083017 dc e edition

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Home & Garden Container gardening solves many problems

Prentiss Co. Alcorn County man charged with burglary

McNairy County Officials search for bank robber

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Wednesday August 30,

Daily Corinthian

Storms, wind

2017

75 cents

Vol. 120, No. 207

Today

Tonight

76

71

60% chance of rain

• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

Churches coordinate Harvey relief efforts By L.A. Story lastory@dailycorinthian.com

The Alcorn County Baptist Association has begun to coordinate a multi-denominational relief effort to aid the Texas victims of Hurricane Harvey. The Alcorn County Baptist Association’s Director of Missions, Bro. Warren Jones, said Wheeler Grove Baptist Church will be instrumental in coordination of the effort to get help to the hurricane victims. Reports of catastrophic flood-

ing in Southeastern Texas has been widespread, along with images of victims displaced by the storm and seeking shelter. A USA Today Network Story by Rick Jervis and John Bacon said, “A National Weather Service gauge southeast of Houston recorded 49.32 inches from Harvey — one of the highest rainfall totals from a tropical storm or hurricane in the contiguous 48 states. The storm is expected to dump an additional 7 to 13

“There are thousands of people who have been affected. We’re trying to create a community effort and would like everyone to just join hands and get together on this thing.” Kara Blackard

Wheeler Grove Baptist Church Pastor inches of rain through Friday over the upper Texas coast and into southwestern Louisiana.

Wheeler Grove Baptist Church will be the collection point for financial donations,

from now through the month of September, for a new project called “Hurricane Relief for Harvey,” according to Ed Settle, Missions Director, Wheeler Grove Baptist Church. “There are thousands of people who have been affected. We’re trying to create a community effort and would like everyone to just join hands and get together on this thing,” said Wheeler Grove Baptist Church Please see RELIEF | 2A

Officials file assault charges after beating the cause of the altercation,” said Caldwell. A 28-year-old Alcorn CounBurress has been charged ty man remains jailed with aggravated asin lieu of a $15,000 sault after the victim bond after he severely suffered severe injubeat an elderly man ries to his head and over the weekend. face. Alcorn County SherSheriff’s deputies iff Ben Caldwell told were called to Alcorn the Daily Corinthian County Road 520 at the suspect was Joshua 10:30 a.m. Saturday Burress of Highway 2 to a report of a fight in Northeast. progress. Burress The sheriff did not The suspect was release the name of the taken into custody afvictim, whom he described as ter a traffic stop not far from a 74-year-old male. the scene where the man was “We are still investigating beaten. By Mark Boehler

editor@dailycorinthian.com

Some summer insects Visitors Center hosts Civil War Fair threaten trees, foliage Several special exhibits will welcome visitors on Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Shiloh National Military Park Visitors Center.

BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

SHILOH, Tenn. — A unique artifact collection will highlight a Civil War “Fair” set for Labor Day weekend. Several special exhibits will welcome visitors on Saturday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Shiloh National Military Park Visitors Center. Appraiser and Civil War collec-

tor Rafael Eledge will also be on hand to take a look at visitors’ artifacts. All events are free and open to the public. “This will be a great event where visitors can not only see unique artifacts associated with the Battle of Shiloh and the Civil War, but can also bring their own items to show,” said Superintendent Dale Wilkerson. “The

variety of items that will be displayed will be amazing.” As a part of this event, visitors are invited to bring their personal Civil War items to display. Two major exhibits will be on display in the visitor center auditorium. The Army/Navy Expedition collection contains

Harvey brings heavy rainfall to Crossroads BY ZACK STEEN

zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

The Crossroads area is expected to get a drenched in the coming days as remnants of Hurricane Harvey approach. What’s left of Harvey, now a tropical storm, is forecast to move inland over the northeastern gulf coast early Wednesday morning. The storm’s persistent downpours have prolonged catastrophic flooding in Texas and Louisiana this week, and according to AccuWeather Meteorologist Brett Rossio, it could be the worst flood-

Please see FAIR | 2A

By Jebb Johnston

jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

The late summer is seeing certain types of foliage threatened by an abundance of a few insects. Caterpillars that defoliate oak trees are more active than normal in Alcorn County and other parts of the state. The variable oakleaf caterpillar and yellownecked caterpillars are the main culprits.

Bob Moore spends a lot of time in the courtroom. The 34-year-old 2001 Corinth High School graduate has been the elected county attorney for the past six years, has been prosecutor for the City of Corinth the past two years and has a downtown private practice, Moore Law Firm. “The ability to help people and make a difference,” is why the Mississippi State Business School and Ole Miss Law School graduate became an attorney. Moore has an interest in preserving Corinth history and serves as chairperson of the Corinth Preservation Commission. The MSU Bulldog sports fan has a wife of five years, Haley, and they have two kids, 2-year-old Kathryn and Grey, who turns 1 next month. His parents are Greg Moore of Corinth and Carolyn Kelly of Tupelo. By Mark Boehler

Please see RAINFALL | 2A

Author Colleen Townsend Evans headlines the annual women’s conference at First Presbyterian Church of Corinth.

10 years ago

Country legend Charlie Daniels is announced as the headliner for Darryl Worley’s annual Tennessee River Run Concert.

Reserving Now for Summer Vacation!

RENTAL

Please see INSECTS | 2A

People of the Crossroads Bob Moore, Corinth

ing any area will see since the Hurricane Katrina disaster. “There will be locations receiving at least 50 inches of rainfall when all is said and done,” Rossio said, as the National Weather Service reported Cedar Bayou, Texas got 51.88 inches of rain from Harvey - a new continental U.S. record. The National Weather Service in Memphis says Corinth and Alcorn County may see five to six inches of rain, which could mean major flooding

25 years ago

Mississippi State University Extension Agent Patrick Poindexter has heard from a number of residents concerned about the caterpillars, and he found them on a white oak at his home. “I have seen them strip all the leaves off a very young tree,” he said. “It was less than five years old. On older trees,

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2A • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Harvey storms move Old Time Revival indoors Staff Reports

For those who remember simpler times and whole-hearted praise and fellowship, there will be an opportunity for both this week. Small Town Promotions is hosting an Old Time Tent Revival this week from Wednesday

until Friday beginning at 6 p.m. nightly. Orginally planned to be off South Parkway directly behind Lowe’s in Corinth, the threat of Tropical Storm Harvey has moved the revival indoors to 613 Bunch Street. “We just want to bring America back to God,”

said Small Town Promotions owner, Randy Black. “We are not promoting any certain denomination, this is for everybody.” The evangelist for the revival is Bro. Dwight Sanders from Dayton, Tenn., and there will also be music each night. On Wednesday night,

Chosen from Detroit, Ala., will perform. On Thursday night, the worship and praise continues with Sara Hambrick of Alabama, and Friday night’s performance will be by Reborn from Jonesboro, Ark. The event is free of charge. “We only want to share Jesus and lift Him up and

share the mighty will of God,” said Black. If the revival doesn’t satisfy your music needs, there will be a free gospel concert on Saturday beginning at 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Tractor Supply Co., in Corinth. “Bring your lawn chairs, but if you don’t have a

lawn chair, then we will have some folding chairs available,” said Donnie Lawrence, CFO, Small Town Promotions. There will be a CocaCola trailer with hotdogs available for sale. Gospel performers will be Chosen, Sara Hambrick and Reborn.

opinion on items they would like examined. Eledge is one of the most active and knowledgeable experts of the Civil War and 19-century militaria, and has frequently been featured on the popular PBS program Antiques Roadshow. He established The Shiloh Civil War Relics shop in 1995, which is now an online operation, and consults for many museums and national parks, as well as for books and magazines. At 4 p.m. on Saturday, a special program will be offered featuring one of

the foremost Civil War flag scholars in the country, Greg Biggs. Biggs has spent many years studying military history from the Spartans to World War II. He consults with many museums and auction houses, and has written dozens of articles for magazines such as Civil War News and North-South Trader. He will be presenting a program on Confederate flags entitled: “1862: The Year of the Battle Flags.” Wilkerson said all weapons, artillery shells, muskets, pistols and

edged weapons will be inspected by certified NPS historic weapons safety officers prior to admission. He said trading or selling of artifacts is strictly prohibited on National Park Service property. Please bring no more than two items per person (one is preferred) for appraisal due to limited time. (For more information, call 731-689-5696, go to the website at nps.gov/ shil, or on Facebook at facebook.com/shilohnmp and Twitter at twitter. com/shilohnps.)

tions and churches— to help the victims of the storm. While there are other places gathering food and other needed items, the local Baptist Association chose to send financial aid. “We know there is a tremendous need there, but

this time we’re not sending things, we are sending money. This way, the money can be put where there’s the most need,” said Blackard. Settle said MBC into Disaster Relief will monitor the situation and keep up with the most needed

areas and make sure the funds go into those areas. “We are waiting on the most direct way of helping at this point. We know everybody’s looking for trustworthy ways to send assistance and we hope to be that — to ensure the money gets to where it

needs to be,” said Jones. Settle said there are three ways to send donations: 1. financial donations can be brought to Wheeler Grove Baptist Church; 2. donations can be mailed to the Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, 21 CR 519, Corinth, MS

38834; or 3. contact the church and they will be happy to pick up the donation. The project is in its earliest stages at this point and all involved said there could be updates as the project gets fully underway.

It is usually not safe or practical to attempt to spray larger landscape trees, and they tend to recover from the defoliation. “However, it can be worthwhile to treat small, recently planted trees that can still be easily sprayed,” said Blake Layton, the state entomologist. “Handpicking is even an option

on small saplings. The younger a tree is, the more beneficial it is to protect it from severe defoliation.” The armyworm is showing up again but in much smaller numbers than a year ago. “I do have a few producers that have had to apply

some insecticide to get them out of hay fields and things along that line,” said Poindexter. “I think one reason they haven’t been as widespread this year is probably due to the weather — we have had adequate rain and we’ve had some little cool

snaps. I’m still telling my forage producers to be mindful of them.” The southern pine beetle is a big problem in parts of the state this year. In trees that have been attacked by the insect, “It will look like someone glued popcorn on your tree,” said Poind-

exter. “The sap exudes and turns white.” Earlier this month, the U.S. Forest Service announced the establishment of an incident management team to direct efforts to suppress the beetle infestations threatening Mississippi pine forests.

will be five to 10 mph out of the east southeast. Wednesday night, rain is expected to continue with a 70 percent chance of precipitation. On Thursday, NWS states the area will see tropical rainstorms throughout the day and night. Chance of rain on

Thursday and Thursday night is 70 percent. Although no warnings or watches are currently in effect for the area, AccuWeather predicts flood warnings will be issued as Harvey moves inland. The projected path takes the storm up across Mississippi. They forecast the eye of the storm, which will be a tropical depression at the time, will move over the Crossroads area on Friday around 7 a.m. With the storm, Ac-

cuWeather said rain is a certain, while flash flooding and tornados are possible. Friday’s forecast includes a 80 percent chance of showers, but drops to a 60 percent chance on Friday night. Rain chances decrease to 40 percent on Saturday and 30 percent on Sunday. High temperatures will hover in the mid to low 80s through the weekend with low temperatures forecast to drop into the mid-60s each night.

FAIR Continued from 1A

many rare items from the Union Army and Navy and the boats they used to successfully control the Mississippi River and tributaries during the war. Another exhibit will feature uniforms, weapons and personal items from the 14th Missouri, “Birge’s Western Sharpshooters,” which participated in the Battle of Shiloh. From 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday only, Eledge will be on-hand to talk to visitors and offer his

Appraiser and Civil War collector Rafael Eledge will be on hand to take a look at visitors’ artifacts during the fair.

RELIEF Continued from 1A

Pastor Kara Blackard. Blackard stressed that while the Baptist Association is coordinating the effort, they want it to be multi-denominational — a community-wide project with all denomina-

Insects Continued from 1A

they seem to eat sections out of it. At my house, there was a big section probably 5 feet in circumference that they had stripped.” While the damage is unattractive and may stress the tree, it will not kill it, he said.

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RAINFALL Continued from 1A

for the area. The rains are expected to begin on Wednesday as outer bands of the slow moving storm pass over. Wednesday’s outlook includes a 60 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Winds

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Local/Region

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Today in History Today is Wednesday, Aug. 30, the 242nd day of 2017. There are 123 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On August 30, 1997, Americans received word of the car crash in Paris that claimed the lives of Princess Diana, her boyfriend, Dodi Fayed, and their driver, Henri Paul.

On this date In 1861, Union Gen. John C. Fremont instituted martial law in Missouri and declared slaves there to be free. (However, Fremont’s emancipation order was countermanded by President Abraham Lincoln). In 1862, Confederate forces won victories against the Union at the Second Battle of Bull Run in Manassas, Virginia, and the Battle of Richmond in Kentucky. In 1905, Ty Cobb made his major-league debut as a player for the Detroit Tigers, hitting a double in his first at-bat in a game against the New York Highlanders. (The Tigers won, 5-3.) In 1945, U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur arrived in Japan to set up Allied occupation headquarters. In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, which was intended to promote private development of nuclear energy. In 1963, the “Hot Line” communications link between Washington and Moscow went into operation.

Daily Corinthian • 3A

Across the Region Booneville Alcorn County man charged with burglary BOONEVILLE —Booneville police have charged an Alcorn County man in connection with the burglary of a storage building. Timothy Michael Burdue, 20, of CR 520, Alcorn County, is charged with one count burglary and larceny of a commercial building; possession of marijuana with intent to distribute; possession of methamphetamine; and possession of methylphenidate hydrochloride. Bond set at $20,000. Arrested with Burdue was Richard Allen Ross, 21, of 106 Stanley Street, Booneville, charged with one count burglary and larceny of a commercial building. Bond for Ross was set at $5,000. They are accused of breaking in a mini-storage building on South Second Street Aug. 19. Patrol officers were conducting checks of the storage units and found the two suspects burglarizing the mini-storage, said Police Chief Michael Ramey. “They were taken into custody for the burglary and Burdue was later found with narcotics,” he said. Both cases will be presented to the next Prentiss County grand jury.

McNairy County

Officials continue search for bank robber FINGER, Tenn. – The McNairy County Sheriff’s Department continues to check out tips involving the robbery of a bank in the northern part of the county. A white male entered the Finger branch of Home Banking Company just after 9 a.m. Friday and robbed the bank of an undisclosed amount before getting away on a blue Yamaha Rhino ATV.

“We are chasing a few tips,” McNairy County Sheriff Guy Buck told the Independent Appeal on Monday. The robbery suspect was dressed in all camo and brandished a stainless steel handgun, according to Buck. Law enforcement officials found the abandoned ATV Friday afternoon off Duberry Road. The blue ATV has been reported stolen earlier on Friday.

Tupelo

Monroe County Another West Nile virus case reported

Convicted sex offender charged in new attacks TUPELO — A convicted sex offender has been charged with sexual battery and other crimes after using a vehicle with flashing lights to stop women in traffic and abducting one at knifepoint, authorities say. Louis Winston Scott, 44, of Pontotoc was arrested Monday and charged with attempted kidnapping, Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson said. One woman escaped about 1:30 a.m. Saturday in Lee County and another woman was attacked a short time later in a nearby county, authorities said. The woman in Lee County accelerated her car and escaped after the man stopped her and threatened her with a knife, WTVA-TV reported . Scott is charged in Union County with kidnapping, attempted armed robbery and three counts of sexual battery after a woman there was pulled over and abducted at knifepoint, Union County Sheriff Jimmy Edwards said. Edwards told The Associated Press on Tuesday that Scott did not have a badge and will not be charged in Union County with impersonating a law enforcement officer. Such a charge would be a misde-

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meanor, Edwards said, while the other charges Scott faces are felonies. It was not immediately clear whether Scott is represented by an attorney. The Mississippi sex offender registry shows Scott was convicted in 2000 of sexual battery and kidnapping. He was released on probation about three months ago, the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reported.

MONROE COUNTY – Five new human cases of West Nile virus have been reported in Mississippi, including a case in Monroe County. The Mississippi State Department of Health says these five new cases were in Clarke, Hinds, Lauderdale, Monroe and Yazoo counties. This brings the 2017 state total to 41 cases. So far this year cases have been reported in Bolivar, Clarke, Clay, Covington, Forrest (4), Hinds (8), Humphreys (2), Jones, Lauderdale, Leake, Leflore, Lincoln (2), Lowndes, Madison (4), Monroe, Noxubee, Perry, Rankin (6), Scott, Wilkinson, and Yazoo counties. Two deaths have been reported in Forrest and Humphreys counties. In 2016, Mississippi had 43 WNV cases and two deaths. Peak WNV season in Mississippi is July through September, although cases can occur at any time of the year. Symptoms of WNV infection are often mild and may include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, a rash, muscle weakness or swollen lymph nodes. In a small number of cases, infection can result in encephalitis or meningitis, which can lead to paralysis, coma and possibly death.

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Oxford Decision over teacher hiring made by conservator OXFORD – A school district sued by five former teachers claiming discrimination over them not being given jobs in a newly consolidated district says the decision not to keep them was made by the conservator in the district they were originally hired, reported WTVA. The Starkville-Oktibbeha Consolidated School District filed the response to a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court. All five women had worked as teachers in the Oktibbeha County School District in the years leading up to the stateordered consolidation of the district with the Starkville Municipal School District. In court documents filed with the federal court, SOCSD claims the state appointed conservator overseeing the Oktibbeha County schools made the decision not to rehire the five teachers before the consolidation took place. They say as such, the new district cannot be held liable for the actions taken prior to the merger. Mary Louise Carr, Kristy Gibson, Brenda Staszefski, Pamela Perry and Janet Hodges-Cagle filed their lawsuits in July. The claims include age and race discrimination.

Starkville

Help needed identifying credit card fraud suspect STARKVILLE – Police are asking for the public’s help identifying a credit card fraud suspect, reported WTVA. Surveillance video captured a suspect and his vehicle. Starkville police say the attached surveillance pictures are from one of multiple locations on Aug. 13. Police did not specify locations.

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Reece Terry, publisher

Education’s future focused on technology Mississippi may be more than 2,000 miles from Silicon Valley, but future software developers are honing their skills in the Magnolia State. I had the chance to learn about the value of computer codRoger ing during a recent visit to Wicker the Base Camp Coding Academy in Water Valley. The U.S. Senator 12-month program readies Mississippians in their senior year of high school for wellpaying software jobs. Graduates have gone on to receive job offers from CSpire and FedEx. The business community’s enthusiasm and financial support for students at the Base Camp Coding Academy reaffirm the growing demand for advanced computer skills in the workforce. The Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that computing will represent one out of every two STEM jobs in less than a decade. The field could produce 1.3 million job openings by 2022. Mississippi’s students should not be left behind. In fact, early coding experience could give them a competitive advantage. I have introduced the “Computer Science Career Education Act of 2017” to encourage the development of computer science programs in high school and postsecondary classrooms. The legislation would promote collaboration among educators, local business leaders, and community partners to engage students with real-world experiences and challenges. The bill would establish competitive grants for career education that trains educators and teaches students computer science skills with future professional opportunities in mind. The Mississippi Department of Education is also working to promote these computer skills among students in kindergarten through the ninth grade. The department has already enlisted 55 districts in a Computer Science for Mississippi program and trained more than 400 teachers. Meanwhile, at the college level, events like the upcoming Tech Summit at Ole Miss are bringing together industry leaders, government officials, and educators for important conversations about how our students can positively contribute to an increasingly connected world. Much has been said about the economic growth that reliable broadband can bring to a community. But it is also important to recognize the impact that high-speed Internet access can have on our schools. With broadband connectivity, local students have a platform to explore computer science fields – a career path that may have been unknown to them otherwise. Closing the service gaps in our state would open the door to careers that could change students’ lives. I have worked to eliminate the digital divide between urban and rural areas in my role as chairman of the Senate subcommittee that oversees Internet issues. That includes introducing legislation to collect better information about the areas with the most limited coverage. I believe government funding should target our truly unserved and underserved communities. Students interested in technology have a lot to be inspired by in our state. Mississippi has been home to a number of success stories in telehealth and precision agriculture, demonstrating how broadly technology can impact the ways we live and work. The idea that Mississippi could be the so-called “Silicon South” is a realistic possibility.

Prayer for today Heavenly Father, help me to-day to look into my heart and see the truth of my life, and show me thy heart that I may see the truth of life. Amen.

A verse to share “Where were you when I laid the earth’s foundation? Tell me, if you understand. Who marked off its dimensions? Surely you know! Who stretched a measuring line across it? On what were its footings set, or who laid its cornerstone— while the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy? —Job 38:4-7

Letters Policy Letters should be of public interest and not of the ‘thank you’ type. Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verification. All letters are subject to editing before publication, especially those beyond 600 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthian.com. Email is the preferred method.

Opinion

Mark Boehler, editor

4A • Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

Flag sentiment rests on shaky foundation

OXFORD — People opposed to changing Mississippi’s flag are standing on at least five false premises. Now I know, I know. People are sick of hearing about the flag. Sorry, but it will be a bone of contention for the foreseeable future. It deserves thought, not rage. Premise 1: People like U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, DMiss., and others in that awful “something for nothing” civil rights crowd are the prime agitators. It’s true that Thompson, the state’s longest-serving and only Democrat in the U.S. House, has never liked the flag. Ask him and he will tell you. He has, however, never said much on the topic. So, who has? Blake Wilson, recently retired as the widely respected president and CEO of the state’s largest private business development organization, was a source in The Atlantic magazine edition of June 23, 2015. The article was about the 2001 campaign to change flags and the nonbinding referendum on what voters wanted to do. “The 2001 effort to replace the flag was led by the Mississippi Economic Council, an association representing state businesses,” the article said. “The council argued that the Confederate symbol has hurt the state’s econo-

my, scaring away companies that might want to move to Mississippi.” Quoting Charlie Wilson: “We hold Mitchell still that posiColumnist tion. There’s no question about it: This is an offensive symbol to a large part of our population.” Analysis of the 2001 results did show 95 percent of African-American Mississippians who voted supported changing the flag and 90 percent of white Mississippians favored the current flag, adopted in 1894, but the racial divide doesn’t tell the whole story — at least not quite. Take one Delta county, Sunflower, which is 73 percent African-American. The vote there was 3,504 for a new flag. Fast forward to second campaign of Barack Obama. The vote was 8,200 to re-elect the president. The analysis is easy: Most African-American Mississippians don’t like the flag, but it’s wrong to blame them for kindling the matter when it was a bunch of white businessmen. Premise 2: History is misunderstood by those seeking change.

