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Biggersville Students get treat during eclipse

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Tuesday Aug. 22,

2017

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 120, No. 200 •

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Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

Great American Eclipse Rare event sweeps across area

‘A primal experience’

BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

The Crossroads area enjoyed the effects of the Great American Eclipse 2017, even if not in the path of totality. Those who watched as much of the process, as Corinthians could observe, got to see first contact and some phases of the eclipse until it ended. Many residents noticed the daylight outdoors became noticeably dimmer and while humidity remained the same, temperatures dropped as much as five degrees during the event’s peak. Social media came alive with photos of crescent-shaped shadows the eclipse casted on outdoor walls, sidewalks, streets and on the ground as tree leaves acted like multiple pinhole viewers. Glen resident Whitney Houry has deep shade along the county road where she lives and said, “With all the crescent shapes on the road, it looked like the road had turned to water.” People posted pictures of their private eclipse-viewing gatherings. Schools in the area had to make choices regarding how to handle their students’ observations of the event and districts varied in their policies for the day. Alcorn County Schools opted for their pre-k through sixth grade students not to participate in observations of the event. A letter from Alcorn School District Superintendent Larry B. Mitchell stated, “After researching the possible hazards and conferring with doctors,

Americans dazzled by solar eclipse BY MARCIA DUNN AP Aerospace Writer

Photos by Michael H. Miller

A portion of the solar eclipse that went through the Crossroads area is seen in this photo taken through the eyepiece of a Mead telescope.

Northeast Mississippi Community College student and Corinth resident Parker Sparks enjoys the view of the solar eclipse on Monday.

The stars came out in the middle of the day, zoo animals ran in agitated circles, crickets chirped, birds fell silent and a chilly darkness settled upon the land Monday as the U.S. witnessed its first full-blown, coast-to-coast solar eclipse since World War I. Millions of Americans gazed in wonder at the cosmic spectacle, with the best seats along the so-called path of totality that raced 2,600 miles (4,200 kilometers) across the continent from Oregon to South Carolina. “It was a very primal experience,” Julie Vigeland, of Portland, Oregon, said after she was moved to tears by the sight of the sun reduced to a silvery ring of light in Salem. It took 90 minutes for the shadow of the moon to travel across the country. Along that path, the moon blotted out the midday sun for about two wondrous minutes at any one place, eliciting oohs, aahs, whoops and shouts from people gathered in stadiums, parks and backyards. It was, by all accounts, the most-observed and mostphotographed eclipse in history, documented by satellites and high-altitude balloons and watched on Earth through telescopes, cameras and cardboardframe protective eyeglasses.

Please see CROSSROADS | 2

Please see ECLIPSE | 2

Second hazardous waste day is set for Sept. 23 BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality is granting $25,000 to support another hazardous waste day disposal event for Alcorn County and Corinth. It is scheduled to be held on Sept. 23 at the transfer station operated by Waste Connections off South Harper Road at 2610 Getwell Road. Last fall’s event had 344 cars drive through the collection center, more than doubling the traffic from the prior year. Residents get the opportunity to dispose of things such as outdated electronics, motor oil, old paint cans and insecticides that

People of the Crossroads Modern Woodman Financial Representative Steve Eaton loves giving back to the community he serves. Just this year alone through July, his company has given $415,405 in fraternal benefits in Northeast Mississippi - many of those in his home county of Alcorn. Eaton is president of Business Network International (BNI) and is an active member in the Corinth Civitan and Corinth Kiwanis clubs. The 38-year-old is president of the Kossuth Booster Club and serves on the Alcorn County Fair Board. A 1997 Kossuth High School graduate, he has been married to Jessica for 19 years. They have two sons, 16-year-old Hunter and 12-year-old Hank, both students at Kossuth. The father has been a volunteer coach in both baseball and football. “That’s my hobbies,” he said. “Working with my boys and helping my community.”

are otherwise difficult to properly throw away. Last fall, old TVs, computers, VCRs and other electronics totaling 24,028 pounds filled a semi trailer and a half. The second-biggest category was chemicals, totaling 3,491 pounds. That included 716 pounds of aerosols; 294 pounds of oxidizers; 2,094 pounds of poisons; 239 pounds of corrosives; 10 pounds of mercury; 92 pounds of batteries; and 46 pounds of compact fluorescent light bulbs, which contain mercury. Residents also turned in 1,646 linear feet of fluorescent

Staff photo by Mark Boehler

Please see WASTE | 5

25 years ago

10 years ago

More than 50 balloons participate in the annual Roscoe Turner Hot Air Balloon Race.

10 Year Anniversary! Doug Jumper

Michael McCreary

Rick Jones

Neil Paul

Marea Wilson

Nikki Briggs of Corinth wins second place in the talent competition at the annual Jimmie Rodgers Festival in Meridian.

2007-2017

John & Brenda Hayes

Alexis Rudd

Roger Clark

Audrey McNair

Carl Jones

2782 S Harper Rd

www.jumperrealty.com


2 • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Great American Eclipse ECLIPSE CONTINUED FROM 1

In Boise, Idaho, where the sun was more than 99 percent blocked, the street lights flicked on briefly, while in Nashville, Tennessee, people craned their necks at the sky and knocked back longneck beers at Nudie’s Honky Tonk bar. Passengers aboard a cruise ship in the Caribbean watched it unfold as Bonnie Tyler sang her 1983 hit “Total Eclipse of the Heart.” Several minor-league baseball teams — one of them, the Columbia Fireflies, outfitted for the day in glow-in-the-dark jerseys — briefly suspended play. At the White House, despite all the warnings from experts about the risk of eye damage, President Donald Trump took off his eclipse glasses and looked directly at the sun. The path of totality, where the sun was 100 percent obscured by the moon, was just 60 to 70 miles wide. But the rest of North America was treated to a partial eclipse, as were Central American and the upper reaches of South America. Skies were clear along most of the route, to the relief of those who feared cloud cover would spoil the moment. “Oh, God, oh, that was amazing,” said Joe Dellinger, a Houston man who set up a telescope on the Capitol lawn in Jefferson City, Missouri. “That was better than any photo.” For the youngest observers, it seemed like magic. “It’s really, really, really, really awesome,” said

9-year-old Cami Smith as she gazed at the fully eclipsed sun in Beverly Beach, Oregon. NASA reported 4.4 million people were watching its TV coverage midway through the eclipse, the biggest livestream event in the space agency’s history. “It can be religious. It makes you feel insignificant, like you’re just a speck in the whole scheme of things,” said veteran eclipse-watcher Mike O’Leary of San Diego, who set up his camera along with among hundreds of other amateur astronomers in Casper, Wyoming. John Hays drove up from Bishop, California, for the total eclipse in Salem, Oregon, and said the experience will stay with him forever. “That silvery ring is so hypnotic and mesmerizing, it does remind you of wizardry or like magic,” he said. More than one parent was amazed to see teenagers actually look up from their cellphones. Patrick Schueck, a construction company president from Little Rock, Arkansas, brought his 10-year-old twin daughters Ava and Hayden to Bald Knob Cross of Peace in Alto Pass, Illinois, a more than 100foot cross atop a mountain. Schueck said at first his girls weren’t very interested in the eclipse. One sat looking at her iPhone. “Quickly that changed,” he said. “It went from them being aloof to being in total amazement.” Schueck called it a chance to “do something with my daughters that they’ll remember for the rest of

their lives.” Astronomers, too, were giddy with excitement. NASA solar physicist Alex Young said the last time earthlings had a connection like this to the heavens was during man’s first flight to the moon, on Apollo 8 in 1968. The first, famous Earthrise photo came from that mission and, like this eclipse, showed us “we are part of something bigger.” NASA’s acting administrator, Robert Lightfoot, watched with delight from a plane flying over the Oregon coast and joked about the space-agency official next to him, “I’m about to fight this man for a window seat.” Hoping to learn more about the sun’s composition and the mysterious solar wind, NASA and other scientists watched and analyzed it all from the ground and the sky, including aboard the International Space Station. Citizen scientists monitored animal and plant behavior as day turned into twilight. About 7,000 people streamed into the Nashville Zoo just to see the animals’ reaction and noticed how they got noisier at it got darker. The giraffes started running around crazily in circles when darkness fell, and the flamingos huddled together, though zookeepers aid it wasn’t clear whether it was the eclipse or the noisy, cheering crowd that spooked them. “I didn’t expect to get so emotionally caught up with it. I literally had chill bumps,” said zoo volunteer Stephen Foust.

Teacher makes eclipse memorable for students BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

BIGGERSVILLE — Moon Pies and Sunkist fruit snacks were served up alongside science and geography to commemorate the Great American Eclipse 2017 for a group of third graders at Biggersville Elementary School. BES third grade teacher Andrea Coleman said the students have known and talked about the eclipse since the first day of school. From day one, they were learning about the sun, and interesting things about the sun, such as solar flares. They learned about the earth, the moon and the phases of the moon. Coleman said her class worked to make their own pinhole viewers for the big event and they learned the science of light and how the light comes through the tiny hole to project an image on the screen in the box. However, the Alcorn County School District made the decision not to allow students up to sixth grade to go outside to witness the eclipse, due to concerns over potential vision safety with the younger children. Without being able to

Photos courtesy of Sherry Shawl

Olivia Eaton, Alannah Seag and Abby Turnbough eat Moon Pies during the eclipse in their third grade classroom at Biggersville elementary. use their pinhole viewers, Coleman said she wanted to do something to make the day special and commemorate the event, so she served up Moon Pies and Sunkist fruit snacks. “We had our Moon Pies and Starkist while we watched it happen on NASA’s online streaming,” said Coleman. The teacher said they learned about geography as they watched it happen in the path of to-

Students at Northeast Mississippi Community College wait patiently for their turn at the telescope during the solar eclipse. Northeast placed a filter on the end of the telescope to make viewing as safe as possible.

It’s back! Corinthian

tality across the United States. “They were really excited about watching it when it got darker. They could hear the crickets through the live feed. They’ve had a blast with it. I don’t know that they understand how neat this is. I’ve been trying to explain it. I hope they will remember it,” said Coleman. The last total solar eclipse in the continental U.S. was in 1979.

Travels

Photo by Michael H. Miller

CROSSROADS

Going somewhere? Pack your Daily Corinthian print edition and have a photo taken with your paper on the trip. Try to take photos at fun, unexpected places or with famous landmarks in the background. The Daily Corinthian in the past has been to the top of Pike’s Peak, to the bottom of the Great Barrier Reef.

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

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teachers and various superintendents, we have decided it is too big a risk for a student’s vision to allow them to observe the eclipse as a group. It would be difficult to insure every student wears the protective eyewear appropriately and does not take them off.” Teachers in that district were encouraged to allow students to watch NASA’s online coverage of the event. The Corinth School District opted not to let any students be allowed to view the solar eclipse outdoors, stating the policy was a safety precaution. District officials also encouraged teachers to allow online viewing of the event. Corinth School District parents were allowed to check their children out to view the eclipse. Those students were allowed an excused absence to leave for that purpose. McNairy County Schools chose to close Monday, due to the eclipse, and all extracurricular activities were postponed until after 3 p.m. Northeast Mississippi Community College was among schools getting students involved. Physics Instructor George Nock said the school set up viewing stations and provided eclipse glasses for students to use to view the rare event. Serving up Moon Pies, Sun Chips, Sunkist soda and Eclipse Gum, Booneville Optometrist Dr.

Photo courtesy of Whitney Houry

Social media came alive with newsfeed photos as crescent-shaped shadows of the eclipse were cast on outdoor walls, sidewalks, streets and on the ground as tree leaves acted like multiple pinhole viewers. Tate Hill gave residents a place to gather and celebrate Monday’s eclipse at the Triangle in Downtown Booneville. The owner of Hill Family Eye Center said he was excited about the unique astronomical event and thought it would be fun to host a party for the community to safely view the eclipse. His eclipse party brought a big crowd out to share fun, fellowship

and a once in a lifetime moment. The last total solar eclipse in the continental U.S. was in 1979. On Aug. 12, 2045, a total solar eclipse will sweep across parts of north Mississippi, although Corinth will again not be in the path of totality. (The Banner-Independent Editor Brant Sappington contributed to this story.)


Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Today in History Associated Press

Today is Tuesday, Aug. 22, the 234th day of 2017. There are 131 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On August 22, 1851, the schooner America outraced more than a dozen British vessels off the English coast to win a trophy that came to be known as the America’s Cup.

On this date In 1485, England’s King Richard III was killed in the Battle of Bosworth Field, effectively ending the War of the Roses. In 1787, inventor John Fitch demonstrated his steamboat on the Delaware River to delegates from the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. In 1846, Gen. Stephen W. Kearny proclaimed all of New Mexico a territory of the United States. In 1910, Japan annexed Korea, which remained under Japanese control until the end of World War II. In 1922, Irish revolutionary Michael Collins was shot to death, apparently by Irish Republican Army members opposed to the AngloIrish Treaty that Collins had co-signed. In 1932, the British Broadcasting Corp. conducted its first experimental television broadcast, using a 30-line mechanical system. In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vice President Richard Nixon were nominated for second terms in office by the Republican National Convention in San Francisco. In 1972, President Richard Nixon was nominated for a second term of office by the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach. John Wojtowicz and Salvatore Naturile took seven employees hostage at a Chase Manhattan Bank branch in Brooklyn, New York, during a botched robbery; the siege, which ended with Wojtowicz’s arrest and Naturile’s killing by the FBI, inspired the 1975 movie “Dog Day Afternoon.”

Local/Region

Daily Corinthian • 3

Across the Region Tishomingo County Absentee ballots available for special election TISHOMINGO COUNTY – Absentee ballots are now available at the Tishomingo County circuit clerk’s office. The ballots will feature the two percent tourism tax on prepared food and drink. The special election is set for Sept. 12. A photo ID is required for all absentee voters.

Tupelo Leaders vote against new jail, raising taxes TUPELO – The Lee County Board of Supervisors voted against building a new jail Monday morning, citing the estimated $51 million cost which would force a tax increase, reported the Daily Journal. In a 3-2 vote Monday morning, the supervisors voted to stay in the current 202-bed facility, which will have to be renovated. With the action, Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson said he will be forced to start releasing current inmates from municipalities throughout the county in order to re-

duce overcrowding. According to Johnson, the Lee County Adult Jail on North Commerce Street has been overcrowded since the day it opened more than 20 years ago. The facility routinely has 240 or more prisoners. The count Monday morning was 232. Johnson had proposed the county build a 600bed jail, which would cover anticipated growth and allow the facility to accept state and possibly federal prisoners, pending a contract with certain agencies. But the preliminary estimates came back at nearly $51 million, which would force a tax increase of up to 5 mills for the next 20 years. According to Lee County Chancery Clerk Bill Benson, that would equate to a $50 increase per year on a house with an assessed value of $100,000. It would be more than a 10 percent increase in ad valorem taxes for most tax payers.

toc County, reported the Daily Journal. David Burk, 57, of Pontotoc, was traveling east on a bicycle when, according to a press release issued by the Mississippi Highway Patrol, he apparently rode into the path of a west bound 2005 Cadillac at approximately 10:30 p.m. Saturday on Mississippi 338. MHP troopers responded to the crash where Burk died from his injuries on the scene. The driver of the Cadillac was not injured. The crash remains under investigation by MHP.

Oxford Ole Miss aims to cut drug, alcohol abuse OXFORD — A new program planned at the University of Mississippi will try to reduce the abuse of drugs and alcohol. A university news release says the William Magee Center for Wellness Education is set to open in 2018. It is named for a young Ole Miss alumnus who died of an overdose in 2013 while trying to overcome drug addiction. Donors have given more than $500,000, and another $850,000 is pledged. Among the donors are

Pontotoc Crash involving bicyclist kills man PONTOTOC – A crash involving a bicyclist left a Pontotoc man dead Saturday night in Ponto-

Magee’s parents, David and Kent Magee. David is publisher of the Oxford Eagle, and has written about how his son, who was a track athlete and honors student, struggled with addiction. The center will offer educational programs.

Starkville Historic home threatened by city development STARKVILLE — One of two pre-Civil War houses in a Mississippi college town could fall to development. Starkville’s GillespieJackson House, built in 1850, is for sale for $2.1 million and is being marketed for commercial or hotel development. Real estate agent Wes Tiner tells The Commercial Dispatch that the property could become a combination retail and residential development. The house is along an otherwise commercial strip of Mississippi 12. Though the house is on the National Register of Historic Places, only a local law could protect it from demolition. But the house is outside Starkville’s locally protected historic districts. The city’s only other pre-Civil War house, The

Cedars, is also for sale. But owners of that 1837 house say they aim to sell to a buyer that will preserve the structure.

Southaven Police dog dies after being left in hot car SOUTHAVEN — Southaven police have confirmed a 6-year-old K-9 officer died after his handler left him in a police car. Police Chief Steve Pirtle said the handler had just returned to the office Tuesday evening following undercover work when he left his partner, Gunner, in the car with the windows up and the engine off. WREG-TV reports by the time the officer returned two hours later, Gunner was in complete distress. He was rushed to a nearby animal hospital where he died. Gunner was the only K-9 dedicated to the department’s narcotics division and had only been partnered with the officer for three weeks. Pirtle says there will be disciplinary action against the officer, and the department will be making policy changes to prevent something like this from happening in the future.

State Briefs 1 Mississippi county is asked to move Confederate statue KOSCIUSKO — One county in Mississippi could consider moving a Confederate monument off of its courthouse lawn. WLIN-FM in Kosciusko reports a local resident asked Attala County supervisors Monday to move the soldier statue to another place, such as a park or cemetery. Jerone Garland, who made the request, says the courthouse is where people seek justice, register to vote and take care of property records. He says they should not have to walk past what he calls a symbol of “hate and bigotry.” Supervisors made no immediate decision. Board president Kary Ellington says he and his colleagues will listen to other suggestions of where to put the statue , which dates to 1899. Supervisors’ next meeting is Sept. 5. Confederate monuments have come under increased scrutiny in the U.S. in recent months.

2 deaths among the 36 reported West Nile virus cases in Mississippi JACKSON — Mississippi now has two West Nile virus deaths and 36 confirmed cases of the mosquito-borne illness this year. The two deaths, reported Monday, are in Forrest and Humphreys counties. The state Health Department says it hasn’t been able to confirm that a death it

attributed to the disease three weeks ago, in Grenada County, was caused by West Nile after additional tests were done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The counties with the most West Nile cases this year are Hinds with seven, Rankin with six, and Forrest and Madison with four each. Humphreys and Lincoln counties have two each. Counties with one case each are Bolivar, Clay, Covington, Jones, Leake, Leflore, Lowndes, Noxubee, Perry, Scott and Wilkinson. Last year, Mississippi reported 43 cases and two deaths.

Mississippi trustees reject rule on university foundations JACKSON — College Board trustees are rejecting an effort to impose further rules on university foundations. The board voted Thursday against the proposal, which had been sought by trustee Alan Perry of Jackson. Perry’s proposal would have required separately incorporated university foundations to notify the board whenever they acquired land or built something intended for a university’s use. Trustees would have been required to approve any purchase that cost a foundation more than 20 percent of its yearly income. The proposal was a reaction to a $3 million land purchase by Jackson State University’s foundation for a dormitory project. Trustees didn’t know about the purchase and later quashed the project.

University foundations fought the proposal for months, saying it was unnecessary and infringed on their independence.

Man in critical condition after motorcycle, 18-wheeler crash KILN — A sheriff’s office says a crash between a motorcycle and an eighteenwheeler in Mississippi left a man in critical condition. The Sun Herald of Gulfport reports the Hancock County Sheriff’s Office says the bike and semi tractor-trailer collided Friday night on state Highway 603 north of Kiln. Chief Deputy Don Bass says the 42-year-old man driving the motorcycle was taken to a hospital in Gulfport. Sheriff’s deputies, American Medical Response and county fire officials had responded at the scene.

Greenville leaders debate how to spend local casino revenue GREENVILLE — Leaders in one Mississippi city want to put all the local casino revenue into the city budget instead of giving some to the schools. Greenville expects to collect just over $1.1 million in taxes from two local casinos. The Delta Democrat-Times reports the City Council usually sends just over 14 percent of the casino money to the Greenville Public School District. For the budget year beginning Oct. 1, that would be about $140,000.

