082015 daily corinthian e edition

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Tishomingo County Mississippi Silicon investor dies while on business trip.

McNairy County High school officials address Pledge of Allegiance rumors.

Prentiss County Booneville residents to receive new garbage cans.

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Thursday Aug. 20,

2015

75 cents

Daily Corinthian Vol. 119, No. 199

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages • One section

Corinth police officer shot Hunt continues for suspect while officer recovers

Public expresses shock, support after shooting

BY STEVE BEAVERS BY ZACK STEEN

sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

A Corinth police officer is in good condition after being shot twice early Wednesday. Numerous law enforcement agencies spent the day searching for the person who shot officer Kevin Parker Jr. on Bell School Road at 4:40 a.m. Parker, a member of the department for around seven months, was struck once in the chest and another time in the left shoulder after a strug- Parker gle with the subject about 50 yards south of where Bell School Road meets McKewen Road. Parker, who lives in Tupelo, was airlifted to North Mississippi Medical Center following the shooting. Parker would have likely died at the scene from a gunshot to the heart without his bulletproof vest, according to Corinth Police Chief Ralph Dance. “The vest saved his life,” said the police chief. The bullet from the shot to the arm exited the shoulder, leaving a pair of bloodstains pinpointing where the struggle took place. “I commend Kevin, he is a heck of an officer,” said Dance. “Things could have been catastrophic.” The Corinth Police Department responded to a prowler complaint on Bell School Road at 2:30 a.m. prior to the shooting.

zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

police chief. “The subject then charged and attacked him, and somehow turned Kevin’s service weapon toward him.”

The Crossroads shed a tear Wednesday morning as news spread that a local police officer had been shot. Kevin Parker Jr., who has only been on the Corinth police force for about seven months, was shot twice during a confrontation with a prowler during the early morning hours. “My heart fell to my toes when I heard the news,” said fellow officer Chad Harville. “He is my brother in blue and it’s awful he was attacked, shot and left for dead.” Parker survived the gunshots thanks to a bulletproof vest, but remains in a Tupelo hospital. As area residents prayed for their fallen officer, many reflected on the violence. “The events that have occurred in the past few months involving the gang-related shooting and now the shooting of an officer honestly could have happened anywhere,” said Corinth Police Department clerk/dispatcher Megan Burns. “But with it being so close to home, it really hurts.” Burns said it was a call no one at the police department ever wanted to receive. “It was very alarming to all of us. We are all like a family at PD and when something like this happens, we pull together even stronger,” she added. “I am very thankful that Officer Parker is going to be OK and I am so grateful that his vest served its purpose and saved his life.” Farmington Baptist Church Paster Jarrod Cox said he was shocked when he first heard the news.

Please see PARKER | 2

Please see REACTION | 2

Staff photos by Steve Beavers

Corinth police officer Kevin Parker Jr. was shot twice by a male early Wednesday. Blood from a shoulder wound was still visible as of Wednesday afternoon on Bell School Road.

Officers with numerous law enforcement agencies were looking for a male who shot a Corinth police officer on Wednesday. “Officers responded and didn’t find anything,” added Dance. Parker returned to the area on patrol about two hours later when a black male, dressed in

all black and carrying a backpack, ran in front of his patrol car, according to Dance. “The officer blue lighted him and the guy turned around and walked toward him,” said the

Bulletproof vest saves officer’s life BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

It didn’t take long for Corinth’s new bulletproof vests to prove their worth. The city purchased new vests earlier this year, and they hit the streets in June. The vest worn by officer Kevin Parker Jr. while responding to a call early Wednesday now has a hole in the heart area. Mayor Tommy Irwin visited the injured officer Wednesday morning. Without the vest, Irwin said, he “would have been going to a funeral instead of a hospital room.” The Corinth Police Department has a “mandatory wear” policy regarding body armor.

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In March, Chief Ralph Dance asked the Board of Mayor and Aldermen to consider the purchase of more than 30 vests — enough to cover the entire force — at a cost of a little more than $20,000. The board approved the purchase of the Xtreme Body Armor vests, although it hadn’t been budgeted. It’s not that officers did not have vests, but those in use were getting old in terms of the manufacturer’s specifications — some had been on the street for eight to 10 years. Those might still work just fine at stopping a bullet, but the manufacturer only backs them for five years of use. “In not only the police department but also the fire department, you’ve

got to give the men and women the equipment they need to perform their job and especially to protect them,” said Irwin. The department also recently distributed expandable batons to officers. The impact weapon was needed to ensure all officers have a secondary weapon available alongside their firearm during times when extra staff is called into the line of duty and there aren’t enough Tasers to go around. The body armor worn by Corinth police officer Kevin Parker Jr. has a hole where an assailant shot him Wednesday morning.

25 years ago

10 years ago

Corinth’s Mickey Suggs gets his first hole-in-one on the par 3 fifth hole at Shiloh Ridge golf course. The feat is witnessed by playing companions Mike Crumby, Rick Johnston and Ronnie South Jr.

Nick Bain of Corinth is honored for academic success with a scholarship at the Mississippi College School of Law. Bain is in his third-year of law school at the college in Clinton.

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2 • Daily Corinthian

Local/Region

McNairy responds to pledge rumor BY JEFF YORK For the Daily Corinthian

McNairy Central High School students will continue to say the Pledge of Allegiance. A rumor making the rounds on social media claiming students would not be doing the patriotic pledge each morning was shot down by principal Mickey Murphy. The principal said the Pledge of Allegiance was to begin Monday when the school returned to having the regular morning announcements. The student-led pledge will be recited during the new home room time of 7:45 a.m.7:55 a.m. A Facebook post last week spread quickly through social media until a story on the McNairy Central Bobcats Facebook page helped stop the rumors. The post said the school had discontinued saying the morning pledge following a complaint by a student.

Murphy said that story was untrue. McNairy County’s Board of Education had already scheduled to hold its monthly meeting at the high school. The school board has rotated its meetings at the various schools in the county over the last few months. Murphy said the school had changed the morning schedule this year with home room being moved from 9:30 a.m. to just before the start of school. Students will now have 30 minutes of instructional time during the old home room time. For example, the seniors will go to “Senior Seminar� to help prepare them for the ‘Senior Projects.’ Juniors will go to ACT Prep to help them get ready for the state-mandated ACT. Murphy said the state will make it mandatory next year to have RTI during the school day and that MCHS is starting it a year early.

Thursday, August 20, 2015

PARKER CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Two shots were fired from the Glock 9mm handgun before the subject fled. Parker was able to fire one or two more shots at the man, but neither is believed to have hit him. “We have an army of people looking for him,� said Dance. The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, who is heading the investigation, is looking for a black male standing 5-feet-9 and weighing 250 pounds. Late Wednesday afternoon, Dance said he

learned the U.S. Marshals Service is putting up a $5,000 reward for information leading to the shooter. Agencies on site Wednesday were the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Marshals Service, Mississippi Highway Patrol, Mississippi High Patrol K9 Unit, Farmington Police Department, Mississippi Department of Transportation, Alcorn County Sheriff’s Department, Biggersville Fire and Rescue Rehab 1, Blackland Search and Research K9 Unit, and Mississippi Game and Fish.

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Master Sgt. Allen Lyles, an accident reconstructionist with the Mississippi Highway Patrol, locates and records evidence at the shooting scene.

REACTION CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

“I couldn’t believe it had happened in such a great small community, but then again, our community has been hit several times this year with sadness,� said Cox. “I worry greatly, because it seemed some people have lost respect for our officers. I am very concerned and will continue to pray for the family and for the people of Corinth.� Cox said his church planned a special meeting Wednesday night to pray for the local police and the community. Corinth business owner Chris Vandiver still feels safe in his hometown after the recent violence. “Corinth is a great place to live and raise a family. Vote for and Re-Elect

LOWELL HINTON

First District Supervisor May God Bless.

Paid for by Lowell Hinton

“ ... I know we will pull through this and be stronger than ever.� Alderman Ben Albarracin We have a police force to be proud of. They protect Corinth’s citizens with bravery and dignity not expecting any glory or reward for their actions,� said Vandiver, who owns Baskin Robbins on Harper Road. “I have seen our officers respond quickly to situations that would test the courage of any one. “I would like to send my prayers and appreciation not only to Officer Parker, but also all the other men and women that serve our city and county. Thank you for having the courage to respond and protect our homes, children, businesses and city against the few people who take their own freedom for granted.� Corinth Alderman Ben

Albarracin said he is praying for Corinth. “I know the Lord was protecting Officer Parker when he was shot trying to protect us — the citizens of Corinth,� Albarracin said. “It breaks my heart to see this kind of thing in my hometown, but I know we will pull through this and be stronger than ever.� By Wednesday afternoon, news of Corinth’s officer shooting spread. In Selmer, Police Chief Neal Burks said the incident happening so close to home is really having an impact on his officers. “It makes you stand back and think about what could happen at any time to an officer,� said Burks, who has been an officer for more than 50

years. “I caution my officers to always be careful when they are approaching a car.� According to Prentiss County Sheriff Randy Tolar, it takes men and women of great courage to knowingly put themselves in harm’s way every time they go on duty. “Law enforcement has always been a dangerous profession, but it seems like the danger has escalated in recent years,� he said. “I fear for every man and woman wearing the badge. Incidents like this can happen anywhere at any time and I pray regularly for their safety.� Downtown Corinth resident Brent Johnson may have summed it up best. “Officer Parker and the entire CPD do a great job protecting our streets, but it’s really sad when a few thugs can make life worse for the rest of us,� he said. (Brant Sappington and Jeff York contributed to this story.)


Thursday, August 20, 2015

Today in History Today is Thursday, August 20, the 232nd day of 2015. There are 133 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in History: On August 20, 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill paid tribute to the Royal Air Force before the House of Commons, saying, “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.” Exiled Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky was assassinated in Coyoacan, Mexico by Ramon Mercader, a Spanish Communist agent working at the behest of Josef Stalin. (Trotsky died the next day.)

On this date: In 1866, President Andrew Johnson formally declared the Civil War over, months after fighting had stopped. In 1953, the Soviet Union publicly acknowledged it had tested a hydrogen bomb. In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Economic Opportunity Act, a nearly $1 billion anti-poverty measure. In 1968, the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact nations began invading Czechoslovakia to crush the “Prague Spring” liberalization drive. In 1972, the Wattstax concert took place at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. In 1989, entertainment executive Jose Menendez and his wife, Kitty, were shot to death in their Beverly Hills mansion by their sons, Lyle and Erik.

Local/Region

Daily Corinthian • 3

Across the Region 5 elected to power association board IUKA — Five directors were elected to the Tishomingo County Electric Power Association this week. Steve Ratliff was elected to the fifth district seat defeating John Denson. Ratliff was the incumbent. In the area-at-large seat, challenger Charles Pardue defeated incumbent John Castleberry. Other unopposed seats included incumbents Jimmy Martin for the first district and Ricky Davis for the second district who will continue their positions. Other board members include Brett Malone for the third district, Nicky Cummings for the second district, Gerald Barnes for at large-fourth district, Jeff Holt for fourth district, Johnny Sims for at large-Prentiss, Kenneth Clingan for fifth district, Tommy Bonds for the third district and Gene Crane for the first district. More than 600 customersmembers voted in the election.

Police hunt suspicious man near playground SAVANNAH, Tenn. — Hardin County deputies and Savannah police are searching for a suspicious man who ran from officers near Northside Elementary

School Wednesday morning. A deputy approached the man who was seen walking towards the school’s playground carrying a plastic bag. The man than fled on foot into a nearby wooded area. Both departments searched the area for several hours, but were unsuccessful. Police advised school officials of the situation and to take precautions. No direct threat was made against the school or any student.

Belmont authority awarded grant TISHOMINGO COUNTY — A train authority in Belmont will receive a grant being awarded to fund maintenance and improvement projects on railroads. The Mississippi Department of Transportation is giving the Mississippi-Alabama Railroad Authority in Walnut $297,000 to replace 1,100 cross ties, switch tie rehab for three switches, ballast replacement and track surfacing. According to the Mississippi Transportation Commission, updating the railways is important because they provide an efficient and cost effective way of moving local goods from the state to other parts of the country.

Booneville residents to get garbage cans BOONEVILLE — City residents will soon have new garbage cans. Distribution of residential garbage cans to Booneville homes by garbage service provider Waste Connections is expected to begin no later than the first of next week, said Mayor Derrick Blythe. Once distributed residents will be required to place their trash only in the approved containers. Waste Connections officials have said they will be willing to pick up additional trash beyond the capacity of the can on occasion due to unusual circumstances, but if a household regularly exceeds the capacity they will be asked to get a second can. The board of aldermen voted in April to approve the contract adding $1.10 per month to residential garbage bills for the cans. If a resident needs an additional can they can receive it for an additional $5.48 per month. On Tuesday the board of aldermen approved a policy limiting distribution of the cans to residents who are current on their garbage bills. Blythe explained the policy will prohibit the cans from being provided to anyone who is behind on their bill and if trash is placed at the curb without the use of the provided receptacle the resident will face a fine under the city’s

littering ordinance. The mayor noted there are currently 18 customers significantly behind on their bills who owe the city a total of over $30,000 in unpaid charges.

Funding for STEM center renewed for three years OXFORD — The Robert M. Hearin Support Foundation of Jackson has awarded $1.6 million to the University of Mississippi’s Center for Mathematics and Science Education to support its efforts to improve STEM education statewide over the next three years. Over the next three years, CMSE staff plan to work more closely with the UM Department of Teacher Education. Through the grant, the center will collaborate with the department’s existing “Grow as a Group” initiative, a study of the professional development partnership possibilities when a school has a mathematics student teacher from UM who is part of its yearlong student teaching program. The program will help bring professional development opportunities to teachers at schools where student teachers are placed. The new grant will also help provide scholarships for K-12 students to attend numerous camps and learning activities at UM.

Mississippi Silicon leader dies on business trip Associated Press

OSCEOLA, Ark. — Steel industry leader John Correnti, who was the driving force behind three mills in eastern Arkansas and others out of state and an investor in the Mississippi Silicon plant in Tishomingo County, has died while on a business trip in Chicago. He was 68. It wasn’t immediately known what caused Correnti’s death on Tuesday; a public relations firm representing Big River Steel, of which he was the CEO and chairman, confirmed his death Wednesday. Correnti was in

Chicago to attend a board meeting of Navistar International Corp., where he was a director, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported. A perpetual entrepreneur, Correnti also was a minority investor in the construction of the $200 million Mississippi silicon silicon metal refinery in Tishomingo County. The plant was moved there after Correnti had a dispute with economic development officials in the Columbus area over missed deadlines and his refusal to put down a deposit on a po-

tential site. “When I heard about it, I just couldn’t believe it,” said chairman and CEO Tom Schueck of Lexicon Inc. and its affiliated companies, including Schueck Steel. He said he had seen Correnti a few weeks ago and spoke with him Aug. 13. “I didn’t think John was capable of dying,” Schueck said. Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson said in a Wednesday statement said his thoughts and prayers are withCorrenti’s family.

“I am saddened to learn of the death of John Correnti,” he said. “He has been called a “steel man’s steel man,” and indeed his name was synonymous with the steel industry. I know that the team he put in place in Osceola will assure the success of Big River Steel, which will be one of John’s lasting legacies.” Correnti helped guide the creation of the company’s $1.3 billion plant that’s still under construction near Osceola, plus two steel mills for Charlotte, North Carolina-based Nucor Corp. near Blytheville.

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Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Thursday, August 20, 2015

Corinth, Miss.

Rubio gets ‘black lives matter’ right I continue to be impressed with the courage and clarity with which Marco Rubio, the conservative young senator from Florida and Republican presidential candidate, takes on the most difficult challengStar es facing our nation. Parker I love his pro-life clarity and his uncompromising stand to Columnist defund Planned Parenthood. I appreciate the clear logic with which he explains the folly of our nation making deals and concessions with tyrannical regimes in Iran and Cuba, in the naive hope that they will change their ways. The other day Rubio appeared on Fox and was asked about the Black Lives Matter movement. His analysis was on target. The Black Lives Matter movement is fueled in large part by left-wing donors such as billionaire George Soros, whose Open Society Foundation donated $33 million to groups that engaged in Ferguson-related protests. But the sentiments (which the Black Lives Matter movement taps into and exploits) are very real, as Rubio accurately points out. This is a “legitimate issue,” he said. “It is a fact that in the African-American community around this country, there has been for a number of years now a growing resentment toward how the law enforcement and criminal justice system interacts with the community.” It’s “particularly endemic among young African-American males,” he continued, “that ... have a much higher chance of interacting with criminal justice than higher education.” Rubio spoke with candor and realism about a personal friend of his – a professional black male – who had been stopped “in the last 18 months eight to nine different times” for no reason. Many blacks will attest to this reality. A new Gallup poll surveying perceptions on how racial minorities are treated by the police shows 52 percent of blacks, compared to 78 percent of whites, think racial minorities in their areas are treated “fairly” or “very fairly” by the police. Forty-eight percent of blacks compared to 19 percent of whites think the police treat minorities “unfairly” or “very unfairly.” The mistake of conservatives over many years has been to ignore these very real problems and the destructive sentiments they produce, conceding minority turf to the left. This has hurt both the country and these communities, as we have expanded government programs and spent trillions of dollars that have not solved problems in minority communities. And in the course of it all, political operatives on the left have expanded their own power, wealth and influence. “(There is) a significant percentage of our population that feels that they are locked out of the promise of this country,” said Rubio. “There are a lot of different reasons .. not all have governmental answers.” The growth of government and moral relativism coincides with growing disillusionment throughout the country. From 1952 to 1998, according to Gallup, over 80 percent of Americans agreed with the statement that “there’s plenty of opportunity and anyone who works hard can go as far as they want.” By 2013 this was down to 52 percent. These trends take a particularly heavy toll in minority communities. Without faith, hope, a sense of meaning, a sense that personal choices matter and that effort pays off, individuals won’t strive to be free. The Black Lives Matter movement, which wants to push America to the left, works to convince minorities that these factors for freedom are not available to them. When a conservative senator such as Marco Rubio gives credence to minority grievances and frustration, he opens the door for delivering the conservative message they need to hear, which provides the only hope for solving their problems. (Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education. Contact her at www.urbancure.org.)

Prayer for today My Lord, I would remember to ask thee this morning for that of which I seem to have most need. May I have the will to keep my patience and realize the untold power of my words and actions. Give me thy peace, not only to rest in, but that I may have it to give to others. Amen.

A verse to share “I will mention the lovingkindnesses of the LORD, and the praises of the LORD, according to all that the LORD hath bestowed on us, and the great goodness toward the house of Israel, which he hath bestowed on them according to his mercies, and according to the multitude of his lovingkindnesses. “ Isaiah 63:7

Trump, Clinton: No embarrassment August is traditionally a vacation month, and East Coast elites, following European tradition, are thick on the ground in the Hamptons, Martha’s Vineyard (the Obamas’ choice) and Nantucket. But news keeps breaking out all over, at home and abroad this August. Actually that’s not unusual. Saddam Hussein overran Kuwait in August 1990; Hitler ordered the invasion of Poland in August 1939; the great powers of Europe went to war in August 1914. Nothing quite so momentous has happened so far this August. But the political world seems to be spinning out of control. Thus last week 24 million Americans watched the Fox News Republican presidential debate, an unprecedentedly enormous audience. And 6 million watched the 5 p.m. debate featuring candidates with low poll numbers. That’s 5 p.m. Eastern, 4 Central, 3 Mountain, 2 Pacific. How many Americans usually watch political debates at that hour? Undoubtedly many, perhaps most, of the 24 million tuned in to see celebrity billionaire Donald Trump, and they got quite a show that night and for days after from Trump’s twittersnit at Fox’s Megyn Kelly. But what did viewers think of the other 16 candidates? There’s no way to

know for sure, but polls show Trump’s support ebbing a bit, with others Michael (Carly FioBarone rina, Marco Rubio) Columnist moving up. Republican voters seem to be shopping around, kicking tires and checking out the odometers. Even bigger news came from the Democratic side when Hillary Clinton, more than two years after leaving office, turned over her private email server to the FBI. Nothing criminal about the investigation, Team Hillary says, and a media apologist says that the FBI is not investigating Hillary, but only Hillary’s conduct. This came after the revelation from the intelligence community’s inspector general that two of a small number of Clinton emails examined included information then classified as “top secret,” the second-highest level of classification. So much for her flat denial that she ever transmitted classified information on her home email system. “I think that in an age where so much information is flying through cyberspace,” one expert said as the court-martial of Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning opened in 2011, “we all have

to be aware of the fact that some information which is sensitive, which does affect the security of individuals and relationships, deserves to be protected, and we will continue to take the necessary steps to do so.” That expert was Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, as quoted by Glenn Greenwald. Greenwald, a defender of Manning, has a point when he criticizes the Obama administration for “wildly overzealous” prosecution of lower-level officials for mishandling classified information. And he has a point when he argues that by the same standard Clinton would be facing prosecution herself. Now many Democrats are still prepared to vote for Clinton on the grounds that, even if she lied, a Republican’s policies would be worse for the country. That’s an intellectually defensible position, though it suggests a certain discomfort. Which may explain the latest Boston Herald/ Franklin Pierce poll, which showed Clinton trailing Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders 44 to 37 percent in New Hampshire. Conservative analysts may be exaggerating Clinton’s plight when they ask whether her campaign is “imploding.” But it sure ain’t having a good week. Sanders, meanwhile, is

attracting huge crowds on the West Coast – much larger than Clinton’s or any Republican’s – with some 27,000 cheering him on in Los Angeles. But he also has some problems. He has been shouted down and off the stage by Black Lives Matter protesters, one of whom demanded four-and-a-half minutes of silence for Michael Brown, shot a year ago in Ferguson, Missouri. But what the protesters failed to note is that all the evidence indicates that Brown was shot after robbing a convenience store and assaulting a policeman, whom the Obama Department of Justice decided, rightly, not to prosecute. Clinton later met with Black Lives Matter leaders. Her near-unanimous support among black voters is her trump card against a Sanders insurgency. Hillary Clinton, like Donald Trump, has the strength of being incapable of embarrassment. But voters might prefer presidents who don’t embarrass themselves so often. (Daily Corinthian columnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics.)

Immigration – issue of the century “Trump’s immigration proposals are as dangerous as they are stunning,” railed amnesty activist Frank Sharry. “Trump ... promises to rescind protections for Dreamers and deport them. He wants to redefine the constitutional definition of U.S. citizenship as codified by the 14th Amendment. He plans to impose a moratorium on legal immigration.” While Sharry is a bit hysterical, he is not entirely wrong. For the six-page policy paper, to secure America’s border and send back aliens here illegally, released by Trump last weekend, is the toughest, most comprehensive immigration proposal of the election cycle. The Trump folks were aided by people around Sen. Jeff Sessions who says Trump’s plan “reestablishes the principle that America’s immigration laws should serve the interests of its own citizens.” The issue is joined, the battle lines are drawn, and the GOP will debate and may decide which way America shall go. And the basic issues – how to secure

Reece Terry

Mark Boehler

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editor editor@dailycorinthian.com

Willie Walker

Roger Delgado

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our borders, whether to repatriate the millions here illegally, whether to declare a Pat moratorium Buchanan on immigration into the Columnist USA – are part of a greater question. Will the West endure, or disappear by the century’s end as another lost civilization? Mass immigration, if it continues, will be more decisive in deciding the fate of the West than Islamist terrorism. For the world is invading the West. A wild exaggeration? Consider. Monday’s Washington Post had a front-page story on an “escalating rash of violent attacks against refugees,” in Germany, including arson attacks on refugee centers and physical assaults. Burled in the story was an astonishing statistic. Germany, which took in 174,000 asylum seekers last year, is on schedule to take in 500,000 this year. Yet Germany is smaller than

Montana. How long can a geographically limited and crowded German nation, already experiencing racial conflict, take in half a million Third World people every year without tearing itself apart, and changing the character of the nation forever? Do we think the riots and racial wars will stop if more come? And these refugees, asylum seekers and illegal immigrants are not going to stop coming to Europe. For they are being driven across the Med by wars in Libya, Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Yemen, by the horrific conditions in Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia and Sudan, by the Islamist terrorism of the Mideast and the abject poverty of the sub-Sahara. According to the U.N., Africa had 1.1 billion people by 2013, will double that to 2.4 billion by 2050, and double that to 4.2 billion by 2100. How many of these billions dream of coming to Europe? When and why will they stop coming? How many can Europe absorb without going bankrupt and changing the continent forever?

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Is the West still blind to reality, to the inevitable future that awaits if the West does not secure its frontiers and close its borders to mass immigration? Either Western nations take tough measures to secure their borders, or the Western nations will be swamped. The character of their countries will be altered forever, and smaller countries will become unrecognizable. And as this is happening, ethnic and racial clashes will become more common. “The principle that America’s immigration laws should serve the interests of its own citizens” is paramount, said Sen. Sessions. Sessions is right. America is our home. We decide who comes in and who does not, how large the American family becomes, whom we adopt and whence they come. It has become the issue of 2016. Indeed, it is the issue of the 21st century. (Daily Corinthian columnist Pat Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, author, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcaster.)

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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.


Thursday, August 20, 2015

State/Nation

Across the Nation Associated Press

Batgirl actress Craig dies at 78 NEW YORK — Yvonne Craig, who played the sexy, crime-fighting Batgirl in the 1960s TV hit “Batman,â€? has died. She was 78. Craig died Monday at her Los Angeles home from complications from breast cancer, her family said. She began her career as a ballet dancer, the youngest member of The Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, with which she toured for three years. Then she was discovered by Hollywood, appearing in a 1958 episode of “Perry Masonâ€? and in the 1959 feature “The Young Land.â€? But she was best known as Batgirl (and her alter ego, librarian Barbara Gordon, Commissioner Gordon’s daughter) in the 196768 season of ABC’s “Batman.â€? Another memorable TV role, from an episode of the original “Star Trekâ€?: the green Orion Slave Girl who wanted to kill Captain Kirk.

Prosecutor: Mom to blame in deaths BELLEFONTAINE, Ohio — A prosecutor says three young boys in Ohio died because their mother decided to suffocate them, not because children’s services or the legal system failed. Twenty-three-year-old Brittany Pilkington is jailed on murder charges in all three deaths in the last 13 months. No defense lawyer has been named. Logan County Prosecutor William Goslee said Wednesday that Pilkington said she

suffocated the boys because she wanted their father’s attention for her young daughter and herself. Pilkington called 911 as her husband tried in vain to revive their last baby boy on Tuesday in Bellefontaine.

Mormon women named to 3 panels SALT LAKE CITY — The Mormon church for the first time is appointing women to three high-level church councils previously reserved only for men. Scholars and Latterday Saint feminists say the move marks a small, but noteworthy step in an ongoing push to increase visibility and prominence of women in the faith. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced the appointments Tuesday evening. The three named to the councils that set church policy are presidents of key women’s groups. Linda K. Burton leads the religion’s Relief Society, the largest organization for women. Rosemary Wixom is the president of the General Primary, the branch dedicated to teaching children. Bonnie L. Oscarson leads the Young Women’s organization.

Search delayed for landslide victims ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The instability of landslide debris is delaying a search Wednesday for three men believed to have been buried at a neighborhood construction site in a rain-saturated southeast Alaska town. The plan is for crews in Sitka to use heavy

“TerriďŹ c Tuesdaysâ€? In August 6:30 P.M.

Daily Corinthian • 5

Across the State

equipment to clear a ditch to divert away stream water that is washing over the debris to stabilize the ground, according to Jeremy Zidek, a spokesman for the state Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management. “We don’t want to put additional people in harm’s way and compound the problem,� he said. City officials have identified the three missing people as city building inspector and fire marshal William Stortz, 62, and construction workers, brothers Elmer Diaz, 26, and Ulises Diaz, 25.

Associated Press

Sentence upheld in ’09 prisoner escape JACKSON — A state appeals court has upheld seven life sentences for a man convicted of helping his cousin escape when the cousin and another inmate were taken to an eye clinic outside a Mississippi prison. Courtney Logan of Louisville, Kentucky, remains in prison in Mississippi. After fleeing the doctor’s office in in 2009 in Greenwood, Mississippi, Logan and his inmate cousin, Joseph Jackson Jr., drove to Tennessee and were stopped for a traffic violation. While Nashville Police Sgt. Mark Chesnut checked their driver’s licenses, Jackson shot Chesnut five times, but the officer survived. In 2012, Logan was found guilty on five counts of kidnapping, one count of aiding escape and one count of being a felon with a firearm.

Prosecutor: ICE agent not charged DETROIT — A U.S. customs agent fatally shot a 20-year-old Detroit armed robbery suspect in self-defense and will not be charged in the killing, the Wayne County prosecutor said Wednesday. Terrance Kellom’s April 27 death came amid a national debate over police conduct — particularly toward black men. Kellom was black, as is the agent who shot him. “Yes, black lives matter,� prosecutor Kym Worthy said at a news conference. “Of course they matter. But you know what else matters? Credible facts matter. ... Doing justice matters and the truth matters.� Police say Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent Mitchell Quinn shot Kellom after the suspect lunged at the agent with a hammer during a raid at his father’s west side home.

William Rhodes, former senator, diesÂ

a son, Landon Rhodes, and two sisters.

Firm pleads guilty in pollution case GULFPORT — A Gulf Coast fertilizer manufacturer has pleaded guilty to polluting waterways, killing fish and destroying marshy areas around Bayou Casotte in Pascagoula. Prosecutors said in a news release that lawyers for Mississippi Phosphates entered the plead Wednesday before U.S. District Judge Louis Guirola Jr. in Gulfport. Last October, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. A bankruptcy judge has since approved a plan to sell the company. In December, the Pascagoula company stopped producing diammonium phosphate and let go most of its 200 workers. It has remained open with a small crew to meet federal environmental requirements. The company operated two sulfuric acid plants on an 8.5-square-mile bay west of Pascagoula at a deep-water channel with direct access to the

Gulf of Mexico.