Actually, selected facts give traction to both sides, so there’s nothing really to flesh out. Consider this for context: When people heard “Apple,” in the 1970s, the resulting mental link was to the Beatles’ record label. Say “Apple” today and it’s a computer. Whatever the Cross of St. Andrew or the Southern Cross meant in days of yore, it doesn’t mean that today. Premise 3: The voting public should decide. It could be argued that the 2001 referendum validated the 1894 Legislature’s adoption of the flag that harked back 30 years to the Confederacy. But in the larger context, there’s probably not a single state flag in America chosen by popular vote. There was no popular vote on the U.S. Constitution, no vote to allow women to vote. There was no vote to declare American independence in 1776. Premise 4. The flag protects “our heritage.” This presumes it is a duty of the state to respect personal sentiment. And it’s just not. Define the only purpose of every flag designed and flown in in all of human history. They are all symbols to identify and unify. In the much-cited 2001 vote, 36 percent of voters wanted change. It just can’t be argued that Mississippi’s flag

is doing what a flag is supposed to do when one of every three voters wants it changed. Premise 5. “If we give them this, ‘they’ will just want something else.” That’s the most blatantly racist premise. It imagines two separate and unequal groups, givers and takers. It equates change with surrender, of saying white Mississippians are admitting some kind of guilt. The far, far better view, of course, is that change is a gift the entire state could give itself. Finally and significantly, the truth is that the flag is nothing more than a straw man, a focal point for the frustration people feel against a rising tide of people who feel entitled, people who trash history and haven’t worked for what they have. Maybe there’s no reason to change the flag, maybe there is. Why not ask Jefferson Davis? He said, “To one who loves his country in all its parts, it is natural to rejoice in whatever contributes to the prosperity and honor and marks the stability and progress of any portion of its people.” Charlie Mitchell is a Mississippi journalist. Write to him at cmitchell43@yahoo. com.

Why stop with monuments when reviewing history?

As we rewrite history and remove Confederate monuments deemed “offensive” when viewed through the prism of contemporary standards of morality, reasonable people ask: Where does one draw the line? The left, for example, reveres the Kennedy brothers, John, Robert and Edward. But if evaluated by today’s standards of social justice, would these left-wing icons hold up? In Sen. Ted Kennedy’s case, how does the monument-removing left feel about the kiss Kennedy blew Gov. George Wallace a mere 10 years after Wallace delivered what became perhaps that era’s most infamous defense of segregation? At Wallace’s request, Kennedy spoke in Alabama at a 1973 Fourth of July “Spirit of America” rally honoring Wallace in 1973. Just 10 years earlier, Wallace defended “Jim Crow,” or legal segregation, by shouting, “Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever,” and attempted to prevent blacks from attending the University of Alabama by blocking a campus doorway. Yet at this July 1973 rally, where Wallace received a “Patriotism Award,” guest speaker Kennedy praised Wallace as a believer in the “true spirit

Reece Terry

Mark Boehler

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of America,” who supported the right of everyone to “speak his mind and be Larry heard.” KenElder nedy also talked about Columnist the things the two men had in common, including that they “don’t corrupt,” “don’t malign” and “don’t abuse” the people’s trust. John F. Kennedy won a razor-thin race in 1960. The black vote was crucial. Just four years earlier, nearly 40 percent of blacks voted Republican. Kennedy got 68 percent of the black vote, thanks in part to the tireless efforts of entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. The brilliant singer/actor/dancer/ musician/comedian Davis campaigned hard for Kennedy, and even postponed his wedding to a white actress until after the election to avoid costing votes from those who disapproved of interracial marriages. But after Kennedy got elected, and Davis then got married, the president-elect disinvited him from performing at Kennedy’s inaugural gala. It got worse. Twentieth Century Fox, to which Sammy’s new wife was under contract, invoked the mor-

als clause and let her go, effectively ending her career. The NAACP criticized Ted Kennedy’s appearance at the Wallace rally, and during Jack Kennedy’s presidency civil rights groups grew frustrated over Kennedy’s failure to offer a civil rights bill. But JFK, afraid of alienating the South, wanted to delay any legislation until after the 1964 reelection. This brings us to Robert Kennedy. FBI head J. Edgar Hoover sought and received permission to wiretap Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The person granting him permission? Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. Some historians argue that Kennedy agreed to the wiretap because he feared Hoover possessed scandalous files on the Kennedy brothers. But other historians say Robert Kennedy sincerely believed, as Hoover did, that communists infiltrated King’s civil rights team. Never mind that FBI documents later released do, indeed, show that a close King adviser also served as a high-level operative and financier of the Communist Party USA. Tell this to today’s social justice warriors in Philadelphia where, for example, locals debate whether to move a statue of

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a mayor whom some black Philadelphians call racist. Whatever Mayor Frank Rizzo was and did, he didn’t own slaves. Charles Barkley, the exbasketball star turned television analyst, said he’s “always ignored” Confederate statues. He said: “I’m 54 years old. I’ve never thought about those statues a day in my life. I think if you ask most black people, to be honest, they ain’t thought a day in their life about those stupid statues. ... What we as black people need to do ... we need to worry about getting our education. We need to stop killing each other. We need to try to find a way to have more economic opportunity. Those things are important and significant.” Barkley makes more sense than many of our socalled leaders. Why don’t we first tackle issues like the breakdown of the nuclear family, noncompetitive urban public schools and gang-related violence before we move on to Confederate monuments? Larry Elder is a bestselling author and nationally syndicated radio talk-show host. To find out more about Larry Elder, or become an “Elderado,” visit www.LarryElder.com. Follow Larry on Twitter @larryelder.

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


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • 5A

We must let go of stress, worry to improve life Imagine carrying a heavy weight around with you every day. With it, you can’t move fast or far. Your back hurts. Your legs are sore. Your burden is exhausting. Bryan Would you Golden choonl tdi ni nu ge this Dare to Live onto Without Limits weight if you didn’t have to? Of course not, you would drop it as soon as possible. Without the weight, your quality of life would improve immensely. Too many people carry around the heavy emotional weight of worry and stress. This burden has destructive effects. When

it’s held onto constantly, physical and mental ailments are common. Since you would readily drop a heavy physical weight, why is it so hard to let go of these mental burdens? You have become conditioned throughout life to hold onto worry and stress. People all around you set the wrong example by their own incessant worry. Although worry and stress are so destructive, you hesitate letting them go. After all, they’ve been your companions for a lifetime. Worry and stress never make circumstances better. They can make them worse. Worry and stress never make you feel better. They can make you feel worse. Since worry and stress are so negative, your best option is just

letting them go. Letting go of stress and worry requires reconditioning on your part. You have to alter your way of thinking along with your reaction to problems. No excuses. No justification. Don’t say to yourself or others any of the following: “I have good reason to worry.” “I’m always so stressed out by this.” “What am I supposed to do?” “It’s so unfair.” “Why does this always happen?” “I am so worried it makes me sick.” Any of these justifications cause stress and worry to become engrained as a way of life. Letting them go requires changing your thinking. Different results require a different approach. Don’t blame other people or circumstances. You are the

only one who can let it go. Letting it go is a simple concept which seems difficult. In the same manner you would open your hand to drop a weight, you can release your worry and stress. Visualize a trap door in your mind. All of your worries and troubles are piled right on top of the trap door. Now open the trap door and imagine all of your stress and worries falling into oblivion. Each time you feel stress and worry accumulating, open your trap door and watch the stress and worry drop away. You are striving to develop a new habit which lets go of stress and worry. Telling yourself that this approach is not so easy sabotages your success. Conditioning your-

self to let it go does take effort and determination, but it is doable. At first, you may find yourself instinctively holding onto stress and worry instead of letting them go. Whenever you start to hold on, open the trap door. As you repeat this process, you will begin letting stuff go more often than holding onto it. There are numerous benefits to letting go of stress and worry. You will be more relaxed. You will be happier. You will feel better physically and emotionally. You will be less irritable. As a result, you will have a clearer perspective so you will make better decisions. Although you are letting go of stress and worry you must still take action to deal with pertinent

issues. You should be concerned about circumstances which require your attention. Being proactive is prudent. As the trap door strategy becomes your automatic response to stress and worry, you will wonder why you didn’t utilize this strategy sooner. All that matters is that you are letting stuff go now. It is a much better way to live. (NOW AVAILABLE: “Dare to Live Without Limits,” the book. Visit www.BryanGolden.com or your bookstore. Daily Corinthian columnist Bryan Golden is a management consultant, motivational speaker, author and adjunct professor. E-mail Bryan at bryan@ columnist.com or write him c/o this newspaper.)

Charlottesville suspect to be extradited Trump’s response Associated Press

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — A man wanted in connection with the beating of a black man in Charlottesville on the day of a white nationalist rally turned himself in to authorities in Georgia and will be extradited to Virginia, officials said. Alex Michael Ramos, 33, surrendered Monday evening at the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office, Sgt. Lawson Bittick told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Ramos faces one count of malicious wounding in the attack on DeAndre Harris, which was captured in photos and video that went viral. The Aug. 12 attack by a group of men left him with a concussion, abrasions and contusions across his body, as well as a head laceration that required staples, a knee injury and a fractured wrist, according to his attorney. Ramos agreed to be extradited to Virginia during a hearing Tuesday, said Kathy Barfield, deputy clerk of the Monroe

County Magistrate Court. Bittick said Ramos is an unemployed construction worker, and he didn’t know if he had obtained an attorney. In an interview with Atlanta TV station WGCL, Ramos said that he hit Harris once and that others beat him with sticks and shields. He called the incident “a defensive attack.” Ramos also said he is not a white nationalist. “I was there because, pretty much, I’m a conservative. ... There were some non-racist members who were going to a free speech rally,” he said. Harris, a 20-year-old special education instructional assistant, attended the rally with friends to show his opposition to the white nationalist groups, his attorney, S. Lee Merritt, said. A member of Harris’ group began arguing with a white supremacist over a Confederate flag, Merritt said in a statement. Harris intervened just as the white suprem-

acist attempted to spear his friend with the flag’s pole, the statement said. Harris tried to retreat but was pushed to the ground by a man holding a shield with the symbol of a white supremacist group, and the group of men swarmed him, beating him with blunt objects, according to the statement. Another man accused in the beating, Daniel Borden, 18, of suburban Cincinnati, appeared by video Tuesday and declined to waive extradition to Virginia, where he also faces a charge of malicious wounding. Hamilton County Magistrate Michael Bachman set bond at $100,000 and scheduled a Sept. 29 hearing. Attorney Greg Berberich has said Borden’s family expects him to be exonerated. Merritt said he intend-

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ed to file a federal civil rights lawsuit against all parties responsible for the attack in the coming weeks. Ramos and Borden were identified through the efforts of journalist and activist Shaun King, who has been posting photos and video of the assault on social media and offered a reward, Merritt said. “With information including affiliated organizations, clear photographs, and recordings, it is disappointing that the combined efforts of federal and local agencies have failed to lead to either the identification or arrest of additional suspects,” Merritt said in the statement. Meanwhile, a Ku Klux Klan member charged with firing a gun during the rally remained in Baltimore County pending extradition.

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for an effective policy, even as the North’s test risked endangering Japanese civilians. Washington and its allies called an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting for later Tuesday, but looked short on new ideas for stopping the nuclear and missile advances that are increasingly putting the U.S. mainland within range. “Threatening and destabilizing actions only increase the North Korean regime’s isolation in the region and among all nations of the world,” Trump said after the North’s missile soared almost 1,700 miles into the Pacific Ocean, triggering alert warnings in northern Japan and shudders throughout Northeast Asia. “All options are on the table.”

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6A • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Harvey rainfall rates as heaviest in history; flood defenses strain By NOMAAN MERCHANT and JUAN LOZANO Associated Press

HOUSTON — With its flood defenses strained, the crippled city of Houston anxiously watched dams and levees Tuesday to see if they would hold until the rain stops, and meteorologists offered the first reason for hope — a forecast with less than an inch of rain and even a chance for sunshine. The human toll continued to mount, both in deaths and in the everswelling number of scared people made homeless by the catastrophic storm that is now the heaviest tropical downpour in U.S. history. The city’s largest shelter was overflowing when the mayor announced plans to create more space for thousands more people by opening two and possibly three more mega-shelters. “We are not turning anyone away. But it does mean we need to expand our capabilities and our capacity,” Mayor Sylvester Turner said. “Relief is coming.” Louisiana’s governor

offered to take in Harvey victims from Texas, and televangelist Joel Osteen opened his Houston megachurch, a 16,000seat former arena, after critics blasted him on social media for not acting to help families displaced by the storm. Meteorologists said the sprawling city would soon have a chance to dry out. When Harvey returns to land Wednesday, “it’s the end of the beginning,” National Hurricane Center meteorologist Dennis Feltgen said. Harvey will spend much of Wednesday dropping rain on Louisiana before moving on to Arkansas, Tennessee and parts of Missouri, which could also see flooding. But Feltgen cautioned: “We’re not done with this. There’s still an awful lot of real estate and a lot of people who are going to feel the impacts of the storm.” The weather service forecast less of an inch for Houston on Wednesday, and only a 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms for Thursday. Friday’s forecast called for mostly

sunny skies with a high near 94. In all, more than 17,000 people have sought refuge in Texas shelters and that number seemed certain to increase, the American Red Cross said. The city’s largest shelter, the George R. Brown Convention Center, held more than 9,000 people, almost twice the number officials originally planned to house there. The crowds included many from outside Houston. Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said he expected Texas officials to decide within 48 hours whether to accept his offer, which comes as Louisiana deals with its own flooding. About 500 people were evacuated from flooded neighborhoods in southwest Louisiana, Edwards said. The city has asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency for more supplies, including cots and food, for an additional 10,000 people, said the mayor, who hoped to get them no later than Wednesday. Almost four days after the storm ravaged the

Texas coastline as a Category 4 hurricane, authorities had confirmed only six deaths — including a woman killed Monday when heavy rains dislodged a large oak tree onto her trailer home in the small town of Porter and another woman who apparently drowned after her vehicle was swept off a bridge over the San Jacinto River in Walker County, north of Houston. Houston police confirmed that a 60-yearold officer drowned in his patrol car after he became trapped in high water while driving to work. Sgt. Steve Perez had been with the force for 34 years. Six members of a family were feared dead after their van sank into Greens Bayou in East Houston. A Houston hotel said one of its employees disappeared while helping about 100 guests and workers evacuate the building. Authorities acknowledge that fatalities from Harvey could soar once the floodwaters start to recede from one of America’s most sprawling metropolitan centers.

Osteen’s Houston megachurch opens doors as shelter By JASON DEAREN Associated Press

HOUSTON — Joel Osteen opened his Houston megachurch to those seeking shelter from floodwaters Tuesday after social media critics slammed the televangelist for not offering to house people in need while Harvey swamps the city. Among those who came to Lakewood Church — a 16,000seat former arena that was the longtime home of the NBA’s Houston Rockets — was Jack Bullman. The 56-yearold Long Pine resident sat with a baby blue towel hanging around his neck, trying to dry off and get warm. “Usually a hurricane comes by and you get hit with the surge and the rain, but here it’s lingered so long there’s no doubt that it will be catastrophic,” Bullman said, adding that he had just rebuilt last year after another flood. “All that

hard work, right down the tubes.” Bullman was evacuated from West Houston Medical Center, where his mother was in intensive care after having a stroke. With floodwaters coming, the hospital spent two hours finding a place for him to stay, then gave him a ride to the church. The church had announced on Twitter late Tuesday morning that it was receiving people who need shelter. Osteen announced the move himself shortly after, adding in a tweet that he and wife Victoria Osteen “care deeply about our fellow Houstonians.” The move followed a day of online criticism from those who claimed the church closed its doors while other places of worship, including several mosques, opened theirs to people who needed help. A fleet of panel trucks, Mercedes coupes, SUVs and pickups descended

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on the church. Out came bags of donations - jackets, strollers, bottled water, pants, dresses, stuffed dolls, sheets, pillows - that volunteers piled in a mountain in the church’s lobby. Eugene Rideaux, 42, is a mechanic and member of Osteen’s church who showed up to help sort donations. The lifelong Houston resident hasn’t been able to work or do much since the storm first hit, so he was eager to get out of his dark house and help. “When is it going to end? As soon as you think it’s clear it comes right back,” he said. “Whole neighborhoods under water, I’ve never seen anything like this. It’s almost like life stops.” Across the church lobby, volunteers were starting to process people who needed shelter. The church’s decision to open up as a shelter came after a church Facebook post and a since deleted Instagram post Sunday by Lakewood associate pastor John

Gray that said flooded highways had made the church inaccessible. “For the people spreading lies about my church. If WE could get there WE WOULD OPEN THE DOORS,” Gray’s comment read. “As soon as the highways aren’t flooded please know @ lakewoodchurch will do all they can alleviate the pain and suffering of as many people as possible. Love y’all! #CantStandLiars.” Don Iloff, a church spokesman and Victoria Osteen’s brother, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that floodwaters had rendered the building mostly inaccessible before receding Monday afternoon, but he said the church wasn’t closed. Three people who showed up at the church on Sunday spent the night there before being taken to a city shelter. “You can’t change your life because of Twitter haters,” he said. “You need to do what you need to do.”

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Deaths Tommy Devine

Funeral services for Tommy Brooks Devine, 38, of Corinth, are set for 11 a.m. Thursday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Lorraine Cemetery in Guys, Tenn. Visitation is Wednesday from 5 to 8 p.m. and Thursday from 10 a.m. until the service. Mr. Devine died Monday, Aug. 28, 2017, in Corinth. Born March 5, 1979, he was a machine operator for Mississippi Polymers. He attended the non-denominational church. Survivors include his wife of two years, China Devine of Corinth; a daughter, Celsey Devine of Corinth; a stepdaughter, Jayda Devine Gray of Corinth; a stepson, Isaac Rorie of Corinth; two brothers, David Devine (Kym) and Chuck Watkins, both of Corinth; three nieces, Christina Suitor (Ian), Cierra Dunn and Keaylie Dunn; two nephews, D.J. Devine and Zacorey Dunn; a great-nephew, Rilee Barnett; other relatives; and a host of friends. He was preceded in death by his parents, Barry Dale Devine and Cynthia Davis Devine. Pallbearers are Chandler Little, Church Watkins, Chris Crabb, Isaac Rorie, Josh Gray, David Devine and Ian Suitor. Bro. Gerald Blankenship will officiate the service. Online guestbook: magnoliafuneralhome.net

Cigger Duckett

IUKA — Cigger Lee Duckett died Tuesday, Aug. 29, 2017, at Southern Magnolia Estates in Iuka. Cutshall Funeral Home will have the arrangements.

Matt Harris

NETTLETON — Matthew Allan Clifton Harris, 26, died Friday, Aug. 25, 2017, at his home. A private service will be held at a later date. He was born May 19, 1991. Survivors include his mother, Lynn Marlar Farris (Mike) of Nettleton; his father, Phillip Harris of Iuka; a son, Weston Allan Harris of Nettleton; a sister, Felicia Raquel Harris Brown (Johnny) of Nettleton; and his maternal grandmother, Libbie Marlar of Burnsville. He was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Cleston and Remell Harris, and his maternal grandfather, Clifton Marlar. Magnolia Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Martha Pierce

Funeral services for Martha Bell Pierce, 81, are set for 2 p.m. Thursday at Oak Hill Missionary Baptist Church with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. Visitation is Wednesday from 5 to 7 p.m. Mrs. pierce died Sunday, Aug. 27, 2017, at her home. Born Sept. 11,

1935, she was employed at Prentiss Manufacturing. She was a Baptist. Survivors include children Mary Starks, Lee G. Christian, Minnie Foster and Thomas Simmons; 15 grandchildren; 26 great-grandchildren; and 13 great-great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Alford F. Pierce; a son, Edgar F. Simmons; her father, Lee Curtiss Simmons; and two siblings, Thomas Lee Simmons and Dorothy L. Agnew. The Rev. Houston Owens will officiate the service.

Linda Pruitt

IUKA — Funeral services for Linda Jean Pruitt, 73, are set for 11 a.m. Thursday at Ludlam Funeral Home Chapel with burial at Tishomingo Cemetery. Visitation is Wednesday from 6 until 9 p.m. Ms. Pruitt died Monday, Aug. 28, 2017. Survivors include two daughters, Melissa Murphy and Rhonda James; two sons, Robin Pruitt (Selina) and Donnie Pruitt (Deena); grandchildren Shawn, Ethan, Hunter and Areye, and Hope, Erin, Brair, Zane, Madelyne and Cameron; and three great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her mother, Geraldine Paden. Bro. Franky Smith will officiate the service.

Obituary Policy The Daily Corinthian include the following information in obituaries: The name, age, city of residence of the deceased; when, where and manner of death of the deceased; time and location of funeral service; name of officiant; time and location of visitation; time and location of memorial services; biographical information can include date of birth, education, place of employment/occupation, military service and church membership; survivors can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), and grandchildren, great-grandchildren can be listed by number only; preceded in death can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), grandchildren; great-grandchildren can be listed by number only.

