092117 daily corinthian e edition

Page 1

Sports Inside SEC football

Prentiss County Bridge replacement replaces highway

McNairy County Corinth man beaten, robbed over weekend

Page 16

Page 3

Page 3

Thursday Sept. 21,

2017

75 cents

Daily Corinthian

Humid Today

Tonight

90

69

20% chance of thunderstorms

Vol. 121, No. 226

• Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

County delays pay increases to Feb. 1 ized, requests for authorization to go ahead with pay increases have been made by several departments, but the Board of Supervisors on Monday voted to delay any pay increases until Feb. 1. That is when cash flow will begin to pick up with pay-

BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Alcorn County is pushing pay raises back several months as the county keeps an eye on finances. With the budget for the upcoming fiscal year now final-

ment of property taxes. In another matter of county finances, the board had further discussion on the possibility of hiring an accountant outside the firm that performs the county’s audits to prepare the county’s financial statements.

Golden Bear rules

The board wants to look at a few options and again delayed action. Board Attorney Bill Davis said that while there is nothing inappropriate about the current arrangement, the state auditor’s office will eventually make

a recommendation that a separate auditor be engaged to prepare the financial statements. The board also voted to send a letter to its auditing firm requesting completion of the

Bishop playground construction nears BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

New playground equipment is on its way and fun can’t be far behind. C.A.R.E. Advisory Board member Orma Smith said he has been notified that the new playground equipment is expected to arrive in the next day or two for E.S. Bishop Memorial Park. Construction should begin immediately after the anticipated arrival of equipment and materials. The new playground was funded by a community project — that managed to raise the money in 30 days. The project was announced at a community meeting on Staff photo by Zack Steen

Alcorn Central High School Principal Brandon Quinn talked to Alcorn School District board members at a recent meeting. Quinn is at the helm of many positive changes taking place at the county school.

School adopts ‘Make it Better’ BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

Average is officially over. It’s the new motto at Alcorn Central High School where fourth-year principal Brandon Quinn is making big changes that’s affecting both students and teachers. Three years ago, the former basketball coach created a leadership team of teachers and administrators and the group began making improvements at Bear Country. “We created a new vision with four core values and introduced them as the new normal around the school,” said Quinn. “Make It Better” encourages

teachers to make everyday better than the one before, “Take It Personally” reminds staffers that everything they do must be taken personally, “Always Collaborate” asks teachers to work together and “How to be

Please see COUNTY | 2

Irreplaceable” encourages staff members to empower their peers through collaboration, leaving a legacy. “We also encourage fitness and staying healthy and ask them to always be open to change,” said Quinn. Alcorn Central’s new way of life started changing the county school’s culture. “It’s all about creating a positive environment for all students, to encourage them and celebrate them everyday,” said Quinn. “We learned that we had to get rid of outside distractions and focus on our kids.” Please see CHANGES | 2

June 9 by Smith, who announced the project which would install a much-needed new playground at E.S. Bishop Memorial Park. The project’s estimated cost is $45,000 and the C.A.R.E. Foundation seeded the fundraising with a check for $15,000, which Smith had said was the “second single biggest check C.A.R.E.’s ever written.” The public had 30 days to raise the remaining $30,000. The community rose to the challenge and at the project deadline, organizers reported that the community donations to date have exceeded the original challenge by $5,000. Please see BISHOP | 2

KCB hosting annual Hazardous Waste Day BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

This Saturday is the time to safely dispose of unwanted paint, oil, cleaners and other hazardous wastes to keep them out of the landfill. The Household Hazardous Waste Day will be held from 8 a.m. until 12 noon at the Alcorn County Transfer Station off of South Harper Road at 2610 Getwell Road. As in past years, the event will be set up for vehicles to drive through and have items unloaded for proper disposal by professionals. It is free to the public for household waste. No commercial waste is accepted.

“It’s an extremely valuable event for our citizens to be able to get rid of hazardous wastes that you don’t typically throw in the trash can and roll out to the street,” said The Alliance’s G.T. McCullough, who now coordinates Keep Corinth-Alcorn Beautiful activities. “We are excited to put it on and excited to help the community in this way.” Electronics will again be accepted, with a limit this year of three televisions per vehicle. Tires are limited to 10 per vehicle. Electronics and chemicals Please see WASTE | 2

Crossroads Museum offers free admission opening their doors for free of charge for Museum Day Live! on Saturday. “Being able to partner with the Smithsonian on anything is a great honor for the staff and members of the Crossroads Museum,” said museum president Cathy Wood. “We look forward to seeing new Smithsonian Magazine subscribers in the area taking advantage of the free day and come see what

BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

The Crossroads Museum will partner with the Smithsonian for the second year in row to offer free admission this weekend. Participating museums across the country will emulate the spirit of the Smithsonian Institution’s Washington, D.C.-based facilities, which offer free admission every day, by

Corinth’s local museum has to offer.” Normally $5 for adults and $3 for seniors, military and students, the Crossroads Museum will charge no admission on Saturday to those who present a Museum Day Live! ticket. Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Museum Day Live! ticket

25 years ago

10 years ago

A state review board OKs the nomination of downtown Corinth for the National Register of Historic Places. The nomination must now be approved by the U.S. Department of the Interior.

A special exhibit at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery, Corinth Library and Crossroads Museum celebrates the work of the Mary Mary Kirk Adams Art Club of the 1960s.

Dr. Erica’s Laser Aesthetic Centers Erica Noyes, MD

Please see MUSEUM | 2

2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU Corinth & Pickwick • Botox & Fillers • Sunspots & • Massage (LMT1914) • Facials • Skin Tightening Rosacea • & More • Vein, Hair Removal • Mani / Pedi

(877) LAZR-SPA

662-284-9600

NEW CORINTH LOCATION 102 NORMAN ROAD CORINTH, MS

What if YOU could lose 20 pounds this Month?

YOU CAN!!

844-LITE-YOU 662-331-5981


Local/Nation

2 • Daily Corinthian

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Trump: GOP health bill short of votes BY ERICA WERNER Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump said Wednesday the Republicans’ last-resort “Obamacare” repeal effort remains two or three votes short, forecasting days of furious lobbying ahead with a crucial deadline looming next week. The legislation by Sens. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina would repeal major pillars of former President Barack Obama’s health law, replacing them with block grants to states to design their own health care programs. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is trying to round up 50 votes to pass the Please see BILL | 5

COUNTY CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

2016 audit by the end of this year. Board members believe potential grant funding is being lost because of audits not being up to date. The state auditor’s investigation was a major factor in the audits getting behind schedule, according to county officials. In other business: • The board agreed to pursue further study on the possibility of LED lighting at the courthouse and justice center, which is expected to provide cost savings. • Youth Court counselor Beth Pharr presented a request for a stipend for an after-hours person to respond to calls. • The August tax settlement is $198,888.29 to general county; $57,161 to roads; and $14,036.25 to bridge and culvert. • The regional correctional facility’s billing for August is $220,938.46 for the housing of Mississippi Department of Corrections inmates; $7,880 for MDOC inmates in county jail beds; $50,375 for county jail inmates; $558.70 for juvenile detention center meals; $31,000 for Corinth Police Department inmates; $2,250 for Farmington Police Department inmates; $4,300 for medical reimbursement; $564.64 for inmate cable service; $724.27 for Corinth inmates’ pharmaceutical expenses; and $1,475 for the housing of Tippah County inmates. The month’s total is $320,066.07.

Across The State Associated Press

Gulf Coast deputy shot with his own weapon resigns GULFPORT — A Mississippi Gulf Coast sheriff’s deputy who was shot with his own weapon in July has resigned. Harrison County Sheriff Troy Peterson told local news media Wednesday that the deputy resigned Sept. 1, after a period on paid leave. The deputy, whose name is being withheld, claimed that a man exited a pickup truck and shot him on July 28. The deputy told officials that he and the assailant struggled over the deputy’s gun. The bullet did not pierce his protective vest. An investigation showed the deputy was shot with his own handgun and there was no evidence anyone was present. Officials have never said whether they believe the deputy shot himself. The shooting promoted a widespread manhunt. Peterson said an inquiry by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation continues.

Tractor rig hits historic bridge that’s now closed VANCLEAVE — The historic Red Creek Bridge will remain closed while state engineers inspect it following a crash that damaged its steel trusses and left a hole in the bridge deck. The Sun Herald reported Mississippi Highway Patrol spokesman Chase Elkins said a track hoe was being pulled by a 1978 GMC Brigadier that crashed into the bridge Tuesday morning. The track hoe was pulled off its trailer onto its side. Significant damages to the bridge north of Vancleave mean commuters will have to make what Mississippi Department of Transportation engineer Kelly Castleberry describes as a significant detour. The bridge, built in 1959, is known for its steel trusses, which

give it a distinctive look in bridgework from that era. It has been deemed eligible for the National Register of Historic Places.

Attorney arrested for smuggling contraband into jail TUPELO — A Mississippi attorney accused of smuggling contraband into a jail has been arrested. News outlets reported Jeffrey Waldo was arrested Tuesday and charged with introducing contraband into a correctional facility. The arrest was made shortly after the Lee County Sheriff’s Department revealed in a Facebook post that Waldo was wanted. Lee County Sheriff Jim Johnson said Waldo is accused of bringing several banned items to the Lee County Adult Jail while meeting with his client Friday. Corrections officers later found the items while searching the inmate. The type of contraband has not been revealed.

Mississippi has the license plate blues for 1 more year BILOXI — Mississippi will have the license plate blues for one more year. That is, its license plates featuring a picture of blues legend BB King’s guitar “Lucille” and the phrase “Birthplace of America’s Music” will remain unchanged because the state legislature didn’t allocate funds to replace them. The Sun Herald reported the state Department of Revenue was scheduled to release new plates in October, as it does every five years, but no money was appropriated. Department spokeswoman Kathy Waterbury said she doesn’t know when a new image will be introduced, but the department will take up the issue with the legislature during the next session. The blue guitar plate replaced the Biloxi Lighthouse plate, which debuted in 2007 and paid homage to the resilience of the coast after

MUSEUM CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

is available for download at Smithsonian.com/museumday. Visitors who present the Museum Day Live! ticket will gain free entrance for two at participating venues Saturday. One ticket per email address is permitted. The museum will also be the site of the Daily Corinthian Community Yard Sale on Saturday from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. “Hopefully folks will come out for free admis-

Hurricane Katrina.

Seaweed as fuel? Federal grants help fund research OCEAN SPRINGS — A federal grant will help pay for scientists at the University of Southern Mississippi do research on the uses of seaweed. The U.S. Department of Energy awarded the school two grants totaling $1 million. One will pay for research on using seaweed as fuel. The other is to develop a ranching paddock for Sargassum seaweed to help improve ocean health. The grants were announced by the chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Republican Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi. He said he commends the university for promoting research that could help the economy and the environment.

1 escaped inmate caught, 1 remains at large JACKSON — One of two inmates who escaped from a Mississippi prison is back in custody, and authorities are still searching for the other. The Mississippi Department of Corrections said 41-year-old James R. Sanders was captured Tuesday, and 22-year-old Ryan Young remained at large Wednesday. The two men escaped late Sunday or early Monday from the Mississippi State Penitentiary at Parchman. The state offered a $10,000 reward for information leading to the capture of both men. The department did not say where Sanders was caught. Sanders was sentenced to life in prison in 2000 after being convicted of murder in Lafayette County. Young was sentenced to 40 years in prison in 2015 after being convicted of burglarizing a vehicle and a residence, grand larceny in Claiborne County.

WASTE sion to the museum and, also, check out the yard sale items,” said Wood. “Those who are setup at the yard sale are helping us Save the Fire Truck and build housing for Corinth’s 1920s-model fire engine.” The Crossroads Museum is one of only seven museums in the state selected to participate in Museum Day Live! Also taking part and offering free admission with a printed ticket are the Delta Blues Museum in Clarksdale, the GRAMMY

Museum in Cleveland, the Mississippi Petrified Forest Museum in Flora, the Lynn Meadows Discovery Center in Gulfport, The Oaks House Museum in Jackson and the Oren Dunn City Museum in Tupelo. Smithsonian recognizes the extraordinary power of museums, and other cultural institutions, to provide visitors with insight and inspiration. The event represents a nationwide commitment to boundless curiosity and

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

the pursuit of knowledge. More than 200,000 people downloaded tickets for last year’s event, and this year’s event is expected to attract more museumgoers than ever before. (For more information about Museum Day Live! 2017 and a full list of participating museums and cultural institutions, see Smithsonian.com/ museumday. The Crossroads Museum is located at 221 North Fillmore in Corinth.)

were the top categories of items turned in at last year’s event. Other items residents can dispose from closets, carports and sheds include insecticide, lighter fluid, batteries, pesticide, brake fluid, gasoline, glues, herbicides, tub and tile, paint thinner, fertilizer and others. Excluded items are explosives, ammunition, PCB’s and radioactive materials. The event is funded by a $25,000 grant from the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality. McCullough expressed appreciation for the grant and the partnership of Alcorn County, Caterpillar and Waste Connections. Caterpillar will have volunteers participating along with the KC-AB board and will provide some equipment.

CHANGES CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Quinn said his staff focuses on the three r’s; rigor, relevance and rela-

tionship. “These are all small changes that are making huge impacts,” he said. “Rigor isn’t about making

classes harder, it’s about digging deeper and making learning exciting. Relevance means we must know what is relevant in order to connect with kids and relationship is key. We must know these kids.” Students aren’t just numbers, he said. “They have voices and when we

listen, school becomes better for us and them.” With the help and input from all staff, Bear Block was implemented. “We put into place a different daily schedule for students that included time in the middle of the day for club meetings, remediation, student tutorial and teacher office

hours,” he said. “We created this block so that no time is ever taken away from our regular class time.” Other changes include highlighting students who score above a 25 on the ACT. Much like star athletics who appear on banners hanging in the gym, ACT

BURNSVILLE HIGH SCHOOL REUNION (For anyone who attended BHS) Special recognition for this class: 1967 - 50th

Saturday, Oct. 14, 2017 10:30am-3:00pm

Tour - Lunch - Program At Hubert Rhea Robinson Auditorium

$10.00 per person FOR LUNCH

(please specify your choice of BBQ or Chicken Fingers) (NO CHARGE if you only wish to attend the REUNION)

Mail checks by Oct. 4 to:

Charlotte Orick, Burnsville High School Reunion %First American National Bank 1251 First American Drive Iuka, MS 38852 For more information contact Andrea Bonds - 662.424.2458 Wanda Bonds - 662.423.9582

stars grace banners in the school lobby. Students are also pitching in to create more positivity at Alcorn Central. Quinn said one student painted a large mural with the words, “You Are Beautiful” above mirrors in the girls restroom. Academics are also benefiting. “We are very encouraged by the way everything is going,” said the principal. “Our student’s ACT scores have increased several points above state average and it keeps climbing.” State testing and the school’s rating have improved. “As long as I can remember, Alcorn Central has always been a ‘C’ school,” said Quinn. “Last year, we became a ‘B’. “Alcorn Central being average is now officially over.”

BISHOP CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

With the overage, Smith said they would eventually seek to add an additional pavilion to the park. He encouraged people to continue donating as new picnic tables and grills will be needed for the pavilions.


Local/Region

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Today in History Today is Thursday, Sept. 21, the 264th day of 2017. There are 101 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History On September 21, 1897, responding to a letter from 8-year-old Virginia O’Hanlon, the New York Sun ran its famous editorial by Francis P. Church that declared, “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy.”

On this date In 1948, Milton Berle made his debut as permanent host of “The Texaco Star Theater” on NBC-TV. In 1970, “NFL Monday Night Football” made its debut on ABC-TV as the Cleveland Browns defeated the visiting New York Jets, 31-21. In 1977, after weeks of controversy over past business and banking practices, President Jimmy Carter’s embattled budget director, Bert Lance, resigned. In 1987, NFL players called a strike, mainly over the issue of free agency. (The 24-day walkout prompted football owners to hire replacement players.) In 1989, Hurricane Hugo crashed into Charleston, South Carolina (the storm was blamed for 56 deaths in the Caribbean and 29 in the United States).

Across the Region Iuka Women sentenced on drugs, theft charges IUKA — A Iuka woman has been sentenced for possession of drugs and theft of a vehicle. Twenty-seven-year-old Angelina Wiginton plead guilty recently to two felonies, possession of meth and theft of a motor vehicle. Wiginton was sentenced to eight years with eight years suspended on the meth charge and 10 years with 10 years suspended on the theft charge. All time suspended is pending Wiginton’s future good behavior and that she violates no laws. The judge said Wiginton would be responsible for paying all costs, fines, assessments and restitution.

Booneville

Bridge replacement closes highway BOONEVILLE — Motorists headed south on Mississippi 145 will need to find an alternate route south of Booneville due to bridge construction. The Mississippi Department of Transportation is replacing three bridges between Booneville and Wheeler on 145, shutting down a section of the highway between County Road 7450 and County Road 5000 to replace the bridges over Twenty Mile Creek, Wolf Creek and Wolf Creek Tributary. The closure is in the bottom on 145 south of Morgan Van Lines and Kimes and Stone Construction. Detour signs and warning signs are in place. MDOT urges motorists to use caution and watch for workers during the closure. A request for information from MDOT on the anticipated

length of the closure was not received at press time. Updated state highway traffic information can be found at MDOTtraffic.com.

Selmer

Corinth man beaten, robbed over weekend SELMER, Tenn. — A an 18-year-old Corinth, Miss. man was allegedly beaten, robbed and forced to walk naked to a Selmer residence, according to the Independent Appeal. Jordan Wallis was riding with a friend, Noreyan Hill, and another man only identified as “Chop” on Saturday. “They were riding back roads in a black Dodge Charger,” stated Wallis in a McNairy County Sheriff’s Department report. “Chop” said he had to use the restroom and Hill pulled the car over, according to Wallis. “Once the car stopped, ‘Chop’ pulled a gun out and put it to Mr. Wallis’s face,” stated the report. “‘Chop’ then pulled Mr. Wallis out of the car and pistol whipped him.” The report continues to state “Chop” hit Wallis in the back of the head several times, in the face at least six times and kicked and stomped his face and ribs. The victim suffered had multiple cuts and scratches. Before being robbed of his clothes, Wallis had his wallet, jewelry and phone taken. Wallis did not know “Chop’s” real name, but described him as “short, chubby with short dreadlocks,” according to the report.