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Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

Other Voices

Immigration system does need reform The nation’s legal immigration system is in dire need of reform, but a new bill will only make us poorer and less free. Republican Sens. Tom Cotton of Alabama and David Perdue of Georgia recently introduced the Reforming American Immigration for a Strong Economy, or RAISE, Act. The legislation, which has the endorsement of the Trump administration, would reduce legal immigration by half over 10 years and implement a new merit-based points system for determining immigration eligibility. Preferences would be given to those who are younger, have advanced degrees (especially in science and engineering fields), have a job offer with a high salary, score well on English-language assessment exams, or invest at least $1.35 million in the country. The bill would also cap the number of refugees offered permanent residency to 50,000 per year. The merit-based system is intended to be modeled after immigration systems in Canada and Australia, though critics point out that the United States permits fewer immigrants per capita than either of those nations — and this rate would only deteriorate further under the RAISE Act. In a USA Today column, Cotton and Perdue claimed that their alterations to the immigration system would “give working-class families the raise they deserve.” This is based on the argument that immigrants flood the country with cheap labor, lowering wages for nativeborn workers. The problem is, economic research does not bear out this widespread wage drop, except perhaps for the small percentage of high school dropouts. Last year, for example, a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine study reviewed economic literature on immigration and concluded: “When measured over a period of 10 years or more, the impact of immigration on the wages of native-born workers overall is very small. To the extent that negative impacts occur, they are most likely to be found for prior immigrants or native-born workers who have not completed high school — who are often the closest substitutes for immigrant workers with low skills.” As Cato Institute immigration policy analyst Alex Nowrasteh noted in a recent blog post, “Congress restricted immigration to raise American wages at least three times in American history — 1882, 1924 and 1964. It failed each time.” Immigration does not affect overall wages much because new immigrants primarily compete with previous immigrants, not native-born workers. The jobs they take tend to be complements of, not substitutes for, natives’ jobs. Moreover, immigrants are also additional consumers, which creates greater demand for goods and services — and thus more jobs. In these ways, immigration allows for greater specialization and economic growth. It is curious that most of those who oppose additional immigration — whether “illegal” or “legal” — tend to be conservative. These same critics tend to advocate (rightly) for free-markets generally, yet they abandon these principles when thinking about the market for labor. Too many conservatives who despise the central planning of an almighty government to dictate which goods and services should be offered, or provide favorable treatment to some, embrace the same government controls over who gets to live and work here. Other immigration fears center on offering additional taxpayer-funded welfare benefits. This is a legitimate concern, though it is much more of an indictment of the expansive welfare state, not just the most recent crop of people to take advantage of it who qualify under existing rules. Economic arguments aside, the proposed criteria for admission would only enhance the state’s power to judge who deserves to be considered an American, which itself feels un-American. The RAISE Act promises prosperity, but fails to deliver, both in terms of economics and the individual liberty that has allowed our nation to flourish. The Orange County Register

Prayer for today Almighty God, may I have that faith in eternal life which will make me careful of what I choose for my own and more careful of what I put in the lives of others. Amen.

A verse to share In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead. —James 2:17

State symbols don’t have to go on the ballot JACKSON — Defenders of the Confederate battle emblem on the Mississippi flag have a ready-made argument that was handed to them nearly a generation ago by lawmakers who didn’t want to deal with the politically volatile issue of redesigning the banner. It goes like this: The people of Mississippi voted to keep the flag in a statewide election in 2001, and politicians should not undo the will of the people. Supporters say if the state flag is going to be debated, the only legitimate way to do it is with another statewide election. The argument about legitimacy ignores the fundamentals of how government works. People elect public officials to set public policy. Subject to approval or veto by the governor, legislators decide how state dollars are spent and write a wide variety of laws, including those that set the symbols of the state. Elected officials changed one Mississippi symbol in 2014, when legislators passed and Republican Gov.

Mark Boehler

publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com

editor editor@dailycorinthian.com

Willie Walker

Roger Delgado

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flag. The Mississippi flag became a topic of public debate in 2000 when the state Supreme Court found that sections of law dealing with the flag had expired during an update of the state code in 1906. That meant the design with the Confederate emblem had been used by tradition but not by law. A commission held public hearings around the state in 2000, and some of those degenerated into shouting matches between supporters and opponents of the Confederate emblem. Legislators could have set a flag design, but chose to put the question to a statewide vote in April 2001. The ballot had two options: The 1894 flag or one that would have replaced the Confederate battle emblem with a solid blue square topped with circles of stars to represent Mississippi as the 20th state. By a 2-to-1 margin, people voting that day chose to keep the old design. The Mississippi flag and the public display of other Confederate symbols came under scrutiny after the

2015 mass killing of black worshippers in Charleston, South Carolina. White nationalists carried the rebel flag this month at a gathering in Charlottesville, Virginia. Bryant and Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves are using the same argument that flag supporters use: If the question is to be reconsidered, it should go to another statewide election. When legislators put the flag on the ballot more than 16 years ago, they removed themselves from a divisive vote guaranteed to anger some portion of the population. With current legislators out of session until January, questions remain: Will they debate the flag themselves? Will they put it to another statewide election? Or will they do as they’ve done the past several years — ignore the volatile question in the interest of their own political self-preservation? Emily Wagster Pettus has covered Mississippi government and politics since 1994. Follow her on Twitter: http://twitter. com/EWagsterPettus .

Wicker visits across the state

During the month of August, when Congress adjourns for its state work period, you can find me traveling across Mississippi. This August will include stops in nearly two dozen counties, where I will join civic group meetings, tour small businesses, and sit down with local officials. Not all of these stops are formal events. Often, the best opportunities to hear from Mississippians directly happen over a plate lunch or at the grocery store or at a local high school football game. One particularly insightful conversation recently happened in Grenada with some of our state’s wounded warriors. We put our heads together to come up with ways to deliver better veterans’ services to North Mississippi. These American heroes know better than anyone what is needed. Before traveling to Grenada, I had joined state and local officials for the dedication of the North Mississippi Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Kilmichael. The cemetery, which will provide a final resting place for thousands of Mississippi’s

Reece Terry

Phil Bryant signed a bill that added “In God We Trust” to the state seal. The seal Emily appears on Wagster some govPettus ernment paperwork and Capitol Dome in a few locations like podiums the governor or other state elected officials use at some news conferences. The flag has a wider reach as a state symbol, both inside and outside Mississippi. It is part of the image that the state presents to the world. Mississippi has used the same flag since 1894, and it is the last state with a flag that still incorporates the Confederate emblem that critics see as racist. Georgia had a large Confederate battle emblem on its flag from 1956 to 2001. A flag used from 2001 to 2003 still had a small version of the emblem, and a new flag adopted in 2003 eliminated the emblem altogether. Legislators in Georgia made the decisions to change the

press foreman

veterans, is a reminder of the honor and care owed to the brave Americans who Roger have dediWicker cated their lives to proU.S. Senator tecting our freedom. O t h e r visits with Mississippians this month have produced candid conversations, often about pressing issues like health care. I share Mississippians’ concerns about the failing Obamacare system and the financial burdens it has put on many families. Like many of my Senate colleagues, I am still determined to achieve true health-care reform, which means repealing and replacing Obamacare. The status quo is unsustainable. In Mississippi, healthcare solutions are moving forward despite legislative setbacks in Washington. That includes the steadfast work of our community health centers, which not only keep our communities healthier but also make

them stronger. Earlier this month, I joined Mantachie Rural Health Care as it kicked off National Health Center Week with an appreciation event for law enforcement, educators, clergy, and other public servants in Itawamba County. I also recently visited T1 Telehealth in Canton, where I learned about innovative telehealth efforts to improve the health outcomes of patients in our underserved populations. Through advancements in telehealth, Mississippi is changing the way we think about health care and the quality services that are available to patients, no matter where they live. I am visiting with a number of small business leaders and major employers across the state – in Olive Branch, Grenada, Jackson, Laurel, and Biloxi, to name just a few locations. These conversations with our state’s job creators have reaffirmed the need for tax cuts and the rollback of excessive regulations. Earlier this year, the Republicanled Congress worked quickly to repeal 14 harmful rules

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of the Obama Administration. Eliminating unnecessary bureaucratic overreach can help keep the economy growing and unemployment down. Career training is important to this success. Businesses want to hire workers that meet their needs and the technological demands of the 21st century. I will have the opportunity to see firsthand how our state is equipping young Mississippians for successful careers during my meetings at technology-based educational centers in Horn Lake, Water Valley, and Vicksburg. These eventvs and meetings in August – as well as during the state work periods throughout the year – are important to my role as your U.S. Senator. My job is to ensure that your voice is heard when legislation is considered that could affect our communities, schools, workplaces, and neighborhoods. I cannot do that without hearing directly from the people I serve. For information about contacting my office closest to you, please visit wicker.senate. gov.

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Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • 5

Exploring the world of the Neanderthals BY JIMMY C REED Columnist

Way out in the farthest, least populated back reaches of the Mississippi Delta, rows of wrecked automobiles, engines, transmissions, and tires crisscrossed a huge junkyard owned by four brothers. Everybody in the Delta knew where the junkyard was, and referred to its owners, not by name, but as the Neanderthals. Antisocial, they seemed to have no use for females, who were terrified of them (as were no small number of men), not to mention children, for whom they were the source of screaming nightmares. Where these Stone Age giants came from, no one knew. They were tall, powerfully built clones of

They were tall, powerfully built clones of each other, with deep-set, pale blue eyes that glared — unblinking, stone cold, and pitiless — from beneath granite brow ridges protruding from nearly nonexistent foreheads. each other, with deep-set, pale blue eyes that glared — unblinking, stone cold, and pitiless — from beneath granite brow ridges protruding from nearly nonexistent foreheads. Against their tangled, matted, yellowish blonde hair and black, grizzly beards, scissors and razors were useless; their tobacco-stained teeth were as big and as thick as dominos, and their necks were virtually nonexistent, requiring that they swivel their massive torsos to look sideways. Despite their diet — mostly baseball-sized

Colleges still grappling with free speech, safety Associated Press

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — When Carl Valentine dropped off his daughter at the University of Virginia, he had some important advice for the college freshman: Don’t forget that you are a minority. “She has to be vigilant of that and be concerned about that, always know her surroundings, just be cautious, just be extremely cautious,� said Valentine, 57, who is African-American. A retired military officer, he now works at the Defense Department. As classes begin at colleges and universities across the country, some parents are questioning if their children will be safe on campus in the wake of last weekend’s violent white nationalist protest here. School administrators, meanwhile, are grappling with how to balance students’ physical safety with free speech. Friday was move-in day at the University of Virginia, and students and their parents unloaded cars and car-

ried suitcases, blankets, lamps, fans and other belongings into freshmen dormitories. Student volunteers, wearing orange university Tshirts, distributed water bottles and led freshmen on short tours of the university grounds. But along with the usual moving-in scene, there were signs of the tragic events of last weekend, when white nationalists staged a nighttime march through campus holding torches and shouting racist slogans. Things got worse the following day, when a man said to harbor admiration for Nazis drove his car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing one woman and injuring 19 others. Flags flew at half-staff outside the university’s Rotunda, and a nearby statue of founder Thomas Jefferson was stained with wax from a candlelight vigil by thousands of students and city residents in a bid to unite and heal. Some student dormitories had signs on doors reading, “No Home for Hate Here.�

WASTE

wads of chewing tobacco and homemade alcoholic concoctions they called mead, so potent that mere mortals would just as soon drink arsenic — they were marvelous specimens of health, and the only doctor who ever attended them was the one who initiated their journey from womb to tomb. The junkyard, unnamed and unadvertised, was accessible only by a winding gravel road and the same railroad that passed through my dad’s farm. When a part for a car or truck couldn’t be found

bulbs; 1,180 gallons of oil; 362 tires; and enough paint to fill a 30yard container. Keep Corinth-Alcorn Beautiful presents the event with local partners. The solid waste assistance grant program

can support efforts to prevent and clean up unauthorized dumps; to aid in hiring local solid waste enforcement officer; public education efforts on solid waste disposal and recycling; and to establish programs for the collection of white goods, bulky wastes and recyclables.

wedged a brick on the accelerator, put it in gear, and rattled off down the tracks, with the doors flapping in the breeze, and a rear fender dragging along, flinging sparks when it banged against the rails. Watching them fade into the distant haze, clanking mugs together in a toast, I thought to myself ‌ no one can doubt what they are: Neanderthals. (Jimmy Reed (jimmycecilreedjr@gmail.com) is an Oxford, Mississippi resident, Ole Miss alumnus, Army veteran, former Mississippi Delta cotton farmer, and retired college teacher. His collection of short stories is available via Squarebooks.com, telephone 662-236-2262.)

Marine crash inquiry continues, but no answers expected soon BY JEFF AMY Associated Press

JACKSON, Miss. — Military investigators are trying to piece together the cause of a crash that killed 15 Marines and a sailor in Mississippi in July, but it could be a year or more until any information becomes public. In the meantime, the Marine Corps’ fleet of KC130T transport planes remains grounded. That plane is similar to the one that crashed near Itta Bena on July 10. April Phillips, a spokeswoman for the Naval Safety Center, said Monday that final reports often don’t become public for 12 to 18 months following a crash. Even then, much of the information in the reports is often withheld from public view. “Ours are done solely to ensure what happened doesn’t happen again,� Phillips said, saying that various military com-

manders must endorse the report before it’s finished. Marines and other investigators finished collecting debris Aug. 3, recovering all of the plane’s major components, said Marine Forces Reserve spokeswoman Lt. Stephanie L. Leguizamon. She said last week that there’s still work going on to clean up the crash area. Naval Safety Center investigators are both reconstructing the wreckage and interviewing witnesses. Their report will ultimately include recommendations to enhance safety. Victims included nine Marines based at Stewart Air National Guard base in Newburgh, New York, who flew and crewed the plane, plus six Marines and a Navy Corpsman from an elite Marine Raider battalion at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. The passengers were headed for pre-deployment training

in Yuma, Arizona. Cargo included at least some ammunition. Brig. Gen. Bradley S. James has told reporters that whatever went wrong began when the plane was at cruising altitude. Most of the plane pancaked upside down into a field, but part of it, including the cockpit, broke off and landed far from the fuselage and wings. Debris was scattered for miles over fields, woods and ponds. Witnesses said they saw the plane descend from high altitude with an engine smoking, with some describing what pilots call a “flat spin,� where a plane twirls around like a boomerang. Phillips said the plane didn’t have an in-flight data recorder. That, plus the lack of survivors, could make the debris crucial to determining what happened. “A lot it, in this case, is

likely to come from forensic evidence,� she said. Phillips said the C-130 and its variants have historically been one of the safest planes operated by the Marine Corps. The Navy classifies its most serious incidents as Class A mishaps, involving death, permanent disability or more than $2 million in damage. Only two in-flight Class A mishaps were recorded before the Mississippi crash, both in 2002. A KC-130R experienced a flash fire and crashed into a mountain in Pakistan while nearing an airfield, killing seven people. A KC130F crash landed shortly after taking off in California, causing injuries but no deaths. The New York squadron is the last Marine unit flying the KC-130T version and is scheduled to upgrade to a newer version in 2019. Only the remaining 12 KC-130Ts are affected by the grounding.

Search underway for sailors; Navy chief orders probe Associated Press

CONTINUED FROM 1

anywhere else, the Neanderthals had it. Yearround, they worked outdoors, bare-chested and greasy, oblivious to the hottest or coldest days, dismantling wrecked autos and salvaging every usable part. At daybreak one morning, several farm employees and I gathered around a small convertible that lay overturned alongside the railroad tracks. Apparently unhurt, the driver must have walked away, abandoning the wreck, which the brothers promptly claimed. One of them measured

the distance between the tires on either side of the car and determined that it matched the space between the rails. As if reading each other’s minds, the four hulking titans crouched at the car’s corners, and with no apparent strain, picked it up clear of the ground and flipped it over onto the railroad tracks. After lowering the tires’ air pressure until they sagged slightly on either side of the tracks, they tossed mirrors, bumpers, windshield and other parts that had become dislodged into the car’s trunk. Nodding to us and grunting approvingly to each other, they filled gallon-sized tankards with mead, stepped over the car’s sides, plopped into its seats, cranked it,

SINGAPORE — The U.S. Navy ordered a broad investigation into the performance and readiness of the Pacific-based 7th Fleet after the USS John S. McCain collided with an oil tanker in Southeast Asia, leaving 10 U.S. sailors missing and five injured. It was the second major collision in two months involving the 7th Fleet. Seven sailors died in June

when the USS Fitzgerald and a container ship collided in waters off Japan. Vessels and aircraft from the U.S., Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia were searching for the missing sailors. Four other sailors were evacuated by a Singaporean navy helicopter to a hospital in the city-state for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries, the Navy said. A fifth was taken to the hospital

by ambulance after the destroyer arrived in Singapore under its own power, the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore said. “It is the second such incident in a very short period of time — inside of three months — and very similar as well,� Navy Adm. John Richardson, the chief of naval operations, told reporters at the Pentagon. “It is the last of a series of incidents in the

Pacific fleet in particular and that gives great cause for concern that there is something out there we are not getting at.� Richardson ordered a pause in operations for the next couple of days to allow fleet commanders to get together with leaders, sailors and command officials and identify any immediate steps that need to be taken to ensure safety.

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6 • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths Jimmy Campbell

Services for Jimmy Lee Campbell, 81, are set for 4 p.m. Wednesday at Memorial Funeral Home with burial at Brigman Hill Cemetery. Visitation is from 3 p.m. until the service. Mr. Campbell died Saturday, Aug. 19, 2017, at Sanctuary Hospice House in Tupelo after a brief illness. He was born in Missouri on Nov. 10, 1935, to the late Leslie and Jewel Brumett Campbell. He was a veteran of the U.S. Navy, having served for 20 years. He was employed by Halls Inc. and Walmart and eventually retired from Magnolia Hospital as a security guard. He was preceded in death by a sister, Billie Trupp, and her husband, Mike. Survivors are his loving wife of 46 years, Flora Mae Campbell; a daughter, Tina Harrington and husband Thomas; sons Terry Campbell and wife Kaci and Jim Campbell and wife Diane; a sister, Peggy Shapland; a brother, Larry Campbell and wife Paulette; grandchildren Tess Campbell, Parker Campbell, Merritt Smith, Ashley Harrington, Charlie Harrington, April Campbell and Lynn Pfeffer and husband Ben; and three greatgrandchildren, Easton, Dylan and Alice Pfeffer. Memorial contributions may be made to the Jimmy Lee Campbell Fund at Memorial Funeral Home. Online guestbook: memorialcorinth.com

Gary Potts

Services for Thomas Gary Potts, 71, of Corinth, are set for 3 p.m. Wednesday at Magnolia

Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Brigman Hill Cemetery. Visitation is Tuesday from 5 to 9 p.m. and Wednesday from 1 p.m. until the service. Mr. Potts died Sunday, Aug. 20, 2017, at his home. He was Potts born in Alcorn County on April 11, 1946, to the late Earvel and Ruby Potts and graduated from Alcorn Central High School in 1964. He was a longtime member of Brigman Hill Baptist Church and owned and operated Potts Garage since 1976. He loved life. He never met a stranger and was a loyal friend to all. The greatest loves in his life were his family and friends. He was a devoted husband to his wife, Glenda, for 52 years. The love they shared for each other was like none other. His love for his children and grandchildren went above and beyond. No matter what was going on, he was always there for them with love and support. He was indeed “one of a kind” and will be missed by all who knew him. Survivors are his wife, Glenda Potts of Corinth; his son, Johnny Ray Potts and wife Jennifer of Farmington; his daughter, Christy Potts Wilson and husband Clay of Humboldt, Tenn.; his grandchildren, Shauna Potts Hill and husband Tony, Julianna Potts, Jon Thomas Potts, Payton Wilson and Presley Wilson; his great-grandchild:, Chelsea Hill; his brother, Nelson Potts and wife Jaunell of Farmington; his sister, Sherry Lee Hunt and husband Gerald of Memphis, Tenn.;

his nieces, Shannon Hardwick and Sen. Rita Potts Parks; other relatives and a host of friends. He was preceded in death by his parents, Earvel and Ruby Potts. Pallbearers are Clevey White, Jeff Logan, Roy Gray, Bill Parker, Eugene King and Mike Logan. Honorary pallbearers are Tony Hill and Clay Wilson. Bro. Alan Parker will officiate the service. Online guestbook: magnoliafuneralhome.net

Brennen Thrasher

Services for Brennen Thrasher, 28, of Corinth, were held Monday at Memorial Funeral Home with burial at Oak Hill Christian Church Cemetery. Mr. Thrasher died at his residence. Born Dec. 3, 1988, he was a 2007 Alcorn Central High School graduate. He was preceded in death by his mother, Anita Thrasher L. McKinney; his grandmother, Wilma L. McKinney; and his grandfather, Leon Thrasher. Survivors are his daughter, Jaidyn Thrasher; his father, Anthony Thrasher; sisters Mia Thrasher and Kayla Stewart; a brother, Ian Manus; his grandmother, Rathelene Thrasher; his grandfather, Robert McKinney.; his uncle, Jerry McKinney; a great aunt Mary McKinney; and a host of other family and friends. Pallbearers are Landon Dees, Daniel Clark, Jerry McKinney and Jeremiah Dees. Online guestbook: memorialcorinth.com

Mary Morrison

Mary Idotha Morrison, 83, of Corinth, died Saturday, Aug. 19, 2017, at Crossroads Hospice in Memphis, Tenn. Patterson Memorial Chapel will have the arrangements.