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State/Nation

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Across the Nation Associated Press

Trump offers up optimism in visit to Harvey’s path CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — With flag-waving optimism, President Donald Trump answered Harvey’s wrath Tuesday by offering in-person assurances to those in the storm zone that his administration will work tirelessly to help the region recover from the massive flooding and storminflicted destruction. “We are going to get you back and operating immediately,” Trump told an impromptu crowd that gathered outside a Corpus Christi fire station about 30 miles from where the storm made landfall Friday. For all of his eagerness to get the federal disaster response right, though, Trump missed clear opportunities to strike a sympathetic note for multitudes who are suffering. The president did not mention those who died in the storm or those forced from their homes by its floodwaters. And he basked in the attention of cheering supporters outside the fire station where officials briefed him on the recovery. “What a crowd, what a turnout,” Trump declared before waving a Texas flag from atop a step ladder positioned between two fire trucks. “This is historic. It’s epic what happened, but you know what, it happened in Texas, and Texas can handle anything.”

Trump is clearly determined to seize the moment and show a forceful response to Harvey, mindful of the political opportunities and risks that natural disasters pose for any president. Trump has been suffering from low approval ratings and self-created crises, and the White House is eager to show him as a forceful leader in a time of trouble.

Police ID teen suspect in fatal library shooting CLOVIS, N.M. — Authorities on Tuesday identified the gunman accused of opening fire inside a New Mexico public library as a 16-year-old high school student who they say killed a youth librarian and a second employee while wounding four people, including a 10-year-old boy. Witnesses said the teen seemed to fire randomly during the rampage. Nathaniel Jouett will face two counts of firstdegree murder, four counts of assault with intent to commit a violent felony, four counts of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon and one count of child abuse, said Clovis Police Chief Douglas Ward. Investigators had not uncovered evidence that Jouett knew the victims, he said. The Associated Press generally does not identify juveniles accused of crimes but is identifying Jouett because of the seriousness of the crime and because au-

thorities said they plan to file a motion requesting the case’s transfer from the juvenile system to adult court.

New Jersey to Supreme Court: Strike down sports bet ban ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — New Jersey officials say the U.S. Supreme Court should strike down a ban on sports betting in all but four states because it wrongly forces states to enforce a regulation that Congress wants. The high court will hear New Jersey’s argument this fall that the ban is not legal because it exceeds the authority of Congress. The state has been trying for nearly a decade to legalize sports betting and grab a share of the estimated $150 billion that is bet illegally on sports each year. After being rebuffed in its efforts to regulate legal sports betting, New Jersey tried a different tactic: repealing its regulations regarding sports betting, leaving no law in place at all. The question to be decided by the justices is this: Does a federal statute that prohibits modification or repeal of state-law prohibitions on private conduct impermissibly usurp the regulatory power of states? Major professional and collegiate sports leagues oppose New Jersey’s effort to legalize sports betting, saying it would threaten the perceived integrity of the games.

“NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON THE PROPOSED BUDGET AND PROPOSED TAX LEVIES FOR CITY OF FARMINGTON The City of Farmington will hold a public hearing on its proposed budget and tax levies for fiscal year 2017-2018 on September 5, 2017, 6:00 PM at Farmington City Hall, 4135 CR 200, Farmington, MS. The City of Farmington is now operating with projected total budget revenue of $1,237,012. (14.88 percent) or $184,092 of such revenue is obtained through ad valorem taxes. For next fiscal year, the proposed budget has total projected revenue of $1,152,504. Of that amount, (16.72 percent) or $192,670 is proposed to be financed through a total ad valorem tax levy. For next fiscal year, the City of Farmington will NOT increase your ad valorem tax millage rate of 32.53 mills. The decision to NOT increase the ad valorem tax millage rate for fiscal year 2017-2018 means you will NOT pay more in ad valorem taxes on your home, automobile tag, utilities, business fixtures and equipment and rental real property, unless the assessed value of your property has increased for fiscal year 2016. Any citizen of the City of Farmington is invited to attend this public hearing on the proposed budget and tax levies for fiscal year 2017-2018 and will be allowed to speak for a reasonable amount of time and offer tangible evidence before any vote is taken.”

Daily Corinthian • 7A

Across the State Associated Press

Police: Woman took car without permission BILOXI — Police say a woman took an acquaintance’s car without permission and ran up about $10,000 on a credit card she found in the vehicle. Biloxi police Lt. Christopher De Back tells The Sun Herald that the card was used at several stores in Biloxi. De Back says surveillance video at a Walmart helped police identify 32-year-old Stephanie Marie Bridges of Gulfport. Police arrested Bridges Saturday. She faces charges of embezzlement by trust and credit card fraud. De Back said the embezzlement charge was a result of taking an acquaintance’s car and not giving it back. Bridges was booked into the Harrison County jail with bonds totaling $20,000. Jail records show she was released Saturday night. It wasn’t immediately clear whether Bridges had an attorney who could comment on the charges.

Mississippi reports 5 new West Nile virus cases, 41 total JACKSON — The Mississippi State Department of Health says five new cases of West Nile virus have been reported. Local news outlets reported on Monday new cases in Clarke, Hinds, Lauderdale, Monroe and

Yazoo counties now bring Mississippi’s total to 41 this year. The mosquitoborne illness was reported on Aug. 21 to have caused two deaths that were in Forrest and Humphreys counties. Hinds County, Mississippi’s most populous with nearly 250,000 residents, has the most reported cases in 2017 with eight. Report totals in other counties include six in Rankin, four in both Forrest and Madison, also two in both Humphreys and Lincoln. Other counties with one case reported are Bolivar, Clay, Covington, Jones, Leake, Leflore, Lowndes, Noxubee, Perry, Scott and Wilkinson. Mississippi reported 43 total cases and two deaths in 2016.

Lake temporarily closed for upkeep MONTICELLO, Miss.

— A lake in south Mississippi is being closed so workers can repair piers and other structures. The state Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks says in a news release that Lake Mary Crawford has been drained. State lake coordinator Jerry Brown says fishing piers, boat ramps and water level control structures will be repaired. After the work is finished, the lake near Monticello will be refilled and stocked with bass, bream, crappie, and catfish. Larry Bull, the department’s assistant director of fisheries, says the fish need to spawn several times and grow to harvestable size. He says the lake should reopen for fishing in the late spring or early summer of 2020.


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A-B-C-D

AES Corp AFLAC AGNC Inv AK Steel AMAG Ph AMC Ent AT&T Inc AbbottLab AbbVie AbeonaTh AberFitc AcelRx AcordaTh ActivsBliz AdamasPh AMD AdvisoryBd Agnico g AlbnyMlc Alcoa Cp Alibaba Alliqua h AllyFincl AlpAlerMLP Altaba Altria AmTrstFn Amazon Ambev AMovilL AmAirlines AEagleOut AmExp AmIntlGrp AmicusTh Anadarko AnalogDev AnglogldA Annaly AnteroRes Anthem Apache Apple Inc ApldMatl ApldOptoel ArcelorM rs ArchDan ArrayBio AscenaRtl AtwoodOcn AVEO Ph h Avon B2gold g BB&T Cp BP PLC B&W Ent n BakHuGE n BcoBrad s BcoSantSA BkofAm BkNYMel Banro g rs BarcGSOil B iPVxST rs BarrickG BerkH B BestBuy BioScrip BlackBerry BlockHR Boeing BostonSci BrMySq BroadcLtd BrcdeCm Brookdale CBS B CH Robins CSX CVS Health CabotO&G CaesarsEnt CallonPet Calpine CampSp CapOne Carlisle Carrizo Catalent Caterpillar Celgene Cemex Cemig pf CenovusE CenterPnt CntryLink ChesEng Chevron ChicB&I Chicos CienaCorp Cinemark Cisco CgpVelLCrd Citigroup CitizFincl ClevCliffs ClubCorp CocaCola Coeur ColgPalm ColNrthS n Comcast s CmclMtls CmtyHlt ComstkMn ConAgra ConocoPhil Corning Costco Coty CSVixSh rs CSVelIVST CSVLgNG rs CS VSSilv Ctrip.com s CypSemi DR Horton DSW Inc Darden Deere Delcath rs DeltaAir DenburyR Dentsply DeutschBk DevonE Dextera hrs DiamOffsh DicksSptg DxGBull rs DrGMBll rs DxGlMBr rs DirSPBear s DirDGlBr rs DxSCBear rs DxBiotBear DrxSCBull s Discover DiscCmA DiscCmC DishNetw h Disney DollarGen DollarTree DomRescs DowChm DryShips s DukeEngy eBay s EOG Rescs Eaton EldorGld g EmersonEl EnbrdgEPt Enbridge EnCana g EndvSilv g Endo Intl EngyTrfPt ENSCO EntProdPt Ericsson EvolentH n Exelon Expedia ExpScripts ExtrmNet ExxonMbl Facebook

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YOUR STOCKS

Chg FairmSant FangHldg FedExCp -.02 FelCor +.91 FiatChrys -.29 FifthThird +.03 FinLine -.45 FireEye -.20 FstHorizon -.09 FMajSilv g -.11 FirstEngy +.57 Fitbit n +1.75 FootLockr -.07 FordM +.15 ForumEn -6.25 Fossil Grp +.73 FrptMcM +1.41 Frontr rs -.08 FusionTel +3.20 GATX +1.42 GGP Inc +.02 GameStop +.83 Gap -.89 GenDynam -.05 GenElec -.11 GenMills +.01 GenMotors -.36 Gentex -.12 Genworth -.90 Gerdau +8.04 GileadSci GlaxoSKln GluMobile -.39 GoldFLtd -.06 Goldcrp g +.01 GoldStr g -.45 GoldmanS +.37 GraphPkg -.56 Groupon +.11 Guess +.37 GulfportE -.08 HCA Hldg -.21 HCP Inc +.35 HD Supply -.48 HP Inc +1.44 HainCels lf +.39 Hallibrtn +1.44 Hanesbds s -.15 HarmonyG -.03 HeclaM -.18 HertzGl -.07 Hess +.87 HP Ent n -.47 HollyFront Hologic -.03 HomeDp -.07 HopFedBc -.10 HorizPhm +.01 Hormel s +.50 HostHotls +.15 HuntBncsh

dd 15.69 dd 2.73 +.06 PattUTI dd 3.51 -.11 PayPal n 48 61.01 17 211.30 +2.46 Penney 10 3.84 9 7.17 +.10 PepsiCo 24 115.84 ... 14.82 -.09 PetrbrsA ... 8.71 13 26.26 -.33 Petrobras ... 9.05 9 8.50 -1.92 Pfizer 14 33.50 dd 14.52 +.06 PhilipMor 24 116.55 18 17.19 -.02 PiperJaf 13 54.85 cc 6.85 -.14 PlainsAAP 17 20.63 12 32.66 -.14 PlainsGP rs 22 21.43 dd 5.93 -.01 PlatfmSpc 16 11.00 8 35.16 -.54 Potash 22 17.26 12 10.84 +.05 PS SPX HiD ... 40.05 dd 10.95 +.40 PS SrLoan q 23.14 5 8.89 +.05 PwShs QQQ q 142.97 dd 15.21 -.32 PrecDrill dd 2.49 ... 13.55 +.30 PrUltPQ s q 108.52 dd 2.89 +.60 PUVixST rs q 31.19 10 60.63 +.20 ProVixST rs q 39.75 11 20.71 -.02 PrUCrude rs q 14.84 5 18.75 -.40 ProShtVx s q 77.61 11 23.59 +.20 ProctGam 24 92.32 21 200.95 +3.08 ProgsvCp 23 47.63 23 24.44 -.03 ProShSP rs q 33.14 18 53.93 -.35 PrUShSP rs q 49.53 5 35.52 +.01 PUShtQQQ q 16.09 14 17.79 -.03 PShtQQQ rs q 28.47 dd 3.43 +.02 ProUShL20 q 34.19 ... 3.56 -.03 PUShtSPX q 15.10 8 75.74 +1.05 ProspctCap 8 6.86 ... 39.32 -.14 PulteGrp 15 25.31 dd 3.50 +.07 ... 4.43 +.07 Q-R-S-T 42 13.59 +.10 QEP Res dd 7.34 15 .76 +.05 Qualcom 18 51.81 12 219.96 -.39 QuintIMS 23 96.00 17 12.70 -.12 RLJ LodgT 8 19.91 dd 4.29 +.15 RangeRs 19 17.40 34 16.10 -.16 RegalEnt 16 14.67 dd 11.94 +.17 RegionsFn 15 14.16 12 77.59 -1.57 RioTinto ... 48.11 12 29.51 +.23 RiteAid 39 2.34 12 32.15 +.66 RockColl 24 130.74 12 19.21 +.03 20 40.05 -.56 RossStrs s 19 58.69 5 9.94 cc 38.72 -.07 Rowan 14 24.39 -.12 RoyDShllA 84 55.44 11 58.77 ... 1.98 +.10 RymanHP 53 5.26 -.05 SM Energy dd 12.84 SpdrGold q 124.42 ... 18.92 +.61 dd 38.13 -.17 S&P500ETF q 244.85 q 80.59 20 17.92 +.13 SpdrBiot s q 37.09 18 32.21 +.74 SpdrLehHY SpdrS&P RB q 51.85 13 37.77 +.28 q 38.90 22 149.84 -.66 SpdrRetl s q 29.54 26 13.85 -.10 SpdrOGEx q 32.15 dd 13.29 -.14 SpdrMetM 36 17.02 19 30.97 -.08 STMicro 10 17.68 +.15 SabreCorp 23 18.39 18 12.59 -.13 Salesforce 83 93.83 SanchezEn dd 4.13 I-J-K-L SandstG g ... 4.69 80 6.41 +.08 SangTher dd 12.80 ... 9.39 +.01 Schlmbrg 57 63.50 q 12.58 -.02 Schwab 26 39.18 q 40.14 +.06 ScorpioTk ... 3.99 q 41.70 -.29 SeadrillLtd 1 .20 q 30.74 -.37 SeagateT 8 31.45 q 24.40 -.02 SealAir 26 43.99 q 16.42 -.08 SeaWorld cc 12.99 q 22.62 -.17 SibanyeG ... 6.70 q 44.27 +.04 SiriusXM 38 5.63 q 246.54 +.31 SnapInc A n ... 14.99 q 44.69 -.08 SouthnCo 17 48.18 q 121.30 +.09 SwstAirl 14 51.46 q 127.65 +.41 SwstnEngy 49 5.44 q 66.48 -.27 SpiritRltC 10 8.36 q 88.12 -.11 Sprint dd 8.27 q 137.49 +.03 Sprouts 21 19.77 q 80.25 -.12 Square n dd 25.04 q 33.30 -.11 SP Matls q 54.25 q 68.02 -.02 SP HlthC q 79.52 q 62.29 -.23 SP CnSt q 54.70 dd 7.58 +1.12 SP Consum q 88.60 dd 11.52 -.32 SP Engy q 62.64 16 15.27 -.04 SPDR Fncl q 24.57 dd .23 +.02 SP Inds q 67.95 15 34.73 +.08 SP Tech q 58.06 11 143.14 +.63 SpdrRESel q 32.61 ... 20.34 +.55 SP Util q 55.12 14 19.99 -.28 Staples dd 10.22 14 32.23 -.22 Starbucks s 27 54.10 q 54.31 -.11 StlDynam 14 34.51 q 53.76 -.13 27 139.41 ... 12.93 +.06 Stryker Suncor g ... 31.53 31 22.35 -.05 12 15.23 ... 9.88 -1.85 SunstnHtl cc 40.84 +.49 SwiftTrans 28 28.42 dd 29.69 14 91.10 -.50 Symantec 20 30.61 +.20 Synchrony 11 30.12 22 52.29 10 19.71 +.12 Sysco 20 132.21 +.47 TAL Educ s cc 29.26 TJX 20 71.49 26 38.75 -.09 7 4.41 dd 43.81 +7.33 TahoeRes ... 36.88 16 21.05 -.32 TaiwSemi TandemD dd .84 7 18.44 -.21 11 54.55 16 17.25 -.14 Target 14 20.00 15 19.29 -.10 TaylorMH ... 25.23 66 19.02 +.01 TeckRes g TenetHlth dd 17.62 63 4.41 +.01 dd 347.36 dd 177.95 -.10 Tesla Inc 7 15.77 31 39.60 +1.05 TevaPhrm 23 81.03 10 39.15 -.40 TexInst 23 202.92 33 81.44 -.70 3M Co 17 101.38 dd 12.90 +.75 TimeWarn ... 51.83 11 21.81 +.09 Total SA 8 8.23 11 36.52 +.07 Transocn 52 41.69 6 17.55 +.35 TripAdvis 33 3.32 dd 6.13 +.03 TurqHillRs 2 1.67 +.46 21stCFoxA 16 27.35 dd 16.93 39 21.99 -.16 Twitter 16 24.60 +.21 TwoHrbInv 10 10.12 17 73.45 -.35 Tyson 13 62.18 28 58.32 -1.81

11.17 81.71 21.20 5.50 16.55 12.85 37.85 50.15 73.89 11.25 12.54 3.20 19.45 63.48 21.68 12.15 53.05 51.02 21.75 43.00 167.41 .39 22.09 10.87 63.17 63.81 12.55 954.06 6.23 18.74 44.56 12.45 85.42 60.21 13.86 40.71 79.55 9.85 12.35 19.41 193.83 38.87 162.91 44.02 62.69 26.39 41.74 9.39 2.01 7.17 3.37 2.55 2.69 46.07 34.37 2.11 33.75 10.68 6.50 23.58 -.14 52.09 -.18 IAMGld g .49 +.17 ICICI Bk 4.79 -.04 iShGold 47.87 +.57 iShBrazil 17.82 +.18 iShEMU 178.62 -.08 iShGerm 55.02 -7.45 iSh HK 2.93 +.13 iShSilver 9.03 +.04 iShEurFn 29.23 -.38 iShChinaLC 240.49 +3.31 iSCorSP500 27.05 +.08 iShEMkts 58.86 +.28 iShiBoxIG 241.73 -1.52 iSh20 yrT 12.35 +.02 iS Eafe 11.33 -.36 iShiBxHYB 63.27 -.48 iShR2K 71.57 +.52 iShREst 49.78 +.48 iShHmCnst 76.09 +.63 iShCrSPS s 24.87 +.11 iShCorEafe 11.15 -.15 ImunoGn 9.88 -.11 Imunmd Infosys 14.54 50.81 +.07 Inpixon rs 79.74 -.81 Intel 94.05 -.19 IBM 12.46 -.02 IntlGmeT n 40.27 +4.91 Interpublic 116.01 +.94 Invesco 132.44 +.79 iShJapan rs 9.16 +.04 iShCorEM 2.70 +.06 ItauUnibH 7.50 +.12 IxysCp 29.89 -.04 JJill n 20.63 -.11 JD.com 3.64 -.01 JPMorgCh 107.86 +.10 Jabil 11.90 -.27 JetBlue 7.83 -.28 JohnJn 23.87 +.13 JohnContl n 32.45 -.42 JunoThera 31.48 -.06 KB Home 12.63 -.27 KKR 67.48 -.33 Keycorp 33.31 -.16 Kimco 8.13 +.26 KindMorg 16.90 +.05 Kinross g 45.45 +.03 KitePharm KnightTr 8.75 71.30 +.40 Kohls 12.77 -.18 KraftHnz n 40.16 -.18 KratosDef 18.52 +.65 Kroger s 7.47 -.33 L Brands .19 +.01 Lannett 32.43 -.10 LendingClb 42.85 -.20 LiNiuTc rs 28.57 -.03 LibQVC A 153.56 +1.01 LaPac 16.51 +.42 Lowes 17.01 +.35 lululemn gs U-V-W-X-Y-Z 81.29 -.73 M-N-O-P US Silica dd 26.54 12.14 +.12 11 11.26 -.15 USG 16 28.40 13.19 -.22 MGIC Inv ... 7.84 52.16 -.01 MGM Rsts 48 32.04 +.35 UltPetro n 7 20.94 -.22 UndrArm s 28 16.43 13.37 +.09 Macys ... 39.14 +.16 UnAr C wi ... 15.34 35.28 -.03 Mallinckdt ... 19.62 -.06 UniPixel h dd .13 18.93 -.11 Manulife g dd 10.88 -.04 UnionPac 20 104.97 82.64 -2.20 MarathnO ... .38 +.06 UtdContl 8 62.89 115.89 -.07 MaraPat h 20 114.89 .12 -.01 MarathPt s 12 51.43 -1.09 UPS B 29 202.82 +2.47 UtdRentals 13 114.94 46.62 -.33 MartMM MarvellTch 54 17.26 +.12 1.01 +.05 US Bancrp 15 51.50 21 16.11 -.36 US NGas 55.70 +.54 Mattel q 6.60 19 5.96 +.17 US OilFd 16.04 -.36 McDrmInt q 9.46 McDnlds 27 159.38 -.29 30.99 +.06 USSteel dd 25.96 2.58 +.01 UtdTech .32 +.01 McEwenM dd 18 118.70 17 79.72 +.13 UrbanOut 11.58 +.17 Medtrnic 14 20.77 16 63.12 -.20 Vale SA 26.52 -.44 Merck ... 10.85 10 46.73 -.84 Vale SA pf 38.60 +.88 MetLife ... 10.01 12 31.48 +.40 ValeantPh 21.46 +.38 MicronT 3 13.24 26 73.05 +.22 ValeroE 50.53 -1.01 Microsoft 22 67.92 ... 9.36 +.21 VanEGold 39.77 -.11 MobileTele q 24.42 2.57 +.23 VnEkRus 22.13 -.53 Moleculin n ... q 20.73 ... 34.08 +.20 VEckOilSvc q 22.17 17.25 -.01 Momo 31 41.89 +.59 VanE JrGld 5.79 -.08 Mondelez q 35.42 13 45.35 -.13 VangEmg 51.80 +.02 MorgStan q 44.10 47 19.94 -.13 58.45 -.65 Mosaic VangEur q 56.38 6 30.50 -.33 22.45 -.36 Mylan NV VangFTSE q 42.22 24 24.95 +.38 21.18 -.34 NRG Egy Vantiv 44 71.25 dd 6.62 -.05 57.77 +1.11 Nabors Vereit 15 8.38 cc 168.81 +1.69 102.57 +.01 Netflix s VerizonCm 10 48.51 1.28 +.14 76.89 -.48 Neuralst rs ... 8 29.28 61 3.64 -.07 ViacomB 79.70 -.68 NwGold g 18 9.04 6 16.48 -.08 Vipshop 80.24 +.10 NewResid Visa s 34 103.77 -.02 64.22 -.45 NY CmtyB 12 11.99 Vodafone ... 28.46 -.36 3.44 +.35 NewellRub 19 47.59 37 116.50 31 38.04 -.26 VulcanM 87.50 +.08 NewmtM 9.74 NewsCpA dd 13.36 -.07 WPX Engy dd WalMart 18 78.77 E-F-G-H Nielsen plc 22 39.07 -.29 21 52.73 -1.00 WalgBoots 17 81.42 5 35.20 +.39 NikeB s 8.52 5 3.44 +.12 WashPrGp 23 dd 83.15 -.25 NobleCorp dd 3.95 16 70.52 +.08 NobleEngy cc 23.58 +.17 WeathfIntl WeiboCorp ... 96.96 NokiaCp ... 6.20 -.01 25 2.03 -.04 ... 1.68 -.08 WellsFargo 13 51.42 25 58.35 -.05 NDynMn g 24 14.34 +.06 NorthropG 24 270.72 +2.82 Wendys Co 36 14.66 13 90.07 4.31 -.05 WDigital ... 39.77 -.13 NovaGld g dd dd 1.06 -.02 WstnUnion 11 19.07 18 8.95 -.08 Novavax 26 31.52 ... 22.19 -.01 Weyerhsr dd 2.38 -.11 Nutanix n 52 164.70 -.27 WheatPr g 26 20.66 dd 8.72 -.28 Nvidia 4.36 dd 6.95 -.08 WhitingPet dd 32 18.56 +.11 OasisPet 42 29.17 dd 59.08 -.05 WmsCos 2 4.60 +.22 OcciPet Windstm rs dd 2.06 11 8.42 -.08 19 25.50 +.02 Oclaro q 51.62 9 4.18 -.04 WTJpHedg ... 5.85 -.09 OfficeDpt 13 69.52 29 16.18 +.04 YY Inc dd 17.10 -.70 OnSmcnd dd 2.89 dd 6.23 -.05 Yamana g 16 38.22 -.05 OpkoHlth ... 29.49 23 49.45 +.21 Yandex 62 143.99 +1.46 Oracle ... 35.18 26 22.82 +.11 Yum China 10 61.38 +.21 PBF Engy 20 43.71 18 103.86 -.29 ZionsBcp dd 11.26 +.12 PPG s 6.46 dd 8.11 -.07 Ziopharm dd 29 76.45 -.02 Pandora dd 3.62 87 24.37 -.33 Zynga 35 168.05 +.81 ParsleyEn

Today

Accelerating growth?

