) veloping would seem to Photo by MSU Extension/Gary Bachman Kumquats produce fruit in astonishing numbers, but due to their small size, their Kumquats produce fruit cause a structural probweight does not threaten even small trees. They are perhaps the most cold toler- in astonishing numbers, lem for the trees as they ant of the citrus. but due to their small ripen, but it’ll be OK. Due

IT’S BACK!

Kenny Nelson (left) helps his 4-year-old grandson, Braiden Henson of Theo, show off two of the three giant watermelons that young Henson helped grow. Nelson said his grandson helped plant the seeds that grew three large watermelsons. They weigh 91 pounds, 86 pounds and 82 pounds. The 4ryearold was excited about the gardening process and could not wait to show off the product of his work.

Saturday

If itʼs important to you, itʼs important to us! Send photo and information to news@dailycorinthian.com Please include your phone number for questions.

(Daily Corinthian columnists Dr. Gary Bachman works for the Mississippi State University Extension Service.)

Theo boy helps grow three huge melons

Snapsh t Share your photos with the Daily Corinthian. Family Get-to-togethers, Pets, Birthdays, Hunting, Big vegetables, Landscapes, or Grandparentsʼ Bragging rights.

to their small size, the weight will not threaten the tree. Kumquats don’t need to be peeled, as the rind is completely edible. I have two varieties; one is sweet, and the other is a little tart. Kumquats are perhaps the most cold tolerant of the citruses, extending the northern range for home gardeners. Citrus must be protected from the cold. Citrus trees are grafted, and the graft union is susceptible to freeze damage. I planted all my citrus trees in 25-gallon containers so I could move them to the garage for protection. However, the containers weigh too much to actually move. My mistake. So, I constructed removable conduit frames from which I hang frost blankets on the coldest nights. If you want more information about growing citrus, especially in containers, get Mississippi State University Extension Service Publication 2542, “Growing Citrus in Containers in Mississippi.” This is an excellent guide for gardening success with citrus in your landscape. Find it at http://extension.msstate.edu/ sites/default/files/publications/publications/ p2542.pdf. For now, I’ll just have to be satisfied with the visions of homemade limoncello while I wait out the rest of the summer in air conditioning.

Staff Photo by L.A. Story

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Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Taste

Daily Corinthian • 1B

Associated Press

Grill puts a spin on classic BLT BY SARA MOULTON Associated Press

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Grilled BLT Salad with Buttermilk Dressing

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Tangy Greek Tzatziki perks up mild fish BY KATIE WORKMAN

2 teaspoons lemon juice 1/2 teaspoon finely minced garlic 11/2 cups plain Greek yogurt

Associated Press

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Variety Comics

2B • Daily Corinthian

BEETLE BAILEY

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Crossword

RELEASE DATE– Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Heckler’s array 6 Slender woodwind 10 Crony 13 Taxpayer’s dread 14 With 24-Across, Chilean poet with a Nobel Prize 16 Suffix with Vietnam 17 *One may follow the wedding dress 19 Total 20 Drunk 21 Pontiac that was Motor Trend’s 1968 Car of the Year 22 Orchestra overseer 24 See 14-Across 26 Places for holsters 27 Swedish pop quartet 30 Arnold’s crime 33 Stand for a photo? 36 Evaluation for a would-be painter 38 Got together 39 *Avant-garde 41 “The guy over there” 43 Makes harmonious 45 Frightens 47 “Whoa, bro!” 49 Tiny branch 50 Feudal drudge 52 Low-risk govt. securities 55 Strategy 58 Granola morsel 59 27-Down user’s need 62 Master 63 Familiar slogan ... or, based on its last word, what each answer to a starred clue is? 66 Every one 67 Poetry Muse 68 __ Hebrides 69 Knight who played a newsman 70 Food-growing prefix 71 Checked out before a heist