Patsy Holcombe

SAVANNAH, Tenn. — Services for Patsy Carolyn Holcombe, 78, are set for 1 p.m. Wednesday at Shackelford Funeral Directors of Savannah with burial at Hollands Creek Cemetery. Ms. Holcombe died Sunday, Aug. 20, 2017, at Dogwood Plantation Assisted Living in Corinth. She was born March 8, 1939. Don Harold Lawrence will officiate the service. Memorial contributions may be made to Hollands Creek Methodist Church, 2570 Hollands Creek Rd., Savannah, TN 38372.

Bill Parnell

Funeral services for William Doyle “Bill” Parnell, 83, of Corinth, are set for 1 p.m. Tuesday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with military honors. Burial will be at White Sulphur Cemetery. Visitation is Tuesday from 11 a.m. until the service. Mr. Parnell died Saturday, Aug. 19, 2017, at Dogwood Assisted Living. Born July 20, 1934, he was the vice president of JPS Industries and a member of First Baptist Church of Corinth. Survivors include his wife of 20 years, Shirley Maddox-Parnell of Counce, Tenn.; a daughter, Reneé Parnell of Corinth; a granddaughter, Chelsea Parnell; stepsons Terry Mitchell of Counce, Parnell Tenn., and Brian Mitchell (Stacie) of Corinth; step-grandchidren Codey Mitchell of Starkville, Avery Mitchell of Baton Rouge, La., Weston Mitchell of Corinth and Belle Mitchell of Corinth; and two step-great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents, Hugh Parnell and Allie Doyle Parnell, and his first wife and the mother of his daughter, Shirley Taylor-Parnell. Bro. Warren Jones will officiate the service.

Obituary Policy All obituaries will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituaries will only be accept- ed from funeral homes. All obituaries must contain a signature of the family member making the funeral arrange- ments.

Stone Mountain another (huge) Trump renews Afghan test for Confederate symbols troop committment while BY KATE BRUMBACK Associated Press

STONE MOUNTAIN, Ga. — The huge raisedrelief images show a Confederate trinity sitting astride their horses, high above the ground. Hats held across their chests, President Jefferson Davis and Gens. Robert E. Lee and Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson ride across the face of Stone Mountain into faded glory. Part theme park and part shrine to Dixie’s Lost Cause, this granite outcrop east of Atlanta

— sculpted like a Mount Rushmore of the Confederacy — is once again an ideological battlefield as a new fight rages over rebel symbolism across the South. In the aftermath of the Aug. 12 white-nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, a Democratic candidate for Georgia governor said the carving should be removed. But removal would probably mean destroying a work of public art that took decades to complete and is the centerpiece of one of

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Georgia’s biggest tourist destinations. The images carved into the mountain, “like Confederate monuments across this state, stand as constant reminders of racism, intolerance and division,” Stacey Abrams wrote in an email to supporters following the violence in Charlottesville. Abrams is vying to become the nation’s first black female governor. Gazing up at the carving Thursday with out-of-town guests, Leila Finn and Sandra Neuse, white women from nearby Avondale Estates, said they visit Stone Mountain for the hiking trails and other park amenities. They see the carving as a curiosity. “I think it would be more productive to use it as a talking point for education than to just get rid of it,” Finn said, quickly adding, “I wouldn’t mind if they took down some of the flags.” John Purpera, who’s white, stopped Thursday at Stone Mountain with his wife and son while driving from their home in Port St. Lucie, Florida, to St. Louis to see Monday’s solar eclipse. Originally from Louisiana, he opposes the removal of Confederate statues. “The people that want it removed should be shot,” he said. “It’s part of history, and you shouldn’t just delete parts of history you don’t like.” Even if Abrams wins the nomination and beats the odds next year to become governor of this red state, it’s unlikely she would be able to get the carving removed. State law says it “shall never be altered, removed, concealed or obscured in any fashion and shall be preserved and protected for all time as a tribute to the bravery and heroism of the citizens of this state who suffered and died in their cause.” That language was part of a compromise in a 2001 law that changed the state flag from one that included the Confederate battle flag.

offering no ‘blank check’ BY JOSH LEDERMAN AND ROBERT BURNS Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Declaring the U.S. will win “in the end,” President Donald Trump vowed Monday night to keep American troops fighting in Afghanistan despite his earlier inclination to withdraw. But he insisted the U.S. would not offer “a blank check” after 16 years of war, and he pointedly declined to say whether or when more troops might be sent. In a prime-time address billed as the unveiling of his new Afghanistan strategy, Trump said the U.S. would shift away from a “time-based” approach, instead linking its assistance to results and to cooperation from the beleaguered Afghan government, Pakistan and others. Still, he offered few details about how that approach would differ substantively from what the U.S. has already tried unsuccessfully under the past two presidents. “We will not talk about numbers of troops or our plans for further military activities,” Trump said. “Conditions on the ground, not arbitrary timetables, will guide our strategy from now on.” Ahead of his speech, U.S. officials said they expected the president to go along with a Pentagon recommendation to send nearly 4,000 new

troops, boosting the total of 8,400 in Afghanistan now. At its peak, the U.S. had roughly 100,000 there, under the Obama administration in 20102011. Trump said his “original instinct was to pull out,” alluding to his long-expressed view before becoming president that Afghanistan was an unsolvable quagmire requiring a fast U.S. withdrawal. Since taking office, Trump said, he’d determined that approach could create a vacuum that terrorists including al-Qaida and the Islamic State could “instantly fill.” Trump said the American people are “weary of war without victory.” “I share the America people’s frustration,” Trump said at the Army’s Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, in Arlington, Virginia, across the Potomac River from the White House. Still, he insisted that “in the end, we will win.” Trump’s speech concluded a months-long internal debate within his administration over whether to pull back from the Afghanistan conflict, as he and a few advisers were inclined to do, or to embroil the U.S. further in a war that has eluded American solutions for the past 16 years. Several times, officials predicted he was nearing a decision to adopt his commanders’ recommendations,

only to see the final judgment delayed. The Pentagon has argued the U.S. must stay engaged to ensure terrorists can’t again use the territory to threaten America. Afghan military commanders have agreed, making clear they want and expect continued U.S. military help. But elected officials in the U.S. have been mixed, with many advocating against sending more troops. As a candidate, Trump criticized the war and said the U.S. should quickly pull out, but he also campaigned on a vow to start winning wars. Exiting now, with the Taliban resurgent, would be impossible to sell as victory. “I think there’s a relative certainty that the Afghan government would eventually fall,” said Mark Jacobson, an Army veteran and NATO’s former deputy representative in Kabul. And while Trump has pledged to put “America First,” keeping U.S. interests above any others, his national security advisers have warned that the Afghan forces are still far too weak to succeed without help. That is especially important as the Taliban advance and a squeezed Islamic State group looks for new havens beyond Syria and Iraq. Even now, Afghan’s government controls just half the country.

Stolen car ruptures chlorine tank, kills 2 Associated Press

BILOXI, Miss. — County officials in Mississippi say a toxic cloud of chlorine was released when a stolen car crashed into a utility station and killed two passengers. WLOX-TV reports Harrison County Sheriff Troy Peterson says the

BMW convertible was stolen roughly one or two hours before the wreck Saturday night and that speeding likely caused it. County coroner Gary Hargrove says authorities were working to identify the victims. County Fire Chief Pat Sullivan says authori-

ties were initially responding to a reported chlorine leak when they discovered the two deceased people inside the car. Sullivan says the toxic cloud had injured some first responders as several deputies and at least one firefighter were treated at the scene.


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Chg ExxonMbl 29 76.38 FNBCp PA 15 12.82 Facebook 35 167.78 +.16 FairmSant dd 2.56 -.02 FalconStor dd .40 -.05 FangHldg dd 3.37 +.05 Fastenal 22 39.97 +.21 FedExCp 17 206.33 +.17 FiatChrys ... 13.44 +.14 FifthThird 13 26.21 +.74 58.com dd 64.14 -.37 FinLine 10 9.89 -.23 FireEye dd 13.77 -.32 FstData n ... 17.69 -.06 FMajSilv g cc 6.41 +.63 FstSolar dd 45.96 +.71 FirstEngy 12 32.92 +1.75 Fitbit n dd 5.06 -1.02 Flex Ltd 15 15.53 -.16 Fluor 17 37.23 +.53 FootLockr 7 31.82 +.70 FordM 11 10.57 -5.18 Fossil Grp 4 7.18 -.05 Francesca 7 7.03 +.16 FrptMcM dd 14.73 -.49 Frontr rs ... 12.72 -.08 GATX 10 60.11 -.11 GGP Inc 11 20.78 -.05 Gap 11 22.57 -.12 GenDynam 21 198.73 -.01 GenElec 23 24.49 +.02 GenMills 19 57.29 -.20 GenMotors 5 34.91 +1.95 Genworth dd 3.35 -.79 Gerdau ... 3.44 -.29 GileadSci 7 72.60 +.84 GluMobile dd 3.27 -.99 GoldFLtd ... 4.43 -3.50 Goldcrp g 41 13.01 GoldmanS 12 220.79 +.29 Goodyear 9 29.74 +.19 GoPro dd 8.76 -.16 GraphPkg 18 12.91 -.17 Groupon dd 3.99 -1.52 GulfportE dd 11.85 +.27 HCP Inc 12 29.38 +.02 HD Supply 11 30.11 -.24 HP Inc 11 18.57 -.16 Hallibrtn cc 38.74 -.05 Hanesbds s 13 23.30 +.10 HarmonyG ... 1.89 +1.79 HeclaM 50 4.97 -.23 Herbalife 14 68.04 -.53 HertzGl ... 17.36 -.07 Hess dd 38.09 -.02 HP Ent n 19 17.31 -.24 Hologic 13 37.63 +.09 HomeDp 21 149.20 -.05 HopFedBc 26 14.10 +.62 HorizPhm dd 13.17 -.53 Hormel s 21 33.93 +.27 HostHotls 10 17.38 +.78 HuntBncsh 18 12.60 +.98 I-J-K-L -.01 73 5.87 -.10 IAMGld g ... 9.22 -.16 ICICI Bk ... 17.81 -.05 ING q 12.41 +.58 iShGold q 38.75 -.09 iShBrazil iShEMU q 41.45 q 67.44 +.22 iSh SKor q 16.07 +.64 iShSilver +.14 iShChinaLC q 42.48 +.25 iSCorSP500 q 244.59 q 43.83 -.09 iShEMkts q 120.82 -.18 iShiBoxIG q 115.66 +.08 iShEMBd q 126.93 +.15 iSh20 yrT q 66.17 -.08 iS Eafe -.02 iSCorSPMid q 168.87 q 87.56 +.11 iShiBxHYB q 33.37 +.20 iShIndia bt q 134.83 -.04 iShR2K q 79.89 +.07 iShREst -1.64 iShCrSPS s q 67.08 q 61.98 -.35 iShCorEafe dd 9.01 +1.04 Imunmd 15 14.56 -.32 Infosys 15 34.92 -.22 Intel 11 140.33 -.02 IBM 17 53.18 -.09 IntPap 1.34 -.14 IntrpDia rs ... 15 20.59 +.27 Interpublic dd 14.41 +1.15 IronwdPh +.04 iShJapan rs q 54.33 q 52.76 -.88 iShCorEM ... 12.43 -.14 ItauUnibH JD.com cc 41.26 -.70 +.01 JPMorgCh 14 90.63 19 29.53 -.21 Jabil 10 20.20 +.12 JetBlue 5 23.70 +.31 JinkoSolar 20 133.45 -1.02 JohnJn +1.98 JohnContl n 26 38.27 3.28 -.63 Jumei Intl 36 16 27.14 -.36 JnprNtwk 7 18.14 -.08 KKR +.51 KapStoneP 19 21.09 16 17.41 +.01 Keycorp 16 19.71 +.46 Kimco 64 18.55 -.55 KindMorg 61 4.28 +.59 Kinross g 10 37.34 +.28 Kohls KosmosEn dd 6.57 11 22.61 -.23 Kroger s 11 36.29 +.61 L Brands LVSands 26 60.25 +.04 6.05 -.61 LendingClb dd 37 21.12 +.03 LibQVC A ... 35.15 +.13 LibMCFor ... 3.38 +.31 LloydBkg 18 73.85 +.32 Lowes +.08 lululemn gs 28 59.44 -1.71 M-N-O-P -1.53 +3.21 MGM Rsts 46 31.11 7 19.53 +.70 Macys dd 10.77 -.11 MarathnO MarathPt s 11 49.45 +1.74 29 198.95 +.45 MartMM -.18 MarvellTch 49 15.62 22 16.42 +.00 Mattel 18 5.62 +.09 McDrmInt 27 158.36 -.15 McDnlds 18 83.52 +.21 Medtrnic 16 61.97 -.79 Merck 10 46.68 -.02 MetLife 12 41.95 +.59 MKors 10 19.36 -.11 Michaels 11 29.56 -.35 MicronT 25 72.15 -.10 Microsoft MitsuUFJ ... 6.11 -.06 ... 45.08 +.04 Momo 32 43.11 -.27 Mondelez 13 44.68 -.53 MorgStan 47 19.86 +1.44 Mosaic dd 23.17 +.78 MurphO 6 30.44 -1.25 Mylan NV NRG Egy 25 25.72 dd 6.47 -.10 Nabors 72 30.29 -.03 NOilVarco NetApp 19 38.95 -.15 cc 166.76 +.47 Netflix s NwGold g 58 3.45 NY CmtyB 12 11.90 +.05 +.46 NewellRub 19 48.47 -.04 NewfldExp 14 24.51 30 36.61 +.20 NewmtM 21 53.61 +.57 NikeB s 5 3.16 +.52 NobleCorp NobleEngy cc 23.54 NokiaCp ... 6.15 23 267.70 +.12 NorthropG dd 1.00 -.54 Novavax 25 57.41 -.40 NuSkin ... 21.56 -.07 Nutanix n 51 159.15 -.18 Nvidia dd 7.07 -.06 OasisPet dd 58.84 +.84 OcciPet 11 8.12 +.01 Oclaro 8 4.07 +.31 OfficeDpt OmegaHlt 10 31.24 29 15.75 -.19 OnSmcnd 32 50.97 -.20 ONEOK .10 -.43 OpexaTh wt ... dd .27 -.30 OpGen n dd 6.14 -.09 OpkoHlth 23 48.90 -.25 Oracle 5 2.80 -.09 PDL Bio 17 102.39 +.56 PPG s dd 8.10 -.03 Pandora 87 24.46 -.35 ParsleyEn dd 15.40 -.23 PattUTI -.28 Paychex 25 55.77

-.26 +.04 +.37 -.01 +.15 -.03 -.71 +.33 +.87 -.12 +10.88 -1.12 -.21 -.12 -.02 -2.10 +.09 -.17 +.01 -.44 -2.56 +.01 -.31 -.95 +.58 -.84 -.37 +.28 -.08

-.06 +.15 +.08 -.10 -.08 +.49 +.07 +.11 +.14 -1.36 -.01 -.29 -.56 -.32 +.53 -.28 +.06 -.25 -.23 +.02 +.11 +6.09 +.40 -.36 +.13 +.21 +1.71 +.04 -.14 -.16 -.05 -.06 +.17 +.18 -.12 +.04 -.28 -.04 -.01 -.03 +.47 +.34 +.16 +.17 +.11 +.31 -.02 +.04 +.09 -.33 -.09 +.71 -.09 +.03 +.59 -.23 -.09 +.63 -1.11 +.11 +.08 -.09 -.12 +.17 -.24 +1.13 -.11 -.14 -.08 -2.63 +.82 +1.22 -.24 -.02 -1.67 -.18 +.37 +.03 +.06 -.34 -.25 +.09 +.24 +.09 -.05 +.95 +.04 +.21 +1.31 +.40 +.04 -.10 -.66 -1.59 -.03 -.25 -.13 +.60 +.11 +.48 -.34 -.01 +.23 -.82 -.34 -.12 +1.26 +.17 -.71 -.86 -.28 -.05 -.10 -.09 -.40 +.22 +.06 -.04 -1.19 -.80 +.78 -1.34 -.08 -.11 -.04 +.09 +1.93 -.35 -2.35 -.28 -.31 -.20 -.05 +.27 -.19 +.04 +.03 +.03 +.02 +.28 +.08 +.31 -.17 -.33 -.23 +.78

PayPal n Penney PepsiCo PetrbrsA Petrobras Pfizer PhilipMor PhxNMda PioNtrl PiperJaf PlainsAAP PlatfmSpc PlugPowr h Potash PS SrLoan PwShs QQQ PrUltPQ s PUVixST rs PrUCrude rs ProShtVx s ProctGam ProgsvCp ProShSP rs PrUShSP rs PUShtQQQ PShtQQQ rs PUShtSPX ProspctCap PulteGrp

47 59.40 -.04 9 3.57 -.03 25 118.26 +.66 ... 8.37 -.24 ... 8.70 -.19 13 32.76 +.09 24 116.25 +.92 32 4.13 -.37 cc 127.94 -4.01 13 54.90 -.05 16 19.40 +.39 17 11.88 -.20 dd 2.11 -.01 22 17.35 +.12 q 23.03 -.02 q 141.05 -.18 -.19 q 104.46 q 35.87 -3.10 q 15.39 -.78 q 73.47 +2.81 24 92.86 +.39 24 48.69 +.06 q 33.39 -.02 q 50.31 -.09 q 16.52 +.02 q 29.68 +.09 q 15.43 -.08 7 7.11 -.04 15 25.40 +.12