+.08 +.48 -.01 +.30 -.02 -.03 +.03 +1.01 -.90 +.14 +.26 +.01 +.10 +.03

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

+.56 -.02 +1.32 +.79 +.47 -.10 -.86 -.15 +.32 -.03 -.11 -.13 -.38 -.22 -.05 -.10 +.01

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

Chris Marshall Financial Advisor

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

www.edwardjones.com

-.04 +.45 +.28 -.19 -.40 -.13 +.08 +.08 +2.75 -.33 +.47 +.15 -.33 -.27 +.28 +.36 -.04 -.42 -.23 -.04 +.30 -.21 -.04 +.17 -.03 -.06 +1.30 +.05 -.36 +.08 -.01 -.04 -.27 -.36 +.25 +.05 -.20 -.17 -.29 +.08 -.02 +.05 +.13 -.26 +.15 +.19 -.08 -.08 -.08 +.49 +.25 -.02 -.12 -.30 +.03 -.16 +.37

Member SIPC

Screen time

Flat panel display production is dominated by a handful of places in Asia: South Korea, Taiwan, China and Japan. Wisconsin could be next on the list, if contract manufacturing giant Foxconn follows through on plans announced by President Donald Trump to build a $10 billion plant to make the panels used in TVs and computer monitors. Analysts at WitsView say the plant, a 20 million square foot facility that could eventually employ up to 13,000 people, would help Foxconn bring its model of vertical integration from Asia to the U.S. Taiwan-based Foxconn is best known for assembling 6.8

East to West: In a coup for Trump, iPhone maker Foxconn plans Global flat panel display production

30.0 2016

6.0 27.5

to build the world’s first LCD panel plant outside of Asia.

33.8%

29.4

devices like Apple’s iPhone and dominates electronics manufacturing partly because of its mastery of supply chains. It owns liquid crystal display makers Sharp of Japan and Taiwan’s Innolux. The move would cut Foxconn’s shipping costs by putting manufacturing much closer to customers. But volatile prices are a risk. Years of declining prices amid intense competition obliterated profit margins at LCD manufacturers, forcing many to stop production in 2015. The undersupply sent prices rising last year, but the rebound is now fizzling out.

35.2%

South Korea China Taiwan Japan

31.5

$230

Average production costs (quarterly)

Average selling price (monthly)

$190

190

170

150

150

2017

’16

’16

’17

Kelvin Chan; J. Paschke • AP

Source: WitsView, a division of Trendforce

52-Week High Low 22,179.11 17,883.56 9,763.66 7,712.13 749.39 616.19 12,019.85 10,281.48 6,460.84 5,034.41 2,490.87 2,084.59 1,795.14 1,475.38 25,848.33 21,583.94 1,452.09 1,156.08

’17

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

Last 21,865.37 9,237.18 746.47 11,791.88 6,301.89 2,446.30 1,706.68 25,352.05 1,383.68

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg +56.97 +.26 +10.64 +18.48 +80.22 +.88 +2.14 +16.78 -1.69 -.23 +13.17 +12.21 -8.34 -.07 +6.65 +9.21 +18.87 +.30 +17.07 +20.66 +2.06 +.08 +9.27 +12.42 -1.31 -.08 +2.78 +8.70 +5.99 +.02 +8.22 +12.08 +1.45 +.10 +1.96 +11.05

22,120 +.78 Dow Jones industrials -.23 Close: 21,865.37 21,860 -.17 Change: 56.97 (0.3%) +.15 21,600 +1.23 10 DAYS 22,500 -.31 -.07 +.11 22,000 -.17 +.11 21,500 -.29 +.21 21,000 +.14 +1.70 20,500 -.16 +.27 20,000 +.46 M A M J J A -.32 +.04 +.22 -.29 TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST +.09 YTD YTD +.10 Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg +.16 Name 3.88 20 122.38 +.01 +7.2 1.72 13 81.71 +.91 +17.4 KimbClk -.05 AFLAC -.37 AT&T Inc 1.96 14 37.85 -.09 -11.0 Kroger s .50f 11 21.81 +.09 -36.8 AerojetR ... ... 28.04 +.33 +56.2 Lowes 1.64f 17 73.45 -.35 +3.3 +.85 AirProd 3.80 22 145.37 -.41 +1.1 McDnlds 3.76 27 159.38 -.29 +30.9 +.50 AlliantEg s 1.22 22 43.06 -.02 +13.6 OldNBcp .52 16 16.40 -.10 -9.6 +.23 2.36 20 73.94 -.16 +17.4 Penney ... 10 3.84 -.01 -53.8 -.50 AEP 1.46 13 78.56 -.10 +.5 PennyMac -.44 AmeriBrgn 1.88 14 17.20 -.09 +5.1 +.07 ATMOS 1.80 25 88.19 -.50 +18.9 PepsiCo 3.22 24 115.84 +.30 +10.7 +1.03 1.32f 16 46.07 -.07 -2.0 PilgrimsP 2.75e 16 28.73 +.08 +51.3 -.26 BB&T Cp 2.38 26 34.37 -.10 -8.1 RegionsFn +1.10 BP PLC .36 15 14.16 -.13 -1.4 +4.23 BcpSouth .56f 19 29.00 -.30 -6.6 SbdCp 3.50 14 4227.81 -22.85 +7.0 -.46 Caterpillar 3.12 30 116.01 +.94 +25.1 +.03 SearsHldgs ... ... 8.46 -.16 -8.9 4.32 61 107.86 +.10 -8.4 -.07 Chevron Sherwin 3.40 27 333.14 -5.78 +24.0 +.66 CocaCola 1.48 28 45.45 +.03 +9.6 SiriusXM .04 38 5.63 +.05 +26.5 +3.37 Comcast s .63 22 40.16 -.18 +16.3 -.42 SouthnCo 2.32 17 48.18 -.17 -2.1 CrackerB 4.80f 23 147.14 -.79 -11.9 +.03 SPDR Fncl .46e ... 24.57 -.08 +5.7 +.08 Deere 2.40 19 115.89 -.07 +12.5 Torchmark .60 17 76.81 -.40 +4.1 -.99 Dillards .40f 16 61.25 +.75 -2.3 -.50 Total SA 2.71e ... 51.83 +.04 +1.7 Dover 1.88f 24 83.85 -.16 +11.9 +.16 1.12 15 51.50 -.46 +.3 .88 47 69.35 -.30 +3.0 US Bancrp -.09 EnPro 2.04 18 78.77 +.74 +14.0 +.13 FordM .60a 12 10.84 +.05 -10.6 WalMart +.18 1.52 13 51.42 -.21 -6.7 .24 ... 6.21 +.03 -66.5 WellsFargo -.09 FredsInc .28 36 14.66 -.34 +8.4 .56 20 50.82 +.11 +5.2 Wendys Co -.25 FullerHB .76 21 74.82 -.02 +33.6 -.18 GenElec .96 23 24.44 -.03 -22.7 WestlkChm -.49 1.60 ... 55.26 +.09 +8.8 -.12 -2.2 WestRck Goodyear .40 9 30.20 -.04 1.24 26 31.52 -.25 +4.8 2.66 20 137.63 +.76 +18.8 Weyerhsr -.10 HonwllIntl -.15 Intel .25p 12 32.24 -.07 +40.2 1.09 15 34.73 +.08 -4.2 Xerox rs +.16 Jabil ... ... 13.00 +.45 -2.1 .32 20 30.61 +.20 +29.3 YRC Wwde -.01 -.25 +.56 +.08 +.74 +.26 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) -.11 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg +.04 Name +1.88 BkofAm 577237 23.58 -.14 Abeona wt 7.45 +2.25 +43.3 AcordaTh 19.45 -6.25 -24.3 -.21 ENSCO 8.50 -1.92 -18.4 385898 4.60 +.22 AchvLfS rs 3.69 +1.01 +37.7 FinLine -.34 BestBuy 328989 55.02 -7.45 RexahnPh rs 2.48 +.54 +27.8 PowrREIT 6.39 -1.36 -17.5 -.49 AMD 9.88 -1.85 -15.8 324179 12.15 -.08 CellectB wt 2.00 +.42 +26.6 JJill n +.03 2.89 +.60 +26.2 KonaGrill 2.90 -.50 -14.7 FrptMcM 292818 15.21 -.32 FusionTel -.25 -.32 -12.3 +.39 ValeantPh 287008 13.24 -.99 Ovid Th n 8.71 +1.54 +21.5 Root9B hn 2.29 JunoThera 43.81 +7.33 +20.1 AVEO Ph h 3.37 -.47 -12.2 Apple Inc 286221 162.91 +1.44 +.05 28.50 +4.65 +19.5 IntlnkEl n 7.01 -.97 -12.1 FordM 285542 10.84 +.05 Movado 268171 3.64 -.01 Comcst29 59.59 +9.29 +18.5 BestBuy 55.02 -7.45 -11.9 -.03 ChesEng -.59 -9.8 250599 8.50 -1.92 AbeonaTh 11.25 +1.75 +18.4 PapaMurph 5.40 +.22 FinLine -1.48 -.01 YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY +.02 3,054 Advanced 1,413 Total issues 3,081 1,484 Total issues -.47 Advanced 75 Declined 1,481 New Highs 72 1,367 New Highs -.57 Declined 75 Unchanged Unchanged 160 New Lows 54 230 New Lows +.33 Volume 2,658,883,735 Volume 1,579,236,343 -.01

GDP The Commerce Depart- seasonally adjusted annual rate ment delivers its latest est. 2.8 estimate of U.S. economic 3% 2.6 growth on Wednesday. 2.2 Last month the agency 2 1.8 said the gross domestic product grew at a 1.2 seasonally adjusted 1 annual rate of 2.6 percent 0.6 in the second quarter, a big improvement from the 0 first three months of this Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 year. Today it will update ’16 ’17 that figure. Source: FactSet

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D

Wednesday, August 31, 2017

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Bob Evans Farms

Brown-Forman

fiscal 2018 today.

Shares in the maker of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Whiskey have traded sideways since June, when it reported a sharp decline in fourth-quarter earnings due to the strong dollar and its sale of the Southern Comfort brand. Brown-Forman forecast earnings per share in the range of $1.80 to $1.90 in the current year, based on sales growth of 4 percent to 5 percent. It reports its fiscal first quarter earnings today.

$64.32 BOBE Bob Evans Farms shares have $80 $38.60 jumped by around a third since it sold off its country-style restaurant 55 chain in January, to focus on production and distribution of its iconic ’17 pork sausages and related products. 30 The New Albany, Ohio-based comest. Operating $0.48 pany has struggled more recently, $0.37 EPS losing 11 percent since mid-June Q1 ’16 Q1 ’17 when it forecast earnings for the curPrice-earnings ratio: lost money rent fiscal year of between $2.06 based on past 12-month results and $2.24 a share. The company reports its first-quarter earnings for Dividend: $1.36 Div yield: 2.1%

Source: FactSet

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Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • 9A

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

Pickin’ on the Square

Special guests for Pickin’ on the Squre for Thursday, Aug. 31 will be Wayne Jerrolds and Savannah Grass.

Fish on Friday

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

Cruise-In

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

Healthy Pregnancy Class

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

Artifact Show

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

Green Market

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

CHS Class of 1977

The Corinth High School Class of 1977 will celebrate its 40th class reunion on Saturday, Sept. 2 at Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club. Cost is $25 for single or $50 per couple. Send payment to Cindy Johnson. For more information contact her at 662-4154647.

Chartering ceremony

The Corinth Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. will be having its public chartering ceremony at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 2 at the Easom Community Center located at 700 South Crater Street in Corinth. For additional information, contact the Corinth Alumni Chapter at CorinthMSAlumni@ gmail.com.

Wallace reunion

The families of Bogard W. Wallace and Caladonia Romine Wallace will hold their 67th annual Wallace Family Reunion on Sunday, Sept. 3 at 7 Alcorn County Road 157, Corinth. A potluck lunch begins at 1 p.m. All family, relatives and friends are welcome to attend. For more information contact Buddy Wallace at 662287-2827 or Billy Wallace at 662-286-2524.

Stocking Sewing Class

The MSU Extension Service in Alcorn County will offer a Quilted Christmas Stocking Sewing Class beginning Tuesday, Sept. 5. The class will meet Tuesdays, Sept. 5, 12, and 19, from 5-7 p.m. at the Extension office. This is an intermediate level sewing class. Participants should know how to operate and thread a sewing machine. The registration fee is $5. Space is limited. Come by the Extension office to sign up and pick up a supply list. Please call 286-7756 for more information.

NARFE Meeting

The National Active and Retired Federal Employees (NARFE) Jacinto Chapter 1879 will hold its regular monthly meeting at 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 7 at Ryan’s Restaurant, 2210 Harper Road, Corinth. All active and retired federal employees are urged to attend in support of their benefits.

Laudadio 5K Run/Walk

The first annual Annalisa Laudadio Love and Encouragement 5K Run/Walk will be held at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 9 at the MSU Extension – Alcorn County office. The event will kick off with an opening ceremony at 8:15 a.m. and a race start time of 8:30

Kossuth Class of 1970

The Kossuth High School Class of 1970 will have a class reunion on Saturday, Sept. 9 at Chapman’s Restaurant. All classmates are encouraged to attend. For further information, contact Buddy Ayers at 662286-9158.

Needle Chasers Program

As Monday is a legal holiday, the Tishomingo Co. Needle Chasers will meet on Tuesday, Sept. 5 in the Iuka Public Library. The meeting will convene at 1 p.m. and the quilting program will be presented by Nelda Soper of Tupelo on “The Magic Inch Block� from Modern Quilting Made Easy. This is a technique with which quilters are unfamiliar, so it should be an informative program. Visitors are welcome and encouraged to bring an item to share with everyone at the end of the meeting. Needle Chasers members consist of residents from Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee who share their quilting knowledge with each other.

Blood Drive

Legacy Hospice will host a blood drive for the public from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 15. Snacks and drinks will be provided. Legacy Hospice is located at 301 East Waldron Street in Corinth.

ACHS Class of 1964

The Alcorn Central Class of 1964 will have its annual reunion at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 16 at Chapman’s Restaurant. For more information call 662-4151983. Â

Community Yard Sale

The Daily Corinthian Community Yard Sale is from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23 at the Crossroads Museum and Corinth Depot at 221 North Fillmore Street in Corinth. Browse yard sale items like clothing, furniture, glassware, antiques, toys, electronics, handcrafted items, baked goods and commercial products at this free event to the public. Rent a 10 x 10 Booth Space for a $25 donation to the Crossroads Museum. All proceeds benefit the Crossroads Museum Save the Fire

Truck Campaign. Signup at the Daily Corinthian, Crossroads Museum or crossroadsmuseum.com. Day of event signups are welcome. Have stuff to get rid of? Donate it to the museum for the yard sale.

LET US HELP YOU! 1018 South Cass St., Corinth, MS (662) 286-2216

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Day beginning at 8 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 30. For more information call 662-603-1460.

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Kossuth Class of 1977

Sons of American Legion Perry Johns Squadron 6 in Corinth is hosting a raffle for a 2017 Harley-Davidson Street 750 motorcycle plus a $700 gift card sponsored by Natchez Trace Harley-Davidson of Tuscumbia, Ala. Tickets are $30 each or four for $100. Only 1,000 tickets will be sold and the drawing will be held on Friday, Nov. 10. Call or text the following for ticket arrangements: Michael Blome at 662-872-8171; Keith Hamm at 662-6640985; John Peebles at 662-603-5121; or Mike McDaniel at 662-6031809.

The Kossuth High School Class of 1977 will have its 40th class reunion at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 7 in Wenasoga at the home of Rodney and Lisha Hinton Hopper. Spouses and significant others are also invited. The meal will be barbeque with buns, slaw, beans and chips. There is no charge to attend, but confirmations are needed by Sept. 20. Please share this information with all classmates. Please contact Methel Sexton, Dianne Timbes, Vickey Hayes or Lisha

Coln Family Reunion

The family members of James Moore Coln and Cynthia Utley Coln will hold a family reunion from noon until 3 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 16 at Strickland Church of Christ Fellowship Hall. Bring a covered dish and old photographs. For more information contact Sue Coln Burcham at 662-462-3754.

Cemetery Cleanup Day

Lamb’s Chapel Cemetery will host a Cleanup

Motorcycle Giveaway

Recipes

Holiday Favorites What are your family’s traditional holiday recipes? Send us your favorites by September 18th. Mail The Daily Corinthian ATTN: Holiday Recipes PO Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835 Email recipes@dailycorinthian.com

Tel.: 662-872-3133

Hearn Family Reunion

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

a.m. The 3.1 mile route will begin at the Extension building. Race-Day registration will be from 7-8 a.m. Proceeds from the 5K will sponsor the Annalisa Laudadio Memorial 4-H Scholarship. For registration information, contact the Extension office at 286-7756.

Fax: 662-872-3277 602 Cass Street Corinth, MS 38834 OPEN HOURS Mon. - Thurs.: 11:00 am - 9:30 pm Fri. & Sat.: 11:00 am - 10:30 pm Sunday: 11:00 am - 9:30 pm

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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Who is the “Best in the Crossroads”? Find out with the 2017 Daily Corinthian Readers Choice Awards coming soon.

Childhood dog bite victim is happy with pet-free life Abigail Van Buren Dear Abby

D E A R ABBY: I’m not a dog person. I’m not even an animal person. I am, however, surrounded by dog owners — my family, my husband’s fam-

ily, my neighbors. Back in middle school, I was bitten several times by dogs while delivering my paper route. My husband has been without a dog for five years (since the beginning of our relationship). Over the last six months, he has begun to ask when he can get “us” a dog. I absolutely do not want one. They’re not clean, they make “messes,” and we will constantly have to find someone to care for it when we travel. I have told him this, yet he continues asking. We can’t even agree on a hypothetical breed of dog. I suppose I could say, “Go ahead,” with the condition that

my husband will have to shoulder all pet-related responsibilities. But we both know how well that will work out. What do you think? — WARY IN WISCONSIN DEAR WARY: There’s a saying, “Once bitten, twice shy.” Because you have been bitten more than once, your reason for not wanting a dog seems logical. Frankly, I think it would be unfair to the animal to bring it into a household in which it wasn’t unanimously welcomed. And if you think your husband would lay the responsibility for caring for the dog on you, you should not agree. DEAR ABBY: My 62-yearold father has recently started to streak his hair with fluorescent colors. He does it when he goes to his job and coordinates his hair color with his outfits. As far as I know, his employer has not said anything as of yet. Also, Dad has difficulty with social cues. My mother and I aren’t happy with his “fashion” choices and we plead with him to stop doing this.