DOWN 1 Quick punches 2 Currency since 1999 3 Cut and paste, e.g. 4 Freed (of) 5 Put on, as a play 6 Decide not to join 7 Trivia night locale 8 The Affordable Care Act became law during it 9 “On the Waterfront” director Kazan 10 *Westminster’s top canine 11 Take by force 12 Floor models 15 __ of a kind 18 P.O. box item 23 Horse’s hoof protection 24 Afternoon rest 25 Makes use of, as experience 27 Bread box? 28 La __ Tar Pits 29 *Harsh and wintry 31 Off-rd. transports 32 Pedometer unit 34 Taxing task 35 Reject as false

37 Luau torch type 40 Attended without a partner 42 Chinese menu abbr. 44 Heaviest U.S. president 46 Extra NBA periods 48 Joyful shout 50 Mar. 17 figure 51 “Guitar Town” rocker Steve

53 Strike gently 54 Guiding principle 56 Zamboni’s milieu 57 “Fame”-ous Irene 59 Harsh reviews 60 “That makes sense” 61 Stereotypical Geek Squad employee 64 WNBA position 65 Genetics lab subject

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Richard Monsaythe and C.C. Burnikel ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

08/09/17

08/09/17

Listening to others is important WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: I am sure that you have dealt with this in the past, but we have a friend in our circle who cannot stop talking. She is very smart and well-spoken, and she is extremely knowledgeable and has a lot of great things to share, but she never gives others a chance to talk about their thoughts or things going on in their lives. She talks over people, interrupts and monopolizes every conversation, both in person and on the telephone. We have talked to her many times, and some of our friends have chosen to not be a part of our activities because this gal just can’t stop talking. We have even gotten to the point of sometimes being rude to get her attention. If we try to interject, she either speaks over us or gets upset because we have interrupted. When we do talk to her about this, she gets offended and refuses to participate in conversations, which seems passive-aggressive and makes us all uncomfortable. After she thinks about it and stops being offended, it gets better for a short time — but then it starts up again. She is a great friend, and we don’t want to exclude her, but it has become so obnoxious and irritating that it may have to happen. We would like to keep this gal in our circle of friends, but it would be nice if she

Dear Annie would finally figure it out and become a listener, as well as a talker. We have talked to her many times, so now we are all hoping that she sees this and takes note that it may be about her. — Love You, But Just Stop Talking Dear LYBJST: Perhaps we should tap this woman’s hot air as a renewable resource, because it doesn’t seem to be dwindling. Even if she sees this letter, I’m doubtful it will have much of an impact. The only other thing I can think of is that she may not be well emotionally. So you might encourage her to seek counseling, where she could talk as much as she wants. Dear Annie: I have just been confronted with a problem I’ve never seen mentioned in your column. On the street behind ours, a very pleasantly nice couple with two sweet little girls moved in. Our backyards meet. When we are out on our patio, we enjoy watching the girls playing in their yard and small pool. We became acquainted with them, and when I found out one

of the girls had her third birthday coming up in a week, I purchased what I thought was a very nice gift, gave it to her mother in a brown paper bag and told her it was for “Libby’s” birthday. She asked me whether there was something there for “Beth” (the other daughter, who’s 4). My reply was, “I thought it was Libby’s birthday.” She informed me that Beth has feelings, too. I was shocked and at a loss for words. Now I wonder what I’ll do when Beth has her birthday. My husband and I had five children. Wouldn’t that system have been hard on some of our gift-giving friends and relatives? I wonder, has my mind been shut off to the outside world? — Confused Giver Dear Confused Giver: This mom is not only being rude to you but also hurting her daughters in the long run. As mothers, our job is to teach our kids how to grow up and be respectful and unentitled members of society. If she is sending them the message that they should receive gifts even when it’s just their sister’s birthday, the girls will grow into very unhappy adults, waiting for life to give them all the things they think they deserve.


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Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • 3B

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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

2008 Harley Davidson FXDF 14K MILES EXC. COND. RADIO, USB PORT $6500. OBO OBO $5500. 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

Bought New, One Adult Owner 2,139 Miles Many Harley Accessories SHOW ROOM CONDITION Oil & Filter changed annually SCREAMING EAGLE SYN 3

662-837-8787

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 OLD L OMILES S 22,883 S $2,350.00 YAMAHA V STAR 650

665-1288

D L SO

Lift and Cargo

Seat. New batteries.