Oxford

Student government wants another mascot vote OXFORD (AP) — Years after it traded Colonel Reb for a bear,

the University of Mississippi could again change its sidelines sports mascot. Student government President Dion Kevin III announced Monday that students will vote next week on changing from a black bear to a “landshark” in a campuswide election. University spokesman Ryan Whittington said the vote would be advisory and would not bind Chancellor Jeffrey Vitter. Whittington didn’t answer whether the university administration has a preferred outcome. “This referendum is a student-led initiative being conducted through an Associated Student Body process,” Whittington wrote in an email. “While we will not speculate on the outcome of their process, we value the important role that students play as an active voice in the life of our campus community. We are always interested in the viewpoints of our students.” The nickname for the school’s athletic teams remains the Rebels, but Ole Miss retired Colonel Reb from the sidelines in 2003 and has ditched other Old South symbols, including Confederate battle flags and the anthem “Dixie.” The bear was chosen from three options in a 2010 student vote, with landshark the runner-up and Hoddy Toddy third. Hoddy Toddy is a mythical creature drawn up to represent Ole Miss’ signature cheer. The landshark is based on a “fins up” hand motion started by then-linebacker Tony Fein in an upset of the Florida football team in 2008. “The landshark as we know it today has its origins in football, but has since expanded to symbolize Ole Miss’s fight spirit and athletic prowess,” Kevin said in a statement, saying students could “leave a legacy of unity and excitement” by sup-

Easy Care Medical Clinic, PLLC

12th Year Anniversary Lunch Special Sept 5th - Oct. 31st

Neil B. Sloan, MD, DC, FIAIME, CEDIR

Mon-Fri 11:00AM - 3:30PM All You Can Eat New Items Added Hibachi Grill, More Sushi & More Seafood

$5.49

2115 S. Harper Rd • 662-287-3666 • Across From Wal-Mart • Corinth, MS

Fellow International Academy of Independent Medical Evaluators Certification in Examination of Disability and Impairment Rating

Certified Disability Impairment Rater NO COST CONSULTATION! 662-665-9073

Mon-Thur 9:00-4:00 2016 E. Shiloh Rd., Corinth, MS 38834

porting the change. Fein, a Washington state native and U.S. Army veteran, died after an accidental drug overdose in 2009. Though Colonel Reb lost his official sanction more than a decade ago, his visage is not hard to find in Oxford, and some supporters still want him back. “We agree that the black bear is an embarrassment and a failure,” Colonel Reb Foundation Student Chairman Wess Helton said in a statement. “But using another closed process and a fake election to force their previously failed choice on students won’t solve anything. The Colonel Reb Foundation calls for the ASB Senate to give us our true mascot choice in this election — Colonel Reb — or add ‘none of the above’ as an option for Ole Miss students.”

Starkville

City loosening its rules on sale of alcohol STARKVILLE (AP) — A Mississippi college town is loosening rules on the sale of alcohol. Starkville aldermen voted 4-3 Tuesday to let bars and restaurants sell alcohol closer to churches, schools and funeral homes. The current 250-foot minimum distance is being reduced to 100 feet. News outlets report that Starkville will also allow the sale of beer with 8 percent alcohol content, up from the current 5 percent. Restaurants and bars will be able to sell alcohol until 1 a.m. Thursday through Saturday and midnight Sunday through Wednesday. The time now varies from 10 p.m. to midnight on different days of the week, or 1 a.m. if a Mississippi State University home football game is on a weekday.

It’s Our 10th Anniversary!

DISABILITY, CAR WRECKS, INJURIES

$5.49

Daily Corinthian • 3

COME CELEBRATE WITH US.

We are offering 10 of our great-tasting dishes at a reduced price of $4.99 (tax included) during LUNCH all of this month. Ask us about the dishes that are available. For DINNER, make your own combo for $4.99 (tax included) These specials good through September 2017 No other offers or coupons accepted with anniversary offer

Julio Mexican Restaurant

1901 Virginia Lane • Corinth • 662-286-2575

Legal Scene Your Crossroads Area Guide to Law Professionals

Contact Barb Smith at 662-287-6111 to advertise your Law Firm on this page. To Start your Home Delivered Subscription:

P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835

Call 662.287.6111 Monday - Friday 8a.m. to 5p.m. for your convenience try our Office Pay Plans.

Miss your paper?

To report a problem or delivery change call the circulation department at 662.287.6111 Late, wet, or missing newspaper complaints should be made before 10 a.m. to ensure redelivery to immediate Corinth area. All other areas will be delivered next day.

For more information visit our website: www.dailycorinthian.com

USPS 142-560 The Daily Corinthian is published daily Tuesday through Sunday by PMG, LLC at 1607 South Harper Rd. Corinth, MS Postmaster send address changes to P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS 38835


www.dailycorinthian.com

Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Thursday, September 21, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

Other Voices

Congressional action needed on DACA

The Trump administration’s announcement that the Deferred Action on Childhood Arrivals program will be rescinded should prompt needed congressional action to protect young immigrants whose sole offense was being brought here by their parents. Giving the Congress six months to act before DACA permits begin to expire, President Trump issued a statement criticizing President Obama for “making an end-run around Congress and violating the core tenets that sustain our Republic” by creating the program. “There can be no path to principled immigration reform if the executive branch is able to rewrite or nullify federal laws at will,” he said. While the details of any possible future immigration reform effort remain to be hammered out, it is imperative that DACA recipients are finally given the sort of permanent protections that can only be achieved through the legislative process. Approximately 800,000 young immigrants, mostly in their 20s, are currently protected by DACA, with many more potentially eligible. This includes 222,795 Californians who have received DACA protections. Far from an open-borders policy, the DACA program responsibly limited eligibility to undocumented immigrants who entered the country before their 16th birthday, arrived here prior to June 2007 and have lived here ever since. Eligible applicants must either be in school, have graduated from high school or have been honorably discharged from the U.S. military. Under the program, young immigrants are eligible to have deportations deferred and may legally work in the United States, with renewals required every two years. For all intents and purposes, these immigrants are as American as native-born Americans, with many having no memory of or any meaningful connection to the country in which they were born. To punish young people for having been brought to the United States as children by their parents, beyond their control, would be an unconscionable disregard of people who have done nothing wrong. Clearly, the DACA program, which only provided temporary protections by way of an easily discarded, legally shaky executive action, was not a viable long-term solution. With President Trump’s decision to allow Congress six months in which to act, Congress must not allow the future of potentially over one million young immigrants to be thrown into turmoil due simply to political inertia. Fortunately, bipartisan legislation has already been introduced, including the DREAM Act of 2017 (S.1615), sponsored by Republican Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Jeff Flake of Arizona and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, and Democrats including California Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris. The proposal would provide a path to citizenship for young, law-abiding undocumented immigrants. It is vital that Congress not perpetuate needless confusion and harm by allowing our currently dysfunctional immigration laws to become a weapon against young immigrants. The Congress must act quickly to bring certainty and dignity to the Dreamers and allow them to live as the Americans they already are. The Orange County Register

Prayer for today My Father in heaven, may I hear thy voice to-day! May I be quiet as I listen to thee. Above the clamor of the crowd may I hear thee calling me. May I hear thee in my joys and in my sorrows; in my work and in my leisure. May I listen to thee oftener, that I may be familiar with thy ways. Amen.

A verse to share Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. —James 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.

Marriage collapse is concerning A new report from the Pew Research Center brings the latest update on the deteriorating state of traditional marriage in America. And as sobering as is the picture for the nation as a whole, the situation for black America is even more disturbing. Fifty percent of American adults over 18 are married today, down 32 percent from 72 percent in 1960. Among black Americans, just 30 percent of adults over 18 are married today, down 31 percent from 1960. Fairly obvious questions emerge: Does it matter that the incidence of traditional married households is declining? Why is this happening and why is this trend so much more pronounced among blacks? Are there remedial actions that can be taken from the point of view of government and public policy to strengthen marriage and the American family? Regarding the first question, it matters a lot. To those of us who still have a traditional moral compass, it is hurtful, sad and ominous that increasing numbers of young Americans do not understand the unique importance of holy matrimony.

Mark Boehler

publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com

editor editor@dailycorinthian.com

Willie Walker

Roger Delgado

circulation manager circdirector@dailycorinthian.com

natural order that it is hard to fathom handling them without religion and faith. But what is happening with blacks? By common measures, blacks are the most religiously engaged community in America. According to a 2009 Pew report, 79 percent of blacks said religion plays a “very important” place in their lives compared to 56 percent of all Americans. Fifty-three percent of blacks reported, in the same study, attending church at least once per week, compared to the national average of 39 percent. So if religious fervor among blacks is far above the national average, why is the pace of marriage deterioration among blacks the worst in the country? We get one hint in the new Pew report. Fortyeight percent of nonwhites, compared with 33 percent of whites, indicate they want to get married but say financial instability is the main reason that they have not. Why are blacks, on average, decidedly more financially unstable? One factor, which must be taken into account, is the disproportionate impact of the wel-

fare state following the civil rights movement. Major welfare programs established in the late 1960s, which required recipients to be unmarried to qualify, followed shortly thereafter by the legalization of abortion in 1973, had a devastating effect on the black family. Data we have today should provoke a sense of urgency to focus policy on reversing the damage done by years of programs that have hurt the very lowincome communities they were supposed to help. We need policies that protect life, and encourage marriage, ownership and individual responsibility. Stop taxpayer funds going to Planned Parenthood, allow low-income Americans to invest their payroll tax in a personal retirement account that allows wealth accumulation, repeal the Davis-Bacon Act and other laws that limit the employability of low-wage workers, and give states block grants to control anti-poverty programs that open the door to creativity and flexibility. Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education. Contact her at www.urbancure.org.

‘Handmaid’s Tale’ is steeped in lunacy

Donald Trump, much to his chagrin, never won an Emmy for “The Apprentice,” but he can now take indirect credit for a clutch of the awards. The Hulu series “The Handmaid’s Tale” won eight Emmys on Sunday night, a sweep fueled, in part, by the widely accepted belief in liberal America that the show tells us something about the Trump era. Based on the 1985 novel by Margaret Atwood, the series depicts a misogynist dystopia. Christian fundamentalists have established a theocracy that -- after an environmental debacle craters the birth rate -- forces fertile women, called handmaids, into sexual slavery. Set in contemporary America, the show combines the atmosphere of “The Scarlet Letter” with “1984.” It is bleak, plodding, heavy-handed and occasionally gripping. What has given it extra oomph is the trope that it is relevant to Trump’s America. This is a staple of the commentary, and everyone involved in the show’s production pushes the notion. According to Atwood, people woke up after Trump’s election “and said

Reece Terry

But moving away from sentiment, there is plenty of modern research that Star shows that Parker i n d i v i d u als who are Columnist married are wealthier, healthier and happier. Moreover, we now see a disproportionate impact of marriage on men. Recent research published by the American Enterprise Institute, authored by W. Bradford Wilcox of the University of Virginia and Robert Lerman of American University, points to married men earning at least $15,900 more annually than single men. For black men, this “marriage premium” is $12,500. Why is marriage in decline? At first glance, it is tempting to associate this with the decline of religion and traditional religious values. It takes great personal fortitude for a young person to turn away from the temptations of promiscuity and to take on the responsibility and commitment of marriage and family. These demands are so far out of the

press foreman

we’re no longer in a fantasy fiction.” The series is indeed highly relevant -- as a stateRich ment on Lowry the fevered mind of proNational gressives. Review T h e president doesn’t want to impose his traditional sexual morality because, for starters, he doesn’t have any to impose. His critics are mistaking a thrice-married real estate mogul who has done cameos in Playboy videos and extensive interviews on “The Howard Stern Show” with Cotton Mather. He isn’t censorious; he’s boorish. “I thought this could be a great cautionary tale,” director Reed Morano says of the show. “We don’t think about how women are treated in other countries as much as we should, and I guess I thought this would raise awareness.” Fair enough. “The Handmaid’s Tale” does have something to tell us about, say, Saudi Arabia. But, in an uncomfortable fact for Christian-fearing feminists, none of the world’s women-hating the-

ocracies are Christian. Elisabeth Moss, who won an Emmy for her portrayal of handmaid Offred, warns of “things happening with women’s reproductive rights in our own country that make me feel like this book is bleeding over into reality.” What this means is that Republicans want to defund the nation’s largest abortion provider, Planned Parenthood, and roll back Obamacare’s contraception mandate. If they succeed, this would mean less government intervention in matters of sexual morality, rather than more. The progressive mind is unable to process that it has won the culture war in a rout (except for abortion, where conservatives are trying to chip away at our extremely liberal laws at the margins). We live in a country where Christian bakers get harried by government for politely declining to bake cakes for gay weddings, yet progressives still believe we are a few steps away from enslaving women. For sheer obtuseness, it’s hard to beat executive producer Bruce Miller’s comment about a protest scene from the show that has

World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com To Sound Off: E-mail:

email: news@dailycorinthian.com Circulation 287-6111 Classified Adv. 287-6147

been compared to the antiTrump Women’s March. “You’re seeing exactly the same signs,” he told Vanity Fair, “exactly the same images, and you’re also seeing Capitol police with guns, not firing them, thank God, but it’s the same image.” Actually, it’s the opposite image. There’s a vast difference between the forces of a totalitarian state crushing a protest, as happens in the show, and police maintaining the peace during a demonstration in a robustly free country, as occurred right here in Donald Trump’s USA. According to Atwood: “If you’re going to get women back into the home, which some people still firmly believe is where they belong, how would you do that? All you have to do is remove the rights and freedoms that [women] have fought for and accumulated over the [past] 200 years.” Yeah, that’s all you have to do. Atwood doesn’t explain who, straw men aside, actually wants to do this, or how they’d go about it. She wrote a book that, despite her intentions, has become a cautionary tale about how sophisticated people lose their minds.

How to reach us -- extensions:

Newsroom.....................317 Circulation....................301 news@dailycorinthian.com advertising@dailycorinthian. Advertising...................339 Classifieds....................302 com Classad@dailycorinthian.com Bookkeeping.................333

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 • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • 5

Maria destroys homes, triggers massive flooding BY DANICA COTO Associated Press

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The strongest hurricane to hit Puerto Rico in over 80 years destroyed hundreds of homes, knocked out power across the entire island and triggered heavy flooding Wednesday in an onslaught that could plunge the U.S. territory deeper into financial crisis. Leaving at least nine people dead in its wake across the Caribbean, Hurricane Maria blew ashore in the morning in the southeast coastal town of Yabucoa as a Category 4 storm with winds of 155 mph. It was expected to punish the island of 3.4 million people with lifethreatening winds for 12 to 24 hours. “Once we’re able to go outside, we’re going to find our island destroyed,” warned Abner

Gomez, Puerto Rico’s emergency management director. “The information we have received is not encouraging. It’s a system that has destroyed everything in its path.” It was the second time in two weeks that Puerto Rico felt the wrath of a hurricane. There were no immediate reports of any deaths or serious injuries on the island. As people waited it out in shelters or took cover inside stairwells, bathrooms and closets, Maria brought down cell towers and power lines, snapped trees, tore off roofs and unloaded at least 20 inches of rain. Widespread flooding was reported, with dozens of cars half-submerged in some neighborhoods and many streets turned into rivers. People calling local radio stations reported that doors were being torn off their hinges and a

water tank flew away. Felix Delgado, mayor of the northern coastal city of Catano, told The Associated Press that 80 percent of the 454 homes in a neighborhood known as Juana Matos were destroyed. The fishing community on San Juan Bay was hit with a storm surge of more than 4 feet, he said. “Months and months and months and months are going to pass before we can recover from this,” he said. As of 4 p.m., Maria had weakened into a Category 2 hurricane with winds of 110 mph. It was centered just off the northwestern corner of Puerto Rico, moving at 12 mph. It was expected to pass off the northeastern coast of the Dominican Republic late Wednesday and today. Even before the storm, Puerto Rico’s electrical grid was crumbling and

Mexico quake rescuers race to free girl, other survivors BY CHRISTOPHER SHERMAN, PETER ORSI AND MARK STEVENSON Associated Press

MEXICO CITY — The wiggling fingers of a young girl trapped in the rubble of her collapsed school in Mexico City raised hopes among hundreds of rescuers working furiously Wednesday to try to free her — a drama that played out at dozens of buildings toppled by the powerful earthquake that killed at least 223 people. But it was the ongoing rescue at the Enrique Rebsamen school, where 25 people including 21 children perished, that was seen as emblematic of Mexicans’ rush to save survivors before time runs out. Helmeted workers spotted the girl buried in the debris early Wednesday and shouted to her to move her hand if she could hear. She did, and a rescue dog was sent inside to confirm she was alive. Hours later the crews were still laboring to free her, as images of the rescue effort were broadcast on TV screens nationwide. Workers in neon vests and helmets used ropes, pry-bars and other tools, frequently calling on the anxious parents and others gathered around to be silent while they listened for any other voices from beneath the school. At one point, the workers lowered a sensitive microphone inside the rubble to scan for any noise or movement. A rescuer said they thought they had located someone, but it wasn’t clear who. “It would appear they are continuing to find children,” said Carlos Licona, a burly sledgehammer wielding volunteer who came to help in any way he could. Asked if that made him optimistic, he said, “I hope so.” It was part of similar efforts at the scenes of dozens of collapsed buildings, where firefighters, police, soldiers and civilians wore themselves out hammering, shoveling, pushing and pulling debris aside to try to reach the living and the dead. By mid-afternoon, 52 people had been pulled out alive since Tuesday’s magnitude 7.1 quake, Mexico City’s Social Development Department said, adding in a tweet: “We won’t stop.” Among them were 11 people rescued at the Enrique Rebsamen school, where three people remained missing, two children and an adult. Earlier, journalists saw rescuers pull two

“We saw some chairs and wooden tables. The next thing we saw was a leg, and then we started to move rubble and we found a girl and two adults — a woman and a man.” Dr. Pedro Serrano

Volunteer rescue worker small bodies from the rubble, covered in sheets. More than 24 hours after the collapse, the debris being removed from the school began to change as crews worked their way inside: From huge chunks of brick and concrete, to pieces of wood that looked like remnants of desks and paneling, to a final load that contained a half-dozen sparkly hulahoops. Volunteer rescue worker Dr. Pedro Serrano managed to crawl into the crevices of the tottering pile of rubble and make it to a classroom, where he found no survivors. “We saw some chairs and wooden tables. The next thing we saw was a leg, and then we started to move rubble and we found a girl and two adults — a woman and a man,” he said. All were dead. “We can hear small noises, but we don’t know if they’re coming from ... the walls above, or someone below calling for help,” Serrano said. A helicopter overflight of some of the worst-hit buildings revealed the extent of the damage wrought by the quake: Three mid-rise apartment buildings on the same street pancaked and toppled in one Mexico City neighborhood; a block in the town of Jojutla, in Morelos state, where nearly every home was flattened or severely damaged and a ruined church where 12

people died inside. The death toll included 93 people killed in Mexico City; 69 in Morelos state just south of the capital; 43 in Puebla state to the southeast, where the quake was centered; 12 in Mexico State, which borders Mexico City on three sides; four in Guerrero state; and one in Oaxaca, according to the official Twitter feed of civil defense agency head Luis Felipe Puente. President Enrique Pena Nieto declared three days of national mourning even as authorities made rescuing the trapped and treating the wounded their priority. “Every minute counts to save lives,” Pena Nieto tweeted. In the town of Jojutla in Morelos state, dozens of buildings collapsed, including the town hall. One building had been rocked off its foundations and part way into a river. The town’s Instituto Morelos secondary school partly collapsed, but an earthquake drill held Tuesday morning to mark the anniversary of an 8.0 earthquake that killed thousands in 1985 proved fortuitous, the school’s director, Adelina Anzures said. “I told them that it was not a game, that we should be prepared,” Anzures said of the drill. When the quake hit, she said, children and teachers rapidly filed out and nobody was hurt.

the island was in dire condition financially. Puerto Rico is struggling to restructure a portion of its $73 billion debt, and the government has warned it is running out of money as it fights back against furloughs and other austerity measures imposed by a federal board overseeing the island’s finances. Gov. Ricardo Rossello urged people to have faith: “We are stronger than any hurricane. Together, we will rebuild.” He asked President Donald Trump to declare the island a disaster zone, a step that would open the way to federal aid. Many people feared extended power outages would further sink businesses struggling amid a recession that has lasted more than a decade. “This is going to be a disaster,” said Jean Robert Auguste, who owns two

French restaurants and sought shelter at a San Juan hotel. “We haven’t made any money this month.” More than 11,000 people — and more than 580 pets — were in shelters, authorities said. Along the island’s northern coast, an emergency medical station in the town of Arecibo lost its roof, while communication was severed with several emergency management posts. A hospital and a police station reported broken windows, and a tree fell on an ambulance. As the storm closed in on the Dominican Republic, about 4,000 tourists in the Bavara-Punta Cana area on the eastern tip of the island were moved to hotels in Santo Domingo, the capital. Maria posed no immediate threat to the U.S. mainland. The longrange forecast showed the

storm out in the Atlantic Ocean hundreds of miles off the Georgia-South Carolina coast by Monday morning. Previously a Category 5 with 175 mph winds, Maria hit Puerto Rico as the third-strongest storm to make landfall in the U.S., based on its central pressure. It was even stronger than Hurricane Irma when Irma roared into the Florida Keys earlier this month. Irma sideswiped Puerto Rico on Sept. 6, causing no deaths or widespread damage on the island but leaving more than 1 million people without electricity. More than 70,000 still had no power as Maria approached. The last Category 4 hurricane to blow ashore in Puerto Rico was in 1932, and the strongest ever to hit the island was San Felipe in 1928 with winds of 160 mph.