It’s embarrassing because it looks stupid and ridiculous. He claims he doesn’t care what others think and that he has flair. Are my mother and I wrong to criticize his “flair”? Isn’t this behavior really inappropriate for a man his age? How can we convince him that he’s making a fool of himself and should stop? Your help is appreciated. — NO FOOL LIKE AN OLD FOOL DEAR N.F.L.A.O.F.: Repeat after me: We cannot change other people; we can only change the way we react to them. Understand that how your father presents himself reflects only on him — not you. Because you and your mother have tried reasoning with him and he refuses to listen, you all might be happier if you stop making HIS fashion choices YOUR problem. 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). With great charisma comes great responsibility. Be careful how you wield that today. You want friends and fans, but you don’t want people to expect attention from you that you’re not willing to give. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You’re highly motivated, but don’t make yourself too busy: It will only be counterproductive. You need to be able to assimilate what you’re experiencing. Dive in where it’s deep enough, within limits -- the pool, not the ocean. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). When you don’t happen to stumble on happiness, fear not. You can still create it like you’re using a favorite recipe: Put in the right ingredients in the right order and you will be happy. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Though your manners are impeccable, a challenging situation puts them to the test. You’ll use your quick reflexes to save someone (or yourself) from imminent embarrass-

ment. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Getting into love is easy: You just fall. For love to continue, though, efforts must be made. You have to be willing to keep taking risks. Falling happens, mostly, in uncertain territory. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). It has been said that there is no love, only acts of love. This is the perfect moment to show someone you love that you’ve been listening. Do the exact thing that is most needed or wanted. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll be an equalizing force in the lives of others -- a safe place for someone to confide in, a neutral party in the war, the fair hand that deals the spoils. Everyone is counting on your justice... no pressure! SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Fraternizing with the enemy is obviously a breach in ethics, a disloyal move, a dangerous risk -- unless, in doing so, you make the enemy an ally. And just maybe the enemy was never really an enemy at all.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21). Perfection doesn’t win hearts. Sure, people respect the hard work it takes to be masterful. However, it’s that intangible something that counts much more. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). It would be so much easier if life would fall into simple categories, but it never does completely. Anyway, you have too many varied interests for narrow-mindedness. Your principles are strong, but your mind is open. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You were right to put off a task until you felt compelled to take it on. But enough is enough. There’s a fine line between inaction and procrastination. Get in there and get it over with. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The difference between a loan and a gift is that one should be repaid literally, while the other should be repaid in a more creative way. Of the two, the loan will be the easier one to manage.


NEXT UP...

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • 11A

MONSTER ENERGY NASCAR CUP SERIES

XFINITY SERIES

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES

Race: Bojangles Southern 500 Where: Darlington Raceway When: Sept. 3, 6 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC Sports Network 2016 Winner: Martin Truex Jr. (right)

Race: Sport Clips Help a Hero 200 Where: Darlington Raceway When: Saturday, 3:30 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC Sports Network 2016 Winner: Elliott Sadler

Race: Chevrolet Silverado 250 Where: Canadian Tire Motorsport Park When: Sunday, 2:30 p.m. (ET) TV: FS1 2016 Winner: John Hunter Nemechek

NOTEBOOK

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A Darlington win would clinch a playoff berth for several drivers sitting on the bubble With two races remaining in the 26-race regular season, 13 drivers are set for the Cup playoffs due to race wins already this season. Three more — Chase Elliott, Matt Kenseth and Jamie McMurray — are among the top 16 based on their positions in the points standings. But any driver in the top 30 in the standings can get in the playoffs by winning either at Darlington Raceway this weekend or at Richmond Raceway the following week. Of the eligible winless drivers, only Matt Kenseth has a previous win at Darlington. Dale Earnhardt Jr., Clint Bowyer and Joey Logano have wins at Richmond, but Logano’s victory there in April does not count toward a playoff berth because of a rules violation found on his car after the race.

NUMERICALLY SPEAKING

592

Laps led at Darlington Raceway since 2005 by Kyle Busch — the most by any active Cup driver

265

Fastest laps run at Darlington Raceway since 2005 by Jimmie Johnson to top all active Cup drivers

17

Lead-lap finishes at Darlington Raceway by Dale Earnhardt Jr. (in 21 races) — the most of any active Cup driver

6,273

Driver Jeremy Clements and the crew of his family-owned No. 51 Chevrolet team celebrate in Victory Lane following Clements’ win in the Johnsonville 180 at Road America on Sunday in Wisconsin.

Stacy Revere/Getty Images for NASCAR

Average Darlington finishing position by Denny Hamlin — an alltime best among all Cup drivers

1. Martin Truex Jr., 951 2. Kyle Busch, 850 3. Kyle Larson, 845

It’s down to an intense two-man race for Cup’s rookie of the year

4. Kevin Harvick, 824

Daniel Suarez, left, and Erik Jones have had impressive runs this season, combining for 1 top-10 Ànishes.

Courtesy of Joe Gibbs Racing & Courtesy of Erik Jones Racing

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NASCAR CUP DRIVER STANDINGS

5. Denny Hamlin, 753 6. Brad Keselowski, 728 7. Chase Elliott, 711 8. Matt Kenseth, 703 9. Jamie McMurray, 700 10. Clint Bowyer, 642

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NASCAR Cup Series.


12A • Daily Corinthian

Sports

Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2017

MCHS girls Ole Miss turns attention to S. Alabama win Hardin Invitational By Brian Scott Rippee OleMissSports.com

PICKWICK, Tenn. — McNairy Central’s golf tandem of Karson Adkins and Emily Hamm proved to be too much for the other girls in the Hardin County Invitational Monday at Pickwick Landing State Park Golf Course. The duo helped McNairy’s girls finish first in the team event and finished with the two best scores in the individual meet. The MCHS boys shot a 406 and did not place in a tournament that had some elite teams involved in the meet. There were 12 teams in the boys part of the tournament. Adkins was the medalist for the girls tournament with an 84 followed close behind by Hamm’s 87. McNairy’s Meg Suggs returned from a hip injury to shoot a 116 and help boost her team to the championship. In the boys tournament, Hayden Harris finished as McNairy’s low scorer with an 87. River Hurst recorded a 97, Caleb Rankin shot a 98, while Trey Durbin posted a 124, and Miles Cooper shot a 126. USJ won the boys tournament with a 320, followed by Trinity Christian Academy with a 327. Ethan Phillips was the medalist in the boys tournament with a 73. There were eight girls team in the event. USJ finished second with a 178 and Lawrence Co. came in third with a 180.

OXFORD — Matt Luke is unsure of exactly how he will be able to control his emotions Saturday leading up to his first career game as a head coach, but it is something that’s been on his mind for quite a while. “This is something I’ve been thinking about for a long time,” Luke said. “I’m just excited. I’m excited for the opportunity, excited for walking through The Grove and representing my university and putting a team on the field that everybody’s proud of. It’s going to be a challenge to control my emotions and be an efficient head coach. That’s going to be one

of my biggest challenges, but I’m excited and prepared for it.” Ole Miss opens up the season against South Alabama on Saturday in the first ever meeting between the two schools. Luke, at his first game week press conference, gave some hints as to what to look for on both sides of the football. The two-deep depth chart is essentially set at most areas, but the free safety position is still somewhat unsettled. C.J. Moore is listed as the current starter, but former defensive back Jaylon Jones is making a push for playing time at the position. “Jaylon looks so natural,” defensive coordinator Wes-

ley McGriff said. “His movement skills, his awareness, I mean I wish we had moved him earlier to have more time. But I like his ball skills. I like his attention to detail. You wish he was about 10 pounds heavier, but other than that we have him in the right spot.” McGriff noted he feels best about the defensive line and the depth the Rebels have acquired both inside and outside there, and that he will have his eyes on the linebackers and secondary to evaluate how those two units play. Ole Miss will be without linebacker Detric BingDukes and safety Ken Webster for the first game. Luke mentioned Donta Evans as

a guy who has impressed at linebacker this fall camp and has responded well in terms of trying to fill the void there. “Donta Evans is the guy that’s emerged to me,” Luke said. “ At mike linebacker, he’s calling all the defense. I think that puts him in a leadership position. I really feel good about where he is.” Luke noted that all of the full-time defensive coaches will be on the field for the game on Saturday. The staff isn’t scared of playing young players and Luke had a few in mind on the defensive side of the ball who will play on Saturday. “I think you’ll see D.D.

Please see turns | 13A

Daily Corinthian Player of the Week

Local Schedule Thursday, Aug. 31 JC Football Northeast @ Pearl River, 6 HS Softball Holly Springs @ Corinth (V & JV), 5:30 Thrasher @ East Union (JV & V), 5:30 Walnut @ Falkner (V & JV), 5 Jumpertown @ Pine Grove (Varsity), 5:30 Kossuth @ Tishomingo County (V & JV), 5:30 Booneville @ Wheeler (V & JV), 5 HS Volleyball Kossuth @ Biggersville, 5:30 Corinth @ Byhalia, 5:30 Alcorn Central @ McNairy Central, 5:30 Tishomingo County @ Belgreen (AL), 5:30

Friday, Sept. 1 HS Football/Week 3 Corinth, Biggersville (open) Thrasher @ Alcorn Central, 7 Baldwyn @ Kossuth, 7 McNairy Central @ Covington, 7 Byers @ Walnut, 7 Tishomingo County @ Belmont, 7 Booneville @ Nettleton, 7 HS Softball Tremont @ Thrasher (V & JV), 5

Shorts • Havis Kids’ will host a Firemen vs. Police Softball Challenge on the large baseball field in Crossroads Regional Park at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 23. There is free admission and donations are accepted. There will also be a silent auction. Following the softball game, Havis Kids’ will host a Homerun Derby for kids in three divisions - eight and under; 10 and under; and 12 and under. Cost is $20 per child. Kids will get 10 hits, fair or foul, and all top homerun hitters will advance to the second round. Trophies will be given for first and second place in each division. Age is judged as of Sept. 23. All proceeds help Havis Kids’ with a trip next fall to Walt Disney World. For more information call Havis Hurley at 662-643-3561 • Plaza Lanes announces the formation of their Fall leagues. The Tuesday Night Church League (men, women, youth) will begin Sept. 5 and the Monday Night Youth League will begin Sept. 11. All night league’s will begin at 6:30 pm and there is currently room for individuals and/or teams in all leagues. Stop by Plaza Lanes on Shiloh Road in Corinth to sign up or for more details. • You’re invited to Date Night at Shiloh Ridge on Aug. 31. You can choose between a couple’s nine-hole golf scramble or mixed doubles tennis, both beginning at 6 p.m. There is a $5 pot for the scramble with a $25 non-member entry fee. Non-members must come with a member and pay a guest fee for the tennis event.

Photo by Joel Counce

McNairy Central High School running back Kylin Wynn has been named Daily Corinthian Player of the Week. The senior, who sat out the entire season last year with an injury, helped the Bobcats come from behind 14-0 to beat Tishomingo County 44-14 Friday night. He had 26 rushes for 163 yards and three touchdowns as MCHS went to 2-0 on the year.

Longo has control of the Ole Miss offense By DAVID BRANDT Associated Press

OXFORD — Mississippi’s Phil Longo was hired to make a good offense even better. After a crazy offseason, that’s still the case. The 48-year-old offensive coordinator could have even more authority to make a quick imprint on the Rebels than was ever expected. “Coach Longo will call the plays on offense, coach (Wesley) McGriff is going to call the plays on defense,”

Ole Miss interim coach Matt Luke said. “I’ll certainly interject if I feel like I can help in any way, but I’m going to let those guys do their jobs.” Longo was hired by former Ole Miss coach Hugh Freeze, who abruptly resigned in July after the school found “personal misconduct” following research into his phone records. Freeze was regarded as the mastermind of an Ole Miss offense that consistently ranked among the most productive in the Southeast-

ern Conference — especially in the passing categories. But the Rebels often struggled to run the ball under Freeze, so Longo’s main task was to establish a ground game that would work well in the program’s spread offense concept. The transition was well underway before Freeze’s stunning resignation. Luke says he trusts Longo to see the project to completion and help the Rebels improve on last year’s 5-7 record.

“I fully appreciate the fact that coach Luke has let us run with what we’re doing,” Longo said. “I think our kids are getting it now.” Longo’s ability to keep the Ole Miss offense rolling will be under close scrutiny when the Rebels host South Alabama on Saturday in the season opener for both teams. The Ole Miss offense has several promising young players that will determine Please see longo | 13A

Stafford, Lions agree to $135M, 5 year extension By LARRY LAGE Associated Press

DETROIT — Matthew Stafford has made a home in the Motor City, leading the Detroit Lions on the field and becoming a first-time father with twin girls earlier this year. “Aggressive start,” Stafford recently cracked. The Lions, likewise, made an aggressive move to keep their franchise quarterback

around for many more years with the richest contract in NFL history. Stafford agreed to a $135 million extension, according to a person familiar with the deal. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because financial terms of the contract were not disclosed. The team announced the five-year deal keeps Stafford under contract through the

2022 season. The 29-year-old was entering the last year of his $53 million, three-year deal. Stafford stood to get quite a raise and did, getting more than the $125 million, fiveyear contract the Oakland Raiders gave Derek Carr this summer. Stafford recently said he hadn’t decided whether he would allow negotiations to drag into the season if both

sides failed to reach an agreement before Week 1. “I had no expectations going into it,” Stafford said last week. “So, I’m doing myself and our team a disservice if that’s what I’m worried about. I truly am letting the guys upstairs here, and my agent, hash it all out. And, I’m just trying to be as good a football player as I can be and Please see stafford | 13A

BYU-LSU moved to New Orleans because of flooding By RALPH D. RUSSO Associated Press

The BYU-LSU game will be played Saturday night at the Superdome in New Orleans after massive flooding in Houston from Hurricane Harvey forced it to be relocated from NRG Stadium. ESPN announced the move Monday. Finding a stadium to play the neutral-site game was in the hands of the television network and AdvoCare Texas Kickoff organizers who

wanted to find a place that allowed convenient access to at least some fans already holding tickets. The game is still scheduled to kick off at 9:30 p.m. Eastern and be televised on ESPN. “Efforts are underway in New Orleans and we will work with the fans, the Superdome, the New Orleans Convention & Visitors Bureau and both schools throughout the week to ensure the most optimal game day experience for all,”

said Pete Derzis, ESPN senior vice president of college sports programming and events. ESPN said Dallas, San Antonio, Jacksonville, Nashville and Orlando also reached out about hosting the game. LSU, ranked No. 13 in the AP poll, announced that tickets and parking passes purchased through its ticket office will be refunded automatically, starting Tuesday. The school said it will alert fans when tickets for the Superdome become avail-

able through its website for purchase. BYU Athletic Director Tom Holmoe apologized to Cougars fans for the disruption of plans. “We hope many of you will be able to make necessary changes to join us in New Orleans to cheer on the Cougars,” Holmoe said. “Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with the people in South Texas who are currently facing the devastating effects of Hurricane Harvey.”


13A • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard

turns Continued from 12A

Bowie in there at corner. C.J. Miler will have a chance to play some at safety. Ryder Anderson and Breon Dixon, those are the guys who jump out to me off the top of my head,” Luke said. Of the talk of playing young players, perhaps McGriff summed it up best. “If you are looking for a redshirt, go buy one and hang it in your closet,” McGriff said. On the offensive side of the ball, Saturday will be the long-awaited debut of Phil Longo’s fastpaced offensive system with Shea Patterson at the controls. Longo spent much of the offseason installing the new system and thinks this week is just about cleaning it up. “The progress we wanted to make in the spring, we made,” Longo said. “The progress we wanted to make in August camp, we made. This week is about polishing. When they see the playlist for Saturday’s game as opposed to what they’ve been running in camp, it’s probably one-third the size. There are fewer pass concepts, fewer run concepts, fewer combinations.” Ole Miss will be without one of its offensive weapons in sophomore tight end Dawson Knox, who is dealing with a foot injury. Knox is someone that has impressed in fall camp with his size and versatility. Longo didn’t mince words on the gravity of being without Knox. “He’s the true hybrid that we have, a guy you’re going to get once in 10 years. I’m excited about him,” Longo said. “I think what the other four players do well, they do well. I don’t know if any one of those four players is as versatile as Dawson is, but that’s what makes

Baseball AL STANDINGS

him so special. We’ll use those guys more in the roles that they fit for us, instead of like Dawson Knox, who can do both.” Longo said that eight guys will play on the offensive line, which shows the depth the Rebels have at that position that they have not in years past. It will be key in what Longo called “winning the war of attrition.” Luke said he hopes to have Knox back by week three when Ole Miss travels to play Cal. Perhaps the most interesting position to keep an eye on this weekend is at running back. Ole Miss gets Jordan Wilkins back this year, who is the clear-cut starter. But it is the four guys behind him that make this position interesting. Longo and Luke both mentioned the possibility of playing as many as four guys, which would give them a chance to see the options and versatility in skill sets each of them boast. “We’re going to play some guys,” Longo said. “Jordan is by far the No. 1 guy. That’s no disrespect to the rest of them; they’ve competed. D’Vaughn (Pennamon) has separated himself; he’s the true No. 2 right now. But all four have a role, and assuming they’re healthy, I wouldn’t be surprised if you see all of them.” A lot more will be known after Saturday, but for now Luke and his team are just excited about the idea of hitting someone other than themselves. “First games you’re really focused on yourself and getting better and making sure you’re sound,” Luke said. “The first game is unpredictable, and you make your most mistakes in that first game. Focus on yourself and make sure you’re prepared.”

stafford Continued from 12A

help our team.” Detroit drafted Stafford No. 1 overall in 2009 and gave him $41.7 million in guarantees as part of a six-year contract worth $78 million coming out of Georgia. Shoulder and knee injuries stunted his first two seasons, but Stafford played in every game the next six years. Stafford won the 2011 AP NFL Comeback Player of the Year award after throwing for more than 5,000 yards and helping the Lions end their 11-season playoff drought. That year, he helped Detroit become the first team in league history to rally and win four games after being down by at least 13 points, including

20-plus point comebacks at Dallas and Minnesota. Last season, the Stafford-led Lions became the first NFL team to come back from fourthquarter deficits to win eight games in a season. He helped the Lions reach the playoffs for the third time in six seasons, but wasn’t able to help them win in the postseason for the first time since the 1991 season. It certainly hasn’t been his fault. He hasn’t ever had a strong running game to lean on and he lost a superstar receiver last year. Despite the retirement of Calvin Johnson last season, Stafford was having one of his best years until a finger injury and stiffer competition stunted his and the team’s success.

longo Continued from 12A

whether Longo’s offense is a success. Sophomore quarterback Shea Patterson threw for 880 yards, six touchdowns and three interceptions in three starts last season. Sophomore Greg Little will protect Patterson’s blind side at left tackle while receivers like sophomore A.J. Brown — who caught 29 passes for 412 yards last season — will provide inviting targets. The running game is a little more unsettled. Senior Jordan Wilkins will be the starting running back in the first game after sitting out last season because of an academic issue. His backups will be sophomore D’Vaughn Pennamon, senior Eugene Brazley and sopho-

more Eric Swinney. “That’s the position I’m most interested in watching compete on Saturday,” Longo said. The scrutiny on Longo is amplified by the fact that he’s never coached at the Football Bowl Subdivision level, much less the SEC. He came to Oxford after three impressive years as the offensive coordinator at Sam Houston State and has also had stops at places like Minnesota-Duluth, Southern Illinois, Youngstown State and Slippery Rock. Despite the fairly anonymous pedigree, Longo’s success impressed Freeze. Sam Houston State was the only team at the FCS level to throw for 4,500 yards and run for 2,000 yards in 2016.

East Division W L Pct GB Boston 74 57 .565 — New York 70 60 .538 3½ Baltimore 66 65 .504 8 Tampa Bay 66 67 .496 9 Toronto 61 70 .466 13 Central Division W L Pct GB Cleveland 74 56 .569 — Minnesota 67 63 .515 7 Kansas City 64 66 .492 10 Detroit 57 73 .438 17 Chicago 52 77 .403 21½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 79 51 .608 — Los Angeles 67 65 .508 13 Seattle 66 66 .500 14 Texas 64 66 .492 15 Oakland 58 73 .443 21½ Monday’s Games Baltimore 7, Seattle 6 Cleveland 6, N.Y. Yankees 2 Boston 6, Toronto 5 Tampa Bay 12, Kansas City 0 Detroit 4, Colorado 3 L.A. Angels 3, Oakland 1 Tuesday’s Games Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees, ppd. Seattle at Baltimore (n) Boston at Toronto (n) Texas vs Houston at St. Petersburg, Fla. (n) Chicago White Sox at Minnesota (n) Tampa Bay at Kansas City (n) Detroit at Colorado (n) Oakland at L.A. Angels (n) Today’s Games Cleveland (Bauer 13-8) at N.Y. Yankees (Garcia 5-8), 12:05 p.m., 1st game Seattle (Miranda 8-6) at Baltimore (Bundy 12-8), 2:05 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 9-8) at Colorado (Bettis 0-1), 2:10 p.m. Cleveland (Tomlin 7-9) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 10-5), 3:35 p.m., 2nd game Boston (Porcello 8-15) at Toronto (Happ 6-10), 6:07 p.m. Texas (Cashner 7-9) vs Houston (Keuchel 11-2), 6:10 p.m. at St. Petersburg, Fla. Chicago White Sox (Holland 7-13) at Minnesota (Berrios 11-6), 7:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Odorizzi 6-7) at Kansas City (Vargas 14-8), 7:15 p.m. Oakland (Graveman 4-4) at L.A. Angels (Bridwell 7-2), 9:07 p.m. Thursday’s Games Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m. Texas vs Houston, 12:10 p.m. at St. Petersburg, Fla. Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m. Toronto at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.