$3,125.00

662-665-2044

Victory Vegas red-silver, Mint Condition, 2004, 41k, new tires, lots of extras, 1520 cc's, $3995.00 obo, 662-396-1531 or 662-665-2701 Call any time

32,000 Miles Super Bike Super Price

$7800.00 OBO 662-212-2451 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

2005 EZ GO 36 Volt

Golf Cart with 4" Jake

2005 Heritage Softail

1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER

07 HONDA RANCHER ES 2005 HONDA 500 Rubicon

$3,900

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

D L SO

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


4B • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

0232 GENERAL HELP

Find the Perfect Job

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

Waste Connections of Mississippi, Inc.

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

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

is NOW HIRING for the following positions:

The Daily Corinthian Classifieds 1607 S. Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 662.287.6111• www.dailycorinthian.com Email: classad@dailycorinthian.com

@

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

Class A & B CDL Drivers Mechanics Submit your application today at www.wasteconnections.com,

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

Full time 3-11 RN Charge Nurse & L.P.N.s PRN s

e l a S o GUARANTEED Please apply in person. Aut directly at 281-873-3208. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth or call our Recruiter Tammy

Waste Connections is an AfďŹ rmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer (Minority/Female/Disabled/Veterans)

FOR SALE

$9800

662-808-2629 662-808-1645

2017 FOREST RIVER CAMPER

FOR SALE 2005 ALLERGO BUS

2002 Keystone Sprinter 31’

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

Mon. – Fri. 8 – 4:30 E.O.E.

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

REDUCED $103,000. $90,000. OBO 662-284-5925 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

2014 TRAVEL STAR BY STARCRAFT CAMPER TRAILER 2 SLIDES $19,000.00 731-439-1744

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

$8,500.

662-415-5071

16FT., USED ONE TIME, FULL BATH, QN. BED AND GAS/ELEC., REFRIGERATOR, EXC. COND.,

ASKING $11,700

CALL 662-415-9188 OR 662-665-9606

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 1((' $1< 7\SH RI 75$&725 :25." <$5' 02:,1* :HHG (DWLQJ $OO PDQQHU RI \DUG ZRUN

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES )5, 6$7 &5 )XUQ 7RQV RI OLWWOH JLUO FORWKHV V] LQIDQW WR \RXWK /RWV 0RUH 6$7 0DJQROLD 5G )XUQ $GXOW &KLOG &ORWKLQJ + + ,WHPV 6KRHV 0LVF

EMPLOYMENT

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

662-660-3433

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

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

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD

SOLD

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

$7500 $8995

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

1959 MASSEY FERGUSON 35

FOR SALE

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

4020 JOHN DEERE TRACTOR

$4500.00 $3950.00 731-926-0006

LD 51,000 SOMILES SLEEPS 6

662-415-0399 662-419-1587

$4300 662-415-5247

SOLD

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

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

SOLD

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

$6500. CALL 662-279-3683

SOLD

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

$5000.00

662-603-4400

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

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

8,500 OBO

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

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

$

1,500 OBO

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

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

$

200000

662-286-1519 662-287-9466

10FT GOOD SHAPE PRO FLEX 120 MODEL

good grass cutter

CALL 662-665-8838

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

$5000.00 $3500.00

$ 0.00 662-416-5191

Gravely zero turn, one owner, 650 obo.

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

FOR SALE

86 chevy 4 wdr,

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

5000.00.00 6000

$$

662-286-6571 662-286-3924

1956 FORD 600

PROGRESSIVE TURF MOWER

FOR SALE 7x19 heavy duty trailer

2003 W/W HORSE TRAILER

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH EQUIPMENT POWER STEERING GOOD PAINT

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. $1200/OBO. $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.