Jury returns guilty verdict in death case BAY ST. LOUIS — A Hancock County jury convicted a man of murder Tuesday in the 2012 death of a Bay St. Louis businessman. The jury returned a unanimous verdict after deliberating for about two hours. The Sun Herald reports Circuit Judge Lisa Dodson sentenced Glen Davis, a habitual offender, to life in prison without the possibility of parole. Assistant District Attorney Chris Daniel said Davis had five prior felony convictions. Police discovered Maurice Colly, 83, dead in the trunk of his car parked in his garage on March 8, 2012. An autopsy revealed the cause of death to be multiple blunt force trauma injuries and asphyxiation. Davis testified Monday. He told the jury he had known Colly for years and that he often did work for him. He denied killing Colly.

VANCLEAVE — Funeral services were being held Wednesday for former Mississippi state Sen. William C. “Sonâ€? Rhodes, who died Sunday. He was 84. Rhodes, of Vancleave, served in the state Senate from 1972 to 1984 and was chairman of the Oil and Gas Committee. The Mississippi Press reports Rhodes was a lifelong resident of Jackson County and served with the U.S. Army during the Korean conflict. He also taught and coached football at East Central High School. His survivors include

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6 • Thursday, August 20, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths Iva Lou Tucker Hodges

TUPELO — A memorial service for Iva Lou Tucker Hodges, 80, is set for 2 p.m. Friday at Freedom Baptist Church in Amory. Mrs. Hodges died Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2015, at Sanctuary House in Tupelo after residing in Amory for the past 10 years. Born in Philadelphia on Aug. 18, 2015, she was also a former Corinth resident. She worked for the Riverside School District for 14 years before holding various other labor and service positions. She enjoyed spending her spare time cooking, sewing, gardening and spending time with family and friends. Survivors include two daughters, Linda Sue Hodges Knotts of Las Vegas and Debbie Ware Weaver of Pontotoc; one sister, Shirley Tucker Rock of Amory; one brother, Alton Tucker of Florence; three grandchildren; one great-grandchild; four nieces; and two nephews. She was preceded in death by her husband, Coleman Ray Hodges of Greenville, and her brother, Joe Franklin Tucker of Meridian.

Jerry Lee Sides

Services for Jerry Lee Sides, 60, were held on Wednesday at Shackelford Funeral Directors of Selmer with burial at Olive Hill Cemetery in Guys. Mr. Sides died Monday, Aug. 17, 2015, in Southaven. He was born in Memphis, Tenn., on Feb. 17, 1955, to the late Bill Sides and Opal Sowell. He was a self-employed welder who enjoyed fishing, playing chess and caring for his dogs. He loved life, taking with people and making them laugh. He served his country honorably in the U.S. Army for 12 years. Survivors include his wife Sides of 25 years, Lena Box Sides of Southaven; three daughters, Michelle (Sides) Haggard and husband Brian of Jackson, Tenn., Tonya Campbell and husband Barry of Corinth, and Amanda (Sides) Palmer of Corinth; two sons, Jerry Fowler of Henderson, Tenn., and Shannon Sides and wife Amanda of Corinth; two sisters, Shirley Jones and husband Marvin and Joyce Barnes, all of Memphis, Tenn.; a half-sister, Reese Louis of Memphis, Tenn.; a half-brother, Philip Cagle of Memphis, Tenn.; eight grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and a host of extended family and friends. Steve Brock officiated the service.

Marvin Cornelius

RIENZI — Services for Donald Marvin Cornelius Sr., 80, are set for 1 p.m. Saturday at Eastview Pentecostal Church. Visitation is Saturday from 11 a.m. until service time at the church. Mr. Cornelius died Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015 at his home. Magnolia Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Obituary Policy The Daily Corinthian include the following information in obituaries: The name, age, city of residence of the deceased; when, where and manner of death of the deceased; time and location of funeral service; name of officiant; time and location of visitation; time and location of memorial services; biographical information can include date of birth, education, place of employment/occupation, military service and church membership; survivors can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), and grandchildren, great-grandchildren can be listed by number only; preceded in death can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), grandchildren; great-grandchildren can be listed by number only. No other information will be included in the obituary. All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituaries will only be accepted from funeral homes.

“ARE YOU FOLLOWING CHRIST Jesus states in (Matthew 16:24), “Then said Jesus unto his disciples, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and FOLLOW ME�. What does following Christ involve? It involves being the servant of Christ. Jesus further stated, “If any man serve me, let him FOLLOW ME: and where I am, there shall also my servant be; if any man serve me, him will my Father honour.� (John 12:26). Consider the rich young ruler who came unto Jesus and asked him, “Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life? (Matthew 19:16). Jesus instructed him, “If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments� (Matthew 19:17). The young man said unto Jesus, “All these things have I kept from my youth up: What lack I yet? (Matthew 19:20). Jesus responded, “If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven, and come and FOLLOW ME� (Matthew 19:21). The scripture tells us that when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions (Matthew 19:22). Jesus saw two brothers (Peter and Andrew) who were casting their nets into the Sea of Galilee, and asked them, “FOLLOW ME and I will make you fishers of men� (Matthew 4:19). The scripture says “And they straightway left their nets, and followed him� (Matthew 4:20) On another occasion, Jesus asked another, “And as Jesus passed forth from thence, he saw a man, named Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom (place of toll) and he saith unto him, FOLLOW ME. And he arose, and followed him.� (Matthew 9:9). FOLLOWING CHRIST often involves leaving things of the world behind and focusing upon that which is spiritual. Note that those who followed were willing to leave their occupations, possessions, and family, to FOLLOW CHRIST. FOLLOWING CHRIST may involve persecution. Jesus said, “Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake, Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you.� (Matthew 5:11-13). Are you willing to give up things of the world to follow him? Jesus states, “For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul� (Mark 8:36). ARE YOU FOLLOWING CHRIST? OR FOLLOWING SATAN?

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Memphis to remove Forrest statue Associated Press

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A vote by the Memphis City Council has cleared the way for the removal of a statute of Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest from a public park. Council members voted 11-1 Tuesday to remove the statue of the rebel general, slave trader and

early Ku Klux Klan member, according to local news outlets. Chairman Myron Lowery, who sponsored the ordinance, said the vote reflected changing attitudes in Memphis. “I think his (Forrest’s) past has been well documented, and there should be no place to honor racism, bigotry and hate,�

Lowery said. Although the vote has concluded, officials say the statue’s future is uncertain. The city may need approval from the Tennessee Historical Commission, which next meets in October, to remove the statue. The vote follows the council’s July 7 approval

of a resolution to move the bodies of Forrest and his wife, Mary Ann Montgomery, from the park back to their original Memphis burial plot. The city needs support from the Forrest family and Chancery Court approval to move the bodies, which the cemetery agreed to do at no cost to the city.

New hole opens at site of fatal sinkhole BY TAMARA LUSH AND CHRIS O’MEARA Associated Press

SEFFNER, Fla. — Sometime after the sun came up Wednesday, a woman walking her dog past a fenced-off area in a sleepy suburban neighborhood near Tampa heard a loud rumble. She quickly dialed 911. The earth had opened, again. By Wednesday afternoon, a 17-foot wide and 20-foot deep sinkhole had formed in exactly the same place where a man was swallowed by the earth while sleeping in 2013. Hillsborough County officials said it’s likely the hole opened because of all the recent rains and that such activity isn’t uncommon. In March 2013, Jeffrey Bush was asleep in his bedroom on the property

when the floor collapsed and he fell in. His body was never recovered. His brother, Jeremy Bush, was in the house and tried to rescue him, even jumping into the hole. He was rescued by authorities as the ground crumbled around him. Jeremy Bush was seen at the site Wednesday. After the tragedy, officials razed the Bush home and two adjacent homes. A sinkhole remediation company filled the hole with gravel, and county officials said the company will study the reopening. “It’s not uncommon for this type of settlement to occur when voids like this happen,� said Michelle Van Dyke, a county spokeswoman. Wednesday’s sinkhole is on a vacant lot that’s now surrounded by a metal fence and landscaped

Blast tears off portion of hotel after evacuation Associated Press

SEATTLE — A powerful explosion tore through a Washington motel, critically injuring a gas company worker and knocking back firefighters just minutes after the manager evacuated the building because she could smell and hear a gas leak. Two people were unaccounted for of the roughly 65 guests at the Bremerton Motel 6, but they might not have been in the building at the time of the blast Tuesday night, said Al Duke, the city’s fire chief. The search would continue until they were located, he said. The blast on the west side of Puget Sound, across from Seattle, ripped off a 16-room section of the hotel that collapsed in a pile of rubble and burned for hours. Some firefighters at the scene were blown back 20 feet by the force, and others pulled smoldering debris from the building

to help contain the fire, Bremerton Fire Capt. John Hawkins said at a Wednesday news conference. Fire officials planned to go through the rubble. “The management did a really good job of getting the alarm in right away and getting the evacuation started,� Police Chief Steve Strachan said. Acting manager Tonya Hinds said in a telephone interview that a passer-by came into her office to say a gas line was leaking at the back of the building. Hinds — a former volunteer firefighter — said she went outside and saw that the leaking line was a big one “with a lot of gas.� The alarm came in just before 8 p.m., and the fire department and two Cascade Gas employees responded. The explosion came half an hour later, critically injuring one of the workers, who was flown to a Seattle hospital, Strachan said.

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with trees and shrubs. The sinkhole wasn’t visible from ground level, but aerial photos showed a tidy crater in the ground. The new sinkhole has led to no reports of injuries and no nearby homes have been evacuated, said Ronnie Rivera of Hillsborough Fire Rescue. Residents were painfully reminded of the tragedy that befell their quiet neighborhood two years ago. TV news trucks and reporters’ cars clogged the narrow street. And folks said the fact that the ground opened again made them nervous. “Well, it’s, um, not expected and you live your life one day at a time,� said 51-year-old Lisa Robinson, who lives a halfdozen houses away from the site and had lived in a different home in the area when the original sink-

hole happened. Robinson said that she’s only renting in the neighborhood and they’re not planning to stay. She added that she felt it odd that her dog, a beagle named Muppet, refused to go in the backyard the previous night and Wednesday morning. “I’m pretty certain Muppet knew something was going on,� she said. Sinkholes are so common in Florida that state law requires home insurers to provide coverage against the danger. While some cars, homes and other buildings have been devoured, it’s rare for them to swallow a person. Florida is highly prone to sinkholes because there are caverns below ground of limestone, a porous rock that easily dissolves in water.

Family donors important to Jeb Bush’s campaign BY JULIE BYKOWICZ Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Jeb Bush’s fundraising network is two generations in the making, and it shows. About half of the roughly $120 million raised to help him win the Republican presidential nomination comes from donors who previously gave to his brother or father, both former presidents, according to a new analysis of Federal Election Commission records by Crowdpac.com, a nonpartisan political research company. The finding puts a numerical exclamation point on the advantage Bush’s presidential family gives him when it comes to fundraising. In Crowdpac’s review of named contributors to three political committees helping Bush, $59.2 million came from firsttime Bush donors, while $60.3 million came from returning donors to the earlier campaigns of President George W. Bush, President George H.W. Bush or both. There are more than 1,800 men and women who have given to all three Bushes over the years, Crowdpac found. These loyalists are spread across the country, with a heavy concentration in Texas, where the two presidents began their political careers, and in Florida, where Jeb Bush served as governor. One such Bush family stalwart is Dirk Van Dongen, president of the Washington-based National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors. Van Dongen said he is

one of a “huge� network of volunteer fundraisers — called “bundlers� because they gather checks from friends and associates to turn over to campaigns — who sprang to action when Jeb Bush said at the beginning of the year that he was thinking about running. “It is a vast network built over decades and it has grown even larger since Gov. Bush announced his candidacy,� he said. Indeed, the money raised in the first six months of the year by Bush’s campaign, leadership political action committee and super PAC is more than double that of anyone else in the 17-person Republican primary race. Fundraising materials for Jeb Bush show clear echoes of techniques his brother mastered. George W. Bush’s 2004 re-election had a salesforce quality. Top George W. Bush money-raisers called “Rangers,� ‘‘Pioneers� and “Mavericks� were rewarded with perks like trips to meet with the president. Jeb Bush’s top fundraisers fall into NASA-themed categories called “Apollo,� ‘‘Endeavor� and “Voyager.� Bush invited donors who raised at least $27,000 in the first two weeks of his campaign to a retreat last month at his family’s property in Kennebunkport, Maine. About 300 of those donors mingled with the candidate and his top strategists in what attendees said had the feel of a family reunion, complete with Jeb Bush’s parents as special guests.

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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Rob Brown’s family and his Tee-Rage Photography business have moved into a historic home on Bunch Street. See Staff Writer/Photographer Kimberly Shelton’s story coming Sunday.

Teenage boys need reliable life advice D E A R ABBY: In my family alone, three young women have — by their own admission — gotAbigail ten pregnant purpose Van Buren on to get their boyfriends Dear Abby to marry and support them. None of these marriages worked out. The horrible relationships were and still are hurtful and damaging, not only to the children, but also to the rest of the family. I’m aware of several other women who have admitted to entrapping their baby daddy by “forgetting to take their pills,” so I know this isn’t just happening in my family. Contraceptive measures for boys are limited and fallible, and I am concerned. My nephews’ mother entrapped their now-absent father, so I doubt she’ll mention this to them. How and when does a relative talk to soon-to-be teen boys about entrapment? — ANONYMOUS RELATIVE DEAR RELATIVE: The subject of contraception should be part of an ongoing, age-appro-

priate conversation about sex and reproduction. Boys and girls mature physically earlier than they did decades ago, and because of the Internet they are often exposed to a wide variety of information. I do think a warning is in order because of your regrettable family situation. However, you should be aware that no law dictates that a man “has” to marry a woman (or girl) he has gotten pregnant. If a paternity test proves he is the father of the baby, he IS required to support his child until the child is no longer a minor. DEAR ABBY: My widowed mother-in-law began dating a man a few months ago. My husband and I are happy for her because he seems to be a good person. She really seems to enjoy spending time with him. We live in Michigan and she lives in South Carolina. She told me she has asked him to come with her the next time she visits us. I have no problem with this, but I do not want them to share a room in my home because they’re not married. I have boys who are 10 and 13, and I think it would send the wrong message. Yes, I know I’m old-fashioned. Talk about role reversal! How do I handle this? — STICKING

TO IT DEAR STICKING TO IT: Handle it by offering to make reservations for your mother-inlaw and her gentleman friend at a nearby hotel or motel. And if she asks you why, explain it to her as you explained it to me. DEAR ABBY: I have neighbors whose house I go to in order to see pay-per-view fights. I split the cost of the fights and food with them. The problem is, if anyone else comes over, they don’t pitch in. Also, they eat the food I just paid half of. Another issue is I eat for one and they eat for five, yet we split the cost down the middle. How do I resolve this? — SHORT END OF THE DEAL IN CALIFORNIA DEAR SHORT END: You could try duking it out, but the most effective way would be for you to discuss it with your neighbors, because I agree what’s happening doesn’t seem fair to you. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). If you want a cool accent, you have to go somewhere else in the world where the people don’t talk like you. It’s something to consider now, taking your act worldwide. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). No one who is adorable is trying to be, as adorableness relies on a certain unselfconsciousness. You’ll fall in love with some adorableness today. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). It’s not always better to give than to receive. Anyway, you have to understand the receiving end of things to give well. You can practice today by accepting the help you’re offered. CANCER (June 22-July 22). They’re all counting on you to bring the surprise, the distraction, the exciting thing that shakes up a routine that would, without you, be mind-numbing. You won’t disappoint. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Wisdom can come from foolishness,

even stupidity. Instead of seeking to follow a wise person, right now you will benefit more from being open to the ordinary people around you. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You can anticipate trouble without borrowing it. The trick is in anticipating a few different outcomes, most of them not troublesome at all, and having a prepared response for each. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). With your feet at home, your eyes are on the world. You have a feeling that what you need most right now is out there. You may find it on the Internet. Be sure to ask the people at home for an opinion. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You may be older than you were yesterday, but you are better, too. Things are looking up, and you’re taking the big strides you couldn’t have taken before. You know more, and so you do more. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You’re not sure you’re be-

ing taken for granted, but that’s the way it feels. Test the theory. Stop offering all that comes with being in a relationship with you. Pull back for a while to see what happens. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Friendship is fortified in laughter. The best part is that you don’t have to try hard to make your friends smile. Hilarity comes as a natural extension of your bond. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You have specialized knowledge -- you just don’t realize it right now because you haven’t needed to use it in your current environment. Get out there. Meet more people. Only then will you understand how unique you are. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). That adventurous spirit of yours sometimes leads you to swim with the sharks. Other times, like now, such a swim is simply necessary in order to get where you’re going. Luckily, not everyone in the tank will be ferocious.


8 • Daily Corinthian

YOUR STOCKS Name

P/E Last

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Our clients’ interests come first.

Chg Exelixis dd 5.72 Orexigen dd 3.32 -.20 Exelon 13 34.18 +.58 PNC 13 97.97 -1.03 ExpdIntl 23 49.79 +.13 PPG s 21 102.50 -2.07 -.08 PPL Corp -.28 ExpScripts 29 89.79 12 33.52 +.09 14 76.23 -1.67 PalatinTch -.18 ExxonMbl dd .97 +.03 11 31.61 -1.02 PanASlv -.60 FMC Tech dd 7.14 +.16 97 95.31 +.14 Pandora -.27 Facebook dd 18.93 +.04 53 164.95 -.71 PattUTI -.42 FedExCp 37 15.95 -.76 ... 15.09 -.23 PayPal n +.04 FiatChry n ... 37.19 -.80 13 20.99 -.17 PeabdyE -.24 FifthThird dd 1.40 +.28 (ULF 0 5XWOHGJH &)3Š FireEye dd 43.46 +.21 Pearson ... 18.09 -.16 $$06Š 16 49.94 -1.69 PennWst g ... -1.30 FstSolar .79 -.06 14 34.88 +.23 PeopUtdF -.01 FirstEngy 20 16.38 -.20 +DUSHU 5RDG 6XLWH Flextrn 12 10.96 -.13 -2.03 PetrbrsA ... 5.04 -.17 &RULQWK 06 12 43.27 -.62 Petrobras -.62 FrankRes ... 5.64 -.19 dd 9.73 -.19 Pfizer +1.74 FrptMcM 25 35.27 -.25 Freescale 26 36.48 -.32 -.05 PhilipMor 17 83.74 -.28 5.36 -.07 Phillips66 -.16 FrontierCm dd 11 80.80 -2.45 6WHYHQ ' +HIQHU &)3Š 10 48.55 -1.03 PiperJaf -.76 GATX 11 42.57 -.10 12 34.10 -.55 PlatfmSpc -.07 Gap dd 20.72 +.19 413 Cruise Street )RRWH 6WUHHW -.53 PlugPowr h dd +.09 GenDynam 18 152.75 2.19 -.07 Corinth, MS 38834 &RULQWK 06 19 27.88 -.07 Potash -.17 GenGrPrp 15 26.37 -.30 662-287-4471 25 58.53 -.41 PwShs QQQ q 110.13 -.39 GenMills -.73 -.08 PrecDrill -.07 GenMotors 12 31.63 11 4.42 -.18 &KULV 0DUVKDOO dd 4.94 -.09 ProLogis -.20 Genworth 21 42.11 -.14 ... 1.56 -.06 ProShtS&P -.16 Gerdau q 21.03 +.15 )RRWH 6WUHHW +DUSHU 5RDG 6XLWH Gevo rs dd 2.45 +.19 -.10 PrUltQQQ s q 76.98 -1.05 &RULQWK 06 12 116.21 -.85 ProUltSP s &RULQWK 06 +.05 GileadSci q 65.78 -1.06 ... 43.30 -.64 PrUltPQQQ q 114.40 -2.19 -1.37 GlaxoSKln 67 4.71 +.01 PUltSP500 s q 68.21 -1.62 -.29 GluMobile ... 3.05 +.27 PUVixST rs -.79 GoldFLtd q 26.80 +.99 dd 15.14 +.35 PrUCrude rs q 20.23 -1.89 -1.15 Goldcrp g www.edwardjones.com GoldmanS 12 200.95 -.23 ProVixSTF -4.26 q 10.85 +.21 33 694.04 +5.31 ProShtVix +.48 Google A q 91.84 -1.83 43 54.67 -2.82 ProctGam +.72 GoPro 29 74.12 -1.01 35 4.21 -.03 ProgsvCp +.03 Groupon 14 31.45 +.26 ... .32 -.03 ProUShSP -1.98 GulfCUDp q 20.48 +.32 Member SIPC 17 89.82 -.66 PUShtQQQ q 32.96 +.42 -1.35 HCA Hldg 51 40.70 +.05 PShtQQQ -2.26 HCP Inc q 22.42 +.42 -1.49 HainCeles s 40 64.15 +.50 PUShtSPX q 33.66 +.77 .84 -.06 PulteGrp -.09 HalconRes dd 16 22.02 +.12 17 39.30 -1.71 +.24 Hallibrtn Q-R-S-T -.18 Hanesbds s 35 30.90 +.52 12 49.20 -.33 QEP Res +.81 HartfdFn 39 13.18 -.24 dd 2.21 +.10 Qihoo360 -.96 HeclaM 52 60.35 -2.30 How should companies use their big piles of cash? ... 18.89 +.03 Qualcom -.20 Hertz 17 61.18 -.14 For years, dividends and stock buybacks have been the popular answer, and investors have loved it. 11 27.74 -.65 QuantaSvc 20 24.18 -.11 HewlettP -.31 Companies across the Standard & Poor’s 500 spent $903.7 billion last year on dividends and buybacks, 39 25.71 -.13 QntmDSS -.29 Hilton 19 1.13 +.05 and those companies have generally had the best performance. 24 122.76 -.04 RSP Perm 31 22.76 -.09 HomeDp -.85 But a different tack may soon prove even better. When interest rates are rising and the economy is -.05 Rackspace 38 31.72 +.61 improving, companies that use their cash on research and development, as well as on new -.95 HopFedBc 21 11.49 21 19.15 -.46 RangeRs -.79 HostHotls 51 35.98 -1.04 factories and equipment, are the ones that have historically done best, according to 1 1.70 -.14 RayAdvM -.06 HovnanE 28 7.62 -6.01 Goldman Sachs strategists. -.20 RioTinto -.26 HuntBncsh 14 11.64 That’s because these companies are better setting up their own sales and ... 36.57 -1.20 29 16.57 -.20 RiteAid +.12 Huntsmn 24 8.72 -.10 earnings to grow along with the economy, versus those spending on just -.63 RossStrs s 24 55.70 -.83 dividends and buybacks. The job market has recently improved I-J-K-L enough that many economists expect the Federal Reserve to -1.13 dd 1.87 +.10 RoyDShllA 12 54.57 -1.17 begin raising rates later this year for the first time since 2006. -3.22 IAMGld g 22 52.79 -.40 ... 9.73 -.11 RymanHP Goldman Sachs looked over the last 25 years for periods -2.56 ICICI Bk s SLM Cp 18 8.93 +.05 ... 15.78 -.22 -.27 ING q 173.74 -1.59 when interest rates were rising and measured the performance q 25.75 -.61 SpdrDJIA of companies that invested the most in their own growth versus -.04 iShBrazil q 108.55 +1.44 q 24.66 -.38 SpdrGold those that invested the least. The top spenders in the S&P 500 -.23 iShCanada q 271.41 -2.97 beat the index 80 percent of the time. q 37.52 -.28 SP Mid -.17 iShEMU S&P500ETF q 208.32 -1.66 q 27.21 -.29 -.42 iShGerm q 39.08 +.03 q 20.46 -.43 SpdrHome -.44 iSh HK Building up These companies have relatively high budgets for research, development R&D, capital -.51 q 12.72 -.14 SpdrS&PBk q 35.53 +.29 iShJapan and capital investments relative to their market size, according to Goldman Sachs. SpdrLehHY q 37.03 -.09 spending as iSh SKor q 47.85 -.32 +.24 -.66 percentage of Wednesday’s 1-yr stock Dividend Avg. broker q 10.10 -.09 SpdrS&P RB q 42.89 -.59 iSMalasia Company q 37.73 -1.47 rating yield market cap Close change iShMexico q 53.23 -1.00 SpdrOGEx +.37 q 19.71 -.11 Sell Hold Buy iSTaiwn q 13.05 -.20 SpdrMetM -.45 Ryder System (R) $86.53 -4.2% 1.9% 51% Salesforce dd 72.04 -.54 iShSilver q 14.57 +.35 -.99 17 25.95 -.13 iShChinaLC q 38.45 -.88 SallyBty Newfield Exploration (NFX) 33.93 -19.2 0.0 36 -.89 22 53.81 -3.09 iSCorSP500 q 209.57 -1.70 SanDisk -.19 .48 -.03 General Motors (GM) 31.63 -8.5 4.6 31 iShEMkts q 34.33 -.43 SandRdge dd -.17 22 80.67 -2.48 iShiBoxIG q 115.91 +.56 Schlmbrg -.07 Murphy Oil (MUR) 30.63 -49.4 4.6 30 q 29.79 -.32 iSh20 yrT q 124.76 +1.22 SchwIntEq -.53 Schwab 35 33.10 -.82 iShIntSelDv q 30.71 -.16 Apache (APA) 45.81 -53.9 2.2 26 -1.88 ... 9.52 -.48 iS Eafe q 62.84 -.56 ScorpioTk -.66 Exelon (EXC) 34.18 6.9 3.6 26 3 7.45 -.34 iShiBxHYB q 86.19 -.08 SeadrillLtd -.20 9 49.43 -2.62 iShIndia bt q 30.21 +.12 SeagateT Stan Choe; Jenni Sohn • AP Sources: Goldman Sachs; FactSet -.18 72 19.47 +.52 iShR2K q 119.41 -1.25 SeaWorld -.16 iShREst q 76.16 -.42 SilvWhtn g 23 13.88 +.23 +.02 43 3.90 -.04 iShHmCnst q 29.74 +.02 SiriusXM +.04 Infosys s 12 18.16 +.16 SkywksSol 23 87.23 +1.53 NDEXES -.38 61 48.65 +.15 IngrmM 21 26.22 -.20 Solera -.23 52-Week Net YTD 52-wk 13 6.25 -.35 IntgDv 24 18.35 +.31 SouFun -.83 IBM High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg -.30 13 153.94 -2.07 SthnCopper 17 26.69 -.70 Invesco 17 40.45 +.26 18,351.36 15,855.12 Dow Industrials 15 36.66 -.56 SwstAirl 17,348.73 -162.61 -.93 -2.66 +2.18 -1.70 iSh UK -.33 q 17.93 -.29 SwstnEngy 13 17.30 9,310.22 7,700.57 Dow Transportation 8,299.99 -61.05 -.73 -9.19 -1.90 -.80 iShCorEM SpectraEn 21 28.96 -.50 q 41.70 -.55 657.17 542.13 Dow Utilities 607.92 +2.65 +.44 -1.64 +9.35 -3.43 iShCHEmu 35 10.48 -.07 q 27.24 -.45 SpiritRltC -.25 ItauUnibH 11,254.87 9,886.08 NYSE Composite 10,687.02 -105.77 -.98 -1.40 -2.40 dd 4.92 +.06 ... 7.48 -.25 Sprint -.08 JD.com 5,231.94 4,116.60 Nasdaq Composite 5,019.05 -40.30 -.80 +5.98 +10.88 q 45.12 -.56 ... 26.78 +.16 SP Matls -1.34 JPMorgCh 12 67.60 2,134.72 1,820.66 S&P 500 2,079.61 -17.31 -.83 +1.01 +4.69 q 75.72 -.31 -.61 SP HlthC -4.49 JPMAlerian 1,551.28 1,269.45 S&P MidCap 1,491.21 -15.84 -1.05 +2.67 +4.67 q 36.36 -.65 SP CnSt q 49.50 -.46 -1.14 JetBlue 22,537.15 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000 21,874.91 -188.80 -.86 +.95 +4.01 18 23.94 -.10 SP Consum q 79.04 -.14 +.47 JohnJn 1,296.00 1,040.47 Russell 2000 1,202.98 -11.91 -.98 -.14 +3.93 17 99.31 -.06 SP Engy q 67.32 -1.91 +.03 JohnsnCtl 19 44.62 -.90 SP Inds q 54.04 -.51 -1.28 Jumei Intl 39 16.73 +.03 SP Tech q 42.16 -.28 17,640 -1.14 JnprNtwk Dow Jones industrials dd 28.05 -.07 SP Util q 45.87 +.19 +2.94 KB Home 22 16.17 -.24 StdPac 18 9.30 +.07 Close: 17,348.73 17,380 -.23 KKR 13 21.50 -.40 Staples 94 14.12 -.03 Change: -162.61 (-0.9%) -.15 KateSpade 30 19.75 -.66 Starbucks s 27 57.59 -.24 -.01 Kellogg 17,120 10 DAYS 64 68.95 -.35 Statoil ASA ... 15.18 -.60 18,600 -.26 KeurigGM 14 49.46 -.78 Stryker 43 104.53 +.22 +.25 KeyEngy dd .72 -.04 Suncor g ... 26.86 -.99 -.60 Keycorp 18,300 14 14.64 -.17 SunEdison dd 13.47 -1.03 -2.90 Kimco 20 25.40 -.26 SunTrst 13 43.83 -.43 -.42 KindMorg 44 33.58 -.36 SupEnrgy 18,000 dd 15.65 -.41 -.09 Kinross g dd 2.08 +.08 SwiftTrans 16 22.08 -1.22 -.45 Kohls 13 54.74 -.71 Symantec 20 21.86 +.21 17,700 -.55 KraftHnz n ... 74.78 -.41 Sysco 25 40.96 -.19 -.30 LVSands 17 50.69 -1.13 TD Ameritr 24 34.93 -.79 17,400 -.04 LendingC n ... 12.74 -.56 TECO 53 21.91 -.09 -.11 LennarA 18 54.99 -.60 TJX 23 74.87 -1.91 -.81 LinearTch 17,100 19 40.33 -.20 TaiwSemi ... 19.91 -.12 F M A M J J A -.95 LinnEngy dd 2.58 -.30 Tarena 23 8.71 -3.47 +.35 LinnCo dd 2.48 -.27 Target dd 80.87 +.57 -.61 LockhdM 19 211.28 -1.39 TataMotors ... 26.51 -.26 -.31 LyonBas A TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST 9 84.93 -1.25 TeckRes g ... 6.49 +.04 -1.83 Tenaris ... 25.58 -.54 M-N-O-P YTD YTD -.26 Teradyn 34 18.25 -.20 Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg -2.17 MBIA 4 6.54 -.17 TeslaMot dd 255.25 -5.47 +.64 MGM Rsts dd 22.07 -.41 .48 15 14.50 -.24 -2.6 1.56 11 63.05 -1.53 +3.2 OldNBcp TevaPhrm 22 69.57 +.54 AFLAC -.18 Macys 15 62.39 -.28 1.88 34 34.36 +.01 +2.3 Penney TexInst 18 49.20 -.71 AT&T Inc ... ... 8.49 -.20 +31.0 +.09 MagHRes dd .86 -.07 ... ... 21.77 -.41 +19.0 3D Sys dd 12.57 -.57 AerojetR -.03 MannKd dd 3.99 -.07 2.44 11 16.29 +.36 -22.8 3M Co 19 145.87 -1.41 AirProd 3.24 29 144.65 -1.38 +.3 PennyMac -.14 MarathnO 9 16.23 -1.25 TimeWarn 18 77.82 -1.19 AlliantEgy 2.20 18 62.49 +.16 -5.9 PepsiCo 2.81 23 98.99 -.78 +4.7 -.94 MarathPt s 9 54.50 -.98 20 41.68 -.20 AEP +.22 MVJrGold 2.12 16 58.80 +.53 -3.2 PilgrimsP q 21.62 +.70 TollBros 5.77e 7 22.14 -.72 -20.0 dd 13.65 -.42 +.38 MktVGold q 15.20 +.43 Transocn AmeriBrgn 1.16 ... 106.14 +1.19 +17.7 42 19.96 -.02 -.26 MV OilSvc .24 14 10.25 -.25 -2.9 q 29.85 -1.04 TrimbleN 1.56 19 57.47 +.17 +3.1 RegionsFn 9.40 -.93 ATMOS -.05 MV Semi q 49.63 -.51 TrinaSolar 16 1.08f 14 39.58 -.51 +1.8 SbdCp 3.00 14 3349.00 -9.00 -20.2 30 3.04 -.06 BB&T Cp +.55 MktVRus q 15.69 -.45 TurqHillRs 2.40 ... 34.66 -.59 -9.1 7 29.96 -.23 BP PLC -1.56 MartMM 55 170.89 -4.80 21stCFoxA SearsHldgs ... ... 23.34 -.74 -29.2 7 29.81 -.24 BcpSouth .40f 18 24.60 -.52 +9.3 -.28 MarvellT 14 11.91 -.25 21stCFoxB 2.68 29 281.92 -3.15 +7.2 dd 27.61 -.69 Caterpillar 3.08f 13 77.41 -1.41 -15.4 Sherwin -.30 Masco 12 28.09 -.26 Twitter 13 43.18 +.31 Chevron -.41 MasterCrd 29 96.60 -1.00 Tyson 4.28 13 80.91 -2.53 -27.9 SiriusXM ... 43 3.90 -.04 +11.4 -1.56 Mattel 19 22.51 -.39 CocaCola 1.32 24 40.78 -.52 -3.4 U-V-W-X-Y-Z SouthnCo 2.17 19 46.31 +.24 -5.7 -.30 McDrmInt dd 4.14 -.15 1.00 18 59.92 +.23 +3.3 29 35.08 -.59 Comcast +1.06 MeadJohn 23 82.40 -1.31 UDR .43e ... 25.05 -.23 +1.3 CrackerB 4.40f 23 150.31 +.33 +6.8 SPDR Fncl UnionPac 16 92.16 -.62 +.41 MedProp 24 12.73 +.12 UtdContl 8 58.23 -.28 Deere 2.40 13 91.98 -1.93 +4.0 Torchmark .54 15 62.52 -.11 +15.4 +.32 Medtrnic 29 77.47 -.62 UPS B 24 102.31 -.45 Dillards .24 12 96.70 -1.02 -22.8 +.26 MelcoCrwn 26 20.62 -.48 Total SA 2.93e ... 47.68 -.34 -6.9 US OilFd q 13.43 -.62 Dover 1.68f 14 62.78 -1.19 -12.5 +.31 Merck 17 59.66 dd 17.03 -1.43 -.39 +.9 -1.02 MetLife 10 53.63 -.65 USSteel EnPro .80 ... 49.80 -.91 -20.7 US Bancrp 1.02f 14 45.36 14 98.21 -1.20 -.90 MKors 10 43.18 +.30 UtdTech .60 16 14.77 -.06 -4.7 WalMart 1.96 14 68.57 -.91 -20.2 20 123.22 -2.28 FordM -2.04 MicronT 5 15.90 -.48 UtdhlthGp .24 ... 14.64 +.13 -15.9 18 30.95 -.60 FredsInc -2.54 Microsoft 32 46.61 -.66 UrbanOut WellsFargo 1.50 14 57.06 -.48 +4.1 .52 30 38.60 -.56 -13.3 ... 4.85 -.23 FullerHB -2.19 Mobileye ... 59.19 -3.84 Vale SA Vale SA pf ... 3.87 -.15 .22 33 9.65 -.13 +6.9 GenElec .92 ... 25.73 -.34 +1.8 Wendys Co -3.25 Mondelez 36 45.21 -.94 8 67.87 -1.60 Goodyear .24 3 32.22 -.44 +12.8 WestlkChm +.26 Monsanto 19 102.35 -.46 ValeroE .66 12 57.62 -.99 -5.7 q 35.52 -.49 HonwllIntl -.49 MorgStan 11 37.44 -.38 VangEmg 2.07 19 105.04 -1.17 +5.1 q 53.88 -.52 WestRock n 1.50 ... 62.07 -1.09 -2.1 13 42.57 -1.02 VangEur +.39 Mosaic Intel .96 12 28.36 -.55 -21.9 q 39.08 -.32 10 30.63 -1.07 VangFTSE +1.55 MurphO 1.16 30 30.91 -.24 -13.9 Jabil .32 22 19.55 -.04 -10.4 Weyerhsr Ventas 39 60.05 +.25 25 55.09 -.66 +.05 Mylan NV 3.52 62 115.37 -.67 -.1 Xerox ... 8.67 -.04 KimbClk .28 20 11.24 -.08 -18.9 84 20.96 -.03 Vereit +4.50 NRG Egy .42f 20 37.36 -1.24 +16.4 -.02 Kroger s ... 87.01 -1.33 VerizonCm 20 47.44 -.62 NXP Semi YRC Wwde ... 80 18.44 -1.23 -18.0 ViacomB 10 43.13 -.11 Lowes 1.12f 27 74.37 +1.35 +8.1 dd 10.35 -.51 +.01 Nabors dd 5.23 -.26 McDnlds 3.40 23 101.10 +.34 +7.9 Yahoo ... 5 35.19 -.50 -30.3 ... .83 +.03 VimpelCm -.75 NBGreece 50 19.00 -.03 9 39.09 -.64 Vipshop s +.97 NOilVarco Visa s 30 74.40 -.07 17 12.60 -.15 -.32 NatPenn ... 36.97 -.58 17 29.78 -.50 Vodafone +.22 NetApp 10 44.65 -.37 Netflix s cc 122.06 -1.99 VoyaFincl VulcanM cc 96.80 -2.25 NwGold g dd 2.37 +.04 7.72 -.55 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) -.69 NwResd rs 8 15.07 +.23 WPX Engy dd AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) -.53 -.34 NY CmtyB 16 18.18 -.30 WalgBoots 31 91.41 Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg WeathfIntl dd 9.09 -.53 -.27 NewfldExp dd 33.93 -1.37 13 81.71 -1.60 S&P500ETF 1601539 208.32 -1.66 CelsusTh h 3.96 +2.94 +287.7 RayAdvM 7.62 -6.01 -44.1 -3.34 NewmtM 19 17.93 +.39 WDigital -.43 iShEMkts 1017350 34.33 -.43 DotHillSys 9.68 +4.50 +86.9 Tarena -.67 NiSource s 13 17.81 +.07 WstnUnion 12 19.95 8.71 -3.47 -28.5 -1.17 NikeB 31 114.96 +.14 WhiteWave 52 46.52 -1.72 B iPVixST 837711 16.26 +.29 ArchCoal rs 2.28 +.81 +55.1 AltisrcAst 43.01 -17.00 -28.3 -.41 NobleCorp dd 12.40 -.37 WhitingPet 44 17.73 -1.44 BkofAm 33.60 -7.99 -19.2 773214 17.46 -.23 Abeona wt 2.18 +.60 +38.0 Flexstl -.57 MktVGold +.71 NobleEngy 19 34.22 -.88 WholeFood 20 32.79 -.95 -18.6 528466 15.20 +.43 CorbusPhm 2.50 +.64 +34.4 EvokePhm 4.16 96 53.01 -.85 -.31 NokiaCp ... 6.46 -.14 WmsCos DxGldBull 479739 4.38 +.32 ChHouLd rs 2.23 +.56 +33.7 CdnSolar 20.20 -4.49 -18.2 6.29 -.22 -2.24 NorthropG 18 175.62 +.12 Windstm rs dd TownSprts 2.61 +.64 +32.5 ChinaDEd 9.50 -2.00 -17.4 Apple Inc 464411 115.01 -1.49 +.38 NStarRlt dd 15.34 -.25 WT EurHdg q 60.95 -1.11 -.45 -16.7 457546 12.72 -.14 SthcrssEn 8.98 +1.95 +27.7 Medgen wt 2.25 q 56.09 -.96 iShJapan -.38 Novavax dd 13.12 -.37 WTJpHedg -.99 -15.5 q 21.34 +.04 SPDR Fncl 448225 25.05 -.23 CitiTrends 28.46 +5.72 +25.2 BaytexE g 5.40 Nvidia 21 22.99 -.09 WT India 3.58 +.57 +18.9 DxNGBll rs 6.16 -1.07 -14.8 422054 4.92 +.06 MYOS 20 36.32 +.41 Sprint -.39 OasisPet 4 10.18 -.46 XcelEngy 19 42.50 -.46 -.40 OcciPet 19 72.16 -1.63 Xilinx dd 2.29 +.07 -.67 OfficeDpt YSE IARY dd 7.56 -.10 Yamana g ASDA IARY ... 11.91 -.55 -.73 Omeros dd 22.52 -2.51 Yandex 802 Total issues 3,237 Advanced 735 Total issues 2,942 39 86.09 +1.89 Advanced -.33 OnSmcnd 28 9.67 -.18 YumBrnds 2,320 New Highs 36 Declined 2,059 New Highs 32 27 30.09 -.51 Declined -6.63 ONEOK 23 34.99 -.63 ZionsBcp 115 New Lows 285 Unchanged 148 New Lows 160 dd 9.32 -.47 Unchanged -.40 OpkoHlth dd 12.63 -.12 Ziopharm Volume 3,457,898,357 Volume 1,741,776,889 -.07 Oracle dd 2.58 -.04 18 39.53 -.30 Zynga