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

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

Chris Marshall Financial Advisor

401 E. Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-7885

Q-R-S-T

7.20 -.24 www.edwardjones.com 51.98 +.06 18.05 -.56 17.60 -.34 102.65 +2.22 Member SIPC 14.62 -.50 14.04 -.02 26.45 +.13 45.20 +.56 2.25 +.03 1.26 +.18 58.56 -.46 9.04 -.29 company’s initial public offering in Facebook’s numerous efforts to 54.32 -.33 March. It hasn’t traded above its copy Snapchat haven’t paid off – 59.09 +.69 $17 IPO price since early July. until now. 10.16 -.17 The company’s latest Instagram Stories, a clear 13.55 -.32 earnings report didn’t help. This Snapchat clone, has more daily 216.74 +.21 month, the company said user users than all of Snapchat itself. 122.76 +.46 Already, advertisers and growth for the April-June period 39.37 -.08 “influencers” – social media was a paltry 4 percent from the 242.90 +.19 celebrities with a lot of followers – previous quarter. 75.37 +.42 are moving to Instagram, where While the doom doesn’t spell 36.85 +.04 they can have a broader reach. imminent death, it’s a sign that 51.59 -.10 Snapchat could be relegated to Both Instagram Stories and 37.93 -.26 Snapchat Stories (yep, Instagram the sidelines as a niche app for 29.09 -.37 young people — or worse, a didn’t even bother to change the passing fad — rather than a major name) let people share photos and 7.64 -.03 competitor for digital ad dollars like Facebook and videos in a continuous 24-hour loop. 16.65 +.06 yes, even the struggling Twitter. Snap Inc.’s stock has been falling since the 21.63 +.92 17.44 +.04 91.76 +1.00 Instagram SNAP stock performance since IPO 17.87 -.06 Stories $30 63.00 -.32 250 45.44 +.15 39.27 -.24 200 million 25 .25 -.03 31.46 +.09 150 140.85 -4.70 20 5.99 +.22 Monday’s close 100 2.48 -.09 $13.58 5.52 +.03 15 50 26.43 -.52 13.58 -.43 Snap’s daily active users 2017 48.29 -.01 0 10 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 53.54 +.37 M A M J J A 2016 2017 5.18 -.10 Barbara Ortutay; Jenni Sohn • AP Sources: Snap Inc.; Instagram 8.61 +.20 4.04 -.30 8.08 +.01 24.46 -.37 NDEXES 53.76 +.05 78.35 +.35 52-Week Net YTD 52-wk 55.40 +.20 High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg 88.41 +.16 21,703.75 +29.24 +.13 +9.82 +17.13 62.00 -.32 22,179.11 17,883.56 Dow Industrials 24.55 -.07 9,763.66 7,712.13 Dow Transportation 9,121.93 +26.62 +.29 +.86 +15.54 67.26 +.11 742.04 616.19 Dow Utilities 741.41 +3.03 +.41 +12.40 +8.28 57.05 -.02 12,019.85 10,281.48 NYSE Composite 11,719.27 +19.44 +.17 +5.99 +8.35 54.70 +.20 6,460.84 5,034.41 Nasdaq Composite 6,213.13 -3.40 -.05 +15.42 +18.47 10.19 2,490.87 2,084.59 S&P 500 2,428.37 +2.82 +.12 +8.47 +11.26 53.15 +.45 1,795.14 1,475.38 S&P MidCap 1,691.67 -.63 -.04 +1.87 +8.19 33.73 -.56 25,848.33 21,583.94 Wilshire 5000 25,137.40 +29.59 +.12 +7.31 +10.89 25.09 +.23 1,452.09 1,156.08 Russell 2000 1,356.90 -.89 -.07 -.02 +9.45 145.13 +.84 30.96 -.46 22,200 8.84 -.40 Dow Jones industrials 8.29 -.16 Close: 21,703.75 21,900 28.14 -.31 Change: 29.24 (0.1%) 30.26 +.19 21,600 3.00 +.09 10 DAYS 22,500 51.17 30.33 +.88 71.46 +.99 22,000 35.98 +.12 43.36 +.05 21,500 56.56 +.91 25.43 -.32 21,000 23.78 +.48 12.40 -.06 20,500 16.56 +2.11 33.93 +.06 20,000 337.86 -9.60 F M A M J J A 17.04 -.26 79.89 -.08 12.15 -.28 204.55 +1.02 TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST 102.11 +.92 YTD YTD 50.35 -.14 Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg 7.32 -.16 Name 3.88 20 122.68 +1.29 +7.5 1.72 12 79.71 +.30 +14.5 KimbClk 40.48 +.56 AFLAC 3.09 -.01 AT&T Inc 1.96 14 37.58 +.21 -11.6 Kroger s .50f 11 22.61 -.25 -34.5 27.37 +.11 ... ... 27.65 +.56 +54.0 Lowes 1.64f 18 73.85 +.21 +3.8 16.11 +.12 AerojetR AirProd 3.80 22 145.15 -.61 +.9 McDnlds 3.76 27 158.36 +.60 +30.1 U-V-W-X-Y-Z AlliantEg s 1.22 22 42.40 +.16 +11.9 OldNBcp .52 16 16.20 -.05 -10.7 UltPetro n ... 8.15 +.10 2.36 19 72.67 +.51 +15.4 Penney ... 9 3.57 -.03 -57.0 UndrArm s 29 16.59 -.53 AEP 1.46 13 78.04 -.56 -.2 PennyMac UnAr C wi ... 15.15 -.49 AmeriBrgn 1.88 14 17.16 -.19 +4.8 UnionPac 19 104.31 +.41 ATMOS 1.80 25 87.59 +.47 +18.1 PepsiCo 3.22 25 118.26 +.66 +13.0 UtdContl 8 64.85 +.10 1.32f 16 45.88 -.24 -2.4 PilgrimsP 2.75e 16 28.42 +.25 +49.7 UPS B 19 113.83 +.49 BB&T Cp 2.38 25 34.00 -.16 -9.0 RegionsFn US Bancrp 16 51.67 -.01 BP PLC .36 15 14.04 -.02 -2.2 US NGas q 6.64 +.13 BcpSouth .56f 18 28.55 +.15 -8.1 SbdCp 3.50 14 4203.00 -141.93 +6.4 US OilFd q 9.71 -.26 Caterpillar 3.12 30 113.60 -.32 +22.5 USSteel dd 23.32 -.38 SearsHldgs ... ... 8.55 -.10 -8.0 4.32 60 105.78 -.70 -10.1 UrbanOut 13 18.89 -.38 Chevron Sherwin 3.40 27 329.62 +.65 +22.7 Vale SA ... 9.99 -.04 CocaCola 1.48 28 45.68 +.01 +10.2 SiriusXM .04 37 5.52 +.03 +24.0 Vale SA pf ... 9.34 +.02 Comcast s .63 23 40.80 +.28 +18.2 ValeantPh 3 14.14 -.25 SouthnCo 2.32 17 48.29 -.01 -1.8 CrackerB 4.80f 23 150.48 -.03 -9.9 ValeroE 21 64.70 -.05 SPDR Fncl .46e ... 24.55 -.07 +5.6 VanEGold q 23.31 +.38 Deere 2.40 19 116.52 -.79 +13.1 Torchmark .60 16 76.52 -.09 +3.7 VnEkRus q 20.18 -.08 Dillards .40f 14 55.51 -.19 -11.5 VanE EMBd q 19.14 -.05 Total SA 2.71e ... 50.35 -.14 -1.2 Dover 1.88f 24 83.70 -.16 +11.7 VnEkSemi q 85.15 -.32 1.12 16 51.67 -.01 +.6 .88 47 69.13 -.18 +2.6 US Bancrp VEckOilSvc q 21.76 -.24 EnPro 2.04 18 79.71 +.40 +15.3 VanE JrGld q 33.90 +.51 FordM .60a 11 10.57 +.01 -12.9 WalMart VangREIT q 83.07 +.88 1.52 13 51.82 +.14 -6.0 .24 ... 6.00 -.04 -67.7 WellsFargo VangEmg q 43.14 +.11 FredsInc .28 37 15.02 -.17 +11.1 .56 20 49.11 -.06 +1.7 Wendys Co VangEur q 55.99 +.03 FullerHB

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Snap’s value disappears

SNAP (SNAP)

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.76 20 70.83 +.55 +26.5 q 41.97 +.01 GenElec .96 23 24.49 -.06 -22.5 WestlkChm 44 71.83 -.45 1.60 ... 54.33 -1.96 +7.0 -.01 -3.7 WestRck Goodyear .40 9 29.74 15 8.57 +.19 1.24 26 31.48 +.31 +4.6 2.66 20 135.57 +.62 +17.0 Weyerhsr 10 48.14 +.45 HonwllIntl 8 28.11 -.48 Intel .25p 11 31.23 -.22 +35.8 1.09 15 34.92 -.09 -3.7 Xerox rs 14 9.87 -.22 Jabil ... 49 11.75 -.05 -11.5 .32 19 29.53 -.14 +24.8 YRC Wwde 19 9.27 -.59 34 103.22 +.71 5 .00 -.01 ... 28.70 +.15 30 8.06 +.03 36 112.57 -1.15 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) dd 9.62 -.13 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg 18 79.71 +.40 Name 17 80.60 +.57 BkofAm 656039 23.38 -.24 Veritone n 11.75 +3.88 +49.3 Crdiom grs 2.60 -1.27 -32.8 dd 3.86 -.15 AMD 582189 12.05 -.32 Arconic pfB 39.00 +9.44 +31.9 BostPrv wt 8.18 -1.69 -17.1 ... 91.06 +1.38 SnapInc A n 437379 13.58 -.43 CoherusBio 13.55 +2.45 +22.1 BorqsTch 6.20 -1.25 -16.8 13 51.82 +.14 GenElec 64.14 +10.88 +20.4 NavMMid 7.11 -1.10 -13.4 358137 24.49 -.06 58.com 12 83.86 +.66 -.44 -13.0 Vale SA 333325 9.99 -.04 TenetHlth 16.56 +2.11 +14.6 Tapimmu n 2.94 11 18.88 283171 10.57 +.01 IntrntGold 7.16 +.86 +13.7 Energous 8.95 -1.33 -12.9 26 31.48 +.31 FordM Neurotrpe n 4.09 +.46 +12.7 Francesca 7.03 -.95 -11.9 Infosys 279605 14.56 -.23 dd 4.26 -.17 -.50 -11.4 Vipshop 255071 9.27 -.59 G1Thera n 17.88 +1.86 +11.6 Cherokee h 3.90 30 41.73 4.00 +.40 +11.1 ECA MTrI 2.10 -.25 -10.6 254045 29.56 -.82 MicrSol n 41 29.01 -.06 MicronT -.35 -10.4 253713 3.82 -.14 B Comm 15.00 +1.45 +10.7 DigitalAlly 3.00 dd 1.91 -.07 ChesEng q 25.70 -.27 26 61.13 +.11 YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY 14 76.23 +2.54 3,021 Advanced 1,451 Total issues 3,087 1,221 Total issues dd 2.76 +.07 Advanced 54 Declined 1,411 New Highs 33 1,594 New Highs ... 13.90 +.17 Declined 143 Unchanged Unchanged 159 New Lows 110 272 New Lows dd 32.97 -.08 Volume 2,662,153,893 Volume 1,496,781,101 dd 3.60 -.02

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Financial analysts predict that Toll Brothers’ latest quarterly snapshot improved from a year ago. The nation’s biggest builder of luxury homes, due to deliver its fiscal third-quarter results today, is expected to report that its earnings and revenue increased in the May-July period versus a year ago. Earlier this year, Toll said this year’s spring homebuying season was the best in more than 10 years.

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D

FHFA home price index A new government index that tracks home prices should provide insight into the state of the housing market. 250 249.2 248.3 The Federal Housing Finance Agency’s index has been rising 246.7 steadily this year, fueled by strong 244.7 demand and a shortage of homes 245 for sale in many U.S. markets. The 242.9 242.3 index is calculated using sales price data from mortgages sold to, or guaranteed by, government-con240 Dec. Jan. Feb. Mar. Apr. May trolled mortgage companies Fannie 2017 Mae and Freddie Mac. The FHFA’s Source: FactSet June index is out today.

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Tuesday, August 22, 2017

YOUR FUNDS OTCPortfolio 104.37 -0.18 Overseas 47.80 +0.03 Puritan 22.51 +0.01 PuritanK 22.49 ... ShTrmBd 8.64 ... SmCpDiscv d 29.64 -0.01 StkSelorAllCp 41.14 +0.03 StratInc 11.11 +0.01 TelecomandUtls27.00 +0.11 TotalBond 10.73 ... TtlMktIdxF 70.00 +0.07 TtlMktIdxInsPrm69.98 +0.07 TtlMktIdxPrm 69.99 +0.07 USBdIdxInsPrm11.68 +0.01 USBdIdxPrm 11.68 +0.01 Value 116.45 +0.09 Fidelity Advisor EmMktsIncI d 14.17 +0.02 NewInsA m 30.27 -0.01 NewInsI 30.92 ... Fidelity Select Biotechnology207.98 +0.77 HealthCare 220.45 +0.39 Technology 169.77 -0.12 First Eagle GlbA m 58.24 +0.09 Franklin Templeton CATxFrIncA m 7.51 +0.01 FdrTFIncA m 12.06 +0.01 GlbBdA m 12.06 -0.04 GlbBdAdv 12.01 -0.05 25.85 +0.01 Gr,IncA m GrA m 87.89 +0.14 HYTxFrIncA m10.28 +0.01 IncA m 2.33 +0.01 IncAdv 2.31 ... IncC m 2.36 +0.01 InsIntlEqPrmry 21.27 ... MutGlbDiscvA m32.11 -0.05 MutGlbDiscvZ 32.74 -0.06 MutZ 29.11 -0.04 RisingDivsA m 56.31 +0.09 GE RSPUSEq 54.71 -0.04 GMO IntlEqIV 22.50 +0.03 Goldman Sachs HYMuniInstl d 9.55 ... ... ShrtDurTxFrIns10.58 Harbor CptlApprecInstl 69.39 +0.08 IntlInstl 67.64 -0.01 Harding Loevner IntlEqInstl d 21.27 ... INVESCO ComStkA m 24.03 -0.04 DiversDivA m 19.77 +0.01 EqandIncA m 10.83 -0.01 HYMuniA m 10.07 ... IVA WldwideI d 18.65 +0.03 JPMorgan CPBondR6 8.34 ... CoreBondI 11.71 +0.01 CoreBondR6 11.73 +0.01 DisEqR6 25.72 +0.02 EqIncI 15.81 ... 7.45 ... HighYieldI LCapGrI 39.12 -0.04 MCapValL 38.15 -0.06 USLCpCrPlsI 30.61 -0.01 Janus Henderson BalancedT 31.66 +0.02 GlobalLifeSciT 53.14 +0.07 ResearchD ... John Hancock BdI 15.99 ... DiscpValI 20.51 ... DiscpValMCI 22.38 -0.03 MltMgLsBlA b 15.41 +0.01 MltmgrLsGr1 b16.30 +0.01 Lazard EMEqInstl x 18.82 -0.01 IntlStratEqIns 14.51 ... Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.26 +0.01 GrY 14.48 +0.04 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m 15.89 +0.01 FltngRtF b 9.14 -0.01 ShrtDurIncA m 4.29 ... ShrtDurIncC m 4.32 ... ShrtDurIncF b 4.29 ... ShrtDurIncI 4.29 ... MFS InstlIntlEq 24.33 ... TtlRetA m 18.93 +0.02 ValA m 38.74 +0.10 ValI 38.96 +0.10 Matthews ChinaInv 21.49 +0.22 IndiaInv 31.57 -0.14 Metropolitan West TtlRetBdI 10.71 ... TtlRetBdM b 10.71 ... TtlRetBdPlan 10.08 ... Northern IntlEqIdx d 12.31 ... StkIdx 29.28 ... Nuveen HYMuniBdA m17.20 +0.01 HYMuniBdI 17.20 ... Oakmark EqAndIncInv 32.07 -0.01 IntlInv 27.39 +0.01 Inv 78.52 +0.13 SelInv 44.43 +0.06 Oberweis ChinaOpps m 15.15 +0.21 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCpStrat16.70 ... LgCpStrats 14.26 +0.02 StratOpps 8.03 ... Oppenheimer DevMktsA m 40.61 +0.15 DevMktsY 40.10 +0.14 GlbA m 90.55 +0.01 IntlGrY 40.85 +0.11 MnStrA m 51.55 +0.06 Osterweis StrInc 11.39 ... PIMCO AlAstAllAthIns 9.01 ... AlAstInstl 12.03 ... CmdtyRlRtStrIns6.61 ... FBdUSDHdgI 10.63 ... HYInstl 8.98 +0.01 IncA m 12.37 ... IncC m 12.37 ... ... IncD b 12.37 IncInstl 12.37 ... IncP 12.37 ... InvGdCpBdIns 10.62 ... LowDrInstl 9.89 ... RlEstRlRtStrC m6.44 ... RlRetInstl 11.02 ... ShrtTrmIns 9.83 ... TtlRetA m 10.34 +0.01 TtlRetIns 10.34 +0.01 PRIMECAP Odyssey AgrsGr 37.37 ... Gr 32.08 +0.03 Stk 28.45 ... Parnassus CorEqInv 41.54 +0.08 Principal DiversIntlIns 13.19 +0.02 Prudential TtlRetBdZ 14.57 +0.01 Putnam EqIncA m 22.46 ... MltCpGrY 90.52 +0.02 Schwab FdmtlUSLgCIdx15.88 +0.02 SP500Idx 37.81 +0.04 Schwab1000Idx58.76 +0.07 TtlStkMktIdx 43.28 +0.04 T. Rowe Price BCGr 89.42 +0.14 CptlAprc 28.67 +0.08 DivGr 40.58 +0.12 EMBd d 12.71 +0.01 EMStk d 40.72 +0.06 EqIdx500 d 65.40 +0.08 EqInc 32.83 +0.02 GlbTech 17.61 +0.06 GrStk 65.25 +0.09 HY d 6.75 ... HlthSci 69.66 +0.26 InsLgCpGr 36.23 +0.05 InsMdCpEqGr 52.64 +0.14 IntlStk d 18.45 +0.03 IntlValEq d 14.75 ... LatinAmerica d24.44 -0.06 MdCpGr 85.95 +0.23 MdCpVal 29.62 +0.01 NewHorizons 50.95 +0.09

Comfortably profitable

+25.3 +20.9 +10.2 +10.2 +1.3 -2.5 +13.1 +6.3 +10.5 +3.7 +9.0 +9.0 +8.9 +3.3 +3.3 +6.1 +8.5 +15.5 +15.8 +19.5 +19.3 +34.8 +7.3 +5.1 +3.0 +2.4 +2.5 +9.7 +14.7 +3.8 +4.4 +4.5 +4.4 +14.0 +5.0 +5.2 +3.2 +7.6 +11.0 +15.3

+7.7 +2.3 +22.5 +15.8 +19.3 +2.4 +3.2 +3.3 +6.5 +8.5 +3.8 +3.6 +3.7 +9.8 +4.9 +4.6 +23.1 +4.8 +8.9 +9.2 +17.7 +15.0 +4.4 +5.9 +4.2 +8.8 +10.9 +18.5 +16.6 +6.8 +20.8 +4.9 +2.0 +1.9 +1.8 +2.2 +2.3 +20.1 +6.1 +8.2 +8.3 +38.9 +23.1 +3.1 +2.8 +3.1 +16.6 +9.7 +8.2 +8.3 +5.4 +20.7 +8.3 +3.2 +38.5 +9.6 +11.1 +7.9 +25.3 +25.4 +21.2 +17.8 +9.7 +3.9 +8.8 +9.1 -4.3 +2.3 +5.3 +5.9 +5.4 +5.9 +6.2 +6.1 +6.5 +1.6 -0.6 +2.5 +1.4 +4.7 +4.9 +11.7 +12.0 +9.9 +6.3 +19.9 +5.4 +6.4 +16.9 +4.3 +9.8 +9.6 +8.9 +23.2 +9.5 +9.8 +7.8 +28.5 +9.7 +5.2 +33.2 +22.5 +5.1 +17.9 +23.9 +14.6 +20.7 +15.1 +26.2 +14.0 +1.9 +17.6