BILL CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

legislation before Sept. 30, when special rules preventing a Democratic filibuster will expire. “We think this has a very good chance, Obamacare is only getting worse,” Trump told reporters covering the U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York, as he prepared to meet Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi. “At some point the Senate is going to be forced to make a deal.” By his reckoning, “we’re at 47 or 48 already, senators, and a lot of others are looking at it very positively.” Trump’s comments came several hours after McConnell’s office an-

nounced that the majority leader’s “intention” is to bring the legislation to the Senate floor next week, a question McConnell was noncommittal on a day earlier. After the embarrassing defeat of an earlier repeal bill in July, some Republicans believe McConnell would bring a bill to the floor only with the votes in hand. In a Senate split 5248 between Republicans and Democrats, McConnell has little room for error. GOP Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky has already announced his opposition, saying the bill doesn’t do enough to repeal “Obamacare,” while moderate Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine is also seen as a likely “no” vote.

With Democrats unanimously opposed, McConnell cannot afford to lose even one more Republican senator. The focus is on Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, both of whom opposed earlier versions of repeal legislation. One leading Republican, Chuck Grassley of Iowa, voiced pessimism Wednesday in a phone interview with homestate reporters, saying glumly: “I think we’re one or two votes short and I don’t see those other votes coming and I hope I’m wrong.” This time is different for McCain because his closest friend in the Senate, Graham, is a co-author of the bill.

GIVE THANKS FOR PASTORS!

PASTOR APPRECIATION DAY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 8 Let your pastor, priest or minister know how much they are appreciated by honoring them on their special day in the Daily Corinthian.

FAITHFUL • SERVANT

PASTOR Mike, I know we don’t say it enough, but we appreciate your faithful dedication to preaching God’s word each Sunday Room #102 Sunday School

Email information and picture

2x3 (3.292’ x 3”) $40.50 to: 2x6 (3.292” x 6”) $81.00 classad@dailycorinthian.com or bring it by our office at: 4x3 (6.708” x 3”) $81.00 1607 South Harper Road. 6x3 (10.125”x 3”) $121.50 DEADLINE FOR 4x6 (6.708” x 6”) $162.00 SUBMITTING AD IS All ads are in full color. MONDAY, OCTOBER 2. To schedule your Pastor Appreciation day for Sunday, October 8th call Jeanine at 662.287.6111. She’ll be happy to help you design a message of appreciation for your pastor on this special day.


6 • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Witnesses yelled victim was deaf BY KEN MILLER Associated Press

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma City police officers who opened fire on a man in front of his home as he approached them holding a metal pipe didn’t hear witnesses yelling that he was deaf, a department official said Wednesday. Magdiel Sanchez, 35, wasn’t obeying the officers’ commands before one shot him with a gun and the other with a Taser on Tuesday night, police Capt. Bo Mathews said at a news conference. He said witnesses were yelling “he can’t hear you� before the officers fired, but they didn’t hear them. “In those situations, very volatile situations,

you have a weapon out, you can get what they call tunnel vision, or you can really lock in to just the person that has the weapon that’d be the threat against you,� Mathews said. “I don’t know exactly what the officers were thinking at that point.� Sanchez, who had no apparent criminal history, died at the scene. The officer who fired the gun, Sgt. Chris Barnes, has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation. Mathews said the officers were investigating a reported hit-and-run at around 8:15 p.m. Tuesday. He said a witness told Lt. Matthew Lindsey the address where the vehicle responsible for the

hit-and-run had gone, and that Sanchez was on the porch when Lindsey arrived. He said Sanchez was holding a metal pipe that was approximately two feet long and that had a leather loop on one end for wrapping around one’s wrist. Lindsey called for backup and Barnes arrived, at which point Sanchez left the porch and began to approach the officers, Mathews said. Witnesses could hear the officers giving Sanchez commands, but the officers didn’t hear the witnesses yelling that Sanchez couldn’t hear them, Mathews said. When he was about 15 feet away from the officers, they opened fire

— Lindsey with his Taser and Barnes with his gun, apparently simultaneously, Mathews said. He said he didn’t know how many shots were fired, but that it was more than one. When asked why Barnes used a gun instead of a Taser, Mathews said he didn’t know. He said it’s possible Barnes wasn’t equipped with a Taser. Neither officer had a body camera. Sanchez’s father, who was driving the hit-andrun vehicle, confirmed after the shooting that his son was deaf, Mathews said. He said Sanchez wasn’t in the vehicle when his father struck something and drove off. It wasn’t a person that he struck.

Trump: ‘I have decided’ Lillian Ross, longtime on Iran deal before talks New Yorker writer, dies BY MATTHEW LEE Associated Press

NEW YORK — “I have decided,� President Donald Trump declared Wednesday, announcing he’d reached a verdict on the Iran nuclear deal’s future even as top U.S. and Iranian officials headed into their highest-level talks of his presidency. Iran’s leader, meanwhile, lashed out at “ignorant, absurd and hateful rhetoric� in response to Trump’s blistering attack at the U.N. The jabbing between Trump and Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani set the stage for a contentious meeting of the nuclear accord’s parties. Trump has sent strong signals that he could walk away from the seven-nation agreement, which would potentially lead to new U.S. sanctions on Iran and its

international trading partners. The Iranians, in turn, have threatened to respond to any U.S. pullout by restarting nuclear activities that could take them closer to bomb-making capability. Asked about his stance on the nuclear pact Wednesday, Trump said he had made a decision. Pressed for details, he replied coyly: “I’ll let you know.� Shortly afterward, Vice President Mike Pence told the U.N. Security Council that Iran “continues to flout the spirit of the Iran deal, destabilizing the region and brazenly threatening the security of sovereign nations,� a toned-down version of the diatribe delivered by Trump in a General Assembly speech to fellow world leaders Tuesday.

 � � � �

�  � � ­

 �  � �

BY HILLEL ITALIE AP National Writer

NEW YORK — Lillian Ross, the ever-watchful New Yorker reporter whose close narrative style defined a memorable and influential 70-year career, including a revealing portrait of Ernest Hemingway, a classic Hollywood expose and a confession to an adulterous affair, has died at age 99. Ross died early Wednesday at Lenox Hill Hospital after suffering a stroke, New Yorker articles editor Susan Morrison said Wednesday. In an email statement to The Associated Press, New Yorker editor David Remnick called Ross a groundbreaking writer. “Lillian would knock my block off for saying so, she’d find it pretentious, but she really was a pioneer, both as a woman writing at The New Yorker and as a truly innovative artist, someone who helped change and shape nonfiction writing in English,� Remnick wrote. Hundreds of Ross’ “Talk of the Town� dispatches appeared in The New Yorker, starting in the 1940s when she wrote about Harry Tru-

man’s years as a haberdasher, and continuing well into the 21st century, whether covering a book party at the Friars Club, or sitting with the daughters of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II as they watched a Broadway revival of “South Pacific.� After the death of J.D. Salinger in 2010, Ross wrote a piece about her friendship with the reclusive novelist and former New Yorker contributor. Her methods were as crystallized and instinctive as her writing. She hated tape recorders (“fast, easy and lazy�), trusted first impressions and believed in the “mystical force� that “makes the work seem delightfully easy and natural and supremely enjoyable.� “It’s sort of like having sex,� she once wrote. Ross’ approach, later made famous by the “New Journalists� of the 1960s, used dialogue, scene structure and other techniques associated with fiction writers. She regarded herself as a short story writer who worked with facts, or even as a director, trying to “build scenes into little story-films.�

Dr. Robert P. Lorentz, D.M.D., M.S.

is pleased to announce that he is associating his orthodontic practice with: Dr. R. Todd Gililland, D.M.D., Dr. Shawn P. O’Bannon, D.M.D, and Dr. Jessica L. Pongetti, D.M.D., M.S. Collectively known as:

GO Orthodontics

Offices in Corinth, Oxford, Saltillo, Southhaven & Collierville, TN.

Deaths Gail Sheppard

MONROE, La. — Funeral services for Bobbie Gail Sheppard, 80, are set for 11 a.m. Friday at Lakeshore Baptist Church in Monroe with Bro. William Smith officiating. Interment will follow at Mulhearn Memorial Park in Monroe under the direction of Griffin Funeral Home. Visitation will be from 5 until 7 p.m. Thursday at Griffin Funeral Home, 600 Hwy 139 Monroe, La. Mrs. Sheppard died Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017, in Monroe, La. She was born Sept. 17, 1937, in Corinth. Her greatest joy was being around her family. Her great-grandchildren kept her busy with all of their activities. She loved every aspect of their lives. She spent much of her free time making her yard a place of beauty. Swinging on her back porch was her favorite way to relax. She loved the time spent Sheppard with her dog, “Doc Holiday.� We find peace and comfort knowing that she is resting in the arms of Jesus Christ her Savior. Survivors include her son, Phillip Sheppard and wife, Teresa, of Monroe, La.; one daughter, Nanette Miller and husband, Steve, of Ruston, La.; her stepchildren, Marge Higdon and Renee Butler of West Monroe, La.; two brothers, James Hayden Smith and wife, Ann, and Danny Smith and wife, Paula, all of Corinth; her brother-in-law, Lionel Mitchell of Kossuth; she is also survived by ten grandchildren, sixteen great-grandchildren, and a host of extended family and friends. She is preceded in death by her husband, Fred R. Sheppard; her parents, Glen and Sybil Smith; her great-grandchild, Charley Borden; her step-daughter, Sheri Clemons; one sister, Janis Mitchell; and one brother, Donnie Smith. Pallbearers will be Clint Sheppard, Will Jones, Early Borden, Greg Clemons, Justin Bennett, Brent Smith, Brady Smith and Greg Mitchell. For anyone wishing to contribute donations, honorariums can be made to Seeker Springs and Lakeshore Baptist Church in Monroe, La. Online guestbook: www.griffinfuneralhome.net.

Melvalina Morelock Brumfield

RIENZI — Melvalina Brumfield, 44, died Sunday, Sept.17, 2017. Corinthian Funeral Home will have the arrangements. Â

Mary Seltzer

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Mary Frances Seltzer, 97, died Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017, at Alive Hospice in Nashville, Tenn. McPeters Inc. Funeral Directors will have the arrangements. Â

Betty Stanfill

Funeral services for Betty Sue Stanfill, 74, of Corinth, are set for 2 p.m. Friday in the Chapel of Corinthian Funeral Home. Burial will follow at the Forrest Memorial Park Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 12 p.m. until service time Friday at the funeral home. Mrs. Stanfill died Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2017, at the North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo. She was born on July 2, 1943, to Jennings and Tennie Baird in Elk Valley, Tenn. Mrs. Stanfill was a homemaker. She was of the Baptist faith. She is survived by her husband, Mr. Tommy Stanfill. She was preceded in death by her parents, The Rev. Seth Kirkland 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.

Corinth Office 1500 N. Harper Rd. #5 • 1-662-286-3891

September 24th - 26th at 7 PM (Singing starts at 6:30)

“The Christian Life�

Lessons on JustiďŹ cation, SanctiďŹ cation, and GloriďŹ cation

www.GoOrthodontics.com

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHURCH

#SavingForTomorrow #MaryAnnWilbanks_Corinth

HOMECOMING

Sunday, September 24, 10 a.m. Music by Southern Image Quartet

www.fmbms.com Mobile Banking Wherever You Are: Download FMB Mobiliti today!

MOBILITI

Speaker: Jeff Jenkins

Sponsored by Churches of Christ located in Northeast Mississippi and Southwestern Tennessee

Location: Booneville Church of Christ 406 North 2nd Street Booneville, MS 38829

The Sleep of Your Dreams Begins With The Right Mattress “We have a mattress to fit every comfort level and every pocketbook.� Several Name Brands To Choose From, Including:

Message by Bro. Jacky Ward Food & Fellowship following the service

And More

M a t t re s s G a l l e ry

662-286-2220 1205 Hwy. 72 East | Corinth

“Remember...Buy your Furniture from the Furniture Store and Buy Your Mattress from the Mattress Gallery.�


Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • 7

THURSDAY EVENING C A

WATN ^ ^ WREG # # QVC $ . WCBI

$

WMC % % WLMT & > WBBJ _ _ WTVA ) ) WKNO * WGN-A + ( WMAE , , WHBQ ` ` WPXX / WPIX

:

MAX

0 3

SHOW 2 HBO MTV

4 1 5 2

ESPN 7 ? SPIKE 8 5 USA : 8 NICK ; C DISC < D A&E

>

FSSO ? 4 BET @ F H&G E!

HIST

C H D

E B

ESPN2 F @ TLC G FOOD H INSP I LIFE TBN

AMC

J = M N 0

FREE O < TCM

P

TNT

Q A

TBS

R *

GAME TOON TVLD FS1 FX OUT NBCS OWN FOXN APL

S T U K Z Æ ; Ø ∞ ± ≤ ≥

HALL ∂ G DISN “ L SYFY

E

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

8:30

Grey’s Anatomy “Ring (:01) Scandal of Fire” Big Bang (:31) Mom Big Bang Mom Theory Theory Home Solution Shoe Shopping Big Bang (:31) Mom Big Bang Mom Theory Theory American Ninja Warrior National finals continue in Las Vegas. Penn & Teller: Fool Whose Line Whose Line Us (N) Grey’s Anatomy “Ring (:01) Scandal of Fire” American Ninja Warrior National finals continue in Las Vegas. The Vietnam War American soldiers Nobody face ambushes. (N) Dies Cops Cops Cops Cops

9 PM

9:30

How to Get Away With Murder “Wes” Zoo “The Barrier” (N)

SEPTEMBER 21, 2017

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

Local 24 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel News Live News Ch. 3 Late Show-Colbert

11:30

(:37) Nightline James Corden Westmore Beauty Your Home philosophy - beauty Zoo “The Barrier” (N) News Late Show-Colbert James Corden Chicago Fire “My News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth MeyMiracle” ers CW30 News at 9 (N) The Game The Game Modern Modern Family Family How to Get Away With News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) NightMurder “Wes” 10pm Live line Chicago Fire “My News at Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth MeyMiracle” Ten ers Crossroads Best Times KeepWaiting for Tavis NHK NewsAppear God Smiley line Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops

The Vietnam War American soldiers The Vietnam War American soldiers Conversa- Charlie Rose (N) World face ambushes. (N) face ambushes. tions News Gotham (N) (:01) The Orville “About Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 Ac. Hol(:05) TMZ Page Six a Girl” (N) News lywood TV (N) Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Blue Bloods Penn & Teller: Fool Whose Line Whose Line PIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Two and Us (N) Half Men } ›› Now You See Me 2 (16, Adventure) Jesse (:10) } ›› Alien Resurrection (97) Sigourney } ››› Die Hard (88) Eisenberg, Mark Ruffalo. Weaver, Winona Ryder. Bruce Willis. Ray Donovan Abby Naked Naked Ray Donovan Abby (6:45) } ››› The Edge of Seven- Dice makes a decision. SNCTM SNCTM makes a decision. teen Hailee Steinfeld. (:10) (:41) Vice Room 104 (:15) } ›› Jason } ››› La La Land (16) A jazz pianist and an Ballers Ballers aspiring actress fall in love. Bourne (16, Action) Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out Wild/Out (6:30) College Football: Temple at South Florida. From Raymond SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt (N) James Stadium in Tampa, Fla. (N) } ›› I, Robot (04) Will Smith. A homicide detective tracks a } ››› Hellboy (04) Ron Perlman, John Hurt. The son of the dangerous robot in 2035. devil fights paranormal creatures. NCIS “Pay to Play” NCIS “Willoughby” NCIS “Off the Grid” The Sinner Cora’s fate is Law & Order: Special determined. Victims Unit } › Yogi Bear (10) Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Alaskan Bush People “Forging a New Future” Returning the homestead to Alaskan Bush People Alaskan Bush People the bush. (N) “Raised Wild” (6:00) O.J. Speaks: The O.J.: Guilty in Vegas (N) (:03) O.J. Speaks: The Hidden Tapes Hidden Tapes Women’s College Tennis: PowerShares Legends Charleston. From Supercross Rewind (N) Soccer Charleston, S.C. } ››› Set It Off (96) Desperation drives four women to bank-robbery. Martin Martin Martin Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Desert Flip- House Hunters House Hunters Flip or Desert Flippers Flop At pers Hunters Int’l Hunters Int’l Flop At } ›› The Holiday (06) Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet. E! News (N) Eric Jess Holiday Mountain Men: Fully Mountain Men Morgan’s horses go missing. (N) (:03) Mountain Men (:03) Mountain Men: Loaded (N) Fully Loaded WNBA Basketball WNBA Basketball: Mercury at Sparks E:60 Nación ESPN (N) (6:00) My 600-Lb. Life My 600-Lb. Life “Tanisha’s Story” Tanisha wants to (:02) My 600-Lb. Life “Lupe’s Story” Lupe makes a “Lupe’s Story” survive for her kids. potential lifesaving move. Chopped “Chili Cook-Off” Chopped “Waffles For Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Beat Bobby Chopped “Waffles For The Win” The Win” Cowboy Way Walker, Ranger The Virginian The Virginian Project Runway (N) Project Runway Creating a street(:33) American Beauty Project (:02) Project Runway style look. (N) Star (N) Runway Praise Prince Hillsong Osteen Christine Praise M Lu Fre (6:00) } ›› The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (12, Fantasy) Bilbo Bag- } ›› Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger gins joins the quest to reclaim a lost kingdom. Tides (11) Johnny Depp. } Twil: (:20) } ›› The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 Kristen The 700 Club } ›› Bewitched (05) Eclipse Stewart. Bella and Edward marry. Nicole Kidman. } ››› Monterey Pop (69) Scott } ››› Dont Look Back (67, Documentary) Bob (:45) } ››› Gimme Shelter (70) McKenzie, John Phillips. Dylan, Albert Grossman. Mick Jagger. } ›› Red 2 (13) Bruce Willis, John Malkovich. Retired opera- (:31) } ›› Red (10, Action) Bruce Willis. The CIA targets a tives return to retrieve a lethal device. team of former agents for assassination. Seinfeld Seinfeld Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Guest Book Conan Actor Jake Gyl- Guest Book Conan Theory Theory Theory lenhaal. (N) FamFeud FamFeud Divided Divided FamFeud FamFeud Cash Cash Divided Divided King/Hill American Cleve American Burgers Burgers Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Mike Ty. Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Mom Mom King King King King MLB Baseball: Twins at Tigers MLB Whiparound UFC Tonight Speak for Yourself Better Better (6:30) } ›› Pitch Perfect 2 (15) Anna Kendrick, Better (:42) } ›› The Internship (13, ComThings Things Things edy) Vince Vaughn. Rebel Wilson. Whitetail Gregg Road Heart Bow Hunt Hunting Scent The One Legends Caffeine Caffeine Grudge Grudge Motorcycle Race Motorcycle Race Grudge Grudge 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on ID 20/20 on ID 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on ID Tucker Carlson The Five (N) Hannity (N) Tucker Carlson The Five Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men Yukon Men Last Man Last Man The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Golden Golden Golden Standing Standing Girls Girls Girls Girls Raven’s Stuck/ Bizaardvark Bizaardvark Liv and K.C. Under- Bizaardvark Raven’s Stuck/ Bunk’d Home Middle Maddie cover Home Middle } ››› John Wick (14, Action) Keanu Reeves, } ›› Lake Placid A monstrous crocodile chomps Lake Placid vs. Anaconda (15, Action) Michael Nyqvist. on villagers in rural Maine.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Don’t miss the Sunday print edition with photos from the Corinth High School Homecoming Parade; or the Saturday print edition with the Fall Crossroads Dining and Entertainment guide.