NL STANDINGS

East Division W L Pct GB Washington 79 51 .608 — Miami 66 64 .508 13 Atlanta 57 72 .442 21½ New York 57 73 .438 22 Philadelphia 49 81 .377 30 Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 70 60 .538 — Milwaukee 68 63 .519 2½

St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati

65 65 .500 5 63 69 .477 8 55 76 .420 15½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 91 38 .705 — Arizona 73 58 .557 19 Colorado 71 60 .542 21 San Diego 57 74 .435 35 San Francisco 53 80 .398 40 Monday’s Games Washington 11, Miami 2 Philadelphia 6, Atlanta 1 Chicago Cubs 6, Pittsburgh 1 Detroit 4, Colorado 3 San Francisco 3, San Diego 0 Tuesday’s Games Atlanta at Philadelphia, ppd. Miami at Washington (n) N.Y. Mets at Cincinnati (n) St. Louis at Milwaukee (n) Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs (n) Detroit at Colorado (n) L.A. Dodgers at Arizona (n) San Francisco at San Diego (n) Today’s Games Atlanta (Teheran 8-11) at Philadelphia (Eickhoff 4-7), 12:05 p.m. St. Louis (Martinez 10-9) at Milwaukee (Anderson 7-3), 1:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 9-8) at Colorado (Bettis 0-1), 2:10 p.m. Miami (Worley 2-3) at Washington (Scherzer 13-5), 3:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Montero 2-9) at Cincinnati (Bailey 4-6), 6:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Nova 11-11) at Chicago Cubs (Quintana 8-11), 7:05 p.m. San Francisco (Blach 8-10) at San Diego (Wood 3-4), 8:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Ryu 5-6) at Arizona (Ray 10-5), 8:40 p.m. Thursday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Cincinnati, 11:35 a.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 2:40 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 6:10 p.m. Atlanta at Chicago Cubs, 7:05 p.m. Washington at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m. St. Louis at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.

Football NFL Preseason Thursday Philadelphia 38, Miami 31 Carolina 24, Jacksonville 23 Friday New England 30, Detroit 28 Seattle 26, Kansas City 13 Saturday Arizona 24, Atlanta 14 Baltimore 13, Buffalo 9 Indianapolis 19, Pittsburgh 15 N.Y. Giants 32, N.Y. Jets 31 Cleveland 13, Tampa Bay 9 New Orleans 13, Houston 0 L.A. Chargers 21, L.A. Rams 19 Dallas 24, Oakland 20 Denver 20, Green Bay 17 Sunday’s Games Chicago 19, Tennessee 7 Washington 23, Cincinnati 17 Minnesota 32, San Francisco 31 Thursday, Aug. 31 Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 6 p.m. L.A. Rams at Green Bay, 6 p.m. Detroit at Buffalo, 6 p.m. Jacksonville at Atlanta, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Jets, 6 p.m.

Television

Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2017

Today’s Lineup

HORSE RACING 3 p.m. — (FS2) Saratoga Live, With Anticipation Stakes, at Saratoga Springs, N.Y. MLB BASEBALL Noon — (MLB) Regional coverage, Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees OR St. Louis at Milwaukee (1 p.m.) 3 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, Detroit at Colorado OR Miami at Washington (4 p.m.) (games joined in progress) 6 p.m. — (ESPN) Texas vs. Houston, at St. Petersburg, Fla. 10 p.m. — (MLB) Regional coverage, L.A. Dodgers at Arizona OR San Francisco at San Diego (games joined in progress) TENNIS Noon — (ESPN) U.S. Open, second round, at New York 5 p.m. — (ESPN2) U.S. Open, second round, at New York 6 p.m. — (ESPN2) U.S. Open, second round, at New York N.Y. Giants at New England, 6:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina, 6:30 p.m. Washington at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m. Miami at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago, 7 p.m. Baltimore at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Dallas at Houston, 7 p.m. Tennessee at Kansas City, 7:30 p.m. Arizona at Denver, 8 p.m. L.A. Chargers at San Francisco, 9 p.m. Seattle at Oakland, 9 p.m.

College Football AP Top 25 Fared Saturday No. 1 Alabama (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 3 Florida State at Atlanta, Saturday. No. 2 Ohio State (0-0) did not play. Next: at Indiana, Thursday. No. 3 Florida State (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 1 Alabama at Atlanta, Saturday. No. 4 Southern Cal (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Western Michigan, Saturday. No. 5 Clemson (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Kent State, Saturday. No. 6 Penn State (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Akron, Saturday. No. 7 Oklahoma (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. UTEP, Saturday. No. 8 Washington (0-0) did not play. Next: at Rutgers, Friday. No. 9 Wisconsin (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Utah State, Friday. No. 10 Oklahoma State (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Tulsa, Thursday. No. 11 Michigan (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 17 Florida at Arlington, Texas, Saturday. No. 12 Auburn (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Georgia Southern, Saturday.

No. 13 LSU (0-0) did not play. Next: vs, BYU at Houston, Saturday. No. 14 Stanford (1-0) beat Rice 62-7 at Sydney, Australia. Next: at No. 4 Southern Cal, Saturday, Sept. 9. No. 15 Georgia (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Appalachian State, Saturday. No. 16 Louisville (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Purdue at Indianapolis, Saturday. No. 17 Florida (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 11 Michigan at Arlington, Texas, Saturday. No. 18 Miami (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Bethune-Cookman, Saturday. No. 19 South Florida (1-0) beat San Jose State 42-22. Next: vs. Stony Brook, Saturday. No. 20 Kansas State (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Central Arkansas, Saturday. No. 21 Virginia Tech (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 22 West Virginia at Landover, Md., Sunday, Sept. 3. No. 22 West Virginia (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. 21 Virginia Tech at Landover, Md., Sunday, Sept. 3. No. 23 Texas (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Maryland, Saturday. No. 24 Washington State (0-0) did not play. Next: vs. Montana State, Saturday. No. 25 Tennessee (0-0) did not play. Next: at Georgia Tech, Monday, Sept. 4.

Transactions Tuesday’s Deals BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned LHP Eric Skoglund to Omaha (PCL). Recalled LHP Brian Flynn from Omaha.

Titans confident they can clean up mistakes By TERESA M. WALKER Associated Press

NASHVILLE — The clock is ticking for the Tennessee Titans, who have had two ugly preseason losses and need to clean up what coach Mike Mularkey says are too many mistakes. The Titans insist they’re not worried, even with the season opener against Oakland looming on Sept. 10. “That is what the preseason is for, to get all the wrinkles out,” wide receiver Rishard Matthews said after a 19-7 loss to Chicago . “The good thing is that it is happening now and hopefully won’t happen in the season. Nobody is perfect, go out there and do what you do and (Monday) we will correct

our mistakes and move forward. I look forward to KC on Thursday.” Tight end Delanie Walker noted the Titans still have two weeks left. “We got the Chiefs, another game that we can clean it up,” Walker said. “Hopefully we can get everything situated, set for the opener.” And Mularkey agrees after watching tape of a loss that dropped Tennessee to 1-2. The Titans’ first-team offense didn’t score until the first play of the fourth quarter and gave up four sacks. Kicker Ryan Succop missed a 40-yard field goal wide left, and punter Brett Kern had a punt blocked for a safety with both working with a backup long snapper. The Titans were

flagged eight times for 69 yards, and left guard Quinton Spain was ejected for throwing a punch. “We didn’t play well enough, and they did,” Mularkey said of the Bears. “Again, in this league you can’t afford to do what we did against a good team that’s playing well.” The defense wasn’t much better, failing to stop Chicago from driving 96 yards on the Bears’ opening possession for a touchdown. Pro Bowl linebacker Brian Orakpo said the Titans have to minimize their mistakes and start games with their normal intensity. Orakpo does want to see more consistency from a young team that opened the preseason

with a 7-3 loss to the Jets followed by a 34-27 win over Carolina . “I can’t explain it,” Orakpo said. “It’s just definitely disappointing. We preach on minimizing those mistakes because it hurts our drives, it hurts offense and defense and you know, that resulted in a loss (Sunday). The great thing about preseason is you can watch the film, dissect it and hopefully minimize those, once we open the regular season against Oakland.” Quarterback Marcus Mariota criticized his own play as not being at the level he expects of himself. After completing 6 of 8 passes against Carolina, Mariota said he had trouble finding a rhythm against Chicago.

University of Houston postpones weekend games By KRISTIE RIEKEN Associated Press

HOUSTON — The University of Houston has postponed its football game at Texas-San Antonio on Saturday as the city deals with catastrophic flooding from Hurricane Harvey. The Cougars have been in Austin practicing since Friday, but decided that this week was not the time to play a game. “The epic disaster that continues to unfold in and around the city of Houston has made it evident that our athletic events are not a priority at this time,” Houston athletics director Hunter Yurachek said Tuesday. “Our focus during the coming days will be on assisting the city of Houston and University of Houston communities in recovery efforts and allowing our coaches, staff and student athletes to devote the necessary time to ensuring the safety and security of their family, friends and loved ones.” Officials said they will explore options for rescheduling the game. Houston has an off date on Nov. 11. The Cougars will not compete in any sports

this weekend with events in cross country, volleyball and soccer also being canceled. The storm has also forced the Houston Dash to play their scheduled home game against the Seattle Reign FC on Sunday at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas. Tickets to that game are $20 with all proceeds going to the American Red Cross. The changes are the latest to hit Houston sports teams. The Astros were forced to play their series against the Texas Rangers at the home of the Tampa Bay Rays while the Texans are playing their “home” preseason game on the road against the Dallas Cowboys instead. The Rice football team hasn’t been home in days, holed up in Fort Worth on the TCU campus after a game in Sydney, Australia, over the weekend. Meanwhile, the Houston Rockets and owner Leslie Alexander upped their donation to Hurricane Harvey relief efforts to $10 million. Alexander pledged $4 million to Houston mayor Sylvester Turner’s Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund on Monday before announcing that he’d donate $10 mil-

lion to help flood victims. The donation is the largest of many contributions by Houston’s sports teams and athletes in recent days. Astros owner Jim Crane and the Astros’ foundation pledged $4 million to the cause and Major League Baseball also contributed, joining with the players association to donate $1 million to the Red Cross and relief organizations chosen by the players. The Texans and owner Bob McNair donated $1 million to the United Way of Greater Houston Flood Relief Fund. The NFL Foundation said it would match the $1 million donation, and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and his family pledged to match all funds donated to the American Red Cross in support of Harvey flood relief up to $1 million. Houston star J.J. Watt started a fundraising page online that has raised more than $3.2 million since its inception on Sunday. The fund was given a boost by a $1 million donation from Titans controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk, who said the flooding and devastation

has been painful to watch as a native. Strunk said Watt has created something to provide immediate aid and the Titans, founded in 1960 as the Houston Oilers, want to be a part of the effort to rebuild the area. Watt’s original goal was to raise $500,000, but he’s now aiming to raise $4 million. Denver Broncos receiver Emmanuel Sanders, who lives in Houston in the offseason and grew up in Bellville, Texas, about 60 miles west, took to Instagram to plead for donations. “I’ve driven up and down those streets and Houston is my heart,” Sanders said. “And just to see the people out there struggling, man, I have to do something about it.” Broncos coach Vance Joseph also weighed in on the situation in Houston, where he coached with the Texans from 2011-13. “I’m a New Orleans guy. Obviously, Katrina was huge for the city,” he said “It’s the same effect with Houston right now. Lots of folks are out of their homes. ... They need help down there and it’s heartbreaking to watch on TV.”


Home & Garden

14A • Daily Corinthian

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Container gardening solves landscape problems This year has been a chal- with water reservoirs that can lenge in my home landscape extend the period between waterings. I’ve adapted my preand garden. First, we have had a lot of existing irrigation system for rain: more than 93 inches and container growing, and this has counting collected in our Com- been a great time saver. You can munity Collaborative Rain, Hail buy starter irrigation kits with & Snow Network rain gauge. If fittings, tubing and timers that you’re interested in being a vol- attach right to the water spigot. Next, always use conunteer rain reporter for tainer potting mix. This them, go to http://www. product is found under cocoraahs.org for more a variety of trade names, information. I’ve seen so which can be confusmany waterlogged landing. Read the ingrediscape beds and lawns ents to make sure you that just won’t dry out. buy the right mix. The The second big chalGary proper container mixes lenge was the heat. When it’s not raining, Bachman have components such as peat moss, coir fiber the high temperatures Southern or bark. Vermiculite and humidity have Gardening and perlite are added to maintained heat indexlighten the mix. es that make me -- and All potting mixes provide the many others gardeners -- just stay indoors. Surely that yard four basic requirements of plant work can be put off until Octo- roots: air space, water-holding capacity, initial fertilization ber. But I’ve taken the steps to and root support. Commercial make my gardening an easier bagged container mixes have been engineered for optimum chore. Besides the few foundation drainage, which is another imIndian hawthorns I have in my portant factor to consider. Keeping your containerfront landscape, I grow everything else in containers. I grow grown plant well fed is a key to in self-watering container gar- success. The easiest way to feed den systems, along with 3-gal- them is to use a water-soluble lon, 5-gallon, 15-gallon and fertilizer. I like to the use a fer25-gallon black nursery con- tilizer attachment that fits on tainers. Growing in contain- the hose, as there’s no measurers alleviates the waterlogging ing required. My last tip concerns plant problem and makes gardening in 113-degree heat index tem- selection. While it’s possible to peratures almost tolerable. I grow any plant in any container, you need to choose the right did say almost. Here are my top thoughts for plant for the right container. being a successful container Doesn’t that sound like the old landscape adage, “plant the gardener. The biggest issue may be right tree in the right place”? choosing just the right contain- Every year, there are more and er. There are many to choose more dwarf and patio-sized from. I like to use black nursery plants available that have been containers. To create interest, bred for container growing. I paint some and add vertical This makes it easy to find a suitable plant for your containers. wood slats to others. Growing in containers makes Containers need consistent irrigation, as the plants rely on it easy to move your garden you for their water needs. There around or to provide weathare great pots and containers er protection for your prized

Photo by MSU Extension/Gary Bachman

These Daybreak Charm Supertunias are thriving in a basic, 25-gallon container that has been dressed up with vertical wooden slats.

Growing in containers alleviates the waterlogging problem and makes gardening in 113-degree heat index temperatures almost tolerable. plants. And have I mentioned that there isn’t nearly as much weeding to do in containers? Once you make the transition to container gardening, I know you’ll be looking for more pots. (Daily Corinthian columnist Dr. Gary Bachman is with the MSU Extension Service.)

Photo by MSU Extension/Gary Bachman

Container gardening makes irrigtation, weeding and fertilizing a breeze, while offering beauty that can be moved around for variety and weather protection.

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Page

8A

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Taste Taste

The Paducah Sun | Wednesday, August 30, 2017 | paducahsun.com

Daily Corinthian • 1B

Associated Press

Soup-inspired burger worth the labor BY SARA MOULTON Associated Press

If you’re a fan of traditional French onion soup — and who isn’t? — you’re going to love this burger. It’s kitted out with all of the ingredients that make the soup such a treasure — tender, browned onions, beef broth, red wine, Gruyere cheese and French bread — and finally lathered up with mustard mayo. Rich and full of flavor, this burger is the perfect entree for a Labor Day bash. Prepping it, however, does require a bit of care. The onions need to be cooked low and slow so that they’ll soften and brown properly. (You can, however, cook them a full day ahead, then cover and chill them until the moment of truth.) Likewise, you want to keep a strict eye on the burgers as they cook. Overdo it and they’ll end up dry. You’re welcome to buy whatever kind of burger

strikes your fancy, but please resist the siren call of prepackaged quarter-pounders. They’re too thin for this recipe and will definitely end up overcooked. If you’re up for a little extra work, you can “grind” your own meat by buying the beef of your choice, cutting it into 1-inch cubes, freezing it for 40 minutes and finally pulsing it in a food processor until you reach the ground beef texture you desire. Classic French onion soup calls for Gruyere cheese, but you’re free to swap in a different variety as long as it melts as well as Gruyere. Likewise, if you don’t want to add wine to the recipe, you can deglaze the burger pan with stock or water.

French Onion Soup Burgers Servings: 4 Start to finish: 1 hour (40 minutes active) 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus extra for brushing

on the bread 3 cups thinly sliced onion Kosher salt 1 teaspoon minced garlic plus 1 whole clove cut in half 1 teaspoon fresh thyme 1/3 cup beef or chicken broth or water Black pepper Four 4-inch pieces of French bread, cut in half 1/4 cup mayonnaise 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard 11/2 pounds ground beef, shaped into 4 burgers 3 ounces thinly sliced Gruyere 1/3 cup red wine In a large skillet heat 2 tablespoons of the oil over medium-high heat. Add the onion and a pinch of salt, reduce the heat to mediumlow and cook, covered, stirring occasionally, until the onion is very tender, about 15 minutes. Remove the lid and continue to cook the onion, uncovered, stirring frequently, until the onion

is golden brown, about 15 minutes. Add the minced garlic and the thyme and cook, stirring, 1 minute. Add the beef broth and cook, stirring the onions constantly to scrape up the glaze at the bottom of the pan, until most of the liquid has been absorbed. Transfer the mixture to a bowl, add salt and pepper to taste and set it aside. Clean and dry the skillet and return it to the burner. While the onions are cooking, preheat the broiler. Brush the cut sides of the French bread liberally with olive oil and on a sheet pan broil the bread cut side up, until it is golden. Remove from the oven and rub the cut sides with the cut sides of the garlic clove. Transfer the French bread halves to each of 4 plates. In a small bowl stir together the mayonnaise and the mustard and spread the mixture evenly on all the cut sides of the bread. In the skillet, heat the

remaining 2 tablespoons oil over high. Season the burgers on both sides with salt and pepper and add them to the pan. Reduce the heat to medium-high and cook the burgers until they are nicely browned (but not cooked through), about 2 minutes a side. Remove the skillet from the heat, spoon off and discard all but 1 tablespoon of the fat in the pan and top each burger with one-fourth of the onion mixture and one-fourth of the cheese. Pour the wine into the skillet and put it back on the burner. Reduce the heat to medium, cover the skillet and cook the burgers just until the cheese is melted, about 1 minute. Transfer the burgers to one of the French bread halves on each of the plates. Simmer the liquid, scraping the bottom of the skillet until it is syrupy, and spoon some of it over each burger. Top with the remaining French bread half and serve.

Quick pork schnitzel comes together in half an hour Associated Press

Schnitzels are often made with veal or chicken, but pork is a great alternative. Pounding out the cutlets makes them even thinner and more tender, so they cook up quickly, perfect for a weeknight meal.

Pork Schnitzel with Pickley Cucumber Salad

Associated Press

Serves 2 to 4 Start to finish: 30 minutes Pickley Cucumber Salad: 1 seedless cucumber, peeled if desired 1/2 red onion, thinly sliced 2 teaspoons Kosher salt 1 tablespoon white wine vinegar 1/2 teaspoon sugar 1 tablespoon minced fresh dill (preferable) or 1 teaspoon dried dill Freshly ground black pepper to taste Pork Schnitzel: 4 1/2 -inch (4 ounce) thick boneless pork chops 2/3 cup all-purpose flour 2/3 cup whole milk 1 cup Panko bread crumbs Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper 2 teaspoons finely minced fresh thyme 2 to 4 tablespoons olive oil

Slice the cucumber in half lengthwise, scoop out the seeds, and slice the cucumbers into thin half-moons. Place the sliced cucumber and the onion in a colander and toss with the salt. Let sit for 10 minutes, then rinse in very cold water and squeeze the vegetables to remove as much water as possible. Place the cucumber mixture in a clean dishtowel, roll up, and squeeze again. Stir together the vinegar, sugar, dill and pepper. Add the cucumber and onion and toss to combine. Hold in the fridge. Place each pork chop between two pieces of plastic wrap and use a rolling pin to pound the chops until they are of an even thickness between ¼- and 1/3-inch thick. Place the flour in a shallow bowl, the milk in another shallow bowl, and the Panko bread crumbs in a third shallow bowl. Season the flour and the milk lightly with salt and pepper. Stir the thyme into the Panko. Season the pork with salt and pepper, then dip each piece into the flour, shaking off any excess, and then into the milk, then the Panko, pressing so that the bread crumbs adhere to the pork. Place the breaded pork on a plate or wire rack. Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large skillet until hot. Cook the pork for about 3 minutes on each side until golden brown and just cooked through. When the pieces of pork are cooked, place them briefly on a paper towel-lined plate to drain. Serve the pork with the Quick Pickley Cucumber Salad.