Housing monitor

Today

Business

The pace of U.S. home sales has been mostly accelerating this year, pushing home prices higher. Sales of previously occupied homes climbed 3.2 percent in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.49 million, the highest rate since February 2007. Sales have jumped 9.6 percent over the past 12 months. Did the trend continue in July? Find out today, when the National Association of Realtors delivers its latest home sales data.

Spending priorities

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Thursday, August 20, 2015

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13.54 -0.09 +8.8 -0.23 +5.3 Prudential Investmen JenMidCapGrZ 42.04 -0.26 +5.0 14.29 +0.03 +1.1 -2.36 +21.6 TotRetBdZ

Better quarter?

Economic bellwether

PCs and printers.

Economists predict that a gauge of the U.S. economy’s health notched a slight gain last month. The Conference Board is due to report today its latest index of leading indicators. The index, which is derived from data that for the most part have already been reported individually, is designed to anticipate economic conditions three to six months out.

HPQ $27.74 Hewlett-Packard reports $50 $35.34 fiscal third-quarter earnings 40 today. The personal computer 30 and printer maker has been ’15 struggling to boost its sales 20 this year at the same time est. Operating $0.89 $0.85 that it takes steps to split up EPS its operations. Last month it 3Q ’14 3Q ’15 filed paperwork to create a Price-earnings ratio: 11 new entity that will sell based on past 12-month results commercial technology, while Dividend: $0.70 Div yield: 2.5% a separate spinoff will sell Source: FactSet

Putnam CpSpctrmY 38.05 -0.21 GrowIncA m 21.32 ... NewOpp 83.41 -0.67 Schwab 1000Inv d 53.80 -0.45 FUSLgCInl d 15.09 -0.15 S&P500Sel d 32.89 -0.27 Sequoia Sequoia 270.61 -2.79 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 74.91 -0.42 CapApprec 27.74 -0.13 EmMktStk d 29.80 -0.35 EqIndex d 56.14 -0.47 EqtyInc 31.43 -0.31 GrowStk 58.16 -0.35 HealthSci 82.65 -0.59 HiYield d 6.60 -0.01 InsLgCpGr 30.65 -0.19 IntlBnd d 8.43 +0.04 IntlGrInc d 14.40 -0.14 IntlStk d 16.27 -0.17 LatinAm d 17.85 -0.35 MidCapE 47.24 -0.34 MidCapVa 29.02 -0.23 MidCpGr 82.42 -0.58 NewHoriz 47.24 -0.45 NewIncome 9.49 +0.02 OrseaStk d 9.84 -0.08 R2015 14.68 -0.07 R2025 16.10 -0.09 R2035 17.19 -0.12 Real d 27.19 -0.19 Rtmt2010 17.91 -0.06 Rtmt2020 21.13 -0.11 Rtmt2030 23.67 -0.16 Rtmt2040 24.73 -0.19 Rtmt2045 16.54 -0.13 ShTmBond 4.75 +0.01 SmCpStk 44.59 -0.46 SmCpVal d 46.13 -0.38 SpecInc 12.38 -0.01 Value 34.86 -0.36 TCW TotRetBdI 10.32 +0.03 TIAA-CREF BdIdxInst 10.86 +0.04 EqIx 15.89 -0.14 IntlE d 18.35 -0.17 Templeton InFEqSeS 20.60 -0.18 Thornburg IncBldA m 20.83 -0.18 IncBldC m 20.82 -0.18 IntlI 30.60 -0.29 LtdTMul 14.46 ... Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 26.30 -0.25 Vanguard 500Adml 192.43 -1.60 500Inv 192.41 -1.59 BalIdxAdm 29.94 -0.11 BalIdxIns 29.94 -0.11 BdMktInstPls 10.79 +0.04 CAITAdml 11.71 ... CapOpAdml 125.62 -0.77 DevMktIdxAdm 12.55 -0.11 DevMktIdxInstl 12.57 -0.11 DivGr 23.03 -0.20 EmMktIAdm 29.76 -0.34 EnergyAdm 86.84 -2.35 EqInc 30.87 -0.28 EqIncAdml 64.70 -0.60 ExplAdml 89.37 -0.92 ExtdIdAdm 68.53 -0.67 ExtdIdIst 68.53 -0.68 ExtdMktIdxIP 169.13 -1.67 FAWeUSIns 91.86 -0.86 GNMA 10.71 +0.03 GNMAAdml 10.71 +0.03 GrthIdAdm 56.28 -0.37 GrthIstId 56.28 -0.37 HYCorAdml 5.83 -0.01 HltCrAdml 100.91 -0.47 HlthCare 239.17 -1.10 ITBondAdm 11.44 +0.05 ITGradeAd 9.75 +0.03 InfPrtAdm 25.82 +0.09 InfPrtI 10.52 +0.04 InflaPro 13.14 +0.04 InstIdxI 190.56 -1.58 InstPlus 190.58 -1.58 InstTStPl 47.37 -0.41 IntlGr 21.80 -0.23 IntlGrAdm 69.36 -0.73 IntlStkIdxAdm 25.91 -0.25 IntlStkIdxI 103.63 -0.97 IntlStkIdxIPls 103.65 -0.97 IntlVal 34.41 -0.32 LTGradeAd 10.23 +0.07 LifeCon 18.47 -0.04 LifeGro 28.95 -0.20 LifeMod 24.18 -0.10 MidCapIdxIP 173.38 -1.40 MidCpAdml 159.12 -1.28 MidCpIst 35.15 -0.28 MorgAdml 85.35 -0.55 MuHYAdml 11.14 ... MuIntAdml 14.10 ... MuLTAdml 11.59 ... MuLtdAdml 10.99 ... MuShtAdml 15.81 ... PrecMtls 7.51 +0.07 Prmcp 104.36 -0.60 PrmcpAdml 108.16 -0.62 PrmcpCorI 21.78 -0.14 REITIdxAd 113.64 -0.74 REITIdxInst 17.59 -0.11 S/TBdIdxInstl 10.52 +0.02 STBondAdm 10.52 +0.02 STCor 10.65 +0.01 STGradeAd 10.65 +0.01 STIGradeI 10.65 +0.01 STsryAdml 10.72 +0.01 SelValu 28.55 -0.20 ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.19 ... SmCapIdxIP 164.60 -1.67 SmCpGrIdxAdm46.27 -0.46 SmCpIdAdm 57.02 -0.57 SmCpIdIst 57.02 -0.57 SmCpValIdxAdm45.37 -0.46 Star 24.91 -0.10 StratgcEq 33.25 -0.32 TgtRe2010 26.58 -0.06 TgtRe2015 15.47 -0.05 TgtRe2020 28.82 -0.13 TgtRe2030 29.45 -0.18 TgtRe2035 18.10 -0.12 TgtRe2040 30.19 -0.23 TgtRe2045 18.92 -0.15 TgtRe2050 30.03 -0.24 TgtRetInc 12.92 -0.02 Tgtet2025 16.75 -0.09 TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.17 +0.02 TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.77 +0.03 TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.59 +0.01 TotBdAdml 10.79 +0.04 TotBdInst 10.79 +0.04 TotBdMkInv 10.79 +0.04 TotIntl 15.49 -0.15 TotStIAdm 52.37 -0.45 TotStIIns 52.38 -0.44 TotStIdx 52.34 -0.45 TxMCapAdm 107.30 -0.90 ValIdxAdm 32.53 -0.32 ValIdxIns 32.53 -0.32 WellsI 25.40 -0.02 WellsIAdm 61.53 -0.06 Welltn 39.17 -0.19 WelltnAdm 67.66 -0.33 WndsIIAdm 65.90 -0.58 Wndsr 21.62 -0.24 WndsrAdml 72.92 -0.80 WndsrII 37.13 -0.34 Virtus EmgMktsIs 9.33 -0.07 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 11.20 -0.08 SciTechA m 14.96 -0.15

-2.0 -1.0 +3.6 +2.5 -1.3 +2.3 +16.3 +11.4 +6.2 -8.0 +2.2 -3.3 +12.0 +21.6 +1.0 +11.5 -4.6 +4.6 +4.2 -18.6 +9.6 +0.7 +9.3 +7.9 +0.6 +4.5 +1.5 +2.5 +3.2 +2.2 +1.0 +2.0 +2.8 +3.4 +3.4 +0.9 +0.6 -1.4 -0.5 +0.6 +1.3 +0.9 +2.4 +5.2 +2.7 +2.1 +1.6 +12.3 +0.6 +1.0 +2.3 +2.3 +1.8 +1.8 +0.8 +1.0 +3.2 +4.9 +5.0 +2.2 -9.5 -13.7 +0.2 +0.3 +3.4 +2.9 +2.9 +2.9 +1.0 +0.9 +1.0 +5.4 +5.4 +1.3 +16.2 +16.2 +1.6 +1.2 -0.2 -0.2 -0.3 +2.3 +2.3 +2.4 +1.2 +1.3 +1.0 +1.0 +1.1 +1.4 -1.6 +1.1 +1.5 +1.4 +4.1 +4.0 +4.0 +8.7 +1.1 +0.7 +1.1 +0.5 +0.3 -16.7 +1.5 +1.5 +0.6 +0.6 +0.6 +1.2 +1.2 +1.1 +1.1 +1.2 +0.8 +0.6 +2.1 +4.6 +2.1 +2.1 +1.9 +3.3 +1.0 +1.2 +1.3 +1.4 +1.5 +1.4 +1.4 +1.4 +0.9 +1.3 +0.5 +0.6 +0.6 +0.8 +0.8 +0.7 +0.9 +2.4 +2.4 +2.3 +3.4 -0.1 -0.1 +0.7 +0.8 +1.3 +1.3 +0.7 +1.6 +1.7 +0.6 -5.7 +6.4 -0.2

Leading indicators seasonally adjusted percent change 0.9%

0.8 0.6

0.6 0.3

0.3 -0.0

0.6 est. 0.2

-0.3

-0.3 F

M

A

M

J

J

2015 Source: FactSet


9 • Daily Corinthian

Variety

BEETLE BAILEY

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Crossword Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 “__ go, into ... ” 6 Top level 11 Night school subj. 14 Boggy tract 16 Verdi aria 17 Poor grade 18 Determined 19 Terms for a student loan 21 *Former Ford compact 23 *Orlando newspaper 24 Egyptian symbol of life 25 March time 27 Put in one’s two cents 28 Grammar bestseller “Woe __” 29 Halifax hrs. 30 Not even 32 Low island 33 Cinque times due 36 Abysmal 39 School area workers, and what the four pairs of intersecting starred answers depict 44 Beat 45 Duma votes 47 Mayall of “Drop Dead Fred” 50 Arctic bird 51 “Too many to list”: Abbr. 54 __ Fighters: Dave Grohl’s band 55 Millenniumending year 57 Month after Shevat 58 Optical device 59 *German __ 62 Historic Honolulu palace 64 Condense 66 *“Heaven Can Wait” (1978) Oscar nominee Jack 68 __ Miss 69 Defamatory text 70 Strip, as of rights 71 Poetic adverb 72 Rodeo catcher 73 “Star Wars” title

DOWN 1 Shocked letters 2 Like much court evidence 3 More kittenish 4 *Hypnotist’s prop 5 This, in Toledo 6 JFK’s UN ambassador 7 Barrette target 8 “Pencils down!” 9 Coast-to-coast hwy. 10 *Janitor 11 Blissful 12 Star sometimes eclipsing Venus? 13 Stahl of “60 Minutes” 15 Fertile Crescent land 20 Reward in a jar 22 NFL six-pointers 24 Come to the rescue of 26 Prefix with biology 30 URL ending 31 Actress Joanne 34 Steal ... or the one who catches the thief 35 War of 1812 commodore 37 Considered figures carefully?

38 Like some wit or wine 40 “The Simpsons” disco guy 41 Rankle 42 *Lawyer, at times 43 Most unemotional 46 “Help! We’re sinking!” 47 ’70s-’80s tennis star Tanner 48 Yoga instructor’s direction

49 *Regulation-sized fish 52 Mai __ 53 Get too close to 56 ER vitals 57 Carpentry tools 58 Cocoon dweller 60 Director Kazan 61 Pokes fun at 63 Ascribed, as blame 65 “Telephone Line” rock gp. 67 Last degree

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Alan DerKazarian ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

08/20/15

08/20/15

Mother asks what to do about her family WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: I have been married for more than 25 years to a highly respected, professional man. He has always worked hard, rarely taking time off. My efforts to get him to vacation have not been successful. Although he no longer enjoys his work, he continues these habits to support the family. Our children are 19 and 22 and still live at home. The oldest graduated college but is extremely immature. In the past year, he has been in jail twice for intoxication and pot possession. He also lost a job due to an alcohol-related incident. He found another position, but he rarely shows up on time. He doesn’t help around the house, is very messy and refuses all requests to contribute. He makes a student loan payment each month, but the rest of his small income goes toward fast food, tobacco and alcohol. Here’s the problem: I see red flags everywhere with our son but my husband refuses to deal with these matters. Instead, he keeps bailing him out. I feel strongly that our son needs a plan to become independent and accountable for his actions. My husband claims he doesn’t have time to talk to him. My children have no respect for my

Annie’s Mailbox authority because any consequences I impose are always undone by my husband, who says he’s tired of me nagging him about it. My efforts to get my husband on board have exhausted me and made me resentful. I feel cheated of a better relationship with all of them. Allowing these patterns to continue cannot be good for anyone. My husband refuses counseling. I am out of patience. Please advise. — Midwest Mom Dear Mom: You recognize that your husband is an obstruction to helping your children develop into mature, responsible adults. He isn’t willing to do the hard work necessary to change this dynamic for their sake. It’s selfish, lazy parenting. You cannot change him, but you can change how you respond, not only to the children, but also to your husband’s behavior. Get counseling for yourself. Ask your doctor for a referral to someone who specializes in

family issues, and if possible, bring your kids with you. Rest assured, they don’t want to be living like this 10 years from now. Dear Annie: I want to warn “Need Your Help,” the 66-year-old gal who has been with “Joe” since his wife died nine years ago. Joe is 75 and verbally abusive. He sounds just like my husband. Tell her to run, not walk, out of that relationship now. She says Joe is unwilling to change. I can assure her he will only get worse as he gets older. She is still young enough to do just fine without him. It might be hard at first for her to be on her own; but believe me, it will get better. Find a women’s group or join a church that is friendly and welcoming. There is help and support out there. Joe and his house are not worth ruining your life. — A Caring Friend Who Has Been There Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.


10 • Daily Corinthian

Volleyball Oxford 3, Corinth 2 @CHS-APAC Oxford 25 14 25 19 15 -- 3 Corinth 14 25 20 25 11 -- 2 Aces (5): Sierra Maness 2, Bailee Essary 2, Sadie Mitchell. Assists (35): Bailee Essary 16, Caroline Sleeper 15, Miller Carlton 3, Madison Mayhall. Digs (13): Bailee Essary 4, Madison Mayhall 4, Sadie Mitchell 4, Sierra Maness. Kills (35): Aundrea Adams 14, Victoria Smith 5, Miller Carlton 4, Sadie Mitchell 4, Deanna King 4, Nikidja Powell 2, Sierra Maness 2. Blocks (13): Aundrea Adams 8, Deanna King 2, Victoria Smith 2, Sierra Maness. Records: Oxford 7-3, Corinth 8-1 Notes: The Lady Warriors host Pontotoc tonight with varsity action set for a 6:30 p.m. first serve.

Local Schedule

Sports

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Plans made for ‘Rivalry Week’ BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

The Corinth Warriors open their 103rd season on Friday with a road trip to Aberdeen. Plans for the home opener, the 22nd such at Warrior Stadium II, are at a fever pitch. The Corinth School District is pulling out all the stops for the Friday, Aug. 28 game when the Warriors add another game to their long gridiron ledger with Tupelo High School. “Corinth Vs Tupelo is a rivalry that many get chills when they think about, whether a player, student or parent during the hay-day of

the rivalry, you never missed that game,” said CHS alum Taylor Coombs, who is in charge IAL Data Manager/ Marketing for the CSD. The series dates back to at least 1919, a 27-7 when by the Golden Wave before they were called the Golden Wave. From 1919-84 the rivals, who once shared two different conferences and a district the first three years the state playoffs returned, played every year sans three. They did play a rare homeand-home series in 1957-58, meaning the schools played 65 times in 66 years. Corinth and Tupelo went 19 years without playing be-

fore returning to the gridiron in 2003-04. Eleven years later, the contest now has its own moniker -- Renewing the Rivalry. “We want to ‘renew’ that rivalry and encourage everyone to attend!” It will be a festive week, beginning Thursday, Aug. 27, with the “Warriors on Wick,” a kickoff pep rally that begins at 5:30 p.m. and is free to the public. “We will have the CHS band, cheerleaders, dance team and football team there,” said Coombs. “Grab your Warrior Gear and head on down to SoCo.” After the pep rally, the

Meet the Lions

Softball Booneville @ Corinth, 5:30 Thrasher @ Kossuth, 6:30 Biggersville @ Shannon Saltillo @ Tish County Volleyball West Memphis @ Central, 5 Pontotoc @ Corinth, 6:30 Tupelo @ Tish County Soccer North Side @ McNairy, 6 Golf McNairy @ Fox Chase, 4

BY JEFF YORK For Daily Corinthian

Friday Football Central @ Biggersville, 7 Independence @ Kossuth, 7 Corinth @ Aberdeen, 7 (WXRZ) Tish County @ Mantachie, 7 Booneville @ Walnut, 7 New Site @ Thrasher, 7 Falkner @ East Union, 7 Itawamba @ Ripley, 7 Baldwyn @ Mooreville, 7

Shorts Meet the Lions

Youth Fall Baseball & Softball The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Department is offering a fall league for boys Dixie Youth baseball and girls ASA softball. Registration has started and will run through Friday. Player cost is $35. Age groups will be divided as 5/6, 7/8, 9/10 and 11/12. There will be a player observation day and a volunteer coaches’ meeting after that to draft teams. Games will begin the week of September 14th and finish up by November 6th. Teams will play 7-8 games and a single elimination tournament. Call the Park Office for more information at 286-3067.

Please see RIVALRY | 11

McNairy golf teams lacking in experience

Today

The Biggersville High School Athletic Booster Club will be hosting “Meet the Lions” on Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on the football field. Football and slow pitch softball players, as well as cheerleaders and band members will be recognized. Hamburger meals will be provided for participants and coaches. Cost for others will be $5, which includes burger, chips, drink and dessert. Everyone is invited to come out and support the 20152016 Lions.

Corinth High School Coach’s show -- featuring fourthyear head coach Doug Jones -- will air live on SuperTalk MS (94.3) from The Corner Slice. Several shops on Wick Street are also extending their hours and will be open. “One of my favorite things about bringing the district to the downtown area is combining my old job with the new and getting people who may never visit the downtown area out and supporting local businesses and restaurants.,” said Coombs. Renewing the Rivalry While next Friday’s game

Photo by Keith Jackson

Sophomore Alex Guevara gets some minor treatment during a recent football practice session at Biggersville High School. The BHS Athletic Booster Club will be hosting “Meet the Lions” tonight at 6:30 on the football field. Football and slow pitch softball players, as well as cheerleaders and band members, will be recognized.