NewInc 9.54 ... OverseasStk d10.77 +0.01 RlEstt d 28.15 +0.27 Rtr2015 15.35 +0.02 Rtr2020 22.39 +0.03 Rtr2025 17.18 +0.01 Rtr2030 25.21 +0.03 Rtr2035 18.36 +0.02 Rtr2040 26.31 +0.03 Rtr2045 17.74 +0.02 Rtr2050 14.92 +0.02 SmCpStk 46.41 +0.01 SmCpVal d 45.50 +0.02 SpectrumInc 12.75 +0.01 SummitMnIntr 11.97 +0.01 Val 36.55 +0.03 TCW TtlRetBdI 10.06 +0.01 TIAA-CREF BdIdxIns 10.90 ... EqIdxIns 18.07 +0.02 IntlEqIdxIns 19.32 +0.01 LgCpValIdxIns 18.65 +0.02 LgCpValIns 18.47 -0.03 Thornburg InvmIncBldrC m21.00 -0.01 LtdTrmMnI 14.51 +0.01 Tweedy, Browne GlbVal d 27.66 +0.03 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 224.86 +0.27 500IdxInv 224.82 +0.26 BalIdxAdmrl 32.89 +0.03 BalIdxIns 32.89 +0.03 CAITTxExAdm 11.87 ... CptlOppAdmrl141.49 +0.10 DevMIdxAdmrl 13.49 +0.02 DevMIdxIns 13.51 +0.02 DivGrInv 25.34 +0.04 EMStkIdxInAdm35.79 +0.08 EMStkIdxIns 27.22 +0.06 EngyAdmrl 88.17 -0.47 EqIncAdmrl 71.96 +0.09 EqIncInv 34.33 +0.04 ExplorerAdmrl 86.70 -0.04 ExtMktIdxAdmrl75.74 ... ExtMktIdxIns 75.74 ... ExtMktIdxInsPls186.91 ... FAWexUSIAdmr31.83 +0.04 FAWexUSIIns 100.91 +0.12 GNMAAdmrl 10.55 ... GNMAInv 10.55 ... GlbEqInv 28.91 +0.07 GrIdxAdmrl 66.11 +0.09 GrIdxIns 66.12 +0.10 HCAdmrl 86.29 +0.24 HCInv 204.55 +0.56 HYCorpAdmrl 5.93 ... HYTEAdmrl 11.38 ... HiDivYldIdxInv 30.96 +0.05 InTrBdIdxAdmrl11.52 ... InTrInGdAdm 9.86 ... InTrTEAdmrl 14.25 ... InTrTrsAdmrl 11.27 +0.01 InflPrtScAdmrl 25.91 +0.02 InflPrtScIns 10.55 ... InsIdxIns 221.88 +0.26 InsIdxInsPlus 221.90 +0.26 InsTtlSMIInPls 54.34 +0.06 IntlGrAdmrl 88.30 +0.30 IntlGrInv 27.77 +0.10 IntlValInv 37.14 -0.01 LTInGrdAdm 10.58 +0.01 LTTEAdmrl 11.69 +0.01 LfStrCnsrGrInv 19.46 +0.02 LfStrGrInv 31.53 +0.03 LfStrModGrInv 25.94 +0.03 LgCpIdxAdmrl 56.34 +0.07 LtdTrmTEAdmrl11.03 ... MCpGrIdxAdm 50.17 +0.10 MCpVlIdxAdm 52.73 -0.01 MdCpIdxAdmrl174.87 +0.15 MdCpIdxIns 38.63 +0.03 MdCpIdxInsPlus190.52+0.16 MorganGrAdmrl88.56 +0.06 PrcMtlsMngInv 10.51 +0.09 PrmCpAdmrl 123.28 +0.04 PrmCpCorInv 24.65 +0.01 PrmCpInv 118.97 +0.04 REITIdxAdmrl 117.74 +1.26 REITIdxIns 18.22 +0.19 SCpGrIdxAdm 50.08 +0.02 SCpValIdxAdm 51.16 -0.03 STBdIdxAdmrl 10.50 +0.01 STBdIdxIns 10.50 +0.01 STBdIdxInsPlus10.50 +0.01 STInfPrScIdAdmr24.77 ... STInfPrScIdIns 24.78 ... STInfPrScIdxInv24.74 ... STInvmGrdAdmrl10.71 ... STInvmGrdIns 10.71 ... STInvmGrdInv 10.71 ... STTEAdmrl 15.83 ... STTrsAdmrl 10.66 ... SeledValInv 30.54 -0.04 SmCpIdxAdmrl 63.17 -0.01 SmCpIdxIns 63.17 -0.01 SmCpIdxInsPlus182.32 -0.04 StarInv 25.95 +0.02 StrEqInv 32.77 -0.05 TMCapApAdm124.63 +0.15 TMSmCpAdm 53.85 -0.08 TrgtRtr2015Inv 15.49 +0.02 TrgtRtr2020Inv 30.52 +0.03 TrgtRtr2025Inv 17.80 +0.02 TrgtRtr2030Inv 32.01 +0.03 TrgtRtr2035Inv 19.57 +0.02 TrgtRtr2040Inv 33.55 +0.03 TrgtRtr2045Inv 21.03 +0.02 TrgtRtr2050Inv 33.83 +0.03 TrgtRtr2055Inv 36.63 +0.04 TrgtRtrIncInv 13.36 +0.01 TtBMIdxAdmrl 10.83 ... ... TtBMIdxIns 10.83 TtBMIdxInsPlus10.83 ... TtBMIdxInv 10.83 ... TtInBIdxAdmrl 21.88 +0.02 TtInBIdxIns 32.83 +0.03 TtInBIdxInv 10.94 +0.01 TtInSIdxAdmrl 28.57 +0.03 TtInSIdxIns 114.26 +0.13 TtInSIdxInsPlus114.29 +0.14 TtInSIdxInv 17.08 +0.02 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 60.54 +0.06 TtlSMIdxIns 60.55 +0.06 TtlSMIdxInv 60.51 +0.06 ValIdxAdmrl 37.59 +0.04 37.59 +0.04 ValIdxIns WlngtnAdmrl 70.88 +0.02 WlngtnInv 41.04 +0.01 WlslyIncAdmrl 64.01 +0.06 WlslyIncInv 26.42 +0.02 WndsrAdmrl 73.69 -0.07 WndsrIIAdmrl 65.11 +0.06 WndsrIIInv 36.69 +0.03 WndsrInv 21.85 -0.02 Victory SycEsVlI 37.48 ... Virtus VontobelEMOppI11.51 ... Waddell & Reed Adv AcculativeA m 9.85 -0.01 SciTechA m 16.20 -0.02 Western Asset CorBdI 12.66 ... CorPlusBdI 11.91 +0.01 CorPlusBdIS 11.91 +0.01 iShares S&P500IdxK 290.40 +0.34

+3.5 +18.7 -0.1 +8.3 +9.7 +10.8 +11.9 +12.7 +13.4 +13.6 +13.5 +3.3 +0.8 +5.0 +4.1 +8.6 +3.3 +3.2 +8.9 +16.7 +3.5 +2.2 +7.4 +3.3 +10.5 +9.9 +9.8 +6.7 +6.7 +4.7 +13.9 +16.7 +16.8 +9.8 +21.2 +21.2 -12.4 +6.6 +6.6 +7.8 +4.8 +4.8 +4.8 +17.6 +17.6 +1.8 +1.7 +16.5 +16.0 +16.0 +13.8 +13.8 +5.3 +5.9 +4.8 +4.2 +4.2 +4.5 +2.8 +1.9 +1.9 +9.9 +9.9 +8.9 +31.1 +31.1 +17.0 +8.0 +5.1 +6.5 +10.3 +8.5 +10.0 +2.8 +10.7 +5.8 +8.0 +8.1 +8.1 +17.4 +11.8 +13.3 +11.1 +13.2 +2.4 +2.4 +7.4 -0.8 +1.7 +1.7 +1.7 +0.5 +0.5 +0.4 +2.2 +2.2 +2.1 +1.4 +0.9 +6.1 +2.8 +2.8 +2.8 +10.3 +1.2 +10.1 -1.9 +6.8 +8.0 +8.9 +9.6 +10.3 +11.1 +11.3 +11.3 +11.3 +5.1 +3.3 +3.3 +3.3 +3.3 +1.6 +1.6 +1.5 +17.6 +17.6 +17.7 +17.5 +8.9 +8.9 +8.9 +5.0 +5.0 +6.5 +6.4 +5.2 +5.2 +7.3 +5.5 +5.4 +7.3 +4.1 +27.6 +6.4 +18.8

$31.15 LZB La-Z-Boy reports its fiscal $40 first-quarter results today. $30.28 Wall Street expects that the 30 furniture maker’s earnings and revenue increased versus the ’17 20 same quarter last year. The est. company, which sells its Operating $0.28 $0.29 furniture wholesale to retailers EPS as well as directly through its Q1 ’16 Q1 ’17 own stores, has benefited this Price-earnings ratio: 18 year from solid sales gains, based on past 12-month results particularly among leather Dividend: $0.44 Div yield: 1.4 % furniture and other higher-priced items. Source: FactSet

+4.3 +6.2 +6.3 +9.8


8 • Daily Corinthian

Local Scores Monday, August 22 HS Softball @ Myrtle Corinth 4, Myrtle 1 CHS 000 020 2 - 4 16 3 MHS 000 001 0 - 1 8 0 (WP) Lily Null (LP) Jamison; MH: (CHS) McKenzie Patterson 4, Kaleigh Sanders 3, Emilshawua Blair 2, Anna Hudson 2; 2B: (CHS) Blair (Record) Corinth 4-2 *Lady Warriors use a strong pitching performance from Lily Null and 16 hits- 15 of those singles- to grab the road win at Myrtle. @ Kossuth Kossuth 15, Thrasher 5 THS 300 20 - 5 7 6 KHS 319 2x - 15 10 3 (WP) Avery Mullins (LP) J. White; MH: (KHS) Mason Drewery 2, Jade Barnes 2, Lexi Fiveash 2; 2B: (KHS) Barnes; HR: (KHS) Fiveash 2, Mullins (THS) Montgomery Tittle, Destiny McGee, C. Young (Records) Kossuth 2-0, THS 3-1 *Lexi Fiveash had a pair of homeruns for Kossuth- one of them a grand slam- and the Lady Aggies runruled the Lady Rebels in five innings despite homeruns by three Thrasher players. Middle School Football @ Corinth (7th-grade game) Corinth 18, Kossuth 8 (8th-grade game) Corinth 22, Kossuth 6

Sports

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Daily Corinthian Player of the Week BY KENT MOHUNDRO kmohundro@dailycorinthian.com

There were several outstanding individual performances turned in this past Friday but one local player had a night to remember and has been named the first Daily Corinthian Player of the Week for the 2017 football season. Biggersville junior running back/strong safety/ kick returner Qua Davis had only six touches for the entire contest against Middleton (TN) during the Lions 39-19 win but averaged just over 51 yards per touch. Davis had four rushes for 116 yards and two touchdowns while adding two kickoff returns for scores totalling 191 yards.

For the game Davis totalled 307 yards on six touches and four touchdowns to secure the player of the week

Davis honor. He returned the opening kickoff 98 yards to start the ball rolling. There were other area players that enjoyed outstanding nights like Kylin Wynn of McNairy Central who turned in a four touchdown game against Freedom Prep out of Memphis. Wynn had many more touches to achieve that performance but still had a game worthy of consideration. Tishom-

Davis’ Game Stats vs. Middleton (TN) 4 rushes for 116 yards (2 touchdowns) 2 kickoff returns for 191 yards (2 touchdowns) Total Numbers 6 touches for 307 yards and four touchdowns ingo County running back Tayvious Duckett recorded a three touchdown game with 117 yards on the ground while teammate Beau Ollivierre rushed for 111 and two scores in the Braves win at Alcorn Central. There were others in the mix but Davis’ effort simply couldn’t be denied. Congratulations to Qua Davis on being the first Daily Corinthian Player of the

Week. If you are a coach who has a player you would like to submit for consideration as a DC Player of the Week email their name, game stats and information to kmohundro@dailycorinthian. com by Saturday after each week’s games. If one of your players is chosen you will receive a phone call by Saturday afternoon verifying they have been selected. We will also need to set up a time that following Monday to take a photo of the player chosen to place with the story. The football season has now begun and should be filled with plenty of fun and excitement. We look forward to seeing who will be the next Daily Corinthian Player of the Week.

Pigskin Picks are back Our popular reader-participation contest ‘Pigskin Picks’ is back for another season beginning this week. Look for the 13-game lineup and entry forms in each Tuesday’s paper throughout the football season and return the entry forms by Friday of each week. You can either drop them off at our office at 1607 South Harper in Corinth and place in the ‘Pigskin Picks’ box or mail them in to The Daily Corinthian, c/o Pigskin Picks, 1607 South Harper Road, Corinth, Mississippi 38834. Mailed entries must be postmarked by Friday before each week’s games. This season should be exciting and we look forward to having you participate and possibly win the weekly $25 prize that goes to the winner. Spread the word and get ready for week 1 of ‘Pigskin Picks’ next week.

Local Schedule Today HS Volleyball Olive Branch @ Corinth, 6 Amory @ Kossuth, 5 Alcorn Central @ Biggersville, 5:30 Belmont @ Tishomingo County, 6 HS Softball Booneville @ Itawamba AHS (JV & V), 5 Corinth @ Mantachie (JV & V), 5:30 Kossuth @ Saltillo (JV & V), 5 Smithville @ Thrasher (V & JV), 5

Thursday, August 24 HS Football Walnut @ Falkner, 7 HS Softball Tishomingo County @ Booneville (V & JV), 5 Itawamba AHS @ Corinth (V & JV), 5:30 Thrasher @ New Site (JV & V), 5 Jumpertown @ Smithville (Varsity), 5:30 HS Volleyball Tishomingo County @ Alcorn Central, 5:30 Kossuth @ Hickory Flat, 5 Senatobia @ Corinth, 5:30

Shorts • Plaza Lanes announces the formation of their Fall leagues. The Thursday Morning Coffee League (ladies only) will begin August 17 beginning at 9 am. The Monday Night Major League (men and women) will begin August 21. The Thursday Night Rebel-Vol League (mixed) will begin August 24. The Tuesday Night Church League (men, women, youth) will begin September 5 and the Monday Night Youth League will begin September 11. All night league’s will begin at 6:30 pm. There is room currently for individuals and/or teams in all leagues. Stop by Plaza Lanes on Shiloh Road in Corinth to sign up or for more details. • Retrieving Freedom Inc. will be conducting the 1st Annual Golf Outing For Autism on Friday, August 25 at Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club on Shiloh Road. For ticket information and more details about this organization log onto www.reconnect4autism.com or call the Shiloh Ridge Pro Shop at (662) 286-8000 for more details concerning the tournament.

Photo by Payton Jackson

She’s safe Kossuth’s Jade Barnes slides in safely ahead of the throw during the Lady Aggies 15-5 win over visiting Thrasher Monday evening.

Who will win the East in 2017? I journeyed into the SEC West last week and gave an educated account as to how I believe things would unfold this season in arguably the toughest division in college football. At the conclusion of that column I mentioned that I would delve into the Eastern division this week so I’m here now make good Kent to on that promMohundro ise. Look folks I Sports Editor don’t profess to be a scholar or any kind of an expert on any of these teams aside from what I read in preseason magazines, school releases, ESPN and social media. That being said, you could possibly know more about a certain team than I do if you fol-

Kent’s Corner low them closely enough. I know we have fans in our coverage area from practically every Easter school but the most prominent ones by far are Tennessee, Florida and Georgia with a few Vandy faithful. My own brother, himself a die-hard Memphis Tiger fan, still claims to be a fan of the Gators. He also likes Michigan so if someone could please explain that one to me I’d be eternally grateful. OK so let’s get started. Last season I picked, with what turned out to be deep regret, the Volunteers to win the East simply based on what they had returning and the fact I believed former quarterback Josh Dobbs would get them there. Then it happened. They started off strong with wins

against Virginia Tech, Florida and Georgia before crashing to earth with losses to Alabama, Texas A&M, South Carolina and Vanderbilt. I’ll grant you those were all bowl teams UT fell to but the only one ranked in the AP Top 25 at the time was the Crimson Tide. So this year, I’m going traditional and I refuse to jump on anyone’s bandwagon unless the pull is simply too strong. Georgia was Tennessee’s mirror-opposite last season as they began with losses to Ole Miss, Tennessee and Vanderbilt before rebounding to defeat South Carolina, Kentucky and Auburn before taking down TCU 31-23 in the Liberty Bowl. The Bulldogs have one of the top young QB’s in the college game in sophomore Jacob Eason and although he was up-and-down in 2016

a lot of that had to do with his being thrown into the fire a little too early. But by the end of the season he and his receivers had developed a report and a rhythm and took a step forward. With the defensive gems Kirby Smart has brought in to go with what the ‘Dogs already had in the frey I’m picking Georgia to be the team that wins the East and advances to face Alabama in the SEC Championship Game. Florida should be right there with UGA and could possibly make a return trip to Atlanta in December but my heart says they’ll fall just short. I believe the Eastern division title will be settled in Jacksonville, Florida, on October 28 at ‘The World’s Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party.’ The Gators are always strong defensively and they’ll Please see CORNER 9

Baseball Rebs complete summer play in style Ole Miss Sports Information

Over the summer, 15 Diamond Rebs played in five different summer collegiate baseball leagues, and even Team USA, across the country from California to Massachusetts. Below is a look at how the current Rebels performed on the field during summer break.

Rebs of Summer

ter leading the club with 35 strikeouts in six starts. The Jackson, Tennessee, native finished with a 1.92 ERA and perfect 4-0 record, allowing only seven runs all summer. Rolison made one appearance in the playoffs, throwing six scoreless frames with seven Ks to help lead Orleans to the second round of the playoffs.

Ryan Rolison LHP Orleans Firebirds (Cape Cod)

Will Ethridge RHP Falmouth Commodores (Cape Cod)

Ryan Rolison was nothing short of brilliant for the Firebirds throughout the summer, and to end the season in the Cape. A Cape Cod League All-Star, the sophomore was named the No. 3 prospect in the entire league according to Baseball America. The southpaw also earned the Thomas Yankus Pitching Award with Orleans af-

Freshman All-American Will Ethridge closed out a strong summer with Falmouth, where he appeared in 10 games and finished with a 1.29 ERA. The sophomore ended with 12 strikeouts and just two earned runs allowed in 14 innings, helping the Commodores to the first round of the Cape Cod playoffs.

James McArthur RHP Falmouth Commodores (Cape Cod)

James McArthur finished out his summer months starting in seven games for Falmouth, where he went 1-2 with a 3.10 ERA. The New Braunfels, Texas, native struck out 19 hitters to end his summer campaign.

Connor Green RHP Hyannis Harbor Hawks (Cape Cod) Connor Green, who enters his junior year at Ole Miss, appeared in 12 games for Hyannis totaling 19.1 innings. The righty finished with 19 strikeouts for the Harbor Hawks, and started a pair of games with an 0-1 record.

Ryan Olenek IF/OF Hyannis Harbor Hawks (Cape Cod) Ryan Olenek closed out the

summer with Hyannis with a .283 clip after totaling 32 hits, including five doubles and a homer. The junior had 10 RBI and scored 14 runs for the Harbor Hawks. He even appeared in relief in one game, throwing an inning back in July.

Thomas Dillard C/OF Cotuit Kettleers (Cape Cod) Thomas Dillard capped off his summer playing in 28 games for Cotuit, finishing with eight RBI off three doubles and two home runs. The sophomore scored 11 runs for the Kettleers and drew 15 walks, helping Cotuit to the Cape Cod playoffs. The Oxford, Mississippi, native even saw time on the mound in early August, striking out four batters and allowing just one hit in two inPlease see REBS | 9


9 • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard

CORNER CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

need to be this year if they wanna hold off the ‘Dogs. The main concern for UF currently is who will be the quarterback that hands off and passes the ball to a talented group of skill players? The consensus right now is redshirt freshman Felipe Franks but Florida has no proven commodity at the most important position on the field. That’s why I believe they finish second. Maybe I’m wrong and I wouldn’t be surprised if I am. Spots 3-4-5 are likely to change from week-toweek but my gut says a surprise team will pop up in this group and I believe that team could very well be Vanderbilt. Yeah the Commodores. All you have to do is look back to last season to see how well Vandy progressed with huge wins over teams that normally drum them like Georgia, Ole Miss and Tennessee. Diminutive but powerful running back Ralph Webb could be a sleeper for SEC Player of the Year. And don’t be surprised if his name creeps up sometime during the season when the experts start talking ‘Heisman’ if the ‘Dores make a run for the division title with their solid defense.