Woman’s co-workers ridicule her extreme aversion to blood

D E A R ABBY: I’m a 30-year-old female who has extreme hemophobia. I cannot see blood or Abigail hear people about Van Buren talk anything blood-relatDear Abby ed. I pass out when my blood is drawn, and I cannot have a finger-prick blood test either. It’s even difficult for me to write this message. I work in an office and I have told my co-workers about my problem and asked them to please avoid the topic when I’m present. They think my request is unreasonable and that I’m just being silly. When someone brings up the subject, I quickly leave the room, sit down out of earshot and put my head between my legs. Then they laugh at me. When I mentioned this problem to my supervisor, he said he doesn’t feel there is anything he can do about it because it’s not a subject that is against company policy or taboo. I’m just looking for some compassion and understanding

from my co-workers. I don’t want to have to find another job, but I can’t keep running for cover every day, and I don’t want to pass out and injure myself. How can I make them see that this is a real medical problem and I’m not just looking for attention? — PASSING OUT IN MISSOURI DEAR PASSING OUT: Unless you work in a doctor’s office or a blood bank, I fail to see why the subject of blood would come up on a regular basis. Because your co-workers know how it affects you, I can only assume that they are either extremely thoughtless and insensitive, or do it intentionally to upset you or make you sick. Raise the subject again with your supervisor. Explain that you don’t want to look for another job and what they’re doing is creating the opposite of a friendly work environment. If he still won’t intervene, consider discussing your problem with a mental health professional who specializes in phobias, because there may be a therapy that can help to lessen or even eliminate your condition. DEAR ABBY: I am wondering about the use of the term “fiancee.”

Urban Dictionary says it is now considered a “White Trash culture” term for a long-term girlfriend. I’m beginning to hear it used more and more often by people I certainly would not think of as white trash. Is there another way to refer to a significant other when no wedding is planned or a date set? Do other cultures or languages have a word for this? — WONDERING ABOUT WORDS DEAR WONDERING: “Fiancee” is a word of French origin that is defined as “a woman engaged to be married.” When couples cohabitate with no plan to marry, the term they often use when referring to their significant other is “partner.” Of course, our culture is more liberal than some others that label those who choose to live this way as “fornicators.” While other cultures may have terms for it, I am unfamiliar with them. 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). It’s said that words should be weighed, not counted. The tone of your messages today will be clearly felt and with the precise intensity level that you meant. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Can love really make impossible things happen? Extraordinary things, for sure. Love is your super fuel today. You apply yourself differently when you’re powered with love’s high octane. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Science tells us a lot these days. Just keep in mind that science thought it was telling us a lot 200 years ago, too, and we didn’t even know about germs then. Stick with what works for you, whether or not it’s scientifically sound. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ve experienced injustice in your life so you know, when you see it happening to others, the gamut of emotions that are involved, especially the fear. This is why you help to right the wrongs. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). When

you admire the way a person thinks, you want to be near the person to share your appreciation and to understand better, maybe even adopt, that manner of thinking. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Reasoning is option one; force is option two. Force can be effective, but it also produces an equal and opposite reaction. It will be better to walk away and do what it takes to recharge powers of reason before deciding on option two. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Those close to you really don’t care how many of your personal goals you reach. They love you beyond such things. You will be loved dearly whether or not you accomplish anything. But this isn’t about them; it’s about you. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Even the best conversations will eventually peter out if you don’t introduce new topics. Relationships are the same. New focus keeps them from going stale. Today’s introduction will keep things fresh. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Problems cause moods and moods cause problems. Regardless of the origin, foul vibes will be fixed. Exercise solves problems unrelated to health and so does inspirational reading, power posing and positive thinking. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Your super talent today is that you’re thought provoking. People will ask for your evaluation and you’re likely to give a strong and truthful answer, different from the ones already on the table. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You don’t have to share a person’s belief system to understand, respect and apply it to helping the situation. Sometimes the mere act of accepting another person causes that person to bend a little in your direction. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). In the interest of tracking your learning process, identify milestones and celebrate those milestones. Keep this trend up and you’ll soon be a masterful expert.


Business

8 • Daily Corinthian

Name

P/E Last

A-B-C-D

AES Corp AGNC Inv AK Steel AMC Ent AT&T Inc AbbottLab AbbVie ActivsBliz AdobeSy AMD Albemarle Alcoa Cp Alibaba Allergan AllyFincl AlnylamP AlpAlerMLP Altaba Altria Amazon Ambev AmAirlines AEagleOut AmExp AmIntlGrp AmOutBr AmTower AmicusTh Anadarko AnglogldA Annaly AnteroRes Anthem Apache Apple Inc ApldMatl ApldOptoel ArbutusB g ArcelorM rs Arconic ArgosThr h ArrayBio AscenaRtl AstraZen s AtwoodOcn AVEO Ph h AvisBudg Avon AxarAc wt B2gold g BB&T Cp BP PLC BallardPw BcBilVArg BcoBrad s BcoSantSA BkofAm BkNYMel BarcGSOil B iPVxST rs BarrickG BedBath BerkH B BestBuy BioAmber BlackBerry BlueAprn n Boeing BostonSci BrMySq BrixmorP BroadcLtd BrcdeCm Brookdale CBL Asc CF Inds s CMS Eng CSX CVS Health CabotO&G Cadence CaesarsEnt CallonPet Calpine CambrE rs CampSp CapOne Capricor Carlisle Carnival Carrizo Caterpillar Celgene Cemex Cemig pf CenovusE CentAl CntryLink ChesEng Chevron ChicB&I CienaCorp Cisco CgpVelLCrd CgpVelICrd Citigroup Citigp wtA CitizFincl ClevCliffs Coach CocaCola Coeur ColNrthS n Comcast s ConAgra ConocoPhil ConsolEngy ContlRescs Copart s Corning Coty CSVixSh rs CSVInvN rs CSVelIVST CSVLgNG rs CS VSSilv Ctrip.com s CypSemi DDR Corp DR Horton Danaher DelmarPh n DeltaAir DenburyR DeutschBk DevonE DxGBull rs DrGMBll rs DxGlMBr rs DirDGlBr rs DxSCBear rs DxBiotBear Discover DiscCmA DishNetw h Disney DomRescs DowDuPnt DukeEngy E-Trade eBay s EOG Rescs EQT Corp EldorGld g Embraer EmersonEl EnCana g Endo Intl EgyTrEq s EngyTrfPt ENSCO EntProdPt EnvisnHl n Equifax Ericsson Exelixis Exelon ExpScripts ExxonMbl Facebook FairmSant Fastenal FedExCp FiatChrys FifthThird FireEye FstData n FstHorizon FMajSilv g FstSolar

10 4 14 dd 14 25 18 44 47 ... 35 ... 50 14 11 dd q cc 20 cc 7 6 12 18 97 9 37 ... dd ... 11 35 19 dd 18 16 18 dd 8 ... dd dd dd 9 6 dd 19 dd ... 65 15 28 dd ... ... ... 15 16 q q 25 6 19 14 dd 49 11 27 29 25 9 cc 30 dd 4 cc 25 26 14 88 35 dd 35 cc dd 15 11 dd 17 19 9 33 36 ... ... cc dd 8 10 66 dd 23 17 ... ... 14 ... 17 6 18 28 46 ... 21 19 39 dd dd 20 19 ... q q q q q cc 24 11 14 22 ... 10 dd ... cc q q q q q q 11 11 24 17 20 22 19

11.28 21.36 5.64 15.35 38.43 51.89 87.41 65.00 149.96 13.74 136.08 47.50 177.95 210.00 22.97 113.84 11.20 66.92 61.22 973.21 6.82 45.42 13.82 88.43 60.12 14.89 140.40 14.92 44.81 9.32 12.36 20.30 183.49 43.05 156.07 47.28 63.96 6.70 26.85 26.20 .20 11.60 2.07 32.93 8.65 3.77 37.92 2.50 .03 2.58 44.86 37.23 4.86 8.89 11.49 6.74 25.06 52.40 5.28 40.98 16.47 22.74 183.82 52.59 .54 9.85 5.22 255.46 28.84 63.49 18.57 242.91 12.14 11.21 8.18 35.19 47.07 52.81 80.70 26.29 38.36 12.65 11.31 14.72 .18 46.51 81.80 2.03 97.97 64.48 14.67 124.85 144.24 9.34 2.83 10.10 20.38 18.67 4.19 116.37 16.00 21.50 32.60 15.75 24.42 71.46 .14 35.79 7.22 39.46 45.78 9.11 12.94 37.46 33.70 48.33 16.32 37.81 33.86 30.03 16.65 12.45 21.73 93.36 13.20 12.54 53.45 14.51 9.33 37.05 86.46 1.07 48.04 1.27 16.38 34.89 33.69 18.82 54.48 24.34 15.05 4.86 60.34 21.26 53.56 99.21 77.62 70.41 85.20

E-F-G-H

19 41.78 6 38.54 dd 94.18 99 64.50 28 2.21 ... 23.23 27 63.89 22 11.11 dd 8.62 22 17.70 32 18.49 2 5.54 20 25.99 ... 44.37 18 96.00 ... 5.60 cc 28.27 15 36.91 10 61.82 31 80.55 36 172.17 dd 3.77 24 44.56 19 220.50 ... 17.18 14 27.41 dd 16.98 ... 18.33 18 17.94 cc 6.86 dd 48.85

YOUR STOCKS

Chg FirstEngy 12 31.19 Fitbit n dd 6.27 Flex Ltd 16 16.75 -.05 FootLockr 8 34.57 -.08 FordM 12 11.71 +.03 FrptMcM dd 14.18 -.30 FuelCell rs dd 1.65 +.22 GATX 11 61.59 +.48 GGP Inc 11 20.75 +1.04 Gap 14 28.00 +.69 GenDynam 21 204.27 -6.64 GenElec 23 24.32 +.62 GenMills 17 52.17 +1.43 GenMotors 6 38.88 +1.30 Genworth dd 3.83 -2.12 Gerdau ... 3.76 -5.00 GileadSci 9 82.64 GlaxoSKln ... 40.18 +38.80 GluMobile dd 3.78 -.02 GoldFLtd ... 4.25 -.51 Goldcrp g 40 12.77 -1.01 GoldStr g 14 .70 +3.35 GoPro dd 10.66 +.05 GraphPkg 19 13.51 +1.04 Groupon dd 4.39 +.19 GulfportE dd 13.78 -.57 HCP Inc 12 29.04 +.63 HP Inc 12 19.60 -.81 HTG Mol h dd 1.95 -.58 HalconRs n ... 6.53 +.96 Hallibrtn cc 43.61 +1.05 HarmonyG ... 1.89 -.18 HeclaM 51 5.06 -.06 HeliMAn h dd 6.14 +.03 HSchein s 23 80.39 +2.05 HertzGl ... 22.54 +1.30 Hess dd 43.46 -2.66 HP Ent n 19 13.63 -.98 Hi-Crush dd 9.35 -3.27 HimaxTch cc 10.22 +1.15 Hologic 13 37.38 -.06 HomeBcs s 17 23.64 +.26 HomeDp 23 158.68 +.01 HonwllIntl 20 138.69 +.08 HopFedBc 26 13.93 -.02 HostHotls 11 18.46 +.26 HuntBncsh 19 13.36 +.50 I-J-K-L -.07 78 6.21 +1.28 IAMGld g ... 8.93 +.03 ICICI Bk ... 18.19 -.05 ING q 12.50 -.08 iShGold q 22.93 +.21 iSAstla q 43.19 +.28 iShBrazil q 43.08 +.26 iShEMU q 25.01 -.07 iSh HK iShSilver q 16.19 -.03 -.05 iShChinaLC q 44.96 +.20 iSCorSP500 q 253.10 q 45.64 +.36 iShEMkts q 120.82 +.10 iShiBoxIG q 115.91 +.07 iShEMBd q 125.91 -.43 iSh20 yrT q 68.32 -4.29 iS Eafe q 88.45 +.81 iShiBxHYB q 34.28 -.17 iShIndia bt q 143.84 +.00 iShR2K q 80.81 +.71 iShREst -.29 iShCrSPS s q 71.45 q 63.99 +3.00 iShCorEafe 1.93 +.15 Itus Cp hrs dd dd .39 +.56 iBio 46 22.90 -.57 Imax Corp dd 11.44 -6.85 Imunmd 15 14.84 -.10 Infosys 16 37.07 +.12 Intel 11 145.88 -.05 IBM -.35 IntlGmeT n ... 23.88 Interpublic 15 20.79 -.32 +1.03 InvestBncp 22 13.55 ... 22.47 -2.40 InvitHm n cc 53.88 +.08 IonisPhm -.46 iShJapan rs q 55.59 q 36.74 +.25 iSTaiwn rs q 55.03 +.18 iShCorEM iSCHeafe q 28.71 ... 13.83 +.01 ItauUnibH cc 44.44 -.81 JD.com +.84 JPMorgCh 15 94.60 20 30.41 -.22 Jabil 10 19.25 +.48 JetBlue 20 133.22 -.74 JohnJn +.58 JohnContl n 27 39.75 16 20.71 +.11 KB Home 7 19.25 +.77 KKR ... 14.13 +.21 KT Corp 16 64.72 +.06 Kellogg 17 18.15 +.74 Keycorp 16 19.49 +.66 Kimco 68 19.77 +.14 KindMorg 5.60 +.15 KindredHlt 16 62 4.33 +.03 Kinross g 12 45.00 -.28 Kohls 7.78 -.58 KosmosEn dd +.11 KraftHnz n 32 79.87 11 20.80 +.60 Kroger s 11 37.23 -1.00 L Brands 17 12.86 +.31 LaredoPet 27 63.63 +.02 LVSands 6.06 -.03 LendingClb dd -.05 LibtyGlobA dd 33.81 ... 32.65 -.89 LibtyGlobC 24 23.19 -.20 LibQVC A ... 38.27 -.15 LibMCFor 18 77.91 +.03 Lowes +.16 M-N-O-P -.47 +.78 MGM Rsts 49 33.08 7 21.48 +.36 Macys dd 12.42 +.78 MarathnO +1.32 MarathPt s 12 54.43 28 107.69 +.12 MarIntA 29 202.15 +.03 MartMM +.06 MarvellTch 56 18.03 20 15.01 +.61 Mattel 27 159.88 -.23 McDnlds 2.13 -.36 McEwenM dd 17 80.16 -.37 Medtrnic MelcoResE 77 23.78 +.43 17 65.79 -.18 Merck 4 25.08 -.22 Meritor MetLife 10 50.13 -.52 Michaels 11 21.42 -.41 1.28 -.05 Microbot rs ... 47 88.32 +.14 Microchp MicronT 14 35.97 26 74.94 -.18 Microsoft 54 12.34 +1.12 MiMedx Momo ... 35.06 -1.66 30 40.41 -1.03 Mondelez 14 47.89 +2.67 MorgStan 50 20.87 +1.09 Mosaic 6 31.39 -.16 Mylan NV 24 24.14 -.25 NRG Egy Nabors dd 7.92 -.15 ... 8.26 -.03 Nabriva n 85 35.51 +.18 NOilVarco 20 41.70 +.78 NetApp cc 185.51 -.71 Netflix s 61 3.64 +.36 NwGold g dd 11.31 -.78 NewLink NY REIT ... 7.64 NewellRub 17 42.40 31 37.63 +.08 NewmtM 21 53.56 -.05 NikeB s 6 4.25 +1.05 NobleCorp +.38 NobleEngy cc 26.84 ... 6.18 -.04 NokiaCp ... 1.95 -.43 NDynMn g +.68 NorthropG 24 280.04 dd 1.15 +.42 Novavax 22 55.98 +.23 Nucor ... 23.00 -.06 Nutanix n 51 185.84 -.13 Nvidia dd 8.91 +.32 OasisPet dd 62.49 -.05 OcciPet .08 +1.26 vjOceanRig ... 12 8.89 +1.13 Oclaro 9 4.30 -.08 OfficeDpt 32 17.38 +.35 OnSmcnd .09 -.37 OpexaTh wt ... dd 6.33 +.82 OpkoHlth 22 47.97 +.33 Oracle 30 26.40 -.35 PBF Engy 18 108.81 +.31 PPG s dd 8.23 +.36 Pandora 94 26.41 +4.50 ParsleyEn dd 19.49 +.10 PattUTI 51 64.74 +.23 PayPal n 10 3.93 -.16 Penney 24 113.58 +.08 PepsiCo ... 10.15 +.29 PetrbrsA -.18 Petrobras ... 10.42 -.01 Pfizer 15 35.99