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 00 $6,000 Ask for Brad: 731-453-5521 284-4826

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P. Imagine owning a likenew, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a High Five stainless prop,

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

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

01 COBRA BOAT & TRAILER

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

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

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


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • 5B

0212 PROFESSIONAL

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

1((' $ 0DLQWHQDQFH 0DQ IRU VPDOO RU ODUJH 86(' 75866 O GLENFIELD 22 semi-auto + 8 1 7 , 1 * & / 2 7 + ( 6 9 $ 5 , 2 8 6 6 . , 5 7 6 V ] MREV" &DOO 3,7&+ $125. Call 662-720-6855 / $ 5 * ( /DUJH NQHH OHQJWK HDFK

0232 GENERAL HELP

= WHDUGURS KRRG CAUTION! ADVERTISE- MENTS in this classifica '(6. tion usually offer infor ($&+ mational service of products designed to help FIND employment. 3& )/25$/ 62)$ Before you send money /29(6($7 to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an 3& 62/,' :$/187 %5 68,7( ad appears to sound “too good to be true�, then it may be! Inquir- 1(: LQ ER[HV &RP ies can be made by con- PHUFLDO 0HWDOX[ EUDQG tacting the Better Busi- EXOE IORUHVFHQW ness Bureau a t VKRS OLJKWV XVHV 7 1-800-987-8280. EXOEV

0240 SKILLED TRADE ',(6(/ 0(&+$1,& 0XVW KDYH \HDUV H[S RU

EMPLOYMENT 0284 INFORMATION 3,$12 3/$<(5 1(('(' )25 681'$< 0251,1* $1' (9(1,1* :256+,3 6(59,&(6 ,) ,17(5(67(' &$//

PETS

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS 0217+ 2/' 0DOH -DFN 5XVVHOO

*5$',1* %/$'( :,7+ $ 32,17 +,7&+ *5($7 6+$3( 1(: LQ ER[HV 9HOX[ 6N\OLJKWV YHU\ KLJK TXDOLW\ 0RGHO 43) ZDV VHOO DOO IRU

*(50$1 6+(3+(5' 3XSSLHV ZNV ROG ZRUPHG VKRWV YHW FKHFNHG

FARM

35 PHQ V GUHVV SDQWV V] [ IRU DOO FDPH IURP %HONV ZRUQ D IHZ WLPHV /* UROOV RI GLIIHUHQW XSKROVWHU\ IDEULF /J RI EODFN EDFNLQJ $OO WDOO UROOV $OO UROOV IRU )LUP

&259(77( $)7(50$5 .(7 ZKHHOV VL]H V &5$)760$1 5$',$/ $50 6$: +3 : 67$1' &5$)760$1 7$%/( 6$: +3 : 67$1'

0460 HORSES 0,1 321,(6 $// )25

&86720(5 *5((7,1* 3D\PHQW &RXQWHU / [ : YHU\ QLFH <RX ORDG

MERCHANDISE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE *$//21 OLWH JUHHQ FOHDQ ZLQH MXJV ZLWK ILQJHU ORRS FDSV HDFK 08/7, &2/25 %52:1 /29(6($7 <5 ROG VWHDPHU WUXQN KDQG PDGH SRWDWR RQLRQ ELQ HDFK RU ERWK IRU &22.%22.6 EUDQG QHZ IRU DOO 6RXSV VWHZV VZHHWV MHOOR GHVVHUWV .HOORJJV 0RUH

62/,' 2$. '5 7$%/( &+$,56

:$17 72 PDNH FHUWDLQ \RXU DG JHWV DWWHQWLRQ" $VN DERXW DWWHQWLRQ JHWWLQJ JUDSKLFV

AD FOR $1.00 EXTRA Call 662-287-6111 for details.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

( %522.( $376 %5 %$ ' : LFHPDNHU VT IW :($9(5 $376 1 &DVV %5 SRUFK Z G XWLO

HOMES FOR 0620 RENT 2BR, 1B., APL/FURN., $600./$600. REF REQ. NO PETS. 662-287-6752

BUSINESS 0670 PLACES/OFFICES

WALTHER 22 semi-auto pistol $250. Call 662-720- 2)),&( 63$&( )25 5(17 VT IW +:< 6855 ($67

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

New Shipment of Wood Look Porcelain Tile!