SELMER, Tenn. — McNairy Central’s golf team does not have much experience returning this season in either the boys and girls, but the linksters still plan on being competitive in district play this season. The boys team is led by senior John Hunter Powers. The other seniors on the team are Briley Taylor, Clay Rankin, Peyton Wolfe, Cross Smith, and Ben Moore. Jonathan Cox and Hunter Upright are the juniors on the squad. The sophomores for MCHS are Hayden Harris and Dakota Lee. River Hurst is the lone freshman on the team. “John Hunter is going to be the leader on our team that has five other seniors,” said first-year coach Jim Merry. “He has a lot of tournament experience and that is going to help our team.” Merry is in his fifth year as the Career Technical Education (CTE) teacher at MCHS. He has been involved in golf for over 20 years. Merry replaces Adam Day as the golf coach at MCHS. On the girls’ team, Kristen Rowsey is the lone experienced player on the team. The Lady Bobcats are hurt by the loss of seniors Kelly Beth Ernest and Sarah Stanfield from last year. Mary Logan Yancey is the other senior on the team and is in her first year as a team member. Emily Hamm is the lone sophomore Please see GOLF | 11

Marshall gives Georgia ‘full package’ at RB The Associated Press

ATHENS, Ga. — Keith Marshall is healthy again, so Nick Chubb doesn’t have to be a one-man tailback corps for Georgia this season. After being limited by injuries to a combined eight games the last two years, Marshall is trying to return to the form he showed in 2012, when he and Todd Gurley were the

star freshmen tailbacks from North Carolina. Marshall ran for 759 yards and eight touchdowns as a freshman, but he hasn’t been the same since then. He tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee early in the 2013 season. He played only three games last year due to knee and ankle injuries. Now Chubb and others are

talking about Marshall’s resurgence in preseason practice. “I’m seeing great things from Keith,” Chubb said Tuesday. “I don’t know how he looked his freshman year in practice but I know how he played in games and I can tell you from what I’ve seen he looks very good.” Marshall has reclaimed the

burst that made him so effective as a freshman. “I’m feeling good,” Marshall said. “It’s a long season and I’m going to try to maintain that. We all deal with little dings and stuff but I’m just trying to stay healthy as possible. I feel like the offseason program has me feeling healthy and back being explosive and having strength. I’m excited.”

Softball Tourney There will be a men’s tournament Saturday in Adamsville, Tennessee. Entry fee is $130. For more information, call 662-415-8238 or 731-6071132.

Golf Tourney Southwest Human Resource Agency and Southwest TN Community Development Corporation are hosting their 8th Annual Golf Tournament on Thursday, Sept. 10 at Chickasaw Golf Course in Henderson. Registration begins at 10 a.m. with a shotgun start at noon. Lunch provided by Coyote Blues at 11 a.m. Tournament is limited to the first 36 paid teams. For more information, contact Christy at (731) 989-5111, cmcmahan.swhra@ yahoo.com, or visit www.SWCDCGOLF.com. There will be a hole-in-one contest, $100,000 4-Player Shootout, $5,000 putting contest, and cash prizes for winning teams. Proceeds from tournament go to SWCDC to assist in the maintenance of rental properties across seven counties and is used as matching dollars for new funding.

Adult Fall Softball The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Please see SHORTS | 11

Federal judge says Brady suspension in jeopardy The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Tom Brady might have reason to practice more intensely after a federal judge made clear Wednesday that the NFL’s four-game suspension of the New England Patriots quarterback over “Deflategate” is in jeopardy. U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman, who’s been asked by NFL Players Association to void the suspension, warned a league lawyer during oral arguments in the

scandal over underinflated footballs that there was precedent for judges to toss out penalties issued by arbitrators. Berman continued to push for a settlement in the dispute — a potential result he called “rational and logical.” But throughout the hearing, he also cited several weaknesses in the way the NFL handled the controversy that could become the basis for handing a victory to Brady and his union.

After the hearing, Berman met behind closed doors with both sides for more than an hour before the lawyers left court, saying the judge asked them not to discuss the negotiations publicly. If there is no deal, the Manhattan judge has said he hopes to rule by Sept. 4, six days before the Patriots host the Pittsburgh Steelers in the NFL’s seasonopening game. Neither Brady nor NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell was in court Wednesday.

Brady returned to Patriots practice after participating in negotiations along with Goodell and lawyers on both sides a day earlier. The league announced in May that it was suspending Brady over allegations he conspired with two Patriots equipment employees to deflate footballs below what league rules allow to give him a competitive edge in New England’s victory over the Indianapolis Colts in January’s AFC championship game.

76ers’ Embiid to miss second consecutive season The Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — Joel Embiid will have to wait at least one more season to start his NBA career. Embiid, the injury-riddled Philadelphia 76ers center, is expected to miss the season following a second surgery on his right foot. His recovery should take five to eight months, the same timeframe

the center was given following the first surgery last year. The Sixers were cautious with their prized prospect and held him out for the entire season. Team president Sam Hinkie said Wednesday the organization would follow a similar path again. Embiid had a bone graft Tuesday, with two existing screws replaced and a graft us-

ing bone from his hip. Hinkie said the foot did not break again, there was simply less healing than expected. “If we all do our part,” Hinkie said, “this will end in a way in which Joel can achieve all his dreams for having a really long, really fantastic NBA career. Nobody has talked me off of that just yet. Do we have reason to be concerned? Of

course. But no one has told me that’s still not in the cards.” Embiid had no pain leading into the surgery and shot 3-pointers and even dunked before games in the final month of last season. Hinkie said the 76ers “would be silly” not to try a new approach in Embiid’s rehab — though he would not secondguess last year’s process.


11 • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard

SHORTS

Auto racing Sprint Cup leaders

CONTINUED FROM 10

Department is offering a Fall League for adult softball. League divisions could include; Men’s Open, Women, Coed, Church, Senior, Wooden Bat and a One Pitch League. There must be a minimum of 4 teams registered to form the division. If 80% of the team’s players live in Alcorn County, the cost per team is $300 and $350 for all others. Players must be 16 years of age as of September 1 and teams must wear numbered uniformed tees. Team registration is open and goes through August 28. Play is ASA sanctioned and games will begin the week of September 7th. Teams will play 8 games and a single elimination tournament to end the season. Call

the Park Office for more information at 2863067.

Adult Fall Flag Football The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Department is offering a fall flag football league for adults, 16 years and above. The team fee is $250, in county or $300 outside the county. Games will begin the week of September 9 and finish up by November 6. Teams will play 7-8 games. Call the Park Office for more information at 286-3067. Other Fall programs to be offered by the Park, if interest is sufficient, includes; Adult Kickball, Ultimate Frisbee/Disc Golf, Tennis Leagues and a Walking program. Call for more information.

GOLF CONTINUED FROM 10

while freshmen Meg Suggs and Laini Plunk round out the team. “Our girls team will be young this season because we lost two key seniors off last year’s team,” said Merry. “The players have worked hard this summer to get better.” Opening Match McNairy Central senior Kristen Rowsey was the girls medalist and helped the Lady Bobcats handily defeat Chester Co. and Bolivar in a three-way match Monday at Woodland Hills in Jackson. Rowsey shot a 49 to take the low score in today’s match. MCHS sophomore Emily Hamm

just tying her teammate for medalist honors when she recorded a 50. John Hunter Powers was the low scorer for the Bobcats in their fourmatch with South Side, Chester Co. and Bolivar. South Side was the winning team in the fourway meet. Briley Taylor shot a 46, Clay Rankin posted a 46, Jonathan Cox shot a 48 and Peyton Wolfe recorded a 52 for the other Bobcats in today’s match. McNairy Central will host a four-team District 1 match today at Fox Chase. The opposing teams will be Bolivar, Lexington, and South Side. Tee time will be at 4 p.m.

Through Aug. 16 POINTS 1, Kevin Harvick, 866. 2, Joey Logano, 818. 3, Dale Earnhardt Jr., 784. 4, Martin Truex Jr., 755. 5, Brad Keselowski, 754. 6, Jimmie Johnson, 752. 7, Matt Kenseth, 751. 8, Kurt Busch, 683. 9, Denny Hamlin, 670. 10, Jamie McMurray, 663. 11, Paul Menard, 654. 12, Ryan Newman, 649. 13, Jeff Gordon, 648. 14, Carl Edwards, 628. 15, Clint Bowyer, 616. 16, Aric Almirola, 593. 17, Kasey Kahne, 590. 18, Greg Biffle, 553. 19, Kyle Larson, 548. 20, Austin Dillon, 533. MONEY 1, Kevin Harvick, $6,395,091. 2, Joey Logano, $5,549,459. 3, Jimmie Johnson, $5,000,664. 4, Denny Hamlin, $4,508,412. 5, Dale Earnhardt Jr., $4,342,525. 6, Matt Kenseth, $4,241,508. 7, Brad Keselowski, $4,148,878. 8, Jeff Gordon, $4,006,373. 9, Martin Truex Jr., $3,729,771. 10, Clint Bowyer, $3,634,094. 11, Ryan Newman, $3,576,683. 12, Greg Biffle, $3,546,233. 13, Jamie McMurray, $3,443,728. 14, Aric Almirola, $3,405,598. 15, Austin Dillon, $3,339,636. 16, Trevor Bayne, $3,268,260. 17, AJ Allmendinger, $3,154,466. 18, David Ragan, $3,118,638. 19, Kyle Larson, $3,104,966. 20, Kurt Busch, $3,051,346.

Baseball NL standings East Division W L Pct GB New York 64 55 .538 — Washington 59 59 .500 4½ Atlanta 53 67 .442 11½ Miami 49 71 .408 15½ Philadelphia 46 73 .387 18 Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 76 43 .639 — Pittsburgh 70 47 .598 5 Chicago 67 50 .573 8 Cincinnati 51 66 .436 24 Milwaukee 52 70 .426 25½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 67 53 .558 — San Francisco 65 54 .546 1½ Arizona 58 60 .492 8 San Diego 59 62 .488 8½ Colorado 48 69 .410 17½ ___ Tuesday’s Games Pittsburgh 9, Arizona 8, 15 innings N.Y. Mets 5, Baltimore 3 Toronto 8, Philadelphia 5 Kansas City 3, Cincinnati 1, 13 innings Detroit 10, Chicago Cubs 8 Miami 9, Milwaukee 6 San Francisco 2, St. Louis 0 Washington 15, Colorado 6

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Oakland 5, L.A. Dodgers 4, 10 innings San Diego 9, Atlanta 0 Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee 8, Miami 7 Oakland 5, L.A. Dodgers 2 San Diego 3, Atlanta 2 Arizona at Pittsburgh, (n) N.Y. Mets at Baltimore, (n) Toronto at Philadelphia, (n) Kansas City at Cincinnati, (n) San Francisco at St. Louis, (n) Detroit at Chicago Cubs, (n) Washington at Colorado, (n) Today’s Games San Francisco (Peavy 3-5) at Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4), 6:05 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 3-3) at Cincinnati (Jo. Lamb 0-1), 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia (J.Williams 4-8) at Miami (B.Hand 2-3), 6:10 p.m. Atlanta (Foltynewicz 4-4) at Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 14-6), 7:05 p.m. Washington (Scherzer 11-9) at Colorado (Flande 2-1), 7:40 p.m. Friday’s Games Atlanta at Chicago Cubs, 3:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Washington, 6:05 p.m. San Francisco at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Arizona at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Houston, 7:10 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Colorado, 7:40 p.m. St. Louis at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.

Cleveland at Boston, (n) Kansas City at Cincinnati, (n) Detroit at Chicago Cubs, (n) Tampa Bay at Houston, (n) Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, (n) Today’s Games Cleveland (Tomlin 0-1) at N.Y. Yankees (Nova 5-4), 6:05 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 1-1) at Baltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 9-8), 6:05 p.m. Texas (M.Perez 1-2) at Detroit (Simon 10-7), 6:08 p.m. Kansas City (D.Duffy 6-5) at Boston (Miley 9-9), 6:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Archer 10-9) at Houston (McHugh 13-6), 7:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 6-10) at L.A. Angels (Tropeano 1-1), 9:05 p.m. Friday’s Games Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m. Minnesota at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. Texas at Detroit, 6:08 p.m. Kansas City at Boston, 6:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. Toronto at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

AL standings East Division W L Pct GB New York 67 52 .563 — Toronto 66 54 .550 1½ Baltimore 61 57 .517 5½ Tampa Bay 59 60 .496 8 Boston 53 66 .445 14 Central Division W L Pct GB Kansas City 72 46 .610 — Minnesota 59 61 .492 14 Detroit 57 61 .483 15 Chicago 55 62 .470 16½ Cleveland 55 63 .466 17 West Division W L Pct GB Houston 65 55 .542 — Los Angeles 62 57 .521 2½ Texas 61 58 .513 3½ Seattle 56 65 .463 9½ Oakland 53 69 .434 13 ___ Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 8, Minnesota 4 N.Y. Mets 5, Baltimore 3 Toronto 8, Philadelphia 5 Boston 9, Cleveland 1 Kansas City 3, Cincinnati 1, 13 innings Detroit 10, Chicago Cubs 8 Seattle 3, Texas 2 Houston 3, Tampa Bay 2, 10 innings L.A. Angels 5, Chicago White Sox 3 Oakland 5, L.A. Dodgers 4, 10 innings Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 4, Minnesota 3 Texas 7, Seattle 2 Oakland 5, L.A. Dodgers 2 N.Y. Mets at Baltimore, (n) Toronto at Philadelphia, (n)

BASEBALL American League TEXAS RANGERS — Activated LHP Derek Holland from 60-day DL. Recalled INF Hanser Alberto from Round Rock (PCL). Designated INF Adam Rosales for assignment. Optioned RHP Chi Chi Gonzalez to Round Rock. National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Recalled RHP Zack Godley from Mobile (SL). Optioned RHP Chase Anderson to Reno (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Selected the contract OF Travis Jankowski from Triple-A El Paso (PCL). American Association AMARILLO THUNDERHEADS — — Signed LHP Chris Cummins. GRAND PRAIRIE AIRHOGS — Released RHP Jeff Neptune. JOPLIN BLASTERS — Signed RHP Joshua Evans. LAREDO LEMURS — Signed INF Abel Nieves. ST. PAUL SAINTS — Signed INF Nate Hanson. WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Signed RHP Johnnie Lowe. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Released LB Darryl Sharpton. BUFFALO BILLS — Signed DL Red Bryant and RB Cierre Wood. CINCINNATI BENGALS — Signed WR Michael Bennett. Waived TE Jake Murphy. NEW YORK JETS — Signed QB Matt Flynn. Waived WR Arthur Williams. HOCKEY American Hockey League

GOLF 4:30 a.m. (GOLF) - European Tour, Made in Denmark, first round, at Aalborg 8:30 a.m. (GOLF) - European Tour, Made in Denmark, first round, at Aalborg 2 p.m. (FS1) - USGA, U.S. Amateur, second and third round, at Olympia Fields, Ill. 2 p.m. (GOLF) - PGA, Wyndham Championship, first round, Greensboro, N.C. 5 p.m. (GOLF) - LPGA Tour, Candadian Pacific Women’s Open, first round, at Coquitlam, British Columbia. LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL Noon (ESPN) - World Series, Kampala, Uganda vs. Santiago de los Caballero, Dominican Republic, first round, at Williamsport, Pa. 2 p.m. (ESPN) - World Series, Pearland, Texas vs. Portland, Ore., first round, at Williamsport, Pa. 4 p.m. (EPSN) - World Series, Barquisimeto, Venezuela vs. Sydney, Australia, first round, at Williamsport, Pa. 6 p.m. (ESPN2) - World Series, Bowling Green, Ky. vs. Bonita, Calif., first round, at Williamsport, Pa. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 6 p.m. (MLB) - San Francisco at Pittsburgh or Minnesota at Baltimore NFL FOOTBALL 7 p.m. (ESPN) - Preseason, Buffalo at Cleveland TENNIS Noon (ESPN2) - Western & Southern open, men’s and women’s early-round play, at Cincinnati 8 p.m. (ESPN2) - Western & Southern open, men’s and women’s early-round play, at Cincinnati

“The first home football game is one that I often remember as a big event of the year,” said Coombs. “One that everyone comes out for....we wanted to provide a special memory to go along with these events for students and families.”

DJ Mac will provide entertainment along with inflatable games for kids. Crossroads Smokers will sell dinner plates along with the CHS Band Aides. “You can bring your own food, but also you can order a package deal from these two or a single

plate,” said Coombs. (Find “Renewing the Rivalry CHS Tailgate” on Facebook for a detailed menu for the pre-orders. If you wish to set up, please contact Coombs at 662-287-2425 or tcoombs@corinth.k12. ms.us.)

Transactions Wednesday’s Deals

HAMILTON BULLDOGS — Agreed to terms with D Reilly Webb. LACROSSE National Lacrosse League COLORADO MAMMOTH — Agreed to terms with F Callum Crawford on a threeyear contract and D Mat MacLeod on a one-year contract. Signed G Zak Boychuk and D Taylor Northway to one-year contracts. SOCCER Major League Soccer PHILADELPHIA UNION — Announced they will own and operate a USL team in Bethlehem starting in the 2016 season. COLLEGE ARKANSAS — Dismissed men’s senior basketball F Jacorey Williams following his arrest last month for allegedly using counterfeit money at three locations near campus. INDIANA STATE — Announced junior S Antonio Allen is transferring from Indiana. LAMAR — Named Jamie Meshew women’s assistant soccer coach. RANDOLPH-MACON — Named Amanda Sopko assistant softball coach. UTSA — Promoted Shenton Wai to assistant baseball coach. Named Jeff Luster director of baseball operations.

Television Today’s Lineup

RIVALRY CONTINUED FROM 10

is set to kickoff at 7 p.m., game day events will commence at 5:30 with a tailgating event sponsored by Magnolia Regional Health Center and the Corinth School District Foundation.

Call for an appointment: (731) 412-9791

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Call for an appointment: (731) 412-9791


12 • Thursday, August 20, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

WWW.ATHLONSPORTS.COM

INSIDEBASEBALL A WEEKLY TURN AROUND THE BASES

AROUND THE HORN

Âť STRONG DEBUTS FOR FUTURE STARS Âť IWAKUMA TOSSES A NO-NO Âť HARPER JOINS THE 30-HR CLUB Âť KEMP HITS FOR THE CYCLE

Believe the hype: Top prospects are delivering Sluggers Bryant, Schwarber shining bright for surging Cubs eams across baseball appear to be valuing their top prospects more than ever, and at the same time, the prospects themselves are getting increased coverage across the media. The 2015 season seems to be the Year of the Prospect, with nearly every notable prospect getting called up to the majors: 26 of the top 50 prospects according to Baseball America and 11 of the top 15 have appeared in at least one game this season. Although they have only just begun their careers, some have made big impacts on playoff contenders. Here’s a quick look at how Baseball America’s top-50 prospects have performed this season to date. The numbers listed are the players’ rankings before the season.

T

Josh Donaldson, J.D. Martinez, Mark Teixeira and Albert Pujols. ‌ Matt Kemp became the ďŹ rst Padre to hit for the

cycle Friday in the 7,444th game in franchise history. Kemp hit a two-run home run in the ďŹ rst inning and a single in the third inning off starter Yohan Flande, a double in the seventh off reliever Rafael Betancourt, and a triple in the ninth off Justin Miller.

Kris Bryant, who began the season as the top prospect in baseball, has hit 16 home runs with 66 RBIs since being called up by the Cubs in mid-April.

32. Michael Taylor, White Sox He’s been great defensively with nine runs saved and has 15 steals, but his bat (.243/.287/.380) is lagging behind. Grade: B 33. Steven Matz, Mets Matz made only two starts before landing on the DL with a torn muscle in his back, but he was very effective with a 1.32 ERA. Grade: B 34. Matt Wisler, Braves Wisler has struggled over 10 starts with a 4.74 ERA, poor strikeout numbers (5.8 K/9) and a low ground ball rate (34.4 percent). Grade: C 35. Luis Severino, Yankees Severino has been solid over three starts with a 3.18 ERA and an equally impressive 9.5 K/9 and 2.1 BB/9. Grade: B 37. Steven Souza, Rays Souza is third among rookies with 15 home runs despite missing 22 games due to hand injuries. His .214 batting average and .303 on-base percentage aren’t great. Grade: B39. Aaron Nola, Phillies His command is as advertised (1.8 BB/9), but his high rate of allowing KRPH UXQV SHU à \ EDOO KDV OHG WR KLV EORDWHG (5$ *UDGH % 42. Andrew Heaney, Angels Heaney has allowed two or fewer runs in all but one start, and his good control has helped him to a 2.53 ERA despite few strikeouts. Grade: A44. Henry Owens, Red Sox One terrible start out of three ballooned his ERA to 6.19, but he does have a 9.6 K/9 and 3.4 BB/9. Grade: B-

ATHLON SPORTS POWER RANKING 1. Cardinals Another solid week including taking two of three from Pittsburgh. 2. Royals The only team with a double-digit division lead. 3. Pirates Swept the Mets and are second in the NL in run differential. 4. Blue Jays 11-game winning streak halted by losing two of three to Yankees. 5. Dodgers Mat Latos and Alex Wood have a 5.85 ERA since being acquired. 6. Cubs Winners of nine straight until Sunday. 7. Astros George Springer should begin a rehab assignment soon. 8. Yankees Lead the majors in pitching WAR for relievers. 9. Mets Only seventh in the NL in run differential and ďŹ fth in WAR. 10. Giants Still 3.5 games out of the playoffs after sweeping Washington. 11. Orioles Chris Davis has nine home runs and a .906 SLG in August. 12. Nationals Losers of six straight (through Sunday) to drop under .500. 13. Angels All-Star Hector Santiago has a 5.08 ERA in his last ďŹ ve starts. 14. Rangers Lead baseball in runs scored in the second half. 15. Diamondbacks Have a higher run differential than the Mets, Angels and Nationals.

16. Twins 17. Rays 18. Padres 19. White Sox 20. Tigers 21. Mariners 22. Indians 23. Red Sox 24. Athletics 25. Braves 26. Reds 27. Brewers 28. Rockies 29. Marlins 30. Phillies

Torii Hunter is hitting only .171 in the second half. Steven Souza is third among rookies with 15 home runs. Hitters have struck out 980 times, third-most in MLB. Sox have the third-fewest walks in baseball. Justin Verlander has a 1.50 ERA in his last ďŹ ve starts. Felix Hernandez has a 9.13 ERA in his last four starts. Starters have the highest fastball velocity (93.1) in baseball. In the top ďŹ ve of runs allowed and scored in the second half. Now own the worst record in the American League. Arodys Vizcaino may have found his role as a closer. Only the Rockies have walked more batters. Pitchers allow the highest percentage of hard-hit balls. Lost six straight to the Mets and Padres. Christian Yelich’s injury further depletes outďŹ eld. Their minus-83 defensive runs saved is double 29th-ranked White Sox.

NUMBERS GAME

6-26 The Toronto Blue Jays are 6–26 when they don’t hit a home run compared to 59–28 when they do hit a home run. Only the Colorado Rockies (5–32) are worse when they don’t hit a home run. The Blue Jays are second in baseball with 158 home runs, trailing only the Houston Astros.

TURN BACK THE CLOCK Aug. 21, 1990 The Philadelphia Phillies scored nine runs in the ninth inning to beat the Dodgers 12–11. John Kruk tied the score with a pinch-hit three-run home run off of Tim Crews, and two batters later Carmelo Martinez drove in the winning run with a double to score Rod Booker.

TRIVIA CORNER Seattle Mariners’ righthander Hisashi Iwakuma became only the second Japanese-born pitcher to throw a no-hitter in Major League Baseball. Who was the ďŹ rst Japanese-born player to throw a nohitter? Written and compiled by Ben Weinrib. Follow Ben on Twitter: @benweinrib. Email: bwweinrib@gmail.com TRIVIA ANSWER: Hideo Nomo in 1996 and 2001

1. Kris Bryant, Cubs Bryant is the frontrunner for NL Rookie of the Year, leading rookies in WAR (4.1) and on-base percentage (.362) with big power. Grade: A 2. Byron Buxton, Twins Buxton only lasted 11 games before landing on the DL with a thumb injury and has since been optioned back to Triple-A. He was hitting only .189/.231/.270. Grade: C 3. Addison Russell, Cubs Russell has shifted from second base to shortstop, taking over for the struggling Starlin Castro. Grade: B 4. Carlos Correa, Astros &RUUHD KDV OLW WKH ZRUOG RQ Ă€ UH KLWWLQJ ZLWK VWURQJ GH fense. He leads all shortstops in WAR prorated for a full season. Grade: A+ 6. Joey Gallo, Rangers Gallo has displayed his massive power but has also struck out 43.9 perFHQW RI WKH WLPH 1RUPDOO\ D WKLUG EDVHPDQ KH¡V SOD\HG RXWĂ€ HOG WR NHHS his bat in the lineup. Grade: B8. Joc Pederson, Dodgers Pederson leads all rookies in home runs (22) and is second in walk rate (15.8 percent), which makes up for his .217 batting average. Grade: A9. Francisco Lindor, Indians Strong defense and good on-base skills (.296 batting average and .329 on-base percentage) at 21 are extremely impressive. Grade: A11. Noah Syndergaard, Mets He’s striking out more than a batter an inning, and his peripheral numbers (3.10 FIP) match his impressive ERA (3.07). Grade: A 12. Jorge Soler, Cubs His power-speed combination hasn’t showed at all, but he’s gotten on base at a solid rate (.270 average and .327 on-base percentage). Grade: C+ 13. Miguel Sano, Twins His bat is everything it was advertised to be (.279/.392/.533), but he’s played almost all his games at DH, which hurts his value. Grade: B+ 15. Carlos Rodon, White Sox He made his MLB debut 10 months after being drafted third overall but has struggled to a 4.51 ERA, although he has 9.92 K/9. Grade: C+ 17. Blake Swihart, Red Sox Called up because Boston had no other catcher options. Swihart’s deIHQVH KDV EHHQ Ă€ QH EXW KLV EDW KDV VWUXJJOHG *UDGH & 18. Daniel Norris, Tigers Norris was the centerpiece of the David Price trade but has struggled with his command, ending up with a 4.24 ERA. Grade: C+ 19. Kyle Schwarber, Cubs He’s been so good (.315/.403/.586) that the Cubs have benched Starlin Castro and Miguel Montero to keep his bat in the order. Grade: A21. Rusney Castillo, Red Sox He’s spent most of the season in Triple-A, but since he was recently called up, he’s hitting .339/.373/.518. Grade: B 24. Jon Gray, Rockies A strict pitch limit has held Gray to 15 innings over three starts, although he’s been very effective with a 2.40 ERA and 8.40 K/9. Grade: B 27. Aaron Sanchez, Blue Jays His ERA (3.30) has been good, but his low strikeout numbers (6.0 K/9) and high walk rate (4.5 BB/9) are concerning. Grade: B+ 30. Dalton Pompey, Blue Jays Pompey was hitting so poorly (.193/.264/.337) that he was demoted at the start of May and hasn’t been called up since. Grade: D+

The Red Sox scored 37 runs in two games against the Mariners, the most any team has scored in a two-game span since the Rangers scored 39 runs in a double-header in August 2007. ‌ Red Sox manager John Farrell was diagnosed with Stage 1 lymphoma and will take a medical leave for the rest of the season. Bench coach Torey Lovullo will manage the team for the remainder of the season. Farrell plans to return for spring training. ‌ Milwaukee Brewers prospect David Denson became the ďŹ rst active player to reveal that he is gay. Denson, who plays for the Class A Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, hit a home run recently in the Northwest/Pioneer League All-Star game. ‌ Texas’ Delino DeShields Jr. hit his ďŹ rst career home run last Friday in his 303rd career plate appearance. In 2,411 career minor league plate appearances, he has hit 39 home runs. ‌ Seattle’s Hisashi Iwakuma threw his ďŹ rst career no-hitter — against the Baltimore Orioles — in his ďŹ rst career complete game. It was the fourth nohitter of the season, and Iwakuma needed only 116 pitches, striking out seven and walking three. ‌ Mets’ third baseman David Wright began a rehab assignment at High-A St. Lucie and is expected to rejoin the Mets soon. He has been out since April 14 with spinal stenosis. ‌ The Blue Jays’ winning streak ended at 11 games Friday, which tied their franchise record. Toronto was on the verge of setting a new record before Aaron Sanchez allowed a three-run home run in the eighth inning to Carlos Beltran in a 4–3 loss to the Yankees. ‌ Bryce Harper became the ďŹ rst NL player to hit 30 home runs Friday on a three-run blast off Matt Cain. There are already seven AL players to reach that mark — Nelson Cruz, Mike Trout, Chris Davis,

Photos by Ricky Bassman

Red Sox hire Dombrowski as president; Cherington is out The Associated Press

BOSTON — On their way to a third last-place finish in four seasons, the Boston Red Sox shook up their front office on Tuesday night by hiring Dave Dombrowski as the new president of baseball operations and saying goodbye to general manager Ben Cherington. Dombrowski takes over his fifth major league club immediately. The team said in a news release during its game against the Cleveland Indians that Cherington “declined the

opportunity to continue as general manager� but will help with the transition. “In nearly four decades in the game, Dave is a proven winner,� Red Sox chairman Tom Werner said. “He can restore winning ways to Yawkey Way and help to fulfill the Red Sox goal, every year, to be playing meaningful games into October.� After taking over as the Montreal Expos GM at the age of 32, Dombrowski went on to build a World Series champion with the Florida Marlins. He took

Detroit to the Series twice, winning four straight AL Central titles in 14 years in the Tigers’ front office. But with Detroit playing below .500, Dombrowski was let go two weeks ago — shortly after the Red Sox announced that president and CEO Larry Lucchino would step away from the club at the end of the season. Red Sox COO Sam Kennedy will run the business of the ballclub, and Dombrowski takes over the baseball side. “He is one of the most highly regarded execu-

tives in all of baseball, and had options to go with other clubs,� said Red Sox owner John Henry, who owned the Marlins for part of Dombrowski’s tenure there. Dombrowski said he was eager to get a head start on building the 2016 club. He said he had other teams interested but he saw great potential in the Red Sox’s farm system and in the young players who have already reached the major leagues. Under John Farrell, the Red Sox rode the civic

pride in the aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing to the 2013 World Series title — the third in a decade for the once-cursed franchise. The season took an even more grim turn last week when Farrell announced that he was diagnosed with cancer. Bench coach Torey Lovullo has filled in for him for the past five games. Farrell began chemotherapy earlier Tuesday. Cherington built the Red Sox team that won the 2013 World Series, but

the club finished last in his three other seasons. In all, his clubs won 289 games and lost 315. “Ben Cherington is one of the finest individuals I have ever worked with, possessing a maturity and integrity second to none,� Henry said. “Over 17 years with the Red Sox and in the four years as our general manager, he always put the best interests of our organization first and foremost, winning a World Series Championship in 2013.�


Daily Corinthian • Thursday, August 20, 2015 • 13

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE BUTLER, DOUG: Foundation, floor leveling, bricks cracking, rotten wood, basements, shower floor. Over 35 yrs. exp. FREE ESTIMATES. 731-239-8945 or 662-284-6146.