Today

Labor market barometer

-.18 +.03 -.12 -.48 -.01 -.30 +.09 +1.99 -.20 +.06 +1.15 +.12 -3.21 +.18 -.10 +.01 +.35 +.26 +.04 -.11 -.08 -.02 -.31 +.18 +.05 +.20 -.06 +.11 +.11 +.30 +.80 -.10 -.07 +.44 +1.25 +.80 +.73 +.14 +.25 +.04 +.25 +.75 +1.02 +.94 -.12 +.12 +.11 -.15 -.06 +.01 -.10 -.05 +.13 -.21 -.03 -.17 +.08 +.15 -.21 -.15 -.75 +.09 -.15 -.01 -.30 +.46 -.20 +.26 -.14 +.01 +.06 +.90 -.20 +.04 -.16 +1.49 +1.43 +.74 +.09 -.53 -5.19 +.02 -.52 -.22 +.13 -.06 +.11 +.66 -1.03 +.21 -2.00 +.71 -.57 +.16 +.15 -1.15 +.03 -.18 +.21 -.50 -.19 -.38 +.17 -.96 -.33 -2.00 +.38 -.17 +.07 +.49 +.29 +.54 -.03 +.42 +.52 -.30 +.42 +.23 +.34 +3.00 -.12 -.04 +2.45 -.07 -1.03 -.16 -.49 +.66 -.03 +.01 -2.66 +.02 -.50 -.82 -1.03 -.17 +.22 +.03 +.41 -.48 +.44 -.93 +.33 -.01 -.17 -.15 -.57 -.07 -.27 -.46 +.23 +.24 +.42 -.04 +.05 +1.71 +.01 +.87 +1.00 -1.51 +.33 +.63 -.08 -.26 -.05 -.24 -.00 +.32 -.07 +.58 +.47 -.09 +1.18 +.81 +.91 -.04 -.91 +.52 +.40 +.54

PhaseRx n PhilipMor Pier 1 PiperJaf PlatfmSpc PlugPowr h Potash PS Oil PS SrLoan PwShs QQQ PrecDrill Pretium g PrUltPQ s PUVixST rs PrUCrude rs ProShtVx s ProctGam ProgsvCp PrUShSP rs PUShtQQQ PShtQQQ rs ProUShL20 PUShtSPX PulteGrp

QEP Res Qualcom RadaElc rs RangeRs RegalEnt RegionsFn RentACt Rexnord RiceEngy RioTinto RiteAid RockColl Rowan RylCarb RoyDShllA RymanHP SM Energy SpdrGold S&P500ETF SpdrBiot s SpdrS&PBk SpdrLehHY SpdrS&P RB SpdrRetl s SpdrOGEx SpdrMetM SPI Eng lf STMicro Salesforce SanchezEn Schlmbrg Schwab ScorpioTk SeadrillLtd SeagateT SealAir SibanyeG SiderurNac SlvrRnII n SiriusXM SkywksSol SnapInc A n SocQ&M SouthnCo SwstAirl SwstnEngy SpiritRltC Splunk Sprint Square n SP Matls SP HlthC SP CnSt SP Consum SP Engy SPDR Fncl SP Inds SP Tech SP Util Starbucks s StrWayp StlDynam Stryker Suncor g SunPower SunTrst SupEnrgy Symantec Synchron Synchrony SynthBiol Sysco T-MobileUS TAL Educ s TJX TahoeRes TaiwSemi Target Technip TeckRes g Tegna TenetHlth Tesla Inc TevaPhrm TexInst 3M Co TimeWarn Total SA TransEntx TransUn n Transocn Tronox TurqHillRs 21stCFoxA 22ndCentry Twitter TwoHrbInv

... 1.29 23 113.43 9 4.22 13 55.05 16 11.50 dd 2.74 24 19.08 q 8.69 q 23.06 q 145.35 dd 2.98 ... 8.28 q 114.36 q 22.61 q 17.24 q 89.64 24 94.40 23 47.70 q 47.06 q 15.47 q 26.87 q 34.92 q 13.97 15 25.66

Q-R-S-T dd 18 dd 21 17 15 66 21 cc ... 41 24 6 25 89 12 dd q q q q q q q q q ... 42 84 dd 60 28 ... 1 8 25 ... ... ... 37 18 ... ... 17 14 55 10 dd dd dd q q q q q q q q q 28 27 14 28 ... dd 15 dd dd 22 11 dd 23 27 cc 21 9 ... 12 22 ... 7 dd dd 8 25 24 17 ... dd 52 9 dd 31 16 dd dd 10

+.52 -1.93 -.30 +.20 -.03 +.33 -.22 +.11 +.01 -.45 +.15 -.03 -.96 +.03 +.45 -.09 +.23 +.07 -.04 +.09 +.24 -.06 -.02 -.57

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

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

Chris Marshall Financial Advisor

401 E. Waldron Street 8.38 +.40 51.98 -.32 Corinth, MS 38834 3.24 +.33 662-287-7885 19.26 +.22 15.88 -.14 14.31 +.16 www.edwardjones.com 11.15 -1.01 25.14 +.32 28.68 +.21 47.82 -.63 2.44 +.04 Member SIPC 130.15 -.42 11.87 +.39 115.54 -2.98 58.83 +.69 61.38 +.29 16.56 +.69 123.62 -1.00 250.06 +.09 touting, such as facial recognition and wireless Apple has crossed the $1,000 barrier 85.17 +1.48 charging, are already available on other with its latest smartphone, the iPhone smartphones. X. Will its customers do the same? 43.25 +.52 Amit Daryanani, an analyst with RBC The iPhone X unveiled last week 37.21 -.01 Capital Markets, says risks to Apple’s long will sell for $999, double what the 54.06 +.60 term business include a original iPhone cost a decade ago 40.51 -.11 “stronger-than-expected competitive and more than any rival device. 32.86 +.68 response to iPhone.” Apple phones And that’s just for the 64 32.55 +.18 account for 15 percent of the global gigabyte version. Anyone who .12 +.00 wants to store a lot of photos 19.53 -.36 smartphone market — the rest is and videos will be on the hook 95.21 -.14 Android. for $1,149. 4.60 +.14 Brian Blau, an analyst with That’s in line with Apple’s 67.62 -.27 Gartner, said Apple took a “pretty good image as a purveyor of pricey, 41.61 +.57 phone” and made it better. aspirational gadgets. But while the 3.58 +.11 But it doesn’t seem to have the “wow” factor new iPhone is impressive, it’s still .48 +.14 elicited by the first iPhone a decade ago. more of the same. Features Apple is 32.38 +.20 41.87 +.15 4.68 -.15 Fully charged: Apple has announced the release of the new iPhone X starting at $999. 3.33 -.10 Revenue Units sold 10.14 -.03 Apple (AAPL) $156.07 (in billions) (in millions) 5.50 +.03 $170 $60 80 103.51 -4.42 14.16 -.56 70 50 57.43 -4.52 60 49.45 -.42 135 40 54.25 +.71 50 6.05 +.07 30 8.66 -.01 40 $114.92 68.94 +.69 20 30 100 8.03 -.17 J F M A M J J A S 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 4Q 1Q 2Q 3Q 28.47 -.09 ’17 ’15 ’16 ’17 ’15 ’16 ’17 56.87 +.20 Sources: Company reports; FactSet Barbara Ortutay; Alex Nieves • AP 82.00 +.08 54.60 -.53 89.54 +.30 66.84 +.45 NDEXES 25.40 +.15 70.36 +.51 52-Week Net YTD 52-wk 58.81 -.24 High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg 53.68 -.40 22,412.59 +41.79 +.19 +13.41 +22.52 55.15 +.53 22,386.01 17,883.56 Dow Industrials 36.09 -.88 9,763.66 7,777.06 Dow Transportation 9,654.37 +147.29 +1.55 +6.75 +21.72 34.08 +.25 755.37 616.19 Dow Utilities 731.61 -5.08 -.69 +10.92 +5.64 142.71 -.33 12,137.60 10,281.48 NYSE Composite 12,147.50 +15.77 +.13 +9.86 +13.44 34.15 +.20 6,477.77 5,034.41 Nasdaq Composite 6,456.04 -5.28 -.08 +19.93 +21.92 7.86 -.51 2,508.32 2,084.59 S&P 500 2,508.24 +1.59 +.06 +12.03 +15.95 56.67 +.64 1,795.14 1,475.38 S&P MidCap 1,766.97 +5.45 +.31 +6.41 +14.39 10.94 +.38 26,033.75 21,583.94 Wilshire 5000 26,050.03 +26.80 +.10 +11.20 +15.75 33.72 -.44 1,452.09 1,156.08 Russell 2000 1,445.42 +5.02 +.35 +6.51 +16.10 9.48 -.34 29.00 -.09 22,440 .96 -.05 Dow Jones industrials 54.39 +.47 Close: 22,412.59 22,080 63.52 -1.90 Change: 41.79 (0.2%) 33.82 21,720 72.42 -.41 10 DAYS 22,500 5.58 -.06 37.82 -.48 59.26 -.09 22,000 27.60 -.01 21.80 -.06 21,500 12.80 +.42 15.57 -.04 21,000 373.91 -1.19 17.11 -.08 20,500 85.83 -.98 210.51 -3.05 20,000 102.89 +.11 M A M J J A S 54.64 +.61 1.24 -.21 44.94 +2.74 9.77 +.42 TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST 21.92 -1.45 YTD YTD 3.11 -.01 Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg 26.87 +.17 Name 3.88 20 120.16 -1.60 +5.3 1.72 13 83.92 +.28 +20.6 KimbClk 3.01 +.04 AFLAC 17.62 -.14 AT&T Inc 1.96 14 38.43 +.22 -9.6 Kroger s .50 11 20.80 -.33 -39.7 10.10 -.01 AerojetR ... ... 31.75 +.96 +76.9 Lowes 1.64f 18 77.91 +.42 +9.5 U-V-W-X-Y-Z AirProd 3.80 23 150.98 +.48 +5.0 McDnlds 3.76 27 159.88 +2.45 +31.4 US FdsHl n ... 27.30 +.05 AlliantEg s 1.22 22 42.15 -.38 +11.2 OldNBcp .52 17 17.25 +.35 -5.0 USG 17 31.26 +1.84 2.36 62 71.68 -.30 +13.9 Penney ... 10 3.93 -.04 -52.7 UndrArm s 29 16.54 -.27 AEP 1.46 14 79.50 +.22 +1.7 PennyMac UnAr C wi ... 15.24 -.46 AmeriBrgn 1.88 14 16.99 +.02 +3.8 UnionPac 21 115.00 +2.00 ATMOS 1.80 24 85.08 -.85 +14.7 PepsiCo 3.22 24 113.58 -.91 +8.6 UtdContl 7 58.06 +.52 1.32f 15 44.86 +.21 -4.6 PilgrimsP ... 16 29.03 +.12 +52.9 UPS B 20 117.83 +.86 BB&T Cp 2.38 28 37.23 +.28 -.4 RegionsFn US Bancrp 16 53.52 +.36 BP PLC .36 15 14.31 +.16 -.3 US NGas q 6.85 -.06 BcpSouth .56f 20 30.70 +.35 -1.1 SbdCp 3.50 16 4550.00 +24.00 +15.1 US OilFd q 10.24 +.13 Caterpillar 3.12 33 124.85 +.11 +34.6 USSteel dd 25.79 +.14 SearsHldgs ... ... 7.21 -.05 -22.4 4.32 66 116.37 +.03 -1.1 UtdTech 17 114.10 +.45 Chevron Sherwin 3.40 28 347.04 +4.30 +29.1 UtdhlthGp 21 195.75 +1.10 CocaCola 1.48 28 45.78 -.20 +10.4 SiriusXM .04 37 5.50 +.03 +23.6 UnitGrp 63 16.34 -.35 Comcast s .63 21 37.46 +.16 +8.5 VEON ... 4.18 -.03 SouthnCo 2.32 17 49.45 -.42 +.5 CrackerB 4.80f 23 147.13 +.69 -11.9 Vale SA ... 10.59 -.19 SPDR Fncl .46e ... 25.40 +.15 +9.2 Vale SA pf ... 9.82 -.16 Deere 2.40 20 123.95 +.87 +20.3 Torchmark .60 17 78.62 +.73 +6.6 ValeantPh 3 14.07 +.30 Dillards .40f 14 55.49 -1.05 -11.5 ValeroE 24 73.18 +.47 Total SA 2.71e ... 54.64 +.61 +7.2 Dover 1.88f 26 92.28 +1.32 +23.2 VanEGold q 23.50 -.35 +4.2 .88 51 75.60 +.21 +12.2 US Bancrp 1.20f 16 53.52 +.36 VnEkRus q 21.75 +.01 EnPro 2.04 18 80.50 +.45 +16.5 VnEkSemi q 91.37 -1.23 FordM .60a 12 11.71 -.01 -3.5 WalMart VEckOilSvc q 25.19 +.37 1.52 13 53.75 +.39 -2.5 .24 ... 7.15 +.01 -61.5 WellsFargo VanE JrGld q 34.11 -.61 FredsInc .28 38 15.44 +.13 +14.2 .56 22 55.45 -.51 +14.8 Wendys Co VangREIT q 84.09 -.23 FullerHB

Apple’s $999 gamble

I

S

L

I

.76 23 81.17 -.13 +45.0 VangEmg q 44.41 -.65 GenElec .96 23 24.32 +.12 -23.0 WestlkChm VangEur q 58.04 -.39 1.60 ... 58.25 +.91 +14.7 +4.5 WestRck Goodyear .40 10 32.27 +.19 VangFTSE q 43.28 -.29 1.24 28 33.40 +.12 +11.0 2.66 20 138.69 +.94 +19.7 Weyerhsr Vantiv 44 71.90 -.08 HonwllIntl Vereit 15 8.50 -.10 Intel .25p 12 32.88 +.44 +43.0 1.09 16 37.07 -.16 +2.2 Xerox rs VerizonCm 10 49.48 +.14 Jabil ... ... 13.24 +.61 -.3 .32 20 30.41 -1.03 +28.5 YRC Wwde ViacomB 8 27.72 +.58 Viavi 14 9.63 -.16 Vipshop 19 9.55 -.30 Visa s 34 104.97 -.44 VulcanM 37 118.20 +3.02 W&T Off 13 2.65 +.08 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) WPX Engy dd 11.06 +.32 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg WalMart 18 80.50 +.45 Name WalgBoots 16 78.84 -2.37 AMD 5.12 -1.17 -18.6 814993 13.74 +.62 AlnylamP 113.84 +38.80 +51.7 MaxwellT WalterInv dd .73 +.08 BkofAm -.47 -17.3 785785 25.06 +.20 FutFintch lf 2.26 +.56 +33.1 KBS Fash rs 2.25 WashPrGp 22 8.03 -.07 RiteAid 3.05 -.61 -16.7 527967 2.44 +.04 ENDRA n 3.83 +.82 +27.4 Tintri n WeathfIntl dd 4.06 -.08 Apple Inc 4.00 +.70 +21.2 IovanceTh 7.15 -1.40 -16.4 499421 156.07 -2.66 Presbia n WeiboCorp ... 100.80 -4.54 MicronT 404671 35.97 +.02 ArbutusB g 6.70 +1.15 +20.7 BedBath 22.74 -4.29 -15.9 WellsFargo 13 53.75 +.39 2.50 -.44 -15.0 381583 4.19 +.15 DicernaPh 4.48 +.69 +18.2 FusionTel WDigital 13 86.37 -3.55 ChesEng -.49 -11.5 362557 24.32 +.12 MotifBi un 2.61 +.35 +15.4 RemarkHld 3.77 WheatPr g 24 19.07 -.35 GenElec Jupai n 13.05 +1.68 +14.8 Onvia Inc 4.25 -.50 -10.5 Vale SA 360067 10.59 -.19 WhitingPet dd 5.19 +.28 WmsCos 43 30.39 -.11 DelmarPh n 305972 1.07 -.05 PlugPowr h 2.74 +.33 +13.7 AltisrcAst 88.00 -10.00 -10.2 -.93 -10.1 Windstm rs dd 1.94 -.01 Comcast s 290835 37.46 +.16 YangRvD n 17.00 +1.91 +12.7 Nabriva n 8.26 WTJpHedg q 54.48 +.38 WT India q 26.32 -.45 YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY XcelEngy 22 48.13 -.31 3,033 Advanced 1,606 Total issues 3,087 1,626 Total issues Yamana g dd 2.69 -.08 Advanced 195 Declined Declined 1,281 New Highs 184 1,252 New Highs ZaiLab n ... 27.93 21 Unchanged Unchanged 146 New Lows 22 209 New Lows ZionsBcp 20 45.11 +.70 Volume 3,374,105,899 Volume 1,941,831,919 Zynga dd 3.91 +.03

MARKET SUMMARY G

N

Initial jobless benefit claims The government’s latest weekly tally of seasonally adjusted, in thousands est. 305 applications for unemployment benefits 298 300 is expected to show a sharp increase 284 from the previous week. Applications jumped two weeks ago, posting the largest gain in nearly five years. The increase was driven by 250 236 Hurricane Harvey’s impact on Texas and 232 235 Louisiana. Economists predict that Hurricane Irma, which struck Florida on Sept. 10, pushed last week’s applica200 tions higher. The Labor Department 8/11 8/18 8/25 9/1 9/8 9/15 releases its tally of applications for 2017 unemployment benefits today. Source: FactSet

D

L

N

D

Reading results Scholastic Corp. serves up its fiscal first-quarter results today. The publishing, education and media company has benefited from strong sales of “Harry Potter” books, increased demand for its educational titles and growth at its children’s trade publishing business across international markets. The company finished the 12 months that ended in May with gains in earnings and revenue versus the same period a year earlier. Did the trend continue in the three months ended in August?