Auto Racing South Carolina is another team that could make noise in the East as head coach Will Muschamp seems to have found the young man to run his offense in sophomore Jake Bentley. He simply took the bull by the horns in 2016 and willed the Gamecocks to a Birmingham Bowl appearance after starting 2-4. Tennessee is hard to figure but I’m going with spot five for the Vols. After folding like a lawn chair last year and losing Dobbs, LB Darrin Kirkland Jr. and FS Todd Kelly it’ll be a big surprise to most if they finish any higher than fourth or fifth. Kentucky and Missouri are the remaining teams to fill out the Eastern division standings and simply on the return of quarterback Drew Lock and an always-stingy defensive line alone I will go with the Tigers next leaving Kentucky to round things out. I hope you understand that forecasting how teams will do and where they will finish before the first snap of the season is only an educated guess at best. And whether I look back in late November and have things pretty much on the money or not I have given it the old college try. Til next time…

REBS trio of Redbirds in the Cal Ripken League, finnings. ished with a .202 clip in games. Cole Zabowski IF 29The Eads, Tennessee, Baltimore Redbirds native scored 16 runs for (Cal Ripken) the Thunderbolts, and Cole Zabowski, who drove in 11 runs off seven earned a spot on the Cal extra-base hits. Ripken League All-Star Trace Tyre IF game roster, finished Albany Dutchmen strong with a .336 clip, (Perfect Game) which tied for eighthTrace Tyre had a sucbest in the entire league. The lefty infielder cessful summer in the drove in 19 runs for the Perfect Game League, Redbirds, and totaled hitting .284 in 45 games. The Madison, Misfour extra-base hits to go sissippi, native finished along with 18 walks. The Lawrenceville, with 22 RBI on the sumGeorgia, native scored mer and tallied nine dou14 runs in 32 games, and bles. He also drew 30 led the club with 36 hits. walks and scored 21 runs Zabowski helped lead while adding six steals. Baltimore to the Cal RipHouston Roth ken League ChampionRHP Elmira ship Game, where they Pioneers fell short to Bethesda. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

Parker Caracci RHP Baltimore Redbirds (Cal Ripken) Parker Caracci was a workhorse for Baltimore this summer, totaling a 7-2 record in 46.2 innings. He finished with a 1.35 ERA for the entire summer, including a 0.69 ERA in the regular season. The Jackson, Mississippi, native struck out 48 in the regular season and allowed only three earned runs, also picking up five saves. He went on to appear in two games in the playoffs, where he earned a save and struck out five in five innings.

Greer Holston RHP Baltimore Redbirds (Cal Ripken)

(Perfect Game)

A Freshman All-American, Houston Roth was dominant for Elmira this summer in eight starts earning 2017 PGCBL AllLeague First Team honors. The Oxford, Mississippi, native went 2-1 in the regular season with a 1.75 ERA in seven outings. He struck out 46 in 36 frames, allowing only seven earned runs in the regular season. He pitched one game in the playoffs and struck out 11 in five innings pitched, helping the Pioneers to the Western Division Championship Series.

Chase Cockrell IF Conejo Oaks (California) Chase Cockrell, the lone Rebel to compete in the California League, finished with a .259 clip in 21 games. He led the club with three home runs, finished third with 19 RBI. The Bastrop, Louisiana native had five triples and scored 13 runs for Conejo.

Holston who also represented Baltimore in the All-Star game and Summer Showcase, had a solid summer with a 2.35 overall ERA in 38.1 innings. He struck out 44 overall and started nine of his 11 outings. In the regular season, the Long Beach, Nick Fortes C Mississippi, native gave Fond du Lac up only six earned runs Dock Spiders in 31 innings, helping the (Northwoods) Redbirds to the playoffs, where he started one conFortes finished as one test. of the top hitters for Fond du Lac all summer, totalMichael ing a .304 clip ad 38 RBI. Fitzsimmons The DeLand, Florida, naIF Silver Spring tive scored 33 runs, tallied Takoma T-Bolts 63 hits, and 17 extra-base (Cal Ripken) hits overall, and was third Michael Fitzsimmons, in the regular season with who went up against the 34 RBI.

NASCAR Monster Energy Cup-Bass Pro Shops NRA Night Race Results Saturday at Bristol Motor Speedway, Bristol, Tenn. Lap length: 0.533 miles (Start position in parentheses) 1. (18) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 500 laps, 0 rating, 53 points. 2. (1) Erik Jones, Toyota, 500, 0, 50. 3. (7) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 500, 0, 43. 4. (5) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 500, 0, 49. 5. (25) Kurt Busch, Ford, 500, 0, 32. 6. (13) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 38. 7. (20) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 500, 0, 30. 8. (29) Kevin Harvick, Ford, 500, 0, 37. 9. (2) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 41. 10. (10) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 500, 0, 31. 11. (21) J.Johnson, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 36. 12. (11) J.McMurray, Chevrolet, 500, 0, 25. 13. (8) Joey Logano, Ford, 500, 0, 27. 14. (14) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, 500, 0, 23. 15. (12) Daniel Suarez, Toyota, 500, 0, 22. 16. (27) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 499, 0, 23. 17. (19) David Ragan, Ford, 499, 0, 20. 18. (4) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 499, 0, 26. 19. (9) Clint Bowyer, Ford, 499, 0, 19. 20. (26) M.McDowell, Chevrolet, 499, 0, 17. 21. (6) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 499, 0, 18. 22. (23) AJ Allmendinger, Chev., 498, 0, 15. 23. (31) D.Earnhardt Jr, Chevrolet, 497, 0, 14. 24. (3) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 497, 0, 13. 25. (24) Danica Patrick, Ford, 496, 0, 12. 26. (34) Matt DiBenedetto, Ford, 496, 0, 11. 27. (15) C.Buescher, Chevrolet, 496, 0, 10. 28. (35) Corey Lajoie, Toyota, 495, 0, 9. 29. (17) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 493, 0, 8. 30. (30) JJ Yeley, Chevrolet, 493, 0, 0. 31. (37) Gray Gaulding, Chevrolet, 488, 0, 6. 32. (36) BJ McLeod, Chevrolet, 482, 0, 0. 33. (32) Cole Whitt, Chevrolet, 480, 0, 4. 34. (40) Joey Gase, Toyota, 476, 0, 0. 35. (33) L.Cassill, Ford, accident, 412, 0, 2. 36. (22) Ty Dillon, Chev., accident, 394, 0, 1. 37. (28) A.Almirola, Ford, accident, 390, 0, 1. 38. (39) R.Sorenson, Chev., trans., 352, 0, 1. 39. (16) A.Dillon, Chev. accident, 230, 0, 1. 40. (38) J.Earnhardt, Chev. accdt., 225, 0, 1.

Baseball AL STANDINGS East Division W L Pct GB 71 52 .577 — 66 57 .537 5 61 65 .484 11½ 60 64 .484 11½ 59 65 .476 12½ Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 68 54 .557 — Minnesota 63 59 .516 5 Kansas City 62 61 .504 6½ Detroit 54 69 .439 14½ Chicago 47 74 .388 20½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 76 48 .613 — Los Angeles 64 60 .516 12 Seattle 63 62 .504 13½ Texas 61 62 .496 14½ Oakland 54 70 .435 22

Boston New York Tampa Bay Baltimore Toronto

Sunday’s Games Detroit 6, L.A. Dodgers 1 Tampa Bay 3, Seattle 0 Boston 5, N.Y. Yankees 1 L.A. Angels 5, Baltimore 4 Minnesota 12, Arizona 5 Oakland 3, Houston 2 Kansas City 7, Cleveland 4 Chicago Cubs 6, Toronto 5, 10 innings Chicago White Sox 3, Texas 2 Monday’s Games Chicago White Sox 7, Minnesota 6, 1st game Baltimore 7, Oakland 3 Cleveland 5, Boston 4 Seattle 6, Atlanta 5 Minnesota at Chicago White Sox 2nd game (n) Texas at L.A. Angels (n) Today’s Games Oakland (Blackburn 3-1) at Baltimore (Jimenez 5-8), 6:05 p.m. Boston (Fister 2-6) at Cleveland (Carrasco 12-5), 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Tanaka 8-10) at Detroit (Boyd 5-6), 6:10 p.m. Toronto (Rowley 1-0) at Tampa Bay (Archer 8-7), 6:10 p.m. Seattle (Gonzales 0-0) at Atlanta (Sims 1-3), 6:35 p.m. Minnesota (Gibson 6-10) at Chicago White Sox (Giolito 0-0), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Roark 9-8) at Houston (Morton 10-5), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Gray 5-2) at Kansas City (Duffy 7-8), 7:15 p.m. Texas (Ross 3-2) at L.A. Angels (Nolasco 6-12), 9:07 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Oakland at Baltimore, 2:05 p.m. Boston at Cleveland, 6:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Detroit, 6:10 p.m. Toronto at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at Atlanta, 6:35 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. Washington at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m. Texas at L.A. Angels, 9:07 p.m.

NL STANDINGS Washington Miami

East Division W L Pct GB 74 48 .607 — 60 62 .492 14

Atlanta 55 67 .451 New York 54 68 .443 Philadelphia 45 77 .369 Central Division W L Pct Chicago 66 57 .537 Milwaukee 65 60 .520 St. Louis 63 61 .508 Pittsburgh 60 64 .484 Cincinnati 53 72 .424 West Division W L Pct Los Angeles 87 35 .713 Colorado 68 56 .548 Arizona 67 57 .540 San Diego 55 69 .444 San Francisco 50 76 .397

19 20 29 GB — 2 3½ 6½ 14 GB — 20 21 33 39

Sunday’s Games Detroit 6, L.A. Dodgers 1 Miami 6, N.Y. Mets 4 Atlanta 8, Cincinnati 1 Minnesota 12, Arizona 5 Chicago Cubs 6, Toronto 5, 10 innings Milwaukee 8, Colorado 4 Philadelphia 5, San Francisco 2 Washington 4, San Diego 1 Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 3 Monday’s Games L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh (n) Arizona 3, N.Y. Mets 2, 10 innings Seattle 6, Atlanta 5 Milwaukee at San Francisco (n) Today’s Games Miami (Straily 7-8) at Philadelphia (Pivetta 4-8), 3:05 p.m., 1st game L.A. Dodgers (Stewart 0-0) at Pittsburgh (Taillon 7-5), 6:05 p.m. Arizona (Corbin 10-11) at N.Y. Mets (Matz 2-7), 6:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lackey 10-9) at Cincinnati (Bailey 4-6), 6:10 p.m. Miami (Urena 11-5) at Philadelphia (Nola 9-8), 6:35 p.m., 2nd game Seattle (Gonzales 0-0) at Atlanta (Sims 1-3), 6:35 p.m. Washington (Roark 9-8) at Houston (Morton 10-5), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Gray 5-2) at Kansas City (Duffy 7-8), 7:15 p.m. San Diego (Richard 6-12) at St. Louis (Lynn 10-6), 7:15 p.m. Milwaukee (Nelson 9-6) at San Francisco (Samardzija 8-12), 9:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee at San Francisco, 2:45 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m. Arizona at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Seattle at Atlanta, 6:35 p.m. Washington at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m. San Diego at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.

Football NFL Preseason Saturday’s Games Tennessee 34, Carolina 27 Dallas 24, Indianapolis 19 Kansas City 30, Cincinnati 12 Detroit 16, N.Y. Jets 6 Green Bay 21, Washington 17 Houston 27, New England 23 Denver 33, San Francisco 14 Chicago 24, Arizona 23 L.A. Rams 24, Oakland 21 Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh 17, Atlanta 13 New Orleans 13, L.A. Chargers 7 Monday’s Game N.Y. Giants at Cleveland, 7 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 24 Miami at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Carolina at Jacksonville, 6:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 25 New England at Detroit, 6 p.m. Kansas City at Seattle, 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 26 Buffalo at Baltimore, 6 p.m. Arizona at Atlanta, 6 p.m. N.Y. Jets at N.Y. Giants, 6 p.m. Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Indianapolis at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m. Houston at New Orleans, 7 p.m. L.A. Chargers at L.A. Rams, 7 p.m. Oakland at Dallas, 7 p.m. Green Bay at Denver, 8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 27 Chicago at Tennessee, Noon Cincinnati at Washington, 3:30 p.m. San Francisco at Minnesota, 7 p.m.

College Football AP Top 25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press preseason college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, 2016 records, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and 2016 final ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Alabama (52) 14-1 1513 2 2. Ohio St. (3) 11-2 1414 6 3. Florida St. (4) 10-3 1396 8 4. Southern Cal (2) 10-3 1325 3 5. Clemson 14-1 1201 1 6. Penn St. 11-3 1196 7 7. Oklahoma 11-2 1170 5 8. Washington 12-2 1150 4 9. Wisconsin 11-3 926 9 10. Oklahoma St. 10-3 889 11 11. Michigan 10-3 881 10 12. Auburn 8-5 880 24 13. LSU 8-4 784 13 14. Stanford 10-3 695 12

Television

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Today’s Lineup

BASEBALL 10 a.m. — (ESPN) Little League World Series, consolation game, Australia (Sydney) vs. Midwest (Sioux Falls, S.D.), at Williamsport, Pa. 2 p.m. — (ESPN) Little League World Series, elimination game, Asia-Pacific (Seoul, South Korea)-Mexico (Tamaulipas, Mexico) winner vs. Caribbean (Santiago, Dominican Republic)-Latin America (Maracaibo, Venezuela) winner, at Williamsport, Pa. 6:30 p.m. — (ESPN) Little League World Series, elimination game, West (Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif.)-Mid-Atlantic (Jackson, N.J.) winner vs. Northwest (Walla Walla, Wash.)-New England (Fairfield, Conn.) winner, at Williamsport, Pa. BOXING 8 p.m. — (FS1) Premier Champions, Juan Carlos Payano vs. Alexis Santiago, bantamweights, at Las Vegas MLB BASEBALL 6 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati OR L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh (subject to blackout in local markets) 9 p.m. — (ESPN) Texas at L.A. Angels RUGBY 11 a.m. — (NBCSN) Women’s World Cup, semifinal, United States vs. New Zealand, at Dublin SOCCER 10:20 a.m. — (FS2) UEFA Champions League playoffs, first round, 2nd leg, Astana vs. Celtic, at Astana, Kazakhstan 1:30 p.m. — (FS1) UEFA Champions League playoffs, first round, 2nd leg, Nice vs. Napoli, at Nice, France 1:30 p.m. — (FS2) UEFA Champions League playoffs, first round, 2nd leg, Sevilla vs. Basaksehir, at Seville, Spain WNBA BASKETBALL 7 p.m. — (NBA) Phoenix at Minnesota 9:30 p.m. — (NBA) San Antonio at Los Angeles 15. Georgia 8-5 690 NR 16. Louisville 9-4 629 21 17. Florida 9-4 624 14 18. Miami 9-4 492 20 19. South Florida 11-2 327 19 20. Kansas St. 9-4 317 NR 21. Virginia Tech 10-4 240 16 22. West Virginia 10-3 207 18 23. Texas 5-7 173 NR 24. Washington St. 8-5 133 NR 25. Tennessee 9-4 114 22 Others receiving votes: TCU 98, Utah 85, Notre Dame 65, Boise St. 37, NC State 26, Northwestern 25, Pittsburgh 23, Oregon 21, Houston 19, Colorado 18, UCLA 9, San Diego St. 9, BYU 5, Appalachian St. 4, Nebraska 4, Tulsa 4, Kentucky 3, Texas A&M 3, Michigan St. 1.

Golf

PGA-Wyndham Championship Scores

Sunday at Sedgefield Country Club, Greensboro, N.C. Purse: $5.8 million. Yardage: 7,130; Par: 70 Final Henrik Stenson 62-66-66-64—258 Ollie Schniederjans 66-63-66-64—259 Webb Simpson 63-64-68-67—262 Ryan Armour 66-61-72-64—263 Kevin Na 67-63-65-68—263 Rory Sabbatini 65-68-66-64—263 Martin Flores 64-70-68-63—265 Cameron Smith 63-69-70-63—265 Shane Lowry 67-64-67-67—265 Davis Love III 64-66-67-69—266 Harold Varner III 63-68-66-69—266 Richy Werenski 67-66-64-69—266 Matt Every 61-72-68-66—267 Jason Dufner 67-66-67-68—268 Tim Wilkinson 63-70-68-67—268 Ricky Barnes 69-67-68-65—269 J.J. Henry 66-70-66-67—269 Søren Kjeldsen 69-63-66-71—269 Jason Kokrak 68-69-63-69—269 Hunter Mahan 65-65-69-70—269 Geoff Ogilvy 70-66-66-67—269 J.J. Spaun 71-66-69-63—269 Camilo Villegas 68-68-65-68—269 Mark Hubbard 67-67-68-68—270 Patton Kizzire 67-70-64-69—270 Ryan Moore 67-65-68-70—270 Johnson Wagner 67-64-65-74—270 Roberto Castro 69-68-68-66—271 K.J. Choi 68-67-70-66—271 Rick Lamb 64-68-72-67—271 Julián Etulain 68-66-69-68—271 Lucas Glover 65-69-68-69—271 Russell Knox 66-66-71-68—271 Anirban Lahiri 65-66-68-72—271 Troy Merritt 67-70-65-69—271 Tyrone Van Aswegen 71-66-65-69—271 Jonathan Byrd 68-68-70-66—272 Ben Crane 69-64-72-67—272 Morgan Hoffmann 66-70-68-68—272

Chez Reavie Sam Saunders Keegan Bradley Chad Campbell Bud Cauley Joel Dahmen Andres Gonzales Retief Goosen Ryo Ishikawa Kevin Kisner Steven Alker Ryan Brehm Harris English Brad Fritsch

66-70-65-71—272 63-68-72-69—272 68-68-67-70—273 67-67-68-71—273 67-68-68-70—273 67-68-72-66—273 70-66-70-67—273 72-65-65-71—273 66-71-66-70—273 69-67-68-69—273 68-65-71-70—274 68-69-70-67—274 68-67-72-67—274 67-66-70-71—274

Transactions Monday’s Deals BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed RHP Miguel Castro on the bereavement list. Recalled RHP Alec Asher from Norfolk (IL). MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Placed INF Miguel Sano ion the 10-day DL, retroactive to Sunday. Optioned LHP Nik Turley to Rochester (IL), then recalled him as 26th man for Monday’s doubleheader. Recalled INF Kennys Vargas from Rochester (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Tim Melville from Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Optioned RHP Bryan Mitchell to Scranton/WilkesBarre (IL). SEATTLE MARINERS — Released 2B Danny Espinosa. Recalled SS Taylor Motter from Tacoma (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS — Placed RHP Jacob Faria on the 10-day DL, retroactive to Thursday. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Released LHP J.P. Howell. Optioned RHP Tom Koehler to Dunedin (FSL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHPs Silvino Bracho and J.J. Hoover to Reno (PCL). Recalled RHPs Jimmie Sherfy and Braden Shipley from Reno. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Claimed RHP Jordan Jankowski off waivers from Houston. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Optioned RHP Brandon Woodruff to Colorado Springs (PCL). Reinstated RHP Chase Anderson from the 10-day DL. NEW YORK METS — Sent RHP Matt Harvey to Binghamton (EL) for a rehab assignment. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Recalled RHP Ben Lively from Lehigh Valley (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Recalled C Jacob Stallings from Indianapolis (IL).

McNairy Central ready for winning season BY JEFF YORK

for the Daily Corinthian

SELMER, Tenn. — The air is filled with excitement and the McNairy Central Bobcats are ready to begin the 2017 season. This year’s team goal is to have a winning season and qualify for the state playoffs. MCHS finally broke the losing season streak last year and are now ready to take the next step to postseason play. The ‘Cats finished with a 5-5 record last year, the first nonlosing season since 2008. The team has missed the state playoffs eight straight years. It’s is the longest playoff drought since MCHS failed to make it from 19691979. The team did play in a bowl game in 1979. Heralded tailback Kylin Wynn returns and he might as well have a Superman shirt under his uniform. The tailback does not talk much, but is still a team leader because of his play on the football field. He seems healthy and ready to break off some long runs this season. The longest run by MC last year was 51 yards and was an issue all year. “Kylin is back and

Franks

ready to go. He looked good Friday night,” said coach Brian Franks. “He is going to do his talking with his

pads on.” Will Kennedy, senior fullback, has moved from guard to the backfield and has made a good conversion. He can carry the ball and is a capable blocker for Wynn. It appears Lucas Hively has won the QB duel with Chase Wallace performing good enough to push Hively. The first-year starting QB will see Hively run the football more than last year’s quarterback Dylan Crabb. Grant McMahan is the team’s top receiver and has the best hands on the team. He still has a tender ankle that was hurt during soccer and it is vital he stays healthy. On the other side, Will Jones looks primed to have a breakout season. He caught a TD pass from Hively in the win over Hardin County in the Bobcats jamboree game. Possibly the key to this team’s success will be

how well a young offensive line performs this season. Carson Kennedy, senior guard, is the team’s veteran that must helped mentor the younger linemen. There is little doubt Kennedy will be playing college football next year. The other guard is Stephen Wilbanks. Hunter Justice and Josh Robison, both sophomores, will start at tackle. Garrett Stone is the starting center. Defensively, the ‘Cats will be quicker on the flanks than last year with Jayden Dean and Nasir Ellis. The nosetackle will be Cartavious Godwin. Cesar Escalante and Richard Gibbens could see action on the line depending on what type defense is being used at the time. Josh Yopp, a starter as a freshman, will be one of the inside linebackers and will be the quarterback of the defense. The other inside linebacker is Matthew Young. Ronnie Kinkennon and Beau Barnes are the outside linebackers. Vennie White and Hunter Mccullar are the cornerbacks and the safeties are Chase Wallace and Trayvon Campbell.