Variety Comics

2B • Daily Corinthian

BEETLE BAILEY

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Crossword

RELEASE DATE– Wednesday, August 30, 2017

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

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Brigantine’s pair 6 Necklace globule 10 Touch gently 13 Sneezing sound 14 Grade for exceptional work 16 “Gross!” 17 Student’s allnighter 19 Links figure 20 Trek on a trail 21 Lots 22 Martini garnish 24 Keats’ “__ on Indolence” 25 Dessert with a caramelized top 27 Verbal 29 Former “Inside the NFL” host Dawson 30 Correctional 32 Issuer of bulls 35 Bridge support 39 Course of study that may include forensics 42 Trail 43 Sports figures 44 __ fit: tantrum 45 Tie-ending qtrs. 47 Boot 48 Like a mid-17th century English government 54 Letter after upsilon 57 “Spider-Man: Homecoming” actress Marisa 58 Je t’__: French “I love you” 59 Cookware material 60 Bygone U.K. record label 61 Car’s impactabsorbing structural feature 64 Suitable 65 Comic/writer/ activist Izzard 66 Solitary sort 67 Ed.’s acquisitions 68 Italian wine region 69 Latin clarifier DOWN 1 Virile 2 Bitterly pungent 3 Seal the deal

4 Heavy reading? 5 Signal of distress 6 Moisten while roasting 7 __ salts 8 Dress named for a letter 9 Electronic music’s Daft Punk, e.g. 10 Dilation target 11 Tequila source 12 Red billiard ball 15 [Bo-ring!] 18 Rank between marquis and viscount 23 __ fringe: fanatical extremists 25 Colombian city 26 __ cheese 28 Make emphatically, as a point 30 Angel dust, for short 31 Significant stretch 32 Sketchbook, e.g. 33 __ Navy: discount retailer 34 Comfy lounging wear

36 Like aggressive investments 37 IV units 38 “Listen up!” 40 Body part with a bridge 41 It’s just over a foot 46 __-baked potatoes 47 Film critic Pauline 48 Third-stringers 49 Escapades

50 Passes over 51 Praises highly 52 Maximum 53 Macao Science Center designer 55 Sharpens 56 Like noble gases 59 Polo maker that’s a Polo rival 62 Nutritional abbr. 63 Philanthropist Broad

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Jacob Stulberg ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

08/30/17

08/30/17

Couple is in a disjointed union WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: After more than 25 years of marriage, I still feel more alone being married to my husband than I would if I were actually alone. Throughout our marriage, he has maintained the same lifestyle he had before we got married. He often takes weekend outings and even vacations with his guy friends. There is nothing that is joint in this relationship: He refers to many possessions as his and refers to our friends by saying, “My friends.” He will decline or accept social invitations without even telling me about them. If he accepts an invitation, he tells me that he was invited and will go to the function excluding me. He turns his back to me to block me out of table conversations when we’re out to dinner with a group. I am not treated as a spouse or companion. If I want to have a conversation and ask any questions to start, he accuses me of nagging. He’s argumentative with other people, too. His motto is, “I’m right; you’re wrong.” This is not at all what I expected out of a life together. The loneliness and pain never leave. I just try to endure each day of the same thing over and over. — Missing Life and Happiness Dear Missing Life and Happiness: Give

Dear Annie

him some of his own medicine and you might end up healing yourself in the process. What I mean is to focus on you. Make new friends or strengthen your existing friendships. Go out for girls’ nights; maybe even plan a weekend away with them. Stop focusing on the things he’s not giving you, and start giving them to yourself. Dear Annie: I am a school psychologist with many years of experience and I read the letter from “Torn in Wisconsin” about her ADHD daughter and the problems she anticipated with an upcoming family reunion. While I would never assert that I can discern all the details of a situation and diagnose someone from a short letter, there were some aspects of the problem that suggested that this child could be on the autism spectrum. There is a good chance that her daughter is receiving school services for her identified disability. Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, she would have a category of eligibility, probably

flowing from a doctor’s diagnosis of ADHD right now. “Torn” should contact the school staff and ask for a meeting to discuss her daughter’s anxiety and social skill deficits. A school psychologist should be invited to the meeting to answer questions about whether there should be further assessment of her daughter. Referring “Torn” to reputable information about autism spectrum online might also help her feel supported against the expectations from her family. She doesn’t need them shaming her parenting skills. The field of autism is moving fast and not everyone out there is able to discern these distinctions. It is important though, and I hope we are getting better all the time. Your column could help here. — Amy S., District School Psychologist Dear Amy: Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge on this important subject. I’ve passed your message on to “Torn in Wisconsin,” and I’m printing it so it might help other families. To learn more about autism spectrum disorder, visit the National Institute of Mental Health website (https://www.nimh. nih.gov).


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • 3B

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4 WHEELS and tires,,225- 3 / $ 7 ) 2 5 0 5 2 & . ( 5 60-16 $280. %URZQ /HDWKHU :RRG 731.610.1112 $UP %RWWRP 1,&( 3$,56 RI PHQ V GUHVV SDQWV VL]H [ ZRUQ D IHZ WLPHV FDPH IURP REVERSE YOUR %HONV IRU DOO AD FOR $1.00

EXTRA

CHEST OF drawers set, Call 662-287-6111 /$',(6 VKRUW VOHHYHV 38inches x 46inches with a for details. SXOORYHU VKLUWV VL]H ; GENERAL HELP 0232 2 drawer end, brown, $140. IRU DOO 662.643.3565 SLATS, HEADBOARD, CAUTION! ADVERTISEfootboard, purple with white MENTS in this classifica FXELF LQFK EORFN D FORD RANGER Truck bed stars, 3-8 year old girls tion usually offer inforEROW PDLQV EHHQ VLWWLQJ cover, $170.00 bed, $100.00 662.643.3565 mational service of QHHGV WR EH FOHDQHG XS 662.643.3565 products designed to HDFK 2%2 67$1',1* +$< <RX FXW help FIND employment. INDUSTRIAL FAN 3ft x 3 EDOH )DUPLQJWRQ Before you send money 1/2 $170.00 $UHD SHU DSSUR[ to any advertiser, it is 662.643.3565 WR OE UROOV your responsibility to 2 FORCE womens bikes in verify the validity of the boxes, new, cruisers, 26 offer. Remember: If an inch, $120 each. THERMOS STAINLESS ad appears to sound 731.610.1112 Steel BBQ Grill w/o Pro“too good to be true�, pane Tank $25.00 then it may be! Inquir- 6+257 GUHVVHV IRU 662-662-1490. ies can be made by con- )RUPDO RU 3URP 1HZ RU tacting the Better Busi- DOPRVW QHZ ness Bureau a t WH[W RU FDOO :$17 72 PDNH FHUWDLQ WALKIN STROLLER, top 1-800-987-8280. \RXU DG JHWV DWWHQWLRQ" of the line, Eddie Bauer, $VN DERXW DWWHQWLRQ n e w , $ 1 5 0 . 0 0 4 WHEELS & tires, JHWWLQJ JUDSKLFV 0240 SKILLED TRADE 6 6 2 . 6 4 3 . 3 5 6 5 2 are brand new ',(6(/ 0(&+$1,& PIER IMPORTS, coffee ta225-60-16 0XVW KDYH \HDUV H[S REAL ESTATE FOR RENT ble, paid 320.00 asking $280.00 RU $160.00 662.643.3565 6626433565

s e l a S o t GUARANTEEDAu

UNFURNISHED 0610 APARTMENTS

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

( %522.( $376 %5 %$ ' : LFHPDNHU nation based on race, color, religion, sex, VT IW handicap, familial status or national origin, or inHOMES FOR 0620 RENT tention to make any such preferences, limi2BR, 1B.,TVRHA Wel- tations or discriminacome $600./$600. REF tion. REQ. New. Appl 287-6752 State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, BUSINESS or advertising of 0670 PLACES/OFFICES rental, real estate based on 2)),&( 63$&( )25 5(17 factors in addition to VT IW +:< those protected under federal law. We will not ($67 knowingly accept any MOBILE HOMES advertising for real es0675 FOR RENT tate which is in violation of the law. All per %5 % 0LOHV 6RXWK RI sons are hereby in.RVVXWK formed that all dwellings advertised are REAL ESTATE FOR SALE available on an equal opportunity basis.

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

0955 LEGALS NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S SALE

WHEREAS, on July 28, 2010, Jonathan Hersey, (Grantor), executed and delivered to Don Detter, trustee, a deed of trust on the property hereinafter described to secure payment of an indebtedness therein mentioned owing to Fort Financial Credit Union, Fort Wayne, Indiana, beneficiary, 727$//< 5(129$7(' which deed of trust is recor %5 % 64 )7 ded in the office of the Chan,1 &,7< /,0,76 cery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument Number 2010003241; and

HUD PUBLISHER’S 0734 LOTS & ACREAGE NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject DFUHV 3RVW 2IILFH to the Federal Fair 5G 0LFKLH WHEREAS, Fort Financial Housing Act which RU Credit Union, legal holder makes it illegal to adand owner of said deed of TRANSPORTATION vertise any preference, trust and the indebtedness selimitation, or discrimi-

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

REDUCED

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

2010 HYUNDIA ELANTRA RED, 4 DOOR NEW TIRES 111K MILES GOOD, CLEAN CAR

$4495.00

662-287-5661

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

$3900 obo.

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

93 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

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

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

1985 Mustang GT,

1989 Corvette

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

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

256-577-1349

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.

2008 Nissan Frontier 4 door crew cab, loaded, one owner, bought new in Corinth, MS, 117000 Miles, $14,900.00 OBO

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

LD O S

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


4B • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

0955 LEGALS cured thereby substituted Arch Bullard as trustee by instrument dated June 27th, 2017, and is recorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument Number 201702546; and

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

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

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS ARCH BULLARD

Commencing at the Northeast corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 4 South, Range 8 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, thence run West along the North boundary line of the Quarter Section 1670 feet, more or less, to the point where the East right-ofway line of Alcorn County Road 451 crosses the North boundary line of the said Quarter Section for the POINT OF BEGINNING. Run thence in a Southwesterly direction along the East boundary line of said road 330 feet, more or less, to the North right-of-away line of a paved County road sometimes referred to as the Rinehart Road, being Alcorn County Road 450; run thence in an Easterly direction along the North right-of-way line of said Rinehart Road 420 feet; thence run at a 90 degree angle from the paved County Road a distance of 300 feet, more or less, to the North Line of the Northwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 4 South, Range 8 East; thence run West 400 feet, more or less, to the East right-of-way line of Alcorn County Road 451 and the Point of Beginning.

Publication Dates: August 9, 2017; August 16, 2017; August 23, 2017; and August 30, 2017. 15994 SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE WHEREAS, on July 30, 1998, Wade E. Downs and Rita R. Downs executed a Deed of Trust to Frank A. Riley as Trustee for the benefit of BancorpSouth Bank, which Deed of Trust was recorded as/in Book 487, Page 652 in the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, BancorpSouth Bank, the holder of said Deed of Trust and the Note secured thereby, substituted Scot P. Goldsholl as Trustee in place of the afore-mentioned original Trustee, as authorized by the terms thereof, as evidenced by an instrument recorded as/in Instrument No. 201702006 in the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; 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, and the legal holder of said indebtedness, BancorpSigned, posted and South Bank, having requested published this 9th day of Au- the undersigned Substitute gust, 2017. Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said Deed of Trust for the purpose of raising the _/s/ Arch Bullard sums due thereunder, together with attorney's fees, Sub-

I will sell and convey only such title as is vested in me by said deed of Situated in the trust. County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

A part of the Northwest Quarter of Section 5, Township 4 South, Range 8 East, Alcorn County, MS described as follows:

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

er with attorney s fees, Sub legal holder and owner of WITNESS my signastitute Trustee's fees and exsaid deed of trust and the ture on this 9th day of Aupenses of sale. indebtedness secured gust, 2017. thereby substituted William NOW, THEREFORE, H. Davis, Jr. as trustee by I, Scot P. Goldsholl, Substi- /s/ Scot P. Goldsholl, Substitute instrument dated July 27, tute Trustee, will on Septem- Trustee 2017, and recorded as Inber 6, 2017, offer for sale at 1501 N. University Avenue, s t r u m e n t Number public outcry to the highest Suite 930 201702957, of the land rebidder for cash, within legal Little Rock, AR 72207-5238 cords of Alcorn County, hours (between the hours of Telephone No. (501) 664- Mississippi; and 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) at 4808 the South front door steps of WHEREAS, said inthe Alcorn County Court- THIS DOCUMENT PRE- debtedness has matured in house in Corinth, Alcorn PARED BY: its entirety and is now past County, Mississippi, the fol- Scot P. Goldsholl due, unpaid and in default, lowing-described property: Mickel Law Firm, P.A. the provisions of said deed 1501 N. UNIVERSITY of trust have been broken PROSPECT BUILDING, INDEXING by said grantor and have SUITE 930 INSTRUCTIONS: not been cured and the LITTLE ROCK, AR 72207 said beneficiary, the I n d e x u n d e r S o u t h w e s t Ph: (501) 664-4808 Fax: (501) present holder of said inQuarter of Section 18, Town- 664-0631 debtedness, has requesship 2 South, Range 7 East, Mickel Case No. 102100-3 ted the undersigned to foreAlcorn County, Mississippi. s.goldsholl@mickellaw.com close said deed of trust pursuant to the provisions Beginning at the Northwest PUBLISH ON THESE DATES: thereof to enforce payment Corner of the Southwest August 16, 2017 of said debt; Quarter of Section 18, Town- August 23, 2017 ship 2 South, Range 7 East, August 30, 2017 NOW, THEREAlcorn County, Mississippi; FORE, notice is hereby givthence run South 1320 feet to 16000 en that I, the undersigned an old fence and hedgerow; substituted trustee, on thence run along said fence September 07, 2017, at the and hedgerow North 89 deNOTICE OF south doors of the county grees East 730.4 feet to a SUBSTITUTED courthouse of Alcorn metal stake; thence run TRUSTEE’S SALE County, Mississippi, in the North 5 degrees 30 minutes City of Corinth, Mississippi, West 586.36 feet to the Point within legal hours for such of Beginning; thence run WHEREAS, on Au- sale, will offer for sale and North 5 degrees 30 minutes gust 31, 2016, Benny T. sell at public outcry to the West 106.5 feet; thence run Cooksey executed and de- highest bidder for cash the South 88 degrees 51 minutes livered to Keith Frazier, as said property conveyed to East 196.5 feet to the West trustee, a deed of trust on me by said deed of trust boundary of a gravel road; the property hereinafter de- described as follows: thence run Southerly along scribed to secure payment said West boundary 106.0 of an indebtedness therein Situated in the County of feet; thence run North 88 de- mentioned owing to Family Alcorn, State of Mississippi, grees 51 minutes West 175.2 Financial Services, Inc., to-wit: feet to the Point of Beginning, Corinth, Mississippi, beneficontaining 0.45 acres, more ciary, which deed of trust is 50 feet North and South by or less. recorded in the office of the 100 feet East and West off Chancery Clerk of Alcorn of the South side of the Title to the above described County, Mississippi, as In- Northwest Quarter (NW ¼) property is believed to be s t r u m e n t N u m b e r of Block 2, Nelson’s survey good, but I will convey only 2 0 1 6 0 4 3 2 4 ; a n d of West Corinth, in the such title as vested in me as Northeast Quarter (NE ¼) Substitute Trustee. WHEREAS, Family of Section 2, Township 2 Financial Services, Inc., South, Range 7 East in Allegal holder and owner of corn County Mississippi

s e l a S o t GUARANTEEDAu

0955 LEGALS corn County, Mississippi. I will sell and convey only such title as is vested in me by said deed of trust. Signed, posted and published this 16th day of August, 2017. /s/ William H. Davis, Jr._ William H. Davis, Jr. Substituted Trustee Publication Dates: August 16, 2017; August 23, 2017; August 30, 2017; September 06, 2017 Clayton O'Donnell PO Box 1613 Corinth, MS 38835 662-396-4808 16006

NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE S SALE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN WHEREAS, default has occurred in the performance of the covenants, terms and conditions of a Deed of Trust dated September 18, 2003, executed by DEBRA A CROWE AND MICHAEL L. CROWE, conveying certain real property therein described to WILLIAM H. GLOVER, JR., as Trustee, for Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Original Beneficiary, to secure the indebtedness therein described, as same appears of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi filed and recorded September 25, 2003, in Deed Book 636, Page 410; and WHEREAS, the beneficial interest of said Deed of Trust was transferred and assigned to U.S. Bank, National Association, as Trust-

0955 LEGALS ee, as successor-in-interest to Bank of America, N.A., as successor to LaSalle Bank National Association, as Trustee for EMC Mortgage Loan Trust 2006A, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-A ; and WHEREAS, the undersigned, Rubin Lublin, LLC has been appointed as Substitute Trustee; and NOW, THEREFORE, the holder of said Deed of Trust, having requested the undersigned so to do, as Substitute Trustee or his duly appointed agent, by virtue of the power, duty and authority vested and imposed upon said Substitute Trustee shall, on September 27, 2017 within the lawful hours of sale between 11:00AM and 4:00PM at the south steps of Alcorn County Courthouse proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash or certified funds ONLY, the following described property situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to wit: PARCEL NO. 5: COMMENCE AT AN IRON ROD AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 35, TOWNSHIP 3 SOUTH, RANGE 6 EAST, ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; THENCE RUN SOUTH 88 DEGREES 56 MINUTES 04 SECONDS EAST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND SOUTH BOUNDARY OF ELTON R. COLEY PROPERTY 674.42 FEET TO A 24 INCH OAK TREE AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF FORMERLY ALMOUS E. RODGERS PROPERTY; THENCE SOUTH 4 DEGREES 01 MINUTES 38 SECONDS WEST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUND-

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

2003 W/W HORSE TRAILER EXTRA TALL, SADDLE RACK, ESCAPE DOOR. FULL OR HALF REAR DOORS, GREAT SHAPE

$

200000

662-286-1519 662-287-9466

$ 0.00 662-416-5191

1956 FORD 600

PROGRESSIVE TURF MOWER 10FT GOOD SHAPE PRO FLEX 120 MODEL

good grass cutter

CALL 662-665-8838

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

$5000.00 $3500.00

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH EQUIPMENT POWER STEERING GOOD PAINT

Gravely zero turn, one owner, 650 obo.

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR .00 5000.00 6000

$$

662-286-6571 662-286-3924

5 FT. WOODS GROOMING MOWER

$1000.00 662-462-5525 662-415-9306 804 BOATS

FOR SALE

FOR SALE 7x19 heavy duty trailer 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

86 chevy 4 wdr, 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

120 HP ENGINE 17 FT.

$7000.00

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

1989 FOXCRAFT

15’ BASS BOAT 90 HP EVINRUDE

$1800 662-415-9461

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

1999 RANGER

1986 ASTROGLASS

57 Chevy 4 door.

14FT BOAT

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

$450.00 CALL 731-610-6853 ASK FOR DAVID SELMER, TN.

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.

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

for only $7995.

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

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

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

WITH TILT TRAILER 2 SEATS SMALL TROLLING MOTOR SPARE TIRE PADDLES ALL IN GOOD COND.

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

01 COBRA BOAT & TRAILER

1985 Hurricane-150 Johnson engine

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

Includes Custom Trailer Dual Axel-Chrome Retractable Canopy $4500.00

JOE R. MILLER 662-660-4151 662-423-8874

662-419-1587

$17,500. OBO

BOAT & TRAILER 13 YR OLD M14763BC BCMS 19.5 LONG BLUE & WHITE REASONABLY PRICED 662-660-3433


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • 5B

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ARY OF CURTIS A. OZBIRN PROPERTY 244.00 FEET TO AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 23 MINUTES 13 SECONDS EAST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUNDARY OF SAID OZBIRN PROPERTY 283.17 FEET TO AN IRON ROD FOR THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 21 MINUTES 53 SECONDS WEST ALONG SAID FENCE AND WEST BOUNDARY LINE 381.27 FEET TO AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH 70 DEGREES 09 MINUTES 23 SECONDS WEST, 705.00 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT IN THE CENTER OF COUNTY ROAD 500 (HIGHTOWN ROAD); THENCE NORTHWESTWARDLY WITH THE CENTER OF SAID COUNTY ROAD THE FOLLOWING TWO CALLS: (1) NORTH 7 DEGREES 21 MINUTES 08 SECONDS WEST, 83.89 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT IN CENTER OF SAID COUNTY ROAD, (2) NORTH 19 DEGREES 25 MINUTES 59 SECONDS WEST, 81.06 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT IN CENTER OF SAID COUNTY ROAD; THENCE LEAVING SAID COUNTY ROAD RUN NORTH 56 DEGREES 15 MINUTES 53 SECONDS EAST, 439.65 FEET TO AN IRON ROD AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF A CERTAIN 2.70 ACRE TRACT OF LAND; THENCE NORTH 57 DEGREES 17 MINUTES 58

SECONDS EAST, 401.25 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING AND CONTAINING 4.40 ACRES. A 40 FOOT WIDE ROAD AND UTILITY EASEMENT IS RESERVED BY GRANTORS ALONG THE WEST SIDE OF ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY. PARCEL NO. 6: COMMENCE AT AN IRON ROD AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 35, TOWNSHIP 3 SOUTH, RANGE 6 EAST, ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; THENCE RUN SOUTH 88 DEGREES 56 MINUTES 04 SECONDS EAST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND SOUTH BOUNDARY OF ELTON R. COLEY PROPERTY 674.42 FEET TO A 24 INCH OAK TREE AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF FORMERLY ALMOUS E. RODGERS PROPERTY; THENCE SOUTH 4 DEGREES 01 MINUTES 38 SECONDS WEST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUNDARY OF CURTIS A. OZBIRN PROPERTY 244.00 FEET TO AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 23 MINUTES 13 SECONDS EAST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUNDARY OF SAID OZBIRN PROPERTY 283.17 FEET TO AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 21 MINUTES 53 SECONDS WEST WITH SAID WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUNDARY 381.27 FEET TO AN IRON ROD AT THE

POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE SOUTH 1 DEGREE 26 MINUTES 30 SECONDS WEST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUNDARY OF OZIBIRN PROPERTY 332.05 FEET TO AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH 81 DEGREES 23 MINUTES 02 SECONDS WEST, 659.99 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT IN THE CENTER OF COUNTY ROAD 500 (HIGHTOWN ROAD); THENCE NORTH 0 DEGREES 40 MINUTES 16 SECONDS WEST WITH CENTER OF SAID COUNTY ROAD 191.52 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT, AS IT NOW EXISTS, IN THE CENTER OF SAID COUNTY ROAD AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF A CERTAIN 4.40 ACRE TRACT OF LAND; THENCE LEAVING SAID ROAD, NORTH 70 DEGREES 09 MINUTES 23

SECONDS EAST 705.00 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING AND CONTAINING 3.94 ACRES. A 40 FOOT WIDE ROAD AND UTILITY EASEMENT IS RESERVED BY GRANTORS ALONG THE WEST SIDE OF ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY. PARCEL NO. 7: COMMENCE AT AN IRON ROD AT THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 35, TOWNSHIP 3 SOUTH, RANGE 6 EAST, ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; THENCE RUN SOUTH 88 DEGREES 56 MINUTES 04 SECONDS EAST WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND SOUTH BOUNDARY OF ELTON R. COLEY PROPERTY 674.42 FEET TO A 24 INCH OAK TREE AT THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF FORMERLY ALMOUS E. RODGERS

PROPERTY; THENCE SOUTHWARDLY WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND WEST BOUNDARY OF CURTIS A. OZBIRN PROPERTY THE FOLLOWING 4 CALLS: (1) SOUTH 4 DEGREES 01 MINUTES 38 SECONDS WEST, 244.00 FEET TO AN IRON ROD, (2) SOUTH 0 DEGREES 23 MINUTES 13 SECONDS EAST, 283.17 FEET TO AN IRN ROD, (3) SOUTH 0 DEGREES 21 MINUTES 53 SECONDS WEST, 381.27 FEET TO AN IRON ROD. (4) SOUTH 1 DEGREE 26 MINUTES 30 SECONDS WEST, 332.05 FEET TO AN IRON ROD, AS IT NOW EXISTS, AT THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUE SOUTH 0 DEGREES 17 MINUTES 43 SECONDS EAST, 294.72 FEET TO A 2 INCH IRON PIPE AT THE SOUTHEAST

CORNER OF FORMERLY ALMOUS E. RODGERS PROPERTY AS IT NOW EXISTS; THENCE WESTWARDLY WITH WIRE FENCE LINE AND THE SOUTH BOUNDARY OF SAID RODGERS PROPERTY THE FOLLOWING 2 CALLS, (1) NORTH 89 DEGREES 41 MINUTES 44 SECONDS WEST, 396.93 FEET TO AN IRON ROD; THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 35 MINUTES 37 SECONDS WEST, 254.87 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT IN THE CENTER OF COUNTY ROAD 500 (HIGHTOWN ROAD) AS IT NOW EXISTS; THENCE NORTH 0 DEGREES 40 MINUTES 15 SECONDS WEST WITH CENTER OF SAID COUNTY ROAD 200.00 FEET TO A STEEL BOLT AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF A CERTAIN 3.94 ACRE TRACT OF LAND; THENCE LEAV-

ING SAID COUNTY ROAD, NORTH 81 DEGREES 23 MINUTES 02 SECONDS EAST 659.99 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING AND CONTAINING 3.67 ACRES. A 40 FOOT WIDE ROAD AND UTILITY EASEMENT IS RESERVED BY GRANTORS ALONG THE WEST SIDE OF ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY. BEING THE SAME PROPERTY AS CONVEYED TO MICHAEL I. CROWE, SR., AND DEBRA A. CROWE IN A WARRANTY DEED FILED FOR RECORD ON AUGUST 12, 1997 IN BOOK 288 AT PAGE 700702. ALSO DESCRIBED BY STREET ADDRESS AS: 124 COUNTY ROAD 500, RIENZI, MS 38865. PROPERTY ADDRESS: The street address of the property is believed to be 124 COUNTY RD 500, RIENZI, MS 38865. In the

event of any discrepancy between this street address and the legal description of the property, the legal description shall control. Title to the above described property is believed to be good, but I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Substitute Trustee. THIS LAW FIRM IS ATTEMPTING TO COLLECT A DEBT. ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. Rubin Lublin, LLC, Substitute Trustee 428 North Lamar Blvd, Suite 107 Oxford, MS 3 8 6 5 5 www.rubinlublin.com/property-listings.php Tel: (877) 813-0992 Fax: (404) 6015846 PUBLISH: 08/30/2017, 09/06/2017, 09/13/2017, 09/20/2017 Ad #122189 08/30/2017, 09/06/2017, 09/13/2017, 09/20/2017 16010

0114 HAPPY ADS

HAROLD STRACHAN is turning 90!