Thursday, September 21, 2017

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AB DiversMunicipal14.48 -0.01 +3.6 AMG YacktmanI d 23.67 +0.01 +10.7 AQR MgdFtsStratI 8.90 ... -4.5 American Beacon LgCpValInstl 30.17 +0.10 +9.5 SmCpValInstl 28.07 +0.13 +1.6 American Century EqIncInv 9.46 -0.03 +8.7 GrInv 33.49 ... +20.5 UltraInv 43.18 +0.01 +23.8 ValInv 8.99 +0.03 +2.9 American Funds AMCpA m 30.72 +0.04 +14.5 AmrcnBalA m 26.93 -0.02 +10.2 AmrcnHiIncA m10.46 +0.01 +6.0 AmrcnMutA m 40.46 +0.07 +11.5 BdfAmrcA m 12.98 -0.02 +3.4 CptWldGrIncA m51.14 -0.07 +18.5 CptlIncBldrA m62.60 -0.15 +11.3 CptlWldBdA m 20.08 -0.08 +7.4 EuroPacGrA m55.79 -0.13 +26.3 FdmtlInvsA m 61.39 -0.05 +14.9 GlbBalA m 32.42 -0.05 +11.0 GrfAmrcA m 49.43 +0.02 +17.6 IncAmrcA m 23.16 -0.01 +9.2 IntlGrIncA m 33.92 -0.09 +21.4 IntrmBdfAmrA m13.44 -0.02 +1.5 InvCAmrcA m 40.19 +0.04 +12.2 NewWldA m 65.06 -0.03 +26.5 NwPrspctvA m43.60 -0.10 +23.4 SmCpWldA m 55.14 -0.01 +19.9 TheNewEcoA m45.59 -0.05 +26.8 TxExBdA m 13.03 -0.01 +4.6 WAMtInvsA m 44.22 +0.06 +12.1 Angel Oak MltStratIncIns 11.28 -0.01 +4.6 Artisan IntlInstl 32.48 -0.17 +26.1 IntlInv 32.27 -0.16 +26.0 IntlValueInstl 39.02 -0.11 +20.0 Baird AggrgateBdInstl10.92 -0.02 +3.7 CorPlusBdInstl 11.27 -0.02 +4.0 ShrtTrmBdInstl 9.71 -0.01 +1.6 BlackRock EngyResInvA m16.95 +0.26 -15.1 EqDivInstl 22.51 +0.06 +9.7 EqDivInvA m 22.44 +0.06 +9.5 GlbAllcIncInstl 20.26 -0.02 +11.0 GlbAllcIncInvA m20.13 -0.03 +10.7 GlbAllcIncInvC m18.23 -0.03 +10.2 HYBdInstl 7.83 +0.01 +6.8 HYBdK 7.84 +0.01 +7.0 StrIncOpIns 9.97 ... +3.9 Causeway IntlValInstl d 16.54 -0.08 +19.3 ClearBridge AggresivGrA m208.24 -0.12 +10.2 LgCpGrI 43.54 +0.03 +16.4 Cohen & Steers PrfrdScInc,IncI 14.26 ... +10.0 Rltys 66.75 -0.23 +4.4 Columbia ContCorZ 25.85 +0.04 +14.9 DFA EMktCorEqI 22.47 -0.04 +30.2 EMktSCInstl 23.72 -0.04 +28.3 EmMktsInstl 29.56 -0.05 +30.6 EmMktsValInstl 30.55 -0.03 +27.8 FvYrGlbFIIns 11.01 -0.01 +2.1 GlbEqInstl 22.01 +0.02 +14.0 GlbRlEsttSec 11.01 -0.03 +5.9 IntlCorEqIns 14.00 -0.03 +21.7 IntlRlEsttScIns 5.15 -0.02 +9.6 IntlSmCoInstl 21.21 -0.08 +23.6 IntlSmCpValIns 23.12 -0.04 +21.9 IntlValInstl 19.53 -0.02 +18.6 OneYearFIInstl 10.30 ... +0.8 RlEsttSecInstl 35.33 -0.10 +3.9 ShTrmExQtyI 10.85 -0.01 +2.1 TAUSCorEq2Instl17.02+0.04 +9.7 TMdUSMktwdVl29.73 +0.10 +8.2 TwYrGlbFIIns 9.98 ... +1.0 USCorEq1Instl 21.36 +0.04 +11.7 USCorEqIIInstl 20.27 +0.05 +9.7 USLgCo 19.59 +0.01 +13.7 USLgCpValInstl37.94 +0.09 +9.1 USMicroCpInstl21.59 +0.10 +3.7 USSmCpInstl 34.97 +0.16 +3.8 USSmCpValInstl37.36 +0.24 +0.2 USTrgtedValIns24.22 +0.14 +1.4 Davis NYVentureA m33.05 +0.18 +12.4 Delaware Inv ValInstl 20.77 +0.06 +6.5 Dodge & Cox Bal 108.32 +0.57 +7.5 GlbStk 13.89 +0.07 +16.6 Inc 13.90 ... +3.8 IntlStk 46.60 -0.10 +22.3 Stk 198.56 +1.70 +10.1 DoubleLine CorFII 11.05 ... +4.4 TtlRetBdI 10.73 -0.01 +3.5 TtlRetBdN b 10.73 -0.01 +3.4 Eaton Vance AtlntCptSMIDCI31.41 +0.22 +12.8 FltngRtInstl 8.99 +0.01 +3.2 GlbMcrAbRtI 9.11 +0.01 +3.1 Edgewood GrInstl 29.00 +0.01 +30.6 FPA Crescent d 34.29 +0.06 +6.4 NewInc d 10.03 -0.01 +2.0 Federated InsHYBdIns d 10.12 +0.01 +6.8 StratValDivIns 6.45 -0.02 +11.8 TtlRetBdInstl 10.94 -0.01 +3.8 Fidelity 500IdxIns 88.10 +0.06 +13.7 500IdxInsPrm 88.10 +0.06 +13.7 500IndexPrm 88.09 +0.05 +13.7 AsstMgr20% 13.58 ... +5.4 AsstMgr50% 18.36 -0.01 +10.5 AsstMgr70% 22.31 ... +13.8 BCGrowth 84.11 +0.05 +27.4 BCGrowthK 84.22 +0.06 +27.6 Balanced 24.48 ... +12.0 BalancedK 24.48 ... +12.1 Cap&Inc d 10.21 ... +9.2 Contrafund 121.34 +0.02 +24.0 ContrafundK 121.32 +0.01 +24.1 CptlApprec 37.02 +0.04 +16.9 DivGro 33.65 +0.04 +10.9 DiversIntl 40.73 -0.16 +22.3 DiversIntlK 40.68 -0.16 +22.4 EmMkts 21.03 -0.02 +33.9 EqDividendInc 28.57 +0.02 +7.6 EqIncome 60.46 +0.04 +7.3 ExMktIdxPr 60.70 +0.21 +10.6 FltngRtHiInc d 9.63 +0.01 +2.5 FourinOneIdx 43.04 -0.02 +13.2 Frdm2015 13.40 ... +10.8 Frdm2020 16.48 ... +11.7 Frdm2025 14.24 -0.01 +12.5 Frdm2030 17.79 ... +14.6 Frdm2035 14.89 ... +16.0 Frdm2040 10.45 ... +16.0 GNMA 11.46 -0.02 +1.8 GlobalexUSIdx 13.01 -0.03 +22.2 GroCo 176.04 +0.55 +28.7 GroCoK 175.97 +0.55 +28.8 Growth&Inc 35.80 +0.11 +9.1 IntlDiscv 46.28 -0.16 +26.9 IntlGr 15.86 -0.05 +23.9 IntlIdxInstlPrm 42.46 -0.15 +20.3 IntlIdxPremium 42.45 -0.15 +20.3 IntlVal 10.69 -0.03 +16.7 IntrmMuniInc 10.45 ... +4.3 InvmGradeBd 11.32 -0.01 +3.9 InvmGradeBd 7.95 -0.01 +3.6 LargeCapStock32.03 +0.13 +10.5 LatinAmerica d26.41 +0.09 +38.6 LowPrStk 51.00 -0.11 +11.3 LowPrStkK 50.96 -0.11 +11.4 Magellan 101.67 +0.16 +17.8 MidCapStock 37.74 +0.03 +11.7 MuniInc 13.27 -0.01 +5.7 NewMktsInc d 16.48 -0.04 +9.6 OTCPortfolio 104.06 +0.04 +30.6 Overseas 49.39 -0.24 +24.9 Puritan 23.12 +0.01 +13.2 PuritanK 23.10 ... +13.2 ShTrmBd 8.62 -0.01 +1.2 SmCpDiscv d 30.59 +0.02 +0.6 StkSelorAllCp 42.92 +0.07 +17.9 StratInc 11.16 -0.01 +7.1 TelecomandUtls26.88 -0.15 +10.1 TotalBond 10.72 -0.01 +3.8 TtlMktIdxF 72.68 +0.08 +13.1 TtlMktIdxInsPrm72.66 +0.08 +13.1

Economic indicator

YOUR FUNDS TtlMktIdxPrm 72.67 +0.08 USBdIdxInsPrm11.64 -0.02 USBdIdxPrm 11.64 -0.02 Value 120.14 +0.27 Fidelity Advisor EmMktsIncI d 14.26 -0.03 NewInsA m 31.41 +0.02 NewInsI 32.09 +0.03 StgIncI 12.62 -0.01 Fidelity Select Biotechnology231.83 +2.73 HealthCare 231.89 +1.05 Technology 179.03 -0.52 First Eagle GlbA m 59.47 -0.03 Franklin Templeton ... CATxFrIncA m 7.50 FdrTFIncA m 12.03 ... GlbBdA m 12.32 +0.09 GlbBdAdv 12.27 +0.09 Gr,IncA m 26.75 -0.01 GrA m 91.29 +0.09 HYTxFrIncA m10.25 ... IncA m 2.38 ... IncAdv 2.36 ... IncC m 2.41 ... InsIntlEqPrmry 21.96 -0.08 MutGlbDiscvA m32.39 +0.04 MutGlbDiscvZ 33.06 +0.05 MutZ 29.39 +0.03 RisingDivsA m 58.72 +0.16 GE RSPUSEq 56.40 +0.05 GMO IntlEqIV 23.40 -0.09 Goldman Sachs HYMuniInstl d 9.62 ... ShrtDurTxFrIns10.58 -0.01 Harbor CptlApprecInstl 72.59 -0.14 IntlInstl 69.92 -0.41 Harding Loevner IntlEqInstl d 22.21 ... Hartford CptlApprecA m41.17 +0.03 INVESCO ComStkA m 25.29 +0.15 DiversDivA m 20.00 -0.03 EqandIncA m 11.12 +0.03 HYMuniA m 10.09 ... IVA WldwideI d 18.97 -0.04 JPMorgan CPBondR6 8.32 -0.01 CoreBondI 11.67 -0.01 CoreBondR6 11.68 -0.01 DisEqR6 26.60 +0.01 EqIncI 16.35 +0.04 HighYieldI 7.51 ... MCapValL 38.99 +0.05 USLCpCrPlsI 31.73 +0.08 Janus Henderson BalancedT 32.42 ... GlobalLifeSciT 55.91 +0.34 ResearchD ... John Hancock BdI 15.99 -0.01 DiscpValI 21.42 +0.06 DiscpValMCI 23.30 +0.10 MltMgLsBlA b 15.78 ... MltmgrLsGr1 b16.81 ... Lazard EMEqInstl 19.44 -0.01 IntlStratEqIns 14.97 -0.07 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.34 ... GrY 14.96 +0.01 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m 16.48 +0.01 FltngRtF b 9.14 ... ShrtDurIncA m 4.28 -0.01 ShrtDurIncC m 4.31 ... ShrtDurIncF b 4.28 ... ShrtDurIncI 4.28 ... MFS GrA m 86.71 -0.05 InstlIntlEq 24.92 -0.13 TtlRetA m 19.21 -0.01 ValA m 39.85 +0.03 ValI 40.08 +0.03 Matthews ChinaInv 23.14 +0.10 IndiaInv 32.79 -0.10 Metropolitan West TtlRetBdI 10.69 -0.02 TtlRetBdM b 10.69 -0.02 TtlRetBdPlan 10.06 -0.02 Northern IntlEqIdx d 12.70 -0.04 StkIdx 30.33 +0.02 Nuveen HYMuniBdA m17.28 -0.01 HYMuniBdI 17.28 -0.01 IntermDrMnBdI 9.29 -0.01 Oakmark EqAndIncInv 33.18 +0.01 IntlInv 28.60 -0.14 Inv 81.88 +0.20 SelInv 46.90 +0.29 Oberweis ChinaOpps m 16.59 +0.19 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCpStrat17.19 ... LgCpStrats 14.60 -0.02 StratOpps 8.18 -0.01 Oppenheimer DevMktsA m 42.46 +0.11 DevMktsY 41.94 +0.11 GlbA m 94.75 -0.22 IntlGrY 42.25 -0.22 MnStrA m 53.23 +0.06 Osterweis StrInc 11.34 ... PIMCO AlAstAllAthIns 9.02 ... AlAstInstl 12.10 ... CmdtyRlRtStrIns6.62 ... FBdUSDHdgI 10.63 ... HYInstl 9.05 +0.01 IncA m 12.43 ... IncC m 12.43 ... IncD b 12.43 ... IncInstl 12.43 ... IncP 12.43 ... InvGdCpBdIns 10.64 ... LowDrInstl 9.90 ... RlEstRlRtStrC m6.62 ... RlRetInstl 11.08 ... ShrtTrmIns 9.84 ... TtlRetA m 10.33 -0.02 TtlRetIns 10.33 -0.02 PRIMECAP Odyssey AgrsGr 39.60 +0.12 Gr 33.90 +0.01 Stk 29.81 +0.04 Parnassus CorEqInv 43.12 +0.01 Pioneer A m 32.68 +0.04 Principal DiversIntlIns 13.76 -0.04 LfTm2030Ins 14.93 -0.01 Prudential TtlRetBdZ 14.54 -0.02 Putnam EqIncA m 23.30 +0.08 MltCpGrY 93.94 +0.04 Schwab FdmtlUSLgCIdx16.52 +0.02 SP500Idx 39.12 +0.02 Schwab1000Idx60.87 +0.06 TtlStkMktIdx 44.94 +0.05 State Farm Gr 76.79 +0.02 T. Rowe Price BCGr 92.65 +0.07 CptlAprc 29.22 +0.04 DivGr 41.49 +0.03 EMBd d 12.82 -0.02 EMStk d 42.76 -0.12 EqIdx500 d 67.65 +0.04 EqInc 34.11 +0.07 GlbTech 18.46 -0.06 GrStk 67.17 +0.04 HY d 6.80 +0.01 HlthSci 73.73 +0.59 InsFltngRt d 10.02 ... InsLgCpGr 37.52 +0.13 InsMdCpEqGr 54.69 +0.19 IntlBd d 9.05 -0.05 IntlStk d 18.97 -0.04 IntlValEq d 15.18 -0.02 LatinAmerica d26.16 -0.01 MdCpGr 89.11 +0.29 MdCpVal 30.51 +0.08 MediaTeleCms 94.93 -0.05 NewHorizons 53.64 +0.34

+13.1 +3.1 +3.1 +9.4

+9.6 +19.9 +20.2 +7.1 +33.2 +25.5 +42.2 +9.6 +5.3 +3.1 +4.8 +4.9 +13.5 +19.2 +3.9 +7.1 +7.2 +7.0 +18.1 +7.7 +7.9 +5.8 +12.2 +14.5 +19.9 +8.9 +2.5 +28.1 +19.7 +24.6 +15.7 +8.2 +4.8 +6.4 +7.1 +10.4 +3.8 +3.4 +3.5 +13.5 +8.8 +6.0 +7.1 +12.8 +11.8 +23.9 +17.6 +4.7 +10.6 +8.5 +11.4 +14.4 +22.4 +20.3 +7.6 +24.8 +8.8 +2.3 +2.0 +1.8 +2.3 +2.4 +22.6 +23.0 +7.9 +11.2 +11.5 +49.6 +27.8 +3.1 +2.8 +3.1 +20.3 +13.6 +9.2 +9.3 +5.8 +9.1 +26.0 +13.0 +9.0 +51.6 +12.8 +13.8 +9.9 +31.0 +31.2 +26.8 +21.8 +13.3 +4.6 +10.5 +11.2 -1.8 +2.4 +6.6 +6.8 +6.3 +6.9 +7.1 +7.1 +7.0 +1.8 +2.2 +3.2 +1.6 +4.7 +5.0 +18.3 +18.4 +15.2 +10.3 +13.6 +25.1 +13.3 +5.4 +10.4 +21.3 +8.5 +13.7 +13.5 +13.1 +9.2 +27.6 +11.6 +12.3 +9.3 +35.0 +13.5 +9.3 +39.6 +26.1 +6.4 +24.8 +2.5 +28.3 +19.0 +10.1 +24.1 +18.5 +35.1 +18.2 +5.0 +27.9 +23.8

NewInc 9.52 -0.01 OverseasStk d 11.14 -0.02 RlEstt d 28.42 -0.03 Rtr2015 15.62 -0.01 Rtr2020 22.85 -0.01 Rtr2025 17.58 -0.01 Rtr2030 25.84 -0.01 Rtr2035 18.86 ... Rtr2040 27.06 ... Rtr2045 18.26 ... Rtr2050 15.35 ... SmCpStk 49.08 +0.30 SmCpVal d 48.06 +0.29 SpectrumInc 12.82 -0.01 SummitMnIntr 11.96 -0.01 Val 37.54 +0.01 TCW TtlRetBdI 10.03 -0.01 TIAA-CREF BdIdxIns 10.87 -0.01 EqIdxIns 18.76 +0.02 GrIncIns 13.89 +0.02 IntlEqIdxIns 19.93 -0.06 LgCpValIdxIns 19.31 +0.04 LgCpValIns 19.41 +0.07 Thornburg InvmIncBldrC m21.42 -0.02 LtdTrmMnI 14.48 ... Tweedy, Browne GlbVal d 27.83 +0.01 VALIC Co I StkIdx 38.11 +0.02 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 231.46 +0.15 500IdxInv 231.46 +0.14 BalIdxAdmrl 33.62 +0.01 BalIdxIns 33.63 +0.02 CAITTxExAdm 11.86 -0.01 CptlOppAdmrl149.47 +0.02 DevMIdxAdmrl 13.90 -0.03 DevMIdxIns 13.91 -0.04 DivGrInv 26.05 +0.01 EMStkIdxInAdm36.94 -0.01 EMStkIdxIns 28.09 -0.01 EngyAdmrl 95.86 +0.90 EqIncAdmrl 74.87 +0.02 EqIncInv 35.71 ... ExplorerAdmrl 91.68 +0.16 ExtMktIdxAdmrl79.75 +0.28 ExtMktIdxIns 79.75 +0.29 ExtMktIdxInsPls196.80 +0.70 FAWexUSIAdmr32.79 -0.07 FAWexUSIIns 103.95 -0.22 GNMAAdmrl 10.54 -0.01 GNMAInv 10.54 -0.01 GlbEqInv 29.91 -0.01 GrIdxAdmrl 68.33 -0.04 GrIdxIns 68.33 -0.05 GrandIncAdmrl 75.49 +0.04 HCAdmrl 89.48 +0.61 HCInv 212.11 +1.44 HYCorpAdmrl 5.98 ... HYTEAdmrl 11.40 ... HiDivYldIdxInv 32.02 +0.02 InTrBdIdxAdmrl11.47 -0.02 InTrInGdAdm 9.83 -0.01 InTrTEAdmrl 14.24 -0.01 InTrTrsAdmrl 11.20 -0.03 InflPrtScAdmrl 25.96 -0.07 InflPrtScIns 10.58 -0.02 InsIdxIns 229.57 +0.15 InsIdxInsPlus 229.59 +0.14 InsTtlSMIInPls 56.43 +0.07 IntlGrAdmrl 93.08 -0.28 IntlGrInv 29.27 -0.08 IntlValInv 38.56 -0.02 LTInGrdAdm 10.58 +0.02 LTTEAdmrl 11.69 -0.01 LfStrCnsrGrInv 19.73 -0.01 LfStrGrInv 32.47 -0.01 LfStrModGrInv 26.50 -0.01 LgCpIdxAdmrl 58.03 +0.04 LtdTrmTEAdmrl11.01 -0.01 MCpGrIdxAdm 51.83 +0.01 MCpVlIdxAdm 54.14 +0.01 MdCpIdxAdmrl180.71 +0.03 MdCpIdxIns 39.92 +0.01 MdCpIdxInsPlus196.89+0.04 MorganGrAdmrl92.16 -0.07 PrcMtlsMngInv 10.63 -0.12 PrmCpAdmrl 129.42 +0.03 PrmCpCorInv 25.85 +0.03 PrmCpInv 124.89 +0.03 REITIdxAdmrl 119.21 -0.34 REITIdxIns 18.45 -0.05 SCpGrIdxAdm 52.83 +0.31 SCpValIdxAdm 53.92 +0.19 STBdIdxAdmrl 10.46 -0.01 STBdIdxIns 10.46 -0.01 STBdIdxInsPlus10.46 -0.01 STInfPrScIdAdmr24.81 -0.04 STInfPrScIdIns 24.82 -0.04 STInfPrScIdxInv24.78 -0.04 STInvmGrdAdmrl10.69 -0.01 STInvmGrdIns 10.69 -0.01 STInvmGrdInv 10.69 -0.01 STTEAdmrl 15.82 ... STTrsAdmrl 10.63 -0.01 SeledValInv 32.02 +0.05 SmCpIdxAdmrl 66.39 +0.31 SmCpIdxIns 66.39 +0.31 SmCpIdxInsPlus191.63+0.89 StarInv 26.67 +0.01 StrEqInv 34.19 +0.07 TMCapApAdm129.16 +0.12 TMSmCpAdm 57.36 +0.21 TrgtRtr2015Inv 15.73 -0.01 TrgtRtr2020Inv 31.13 -0.02 TrgtRtr2025Inv 18.22 ... TrgtRtr2030Inv 32.85 -0.01 TrgtRtr2035Inv 20.15 ... TrgtRtr2040Inv 34.64 ... TrgtRtr2045Inv 21.74 ... TrgtRtr2050Inv 34.97 -0.01 TrgtRtr2055Inv 37.86 -0.01 TrgtRtrIncInv 13.50 -0.01 TtBMIdxAdmrl 10.80 -0.01 TtBMIdxIns 10.80 -0.01 TtBMIdxInsPlus10.80 -0.01 TtBMIdxInv 10.80 -0.01 TtInBIdxAdmrl 21.80 ... TtInBIdxIns 32.72 +0.01 TtInBIdxInv 10.90 ... TtInSIdxAdmrl 29.46 -0.06 TtInSIdxIns 117.79 -0.26 TtInSIdxInsPlus117.81 -0.26 TtInSIdxInv 17.61 -0.04 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 62.87 +0.08 TtlSMIdxIns 62.88 +0.07 TtlSMIdxInv 62.84 +0.08 ValIdxAdmrl 38.98 +0.07 ValIdxIns 38.98 +0.07 WlngtnAdmrl 72.70 +0.07 WlngtnInv 42.09 +0.04 WlslyIncAdmrl 64.98 -0.03 WlslyIncInv 26.82 -0.01 WndsrAdmrl 76.54 +0.22 WndsrIIAdmrl 67.46 +0.07 WndsrIIInv 38.02 +0.05 WndsrInv 22.69 +0.07 Victory SycEsVlI 39.14 +0.15 Virtus VontobelEMOppI11.76 -0.03 Waddell & Reed Adv AcculativeA m 10.18 -0.01 SciTechA m 17.29 -0.14 Western Asset CorBdI 12.67 ... CorPlusBdI 11.94 ... CorPlusBdIS 11.94 ... iShares S&P500IdxK 300.27 ...