289 $ 19 Corrugated Metal 1 $ 95 4x8 Cement Siding 10 $ 95 4x10 Cement Siding 14

:+(5($6 RQ 0DUFK .HYLQ ) )UHHPDQ DQG ZLIH 6DPDQWKD )UHHPDQ H[HFXWHG D FHUWDLQ GHHG RI WUXVW WR -RKQ + VKRZV 7UXVWHH IRU WKH EHQHILW RI 0RUW JDJH (OHFWURQLF 5HJLV WUDWLRQ 6\VWHPV ,QF DV QRPLQHH IRU &RP PHUFH 1DWLRQDO %DQN ZKLFK GHHG RI WUXVW LV RI UHFRUG LQ WKH RIILFH RI WKH &KDQFHU\ &OHUN RI $OFRUQ &RXQW\ 6WDWH RI 0LVVLVVLSSL LQ ,QVWUX PHQW 1R DQG :+(5($6 VDLG 'HHG RI 7UXVW ZDV VXEVHTXHQWO\ DVVLJQHG WR &LPDUURQ

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

$179,500

CALL 662-415-9187

HOUSE FOR SALE

805 CONFEDERATE ST. 918 SQ. FT. 2BR, 1 BATH OUTSIDE SHED CARPORT STORM SHELTER 1/2 ACRE LOT $30,000.00 662-415-8335

& Business

GRISHAM INSURANCE

662-286-9835

li. ft.

1095 $ 1295 $

per sheet

169 Tile 69¢ ¢-$ 19 Laminate Floor From 79 1 $ 00-$ Pad for Laminate Floor 5 1000 $ Area Rugs 6995 $ Handicap Commodes 12995 $ 3/4â€? Plywood 2195 $ 1/2â€? Plywood 1650 $ 95 25 Year 3 Tab Shingle 46 sq. ft.

sq. ft.

sq. ft.

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

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand We Haul:

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

Loans $20-$20,000 CHRIS GRISHAM

Life

Auto Health

Medicare Supplements “I will always try to help youâ€? 1900 E. Shiloh Road • Corinth, MS 38834

per sheet

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

68%67,787(' 75867(( 6 127,&( 2) 6$/(

86 CR 173 CORINTH, MS

IN EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER HWY 72 EAST.

Home

each

per sheet

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

0955 LEGALS

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

Summer Time Savings!

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

FINANCIAL

PRIME LOCATION!

Smith Discount Home Center

Crossties ....................................

TRANSPORTATION

FOR LEASE

/$=< %2< 6XSUHPH (OHJDQFH IROG RXW VRID EHG FRXFK )LUVW JHWV LW

...

$3352; DFUHV LQVLGH &RULQWK &LW\ /LPLWV /RF DWHG RQ FRUQHU ORW RI +Z\ )DUULV /Q 2ZQHU %HWW\ 5REHUWVRQ

D L SO

,1&5(',%/( '($/ (DUWK WRQH IDEULF FRXFK /DQH WLHU HQG WDEOHV ODPS $// SFV IRU

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

0734 LOTS & ACREAGE

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

*22' 5811,1* PRWRU JDV RXW RI D )RUG ) FRPH FUDQN LW KHDU KHU SXU

$

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 dis-

LEGALS

crimination 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.