Property Directory FOR SALE OR RENT 186 CR 1040 Booneville, 13 years old, 8.9 acres, 4540 heated sq. Ft., open floor plan, 4 bedrooms 4 baths, 2 half baths, living room w/ gas log fireplace and built-ins, kitchen w/ lg island and walk in pantry, formal dining room, craft room, sunroom, office/laundry room, play/bonus room, 700 sq ft walkin floored attic storage, hardwood tile and carpet floors, 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 fish pond. For more details and appt. call 662-728-1604 or 416-1979

Join us to honor and celebrate him Sunday, September 3, 2017 Indian Springs Church 541 CR 300 Glen, MS Reception 1:00-2:30 p.m. (No gifts please but cards or notes with your favorite memory or story about Harold will be welcome) 0542 BUILDING MATERIALS

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

D L SO 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

$30,000.00 662-415-8335

We Haul:

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

Loans $20-$20,000

each

• • • • • • •

li. ft.

per sheet

...

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

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

289 $ 19 Corrugated Metal 1 $ 95 4x8 Cement Siding 10 $ 95 4x10 Cement Siding 14 $ Crossties 1095 $ Paneling 1295 .............

805 CONFEDERATE ST.

& Business

New Shipment of Wood Look Porcelain Tile! $

PRIME LOCATION!

HOUSE FOR SALE

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

Labor Day Savings! 2 X 4 X 92 5/8” Stud .....

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

PRIME OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT

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

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.

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

40 Years

per sheet

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

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

per sheet

3/8” Engineered $ Hardwood.................................

169 Tile 69¢ ¢-$ 19 Laminate Floor From 79 1 $ 00-$ Pad for Laminate Floor 5 1000 $ Area Rugs 6995 $ Handicap Commodes 12995 $ 7/16 OSB 1195 $ 3/4” Plywood 2195 $ 1/2” Plywood 1650 $ 95 25 Year 3 Tab Shingle 46 sq. ft.

sq. ft.

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

sq. ft.

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

.......

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

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

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

CHIROPRACTIC, LLC

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

.

35 Year Architectural

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

5595

$

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

21500

$

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

S&M

CLEANING SERVICE

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL OVER 15 YEARS EXP. LICENSED AND INSURED

CALL MELANIE FOR AN APPT. 769-226-6830

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


6B • Wednesday, August 30, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

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deed of trust, The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A. as successor in interest to all permitted successors and assigns of The JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Trustee for Specialty Underwriting and Residential Finance Trust Mortgage Loan AssetBacked Certificates, Series 2003-BC1, the legal holder of said indebtedness, having requested the undersigned Substitute Trustee in said deed of trust, will on September 20, 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 main front door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County in Corinth, Mississippi, to the highest and best bidder for cash the following described property situated in Alcorn County, Mississippi, to wit:

76-80.

0955 LEGALS SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE WHEREAS, on July 9, 2002, Charles Gregory Quinn and Lisa Russell Quinn executed a certain deed of trust to Mitchell L. Heffernan, Trustee for the use and benefit of Mortgage Lenders Network USA, Inc., which deed of trust is of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn, County, state of Mississippi, in Book 595, Page 580; and WHEREAS, The Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company, N.A. as successor in interest to all permitted successors and assigns of The JPMorgan Chase Bank, as Trustee for Specialty Underwriting and Residential Finance Trust Mortgage Loan AssetBacked Certificates, Series 2003-BC1, the current holder and/or assignee, substituted Jauregui & Lindsey, LLC as Trustee by instrument recorded in the Chancery Clerk’s Office on March 30, 2017 in Instrument number, 201701296; and

The land referred to in this commitment is described as follows:

Notwithstanding the above description, said acreage is for legal purposes only and does not guarantee the quantity of land described herein.

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Interested parties are invited to submit a proposal in accordance with this request to the The Alliance at 502 Wick Street, Corinth, MS 38834, not later than 10:00 a.m. on September 13, 2017. Proposals shall be marked on the outside as “Proposal for Engineering Services/FY 2017 ARC�. Information concerning the proposals may be obtained by calling (662)728-6248 extension 301.

This being the same property conveyed by Leroy Hopkins to Charles Gregory Quinn and Lisa Russell Quinn dated 05/08/92 filed in Book 260 on Page 487 and recorded in the Office of the County Chancery Clerk of Alcorn The contract will be awarCounty, Mississippi. ded to the responsible offeror whose proposal is within the competitive I will convey only range and determined to be such title as vested in me the most advantageous to as Substituted Trustee. the program, with price, and other factors conJauregui & Lindsey, LLC sidered. The factors to be Substituted Trustee considered in evaluation of Jauregui & Lindsey, LLC proposals and their relative 244 Inverness Center Dr importance are set forth beSte 200 low. Birmingham, AL 35242 (205) 970-2233 The Contractor shall perform all the necessary enPublication dates: August gineering services to prop23, 2017, August 30, 2017, erly carry-out the activities September 6, 2017, in the project, in accordSeptember 13, 2017 ance with State and ARC 16013 prescribed rules, regulations, policies, and State law. The project includes REQUEST FOR the following activities. PROPOSALS TO PROVIDE 1) Prepare plans and ENGINEERING specifications for project inSERVICES cluding all services re-

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requirements are met in ence of the firm. This information should include contract preparation). types of project activities 3) Assist in bid opening undertaken. (40 points) and prepare bid tabulation 3) Capacity for Perform4) Conduct pre-construc- ance-Identify the number tion conference with con- and title of staff available to tractor, and staff represent- be assigned to provide seratives, documenting files vices. (20 points) with minutes of meeting. All proposals will be rated 5) Conduct work in-pro- on the above system to degress inspections giving termine the best offeror. periodic reports to The Alliance and approving any Proposals will be reviewed and all partial payment re- by the Alliance Economic using the above selection quests. criteria the Board will as6) Provide all services sign points to each criteria necessary for execution of based on the content of the the project including con- proposal. Negotiations will sultations, surveys, soil in- be conducted to determine vestigations, supervision, a mutually satisfactory contravel, “as built� or record tract with the firm receiving drawings, rights of way as- the highest accumulated sistance, testing, construc- points, as rated by the tion engineering and incid- Board. If a mutually satisfactory contract cannot be ental costs. negotiated with the firm, the 7) Provide the recipient, firm will be requested to ARC, or any authorized submit a best and final ofrepresentatives access to fer in writing; and if a conall records of the project. tract cannot be reached after the best and final of8) Maintain all records for fer, negotiations will be initi3 years after project is ated with the subsequently listed firm in order of rating. closed. This procedure will be conThose desiring considera- tinued until a mutually sattion should submit propos- isfactory contract has been als by the time and date negotiated. In addition to above stated and must in- reaching a fair and reasonable price for the required clude the following: work, the objective of negotiations will be to reach an 1) Qualifications- List of agreement on the proviqualifications of each staff sions of the proposed conperson assigned to project. tract including scope and extent of work, and other essential requirements. (40 points)

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proposals. Clayton Stanley, President The Alliance PO Box 1089 Corinth, MS 38835 662-287-5269 2t 8/23, 8/30/2017 16015

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232 (601) 981-9299 377 County Road Unit 512 Corinth, MS 38834 11-002005BD Publication Dates: August 30, September 6, 13 and 20, 2017 16022

IN THE MATTER OF THE I N T H E C H A N C E R Y COURT OF ALCORN ESTATE OF COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI NATHANIEL DAVID DIXON, DECEASED RE: LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF CAUSE NO. 17-361-02 DAVID E. ESSARY, NOTICE TO CREDITORS DECEASED Letters of Administration having been granted on 26th day of July, 2017, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi to the undersigned Administrator of the Estate of Nathaniel David Dixon, Deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to the Clerk of this Court for probate and registration according to law, within ninety (90) days from the first publication of this notice, or they will be forever barred.

NO. 17-406-02 NOTICE TO CREDITORS

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

BROSELABORDAYSELL-A-THON!

2002 CHEVROLET

2004 CHEVROLET

1992 GMC

2002 FORD

2014 FORD

2010 FORD

2002 GMC

1993 PONTIAC

SILVERADO

TRAILBLAZER LS 4x4

SIERRA SLE

ESCAPE XLT 4x4

ESCAPE SE

MUSTANG CONV.

ENVOY SLE 4x4

BONNEVILLE SE

STK#23247U

STK#23246U

STK#23244U

STK#23234U SUNROOF!

STK#23233A

STK#23230U

STK#23226U

STK#23245U

SPORTSIDE V8!

V6! LEATHER!

XTRA CLEAN! LOCAL TRADE! 2013 JEEP

2015 JEEP GRAND

2013 NISSAN

WRANGLER X 4x4

CHEROKEE LTD

JUKE S

STK#23224U

STK#23243U NAV!

LOTS OF EXTRAS!

SUNROOF! LEATHER!

STK#22875U AUTO!

*$

8,997

2016 CHRYSLER

*$

XTRA CLEAN! SHARP! 2005 DODGE

*$

2,999

1,499

2015 DODGE

2014 DODGE

2014 FORD

DART SXT

GRAND CARAVAN ANNIV.

F150 XLT 4x4

TOWN&COUNTRY TOUR GRAND CARAVAN SXT

STK#23101A LEATHER!

STK#23150U

STK#22820A

DVD VIDEO! STOW-N-GO!

MUST SEE! POWER SLIDERS!

RALLYE PKG! NAVIGATION!

STK#22899U

*$

STK#23129U XTRA CLEAN!

10,993 LOW MILES!

2009 CHEVROLET

2017 CHRYSLER

2014 HONDA

2015 JEEP

2014 NISSAN

2016 NISSAN

2013 NISSAN

2015 NISSAN

TAHOE LT

PACIFICA TOUR-L

ACCORD SPORT

PATRIOT SPORT

FRONTIER PRO-4X 4x4

MAXIMA SV

ROGUE S

TITAN SV CREW

STK#22362U

*$

STK#23227E

LEATHER! NAVIGATION!

10,999

2014 TOYOTA

STK#23191U

XTRA CLEAN! LOW MILES!

2008 JEEP GRAND

COROLLA LE PLUS CHEROKEE LAREDO

STK#22993U

*$

STK#23209U

*$

13,490

STK#23032A

STK#23093U NAVIGATION!

LEATHER! SUNROOF! ROCKFORD SOUND!

STK#23047U LEATHER! NAVIGATION!

STK#23173U SPECIAL EDITION!

LOW MILES! LOW MILES!

STK#22603E

NAVIGATION! ROCKFORD SOUND!

2008 PONTIAC

G6

CHECK OUT OUR ENTIRE INVENTORY! BROSECHRYSLER.COM

STK#23202U

8,997 LOW MILES!

*: ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAX & TITLE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN. PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE $399. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAY ALREADY BE SOLD. BHPH PROGRAM EXCLUDED. PRIOR DEALS OR OFFERS EXCLUDED. SEE SALESPERSON FOR WARRANTY COMPONENT COVERAGE ON NISSAN CPO UNITS. DEDUCTIBLE AND RESTRICTIONS APPLY. GOOD TILL 9/4/17.

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

NOTICE is hereby given that Letters Testamentary have been on this day granted to the underSituated in the City of Corsigned, Christina Lynn inth, County of Alcorn, Essary, on the estate of State of Mississippi, to-wit: David E. Essary, deceased, by the Chancery Lot 43 of Shiloh Ridge SubCourt of Alcorn County, division, according to the Mississippi, and all permap or plat of said subdivisons having claims sion recorded in the Chanagainst said estate are recery Clerk`s Office of Alquired to have the same corn County, Mississippi, in probated and registered Map Records Book 4 at by the Clerk of said Court pages 54. quired for design and enwithin ninety (90) days This the 26th day of WHEREAS, DeThis is a Request for Pro- gineering phases of project after the date of the first July, 2017. fault having been made in SUBJECT TO the protect- posals to provide Engineerincluding preliminary, envirpublication of this notice the terms and conditions of ive covenants applicable to ing Services for Appalachionmental, and final design. or the same shall be Tim Dixon said deed of trust and the said subdivision, which an Regional Commission forever barred. The first TIM DIXON entire debt secured thereby have been recorded in the RailHub South Industrial 2) Construct and distribAdministrator of the Estate day of the publication of having been declared to be Chancery Clerk`s Office of Park Improvements, Site & ute bid packets (insuring 2) Experience- Informa- The Alliance reserves the this notice is the 16th day of due and payable in accord- Alcorn County, Mississippi, Transportation project for that all Federal and State tion regarding the experi- right to reject any and all of August, 2017. Nathaniel David Dixon, ance with the terms of said in Deed Book 244 at pages The Alliance, Corinth, MS. requirements are met in ence of the firm This in proposals Deceased AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES WITNESS my signature on this 11th day of AuRebecca Phipps 0848 gust, 2017. PO Box 992 Corinth, MS 38835 CHRISTINA LYNN ESO OPEN LABOR O DAY! • OPEN O LABOR O DAY! • OPEN O LABOR O DAY! • OPEN O LABOR O DAY! • OPEN O LABOR O DAY! • OPEN O LABOR O DAY! 286-9211 SARY, EXECUTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF DAVID 3t 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/2017 E. ESSARY, DECEASED 16014

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

BRAND NEW

2017 ALTIMA 2.5S

AT BROSE AUTOPLEX

2

AT THIS

PRICE!

BRAND NEW

2017 VERSA SV SEDAN

w/ AUTOMATIC, AIR, POWER PKG & MUCH MO ORE!

w/ POWER DRIVER SEAT!

^^RATED 39 MPG HIGHWAY!

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

17,999

*#^^^$

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

SA ALES PRICE.....*^^^$17,999

#INCLUDES $1000 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW

2017 SENTRA S

3

AT THIS

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

SA ALES PRICE.....*^^^$13,750

13,750

*^^^$

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

7

AT THIS

PRICE!

BRAND NEW

2017 FRONTIER SV KINGCAB 2WD

2

AT THIS

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

SA ALES PRICE.....*^^^$18,776

w/ AIR, POWER PKG, CRUISE, ALLOYS, BLUETOOTH & MUCH MORE!

18,776

*^^^$

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

^^RATED 37 MPG HIGHWAY!

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

14,944

*#^^^$

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

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

BRAND NEW

2017 ROGUE S

8

AT THIS

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

SA ALES PRICE.....*^^^$19,464

*#^^^$

19,464

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

#INCLUDES $500 NMAC FINANCE BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

*:ALL DEALS & PAYMENTSARE PLUSTAX &TITLE.PLEASE UNDERSTANDTHESE ARE NOT INCLUDED INTHE PRICE OR PAYMENT SHOWN.DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE NOT INCLUDED.ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS,MANUFACTURES’ REBATES,INCLUDING ANY HOLIDAY BONUS CASH,ALREADYAPPLIEDTO PURCHASE PRICE UNLESS NOTED OTHERWISE.PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY; NO DEALERTRANSFERS ATTHESE PRICES.ACTUALVEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE.DUETO PUBLICATION DEADLINES VEHICLE MAYALREADY BE SOLD.RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAYAFFECT REBATESALLOWED; SOME PRICES SHOWN ARE FOR RESIDENTS OF 38372,38375,OR (&) 38852WHICH DIFFER FROM COUNTY TO COUNTY DUE TO NISSANS DESIGNATED MARKETAREA (DMA)ALIGNMENT WHICH MAYAFFECT NISSAN INCENTIVES,WHICH BROSE HAS NO CONTROL OVER. PAYMENTS FIGURED @ 84MO,5.5APR,TIER 1-2 CREDIT RATING,W.A.C.& T.ONLY.SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. #:INCLUDESTHE NMAC FINANCE REBATEWHICH REQUIRES YOUTO FINANCETHE PURCHASE THRU NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN.^: SEE SALESPERSON FOR COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAM DETAILS. CERTAINTERMS & CONDITIONS MAYAPPLY.^^PRICING INCLUDES BROSE TRADE-IN BONUS WHICH REQUIRES YOUTO HAVE A MOTORIZEDVEHICLE TRADE INTO GET THE LOWEST PRICEADVERTISED.SEE SALESPERSON DETAILS.DEALS GOOD UNTIL 9.4.17.

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY! • OPEN LABOR DAY!

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE WHEREAS, on February 8, 2008, Tommy B. Bonds and Sandra A. Bonds, Husband and Wife executed a certain deed of trust to Emmett James House or Bill R. McLaughlin, Trustee for the benefit of Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage which deed of trust is of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, State of Mississippi in Instrument No. 200800856; and WHEREAS, Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage has heretofore substituted J. Gary Massey, as Trustee by instrument dated February 10, 2011 and recorded in the aforesaid Chancery Clerk's Office in Instrument No. 201100732; 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, Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage, the legal holder of said indebtedness, having requested the undersigned Substituted Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust and for the purpose of raising the sums due thereunder, together with attorney's fees, trustee's fees and expense of sale. NOW, THEREFORE, I, J. Gary Massey, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, will on September 27, 2017 offer for sale at public outcry and sell within legal hours (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the South Main Door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, located at Corinth, Mississippi, to the highest and best bidder for cash the following described property situated in Alcorn County, State of Mississippi, to-wit: Situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, and lying and being located in the Southwest Quarter of Section 32, Township 2, Range 7, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the Southwest corner of the East Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 31, Township 2, Range 7 run thence East along the North boundary line of Wheeler Grove Road and along the South boundary of said Quarter Section 1264.25 feet; thence continue to run East along Wheeler Grove Road North right-of-way 550.75 feet to the true point of beginning; thence run North 350 feet; thence run West 235.7 feet; thence South 350 feet, more or less, to the North boundary line of Wheeler Grove Road and the South boundary line of said Quarter Section; thence run East 235.7 feet to the true point of beginning. I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 23 rd day of August, 2017. J. Gary Massey SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Donald Downs PO Box 1618 Corinth, MS 38835 287-8088 3t 8/16, 8/23, 8/30/2017 16005 MISSISSIPPI PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI 2016-UA-271 CITY OF WALNUT GM003012500 IN RE: APPLICATION OF TOWN OF WALNUT, MISSISSIPPI FOR A CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC CONVENIENCE AND NECESSITY AUTHORIZING IT TO CONSTRUCT, OPERATE AND MAINTAIN A GAS SYSTEM IN A SPECIFIED AREA IN ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI ORDER SETTING HEARING THIS DAY this cause came on before the Mississippi Public Service Commission which appearing for good cause shown finds that this matter should be set for hearing on September 11, 2017. IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED that this cause is set for hearing on Monday, September 11, 2017 at 10:00 a.m. in the boardroom of Walnut Town Hall located at 621 Main Street, Walnut, MS 38683. ORDERED by the Commission on this, the 25th day of August, 2017. Katherine Collier Executive Secretary Permenter & Elliott 105 East Spring St. Ripley, MS 38663 662-837-8175 1t 8/30/17 16026

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