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES SAT ONLY, Furn. Clothing Childrens & Adults, Misc. Items. Left at Suitors Crossing 160 CR 614. 3 Families. THUR., FRI. & Sat. 8 until, Norman Rd., Follow signs, Big Warehouse B l d g . A L M O S T E V E R Y T H I N G .

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES BENEFIT SALE & SINGING, Sat, 8a-2p 84 CR325, BBQ plates, proceeds for funeral expenses for Jas. Bowden. 287-6993 to donate items & info. FRI & SAT 2406 West Linden Street FRI & SAT 7AM until, 1987 Hwy 72 East, Corinth. Lots of toys, home stuff, purses, some clothes FRI & SAT, 313 Pinecrest Rd., Multi-Family, Kid Stuff, Bikes, Clothes, Shoes, Grooming Items. GARAGE SALE, Rain or Shine, Fri. 7-4, Sat 7-12. 99 CR 173, (Deer Park) SAT 7 until, 335 CR 512, 2.5 miles up Wheeler Grove Rd., Furn., Books, Toys, Adult/Youth clothing, tools, & Misc. SAT 7AM 4901 N Harper 3 Families, Household items, Furn., Tools, Clothes, Toys, Bicycles, Motor. Cyc. Helmets

EMPLOYMENT

0232 GENERAL HELP

TRUCK DRIVER

Corinth Plant Need good driver for local deliveries. Home every night. Full time employees desired. Must be at least 21 years old. Must have a valid Class B drivers license and clean driving record. Good Benefits and 401K retirement. A tobacco free workplace. APPLY IN PERSON, NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! Equal Opportunity Employer B & B CONCRETE COMPANY, INC. 2724 South Harper Road, Corinth

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

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POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT

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List your name and office under the political listing for only $190.00. Runs every publishing day until final election. Come by the Daily Corinthian office at 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 662-287-6111 for more info. Must be paid in advance. This is a paid political advertisement which is intended as a public service for the voters. It has been submitted to and approved and submitted by each political candidate listed below or by the candidate’s campaign manager or assistant manager. This listing is not intended to suggest or imply that these are the only candidates for these offices.

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Chad Cornelius - Owner

662-665-1849 FREE ESTIMATE

STEVENS LAWN MOWING & MAINTENANCE, LLC

Pressure Licensed & Washing

Fully Insured Licensed & Fully Insured

FREE ESTIMATES 662-603-7751 Rhonda & Bubba Stevens Owners

Complete Package $295.00

Loans $20-$20,000

40 Years

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

Jason Roach’s

Plumbing & Electric

• Home Repair & Remodeling • Backhoe

1. Clean off Entire Roof 2. Thorough Inspection (roof and fascias) 3. Replace any missing shingles 4. Seal around pipes, chimneys, and sky lights 5. Locate and Stop Leaks 6. Clean out gutters We can also install H.D. leafguards. JIMCO is your full service roofing company with 38 years experience and 1 Million in liability insurance.

662-665-1133 Home Maintenance Services • • • • •

Decking Flooring Tile Plumbing Electrical and more!

662-396-1023 JASON ROACH OWNER

1159 B CR400 CORINTH MS 38834

Hat Lady

Mary Coats

Is still here!!! Thank you for 15 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

Call 662-212-3287 Free Estimates


14 • Thursday, August 20, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

0248 OFFICE HELP

0536 MISC. TICKETS

H & R BLOCK Learn to prepare taxes with the nation's largest tax preparation service. Potential for great seasonal income. Tax courses start soon in Corinth, Ripley and Selmer. Please call 662287-0114 for Corinth office, 662-837-9972 for the Ripley office and 731-645-4348 for Selmer.

12 PLACE Setting Mikasa Garden Harvest. $100. ANTIQUE WATERFALL CEDAR CHEST. 286-5463 $150. 284-6200 6000 BTU Air Conditioner $125.00 SONY COMPUTER 662-212-2080 (Home), Good Cond., $100.00 415-7435

PETS

0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS MALE POMERANIAN PUPPY, CKC REG, shots/worming up-todate, $250. 662-720-9979 or 662-416-1970

FARM

0536 MISC. TICKETS

TAN LIVING Room Chair, 50'S STYLE BED, CHEST a bargain at $20. 284AND DRESSER, ALL FOR 6200 $100. CALL 284-6200 TWO LIGHT BLUE WINGALUMINUM GOLF cart for BACK CHAIRS, $30. bag new in box $25. 284-6200 (Birdie Brand) 662-279TWO WOODEN ladder 5899 back chairs, good shape, $40. for both ANTIQUE 284-6200 WATERFALL BUFFET Asking $200. 284-6200 UTILITY TRAILER $300. BED 5X8, NEW 13 IN. TIRES & 1 7/8 COUPLER, BASSETT FURN., 3 tables, T I L T B E D , J A C K W / 2 lamps, Nice. All for WHEEL, 662-872-3109 $250.00 870-768-5735 BURGUNDY LIFT Chair, Excellent Cond. $125.00 286-5463

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

CUCKOO CLOCK (From Germany) $100.00 415-7435

0430 FEED/FERTILIZER SQ. BALE mixed grass hay, $3.00 bale 662-664-1400.

0480 FARMS FOR SALE 300 ACRES forty miles West on Hwy 72. Call 662-216-6444

MERCHANDISE

SPORTING 0527 GOODS

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

DARK BLUE SWIVEL ROCKER $25. 284-6200

WANT TO make certain your ad gets attention? HAMILTON HAND Held Ask about attention M i x e r w i t h h o l d i n g getting graphics. compartment, 4 beat- ALMOST NEW PILLOW ers, $15.00 LIKE NEW TOP TWIN MATTRESS. 662-279-5899 $250. RETAIL, ASKING $50. CALL 662-415-6542 KIDS, SOME NEW UNDER ARMOUR SHIRTS & REVERSE YOUR PANTS SIZE 12-14-16, AD FOR $1.00 10.00 EACH. EXTRA CALL 808-1650 LADIES BOWLING Ball, 12 lbs, Multi Color, bag(black&purple) shoes 9B (wht w/pur.) $100. 662-279-5899

Call 662-287-6111 for details. REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

NEW MEN New Balance 0610 UNFURNISHED BROWNING CITORI 12 GA. APARTMENTS Shoes Size 10 $25.00 O/U Shotgun. 99% New. 662-212-2080 2 BR duplex, near AlSILVER ENGRAVED SIDES. corn Central. $425. mo. GRADE III, $1200.00 662-212-4102. 423-8449 MULCHING COVER Plate for John Deere Model W E A V E R A P T S . 5 0 4 D140 Mower 48'' Deck. N.Cass,1BR,porch,w/d ($42. new). Will take $25. $375/400 + util. 603-5767

0533 FURNITURE

Like New. 286-8848 CHERRY DINING Room NORDIC TRACK C1800 Suite, China Cabinet, Buffett, Oval Table, 8 Treadmill. 2 mats & Surchairs, like new $1495.00 ger,Console provides exercise feedback. $250. 662-415-4286 731-645-8283

MOBILE HOMES 0675 FOR RENT REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color,HOMES religion, FOR sex, 0710 SALEfamilial status handicap, or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

MOBILE HOMES 0741 FOR SALE 2003- 28X52 Fleetwood 3+2, CHA, Very nice cond. $18,500. Serious inq. only. 731-926-0741

Let the

CLASSIFIEDS be the KEY to listing your home!

662-287-61 1

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

TRANSPORTATION

0868 CARS FOR SALE

Take stock in America. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds. FINANCIAL LEGALS

0955 LEGALS NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE' S SALE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated January 27, 2003, executed by DANNY CROTTS AND LINDA CROTTS, conveying certain real property therein described t o CT C RE AL E STA TE SERVICES, as Trustee, for COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC., Original Beneficiary, to secure the indebtedness therein described, as same appears of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi filed and recorded January 31, 2003, in Deed Book 611, Page 387 (see also Scrivener`s Affidavit at instrument number 201403583); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was transferred and assigned to Federal National Mortgage Association by instrument recorded on May 1, 2015 in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk at Instrument Number 201501641; and WHEREAS, on December 22, 2014, the undersigned, Rubin Lublin, LLC has been appointed as Substitute Trustee by instrument recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk at Instrument Number 201406176; and NOW, THEREFORE, the holder of said Deed of Trust, having requested the undersigned so to do, as Substitute Trustee or his duly appointed agent, by virtue of the power, duty and authority vested and imposed upon said Substitute Trustee shall, on August 27, 2015 within the lawful hours of sale between 11:00AM and 4:00PM at the south steps of Alcorn County Courthouse proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash or certified funds ONLY, the following described property situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to wit: SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF ALCORN, STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, TO-WIT: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 26, TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI THENCE RUN SOUTH 0 DEGREES 16 MINUTES EAST 189 FEET TO A LARGE OAK TREE, THIS BEING THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH 1 DEGREE 06 MINUTES EAST 551.28 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 1 DEGREE 25 MINUTES EAST 158.07 FEET ALONG THE FENCE TO AN IRON PIN ON THE NORTH SIDE OF AN OLD ROAD; THENCE FOLLOWING THE MEANDERINGS OF AN OLD ROAD AND A FENCE LINE AS FOLLOWS: THENCE SOUTH 71 DEGREES 21 MINUTES WEST 87.45 FEET; NORTH 86 DEGREES 11 MINUTES WEST 191.52 FEET; WEST 137.95 FEET; NORTH 55 DEGREES 50 MINUTES WEST 54.76 FEET; NORTH 40 DEGREES 32 MINUTES WEST 71.58 FEET; NORTH 61 DEGREES 50 MINUTES WEST 93.94 FEET; NORTH 68 DEGREES 43 MINUTES WEST 79.63 FEET; NORTH 79 DEGREES 33 MINUTES WEST 261.38 FEET; NORTH 79 DEGREES 51 MINUTES WEST 82.89 FEET; SOUTH 86 DEGREES 10 MINUTES WEST 143.96 FEET; NORTH 85 DEGREES 49 MINUTES

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE' S SALE STATE 0955 LEGALS OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of the LEGALS covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated January 27, 2003, executed by DANNY CROTTS AND LINDA CROTTS, conveying certain real property therein described t o CT C RE AL E S TATE SERVICES, as Trustee, for COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS, INC., Original Beneficiary, to secure the indebtedness therein described, as same appears of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi filed and recorded January 31, 2003, in Deed Book 611, Page 387 (see also Scrivener`s Affidavit at instrument number 201403583); and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was transferred and assigned to Federal National Mortgage Association by instrument recorded on May 1, 2015 in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk at Instrument Number 201501641; and WHEREAS, on December 22, 2014, the undersigned, Rubin Lublin, LLC has been appointed as Substitute Trustee by instrument recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk at Instrument Number 201406176; and NOW, THEREFORE, the holder of said Deed of Trust, having requested the undersigned so to do, as Substitute Trustee or his duly appointed agent, by virtue of the power, duty and authority vested and imposed upon said Substitute Trustee shall, on August 27, 2015 within the lawful hours of sale between 11:00AM and 4:00PM at the south steps of Alcorn County Courthouse proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash or certified funds ONLY, the following described property situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to wit: SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF ALCORN, STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, TO-WIT: BEGINNING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 26, TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI THENCE RUN SOUTH 0 DEGREES 16 MINUTES EAST 189 FEET TO A LARGE OAK TREE, THIS BEING THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH 1 DEGREE 06 MINUTES EAST 551.28 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 1 DEGREE 25 MINUTES EAST 158.07 FEET ALONG THE FENCE TO AN IRON PIN ON THE NORTH SIDE OF AN OLD ROAD; THENCE FOLLOWING THE MEANDERINGS OF AN OLD ROAD AND A FENCE LINE AS FOLLOWS: THENCE SOUTH 71 DEGREES 21 MINUTES WEST 87.45 FEET; NORTH 86 DEGREES 11 MINUTES WEST 191.52 FEET; WEST 137.95 FEET; NORTH 55 DEGREES 50 MINUTES WEST 54.76 FEET; NORTH 40 DEGREES 32 MINUTES WEST 71.58 FEET; NORTH 61 DEGREES 50 MINUTES WEST 93.94 FEET; NORTH 68 DEGREES 43 MINUTES WEST 79.63 FEET; NORTH 79 DEGREES 33 MINUTES WEST 261.38 FEET; NORTH 79 DEGREES 51 MINUTES WEST 82.89 FEET; SOUTH 86 DEGREES 10 MINUTES WEST 143.96 FEET; NORTH 85 DEGREES 49 MINUTES WEST 216 FEET; NORTH 74 DEGREES 58 MINUTES WEST 192.6 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 87 DEGREES 55 MINUTES WEST 227 FEET TO AN IRON PIN ON THE EAST SIDE OF A GRAVEL ROAD; THENCE NORTH 55 DEGREES 05 MINUTES EAST 214.2 FEET ALONG SAID GRAVEL ROAD; THENCE NORTH 5 DEGREES 41 MINUTES WEST 240.2 FEET ALONG SAID ROAD; THENCE NORTH 11 DEGREES 40 MINUTES WEST 117.5 FEET ALONG SAID ROAD, ALSO ALONG A FENCE; THENCE NORTH 22 DEGREES 38 MINUTES EAST 169 FEET TO AN IRON PIN; THENCE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 06 MINUTES EAST 293.45 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 47 MINUTES EAST 359.72 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 84 DEGREES 02 MINUTES EAST 128.2 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 58 DEGREES 42 MINUTES EAST 61.58 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 41 DEGREES 50 MINUTES EAST 117.63 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 81 DEGREES 06 MINUTES EAST 41.92 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE NORTH 81 DEGREES 48 MINUTES EAST 146.2 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE NORTH 54 DEGREES 43 MINUTES EAST 132.37 FEET; THENCE NORTH 64 DEGREES 55 MINUTES EAST 56.36 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 62 DEGREES 44 MINUTES EAST 126.03 FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 61 DEGREES 59 MINUTES EAST 228.7 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. CONTAINING 26.43 ACRES, MORE OR LESS. LESS AND EXCEPT THE FOLLOWING PARCELS OF LAND: PARCEL A: COMMENCING AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF THE NORTHEAST

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For Sale, Misc.

AVIATION Grads work with JetBlue, Boeing, NASA and others - start here with hands on training for FAA certification. Financial aid if qualified. Call Aviation Institute of Maintenance 866-3672510.

REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! Get a whole home satellite system installed at NO COST and programming starting at $19.99/month. FREE HD/DVR upgrade to new callers, so CALL NOW. 1877-381-8004.

E m p l o y m e n t -T r u c k i n g

Services-Misc.

25 DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED NOW! Learn to drive for USXpress Earn $800 per week. Local 15-day CDL training. Immediate Openings! 1-800-350-7364

For Rent PRIME OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE. Approximately 1,400 sq. ft. available June 1. Located off I-55 in Autumn Woods Office Park in north Jackson. 3-4 private offices and large storage, work or conference room, separate baths, kitchenette, small reception area. Partially furnished if interested. Excellent neighbors. Great space for small business or nonprofit association or charity. Call Monica to arrange a viewing. 601-981-3060.

For Sale, Misc. CHURCH FURNITURE: Does your church need pews, pulpit set, baptistery, steeple, windows? BIG SALE on new cushioned pews and pew chairs. 1-800231-8360. www.pews1.com

CANADA DRUG CENTER is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 75 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-823-2564 for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. DIRECTV Starting at $19.99/mo. FREE Installation. FREE 3 months of HBO SHOWTIME CINEMAX, STARZ. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2015 NFL Sunday Ticket Included (Select Packages) New Customers Only. CALL 1-800-215-6713. DISH NETWORK – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1-800-319-2526. GOT KNEE PAIN? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace. Little or no cost to you. Medicare patients call Health Hotline Now! 1-800-507-6576

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Services-Misc.

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We can help! WIN or pay nothing! Start your application today! Call Bill Gordon & Associates. 1-800-706-3616

Services-Legal

DIVORCE WITH or WITHOUT children $125. Includes name change and property settlement agreement. SAVE hundreds. Fast and easy. Call 1-888733-7165, 24/7.

4:00PM at the south A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH steps of Alcorn County 41 DEGREES 50 MINUTES Courthouse proceed to EAST 117.63 FEET ALONG sell at public outcry to A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH the highest and best 81 DEGREES 06 MINUTES bidder for cash or certi- EAST 41.92 FEET ALONG fied funds ONLY, the fol- A F E N C E ; T H E N C E 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 81 DEGREES 48 lowing described prop- NORTH erty situated in Alcorn M I N U T E S E A S T 1 4 6 . 2 County, Mississippi, to FEET ALONG A FENCE; wit: SITUATED IN THE THENCE NORTH 54 DEC O U N T Y O F A L C O R N , GREES 43 MINUTES EAST STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, 132.37 FEET; THENCE TO-WIT: BEGINNING AT NORTH 64 DEGREES 55 THE N O R T H E A S T MINUTES EAST 56.36 CORNER OF THE NORTH- FEET ALONG A FENCE; EAST QUARTER OF SEC- THENCE SOUTH 62 DETION 26, TOWNSHIP 2 GREES 44 MINUTES EAST SOUTH, RANGE 8 EAST, 126.03 FEET ALONG A ALCORN COUNTY, MIS- FENCE; THENCE SOUTH SISSIPPI THENCE RUN 61 DEGREES 59 MINUTES SOUTH 0 DEGREES 16 EAST 228.7 FEET TO THE MINUTES EAST 189 FEET POINT OF BEGINNING. TO A LARGE OAK TREE, C O N T A I N I N G 2 6 . 4 3 THIS BEING THE POINT ACRES, MORE OR LESS. OF BEGINNING; THENCE LESS AND EXCEPT THE S O U T H 1 D E G R E E 0 6 FOLLOWING PARCELS OF MINUTES EAST 551.28 LAND: PARCEL A: COMFEET ALONG A FENCE; M E N C I N G A T T H E THENCE SOUTH 1 DE- NORTHEAST CORNER OF GREE 25 MINUTES EAST T H E NORTHEAST 158.07 FEET ALONG THE QUARTER OF SECTION FENCE TO AN IRON PIN 26, TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, ON THE NORTH SIDE OF RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORN AN OLD ROAD; THENCE COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; FOLLOWING THE MEAN- RUN SOUTH 0 DEGREES D E R I N G S O F A N O L D 16 MINUTES EAST 189 ROAD AND A FENCE LINE FEET TO A LARGE OAK AS FOLLOWS: THENCE T R E E ; T H E N C E R U N SOUTH 71 DEGREES 21 ALONG A FENCE THE MINUTES WEST 87.45 FOLLOWING: NORTH 61 F E E T ; N O R T H 8 6 D E - DEGREES 59 MINUTES GREES 11 MINUTES WEST WEST 228.7 FEET; NORTH 191.52 FEET; WEST 137.95 62 DEGREES 44 MINUTES FEET; NORTH 55 DE- W E S T 1 2 6 . 0 3 F E E T ; GREES 50 MINUTES WEST SOUTH 64 DEGREES 55 54.76 FEET; NORTH 40 MINUTES WEST 56.36 DEGREES 32 MINUTES F E E T ; S O U T H 5 4 D E WEST 71.58 FEET; NORTH GREES 43 MINUTES WEST 61 DEGREES 50 MINUTES 132.37 FEET; SOUTH 81 WEST 93.94 FEET; NORTH DEGREES 48 MINUTES 68 DEGREES 43 MINUTES WEST 146.2 FEET; NORTH WEST 79.63 FEET; NORTH 81 DEGREES 06 MINUTES 79 DEGREES 33 MINUTES WEST 41.92 FEET; NORTH W E S T 2 6 1 . 3 8 F E E T ; 41 DEGREES 50 MINUTES NORTH 79 DEGREES 51 W E S T 1 1 7 . 6 3 F E E T ; MINUTES WEST 82.89 NORTH 58 DEGREES 42 FEET; SOUTH 86 DE- MINUTES EAST 61.58 GREES 10 MINUTES WEST F E E T ; N O R T H 8 4 D E 143.96 FEET; NORTH 85 GREES 02 MINUTES WEST DEGREES 49 MINUTES 128.2 FEET; SOUTH 88 WEST 216 FEET; NORTH DEGREES 47 MINUTES 74 DEGREES 58 MINUTES WEST 354.27 FEET TO W E S T 1 9 2 . 6 F E E T ; THE TRUE POINT OF BETHENCE SOUTH 87 DE- GINNING; THENCE CONGREES 55 MINUTES WEST T I N U E A L O N G S A I D 227 FEET TO AN IRON FENCE SOUTH 88 DEPIN ON THE EAST SIDE GREES 47 MINUTES WEST OF A GRAVEL ROAD; 5 . 4 5 F E E T ; T H E N C E THENCE NORTH 55 DE- NORTH 89 DEGREES 06 GREES 05 MINUTES EAST MINUTES WEST 293.45 214.2 FEET ALONG SAID FEET TO AN IRON PIN; GRAVEL ROAD; THENCE THENCE RUN SOUTH 22 NORTH 5 DEGREES 41 DEGREES 38 MINUTES MINUTES WEST 240.2 WEST 169 FEET TO A FEET ALONG SAID ROAD; GRAVEL ROAD; THENCE THENCE NORTH 11 DE- RUN SOUTH 11 DEGREES GREES 40 MINUTES WEST 40 MINUTES EAST 117.5 117.5 FEET ALONG SAID F E E T ; T H E N C E R U N ROAD, ALSO ALONG A SOUTH 5 DEGREES 41 FENCE; THENCE NORTH MINUTES EAST 120 FEET; 22 DEGREES 38 MINUTES THENCE RUN EAST 328.7 EAST 169 FEET TO AN F E E T ; T H E N C E R U N I R O N P I N ; T H E N C E NORTH 380 FEET, MORE SOUTH 89 DEGREES 06 OR LESS, TO THE POINT MINUTES EAST 293.45 OF BEGINNING. CONFEET ALONG A FENCE; T A I N I N G 3 . 0 A C R E S , THENCE NORTH 88 DE- MORE OR LESS. PARCEL GREES 47 MINUTES EAST B: COMMENCING AT THE 359.72 FEET ALONG A NORTHEAST CORNER OF FENCE; THENCE SOUTH T H E NORTHEAST 84 DEGREES 02 MINUTES QUARTER OF SECTION EAST 128.2 FEET ALONG 26, TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH RANGE 8 EAST OF AL58 DEGREES 42 MINUTES CORN COUNTY, MISSISEAST 61.58 FEET ALONG SIPPI; THENCE RUN 0 DEA FENCE; THENCE SOUTH GREES 16 MINUTES EAST 41 DEGREES 50 MINUTES 189 FEET TO A LARGE EAST 117.63 FEET ALONG OAK TREE; THENCE RUN A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH ALONG A FENCE TO THE 81 DEGREES 06 MINUTES FOLLOWING: NORTH 61 EAST 41.92 FEET ALONG DEGREES 59 MINUTES A FENCE; THENCE WEST 228.7 FEET; NORTH 81 DEGREES 48 THENCE NORTH 62 DEM I N U T E S E A S T 1 4 6 . 2 GREES 44 MINUTES WEST FEET ALONG A FENCE; 126.03 FEET; THENCE THENCE NORTH 54 DE- SOUTH 64 DEGREES 55 GREES 43 MINUTES EAST MINUTES WEST 56.36 132.37 FEET; THENCE FEET; THENCE SOUTH 54 NORTH 64 DEGREES 55 DEGREES 43 MINUTES MINUTES EAST 56.36 W E S T 1 3 2 . 3 7 F E E T ; FEET ALONG A FENCE; THENCE SOUTH 81 DETHENCE SOUTH 62 DE- GREES 48 MINUTES WEST GREES 44 MINUTES EAST 1 4 6 . 2 F E E T ; T H E N C E 126.03 FEET ALONG A NORTH 81 DEGREES 06 FENCE; THENCE SOUTH MINUTES WEST 41.92 61 DEGREES 59 MINUTES FEET; THENCE NORTH 41 EAST 228.7 FEET TO THE DEGREES 50 MINUTES POINT OF BEGINNING. W E S T 1 1 7 . 6 3 F E E T ; C O N T A I N I N G 2 6 . 4 3 THENCE NORTH 58 DEACRES, MORE OR LESS. GREES 42 MINUTES EAST LESS AND EXCEPT THE 6 1 . 5 8 F E E T ; T H E N C E FOLLOWING PARCELS OF NORTH 84 DEGREES 02 LAND: PARCEL A: COM- MINUTES WEST 128.2 M E N C I N G A T T H E FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88 NORTHEAST CORNER OF DEGREES 47 MINUTES THE N O R T H E A S T WEST 354.27 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88each DEQUARTER 2 X 4 XOF 92SECTION 5/8” Stud ..... 26, TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, GREES 47 MINUTES WEST RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORN 5 . 4 5 F E E T ; T H E N C E COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; NORTH 89 DEGREES 06 5/8” T-1-11 Siding ........... MINUTES WEST 293.45 RUN SOUTH 0 DEGREES 16 MINUTES EAST 189 FEET, MORE OR LESS, TO FEET TO A LARGE OAK AN IRON PIN; THENCE T R E E ; T H E N C E R U N SOUTH 22 DEGREES 38 Corrugated Metal ............. li. ft. ALONG A FENCE THE MINUTES WEST 169 FEET, FOLLOWING: NORTH 61 M O R E O R L E S S T O A DEGREES 59 MINUTES GRAVEL ROAD; THENCE SOUTH 40 WEST FEET; NORTH 4 X 228.7 8 Masonite ........ Starting at 11 DEGREES each 62 DEGREES 44 MINUTES M I N U T E S E A S T 1 1 7 . 5 W E S T 1 2 6 . 0 3 F E E T ; FEET; THENCE SOUTH 5 41 MINUTES SOUTH 64 DEGREES 55 .DEGREES Starting at sq. ft. MINUTES WEST 56.36 EAST 120 FEET TO THE F E E T ; S O U T H 5 4 D E - POINT OF BEGINNING; GREES 43 MINUTES WEST THENCE RUN EAST 100 VinylFEET; FloorSOUTH Remnants .. sq. yd. THENCE SOUTH 132.37 81 FEET; DEGREES 48 MINUTES 230 FEET, MORE OR LESS, WEST 146.2 FEET; NORTH TO THE NORTH SIDE OF A 81Laminate DEGREES 06 From MINUTES B L A C K T O P D R I Vft.E ; Floor sq. WEST 41.92 FEET; NORTH THENCE WEST FOLLOW41 DEGREES 50 MINUTES ING THE NORTH SIDE OF W E S T 1 1 7 . 6 3 F E E T ; THE BLACKTOP DRIVE NORTH 58 DEGREES 42 260 FEET, MORE OR LESS, M I N U T E S E A S T 6 1 . 5 8 TO THE EAST BOUNDARY F New E E T ; NLoad O R T H of 8 4 D E - LINE OF A PUBLIC ROAD; GREES 02 MINUTES WEST TH E NCE NO RT HE AS T128.2 SOUTH 88 ERLY WITH THE EAST .................Starting at AreaFEET; Rugs DEGREES 47 MINUTES RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF WEST 354.27 FEET TO SAID PUBLIC ROAD TO THE TRUE POINT OF BE- THE POINT OF BEGIN3/4” Plywood each ..................... GINNING; THENCE CON- NING. PROPERTY ADT I N U E A L O N G S A I D DRESS: The street adFENCE SOUTH 88 DE- dress of the property is 1/2”47Plywood each ..................... GREES MINUTES WEST believed to be 38 5.45 FEET; THENCE COUNTY ROAD 261, NORTH 89 DEGREES 06 GLEN, MS 38846. In the MINUTES 293.45 event . of any discrep25 YearWEST 3 Tab Shingle FEET TO AN IRON PIN; a n c y b e t w e e n t h i s THENCE RUN SOUTH 22 street address and the 35 Year38 Architectural DEGREES MINUTES legal description of the WEST 169 FEET TO A property, the legal deGRAVEL ROAD; THENCE scription shall control. RUN SOUTH ........................................... Shingle 11 DEGREES Title to the above de40 MINUTES EAST 117.5 scribed property is beF E E T ; T H E N C E R U N lieved to be good, but I SOUTH DEGREES 41 will convey only such Croft 5Windows ...................................................... MINUTES EAST 120 FEET; title as is vested in me THENCE RUN EAST 328.7 as Substitute Trustee. F E E T ; T H E N C E R U N THIS LAW FIRM IS ATTubs & Showers.. starting at NORTH 380 FEET, MORE TEMPTING TO COLLECT A OR LESS, TO THE POINT DEBT. ANY INFORMAOF BEGINNING. CON- TION OBTAINED WILL BE x 16 T2 A Ix N I4 NG 3 . 0Utility A C R E S................................. , USED FOR THAT PURMORE OR LESS. PARCEL POSE. Rubin Lublin, LLC, B: COMMENCING AT THE Substitute Trustee 428 NORTHEAST CORNER OF North Lamar Blvd, Suite THE N O R T H E A S T 107 Oxford, MS 38655 QUARTER OF SECTION www.rubinlublin.com/p 26, TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, roperty-listings.php Tel: RANGE 8 EAST OF AL- (877) 813-0992 Fax: (404) CORN COUNTY, MISSIS- 6 0 1 - 5 8 4 6 P U B L I S H : SIPPI; THENCE RUN 0 DE- 07/30/2015, 08/06/2015, GREES 16 MINUTES EAST 08/13/2015, 08/20/2015 189 FEET TO A LARGE Ad #84901 OAK TREE; THENCE RUN ALONG A FENCE TO THE FOLLOWING: NORTH 61 14952 DEGREES 59 MINUTES

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GREES 16 MINUTES EAST 189 FEET TO A LARGE OAK TREE; THENCE RUN ALONG A FENCE TO THE FOLLOWING: NORTH 61 DEGREES 59 MINUTES WEST 228.7 FEET; THENCE NORTH 62 DE0955 LEGALS GREES 44 MINUTES WEST 126.03 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 64 DEGREES 55 MINUTES WEST 56.36 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 54 DEGREES 43 MINUTES WEST 132.37 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 81 DEGREES 48 MINUTES WEST 146.2 FEET; THENCE NORTH 81 DEGREES 06 MINUTES WEST 41.92 FEET; THENCE NORTH 41 DEGREES 50 MINUTES WEST 117.63 FEET; THENCE NORTH 58 DEGREES 42 MINUTES EAST 61.58 FEET; THENCE NORTH 84 DEGREES 02 MINUTES WEST 128.2 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 47 MINUTES WEST 354.27 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 47 MINUTES WEST 5.45 FEET; THENCE NORTH 89 DEGREES 06 MINUTES WEST 293.45 FEET, MORE OR LESS, TO AN IRON PIN; THENCE SOUTH 22 DEGREES 38 MINUTES WEST 169 FEET, MORE OR LESS TO A GRAVEL ROAD; THENCE SOUTH 11 DEGREES 40 MINUTES EAST 117.5 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 5 DEGREES 41 MINUTES EAST 120 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE RUN EAST 100 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 230 FEET, MORE OR LESS, TO THE NORTH SIDE OF A BLACKTOP DRIVE; THENCE WEST FOLLOWING THE NORTH SIDE OF THE BLACKTOP DRIVE 260 FEET, MORE OR LESS, TO THE EAST BOUNDARY LINE OF A PUBLIC ROAD; TH E N CE NO R THE A ST ERLY WITH THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF SAID PUBLIC ROAD TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. PROPERTY ADDRESS: The street address of the property is believed to be 38 COUNTY ROAD 261, GLEN, MS 38846. In the event of any discrepancy between this street address and the legal description of the property, the legal description shall control. Title to the above described property is believed to be good, but I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Substitute Trustee. THIS LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin, LLC, Substitute Trustee 428 North Lamar Blvd, Suite 107 Oxford, MS 38655 www.rubinlublin.com/p roperty-listings.php Tel: (877) 813-0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846 PUBLISH: 07/30/2015, 08/06/2015, 08/13/2015, 08/20/2015 Ad #84901

0955 LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS LEGALS IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI RE: ADMINISTRATION OF THE ESTATE SHIRLEY A. HESTER, DECEASED NO. 2015-0296-02 SUMMONS THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAW OF SHIRLEY A. HESTER You have been made a Defendant in the Complaint filed in this Court by Connie Montgomery, both individually and as administratrix of the estate of Shirley A. Hester, deceased, and you must take immediate action to protect your rights. Respondents other than you in this action are: None You are summoned to appear and defend against said Complaint to establish and determine heirs-at-law of Shirley A. Hester at 9:00 o’clock a.m. on the 14th day of September, 2015, at the Alcorn County Chancery Building, Corinth, Mississippi, and in case of your failure to appear and defend a judgment will be entered against you for the things demanded in said Complaint. You are not required to file an answer or other pleading, but you may do so if you desire. ISSUED under my hand and seal of said Court this the 4th of August, 2015. BOBBY MAROLT CHANCERY COURT CLERK 4tc 8/6, 13, 20, 27 14966

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI RE: MA, A MINOR CAUSE NO. 2015-040102-MM SUMMONS STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: Krystal Taylor, not to be found in the State of Mississippi on diligent inquiry and whose 14952 post office address is not known to the Petitioners after diligent inTRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF quiry made by said PeSALE titioners.