+3.5 +22.8 +0.9 +10.2 +12.0 +13.4 +14.7 +15.8 +16.6 +16.9 +16.8 +9.2 +6.5 +5.9 +4.2 +11.6 +3.3 +3.2 +13.1 +15.5 +20.4 +7.2 +7.4 +10.0 +3.3 +11.1 +13.4 +13.7 +13.6 +9.1 +9.1 +4.9 +20.3 +20.7 +20.7 +12.9 +26.5 +26.6 -4.7 +10.9 +10.9 +14.0 +10.6 +10.6 +10.6 +21.8 +21.8 +1.9 +1.9 +20.5 +19.9 +19.9 +12.6 +18.0 +18.0 +6.7 +6.5 +9.2 +4.0 +4.1 +4.6 +2.3 +2.1 +2.2 +13.7 +13.7 +13.1 +38.2 +38.1 +21.4 +8.4 +5.4 +8.0 +13.6 +10.8 +13.9 +2.8 +14.7 +9.1 +11.6 +11.7 +11.7 +22.1 +13.1 +18.9 +16.5 +18.9 +3.7 +3.7 +13.5 +4.5 +1.5 +1.5 +1.5 +0.7 +0.7 +0.6 +2.1 +2.1 +2.1 +1.5 +0.8 +11.3 +8.5 +8.5 +8.5 +13.4 +5.6 +14.1 +4.5 +8.4 +10.2 +11.4 +12.5 +13.6 +14.7 +15.1 +15.1 +15.0 +6.2 +3.3 +3.3 +3.3 +3.2 +1.3 +1.3 +1.2 +21.9 +21.9 +22.0 +21.8 +13.1 +13.1 +13.1 +8.8 +8.9 +9.2 +9.1 +6.8 +6.8 +11.5 +9.3 +9.3 +11.4 +8.7 +30.4 +9.9 +26.8 +4.5 +6.7 +6.8 +13.6

Leading indicators An index meant to predict future seasonally adjusted percentage change growth for the U.S. economy is 0.6 0.6% expected to have posted a gain last month. Economists predict the 0.4 est. Conference Board will report today 0.3 0.3 0.3 that its index of leading indicators 0.3 rose 0.3 percent in August. That 0.2 would match the gain in July. The index, derived from data that for the most part have already been 0.0 reported, is designed to anticipate M A M J J A economic conditions three to six 2017 months out. Source: FactSet


Variety Comics

9 • Daily Corinthian

BEETLE BAILEY

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Crossword

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, September 21, 2017

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

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Hopped out of bed 6 Challenge for Santa’s drycleaner 10 Medicine __, Alberta 13 OPEC, for one 15 Radius neighbor 16 Sworn statement 17 Measurement based on inflation and unemployment rates 19 X, at times 20 Tesla Motors co-founder Musk 21 “Inside Politics” channel 22 Poet laureate, e.g. 24 “Postcards From the Edge” author 28 Where Moses received the Ten Commandments, for short 31 Colorful fall tree 32 Put together 33 Instagram upload, briefly 34 Three-time A.L. MVP 37 “Is there more?” 38 Smart comment? 42 Baja she-bear 43 Understands 45 Solar wind particle 46 Song of worship 48 Off-white color 50 It may be reckless 52 Semipermeable biological barrier 55 Big glitch 56 Inhospitable 57 2000s Chevy 61 Signature piece? 62 Author born 9/21/1947 who penned the starts of 17-, 24-, 38and 52-Across 66 Biblical craft 67 Roof edge 68 “Mad About You” co-star 69 “But, mom!” evokers 70 Zoomed 71 Drumroll drum DOWN 1 Top 2 Scenic overlook safety feature

3 Driving directions qualifier 4 Sign maker’s aid 5 Always, in sonnets 6 Denomination of most Iraqi Kurds 7 Unlike spring chickens 8 Person 9 Advice for an e-filer 10 Get going 11 One-named “All I Ask” singer 12 Skin care product 14 Sports bra fabric 18 Cross characters 23 Land surrounded by agua 25 Not pro 26 Bahrain bigwig 27 One of John Adams’ “stubborn things” 28 Corp. execs’ degrees 29 Use a fork, perhaps 30 Exercises that strengthen obliques 33 “Sign language is pretty handy,” e.g.

35 Nobel Prize city 36 Butler’s last word 39 Flag 40 “Chariots of Fire” Oscar nominee Ian 41 Time period 44 __-service 47 Enter surreptitiously 49 Makes giggle 50 Cat’s back shape, at times

51 Tylenol rival 52 Political channel 53 Calendario month 54 Two-footer 58 Authorization to enter a country 59 Fed. power dept. 60 Barbarian 63 __ water 64 Holiday threshold 65 Nintendo’s Super __ console

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By C.C. Burnikel ©2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

09/21/17

09/21/17

Ex is still in the picture for some events WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: About two years ago, my wife of 20 years, “Cynthia,” and I divorced. Our two children are grown and out of the house. Our divorce wasn’t the norm; we did it without a lawyer or mediator. Everything was civil; no one cheated or was abused. I think we both just changed over time. About four months after the divorce, I met another woman, “Beth.” Having already had my cry, I decided to give it a shot. Long story short, we were great for each other, and now, a year and a half later, we’re engaged. The problem is that Cynthia doesn’t really have a family other than mine. My sister and the rest of my family are sympathetic to Cynthia and want to include her. I don’t mind being around her, but the awkwardness comes in when Beth and Cynthia attend the same family events. Beth understands that it’s unavoidable during big occasions, such as weddings and funerals. But she feels that it isn’t normal for Cynthia to be around for our casual family gatherings, which are more frequent. She feels that once people divorce, they should start to move on with their lives and shouldn’t hang around an ex’s family gatherings. I’m very torn. I want Beth to attend these events. However, if I asked

Dear Annie

Cynthia to stop being around so much, it might get back to my family, and then Beth and I would be deemed as spoilers in the family. But she may already be seen as an outcast by excluding herself from these gatherings. Is Beth having anxiety over nothing, or should I ask my ex not to be around so much? — Ex In or Ex Out Dear Ex In or Ex Out: Your ex-wife was a part of your family for 20 years, and that bond doesn’t disappear once the ink dries on the divorce papers. It’s understandable that she wants to stay in touch with her former in-laws, and it’s understandable that they want to include her. But it’s important that your fiancee really get to know and love your family, and she’s having a hard time doing so with your exwife around. Rather than disinvite Cynthia, talk to your family members about your concern and plan additional outings with just them and Beth. Once Beth feels more settled and secure with her place in the

family, it will be easier for her to relax at family gatherings, even when Cynthia is there. Dear Annie: My husband and I own a boat that takes tourists on short trips. Three years ago, he fell in love with the only woman on board. When I realized something was up, I said, “If she is so wonderful, what is stopping you from being with her?” Without hesitation, he said, “The age difference.” I have not been able to stop thinking about that every day for the past three years. I am becoming upset even writing this to you. She is not interested in him. I guess he is old enough to be her father. But what if he meets someone his own age? I think I’d better see my lawyer. What do you think? Should we get a divorce? — Seasick Dear Seasick: I can’t tell you whether you should get a divorce based on your letter. But I can tell you that you can’t keep living this way. One comment has been eating away at you for three years, and you need to put a stop to that before it swallows you whole. Have you tried talking to your husband? It’s possible his comment was a joke, albeit a mean one.


Sports

10 • Daily Corinthian

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Out On A Limb BY “POPPY” PIGSKIN The entire panel had a winning record in Week 3, meaning it must have been an easy week at pickin’. The Old Man on the panel, “Bee-ler” pulled one out of his tail to go 12-1, overtake “The Beave” for second place and get within two games of the top guy, “Libertarian.” What about “Fire” being the only picker to go with Texas? It took USC two overtimes to take care of the Longhorns, or the “Fire” would have gotten the Upset Special of the Week. There are some tough picks this week, but happy pickin’ to the Motley Crew.

Joel “Libertarian” Counce

Mark “Bee-ler” Boehler

Steve “The Beave” Beavers

Kent “Mo” Mohundro

Zack “Mean” Steen

L.A. “Tell A” Story

Kendall “Fire” Patterson

Brant “Sapp” Sappington

Season

41-11

39-13

38-14

36-16

32-20

32-20

29-23

20-32

Last Week

10-3

12-1

10-3

11-2

9-4

10-3

7-6

9-4

Kossuth

Corinth

Kossuth

Kossuth

Kossuth

Corinth

Kossuth

Kossuth

Biggersville

Biggersville

Biggersville

Biggersville

Biggersville

Biggersville

Biggersville

Biggersville

Alcorn Central

Alcorn Central

Alcorn Central

Alcorn Central

Alcorn Central

Alcorn Central

Alcorn Central

New Site

Tishomingo County

Holly Springs

Holly Springs

Tishomingo County

Holly Springs

Tishomingo County

Tishomingo County

Holly Springs

McNairy Central @ Humboldt

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

McNairy Central

Walnut @ Fayette Academy

Walnut

Walnut

Walnut

Walnut

Walnut

Walnut

Walnut

Walnut

Miss. State

Georgia

Georgia

Miss. State

Georgia

Miss. State

Georgia

Miss. State

Arkansas

Texas A&M

Arkansas

Arkansas

Arkansas

Texas A&M

Texas A&M

Texas A&M

LSU

LSU

LSU

LSU

LSU

LSU

LSU

LSU

Kentucky

Kentucky

Kentucky

Florida

Kentucky

Kentucky

Florida

Florida

Michigan State

Notre Dame

Corinth @ Kossuth Ashland @ Biggersville Alcorn Central @ New Site Holly Springs @ Tishomingo Co.

Miss. State @ Georgia Arkansas vs. Texas A&M Syracuse @ LSU Florida @ Kentucky

Notre Dame @ Michigan State Michigan @ Purdue TCU @ OSU

Scoreboard Tuesday, Sept. 19

HS Softball @ Fulton Corinth 6, Itawamba 2

CHS 111 020 1 — 6 9 1 IAHS 110 000 0 — 2 6 6 (WP) Lily Null (LP) Weston; MH: (CHS) Maddy Oaks 2, McKenzie Patterson 2; HR: (CHS) Oaks, Patterson (Record) Corinth 7-5, 3-3

HS Volleyball @ Savannah Hardin County 3, McNairy Central 2 HCHS 25 21 20 25 15 MCHS 19 25 25 14 8 (Record) McNairy Central 3-7

JV Volleyball @ Savannah McNairy Central 2, Hardin County 0 MCHS 25 25 HCHS 19 22

Wednesday, Sept. 20

HS Softball @ Corinth Corinth 11, Kossuth 0

KHS 000 000 — 0 4 2 CHS 320 204 — 11 17 0 (WP) Lily Null (LP) Avery Mullins; MH: (CHS) McKenzie Patterson 3, Emilshawua Blair 2, Tatianna Selmon 2, Tiara Selmon 2, Kaleigh Sanders 2, Michayla Lancaster 2 (KHS) None; 2B: (CHS) Selmon, Sanders, Patterson (Records) Corinth 8-5, 4-3 Kossuth 11-5, 4-3

Notre Dame

Notre Dame Michigan State Notre Dame Notre Dame Notre Dame

Michigan

Michigan

Purdue

Purdue

Michigan

Michigan

Michigan

Michigan

OSU

OSU

OSU

OSU

OSU

OSU

TCU

OSU

Mullen earns National Coach of the Week Mississippi State Sports Information

STARKVILLE -— The national honors continue to roll in for Mississippi State football as head coach Dan Mullen was recognized as the Bobby Dodd Trophy National Coach of the Week. It was announced by officials from the Dodd Coach of the Year Foundation and Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl this week. The Dodd Trophy Coach of the Week Award honors the football coach whose program embodies the award’s three pillars of scholarship, leadership and integrity, while also having success on the playing field during the previous week. Mullen and the Bulldogs beat No. 11 LSU 37-7 for the largest margin of victory for MSU in the 111-year series history. It was the Bulldogs’ first victory over LSU in Starkville since 1999. It was also the largest margin of victory over a ranked opponent by the Bulldogs since 1942 (33-0 over No. 12 Vanderbilt).

The win catapulted State into the Top 20 of the national polls ranking as high as No. 17 in the Associated Press poll and No. Mullen 19 in the Amway USA Today Coaches Top 25. “When an unranked team dominates a No. 11 team the way Mississippi State did on Saturday against LSU, we take notice,” said Jim Terry, chairman of the Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Foundation. “Coach Mullen has set a new standard for excellence in Starkville since arriving in 2009, and we appreciate the way that he leads his program.” It’s the second straight year Mullen has won the honor. He was the recipient following the Bulldogs’ 35-28 win over No. 4 Texas A&M last season on Nov. 5. Mullen is the only SEC coach to win the honor multiple times since the start of

last season. At 64-42 (.604), Mullen is just one victory away from tying College Football Hall of Famer Allyn McKeen for second in MSU history, and he’s 11 wins away from tying Jackie Sherrill’s school-record mark. Mullen is currently the SEC’s second-longest tenured coach in his ninth season. The Bulldogs were 32-65 in the eight years prior to his arrival. Off the field, Mullen’s players are constant achievers in the classroom earning an NCAA Academic Progress Rate (APR) score of 974 last year while also donating countless hours to the Starkville area and state of Mississippi. A school-record 31 Bulldogs were named to the 2016 SEC Fall Academic Honor Roll, which ranked among the top five in the league. During Mullen’s entire tenure at MSU, 166 players have earned the distinction of SEC Honor Roll recipient. State is tied for the SEC lead in number of National Football

Foundation National Scholar-Athletes produced since 2010, with two. The Mullens created the Mullen Family 36 Foundation, raising close to $500,000 for charity in the last five years. The foundation has impacted the lives of 36 different children’s charities throughout the state of Mississippi and annually chooses a deserving student for a college scholarship. In the spring of 2017, the foundation hosted its first golf classic, bringing back former Bulldogs and celebrities who raised over $100,000 for children’s charities. “Coach Mullen has led the Bulldogs to extraordinary success on the field as well as in the classroom,” said Chick-fil-A Peach Bowl Chairman Percy Vaughn. “He has the Bulldogs looking like a legitimate SEC West contender, and his commitment to his players and program made him an easy choice for the Dodd Trophy Coach of the Week recognition.”

Local Schedule Today JC Football Southwest @ Northeast, 6:30 HS Volleyball West Memphis Christian @ Alcorn Central, 5:30 Biggersville @ West Memphis (Ark.), 5:30 HS Softball Itawamba AHS @ Kossuth (JV & V), 5 Jumpertown @ New Site (V only), 5 Thrasher @ Pine Grove (V & JV), 5:30 Corinth @ Tishomingo Co.(V & JV), 5:30 Blue Mountain @ Walnut (V only), 5

Friday

7

HS Football — Week 6 Thrasher, Booneville (open) Corinth @ Kossuth, 7 (WXRZ) Ashland @ Biggersville, 7 Alcorn Central @ New Site, 7 Holly Springs @ Tishomingo Co.(HC), McNairy Central @ Humboldt, 7 Walnut @ Fayette Academy, 7

Saturday HS Softball Corinth Tournament (V & JV), 9 a.m. (Kossuth, Booneville & Tish Co.will also be in the tournament) Biggersville @ Baldwyn Tournament, TBA

Monday, Sept. 25 HS Softball Kossuth @ Falkner (V & JV), 5 Walnut @ Myrtle (V & JV), 5:30 HS Volleyball Biggersville @ Kossuth, 5:30

Tuesday, Sept. 26 HS Softball Wheeler @ Booneville (V & JV), 5 Please see SCHEDULE | 11

Photo courtesy of Chris Butler

Thrasher tops New Site

New Site’s Bonnie Wright (3) slides home under the tag of Thrasher catcher Lexi Underwood (12) as the umpire trails during Tuesday’s game at Thrasher Field. The Lady Rebels claimed a hard-fought 12-7 win over the Lady Royals. The two teams are now tied inside division play.