FOR SALE OR RENT

*$=(//(

2 X 4 X 92 5/8� Stud .....

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

Property Directory

'((3 )5((=(5 ZRUNV JRRG

412 Pinecrest Road 287-2221 • 287-4419

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED 0610 APARTMENTS

75($' 0,// NEW ENGLAND 410 single shot in great condition $175. 758&. /2$' FKLOGUHQ Call 662-720-6855 DGXOW FKDLUV IROGLQJ VWDFNDEOH ERWK PHWDO 3,17 -$56 /LGV QHHG SODVWLF H RU RU WR GXPS RXW ZDVK PRUH H RXW MDUV LQ D FDVH 7:2 WDOO 9LUJLQ 0DU\ SHU FDVH 6WDWXHV YDOXH REVERSE YOUR VHOO ERWK IRU

3& 3$7,2 6(7

; %85*81'< 5HG 7DQ *UHHQ DUHD VL]H UXJ

)5(( .,77(16 WR D JRRG KRPH &DOO

6+2:(5 &857$,1 /LQHU +RRNV

MOBILE HOMES 0675 FOR RENT

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

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

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

.

35 Year Architectural

Shingle ...........................................

$

5595

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

21500

$

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

CROSSROADS

Transform your existing concrete

CHIROPRACTIC, LLC

Staining - Scoring Interior - Exterior Brick & Tile Designs 2007 Roundelay Corinth, MS 38834

Brett McDuffy

mcduffy3@bellsouth.net

(662) 415-4396

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


6B • Wednesday, August 9, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

0610

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS

VACANCIES 795+$ ,6 &855(17/< $&&(37,1* $33/,&$7,216 )25 $3$570(17 68%',9,6,216

5(17 $6 /2: $6 $0(1,7,(6 $9$,/$%/( x1HZ &RPSOHWHO\ 5HQRYDWHG 8QLWV x3OD\JURXQGV :DONLQJ 7UDFNV x8WLOLWLHV PD\ EH IXUQLVKHG LQ VRPH DUHDV x/DXQGURPDW RQ VLWH x2Q 6LWH 6HFXULW\ x:DVKHU 'U\HU +RRNXSV x$SSOLDQFHV )XUQLVKHG x&HQWUDO +HDW DQG $LU $1' 0225((

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0955 LEGALS

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AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES 0848

AT BROSE AUTOPLEX

2017 ROGUE S

11

AT THIS

PRICE!

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

SALES PRICE.....*^^^$19,464

*#^^^$

6KDSLUR 0DVVH\ //& 68%67,787(' 75867(( 6KDSLUR 0DVVH\ //& 5LYHU 2DNV 'ULYH 6XLWH % )ORZRRG 06

19,464

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

2

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES...*$2,750 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$1,274 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE.....

*^^^$

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S SALE

WHEREAS, on July 28, 2010, Jonathan Hersey, (Grantor), executed and delivered to Don Detter, trustee, a deed of trust on the property hereinafter described to secure payment of an indebtedness therein mentioned owing to Fort Financial Credit Union, Fort Wayne, Indiana, beneficiary, which deed of trust is recorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument Number 2010003241; and

WHEREAS, Fort Financial Credit Union, legal holder and owner of said deed of trust and the indebtedness secured thereby substituted Arch Bullard as trustee by instrument dated June 27th, 2017, and is recorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument Number 201702546; and

18,776

18,776

#INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW

2017 SENTRA S

WHEREAS, said indebtedness has matured in its entirety and is now past due, unpaid and in default, the provisions of said deed of trust have been broken by said grantors and have not been cured and the said beneficiary, the present holder of said indebtedness, has requested the undersigned to foreclose said deed of trust pursuant to the provisions thereof to enforce payment of said debt;

*^^^$

STK# 2958NT 2958NT, 3090NT T • MODEL# 31357 • VIN# HN706067 • DEAL# 55879

BRAND NEW

2017 VERSA SV SEDAN w/ AUTOMATIC, AIR, POWER PKG & MUCH MORE!

NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that I, the undersigned substituted trustee, on August 31st, 2017, at the front doors of the county courthouse of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in the City of Corinth, Mississippi, within legal hours for such sale, will offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash the said property conveyed to me by said deed of trust described as follows:

Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

7

AT THIS

PRICE!

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

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

^^RATED 37 MPG HIGHWAY!

*#^^^$

14,944

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

3

AT THIS

PRICE!