WHEREAS, on October 4, 2013, Tyler Scott Wiginton, unmarr, executed a Deed of Trust to W. Stewart Robison, Trustee for Green Tree Servicing LLC, Beneficiary, which Deed of Trust is recorded in Land Deed of Trust Book Instrument #201305251, at Page , in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; AND WHEREAS, default having been made in payment of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, and the holder of the note and Deed of Trust having requested the undersigned Trustee so to do, I will on the 2nd day of September, 2015, offer for sale at public outcry and sell during legal hours between the hours of 11:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M., at the south main door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, at Corinth, Mississippi, for cash to the highest and best bidder, the following described land and property, situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to-wit: Commencing at the Northwest corner of Section One, Township Four South, Range Six East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; also being the point of beginning for this description, thence run East along or near an existing fence 110.87 feet; thence run South 34 degrees 57 minutes East 576.81 feet to the Northeasterly right of way of Alcorn County Road #552; thence run Northwesterly along said right of way the following calls: North 71 degrees 21 minutes West 126.75 feet, North 66 degrees 09 minutes West 103.51 feet, North 57 degrees 35 minutes West 166.00 feet, North 56 degrees 45 minutes West 226.29 feet; thence leaving said right of way, run North 103.70 feet to an existing fence; thence run East along or near said fence 232.68 feet to the point of beginning, containing 3.00 acres, more or less.

You have been made a Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by Kacey Broadway and Ray Broadway, Plaintiffs, seeking to terminate your parental rights to a minor female child born March 28, 2013, in Jasper, Alabama. You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint or petition filed against you in this action at 9:00 o’clock A.M. on the 16th day of September, 2015, in the courtroom of the Alcorn County Chancery Building at Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and in case of your failure to appear and defendant, a judgment will be entered against you for the money or other things demanded in the complaint or petition. You are not required to file an answer or other pleading but you may do so if you desire. Issued under my hand and the seal of said Court, this the 3 day of August, 2015. BOBBY MAROLT, CHANCERY CLERK ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI BY: Karen Duncan, D.C. DEPUTY CLERK 3tc 8/6, 13, 20 Rebecca C Phipps PO Box 992 Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9211 14967

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI RE: MA, A MINOR CAUSE NO. 2015-040102-MM SUMMONS STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this, the 30th day of July, 2015.

TO: Unknown Putative Father, not to be found in the State of Mississippi on diligent inquiry and whose post office address is not known to /s/ W. Stewart Robison , the Petitioners after diligent inquiry made by Trustee said Petitioners. You have been made a Publish: August 6, 13, 20, and Defendant in the suit filed in 27, 2015 this Court by Kacey Broadway and Ray Broadway, Robison & Holmes, PLLC Plaintiffs, seeking to termin112 Commerce Street ate your parental rights to a Post Office Drawer 1128 minor female child born McComb, MS 39649 March 28, 2013, in Jasper, Telephone: (601) 249-3112 Alabama. 14962 You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint or petition filed against you in this action at

ted as Substitute Trustee by instrument recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk at Instrument Number 201500598; and NOW, THEREFORE, the holder of said Deed of Trust, having requested the under0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS signed so to do, as Substitute You are summoned to apTrustee or his duly appoinpear and defend against the ted agent, by virtue of the complaint or petition filed NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE power, duty and authority against you in this action at TRUSTEE' S SALE STATE OF vested and imposed upon said 9:00 o’clock A.M. on the 16th MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF Substitute Trustee shall, on day of September, 2015, in ALCORN WHEREAS, de- September 17, 2015 within the courtroom of the Alcorn fault has occurred in the per- the lawful hours of sale County Chancery Building at formance of the covenants, b e t w e e n 1 1 : 0 0 A M a n d Corinth, Alcorn County, Mis- terms and conditions of a 4:00PM at the south steps of sissippi, and in case of your Deed of Trust dated Febru- Alcorn County Courthouse failure to appear and defend- ary 29, 2012, executed by proceed to sell at public outant, a judgment will be CHELSEY L BEAVERS, con- cry to the highest and best entered against you for the veying certain real property bidder for cash or certified money or other things de- therein described to DENISE funds ONLY, the following manded in the complaint or MCLAURIN, as Trustee, for described property situated in REGIONS BANK D/B/A REpetition. Alcorn County, Mississippi, to GIONS MORTGAGE, Originwi t: SITUATED IN THE You are not required to al Beneficiary, to secure the COUNTY OF ALCORN, file an answer or other plead- indebtedness therein de- STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, TOing but you may do so if you scribed, as same appears of WIT: COMMENCING AT record in the office of the desire. THE SOUTHEAST CORNER Chancery Clerk of Alcorn OF THE SOUTHWEST Issued under my hand and County, Mississippi filed and QUARTER OF SECTION 4, the seal of said Court, this the recorded March 6, 2012, at T O W N S H I P 2 S O U T H , Instrument Number 3 day of August, 2015. RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORN 201201181; and WHEREAS, COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; the beneficial interest of said BOBBY MAROLT, THENCE RUN NORTH Deed of Trust was transCHANCERY CLERK 26.00 FEET TO THE NORTH ferred and assigned to REALCORN COUNTY, RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF GIONS BANK D/B/A REMISSISSIPPI ALCORN COUNTY ROAD GIONS MORTGAGE; and NO. 200 (FARMINGTON WHEREAS, on February 17, BY:Karen Duncan, D.C. ROAD); THENCE RUN 2015, the undersigned, Rubin DEPUTY CLERK SOUTH 89 DEGREES 09 Lublin, LLC has been appoinMINUTES 42 SECONDS ted as Substitute Trustee by Rebecca C Phipps WEST 30.00 FEET TO THE instrument recorded in the PO Box 992 WEST RIGHT-OF-WAY office of the aforesaid ChanCorinth, MS 38834 LINE OF A 40.00 FOOT cery Clerk at Instrument 662-286-9211 ROADWAY AND THE Number 201500598; and SOUTHEAST CORNER OF NOW, THEREFORE, the 3tc 8/6, 13, 20 THAT PROPERTY REFERholder of said Deed of Trust, ENCED IN DEED BOOK 224 having requested the under14968 AT PAGE 109 IN THE DEED signed so to do, as Substitute RECORDS OF ALCORN Trustee or his duly appoinCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; ted agent, by virtue of the THENCE RUN SOUTH 89 HOMES power, FOR dutySALE and authority DEGREES 09 MINUTES 42 vested and imposed upon said 0710 SECONDS WEST ALONG Substitute Trustee shall, on THE NORTH RIGHT-OFSeptember 17, 2015 within WAY LINE OF ALCORN the lawful hours of sale COUNTY ROAD NO. 200, between 11:00AM and A DISTANCE OF 210.00 4:00PM at the south steps of FEET TO THE SOUTHWAlcorn County Courthouse EST CORNER OF THAT proceed to sell at public outPROPERTY RECORDED IN cry to the highest and best DEED BOOK 224 AT PAGE bidder for cash or certified 109 IN THE DEED REfunds ONLY, the following CORDS OF ALCORN described property situated in COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; Alcorn County, Mississippi, to THENCE RUN SOUTH 87 wit: SITUATED IN THE DEGREES 59 MINUTES 58 COUNTY OF ALCORN, SECONDS WEST 106.50 STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, TOFEET ALONG SAID NORTH WIT: COMMENCING AT RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE TO THE SOUTHEAST CORNER THE POINT OF BEGINOF THE SOUTHWEST NING; THENCE RUN QUARTER OF SECTION 4, SOUTH 87 DEGREES 59 TOWNSHIP 2 SOUTH, MINUTES 58 SECONDS RANGE 8 EAST, ALCORN WEST 34.15 FEET ALONG COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; SAID NORTH RIGHT-OFTHENCE RUN NORTH WAY LINE; THENCE RUN 26.00 FEET TO THE NORTH SOUTH 89 DEGREES 31 RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF MINUTES 49 SECONDS ALCORN COUNTY ROAD WEST 70.81 FEET ALONG NO. 200 (FARMINGTON SAID NORTH RIGHT-OFROAD); THENCE RUN WAY LINE; THENCE LEAVSOUTH 89 DEGREES 09 ING SAID ROAD RUN MINUTES 42 SECONDS 0710 HOMES FOR SALE WEST 30.00 FEET TO THE N O R T H 2 1 5 . 4 9 F E E T ; THENCE RUN EAST 104.93 WEST RIGHT-OF-WAY FEET; THENCE RUN LINE OF A 40.00 FOOT SOUTH 213.72 FEET TO ROADWAY AND THE THE POINT OF BEGINSOUTHEAST CORNER OF NING, CONTAINING 0.52 THAT PROPERTY REFERACRE, MORE OR LESS. LESS ENCED IN DEED BOOK 224 AND EXCEPT AN EASEAT PAGE 109 IN THE DEED MENT 10 FEET IN WIDTH RECORDS OF ALCORN ALONG AND PARALLEL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; TO THE NORTH AND THENCE RUN SOUTH 89 SOUTH LINES OF THE DEGREES 09 MINUTES 42 ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPSECONDS WEST ALONG ERTY AND 7 FEET IN THE NORTH RIGHT-OFWIDTH ALONG AND PARWAY LINE OF ALCORN ALLEL TO THE EAST AND COUNTY ROAD NO. 200, WEST LINES OF THE A DISTANCE OF 210.00 ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPFEET TO THE SOUTHWERTY FOR THE PURPOSE EST CORNER OF THAT OF INSTALLATION AND PROPERTY RECORDED IN MAINTENANCE OF PUBDEED BOOK 224 AT PAGE LIC UTILITIES AND FOR 109 IN THE DEED REDRAINAGE. PROPERTY ADCORDS OF ALCORN DRESS: The street address of COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; the property is believed to be THENCE RUN SOUTH 87 4107 CR 200, CORINTH, MS DEGREES 59 MINUTES 58 38834. In the event of any disSECONDS WEST 106.50 crepancy between this street FEET ALONG SAID NORTH address and the legal descripRIGHT-OF-WAY LINE TO tion of the property, the legal THE POINT OF BEGINdescription shall control. Title NING; THENCE RUN to the above described Great59Brick house with prop4 SOUTH 87 DEGREES believed be good, BRs, 3 erty andis 1/2 halftoBath. 25 CR 303MINUTES 58 SECONDS 2.491 acres. This house is a but I will convey only such 34.15 FEET duplex ALONG house with 2 Kitch3 Bedroom/2 BathWEST $750 title as is vested in me as SubSAID NORTH RIGHT-OFens, 2 LRs & BRs. Each bedstitute Trustee. THIS LAW WAY LINE; THENCE RUN room is good sized and can FIRM ISwith ATTEMPTING TO be used easily the other SOUTH 89 DEGREES 31 4 CR 316 COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INsides. Home has 2 shops, MINUTES 49 SECONDS OBTAINED withFORMATION a 30 x 20 fl oor plan 3 Bedroom/2 BathWEST $675 70.81 FEET one ALONG and sitting a Blacktop WILL on BE USED FOR THAT SAID NORTH RIGHT-OFRd. HasPURPOSE. a Carport and 1/2LLC, Rubin Lublin, LINE; THENCE onLEAVeachSubstitute side. The outside Trustee 428 North 9 CR 128 IWAY NG SAID ROAD R U N garage Bedroom has a Full Lamar Blvd, Suite 107 OxUtility room, with R T H 2 1 5 . 4 9Bath F E E Tand ; 3 Bedroom/2 BathN O$650 ford, Bath that hasMS its38655 own www.rubinSeptic 104.93 THENCE RUN EAST lublin.com/propertyF E E T ; T H E N C Esystem. R U N Fenced back yard. Metal roof. PriceTel: reduced listings.php (877) 813SOUTH 213.72 FEET TO from $138,500 to (404) $129,900. 0992 Fax: 601-5846 THE POINT OF BEGINLarry Raines Realty PUBLISH: 08/20/2015, NING, CONTAINING 0.52 731-645-7770 08/27/2015, 09/03/2015, 10AM-6PMACRE, MORE OR LESS. Bruce LESSManley 731-610-7129 09/10/2015 Ad #85711 AND EXCEPT AN EASEMENT 10 FEET IN WIDTH 14972 ALONG AND PARALLEL this Court by Kacey Broadway and Ray Broadway, Plaintiffs, seeking to terminate your parental rights to a minor female child born March 28, 2013, in Jasper, Alabama.

House For Sale By Owner

38 CR 116 • Corinth, MS 38834

(Farmington area) 3BR, 2 Bath. Brick, Large Sunroom, Central Heating & Air, Fireplace, 2 Car Garage, New Roof, Patio, Outside Storage Building, & More.

662-284-5311 OR 662-286-6901

WEST 30.00 FEET TO THE THENCE RUN EAST 104.93 WEST RIGHT-OF-WAY F E E T ; T H E N C E R U N LINE OF A 40.00 FOOT SOUTH 213.72 FEET TO R O A D W A Y A N D T H E THE POINT OF BEGINSOUTHEAST CORNER OF NING, CONTAINING 0.52 Corinthian • Thursday, THAT PROPERTYDaily REFERACRE, MORE OR LESS. LESSAugust 20, 2015 • 15 ENCED IN DEED BOOK 224 AND EXCEPT AN EASEAT PAGE 109 IN THE DEED MENT 10 FEET IN WIDTH 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS RECORDS OF ALCORN ALONG AND PARALLEL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; TO THE NORTH AND ADVERTISEMENT FOR THENCE RUN SOUTH 89 S O U T H L I N E S O F T H E BIDS DEGREES 09 MINUTES 42 ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPSECONDS WEST ALONG E R T Y A N D 7 F E E T I N Notice is hereby given that THE NORTH RIGHT-OF- WIDTH ALONG AND PARsealed bids will be received by WAY LINE OF ALCORN ALLEL TO THE EAST AND the Public Utilities CommisCOUNTY ROAD NO. 200, W E S T L I N E S O F T H E sion of the City of Corinth, A DISTANCE OF 210.00 ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPMississippi at the office of the FEET TO THE SOUTHW- ERTY FOR THE PURPOSE Corinth Gas & Water DeEST CORNER OF THAT OF INSTALLATION AND partment, 305 West Waldron PROPERTY RECORDED IN MAINTENANCE OF PUBStreet, P. O. Box 1870, CorDEED BOOK 224 AT PAGE LIC UTILITIES AND FOR inth, MS until 2:00 P.M., C.S.T. 1 0 9 I N T H E D E E D R E - DRAINAGE. PROPERTY ADSeptember 24, 2015 for items C O R D S O F A L C O R N DRESS: The street address of as follows: C O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I ; the property is believed to be THENCE RUN SOUTH 87 4107 CR 200, CORINTH, MS Polyethylene Gas Pipe, Butt DEGREES 59 MINUTES 58 38834. In the event of any disFusion Fittings, Gas Valves, SECONDS WEST 106.50 crepancy between this street Gas Meters, Meter Loops, FEET ALONG SAID NORTH address and the legal descripGas Service Regulators, Gas RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE TO tion of the property, the legal Pipe Risers, Brass Fittings that THE POINT OF BEGIN- description shall control. Title meet the requirements of the N I N G ; T H E N C E R U N to the above described prop“2 011 Reduction of Lead in SOUTH 87 DEGREES 59 erty is believed to be good, Drinking Water Act”revised MINUTES 58 SECONDS but I will convey only such section 1417, Ball Fittings, WEST 34.15 FEET ALONG title as is vested in me as SubDuctile Iron Fittings, Gate SAID NORTH RIGHT-OF- stitute Trustee. THIS LAW Valves, Fire Hydrants, Ductile WAY LINE; THENCE RUN FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO Iron Water Pipe, Water SOUTH 89 DEGREES 31 COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INMeters, Meter Boxes, Repair MINUTES 49 SECONDS FORMATION OBTAINED Clamps, Detectable UnderWEST 70.81 FEET ALONG WILL BE USED FOR THAT ground Marking Tape, Valve SAID NORTH RIGHT-OF- PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin, LLC, Boxes, Small Tools, ElectronWAY LINE; THENCE LEAV- Substitute Trustee 428 North ic Measuring Devices, MagI N G S A I D R O A D R U N Lamar Blvd, Suite 107 Oxnesium Anodes and ChemicN O R T H 2 1 5 . 4 9 F E E T ; ford, MS 38655 www.rubinals. THENCE RUN EAST 104.93 l u b l i n . c o m / p r o p e r t y F E E T ; T H E N C E R U N listings.php Tel: (877) 813Bids must be submitted on a SOUTH 213.72 FEET TO 0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846 form furnished by the Public THE POINT OF BEGIN- P U B L I S H : 0 8 / 2 0 / 2 0 1 5 , Utilities Commission. They NING, CONTAINING 0.52 0 8 / 2 7 / 2 0 1 5 , 0 9 / 0 3 / 2 0 1 5, should be addressed to: PubACRE, MORE OR LESS. LESS 0 9 / 1 0 / 2 0 1 5 A d # 8 5 7 1 1 lic Utilities Commission, AtAND EXCEPT AN EASEtention: Chris Curtis, City of MENT 10 FEET IN WIDTH 14972 Corinth Gas & Water DeALONG AND PARALLEL partment, 305 West Waldron TO THE NORTH AND Street, P. O. Box 1870, CorSOUTH LINES OF THE inth, MS 38835-1870 and ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPHOMES FOR SALE 0710 should be plainly marked on ERTY AND 7 FEET IN the envelope: Inventory Bid – WIDTH ALONG AND PARSeptember 24th, 2015 OpenALLEL TO THE EAST AND FOR SALE: ing. Bids not marked as such WEST LINES OF THE on the envelope will not be LAKESIDE NEIGHBORHOOD PROPERTY ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPaccepted. ERTY FOR THE PURPOSE OF INSTALLATION AND Detailed lists of each catMAINTENANCE OF PUBegory as well as copies of the LIC UTILITIES AND FOR bid form may be obtained at DRAINAGE. PROPERTY ADthe office of the Corinth Gas DRESS: The street address of & Water Department, the property is believed to be Monday through Friday, dur4107 CR 200, CORINTH, MS ing regular business hours 38834. event of anyindis10 Owl In Cv.,the Iuka, MS...located a unique cove off CR 378 across from Aqua Yacht Harbor... Excellent location for (8:00 AM - 5:00 PM). Bid this 5 BR, 3.5ba, 2.5 storythis homestreet nestled on 2 lots and ready for immediate occupancy. Custom designed inside and out with crepancy between prices, including hardwoodand floors, newlegal cabinets, 9ft ceilings, crown molding and decorative paint thru-out. This home features adelivery, large masterwill descripaddress the be offirm for aWAIT... six-month perisuite with luxury master bath. Private quarters for the guest in mind add to the vast appeal this home. there’s more: tion the porch, property, the legal wrapofaround circle driveway, pull thru garage, open concept living space... onlyod steps(October from beautiful15, Pickwick 2015Lake... - April description shall control. Title Owner/Agent Call for a private viewing. MLS#3289634. 14, 2016). to$199,000 the aboveREDUCED... described prop$192,000 erty is believed to be good, bid can be accepted which to you by Barbara Wilson No but I will convey Offered only such contains any provision for title as is vested in me as Subprice escalation, and the substitute Trustee. THIS LAW mission of such a proposal FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO will constitute a waiver of the COLLECT A DEBT.365 ANYHwy IN- 51 N, Ripley, Tn. 38063 price escalation. All bidders FORMATION OBTAINED realtyup@bellsouth.net must be duly licensed to sell WILL BE USED FOR THAT the product(s) bid upon. All PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin, LLC, (office) • 731-635-6749 (cell) 731-635-3660 Broker/Owner products must be delivered Substitute Trustee 428 North F.O.B. to our facility in CorLamar Blvd, Suite 107 Oxinth, Mississippi. The Comford, MS 38655 www.rubinmission reserves the right to lublin.com/propertywaive any informalities in or listings.php Tel: (877) 813to reject any or all bids. 0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846 PUBLISH: 08/20/2015, Advertisement for solicita08/27/2015, 09/03/2015, tion of bids was authorized by 09/10/2015 Ad #85711 the Public Utilities Commission on the 13th day of July, 14972 2015.

Unique Properties

Property Directory

Patti's Property Rentals

T O BY THE NORTH AN D FOR SALE Desirable SOUTH LINES OF THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPOWNER Farmington

ERTY AND 7 FEET IN WIDTH ALONG AND PARALLEL TO THE EAST AND WEST LINES OF THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY FOR THE PURPOSE INSTALLATION AND 3901 Worsham OF Drive MAINTENANCE OF PUBSpacious, well-maintained LIC UTILITIES AND FOR 3600 square foot trilevel home DRAINAGE. PROPERTY ADthat offers country style living DRESS: The street address 3 of Bed, 2 Bath in the city. 4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 the property is believed to be on 1.3 Acres baths, kitchen, den, sun 4107room, CR 200, CORINTH, MS living room and dining room. Fenced Yard, 38834. In the event of any disLarge elevated deck crepancy in back.between this street Open Concept New energy efficient windows. address and the legal descripReduced $105,000 Roof only one year old. tion of the property, the legal All major appliances included. description shall control. Title $1,000 BONUS Large lot with lots to of the above described propbeautiful flowers. erty is believed to be good, TO BUYER but I will convey only such 662-279-3679 Call 662-415-2285 CALL title as is vested in me as Subfor an appointment. For Viewing. Trustee. THIS LAW Price just reduced by stitute $10,000! FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED Commercial Offi WILLce BE USED FOR THAT Space for rent PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin, LLC, on Shiloh Rd in Substitute Trustee 428 North Corinth, MS! Lamar Blvd, Suite 107 OxCompletely ford, MS 38655 www.rubinremodeled! Really lublin.com/propertynice! Can be listings.php Tel: (877) 813customized to fi t 0992 Fax: (404) 601-5846 your needs. PUBLISH: 08/20/2015, $550 per0 8 / 2 7 / 2 0 1 5 , 0 9 / 0 3 / 2 0 1 5 , month(includes 09/10/2015 Ad #85711

Area

4414 CR 200

Serious inquiries only. Call 662-286-6962 662-808-5050 and mention this ad. SMALL, RESIDENTIAL, 1 BEDROOM. REFERENCES REQUIRED. 662-286-6962 OR 662-808-5050

PUBLISH: Thursday, August 13th, 2015 Thursday, August 20th, 2015

City of Corinth Gas & Water

2155 Davis Yancey Rd – Guys

662-279-7453

high speed internet, cable, & 14972 garbage pickup) Renter pays utilities.

JOHN RHODES, General Manager City of Corinth Gas & Water Dept.

3 BR, 2 Bath Brick with large shop on 31.5 acres. Electric CHA $165,000.00 662-286-8513 662-212-2031

Department BURNSVILLE Attention: Chris Curtis, Purchasing Agent P. O. Box 1870 Corinth, MS 38835-1870

HOME FOR SALE Beautiful, 2 story 2300+ sq ft. 3 BR, 2 baths, Bonus room, including fridge/freezer combo, gas oven/ stove, dish washer and full size washer and dryer. Cherry hardwood floors throughout, new laminate flooring in kitchen and bathrooms, new windows on upper story. Central heating and air also has gas heaters throughout home. Lg. fenced-in back yard and lg. front yard on corner lot. Gift card from Walmart upon successful closing!!! 131 N 8th St., Selmer, TN 38375 $65,000 Contact: Ann McLain (731) 632-1246

WELL ESTABLISHED BUSINESS FOR SALE ON HWY 72 BUILDING, LAND AND BUSINESS OWNER RETIRING GREAT INVESTMENT, $495,000.00 SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY

662-808-0965 662-396-1095

40 ACRES 14979 OF WOODED LAND $80,000

CALL 662-808-9313 OR 415-5071 House For Sale By Owner

240 CR 409 Rienzi, MS 38865 2200 sq. ft. 3BR, 2 Bath, Central Heat & Air New Paint, New Carpet in Bedrooms, New Roof, 2 Car Garage, Outside Storage Building & More

$139,900.00

(662) 690-0834


Detailed lists of each cat- price escalation. All bidders Bids must be submitted on a egory as well as copies of the must be duly licensed to sell form furnished by the Public bid form may be obtained at the product(s) bid upon. All Utilities Commission. They the office of the Corinth Gas products must be delivered 16 •beThursday, should addressed to:August Pub- & 20, W a2015 t e r D• e pDaily a r t m eCorinthian n t , F.O.B. to our facility in Corlic Utilities Commission, At- Monday through Friday, dur- inth, Mississippi. The Comtention: Chris Curtis, City of ing regular business hours mission reserves the right to informalities in or LEGALS LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 AM 0955 any Corinth Gas & Water De- (8:00 - 5:00 PM). Bid waive partment, 305 West Waldron prices, including delivery, will to reject any or all bids. Street, P. O. Box 1870, Cor- be firm for a six-month periinth, MS 38835-1870 and od (October 15, 2015 - April Advertisement for solicitation of bids was authorized by should be plainly marked on 14, 2016). the Public Utilities Commisthe envelope: Inventory Bid – th September 24th, 2015 Open- No bid can be accepted which sion on the 13 day of July, ing. Bids not marked as such contains any provision for 2015. on the envelope will not be price escalation, and the subaccepted. mission of such a proposal JOHN RHODES, General will constitute a waiver of the Manager Detailed lists of each cat- price escalation. All bidders City of Corinth Gas & Water egory as well as copies of the must be duly licensed to sell Dept. bid form may be obtained at the product(s) bid upon. All the office of the Corinth Gas products must be delivered & W a t e r D e p a r t m e n t , F.O.B. to our facility in CorMonday through Friday, dur- inth, Mississippi. The Com- PUBLISH: ing regular business hours mission reserves the right to Thursday, August 13th, 2015 (8:00 AM - 5:00 PM). Bid waive any informalities in or Thursday, August 20th, 2015 prices, including delivery, will to reject any or all bids. be firm for a six-month period (October 15, 2015 - April Advertisement for solicita- City of Corinth Gas & Water Let our certified technicians tion of bids was authorized by Department 14, 2016). Attention: quickly restoreChris your Curtis, vehiclePurthe Public Utilities Commischasing Agentcondition to pre-accident No bid can be accepted which sion on the 13th day of July, Box 1870 guarantee. withP.aO. satisfaction contains any provision for 2015. Corinth, MS 38835-1870 price escalation, and the subState-of-the-Art mission of such a Frame proposal JOHN RHODES, General 14979 Straightening will constitute a waiver of the Manager Dents, Dings & All bidders City of Corinth Gas & Water price escalation. Scratches must be dulyRemoved licensed to sell Dept. Custom Colorbid upon. All the product(s) Matchingmust Service products be delivered F.O.B. to our facility in Corinth, Mississippi. The Com- PUBLISH: We’ll Deal Directly mission reserves the right to Thursday, August 13th, 2015 With any Yourinformalities Insurance in or Thursday, August 20th, 2015 waive toCompany reject any or all bids.