“We are going to have eight new starters on defense, but I like the way we have looked in preseason practice,” said Franks. “We gave up too many big plays last season and that is something we have worked on preventing this season.” Franks knows the region is going to be rugged with Milan the predicted favorite and Bolivar a close second. The coach said there are no easy games in the region and the Bobcats will have to play well to reach the state playoffs. Cole Miller was reliable as a placekicker last year and he is expected to be an asset again this season. Anthony White will take over the punting duties this year. “Our team morale has been really good so far and I like the way our players have approached this season,” said Franks. “We are going to play a lot of people this season and that is going to help us stay fresh late in the games.” McNairy opened the 2017 season last Friday with a 65-26 blowout of Freedom Prep and will travel to Tishomingo County this week.


10 • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

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Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • 11

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Bachelor in Paradise A woman decides to leave. (N) NCIS “Willoughby” Bull “Teacher’s Pet” Jane’s Jewelry NCIS “Willoughby”

Tues. Beauty Bull “Teacher’s Pet”

America’s Got Talent “Live Show 2” Twelve acts perform live. (N) (L) The Flash “Duet” DC’s Legends of Tomorrow Bachelor in Paradise A woman decides to leave. (N) America’s Got Talent “Live Show 2” Twelve acts perform live. (N) (L) Diana -- Her Story (N) Secrets of Althorp -The Spencers Cops Cops Cops Cops Diana -- Her Story (N)

Secrets of Althorp -The Spencers Lethal Weapon “Home- The Mick Brooklyn bodies” Nine Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The Flash “Duet” DC’s Legends of Tomorrow } ››› My Cousin Vinny (92, Comedy) Joe Pesci, Marisa Tomei. Ray Donovan “Dog(6:05) } ›› The Rewalker” cruit Al Pacino. } ››› The Incredible Hulk (08, Action) Edward Norton, Liv Tyler. Teen Mom 2 The Challenge (N) 2017 Little League World Series Baseball Tonight Ink Master “Pin-Up Panic Ink Master “Drill Baby, Attack” Drill” WWE SmackDown! (N) (L)

9 PM

9:30

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(:01) Somewhere BeLocal 24 tween (N) News NCIS: New Orleans News Ch. 3 Tracking a sniper. The Find With Shawn Killinger (N) NCIS: New Orleans News Tracking a sniper. Hollywood Game News Night (N) CW30 News at 9 (N) Simpsons (:01) Somewhere Between (N) Hollywood Game Night (N) Frontline Cops

Cops

Frontline Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Criminal Minds PIX11 News at Ten (N)

News at 10pm News at Ten KeepAppear Cops

AUGUST 22, 2017

10:30

11 PM

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live Late Show-Colbert

11:30

(:37) Nightline James Corden Best Dressed Late Show-Colbert James Corden Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers Family Guy Modern Modern Family Family (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightLive line Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Meyers Waiting for Tavis NHK NewsGod Smiley line Cops Cops Cops

Tavis Charlie Rose (N) World Smiley News Fox 13 (:35) TMZ (:05) Dish Ac. HolNews Nation lywood Saving Hope Saving Hope Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

} ››› Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (10, Ro(10:55) } ››› Road to Perdition mance-Comedy) Michael Cera. Dice Episodes All Access Twin Peaks: The Return Naked “Part 15” SNCTM Hard Knocks: Training REAL Sports With Bry- Insecure Ballers Camp ant Gumbel (N) (:02) Fear Factor (:03) Fear Factor (:03) Fear Factor MLB Baseball: Texas Rangers at Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. From Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, Calif. (N) Ink Master “Grim Ink Master Tattoo Tattoo Tattoo Inker” (N) Night. Night. Night. Shooter “Across the Rio Law & Order: Special Law & Order: Special Grande” (N) Victims Unit Victims Unit Thunder Thunder Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends (:15) Friends Deadliest Catch: On Deadliest Catch “Lost at (:01) Manhunt: Una(:03) Manhunt: Una(:05) Deadliest Catch Deck (N) Sea” (N) bomber (N) bomber Leah Remini: ScienLeah Remini: Scien(:02) The Murder of Laci Leah Remini: ScienLeah Remini: Scientology tology Peterson (N) tology tology CBR Bull Riding: Cham- Bundesliga Soccer: Borussia Mönchengladbach World Poker UEFA Champions pionship. vs FC Koln. League Soccer Black Girls Rock! 2017 (N) Being Mary Jane Black Girls Rock! 2017 Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Good Bones (N) House House Fixer Upper Hunters Hunters } ›› Bring It On (00) Kirsten Dunst. WAGS: Miami E! News (N) Forged in Fire: Cutting Forged in Fire “The (:03) American Rip(:03) Forged in Fire “The (:03) Forged in Fire: Deeper (N) Kampilan” (N) per (N) Kampilan” Cutting Deeper NFL Live Champ. Drive Champ. Drive E:60 SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Outdaughtered: Life Outdaughtered (N) (:03) Rattled “Pump & (:06) Outdaughtered (:06) Rattled “Pump & With Quints (N) Dump” (N) Dump” Chopped “Whiskey and Chopped “The Newlywed Chopped “Grill Masters: Chopped “Mac and Chopped “The Newlywed Game” Wings” Game” Battle 4” Cheese” Bonanza Walker, Ranger The Virginian “A Distant Fury” The Virginian Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms (N) (:02) So Sharp “So (:12) Dance Moms (:02) Dance Moms Sick” (N) Praise Prince Every Joyce Why Is Praise God Impact } ›› Clash of the Titans (10, Fantasy) Perseus, son of Zeus, } ›› Pompeii (14) Kit Harington. A gladiator tries to get home embarks on a dangerous journey. to save the woman he loves. The Fosters “Chasing (:01) The Bold Type (N) (:02) The Fosters The 700 Club Protect } ››› 13 Going on Waterfalls” (N) Your Brain. 30 (04) } ››› Experiment in Terror (62, Crime Drama) (:15) } ›› The Violent Men (55, Western) Glenn } ››› Gilda (46) Rita Glenn Ford, Lee Remick. Ford, Barbara Stanwyck. Hayworth. (:01) Animal Kingdom (:02) The Last Ship “In (:02) The Last Ship (5:30) } ›› Now You Animal Kingdom (N) Media Res” See Me (13) Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Wrecked (:01) Conan “Jim Lauder- (:01) (:32) Conan Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory (N) dale” (N) Wrecked FamFeud FamFeud Snap Snap Divided Divided Cash Cash Snap Snap King/Hill American Cleve American Burgers Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Mike Ty. (:12) M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King UFC UFC Ten Boxing: Premier Boxing Champions. (N) MLB Whiparound Speak for Yourself } ›› Battleship (12) Taylor Kitsch, Alexander Skarsgard. Earth comes under } ›› Battleship (12) Earth comes under attack attack from a superior alien force. from a superior alien force. Fear No Nugent Hunting Driven Thirteen Season Wild Sky MRA Uncharted Motorcycle Race Motorcycle Racing: Washougal. Motorcycle Race The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots Master Class The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots Tucker Carlson The Five (N) Hannity (N) Tucker Carlson The Five River Monsters The Great Barrier Reef River Monsters “Amazon Apocalypse” Last Man Last Man The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Standing Standing Girls Girls Girls Girls Stuck/ Bunk’d Bizaardvark Andi Mack K.C. Under- K.C. Under- Bunk’d Jessie Stuck/ Andi Mack Middle cover cover Middle Face Off: Game Face Face Off “Journey Into Face Off: Game Face (5:30) } ›› XXX (02) Face Off “Journey Into Fear, Part 2” (N) Fear, Part 2” Vin Diesel.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian The Alcorn County Board of Supervisors held its regular monthly meeting on Monday night. Read Staff Writer Jebb Johnston’s recap story in Wednesday’s Daily Corinthian.

Family’s tolerance of verbal abuse is red flag for girlfriend D E A R ABBY: My boyfriend and I have been together for almost a year and a half. Abigail In the beVan Buren g i n n i n g , he kept his family and Dear Abby me apart. I thought it was because they were extremely close, but turns out he was doing me a favor given their inappropriate and cruel treatment of one another. At my boyfriend’s birthday lunch, his father called his mother the worst possible word anyone could call a female. My boyfriend and his sisters didn’t seem phased by his verbal abuse. I worry his parents’ toxic and unloving relationship is something he will eventually settle for in life. Is it possible for children not to emulate their parents’ example, or should I move on? -- NOT IN THE FAMILY DEAR NOT IN THE FAMILY: Children do not automatically follow the abysmal patterns set by their parents. However, if you and this man are serious and you are con-

templating a future with him, I strongly recommend that before formalizing your relationship, you seek premarital counseling together to avoid any unpleasant surprises. DEAR ABBY: I have a question about nail-biting/finger chewing. We recently hired a new employee who is in daily contact with the public. He is a finger chewer, and his nails are bitten well below the finger tip. I am struggling with this because I had a childhood friend who chewed her fingers to the point of bleeding, and I have a strong negative reaction when I see people do it. When, if ever, is it appropriate to speak to someone about this bad habit? I have recently learned that it is actually a medical diagnosis and can lead to gastric disorders. We all know there are many germs on our hands, and every time you put them in your mouth, you’re transferring them to your intestinal tract. -- WORRIED IN THE EAST DEAR WORRIED: I have heard of very few nail-biters who are proud of the habit. There’s a saying -- not original

-- that if you want someone to avoid you, just tell him something “for his own good.” If you want a pleasant working relationship with this person, mind your own business and do not attempt to “help” him by offering unasked-for advice. DEAR ABBY: I’m usually well-spoken and articulate with family and close friends. But when talking to strangers or potential employers, I tend to choke up and make no sense at all. I become anxious and forget what I want to say. Do you have any ideas why this happens? -- TALKER IN THE WEST DEAR TALKER: It may happen because you suffer from a form of social anxiety -- one shared by many people. Fortunately, there’s help for it if you consult a mental health professional. Because it is interfering with employment opportunities, you shouldn’t wait. 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). People who make you feel small while making themselves feel big are, of course, toxic for you to be around. If you can’t stay away altogether, at least minimize your exposure. Firm boundaries will be key. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Not every day, but certainly today, it will be far more important to take care of the practical matters than to concern yourself with the deeper or more mystical layers of existence. You can ponder and intuit after the storm has passed. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Good work is good work, no matter how humble or herculean the task. There’s a victory rush that comes from doing a job to the best of your ability and knowing it’s not been done better. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Between too much and too little is the wonderfully cozy waystation you’ll hang out in today. It’s made even more enjoyable by friends who are similarly satisfied.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). If it’s fun but doesn’t make sense, consider it anyway. Even computers have evolved to incorporate illogical turns to serve the very human need for surprises and fun. A touch of irrationality will bring magic to your world. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Remember when you felt helpless? If you could have only known that help was on its way, how much easier the moment would have passed. Remember the lesson. Trust that there are forces on your side. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll be energized by a steady and deliberate learning process. There is nothing more exciting to do with this day than to move from ignorance to knowledge on a subject that interests you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’re in a mood to bounce around ideas -- your favorite way to learn. While bandying about intellectual and philosophical concepts, keep in mind that not everyone likes to debate. Choose your company

carefully. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21). You are who you are because of what you’ve experienced. It’s why you keep putting yourself in the mix, taking risks and making efforts: You’re brave. Courage is a lifestyle. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). If you have to turn it into a competition, make yourself the opponent. The only nobility worth striving for is the kind where you top your finest effort thus far. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). With so many people looking for somewhere to pass the blame, it’s important to note that blame never solves anything. It gets better once someone starts taking responsibility for it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Perhaps it seems counterintuitive that you would be in a position to teach what you don’t know, yet it happens all of the time. The added pressure of having to present information will make you learn superquickly.


Variety Comics

12 • Daily Corinthian

BEETLE BAILEY

RELEASE DATE– Monday, August 21, 2017

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Crossword

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

RELEASE DATE– Tuesday, August 22, 2017

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Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

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FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: I would like some help with this problem. I recently joined a board game group. A friend had told me to come and play. Two women in the group are very competitive; one is my friend. I haven’t played these games since the 1970s. So much has changed. They even play these games online to practice now. One warms up for our weekly games by playing a game at the computer at the center where we meet. This week, we had an extra person when I came, so we made two teams instead of playing individually. One of the competitive women said I should play with another woman who doesn’t score high. She wanted to play with another of the top players so they could score really high. I felt that I was not wanted, and so did the other ladies. Now I do not want to go to this group anymore. The other woman gets upset if she does not win. Should I continue to go and hope I can do better or leave the group? — Undecided Dear Undecided: You don’t need to improve your score; they need to improve their

Dear Annie

attitudes. Try talking to your competitive friend about your feelings. If she and the other poor sport in the group can’t be kind, relax and enjoy themselves while playing board games with girlfriends, it’s their loss. Start your own group with like-minded women who are looking to have fun, not just to win. Dear Annie: I am writing in response to “Trying to Stay Afloat,” the parents who are falling behind on everyday chores in their efforts to be great parents and excel at their jobs. I absolutely agree with your advice to use Mint. Automatic bill pay can be such a timesaver and can take the worry out of this chore. I liked the Blue Apron or Green Chef idea, as well. That’s a great way to cook healthful meals. I would like to add one observation. As parents, one of our biggest jobs is teaching. And we teach by example.

We are teaching our children how to be adults and what they will need to do to survive in our society. No matter the age of a child, we can incorporate our chores into their daily lives. When they are young, you can make it into a game. When cleaning, give them a dust cloth. Tell them they are chasing down the dust monsters with their magic cloth. Get them toy vacuum cleaners and brooms. If doing the laundry, teach them colors as you sort the laundry. As the children get older, the lessons can become more technical. But always spend good quality time making what you might otherwise see as a chore into a lesson on being an adult. I think we do a disservice to our children by letting them believe life is all fun and games. Thanks, Annie, as always, for your good advice. — Betty Dear Betty: You’ve found teachable moments in everyday chores. I absolutely love your suggestions. Thank you. Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.


Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • 13

FERRELL’S HOME & OUTDOOR, INC. 807 SOUTH PARKWAY • 287-2165 1609 HARPER ROAD • 287-1337 CORINTH, MS

REBECCA COLEMAN PHIPPS

Attorney & Counselor at Law  ­ € ‚ ƒ „  Â… † Â? „ ‡‡‡ Â?  Â‡­ Â? ˆ Â?‰‰ Â? Â?Â? Š

SMC RECYCLING 2760 S. Harper Corinth Mon. - Fri. 8 am - 4 pm Sat. 8 am - 11 am Call us for scrap pick-up.

662-665-0069

735 Foote Street, P.O. Box 2485 Corinth, MS 38835-2485

Casabella’s Corinth Clearance Center

Ph. 662-286-9322 Fx. 662-286-8322 e-mail: khardwick@bellsouth.net

POPhone:662-665-9965 Box 1891 Corinth, MS 662-286-3127 Fax 662-286-8111

AND COMPANY, P.A.

Ken Hardwick, K H d i k CPA Tommy Hardwick, CPA

Fax :662-286-6475

1801 S Harper Rd #2 The Pit Corinth, MS 38834 Stop 662-286-6681 726 S. Tate St. Visit our website www.kingkars.net Hours: M-F 9:30-7:00

662-287-8773 (College Rd) Hill

916 Hwy. 45 South 662.665.9109 Owners: Harley & SharonCorinth, Davis MS 38834

100% employee owned

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel 1299 Hwy 2 West • (Marshtown) “Let us help with your projectâ€? “Large or Smallâ€? 218 N. 4th Baldwyn, Ms Bill Jr.,St.284-6061 G.E.365-7611 284-9209

Gold Bond

Pest Control, LLC

Coombs DailyJeffManager Corinthian 5756 Hwy. 22 South PHONE Michie, TN 38357CELL 662-287-3521 662-587-1544 Office 731-239-3900

Certified Public Accountants

920 Hwy 72 E Corinth, MS 662-284-4646

MCKEE’S THE PITGUNSTOPSHOP

Tennessee and Mississippi Enhanced Hand Gun Safety • Home •726 Auto Ben Grisham S. Tate St. Classes (monthly classes offered)

Corinth, MS

662-665-9109 4639 Call Hamburg Rd., Michie, TN 662-286-9835

Reasonable Rates Today

Call

662-728-6291

662-415-2425

Corinth, MS

800-844-0184

Lane Grooming Magnolia Stump Grinding Puppy “We Treat Your Dog Like Family� For appointment call 662-554-7293 Located At 373 CR 515 | Rienzi Hours: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to noon on Saturday

Phone: 662-286-0088 • Fax: 662-286-0067 www.edwardjones.com

662-287-3184

Chris Grisham

WHITFIELD NURSING HOME, INC

Joseph L. Pratt Dr. Amy B. Davis Misty Rowsey F.N.P Steven D Hefner, CFP ÂŽ Carla Bray Financial F.N.P Advisor Sherie Norton F.N.P 413 Cruise Street 121 Pratt Drive Suite 1A MS 38834 Corinth, Corinth, Mississippi 38834 662-287-4471

Long–Lewis 1500 S. Harper Rd.

(College Hill Rd) Deanna Grisham 731-239-5635

• Life • Health

Certified Public Accountants BRADDOCK BRAWNER, CPA A. A. BRADDOCK BRAWNER, CPA ELIZABETH COSSITT, CPA M.M.ELIZABETH COSSITT, CPA 515 E. WALDRON STREET P.O. Box 458 •

Corinth; MS

38834

Tel. (662) 286-7082 Fax (662) 286 3365 Tel. (662) 286-7082 Fax (662) 286¡3365 Pratt Family Medical Clinic, P.A.

pickwicktreeservice@yahoo.com

PICKWICK TREE SERVICE TOP • TRIM • REMOVE

Plaza Bowling Lanes

Special Rates for Church Groups 2001 Shiloh Rd. 662.286.8105 1801 S Harper Rd #2 798 S. Cass B&B CONCRETE Corinth, MS 38834 Corinth, MS CO., INC. 662-286-6681 Â Residential-Commerical-Industrial Hours: M-F 9:30-7:00 Call for Free Estimates

BILLY HARBIN 16 CR 329 Counce, TN 38326 Cell:731-926-0249 Owners: Harley & Sharon Davis

ALL TYPES OF TREES & STUMP REMOVAL & LOT CLEARING OVER 25 YEARS EXPERIENCE - INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

Smith & Associates, Inc. Insurance Services Since 1970

David Odle

816 Taylor Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-2270

662.286.6407

1 Hour Approval $500-$10,000 Loans

662-728-6627

Home Family Financial Improvement Loans BillBooneville’s Consolidation OnlyServices Family 101½ N. Cass St., Loans Owned FuneralCorinth, HomeMS Auto Loans 662-665-7976 www.boonevillefuneralhome.net Vacation Loans

Â?Â? Â?

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CORINTHIAN Gold Bond Pest Control, LLC FUNERAL HOME Jeff Coombs

Manager St. 506 Kilpatrick 1704 Shiloh Rd., Corinth, MSCorinth, 38834 MS 662-286-8600 (OfďŹ ce) Phone: 662.287.3521 662-287-6080 (Fax) Cell: 662.587.1644

 � � 662-284-INFO (4636)


14 • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Access the single most comprehensive resource for garage and estate sale listings in our area, in print and online!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS

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

3 days for only $19.10 Call 662.287.6111 today!

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

EMPLOYMENT

0232 GENERAL HELP

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

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.