BRAND NEW

AT THIS

PRICE!

SALES PRICE.....*^^^$17,999

13,750

13,750

STK# 3267N, 67N 3287N 3287N, 3318N 1 • MODEL# 11217 • VIN# HL846399 • DEAL# 44976

2017 MAXIMA S

w/ POWER DRIVER SEAT!

2

SALES PRICE.....

*^^^$

*^^^$

BRAND NEW

2017 ALTIMA 2.5S

NISSAN REBATES...*#$3,500 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$2,101 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

NISSAN REBATES...*$1,000 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$710 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

INCLUDES NAVIGATION!

^^RATED 39 MPG HIGHWAY!

*#^^^$

17,999

STK# 3200N, 3207N • MODEL# 13117 • VIN# HN311978 • DEAL# 54815

2

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES...*$2,000 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$2,860 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$750 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE.....

*^^^$

27,305

*^^^$

27,305

STK# 3305N, 3307N • MODEL# 16117 • VIN# HC423115 • DEAL# 49518

#INCLUDES $1000 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW

BRAND NEW

2017 NV200

INCLUDES NAVIGATION, REARVIEW MONITOR, BLUETOOTH & MUCH MORE!

2

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES...*$1,500 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$1,689 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$500 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SALES PRICE.....*^^^$19,716

2017 ARMADA PLATINUM w/ LEATHER SEATS, BOSE AUDIO, CAPTAINS CHAIRS, NAVIGATION, REAR DVD, SUNROOF & MUCH MORE!

GREAT FOR SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS!

*^^^$

19,716

STK# 3079NT, 3080NT • MODEL# 67217 • VIN# HK705513 • DEAL# 64412

2

AT THIS

PRICE!

NISSAN REBATES...*#$5,000 BROSE DISCOUNT...*$2,057 NNISSAN COLLEGE GRAD REBATE...^$1,000 BBROSE TRADE ASSIST PROGRAM...^^$1,000

SA ALES PRICE.....

*^^^#$

51,333

# INCLUDES $1500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

+:< ($67

&25,17+ 06

% %526(

ANNUAL MEETING, AUGUST 28, 2017

The members will elect two (2) directors each for threeyear terms to the offices now occupied by Danny Miller and Jerry Johnson. The members will also elect a director to fill the unexpired term of Joel Griffin, deceased, which office is now occupied by interim director Danny Bingham, and which term of office expires August 27, 2018. Nominations for each of these offices will be accepted at the Farmington Water Office located at 4100 CR 200 (Farmington Road), Corinth, Mississippi 38834 until 5:00 o'clock p.m., Monday, August 21, 2017. Thereafter, no further nominations will be accepted. Nominees must be Farmington Water Association members and shall be nominated by a member and endorsed by the signatures of no fewer than ten (10) other members. Nomination forms are available at the Farmington Water Office. Voting by the members will be by paper ballot at the Farmington Town Hall Board Room. No proxy voting is allowed, except the spouse of an absent member will be allowed to vote. The voting will take place on Monday, August 28, 2017, from 5:30 o'clock p.m. until 6:30 o'clock p.m. The votes will be counted at the meeting, and the candidate for each office receiving the highest number of votes will be declared the winner. The newly elected directors will take office upon verification of the results and certification of the winners by the Board of Directors. In case of a tie, a run-off election will be held on Tuesday, September 5, 2017, at a special meeting held for that purpose from 5:30 o'clock p.m. until 6:30 o'clock p.m. at the Farmington Town Hall Board Room. BOARD OF DIRECTORS FARMINGTON WATER ASSOCIATION Publication Dates: August 2 and August 9 Bowen Carman 1723 W. Quitman St. Iuka, MS 38852 662-593-3079 15991