Dept.

and miscellaneous electrical. The Contract Documents may be examined at the following locations: Corinth Utilities Commission, 305 West Waldron Street, Cor0955MSLEGALS inth, 38834; Cook Coggin Engineers, Inc., 703 Crossover Road, Tupelo, Mississippi 38801; and Cook Coggin Engineers, Inc., 701 Foote Street, Corinth, MS 38834

38804. Questions regarding website registration and online orders please contact Plan House Printing at (662) 407-0193.

tion of the project shall apply to the contract throughout.

Each Bidder is responsible for inspecting the site and for reading and being thoroughly familiar with the Contract This project is partially fin0955 LEGALS 0955byLEGALS 0955 LEGALS The failure or anced the Appalachian Re- Documents. gional Commission Grant and omission of any Bidder to do any of the foregoing shall in City of Corinth Gas & Water is subject to the rules and no way relieve any Bidder Department regulations thereof. from any obligation in reAttention: Chris Curtis, Purchasing Agent The contract will be awarded spect to this Bid. P. O. Box 1870 as an entire job and individual The Bidder must ensure that Corinth, MS 38835-1870 A Pre-Bid Conference is items will not be let for sepemployees and applicants are scheduled for 10:00 AM on arate work. not discriminated against be14979 Thursday, August 27th, 2015, cause of their race, color, reat the Clifford G. Worsham Bids will be accepted Surface Water Treatment Fa- only under the name of ligion, sex or natural orgin. the Bidder to whom ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS cility, 2710 US Hwy 72 E A conditional or qualified Bid Glen, MS 38846. Although contract documents not mandatory, bidders are have been issued by the will not be accepted. Award Separate and sealed bids for will be made to the lowest reencouraged to attend. Engineer. the construction of Corinth sponsible, responsive Bidder. Utility Commission Altitude Bidders are encouraged to re- Each bidder must deposit Valve Arrangements (ARC The Owner reserves the right with this bid, security in the MS–17769-1) will be received gister for an account at amount, form and subject to to waive any informalities or by the Corinth Utilities Com- www.cceplanroom.com to view or order Contracts the conditions provided in the to reject any or all Bids. mission, at the Clifford G. Documents. The only reInformation for Bidders. Worsham Surface Water Hon. Frank Berry, Chairman, quirement for registration is a Treatment Facility, 2710 US valid email address. Contract No Bidder may withdraw his Corinth Public Utilities ComHwy 72 E Glen, MS 38846, mission bid within 90 days after the Documents are distributed until 10:00 AM on Monday, only as paper copies and are actual date of the opening September 14th, 2015 and Publish: Thursday, August thereof. available only from Plan then at said office publicly 13th, 2015 and Thursday, AuHouse Printing and Graphics, opened and read aloud. Simultaneously with his deliv- gust 20th, 2015 607 West Main Street, Tuery of the executed contract, 14980 pelo, MS 38804. Bid docuThe work consists of inments can also be purchased the Contractor shall furnish stalling above ground AltiIN THE CHANCERY through Plan House Printing. surety bonds subject to the tude Valve Arrangements, conditions provided in the In- C O U R T O F A L C O R N varying in main line sizes from The non-refundable cost of COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI formation for Bidders. 8”to 12”, at five elevated tank the Bid Documents is $125.00. All payments for Bid sites. The arrangements will RE: THE LAST WILL AND All applicable laws, ordininclude Fiberglass Reinforced Documents shall be made Polymer enclosures with con- payable to Plan House Print- ances and the rules and regu- TESTAMENT OF SOYRIETA R. MCFARLAND, DEing and Graphics, 607 West lations of all authorities havcrete foundations, SCADA No up-front payments. ing jurisdiction over construc- C E A S E D System upgrades, field piping Main Street, Tupelo, MS 38804. Questions regarding Advertisement for solicita- City of Corinth Gas & Water tion of the project shall apply and miscellaneous electrical. No hassle. CAUSE NO. 2015-0409-02 website registration and ontion bids was authorized by Department to the contract throughout. No of paperwork. line orders please contact the Public Utilities Commis- Attention: Chris Curtis, PurThe Contract Documents NOTICE TO CREDITORS Each Bidder is responsible for Plan House Printing at (662) sion on the 13th day of July, chasing Agent may be examined at the folFree Estimates inspecting the site and for 2015. 407-0193. P. O. Box 1870 lowing locations: Corinth NOTICE IS GIVEN that 25 Years professional reading and being thoroughly Corinth, MS 38835-1870 Utilities Commission, 305 Letters Testamentary were service experience familiar with the Contract JOHN RHODES, General This project is partially finWest Waldron Street, Coron the 28th day of July, 2015 Manager 14979 inth, MS 38834; Cook Coggin anced by the Appalachian Re- Documents. The failure or Rental cars available City of Corinth Gas & Water Engineers, Inc., 703 Crossov- gional Commission Grant and omission of any Bidder to do granted the undersigned Executor of the Estate of is subject to the rules and any of the foregoing shall in Dept. er Road, Tupelo, Mississippi SOYRIETA R. MCFARLAND, no way relieve any Bidder 38801; and Cook Coggin En- regulations thereof. Deceased, by the Chancery from any obligation in regineers, Inc., 701 Foote Court of Alcorn County, MisThe contract will be awarded spect to this Bid. Street, Corinth, MS 38834 sissippi; and all persons havas an entire job and individual PUBLISH: items will not be let for sepThe Bidder must ensure that ing claims against said Estate Thursday, August 13th, 2015 A Pre-Bid Conference is arate work. employees and applicants are are required to have the same Thursday, August 20th, 2015 scheduled for 10:00 AM on not discriminated against be- probated and registered by Thursday, August 27th, 2015, Bids will be accepted cause of their race, color, re- the Clerk of said Court withat the Clifford G. Worsham City of Corinth Gas & Water Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV &Treatment ATV here for under the name of ligion, sex or natural orgin. in ninety (90) days after the Surface Water Fa- only date of the first publication of the Bidder to whom Department cility, 2710 US Hwy 72 E $39.95 SOLD! Ad should include photo, descriptionGlen, and price. PLEASE NO contract documents A conditional or qualified Bid this Notice, which is the 20th Attention: ChrisUNTIL Curtis, PurMS 38846. Although have been issued by the will not be accepted. Award day of August, 2015 or the chasing Agent not mandatory, bidders are DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. Engineer. will be made to the lowest re- same shall be forever barred. P. O. Box 1870 encouraged to attend. Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. 38835-1870 sponsible, responsive Bidder. Corinth, MS WITNESS OUR SIGNABidders are encouraged to re- Each bidder must deposit 868 14979 with this bid, security in the The Owner reserves the right TURE(S), this the 17th day of gister for an account at AUTOMOBILES amount, form and subject to to waive any informalities or August, 2015. www.cceplanroom.com to the conditions provided in the to reject any or all Bids. view or order Contracts JOHNNY RAY MCFARInformation for Bidders. Documents. The only reHon. Frank Berry, Chairman, L A N D quirement for registration is a valid email address. Contract No Bidder may withdraw his Corinth Public Utilities Com- EXECUTOR bid within 90 days after the mission Documents are distributed W. JETT WILSON, only as paper copies and are actual date of the opening MSB#7316 thereof. available only from Plan 2004 Cadillac Publish: Thursday, August 13th, 2015 and Thursday, Au- ATTORNEY FOR EXECUT2004 Hummer H2 House Printing and Graphics, Seville SLS 2008 CHEVY MALIBU • 3.0L • 155K miles OR Simultaneously with his deliv- gust 20th, 2015 607 West Main Street, TuLoaded, leather, 505 E. WALDRON STREET ery of the executed contract, 14980 • New tires 134,514 miles pelo, MS 38804. Bid docuBEIGE 2000 Buick sunroof, shall chrome POST OFFICE BOX 1257 furnish New Tires ments can also be purchased the Contractor DOORPrinting. surety bonds CORINTH, MS 38835 subject to the wheels. through Plan4 House 100K Miles Regal Just serviced and (662) 286-3366 conditions provided in the InThe non-refundable cost of 78,000 MILES APPROX. 89,000 Miles Just serviced and Never BeeWrecked V-6 (Sunroof) formation for Bidders. ready for the road. the Bid Documents is $5900. 7000 for Bid 3800 Motor ready for the road. 3tc 8/20,8/27, 9/3 $7900. $125.00. All$ payments Call @ All applicable laws, ordinDocuments shall be made Call @ $2000. Call CALL 662-286-9316 14986 payable to Plan House Print- ances and the rules and regu662-664-0210 662-603-1290 Call 212-2185 lations of all authorities hav662-664-0210 ing and Graphics, 607 West ing jurisdiction over construcMain Street, Tupelo, MS tion of the project shall apply 38804. Questions regarding to the contract throughout. website registration and online orders please contact Bidder is responsible for 2004 Ford Plan House Printing at (662) 1989 Mercedes Benz Each inspecting the site and for 407-0193. Ranger 4 cyl., reading and being thoroughly 300 CE Elec. Windows, familiar with Contract ED! This project is partially finUC Door Locks, REDthe Documents. The failure or anced by the Appalachian Re145K miles, Rear Automatic New tires, paint, seats, gional Commission Grant and omission ofBlack any Bidder to do Trans., Air bucket and window & door any of the foregoing is subject to the seats, rules and Like new onshall thein Conditioner, seals. Engine like new, regulations thereof. no way relieve any Bidder 01 JEEP 4.0 Champagne color, For Sale or Trade 59,900 miles. and out. from inside any obligation in re3 speed, 4x4, roll-bar, 1978 Mercedes New top to this Bid. wench. Excellent Condition. The contract will be awarded spect Runs Great, good 6.9 Motor 135,000 miles. Great Shape! as an entire job and individual front & rear bumper 00 Miles, Red milesthat Only made 450 that year. The tires, Bidder 114K must ensure items willDiligently not be let for sepGarage Kept, it has Custom Jeep radio $2,500. OBO employees and applicants are arate work. maintained. been babied. not$discriminated against beSelling due to health and CD player Home All maintenance cause of their race, color, rereasons. Bids will be accepted records available. 662-872-3179 $5000.00 $9,800 $9,800 Harry Dixon only under the name of ligion, sex or natural orgin. Call or Text: Cell 286-6359 the Bidder to whom 662-643-3565 662-415-2657 662-594-5830 662-415-9875 A conditional or qualified Bid contract documents have been issued by the will not be accepted. Award will be made to the lowest reEngineer. sponsible, responsive Bidder. Each bidder must deposit The Owner reserves the right with this bid, security in the amount, form and subject to to waive any informalities or the conditions provided in the to reject any or all Bids. Information for Bidders. Hon. Frank Berry, Chairman, No Bidder may withdraw his Corinth Public Utilities Commission bid within 90 days after the 1976 F115 actual date of the opening Antique 1986 FORD Publish: Thursday, August 54,000 miles, 4.2 V-6, thereof. 428 Motor F350 XL- Dualley, 7.3 130K Miles, 13th, 2015 and Thursday, AuExt. Cab, 4 DR, automatic, new tires, Very Fast Fully Loaded Diesel, new tires, Paint, Simultaneously with his deliv- gust 20th, 2015 blue, cold AC, runs Loaded, 218k mls, dark $3,500. GREAT Condition! ery of the executed contract, 14980 Lots of Extras, 164,803 drives like theand Contractor shallnew. furnish New Tires Miles, Motor runs well, surety bonds subject to the $ 662-808-9313 2nd Owner, $4000.00 conditions provided FIRM in the In662-415-8343 formation for Bidders. 662-415-5071 662-287-8894 PUBLISH: Thursday, August 13th, 2015 Thursday, August 20th, 2015

We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse

Corinth Collision Center 810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

2008 2012 Nissan Versa

CED U D E R

$13,900 OBO

2006 Jeep Liberty

2004 BMW $12,900 OBO

$7500.00 OBO $8200 OBO 662-664-0357

TAKE OVER PAYMENTS!

662-462-8274

1973 Jeep Commando

1997 Mustang

2012 Jeep Wrangler 4WD

10,000

$

$4000.00

731-607-3172

2011 GMC CANYON-RED REG. CAB, 2 WD 78,380 MILES

2001 Dodge 1500 4X4

3500

95’ CHEVY ASTRO

2008 FORD F150 STX

Cargo Van Good, Sound Van

$2700

872-3070

8950

All applicable laws, ordinances and the rules and regulations of all authorities having jurisdiction over construction of the project shall apply to the contract throughout.

REDUCED 2002 Harley Fat Boy, color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

$

662-665-5679 662-665-1995

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

2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bike

1987 FORD 250 DIESEL UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK $4000. IN GOOD CONDITION

731-645-8339 OR 731-453-5239

2012 Banshee Bighorn Side-by-Side 4 X 4 w/ Wench AM/FM w/ CD

w/removable (three bolts) trike kit., 6400 miles, excellent condition. $

$7200.00 OBO

662-808-9662 or 662-808-2020

662-664-0357

7500.00

$9,200

662-664-0357

$11,900 OBO

662-462-7790

4,500.00

Each Bidder is responsible for inspecting the site and for reading and being thoroughly familiar with the Contract Documents. The failure or omission of any Bidder to do 1994 Quest any of theNissan foregoing shall in no wayNew relieve Lifters, any Bidder from any obligation in reCam, Head, spect to this Bid.

Struts and Shocks.

The Bidder must ensure that employees$2000. and applicants are notCall discriminated against be603-9446 cause of their race, color, religion, sex or natural orgin.

2003 Mustang SVT Cobra Tuned 4.6 Engine 5 Speed Lowered 4:10 Gears All Power & Air $7000. Call/Text 662-286-7977

2010 Chevy Equinox LS

$10,000 $10,500 or 415-7205

832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

1994 F150 1987 FORD BRONCO ALL ORIGINAL VINTAGE! RUNS & DRIVES GOOD

Long Wheel Base & Tool Box Good Motor & Transmission Runs fine

$2500/OBO

$2350.00

662-286-1717

662-664-3350

1500 Goldwing Honda

78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500

662-284-9487

A conditional or qualified Bid will not be accepted. Award will be made to the lowest responsible, responsive Bidder. The Owner reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all Bids.

2006 Kawasaki Vulcan 1600

Hon. Frank Berry, Chairman, Corinth Com13,500Public Miles,Utilities Serviced mission in November, New Back

Tire, Cobra Pipes,

Publish: Thursday, August Slingshot Windshield 13th, 2015 and Thursday, August 20th, 2015 14980

$4295 OBO 662-212-2451

2007 Harley-Davidson STREET GLIDE 23,710 MILES $13,500 662-665-1044

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

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

CAUSE NO. 2015-0409-02 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS GIVEN that Letters Testamentary were LEGALS 0955 on the 28th day of July, 2015 granted the undersigned Executor of the Estate of SOYRIETA R. MCFARLAND, Deceased, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and all persons having claims against said Estate are required to have the same probated and registered by the Clerk of said Court within ninety (90) days after the date of the first publication of this Notice, which is the 20th day of August, 2015 or the same shall be forever barred. WITNESS OUR SIGNATURE(S), this the 17th day of August, 2015. JOHNNY RAY MCFARLAND EXECUTOR W. JETT WILSON, MSB#7316 ATTORNEY FOR EXECUTOR 505 E. WALDRON STREET POST OFFICE BOX 1257 CORINTH, MS 38835 (662) 286-3366 3tc 8/20,8/27, 9/3 14986 NOTICE OF SALE BY SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE WHEREAS, BRAD HIGHT, made, executed and delivered to DONALD RAY DOWNS, PA ATTY, as Trustee for the benefit of SOUTHBANK, certain Deeds of Trust as follows: A) Dated November 30, 2005, recorded as Instrument No. 200509456, in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; B) Dated January 30, 2007, recorded as Instrument No. 200700632, in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi. WHEREAS, SOUTHBANK, legal holder and owner of said Deeds of Trust and the indebtedness secured thereby, substituted W. JETT WILSON as Substitute Trustee, in said Deeds of Trust by instrument dated April 12, 2012, and recorded in the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn2004 County,Nissan Mississippi, as QuestNo.201201799; 104,000 Instrument

miles, cold ac, new WHEREAS, default havtires, fully loaded, ing been made in the terms dvd entertainment and conditions of said Deeds and debt of system, Trust and runs the entire looks 4850.00 securedgreat, thereby, having been declared to be due and pay662-665-1995

able in accordance with the terms of said Deeds of Trust, 864 andTRUCKS/VANS/ the legal holder of said ind e b t e d nSUV’S ess, SOUTHBANK, having requested the undersigned Substitute Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said Deeds of Trust for the purpose of raising the 2006 sums due Express thereunder,2500 together with fees, Sub6.6attorney's Diesel Runs stitute Trustee's fees, and exand drives great. pense of sale.

172,000 miles. A/C NOW, THEREFORE, and new tires NOT ICE IS HER EBY Wellthat serviced! GIVEN I, the undersigned Substitute Trustee, on $8500.00 the 11th day of September, 662-594-1860 2015, at the South front door

of the Alcorn County Courthouse, in the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, within the legal hours for such sales (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), will offer for sale and sell, at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash, the following property conveyed to me by said Deed of Trust described as follows:

2001 Nissan Xterra FOR SALE Needs a little work. Good Bargain! Call: 662-643-3084

Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, towit:

TRACT 1: Commencing at the Southwest corner of the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 33, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, said point being an eight inch diameter creosote post, for the point of beginning; thence run North 01 degree 39 minutes 33 seconds East along an old wire fence and tree line 330.568 feet to an iron pin set; thence leaving said old wire fence and tree line, run North 89 degrees 59 minutes 13100 seconds 2003 yr. East 44.951 feet to a nail883 set being Anniversary 5.0 Harley feet EastSportster, of an existing 10 color: blue, 14,500 feet wide asphalt drive; miles,run$4,900. thence along a OBO. line that is Just serviced, good 5.0 feet East of and parallel to or existing new tires, brakes, the said drive the folreadySouth for the road. 22 lowing: 05 degrees Call @ minutes 10 seconds East 662-664-0210 32.239 feet; South 22 degrees 56 minutes 10 seconds East 37.498 feet; thence continue along a line that is 5.0 feet North of and parallel to the existing drive the fol1990said Harley lowing: South 46 degrees 43 Davidson minutes 37 seconds East 46.501 feet; Soft-Tail South 64 deCustom grees 06 minutes 50 seconds $9000 East 38.933 feet; South 81 degrees 33 minutes 16 seconds East 45.146 feet; North 89 minutes 58 d e g r1949 e e s 0 2Harley seconds East 82.619 feet; Davidson North 80 degrees 11 minutes Panhead 33 seconds East 31.715 feet; North 63 degrees 11 minutes $9000 OBO 45 seconds East 40.483 feet; thence continue along a line that662-808-2994 is 5.0 feet West of and parallel to the existing said drive the following: North 38 degrees 42 minutes 49 seconds East 62.250 feet; North 13 degrees 41 minutes 06 seconds East 52.537 feet; thence leaving said line, run North 88 degrees 55 minutes 52 seconds East 32.352 feet to a point that is 5.0 feet East of said drive; thence continue along a line that is 5.0 feet East of and parallel to the existing said drive the following: South 14 degrees 05 minutes 41 seconds East 59.441 feet; thence leaving said line, run South 08 degrees 55 minutes 13 seconds West 279.132 feet to an elm tree on a fence and tree line; thence run South 89 degrees 58 minutes