PETS

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

0955 LEGALS highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in Alcorn County, MS, to-wit:

5 +$1.22. 237,02 7,5(6 ($&+ )25 )25

Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to*(50$1 7$%/( :,7+ $ :$17 72 PDNH FHUWDLQ wit: \RXU DG JHWV DWWHQWLRQ" &(17(5 '523 /($) FARM $VN DERXW DWWHQWLRQ Commencing at the Southw9(5< 81868$/ est corner of the East Half of JHWWLQJ JUDSKLFV the Southeast Quarter of Sec&$// tion 3, Township 2 South, NEW ENGLAND 410 single shot shotgun Range 8 East; thence run MERCHANDISE $175. Call 662-720-6855. North 82 degrees East 287 J C Higgins 22 bolt action feet to the West right of way $125. Call 662-720-6855. line of a new road; thence run 2&&$6,21$/ &+$,5 :,7+ in a Northerly direction along 0533 FURNITURE the West right of way line of &86+,21(' 6($7 said road 290 feet for a true $6+/(< )851 /5 6HW (;& &21' Point of Beginning; thence run 2YHU 6L]HG &RXFK /RYH /* 6725$*( 6+,33,1* 21/< North along the West right 6HDW &KDLU ZLWK 2WWR &217$,1(5 ; ; &$// of way line of said road 150 PDQ [ 5XJ $OO IRU feet; thence run West 230 &$// R G 32 revolver feet, more or less, to the $150. West line of the East Half of Call 662-720-6855. the Southeast Quarter of Section 3, Township 2 South, Range 8 East; thence run REVERSE YOUR South 180 feet, more or less, AD FOR $1.00 to the Northwest corner of the property conveyed by EXTRA Smith and wife, Myra Page For $165 Mo. – Call 662-287-6111 Vernon Kathryn Smith, to Barry for details. Brumfield and wife, Donna Brumfield, by deed dated Au62/,' 2$. $50 &+$,5 gust 15, 1972, which has been 6($7 +,*+ %$&. $5( recorded in the Chancery 3$''(' (;& &21' Clerk's Office of Alcorn 0867 6(( County, Mississippi, in Deed &$// Book 161 at Pages 19-20; 7:2 0$7&+,1* 9LQWDJH thence run in an Easterly dir/DPSV Z VKDGHV %RQH ection 240 feet, more or less, FRORU Z IORZHUV along the North line of the HDFK &DOO property conveyed to Barry Brumfield and wife, Donna 87,/,7< 75$,/(5 )7 ; Brumfield, by the deed reLoans $20-$20,000 )7 :,7+ )7 6,'(6 ferred to above to the Begin:22' %(' 5(' (;& ning Point. &21' 0867 6(( I will convey only &$// such title as is vested in me as Trustee, with no warranties.

& Business

– Run Your Ad On This

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand We Haul:

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

• • • • • • •

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

662-286-9158 or 662-287-2296

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

Hat Lady

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

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

Mary Coats Thank you for

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

HOMES FOR 0620 RENT

40 Years FORESTRY MULCHER SERVICES

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

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

CROSSROADS

Transform your existing concrete

CHIROPRACTIC, LLC

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

Brett McDuffy

mcduffy3@bellsouth.net

(662) 415-4396

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

Property Directory 186 CR 1040 Booneville, 13 years old, 8.9 acres, 4540 heated sq. Ft., open oor plan, 4 bedrooms 4 baths, 2 half baths, living room w/ gas log ďŹ replace and built-ins, kitchen w/ lg island and walk in pantry, formal dining room, craft room, sunroom, ofďŹ ce/laundry room, play/bonus room, 700 sq ft walkin oored attic storage, hardwood tile and carpet oors, 9&10 ft ceilings, crown molding through out, 3 car attached garage, central h/a, central vacuum, sprinkler system, 12 person storm shelter, 2 story 30x50 workshop w/ bath, nicely landscaped yard and concrete driveway, approx. 1 acre ďŹ sh pond. For more details and appt. call 662-728-1604 or 416-1979

2BR, 1B.,TVRHA Wel- JAMES ELDRED RENFROE, come $600./$600. REF Trustee REQ. New. Appl 287-6752 James Eldred Renfroe, %5 %$ /5 NLWFKHQ 648 Lakeland East Dr., Ste A, 1RHO 6W PR Flowood, MS 39232, GHS 1R SHWV Phone 601-932-1011 Publish: 8/8, 8/15, 8/22, 8/29 MOBILE HOMES 15986

0675 FOR RENT

IN THE CHANCERY 1,&( %5 %$ &HQW C O U R T O F A L C O R N 6FK 'LVW VWY UHI &+$ C O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I GHS RE: THE LAST WILL AND REAL ESTATE FOR SALE TESTAMENT OF JIM W. BENJAMIN DECEASED

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE 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 FINANCIAL LEGALS

0955 LEGALS TRUSTEE’'S NOTICE OF SALE

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

2,450 sq ft 4 bedroom, 3 bath , bonus room , lots of storage, gas fireplace, security system, 2 car garage, sprinkler system, 36X40 insulated shop 2 years old, pond stocked with fish ,1.5 acres, home only 8 years old. Extremely nice home located 1 mile from Kossuth High School on CR 617.

D L O S

Don’ wait it won’t last long! If interested please text or call Steven at 662-415-9427

PRIME OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT

FOR LEASE

6 ROOM OFFICE SUITE PLUS WAITING ROOM, WINDOW RECEPTION ROOM, 2 REST ROOMS, LARGE PARKING AREA

IN EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER HWY 72 EAST.

CALL 662-415-9187 OR 662-594-1874

CALL 662-415-9187

PRIME LOCATION!

HOUSE FOR SALE

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

WITNESS my signature this 25th day of July, 2017.

WHEREAS, on May 1, 2014, William Lee Roberts executed a Deed of Trust to T. Harris Collier, III, as Trustee for Trustmark National Bank, as Lender, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS�), as Beneficiary, which is recorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, MS, in Instrument No. 201401851; WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was thereafter assigned to Trustmark National Bank with this recorded in Instrument No. 201702672;

CAUSE NO. 2016-767-02TKM NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS GIVEN that Letters Testamentary were, on the 19 day of December, 2016, granted the undersigned Executrix of the Estate of Jim W. Benjamin, 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 8th day of August, 2017 or the same shall be forever barred. WITNESS OUR SIGNATURE(S), this the 2nd day of August, 2017. Donna A. Benjamin Executrix PHIL R. HINTON, MSB#2480 505 E. WALDRON STREETPOST OFFICE BOX 1257 CORINTH, MS 38835 (662) 286-3366 3t 8/8, 8/15, 8/22/2017 15995

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI RE: THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF DALE KING CRANFORD, DECEASED CAUSE NO.

17-375-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS GIVEN that Letters Testamentary were on the 3rd day of August, 2017 granted the undersigned CoExecutors of the Estate of DALE KING CRANFORD, 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 8th day of August, 2017 or the same shall be forever barred.

WHEREAS, on June 21, 2017, Trustmark National Bank substituted James Eldred Renfroe as Trustee in WITNESS OUR SIGthe aforementioned Deed of Trust with this recorded in NATURE(S), this the 3rd day Instrument No. 201702673; of August, 2017. WHEREAS, there being a default in the terms and conditions of the Deed of Trust and entire debt secured having been declared to be due and payable in accordance with its terms, Trustmark National Bank, the holder of the debt has requested the Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property pursuant to its terms in order to raise the sums due, with attorney’s and trustee’s fees, and expenses of sale; NOW, THEREFORE, I, James Eldred Renfroe, Trustee for said Deed of Trust, will on August 30, 2017, offer for sale at public outcry, and sell within legal hours (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m., and 4:00 p.m.) at the south main door of the Alcorn County Courthouse in Corinth, MS, to the

JOHN WILLIAM WAGNON CO-EXECUTOR HANNAH LEE CRANFORD CO-EXECUTOR W. JETT WILSON, MSB#7316 ATTORNEY FOR CO-EXECUTORS 505 E. WALDRON STREET POST OFFICE BOX 1257 CORINTH, MS 38835 (662) 286-3366 3t, 8/8, 8/15, 8/22/2017 15996

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE WHEREAS, on May 3, 2006, Christopher G. Webb and wife, Sandra N. Webb, executed and delivered to Donald Ray Downs as Trustee a


Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • 15

0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS deed of trust on the property herein described to secure payment of an indebtedness therein mentioned and owing to Patrica Harville Burcham, which deed of trust is recorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument No. 200602553; and WHEREAS, default having been made in the terms and conditions of said deed of trust and the entire debt secured thereby having been declared to be due and payable in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust and Patricia Nachbar, for- merly Patricia Harville Burcham, having requested the undersigned trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said deed

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

the terms of said deed of trust and for the purpose of raising the sums due thereunder, together with attor- ney's fees, trustee's fees and expense of sale.

tion 17, Town ship 2 South, Range 8 East, etc. described as follows:

NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that I, Donald Ray Downs, the trustee in said deed of trust, will on September 6, 2017, at the south front doors of the county courthouse of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in the City of Corinth, Mississippi, within legal hours for such sales (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash the property described in said deed of trust as follows: Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit: That part of the Southwest Quarter of Section 17, Town- ship 2

Commencing at the Southeast corner of the Southwest Quarter of the said Section 17, run North 173 feet, more or less, to the North right-of-way line of U. S. Highway #72, as it existed on December 3, 1966, and from said point continue North 275 feet, more or less, to the North corner of the Gann property, and from said point continue further North 142 feet; thence run West 50 feet across a 50 foot strip of land upon which strip a street has been constructed for a true point of be- ginning of the property to be conveyed hereby; thence run North with the West line of said street 100 feet; thence run West 150 feet; thence run South to the Northwest corner of the Gardner's lot; thence run in an easte r l y d i r e c t i o n al o n g

0232 GENERAL HELP

0220 MEDICAL/DENTAL

JOB OPENING JONES EXHAUST SYSTEMS Assistant Production Manager Please apply in person 8am – 5pm 442 Arendall St. Adamsville Industrial Park Jones Exhaust Systems is an Equal Opportunity Employer

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

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

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

FOR SALE 2002 Keystone Sprinter 31’

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

$9800

662-808-2629 662-808-1645

SOLD

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

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

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

662-284-5598

2017 FOREST RIVER CAMPER

FOR SALE MOTOR HOME 1969 ULTRA VAN

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

662-415-1026 or 662-286-8948

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

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

$8,500.

662-415-5071

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

ASKING $11,700

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

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

662-660-3433

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

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

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD

SOLD

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

$7500 $8995

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

1959 MASSEY FERGUSON 35

FOR SALE

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

4020 JOHN DEERE TRACTOR

$4500.00 $3950.00 731-926-0006

LD 51,000 SOMILES SLEEPS 6

2003 CHEROKEE 285 SLEEPS 8

662-415-0399 662-419-1587

$4300 662-415-5247

SOLD

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

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

SOLD

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

$6500. CALL 662-279-3683

SOLD

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

$5000.00

662-603-4400

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

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

8,500 OBO

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

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

$

1,500 OBO

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

200000

$ 0.00

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

$

662-286-1519 662-287-9466

PROGRESSIVE TURF MOWER 10FT GOOD SHAPE PRO FLEX 120 MODEL

$5000.00 $3500.00

CALL 662-665-8838

Gravely zero turn, one owner,

good grass cutter 650 obo.

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

86 chevy 4 wdr,

57 Chevy 4 door.

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

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

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

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 662-808-4464

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

5000.00.00 6000

$$

662-416-5191

662-286-6571 662-286-3924

1956 FORD 600

SOLD

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

FOR SALE

FOR SALE 7x19 heavy duty trailer

2003 W/W HORSE TRAILER

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH EQUIPMENT POWER STEERING GOOD PAINT

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

For sale, like new Husqvarna 54" cut lawn tractor. Only 105 hours. Always garage kept. Save $1000 versus new. $1200/OBO. $1500/OBO. Call 662-415-7552/leave msg.

5 FT. WOODS GROOMING MOWER

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

804 BOATS

FOR SALE

1999 RANGER 120 HP ENGINE 17 FT.

$7000.00

662-210-1707 $3500.00 GOOD COND. VERY NICE 662-210-1707

1989 FOXCRAFT

1986 ASTROGLASS 15’ BASS BOAT 90 HP EVINRUDE

$1800 662-415-9461

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

$4500. 662-596-5053

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

2004 21’ PONTOON SUNTRACKER WITH TRAILER 2 LIVE WELLS 50 HP JOHNSON, 24 VOLT TROLLING MTR. HUMMINGBIRD DEPTH FINDER BIKINI TOP, TABLE, RESTROOM $5500.00 OBO

662-603-3902

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

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

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

for only

7995.

$

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

DECK BOAT BAYLINER CLASSIC

1993 21FT TRACKER PONTOON

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

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

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

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

01 COBRA BOAT & TRAILER

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

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

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


16 • Tuesday, August 22, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

e r l y d i r e c t i o n a l o ng Gardner's North line to an iron stake at Gardner's Northeast corner; thence run North 36 feet to the beginning point.

August 29, 2017 September 5,2017

Donald Ray Downs, P. A. P. O. Box 1618 Corinth, Mississippi 38835-1618 I will sell and convey 15999 only such title as is vested in me as trustee under the provisions of A B A N D O N E D M O T O R said deed of trust. VEHICLE PURSUANT TO

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

CONTENTS WILL BE SOLD OR DISPOSED OF ON 9/6/17. TIME OF DISPOSAL:12:00 PM PLACE OF DISPOSAL: 813 S PARKWAY ST, CORINTH, MS, 38834. YEAR:2004 MAKE: DODGE MODEL:RAM VIN NO:5 T B E T 3 8 1 5 4 S 4 4 8 2 9 0 SIGNED:GRANT BROSE NAME OF BUSINESS: BROSE AUTOPLEX; LOCATION: 813 S PARKWAY ST, CORINTH, MS, 3 8 8 3 4 . PHONE:662.286.6006

0955 LEGALS

THE PROVISIONS OF WITNESS my signa- SECTION 63-23-1, ET ture on this 9th day of SEQ OF THE MS CODE August, 2017. OF 1972, THE UNDERSIGNED NOTIFIES ANY DONALD RAY DOWNS AND ALL PARTIES TRUSTEE HAVING OR CLAIMING ANY INTEREST LEGAL 3t 8/22, 8/29, 9/5/2017 4t OR EQUITABLE, IN THE August 15, 2017 FOLLOWING 16011 August 22, 2017 DESCRIBED VEHICLE. August 29, 2017 SAID VEHICLE AND ITS

0955 LEGALS “PUBLIC NOTICE� TO THE PUBLIC AND TO THE TAXPAYERS OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI: You are hereby notified that the real and personal property assessment rolls of the above named county for the year 2017 have been equalized according to law, and that said rolls are ready for inspection and examination, and that any objections to said rolls or any assessment therein contained shall be made in

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

contained, shall be made in writing and filed with the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors of said County, on or before the 11th day of September, 2017, at his office in the Alcorn County Chancery Building of said county, and that all assessments to which no objection is then and there made, will be finally approved by said Board of Supervisors, and that all assessments to which objection is made, and which may be corrected and properly determined by this Board, will be made final by this Board of Supervisors, and that said rolls and the assessments contained therein, will be approved by this Board of Supervisors; and that

WITNESS the signature and seal of the said Board 1. This board will be of Supervisors, this the 7th in session for the purpose day of August, 2017. of hearing objections to the said assessments which may be filed at the Board of THE BOARD OF SUPERSupervisors Office Building V I S O R S O F A L C O R N in the City of Corinth, said C O U N T Y County and State, on the 11th day of September, BY: JIMMY TATE WALDON, 2017. PRESIDENT

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

0955 LEGALS

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

and that,

2. This Board of Supervisors will remain in session from day-to-day until all objections, lawfully filed, shall have been disposed of and all proper corrections made in the said rolls.

ALCORN COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS 305 S. FULTON DRIVE CORINTH, MS 38834 286-7707 2t 8/22, 8/29/2017 16012

WITNESS the signature

STORAGE, INDOOR/ OUTDOOR $0(5,&$1 0,1, 6725$*( 6 7DWH $FURVV )URP :RUOG &RORU 0255,6 &580 0,1, 6725$*(

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY 0255,6 &580 0,1, 6725$*(

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

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

1984 EL CAMINO 2009 Pontiac G6

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

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

2003 FORD MUSTANG GT BLACK, 5 SPD., LEATHER, LOADED EXTRA CLEAN 78,226 MILES

$7,500.00 CASH 662-462-7634 662-664-0789 RIENZI, MS

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

$3900 obo.

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

REDUCED

93 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

1977 CORVETTE RED RED/WHITE INTERIOR 305 ENGINE AC $7500.00 CALL OR TEXT 662-255-2275

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

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

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

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

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

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

286-6707

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

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

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

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

D L SO

2004 GMC Explorer conversion van, 246,000 miles,one owner lady driven. Loaded, leather, heated seats, new transmission, ready to tailgate. $ 00 obo. 662-287-4848

D L SO

2001 DODGE DAKOTA 130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

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

1986 Corvette

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

$7,500.00

CALL 662-284-6724

BLACK / 4 DOOR 200K MILES CLEAN, 1 OWNER $2500.00 OBO 662-284-5901

D L SO

2002 Chevy Trailblazer

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

$1,250 662-808-4079

1970 MERCURY COUGAR FOR SALE Excel. Cond. 2014 Nissan Pathfinder SV

official pace car convertible, automatic 90,000 miles, 350 motor red in color air and heat lots of new parts $7500.00 obo $6500. OBO

60,000 miles Exc. Cond., looks new Seashell Exterior, Cream leather interior Sunroof, Back-up camera, Bluetooth enabled stereo, Good tires Asking 18,500

no text please

Call 662-415-4151 or 662-415-4268

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

1985 Mustang GT,

1989 Corvette

662-223-0865

2014 Toyota Corolla S 1.8 LOW MILES!!

$15,999 (Corinth Ms)

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

(205-790-3939)

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

662-287-4848

1973 CUTLASS 2 DOOR •••••

$4,500.00 662-415-5071

2014 HYUNDAI HYUNDAI 2014 ACCENTHATCHBACK HACHBACK ACCENT STANDARD STANDARD SHIFT SHIFT

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

2008 FORD RANGER

2010 Chevy Equinox LS

2002 Honda Accord EX Runs great, 30 mpg, $1500.00. 662-415-2305

2013 Volvo XC60 FWD

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

Call 662-720-6661

95’ CHEVY ASTRO

Cargo Van Good, Sound Van

$2700

872-3070

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

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

70K Miles 57,000 Miles,

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

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

Inside & Out All Original

$$

00 6,900 8,90000 662-415-0453 662-664-0357

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

$700.00 (662) 603-2635 212-2431

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

662-479-5033

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

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

731-645-8339 OR 731-453-5239

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

832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

2006 HONDA VTX 1800

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

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

901-485-8167

ATV FOR SALE

HONDA 3 WHEELER

KICK START, RUNS GOOD, MIGHT NEED TIRES. $

750 OBO

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

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

HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE 2005 Harley Davidson Trike

D L SO

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

$3,550.00

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

Contact Paul 901-486-4774 Walnut, MS.

CALL OR TEXT 662-396-1105

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

MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE

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

24,000 miles, Ultra Classic Nice, $23,500. REDUCED

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

662-415-7407 662-808-4557

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

Leather seats with sunroof and low miles.

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

2008 Harley Davidson FXDF 14K MILES EXC. COND. RADIO, USB PORT $6500. OBO OBO $5500. CASH TALKS!!! NO TRADES

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

D L SO

YAMAHA V STAR 650

22,883 MILES $2,350.00 665-1288

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

D L SO

D L SO

Lift and Cargo

Seat. New batteries.

$3,125.00

662-665-2044

32,000 Miles Super Bike Super Price

$7800.00 OBO 662-212-2451

662-837-8787

03 Harley Davidson Ultra

1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

2013 Arctic Cat

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO

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

662-808-2994

(662)279-0801

100th Anniversary Edition 22000 miles. New tires, battery and brake pads. Regular maintenance checks. $8,000. 901-606-7985 call or text. no voicemails.

2005 EZ GO 36 Volt

Golf Cart with 4" Jake

2005 Heritage Softail

662-284-6653

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER

07 HONDA RANCHER ES 2005 HONDA 500 Rubicon

$3,900

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

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

D L SO

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


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