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

$0(5,&$1 0,1, 6725$*(

51,333

*: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES, INCLUDING ANY HOLIDAY BONUS CASH, ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE PRICE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY; NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372, 38375, OR (&) 38852 WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIGNATED MARKET AREA (DMA) ALIGNMENT WHICH MAY AFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES, WHICH BROSE HAS NO CONTROL OVER. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 84MO, 5.5APR, TIER 1-2 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. #: INCLUDES THE NMAC FINANCE REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN. ^: SEE SALESPERSON FOR COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAM DETAILS. CERTAIN TERMS & CONDITIONS MAY APPLY. ^^PRICING INCLUDES BROSE TRADE-IN BONUS WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO HAVE A MOTORIZED VEHICLE TRADE IN TO GET THE LOWEST PRICE ADVERTISED. SEE SALESPERSON DETAILS. DEALS GOOD UNTIL 8.19.17.

TO ALL MEMBERS OF FARMINGTON WATER ASSOCIATION

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF WILLIE DEE MOORE, A part of the DECEASED Northwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 4 South, CAUSE NO.2017-288-02 Range 8 East, NOTICE TO CREDITORS Alcorn County, MS described as follows: LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATRIX having been granted on the 16 th day of June, Commencing at the North- 2017, by the Chancery Court east corner of the Northw- of Alcorn County, Mississippi, est Quarter of Section 5, to the undersigned as AdminTownship 4 South, Range 8 istratrix of the Estate of WILEast, Alcorn County, Missis- LIE DEE MOORE deceased, sippi, thence run West along notice is hereby given to all the North boundary line of persons having claims against the Quarter Section 1670 said Estate to present the feet, more or less, to the same to the Clerk of said point where the East right-of- Court for probate and regisway line of Alcorn County tration according to law withRoad 451 crosses the North in ninety (90) days after the boundary line of the said date of the first publication of Quarter Section for the this Notice, which is the 9th POINT OF BEGINNING. day of August, 2017, or the Run thence in a Southwest- same shall be forever barred. erly direction along the East THIS the 7th day of August, boundary line of said road 330 feet, more or less, to the 2017. North right-of-away line of a paved County road some- _Mattie Lee Moore__ times referred to as the Rine- MATTIE LEE MOORE hart Road, being Alcorn County Road 450; run thence Greg Meyer Law Firm in an Easterly direction along PO Box 656 the North right-of-way line of Corinth, MS 38835 said Rinehart Road 420 feet; 662-287-5620 thence run at a 90 degree angle from the paved County 3t 8/9, 8/16, 8/23/17 Road a distance of 300 feet, 15998 more or less, to the North Line of the Northwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 4 South, Range 8 East; HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY thence run West 400 feet, more or less, to the East STORAGE, INDOOR/ right-of-way line of Alcorn OUTDOOR County Road 451 and the Point of Beginning.

*#$

STK# 3006NT 3006NT, 2054NT NT • MODEL# 26517 • VIN# H9301774 • DEAL# 42517

ARCH BULLARD

Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of the members of Farmington Wa &RXQW\ 5RDG ter Association will be held &RULQWK 06 on Monday, August 28, 2017, %( at 6:00 o'clock p.m. at the Farmington Town Hall Board 3XEOLFDWLRQ 'DWHV Room for the purpose of -XO\ $XJXVW DQG election of directors and the transaction of any other business which may be properly considered by the membership.

2017 FRONTIER SV KINGCAB 2WD w/ AIR, POWER PKG, CRUISE, ALLOYS, BLUETOOTH & MUCH MORE!

_/s/ Arch Bullard

Publication Dates: August 9, 2017; August 16, 2017; August 23, 2017; and August 30, , :,// &219(< RQO\ VXFK 2017. WLWOH DV YHVWHG LQ PH DV 6XEVWLWXWHG 7UXVWHH 15994 :,71(66 0< 6,*1$785( RQ WKLV WK GD\ RI -XO\ NOTICE

BRAND NEW

BRAND NEW

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I will sell and convey only such title as is vested in me by said deed of trust.

6 7DWH $FURVV )URP :RUOG &RORU 0255,6 &580 0,1, 6725$*(

Signed, posted and published this 9th day of August, 2017.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY


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