inch diameter creosote post, North 88 degrees 55 minutes run along the North side of for the point of beginning; 52 seconds East 32.352 feet said curb the following: South thence run North 01 degree to a point that is 5.0 feet East 89 degrees 54 minutes 13 39 minutes 33 seconds East of said drive; thence continue seconds East 120.218 feet; along an old wire fence and along a line that is 5.0 feet North 89 degrees 19 minutes WHEREAS, BRAD tree line 330.568 feet to an East of and parallel to the ex- 51 seconds East 159.434 feet; HIGHT, made, executed iron pin set; thence leaving isting said drive the following: North 75 degrees 21 minutes and delivered to DONALD LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955oldLEGALS 0955 14LEGALS 0955 said wire fence and tree South degrees 05 minutes 03 seconds East 21.689 feet; RAY DOWNS, PA line, run North 89 degrees 59 41 seconds East 59.441 feet; North 59 degrees 15 minutes ATTY, as Trustee for the minutes 13 seconds East thence leaving said line, run 30 seconds East 32.055 feet; benefit of SOUTHBANK, 44.951 feet to a nail set being South 08 degrees 55 minutes North 46 degrees 28 minutes certain Deeds of Trust as fol5.0 feet East of an existing 10 13 seconds West 279.132 00 seconds East 22.124 feet; lows: feet wide asphalt drive; feet to an elm tree on a fence North 31 degrees 22 minutes thence run along a line that is and tree line; thence run 56 seconds East 17.705 feet A) Dated November 30, 5.0 feet East of and parallel to South 89 degrees 58 minutes to a nail set; thence leaving 2005, recorded as Instruthe existing said drive the fol- 42 seconds West along said said curb, run South 88 dement No. 200509456, in the NOW, THEREFORE, lowing: South 05 degrees 22 fence and tree line, 390.586 grees 39 minutes 37 seconds office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; NO TICE IS HER EB Y minutes 10 seconds East feet to the point of beginning, East 89.105 feet to an iron pin GIVEN that I, the under- 32.239 feet; South 22 de- containing 2.346 acres, more set on the West right-of-way lien of U. S. Highway 45 B) Dated January 30, 2007, signed Substitute Trustee, on grees 56 minutes 10 seconds or less. South; thence run South 00 recorded as Instrument No. the 11th day of September, East 37.498 feet; thence con200700632, in the office of 2015, at the South front door tinue along a line that is 5.0 TRACT 2: Commencing at d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 the Chancery Clerk of Al- of the Alcorn County Court- feet North of and parallel to the Southwest corner of the seconds West along the West corn County, Mississippi. house, in the City of Corinth, the existing said drive the fol- Northeast Quarter of the right-of-way line of said HighAlcorn County, Mississippi, lowing: South 46 degrees 43 Southeast Quarter of Section way 279.948 feet to a conWHEREAS, SOUTH- within the legal hours for minutes 37 seconds East 33, Township 2 South, Range crete right-of-way marker at a BANK, legal holder and such sales (being between the 46.501 feet; South 64 de- 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- fence corner; thence leaving owner of said Deeds of Trust hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 grees 06 minutes 50 seconds sippi, said point being an eight said right-of-way run South 89 and the indebtedness se- p.m.), will offer for sale and East 38.933 feet; South 81 de- inch diameter creosote post; d e g r e e s 5 8 m i n u t e s 4 2 cured thereby, substituted sell, at public outcry to the grees 33 minutes 16 seconds thence run North 89 degrees seconds West along said wire W. JETT WILSON as highest bidder for cash, the East 45.146 feet; North 89 58 minutes 42 seconds East fence and tree line 440.638 Substitute Trustee, in said following property conveyed d e g r e e s 0 2 m i n u t e s 5 8 along a wire fence and tree feet to the point of beginning, Deeds of Trust by instru- to me by said Deed of Trust seconds East 82.619 feet; line 390.586 feet to a 10 inch containing 2.456 acres, more North 80 degrees 11 minutes diameter elm tree; thence or less. ment dated April 12, 2012, described as follows: 33 seconds East 31.715 feet; continue along said wire fence and recorded in the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Al- Situated in the County of Al- North 63 degrees 11 minutes and tree line North 89 de- LESS AND EXCEPT: corn County, Mississippi, as corn, State of Mississippi, to- 45 seconds East 40.483 feet; grees 58 minutes 42 seconds thence continue along a line East 465.153 feet to an iron TRACT A: Instrument No.201201799; wit: that is 5.0 feet West of and pin set for the point of begin- Commencing at the SouthwWHEREAS, default hav- TRACT 1: Commencing at parallel to the existing said ning; thence leaving said wire est Corner of the Northeast ing been made in the terms the Southwest corner of the drive the following: North 38 fence and tree line, run North Quarter (1/4) of the Southand conditions of said Deeds Northeast Quarter of the d e g r e e s 4 2 m i n u t e s 4 9 00 degrees 00 minutes 11 east Quarter (1/4) of Section of Trust and the entire debt Southeast Quarter of Section seconds East 62.250 feet ; seconds East 228.307 feet to 33, Township 2 South, Range secured thereby, having been 33, Township 2 South, Range North 13 degrees 41 minutes a nail set on the North edge 7 East, Alcorn County, Missisdeclared to be due and pay- 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- 06 seconds East 52.537 feet; of a curb on a 25 feet wide sippi, said point being a able in accordance with the sippi, said point being an eight thence leaving said line, run existing asphalt drive; thence marked 8 inch diameter creoterms of said Deeds of Trust, inch diameter creosote post, North 88 degrees 55 minutes run along the North side of sote post at a fence comer; and the legal holder of said in- for the point of beginning; 52 seconds East 32.352 feet said curb the following: South Thence run North 89 ded e b t e d n e s s , S O U T H - thence run North 01 degree to a point that is 5.0 feet East 89 degrees 54 minutes 13 grees 58 minutes 42 seconds BANK, having requested 39 minutes 33 seconds East of said drive; thence continue seconds East 120.218 feet; East along an old wire fence the undersigned Substitute along an old wire fence and along a line that is 5.0 feet North 89 degrees 19 minutes and tree line 390.586 feet to a Trustee to execute the trust tree line 330.568 feet to an East of and parallel to the ex- 51 seconds East 159.434 feet; 10 inch diameter elm tree; and sell said land and prop- iron pin set; thence leaving isting said drive the following: North 75 degrees 21 minutes Thence continue along said erty in accordance with the said old wire fence and tree South 14 degrees 05 minutes 03 seconds East 21.689 feet; old wire fence and tree line terms of said Deeds of Trust line, run North 89 degrees 59 41 seconds East 59.441 feet; North 59 degrees 15 minutes North 89 degrees 58 minutes for the purpose of raising the minutes 13 seconds East thence leaving said line, run 30 seconds East 32.055 feet; 42 seconds East 465.153 feet sums due thereunder, togeth- 44.951 feet to a nail set being South 08 degrees 55 minutes North 46 degrees 28 minutes to an iron pin; Thence continer with attorney's fees, Sub- 5.0 feet East of an existing 10 13 seconds West 279.132 00 seconds East 22.124 feet; ue' North 89 degrees 58 stitute Trustee's fees, and ex- feet wide asphalt drive; feet to an elm tree on a fence North 31 degrees 22 minutes minutes 42 seconds East thence run along a line that is and tree line; thence run 56 seconds East 17.705 feet along said old wire fence and pense of sale. 5.0 feet East of and parallel to South 89 degrees 58 minutes to a nail set; thence leaving tree line 353.118 feet to an NOW, THEREFORE, the existing said drive the fol- 42 seconds West along said said curb, run South 88 de- iron pin for the Point of BeNO T IC E IS HER EB Y lowing: South 05 degrees 22 fence and tree line, 390.586 grees 39 minutes 37 seconds ginning; Thence run North GIVEN that I, the under- minutes 10 seconds East feet to the point of beginning, East 89.105 feet to an iron pin 234.267 feet to a point 2.5 feet; South de- containing right-of-way 2.346 acres, more set on the Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV,22BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RVWest & ATV here feet forSouth of an existing curb; signed Substitute Trustee, on 32.239 lien of U. S. Highway 45 Thence run along a line that is the 11th day of September, grees 56 minutes 10 seconds or less. $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, descriptionSouth; andthence price. run PLEASE South 00 NO 2.5 feet South of and parallel 2015, at the South front door East 37.498 feet; thence conalong a line that is 5.0 TRACT 2: Commencing at d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 to said curb the following: of the Alcorn County Court- tinue DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. house, in the City of Corinth, feet North of and parallel to the Southwest corner of the seconds West along the West North 56 degrees 56 minutes Single item only. Payment 287-6147 to placelineyour said drive in the advance. fol- NortheastCall High- 40 seconds East 13.413 feet; the existing of said ad. Quarter of the right-of-way Alcorn County, Mississippi, legal hours for lowing: South 46 degrees 43 Southeast Quarter of Section way 279.948 feet to a con- North 78 degrees 59 minutes within the 816 suchRECREATIONAL sales (being between the minutes 37 seconds East 33, Township 2 South, Range crete right-of-way marker at a 40 seconds East 35.321 feet; hours ofVEHICLES 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 46.501 feet; South 64 de- 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- fence corner; thence leaving North 88 degrees 05 minutes p.m.), will offer for sale and grees 06 minutes 50 seconds sippi, said point being an eight said right-of-way run South 89 38 seconds East 43.317 feet sell, at public outcry to the East 38.933 feet; South 81 de- inch diameter creosote post; d e g r e e s 5 8 m i n u t e s 4 2 an iron pin on the West right highest bidder for cash, the grees 33 minutes 16 seconds thence run North 89 degrees seconds West along said wire of way line of U.S. Highway following property conveyed East 45.146 feet; North 89 58 minutes 42 seconds East fence and tree line 440.638 45 South; Thence run South 0 to me by said Deed of Trust d e g r e e s 0 2 m i n u t e s 5 8 along a wire fence and tree feet to the point of beginning, d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 seconds East 82.619 feet; line 390.586 feet to a 10 inch containing 2.456 acres, more seconds West along the West described as follows: North 80 degrees 11 minutes diameter elm tree; thence or less. right of way line of U.S. High2006 WILDERNESS 31.715 feet; continue along said wire fence way 45 South 249.739 feet to 2011East Coachman D Al- 33 seconds Situated in the County CAMPER REDUCEof 63Catalina degrees Camper 11 minutes and tree line North 89 de- LESS AND EXCEPT: an iron pin at a concrete right corn, State of Mississippi, to- North28’ 45 seconds 40.483 feet; grees 58 minutes 42 seconds of way marker; 29 FT.Thence leavSleepsEast 6 (Memory wit: Sportsman Camper 2011 AR-ONE Craft, 465.153 feetStar to an iron TRACT A: thence continue along 32” a line East ing said right of way line, run Queen Bed, Couch Foam Mattresses), 36ft, 2 Air conditioners, Fridge/AC, 5TH WHEEL is 5.0 feet West ofBathand pin set 14ft. degrees 58 minutes for the pointStove, of begin- Commencing at the Southw- South 89 sleeps1:2, lots of cabinets, TRACT Commencing at that Flatscreen TV w/DVD, 30K miles LARGE SLIDE OUT said Microwave, bath, immaculate to the Range/Stove/ existing said ning; thenceFull leaving said wire est Generator, 42 seconds West along Corner of the Northeast pulled 6corner times,of the parallel the Southwest tub/Shower, FULLY EQUIPPED the following:& North and tree North Quarter (1/4) of the South- old wire fence and tree line Refiline, nancerun or payoff non-smoker, clean Northeast Quarter ofasthe drive Microwave, More. 38 fencecondition. e s 4 2 m i n u t e s 4 9 00 degrees 00 @minutes feet to the point of (prox. $5300) Trustmark,11 east Quarter (1/4) of Section 87.520 newQuarter on the inside. Southeast of Section d e g r eWilliam Whitaker NON-SMOKING OWNER 228.307 containing 0.500 payments $198. feet to 33, Township 2 South, Range beginning, IUKA 33, Township 2 South, Range seconds East 62.250 feet; seconds East $9,500.00 $8500.00 662-660-4298 set on theforNorth edge 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- acres, more or less. 7 East, Alcorn County,or Missis- North 13 degrees 41 minutes a nail Excellent starter small family. 287-3461 East 52.537 on a 25 feet wide sippi, said point being a for More Info feet; of a curb 284-0138 sippi, said396-1678 point being an eight 06 seconds CALL 662-423-1727 inch diameter creosote post, thence leaving said line, run existing asphalt drive; thence marked 8 inch diameter creo- TRACT B: sote post at a fence comer; North 88 degrees 55 minutes run along the North side of Commencing at the Southwfor the point of beginning; thence run North 01 degree 52 seconds East 32.352 feet said curb the following: South Thence run North 89 de- est Corner of the Northeast 39 minutes 33 seconds East to a point that is 5.0 feet East 89 degrees 54 minutes 13 grees 58 minutes 42 seconds Quarter (1/4) of the Southalong an old wire fence and of said drive; thence continue seconds East 120.218 feet; East along an old wire fence east Quarter (1/4) of Section tree line 330.568 feet to an along a line that is 5.0 feet North 89 degrees 19 minutes and tree line 390.586 feet to a 33, Township 2 South, Range iron pin set; thence leaving East of and parallel to the ex- 51 seconds East 159.434 feet; 10 inch diameter elm tree; 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississaid old wire fence and tree isting said drive the following: North 75 degrees 21 minutes Thence continue along said sippi, said point being a line, run North 89 degrees 59 South 14 degrees 05 minutes 03 seconds East 21.689 feet; old wire fence and tree line marked 8 inch diameter creo89 degreesJOURNEY 58 minutes sote post at a fence comer; WINNEBAGO minutes 13 seconds East 41 seconds East 59.441 feet; North 59 degrees 15 minutes North run North 89 de465.153 CLASS East A , RV 2000 feet Thence 44.951 feet to a nail set being thence leaving said line, run 30 seconds East 32.055 feet; 42 seconds CAMPER & TRUCK pin; Thence contin- grees 58 minutes 42 seconds an existing 10 South 08 degrees 55 minutes North 46 degrees 28 minutes to an iron MODEL 5.0 feet East of Condition Excellent CHEROKEE 285 00 seconds East 22.124 feet; ue' North 89 LONG degrees 58 East2007 alongF250 an oldSuper wire fence seconds West 279.132 34.9 FT. feet wide drive; 132003 Duty Power Stroke Brand Newasphalt Refrigerator 8 a fence North 31 degrees 22 minutes minutes 42 HOOKUP seconds East and tree line 390.586 elm tree on 50 AMP thence run along a line that is feet to an SLEEPS Diesel Truckfeet to a said old wire fence and 10 inch diameter elm tree; line; thence run 56 seconds East 17.705 feet alongCUMMINS Tiresof&and Hotparallel Waterto and tree DIESEL 5.0 New feet East EXCELLENT CONDITION line 353.118 CHASSIS feet to an Thence continueRiver along30 said 89 degrees WORKS 58 minutes to a nail set; thence leaving tree EVERYTHING FREIGHTLINER 2006 Forest the existing said drive the Heater. Sleeps Six fol- South 5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK pin for SLIDE the Point of Be- old wire fence and tree line West along said said curb, run South 88 de- ironLARGE OUT Ft. Camper. lowing: South 05 degrees 22 42 seconds ADAPTER 7,900 ACTUAL MILES Thence run North North 89 degrees 58 minutes tree line, 390.586 grees 39 minutes 37 seconds ginning;ONAN QUIET minutes 10 seconds East fence and CENTRAL HEAT & AIR feet to a point 2.5 42 seconds East for 465.153 feet East 89.105 feet to an iron pin 234.267GENERATOR theNEW point of &beginning, Both TIRES NEW OBO22 de- feet toALL 32.239 $12,500. feet; South ELECTRIC JACK acres, ON TRAILER South of an existing pin for the Point of containing 2.346 more set on the West right-of-way feet VERY WELL KEPT.curb; to an iron grees 56 minutes 10 seconds $10,000 Must See!! along a line that is Beginning; Thence continue lien of U. S. Highway 45 Thence run ,500. East 37.498 feet; thence con- or less. $8995 662-665-1420 South of and parallel North degrees 58 minutes Call 89 662-462-3754 Call Richard 662-664-4927 South; thence run South 00 2.5 feet662-728-2628 tinueCall along a line that is 5.0 feet North of and parallel to TRACT 2: Commencing at d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 to said curb the following: 42 seconds East along said old the existing said drive the fol- the Southwest corner of the seconds West along the West North 56 degrees 56 minutes wire fence and tree line lowing: South 46 degrees 43 Northeast Quarter of the right-of-way line of said High- 40 seconds East 13.413 feet; 353.118 feet to an iron pin; minutes 37 seconds East Southeast Quarter of Section way 279.948 feet to a con- North 78 degrees 59 minutes Thence run North 25.000 46.501 feet; South 64 de- 33, Township 2 South, Range crete right-of-way marker at a 40 seconds East 35.321 feet; feet; Thence run South 89 degrees 06 minutes 50 seconds 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- fence corner; thence leaving North 88 degrees 05 minutes grees 58 minutes 42 seconds East 38.933 feet; South 81 de- sippi, said point being an eight said right-of-way run South 89 38 seconds East 43.317 feet West 353.116 feet; Thence grees 33 minutes 16 seconds inch diameter creosote post; d e g r e e s 5 8 m i n u t e s 4 2 an iron pin on the West right run South 00 degrees 00 East 45.146 feet; North 89 thence run North 89 degrees seconds West along said wire of way line of U.S. Highway minutes 11 seconds West d e g r e e s 0 2 m i n u t e s 5 8 58 minutes 42 seconds East fence and tree line 440.638 45 South; Thence run South 0 25.000 feet to the point of seconds East 82.619 feet; along a wire fence and tree feet to the point of beginning, d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 beginning, containing 0.203 North 80 degrees 11 minutes line 390.586 feet to a 10 inch containing 2.456 acres, more seconds West along the West acres, more or less. right of way line of U.S. High2009 TT45A 33 seconds East 31.715 feet; diameter elm tree; thence or less. way 45 South 249.739 feet to TRACT C: North 63 degrees 11 minutes continue along said wire fence New Holland Tractor New injectors an iron pin at a concrete right Less and except any and all 335EXCEPT: Hours 45 seconds East 40.483 feet; and tree line North 89 de- LESS AND & Fuel Pump of way marker; Thence leav- conveyances of burial plots thence continue along a line grees 58 minutes 42 seconds 8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll ing said right Tires of way line, run and spaces in Forrest MeA: Good that is 5.0 feet West of and East 465.153 feet to an iron TRACT over protective as evidenced by at structure, the Southw- South 89 degrees 58 minutes morial GOODPark CONDITION parallel to the existing said pin set for the point of begin- Commencing Like 42 seconds West along said any recorded or unrecorded Cornerpower of thelift. Northeast drive the following: North 38 ning; thence leaving said wire esthydrolic OR New Condition, owner d e g r e e s 4 2 m i n u t e s 4 9 fence and tree line, run North Quarter (1/4) of the South- old wire fence and tree line deeds or transfers of such deceased, Kossuth Area. seconds East 62.250 feet; 00 degrees 00 minutes 11 east Quarter (1/4) of Section 87.520 feet to the point of burial plots in such described $12,500- 662-424-3701 North 13 degrees 41 minutes seconds East 228.307 feet to 33, Township 2 South, Range beginning, containing 0.500 property. 06 seconds East 52.537 feet; a nail set on the North edge 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- acres, more or less. Although the title to said thence leaving said line, run of a curb on a 25 feet wide sippi, said point being a property is believed to be North 88 degrees 55 minutes existing asphalt drive; thence marked 8 inch diameter creo- TRACT B: 52 seconds East 32.352 feet run along the North side of sote post at a fence comer; Commencing at the Southw- good, I will sell and convey title in said propto a point that is 5.0 feet East said curb the following: South Thence run North 89 de- est Corner of the Northeast only 53'such STEP DECK of said drive; thence continue 89 degrees 54 minutes 13 grees 58 minutes 42 seconds Quarter (1/4) of the South- erty as is vested in me as SubTRAILER along a line that is 5.0 feet seconds East 120.218 feet; East along an old wire fence east Quarter (1/4) of Section stitute Trustee. East of and parallel to the ex- North 89 degrees 19 minutes and tree line 390.586 feet to a 33, Township 2 South, Range CUSTOM BUILT TO isting said drive the following: 51 seconds East 159.434 feet; 10 inch diameter elm tree; 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- S I G N E D , P O S T E D HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1 South 14 degrees 05 minutes North 75 degrees 21 minutes Thence continue along said sippi, said point being a AND PUBLISHED on this TON TRUCKS. 41 seconds East 59.441 feet; 03 seconds East 21.689 feet; old wire fence and tree line marked 8 inch diameter creo- the 20th day of August, 2015. thence leaving said line, run North 59 degrees 15 minutes North 89 degrees 58 minutes sote post at a fence comer; BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3' South 08 degrees 55 minutes 30 seconds East 32.055 feet; 42 seconds East 465.153 feet Thence run North 89 de- W. JETT WILSON MSB# PULL OUTS @ FRONT 13 seconds West 279.132 North 46 degrees 28 minutes to an iron pin; Thence contin- grees 58 minutes 42 seconds 7316 & REAR. feet to an elm tree on a fence 00 seconds East 22.124 feet; ue' North 89 degrees 58 East along an old wire fence SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE 8,000 lbs, 42 seconds East and tree line 390.586 feet to a WILSON & HINTON, P.A. degrees 22 minutes minutes FOR and tree line; thence run North 31CALL Big Boy Forklift BOOMS, CHAINS East 17.705 feet along said$old wire fence and 10 inch diameter elm tree; Post Office Box 1257 & South outside 89 degrees tires 58 minutes 56 seconds ADDITIONAL OFMS ACCESSORIES set; thence leaving tree line 353.118 feet to an Thence continue along said LOTS Corinth, 38835 42 seconds along said to a nail INFORMATION Good West Condition lbs tree line (662) 286-3366 fence and pin forfor the aPoint of Be- old wire5,000 Great small fence and tree line, 390.586 said curb, run South 88 de- iron $10,000/OBO $15,000 89 degrees 58 minutes Thence run North North 39 minutes 37 seconds ginning;warehouse Good Condition feet to the point of beginning, grees662-808-9313 OR containing 2.346 acres, more East 89.105 feet to an iron pin 234.267 feet to a point 2.5 42 seconds East 465.153 feet Publish 4 times: CALL 20, 662-603-1547 27, September 3, set on 662-415-5071 the West right-of-way feet South of an existing curb; to an iron pin for the Point of August or less. lien of U. S. Highway 45 Thence run along a line that is Beginning; Thence continue 10, 2015 TRACT 2: Commencing at South; thence run South 00 2.5 feet South of and parallel North 89 degrees 58 minutes the Southwest corner of the d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 to said curb the following: 42 seconds East along said old 14987 Northeast Quarter of the seconds West along the West North 56 degrees 56 minutes wire fence and tree line Bass line Tracker of said High- 40 seconds East 13.413 feet; 353.118 feet to an iron pin; Southeast Quarter of Section right-of-way feet to a con- North 78 degrees 59 minutes Thence run North 25.000 Boat 33, Township 2 South, Range way 279.948 marker at a 40 seconds East 35.321 feet; feet; Thence run South 89 de7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- crete right-of-way 17 foot with fence console, corner; thence leaving North 88 degrees 05 minutes grees 58 minutes 42 seconds sippi,18’ said long, point being an eight foot 120 HP right-of-way run South 89 38 seconds East 43.317 feet West 353.116 feet; Thence inch diameter creosote post; said control trolling e e s 5 8 m i n u t e s 4 2 an iron pin on the West right run South 00 degrees 00 Johnson mtr.,89trailer thence run North degrees d e g r motor, 2 new 1995 15’ Aluminum 11 seconds West seconds West along said wire of way line of U.S. Highway minutes 58 minutes seconds & mtr.,42new paint,East fence batteries, feet Outboard to the point of and tree linedepth 440.638 45 South; Thence run South 0 25.000 Boat, along a wire fence and tree finder, live well, new transel, 2 line 390.586 feet to a 10 inch feet to the point of beginning, d e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 beginning, containing 0.203 2012 Lowe Pontoon life jackets, no Motor, Trolling Mtr., live wells, hot foot diameter elm tree; thence containing 2.456 acres, more seconds West along the West acres, more or less. leaks, carpet in right of way line of U.S. Highor less. 90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer New Rod Holder, continue along said wire fence control. good shape, 40 way 45 South 249.739 feet to TRACT C: and tree line North 89 deStill under warranty. New Electric hp Johnson, good Less and except any and all an iron pin at a concrete right LESS AND EXCEPT: grees 58 minutes 42 seconds of burial plots of way marker; Thence leav- conveyances boat. Includes HUGE tube Anchor East 465.153 feet to an iron ing said right of way line, run and spaces in Forrest MeA: 662-596-5053 pin set for the point of begin- TRACT $ $19,300 $2550.00 SouthwSouth 89 degrees 58 minutes morial Park as evidenced by Commencing at the ning; thence leaving said wire Corner of the Northeast 42 seconds West along said any recorded or unrecorded 662-427-9063 462-3373 fence and tree line, run North est662-415-8425 00 degrees 00 minutes 11 Quarter (1/4) of the South- old wire fence and tree line deeds or transfers of such seconds East 228.307 feet to east Quarter (1/4) of Section 87.520 feet to the point of burial plots in such described a nail set on the North edge 33, Township 2 South, Range beginning, containing 0.500 property. of a curb on a 25 feet wide 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- acres, more or less. Although the title to said existing asphalt drive; thence sippi, said point being a property is believed to be run along the North side of marked 8 inch diameter creo- TRACT B: said curb the following: South sote post at a fence comer; Commencing at the Southw- good, I will sell and convey 89 degrees 54 minutes 13 Thence run North 89 de- est Corner of the Northeast only such title in said propseconds East 120.218 feet; grees 58 minutes 42 seconds Quarter (1/4) of the South- erty as is vested in me as SubNorth 89 degrees 19 minutes East along an old wire fence east Quarter (1/4) of Section stitute Trustee. 51 seconds East 159.434 feet; and tree line 390.586 feet to a 33, Township 2 South, Range North 75 degrees 21 minutes 10 inch diameter elm tree; 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- S I G N E D , P O S T E D 03 seconds East 21.689 feet; Thence continue along said sippi, said point being a AND PUBLISHED on this North 59 degrees 15 minutes old wire fence and tree line marked 8 inch diameter creo- the 20th day of August, 2015. 30 seconds East 32.055 feet; North 89 degrees 58 minutes sote post at a fence comer; North 46 degrees 28 minutes 42 seconds East 465.153 feet Thence run North 89 de- W. JETT WILSON MSB# 00 seconds East 22.124 feet; to an iron pin; Thence contin- grees 58 minutes 42 seconds 7316 North 31 degrees 22 minutes ue' North 89 degrees 58 East along an old wire fence SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE 56 seconds East 17.705 feet minutes 42 seconds East and tree line 390.586 feet to a WILSON & HINTON, P.A. along said old wire fence and 10 inch diameter elm tree; Post Office Box 1257 NOTICE OF SALE BY SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

able in accordance with the terms of said Deeds of Trust, and the legal holder of said indebtedness, SOUTHBANK, having requested the undersigned Substitute Trustee to execute the trust 0955 and sellLEGALS said land and property in accordance with the terms of said Deeds of Trust for the purpose of raising the sums due thereunder, together with attorney's fees, Substitute Trustee's fees, and expense of sale.

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto 1999 ENDEAVOUR

SOLD

$27,000 $25,000

SOLD

808-0653

1990 Allegro Motor Home

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD SLEEPS 6

51,000 MILES

SOLD

$4300

662-415-5247

1993 John Deere 5300 Tractor

TRACTOR FOR SALE JOHN DEERE

w/ John Deere loader. 2900 Hours

40-20 NEW PUMPS, GOOD TIRES RETIRED FROM FARMING $14,000 662-419-1587

$10,500

731-926-0006

sote post at a fence comer; Commencing at the Southw- good, I will sell and convey Thence run North 89 de- est Corner of the Northeast only such title in said propgrees 58 minutes 42 seconds Quarter (1/4) of the South- erty as is vested in me as SubEast along an old wire fence east Quarter (1/4) of Section stitute Trustee. • Thursday, and tree line 390.586Daily feet toCorinthian a 33, Township 2 South, RangeAugust 20, 2015 • 17 10 inch diameter elm tree; 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- S I G N E D , P O S T E D Thence continue along said sippi, said point being a AND PUBLISHED on this 0955 0955 LEGALS 0955 old wireLEGALS fence and tree line marked 20thLEGALS day of August, 2015. 8 inch diameter creo- the North 89 degrees 58 minutes sote post at a fence comer; 42 seconds East 465.153 feet Thence run North 89 de- W. JETT WILSON MSB# to an iron pin; Thence contin- grees 58 minutes 42 seconds 7316 ue' North 89 degrees 58 East along an old wire fence SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE minutes 42 seconds East and tree line 390.586 feet to a WILSON & HINTON, P.A. along said old wire fence and 10 inch diameter elm tree; Post Office Box 1257 tree line 353.118 feet to an Thence continue along said Corinth, MS 38835 iron pin for the Point of Be- old wire fence and tree line (662) 286-3366 ginning; Thence run North North 89 degrees 58 minutes 234.267 feet to a point 2.5 42 seconds East 465.153 feet Publish 4 times: feet South of an existing curb; to an iron pin for the Point of August 20, 27, September 3, Thence run along a line that is Beginning; Thence continue 10, 2015 2.5 feet South of and parallel North 89 degrees 58 minutes to said curb the following: 42 seconds East along said old 14987 North 56 degrees 56 minutes wire fence and tree line 40 seconds East 13.413 feet; 353.118 feet to an iron pin; North 78 degrees 59 minutes Thence run North 25.000 40 seconds East 35.321 feet; feet; Thence run South 89 de- HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY North 88 degrees 05 minutes grees 58 minutes 42 seconds 38 seconds East 43.317 feet West 353.116 feet; Thence an iron pin on the West right run South 00 degrees 00 HOME IMPROVEMENT of way line of U.S. Highway minutes 11 seconds West & REPAIR 45 South; Thence run South 0 25.000 feet to the point of ALL-PRO Home Maintend e g r e e s 2 3 m i n u t e s 1 3 beginning, containing 0.203 ance and Repair- 662seconds West along the West acres, more or less. 415-6646 right of way line of U.S. Highway 45 South 249.739 feet to TRACT C: STORAGE, INDOOR/ an iron pin at a concrete right Less and except any and all of way marker; Thence leav- conveyances of burial plots OUTDOOR ing said right of way line, run and spaces in Forrest Me20 AND 40 foot Metal South 89 degrees 58 minutes morial Park as evidenced by Cargo Containers. Great 42 seconds West along said any recorded or unrecorded /storage. 731-689-5616 old wire fence and tree line deeds or transfers of such 87.520 feet to the point of burial plots in such described AMERICAN beginning, containing 0.500 property. MINI STORAGE acres, more or less. 2058 S. Tate Although the title to said Across From property is believed to be TRACT B: World Color Commencing at the Southw- good, I will sell and convey 287-1024 est Corner of the Northeast only such title in said propQuarter (1/4) of the South- erty as is vested in me as SubMORRIS CRUM east Quarter (1/4) of Section stitute Trustee. MINI-STORAGE 33, Township 2 South, Range 286-3826. 7 East, Alcorn County, Missis- S I G N E D , P O S T E D sippi, said point being a AND PUBLISHED on this PROFESSIONAL marked 8 inch diameter creo- the 20th day of August, 2015. SERVICE DIRECTORY sote post at a fence comer; Thence run North 89 de- W. JETT WILSON MSB# grees 58 minutes 42 seconds 7316 East along an old wire fence SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE and tree line 390.586 feet to a WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 10 inch diameter elm tree; Post Office Box 1257 Thence continue along said Corinth, MS 38835 old wire fence and tree line (662) 286-3366 North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East 465.153 feet Publish 4 times: to an iron pin for the Point of August 20, 27, September 3, Beginning; Thence continue 10, 2015 North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East along said old 14987 wire fence and tree line 353.118 feet to an iron pin; Thence run North 25.000 feet; Thence run South 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds West 353.116 feet; Thence run South 00 degrees 00 minutes 11 seconds West 25.000 feet to the point of beginning, containing 0.203 acres, more or less. REDUCED

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

TRACT C: Less and except any and all gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, conveyances of shower, burial plots full body paint, walk-in SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 and spaces in Forrest Megen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-flatasscreen TVs, Allison by morial Park evidenced 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather any or unrecorded capt. recorded seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table couch (fold into deeds or &transfers of bed), such micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi. burial plots in such described property. $65,000

ED C U D RE 662-415-0590

Although the title to said property is believed to be good, I will sell and convey only such title in said property as is vested in me as Substitute Trustee.

WINNEBAGO

SIGNED, POSTED MOTOR HOME AND PUBLISHED on this the 20th day of August, 2015.

1989 W. JETT 40' WILSON MSB# 7316 Queen Size Bed SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 1 Bath Post Office Box 1257 Corinth,Sleeps MS 38835 6-7 (662) 286-3366 people comfortably

$8500

Publish 4 times: August 20, 27, September 3, 10, 2015

662-808-9313

1979 GMC DUMP TRUCK GRAIN BED $

4,000

$6500.00 731-645-8339 662-419-1587 731-453-5239

EQUIPMENT HAULER

662-287-1464

662-287-1464

Toyota Forklift 662-287-1464

$75,000. 662-287-7734

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor

$6500.

Older Model Ford Tractor with 2 Row Equipment.

1400 Hours

$8500.00 731-926-0006

$6000.00 662-286-6571 662-286-3924

1956 FORD 600

W & W HORSE OR CATTLE TRAILER ALL ALUMINUM LIKE NEW $7000.

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

Hyster Forklift Narrow Aisle 24 Volt Battery 3650.00 287-1464

804 BOATS ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE 16FT./5FT. 115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR TRAILER NEWLY REWIRED ALL TIRES NEW NEW WINCH

ASKING $7500.00 Or Make Me An Offer CALL 662-427-9591 Call (662)427-9591 or Cell phone (662)212-4946 Built by Scully’s Aluminum Boats of Louisiana.

Loweline Boat

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

for only $7995.

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat SOLD 25 HP Motor $2700.00 Ask for Brad: 2800.00 284-4826

662-660-3433

COMMERCIAL

Clark Forklift

1250

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

1985 30’ long motor home, new tires, Price negotiable.

14987

Tractor For Sale! John Deere 16-30

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy

14 Ft. Aluminum Boat & Trailer, 25 HP Johnson Motor. New Battery $2400. REDUCED Call for More Info: 662-286-8455

Starcraft Semi V Boat 15' Long, 5.5' Wide 50 hp Mercury outboard motor Motor guide trolling 30 pound thrust 3 Seats + 2 Bench Seats, Canopy

SOLD

$2000 Call 662-415-5842 or 415-5375

14’ flat bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor and all. Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503


18 • Thursday, August 20, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

HONESTY • INTEGRITY • COMMITMENT

Elect REED MITCHELL 4th District Supervisor

Having successfully owned and operated a local business for 22 years, I am ready and qualified to oversee the business of the 4th District of Alcorn County. My goal is to effectively and efficiently manage our tax dollars with the same care and respect as I require with my own business. I live under the guiding principle that if I don’t handle myself and my personal funds with integrity, my family will suffer. I will uphold this same commitment to fiscal responsibility with our tax dollars.

PERSONAL

• Life-long resident of 4th District of Alcorn County • Married 22 years to the former Julie Hinton, daughter of Ray and Lynn Hinton • 4 children: John (21), Zach (16), Anslie (10), Ethan (9) • Son of Lionel and the late Janis Mitchell • Grandson of the late Lionel and Letha Mitchell and the late Glen and Sybil Smith • 1992 graduate of Kossuth High School • Attended NEMCC • A Christian and active member of Wheeler Grove Baptist; Deacon 9 year • Sunday School Director, 4 years • Outreach Ministry Chairman • Awana, 15 years • Upward Basketball Ministry,8 years • Church Security Chairman • Little League Basketball Coach

POLITICAL

• 2000-2004 Alderman of Kossuth • 2004-2012 U.S. Department of Argriculture Alcorn and Tishomingo County Committee (COC), served 3 terms and held the position of Chairman and Vice Chairman

The COC are the supreme decision makers in Farm Service Agency with county offices, nationwide. All program approvals, as well as staffing issues, must be approved by the COC and County Executive Director.

REED

MITCHELL

4th District Supervisor ALCORN COUNTY Paid for by Reed Mitchell

Fogle agrees to plead guilty to sex, child porn charges BY RICK CALLAHAN Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS — Longtime Subway pitchman Jared Fogle agreed Wednesday to plead guilty to allegations that he paid for sex acts with minors and received child pornography in a case that destroyed his career at the sandwich-shop chain and could send him to prison for more than a decade. Prosecutors allege that Fogle knew the pornography had been secretly produced by the former director of his charitable foundation, which sought to raise awareness about childhood obesity and arranged for Fogle to visit schools and urge children to adopt healthy eating and exercise habits. Authorities said Fogle offered to pay adult prostitutes a finder’s fee if they could connect him with minors for sex acts, including some as young as 14 or 15 years old. “This is about using wealth, status and secrecy to illegally exploit children,” U.S. Attorney Josh Minkler said. A tight-lipped Fogle sat in federal court with his hands clasped and quietly answered “no” when the judge asked whether he had any questions about his rights. He is expected to enter the formal plea at a later date to one count each of travelling to engage in illicit sexual conduct with a minor and distribution and receipt of child pornography. The agreement released by prosecutors said Fogle will pay $1.4 million in restitution to 14 minor victims, who will each receive $100,000. He will also be required to register as a sex offender and undergo treatment for

“This is about using wealth, status and secrecy to illegally exploit children.” U.S. Attorney Josh Minkler sexual disorders. The government agreed not to seek a sentence of more than 121⁄2 years in prison, and Fogle agreed not to ask for less than five years, according to court documents. Federal judges have wide discretion in sentencing, and Fogle could get a longer sentence. The child-porn charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. The count involving sex with a minor is punishable by up to 30 years. Fogle “knows that restitution can’t undo the damage that he’s done, but he will do all in his power to try to make it right,” defense attorney Jeremy Margolis told reporters. The married father of two, he added, has a “medical problem” and “expects to get well,” but he did not elaborate. As Fogle left the courthouse, several people jeered him amid a throng of TV cameras, onlookers and protesters. Fogle, 37, became Subway’s pitchman after shedding more than 200 pounds as a college student, in part by eating the chain’s sandwiches. He was the public face of the company for more than 15 years — a period in which its number of locations tripled, making Subway the world’s largest restaurant chain. Subway suspended the partnership in July after agents raided his home in the affluent Indianapolis suburb of Zionsville, and

the chain said this week that it had ended its relationship with Fogle. Federal prosecutors allege in the documents that Fogle traveled to pay for sex acts, including with minors, from 2007 until as recently as June and that he repeatedly planned business trips to coincide with his sexual pursuits. Fogle is accused of having sex with two 16-yearold girls at hotels in New York City. One of the girls told investigators she had sex with Fogle three times in November 2012, when she was 16, and again two months later, when she was 17. The girl told Fogle her age when they first met, according to the documents. After that meeting, Fogle allegedly texted the girl and offered to pay her a fee if she could find him another underage girl to pay for sex acts. During these discussions, Fogle “stated that he would accept a 16-yearold girl, while stating that the younger the girl, the better,” the documents said. Posts to social media place Fogle in New York around the dates of the alleged sex acts. Tweets from Subway’s official account indicate Fogle attended events ahead of the New York Marathon in November 2012, appearing in a segment of a news program on Nov. 1 and sitting on a panel with Subway teammates the following day.

Dorm Room Specials Dorm Room Set Sofa, Love & Chair ( Compact Set for EASY Hauling!!! )

Sofa - Loveseat Set

$500

Multiple Colors to choose from

$400

Reclining - Sofa or Loveseat

$450

Reclining - Sofa & Loveseat Set

$999

EACH

Corinthian Clearance Center 2676 S. Harper Rd. • Corinth, MS (662) 696-3000 • between Wal-Mart and Hwy 45 By blinking light across from Tecumseh


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