Federer, Nadal would be happy to play doubles The Associated Press

PRAGUE — With Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal at the Laver Cup team tennis tournament, expectations are running high about the chance of seeing the two as doubles partners. The three-day competition at the O2 Arena in Prague starts Friday, pitting a team of the best six European players

against the top six from the rest of the world. No ATP rankings points will be awarded. Alexander Zverev, Marin Cilic, Dominic Thiem and Tomas Berdych are also on the European team to face Sam Querrey, John Isner, Nick Kyrgios, Jack Sock, Denis Shapovalov and Frances Tiafoe. The tournament is to honor Rod Laver, an 11-time ma-

jor champion who won two calendar-year Grand Slams. It will include three singles and one doubles match every day. Bjorn Bjorg captains Europe while John McEnroe does the same for the opponents. Federer and Nadal were clear about their choice of a possible partner. “I’ve played a lot against Rafa on so many occasions,

in big matches,” Federer said at Prague’s picturesque Old Town Square. “I think in nine Grand Slam finals. Finally, to have him on my side it’s a joy. We talked about playing doubles a long, long time ago. It never happened. Of course, I would love to share the side of the net this time around. We Please see DOUBLES | 11


11 • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard Baseball AL STANDINGS East Division W L Pct GB 87 64 .576 — 85 67 .559 2½ 73 78 .483 14 73 79 .480 14½ 71 80 .470 16 Central Division W L Pct GB x-Cleveland 94 57 .623 — Minnesota 78 74 .513 16½ Kansas City 73 77 .487 20½ Detroit 62 90 .408 32½ Chicago 60 90 .400 33½ West Division W L Pct GB x-Houston 92 58 .613 — Los Angeles 76 74 .507 16 Texas 74 76 .493 18 Seattle 74 77 .490 18½ Oakland 69 83 .454 24 x-clinched division Tuesday’s Games Boston 1, Baltimore 0, 11 innings N.Y. Yankees 5, Minnesota 2 Toronto 5, Kansas City 2 Chicago Cubs 2, Tampa Bay 1 Oakland 9, Detroit 8 Houston 3, Chicago White Sox 1 Cleveland 6, L.A. Angels 3 Texas 3, Seattle 1 Wednesday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 11, Minnesota 3 Oakland 3, Detroit 2 Boston at Baltimore (n) Kansas City at Toronto (n) Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay (n) Chicago White Sox at Houston (n) Cleveland at L.A. Angels (n) Texas at Seattle (n) Today’s Games Cleveland (Salazar 5-6) at L.A. Angels (Bridwell 8-2), 3:07 p.m. Tampa Bay (Andriese 5-3) at Baltimore (Ynoa 1-2), 6:05 p.m. Kansas City (Vargas 16-10) at Toronto (Happ 9-10), 6:07 p.m. Minnesota (Mejia 4-6) at Detroit (Zimmermann 8-12), 6:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Fulmerx 2-1) at Houston (Keuchel 13-4), 7:10 p.m. Texas (Hamels 10-4) at Seattle (Paxton 12-4), 9:10 p.m. Friday’s Games Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 6:07 p.m. Boston at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Minnesota at Detroit, 6:10 p.m. Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Texas at Oakland, 9:05 p.m. Cleveland at Seattle, 9:10 p.m. Boston New York Tampa Bay Baltimore Toronto

Photo by Kent Mohundro

Corinth blanks Kossuth Corinth’s Tiara Selmon (29) slides home with the 11th and final run of Wednesday’s region softball game against Kossuth at the CHS Sports Plex. Lady Aggie catcher Paige Mask can’t handle the throw, and the game was called after 6 due to the 10-run rule with Corinth winning 11-0. Both teams are tied in region play with identical 4-3 records. The Lady Warriors are 8-5 overall while Kossuth is now 11-5. Looking on and cheering in the background is Corinth outfielder McKenzie Patterson.

FBS sees huge spike in targeting enforcement The Associated Press

College football’s Bowl Subdivision has seen a 73 percent increase in the number of targeting penalties enforced through the first three weeks of the season compared with the same point in 2016. National coordinator of officials Rogers Redding said Wednesday that 55 targeting penalties have been enforced in 214 games (0.26 per game). Last year at this time, 35 targeting penalties had been enforced in 230 games (0.15). Targeting is called if a player uses the crown of his helmet to strike an opponent above the shoulders or strikes the head or neck area of a defenseless opponent with a helmet, forearm, hand, elbow or shoulder. Big Ten coordinator of officials Bill Carollo said the early numbers are alarming. “I fired off an email to a few people to say we need to do something about this,” he said. “Let’s not wait until the end of the season. Not let’s wait to do a study. I don’t have all the answers, but it needs to get to the level of commissioners, athletic directors and partnering with coaches.” The rule didn’t change from last year. Targeting

penalties that are upheld by video review result in a 15-yard penalty and the ejection of the player called for the targeting. Redding said the increase in number of calls could be attributed to onfield and replay officials becoming more comfortable making the call. Last year, for the entire 2016 season, there was an average of 0.17 targeting calls enforced per game. The 0.26 per game so far this season is a 53 percent increase. Redding said comparing the first three weeks of 2016 to the first three weeks of 2017 is a better gauge because games in September tend to be played differently because there are more mismatches, and less experienced players are on the field. Redding said there have been 75 targeting penalties called on the field through three weeks, and 20 of them have been overturned on review. Last year, there were 44 fouls called on the field through three weeks, with nine of them overturned. Of the 55 targeting penalties enforced, 15 of the calls were initiated by the replay official. Redding said he did not have complete data for how many calls were made by replay officials last year.

SCHEDULE CONTINUED FROM 10

Tishomingo Co.@ Kossuth (JV & V), 5 Pine Grove @ Jumpertown (V only), 5 HS Volleyball Tishomingo Co.@ Corinth, 5:30

Thursday, Sept. 28 JC Football Northeast @ Coaho-

ma, 7 HS Softball Booneville @ Corinth (V & JV), 5:30 Mantachie @ Tishomingo Co.(V & JV), 5:30 Thrasher @ Wheeler (V & JV), 5 Jumpertown @ East Union (V only) 5:30 HS Volleyball Corinth @ Middleton, 5:30

DOUBLES CONTINUED FROM 10

have to see how practice goes and then at the end Bjorn will take the ultimate decision.” Nadal concurred. “Of course, I would love (to play with Federer),” Nadal said. “It will be amazing if that happens. We’ve talked about that years ago to play in some tournament together. It didn’t happen yet. We’re looking forward to playing here, hopefully. Let’s see if the captain allows us to play.” Borg has yet to decide how to form pairs for doubles, but suggested “there’s a very good chance” for Federer and Nadal. “He’s the captain, he’s

the boss here now,” Nadal said. “I am just here to try my best, every time the captain wants me on court, I am just here to try to help the team to win the Laver Cup.” Federer warned a victory was not a given even though the two are currenxtly ranked No. 1 (Nadal) and No. 2 (Federer). “There’s a lot of expectations and everybody thinks we’re going to win and play together then we bomb out,” Federer said. “So, we better make sure we focus on just playing good doubles and if it works together at the same time, that’d be great. “I’m sure that the crowd would go absolutely crazy.”

NL STANDINGS

East Division W L Pct GB x-Washington 91 59 .607 — Miami 72 80 .474 20 Atlanta 67 82 .450 23½ New York 65 87 .428 27 Philadelphia 60 91 .397 31½ Central Division W L Pct GB Chicago 84 66 .560 — Milwaukee 81 70 .536 3½ St. Louis 78 72 .520 6 Pittsburgh 68 84 .447 17 Cincinnati 66 85 .437 18½ West Division W L Pct GB z-Los Angeles 96 55 .636 — Arizona 87 65 .572 9½ Colorado 82 70 .539 14½ San Diego 68 83 .450 28 San Francisco 60 93 .392 37 z-clinched playoff berth x-clinched division Tuesday’s Games Milwaukee 1, Pittsburgh 0 Philadelphia 6, L.A. Dodgers 2 Chicago Cubs 2, Tampa Bay 1 Miami 5, N.Y. Mets 4, 10 innings St. Louis 8, Cincinnati 7, 10 innings Washington 4, Atlanta 2 San Diego 6, Arizona 2 San Francisco 4, Colorado 3 Wednesday’s Games Miami 9, N.Y. Mets 2 San Francisco 4, Colorado 0

L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia (n) Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (n) Chicago Cubs at Tampa Bay (n) St. Louis at Cincinnati (n) Washington at Atlanta (n) Arizona at San Diego (n) Today’s Games L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 12-6) at Philadelphia (Leiter Jr. 3-6), 12:05 p.m. St. Louis (Martinez 11-11) at Cincinnati (Bailey 5-8), 6:10 p.m. Washington (Roark 13-9) at Atlanta (Dickey 9-10), 6:35 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Arrieta 14-9) at Milwaukee (Davies 17-9), 7:10 p.m. Colorado (Anderson 5-5) at San Diego (Richard 7-14), 9:10 p.m. Friday’s Games St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m. Boston at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 6:35 p.m. Philadelphia at Atlanta, 6:35 p.m. Miami at Arizona, 8:40 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 9:10 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

Basketball WNBA Playoff Glance

Finals (Best-of-5) Minnesota vs. Los Angeles Sunday, Sept. 24: Los Angeles at Minnesota, 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 26: Los Angeles at Minnesota , 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 29: Minnesota at Los Angeles, 9 p.m. x-Sunday, Oct. 1: Minnesota at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, Oct. 4: Los Angeles at Minnesota, 8 p.m..

Football

National Football League

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Miami 1 0 0 1.000 19 17 Buffalo 1 1 0 .500 24 21 New England 1 1 0 .500 63 62 N.Y. Jets 0 2 0 .000 32 66 South W L T Pct PF PA Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 53 42 Jacksonville 1 1 0 .500 45 44 Houston 1 1 0 .500 20 38 Indianapolis 0 2 0 .000 22 62 North W L T Pct PF PA Baltimore 2 0 0 1.000 44 10 Pittsburgh 2 0 0 1.000 47 27 Cincinnati 0 2 0 .000 9 33 Cleveland 0 2 0 .000 28 45 West W L T Pct PF PA Denver 2 0 0 1.000 66 38 Oakland 2 0 0 1.000 71 36 Kansas City 2 0 0 1.000 69 47 L.A. Chargers 0 2 0 .000 38 43 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 1 1 0 .500 50 44 Dallas 1 1 0 .500 36 45 Washington 1 1 0 .500 44 50 N.Y. Giants 0 2 0 .000 13 43 South W L T Pct PF PA Atlanta 2 0 0 1.000 57 40 Carolina 2 0 0 1.000 32 6 Tampa Bay 1 0 0 1.000 29 7 New Orleans 0 2 0 .000 39 65 North W L T Pct PF PA Detroit 2 0 0 1.000 59 33 Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 38 45 Green Bay 1 1 0 .500 40 43 Chicago 0 2 0 .000 24 52 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 1 1 0 .500 21 26 L.A. Rams 1 1 0 .500 66 36 Arizona 1 1 0 .500 39 48 San Francisco 0 2 0 .000 12 35 Today’s Game L.A. Rams at San Francisco, 7:25 p.m. Sunday’s Games Baltimore vs Jacksonville at London,

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Today’s Television Lineup COLLEGE FOOTBALL 6:30 p.m. (ESPN) — Temple at South Florida 6:30 p.m. (ESPNU) — SC State at NC Central GOLF 5:30 a.m. (GOLF) — European PGA Tour, Portugal Masters, first round, at Vilamoura, Portugal 10 a.m. (GOLF) — Web.com Tour, DAP Championship, first round, at Beachwood, Ohio Noon (GOLF) — PGA Tour, Tour Championship, first round, at Atlanta MLB BASEBALL Noon (MLB) — L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia 3 p.m. (MLB) — Cleveland at L.A. Angels 6 p.m. (FS1) — Minnesota at Detroit 7 p.m. (MLB) — Regional coverage, Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee OR Washington at Atlanta (7:30 p.m.) NFL FOOTBALL 7:20 p.m. (NFL) — L.A. Rams at San Francisco NHL HOCKEY 6:30 a.m. (NBCSN) — Preseason, Vancouver vs. Los Angeles, at Shanghai UK, 8:30 a.m. New Orleans at Carolina, Noon Tampa Bay at Minnesota, Noon Denver at Buffalo, Noon Pittsburgh at Chicago, Noon. Miami at N.Y. Jets, Noon N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, Noon Atlanta at Detroit, Noon Houston at New England, Noon Cleveland at Indianapolis, Noon Seattle at Tennessee, 3:05 p.m. Kansas City at L.A. Chargers, 3:25 p.m. Cincinnati at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m. Oakland at Washington, 7:30 p.m. Monday’s Game Dallas at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 28 Chicago at Green Bay, 7:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 1 New Orleans vs Miami at London, UK, 8:30 a.m. Pittsburgh at Baltimore, Noon Carolina at New England, Noon Tennessee at Houston, Noon Detroit at Minnesota, Noon Buffalo at Atlanta, Noon L.A. Rams at Dallas, Noon Cincinnati at Cleveland, Noon Jacksonville at N.Y. Jets, Noon N.Y. Giants at Tampa Bay, 3:05 p.m. Philadelphia at L.A. Chargers, 3:05 p.m. San Francisco at Arizona, 3:05 p.m. Oakland at Denver, 3:25 p.m. Indianapolis at Seattle, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 2 Washington at Kansas City, 7:30 p.m.

Top 25 College Schedule

Today No. 21 South Florida vs. Temple, 6:30 p.m. Friday No. 23 Utah at Arizona, 9:30 p.m. Saturday No. 1 Alabama at Vanderbilt, 2:30 p.m. No. 2 Clemson vs. Boston College, 2:30 p.m. No. 3 Oklahoma at Baylor, 5:30 p.m. No. 4 Penn State at Iowa, 6:30 p.m. No. 5 Southern Cal at California, 2:30 p.m. No. 6 Oklahoma State vs. No. 16 TCU, 2:30 p.m. No. 7 Washington at Colorado, 9 p.m. No. 8 Michigan at Purdue, 3 p.m. No. 10 Ohio State vs. UNLV, 11 a.m. No. 11 Georgia vs. No. 17 Mississippi State, 6 p.m. No. 12 Florida State vs. NC State, 11 a.m. No. 13 Virginia Tech vs. Old Dominion, 1 p.m. No. 14 Miami vs. Toledo, 2:30 p.m. No. 15 Auburn at Missouri, 6:30 p.m. No. 18 Washington State vs. Nevada, 5 p.m. No. 19 Louisville vs. Kent State, 11 a.m.

No. 20 Florida at Kentucky, 6:30 p.m. No. 22 San Diego State at Air Force, 6 p.m. No. 24 Oregon at Arizona State, 9 p.m. No. 25 LSU vs. Syracuse, 6 p.m.

Transactions Wednesday’s deals BASEBALL TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to terms with RHP Marco Estrada on a oneyear contract. National League CINCINNATI REDS — Reinstated OF Billy Hamilton from the 10-day DL. MIAMI MARLINS — Reinstated LHP Chris O’Grady from the 10-day DL. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Recalled INF Aledmys Diaz and RHP Josh Lucas from Memphis (PCL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Named Pete Vuckovich special assistant to the president of baseball operations/general manager. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL PLAYERS ASSOCIATION — Reelected executive director DeMaurice Smith. ARIZONA CARDINALS — Re-signed LB Philip Wheeler. BUFFALO BILLS — Signed S Robert Blanton and OT Deandre Coleman. CHICAGO BEARS — Signed OL D.J. Tialavea to the practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed DB Reggie Porter from Baltimore’s practice squad. HOUSTON TEXANS — Waived TE Evan Baylis. Signed CB Johnthan Banks. LOS ANGELES CHARGERS — Signed OT Tyler Marz from Tennessee’s practice squad. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed S Jack Tocho to the practice squad. TENNESSEE TITANS — Placed LB Aaron Wallace on injured reserve. Signed WR Zach Paschal from the practice squad and OL Brad Seaton and LB Tony Washington Jr. to the practice squad. Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Released WR TJ Thorpe from the practice roster. HOCKEY ECHL IDAHO STEELHEADS — Agreed to terms with Fs Alexander Dahl and Daniel Tedesco on one-year contracts. SOCCER Major League Soccer SEATTLE SOUNDERS — Announced the resignation of high performance director David Tenney, to take the same position with the Orlando Magic (NBA). COLLEGE NCAA — Named Gary Walters and Dave Odom to the NIT committee.

Tigers hope to tame Bears for first win Northeast Sports Information

BOONEVILLE — The Northeast Mississippi Community College football program will close the longest home stretch in 14 years with its final bout against a non-division opponent this season. Northeast welcomes Southwest Mississippi Community College to the City of Hospitality today. Kickoff is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at Tiger Stadium. The contest serves as Northeast’s annual Black Out Game. Fans are encouraged to fill the bleachers well before the Tigers take the field and wear black to support the team. Those who can’t attend can watch live and in high definition on NEMCCTV. Tune in starting at 6 p.m. for the pregame show by visiting www.nemcctv.com on any computer, smartphone or tablet. The Northeast Broadcasting Network also includes new radio affiliate WOWL Fun 91. An audio simulcast featuring Jody Presley and Carter Smith, the Voices of the Tigers, can be heard on frequencies 91.9 FM from Burnsville, 92.9 FM from Florence, Ala., and 102.3 FM from Killen, Alabama. Northeast and the Bears are searching for their first wins of the campaign after falling in their division openers one week ago against East Mississippi Community College and Hinds Community College, respectively. “The biggest thing that we have to do is play one play at a time and that’s what I told the kids,” said Tigers head coach Greg Davis. “We have to do our job and that’s it. We have to go out there and compete like we need to.” The Tigers (0-3) are still led offensively by Oxford’s Kenzie Phillips, who is fifth in the Mississippi Association of Community and Junior Colleges (MACJC) with an average of 88.3 rushing yards per game. Phillips has the second most running attempts in the Magnolia State as well with 67 through three games and is tied for fifth for the highest amount of rushing touchdowns with three. Northeast’s trio of quarterbacks has combined to complete around 55 percent of their passes this year. The combo of Desmond Hunter of Wilkinson County High School and Caleb Kitchens from Tupelo Christian Pre-

Photo by Michael H Miller

Northeast head coach Greg Davis has seen his Tiger squad lose its first three games of the season and fall out of the Top 25. The blackand-gold host Southwest tonight at 6:30 at Tiger Stadium in search of that elusive first win. patory School are a combined 18 of 33 for 113 yards. Hernando’s O.D. Wooten guides the Tigers’ talented group of wideouts with eight catches, 127 yards and a touchdown. Twelve different Northeast players have caught at least one pass while three average a first down per grab. The Tigers’ offensive line — which includes starters Micheal Cameron of Philadelphia, Kelton Edwards of Hernando, Quan Stokes of Moultrie, Georgia, Matthew Trehern of Saraland, Alabama, and Jake Wilcox of Hernando — has allowed only three sacks through three matchups. Kossuth High School graduate Beau Lee has the most net punt yardage in the MACJC with 687 yards on 21 attempts. He averages 32.7 yards each boot with a long of 52 yards against East Central Community College. Peyton McMahon of DeSoto Central High School is in a stalemate with Holmes Community College’s Lorenzo McCaskill for the fourth highest tackles per game average with 10 on the dot. Freshman Juwan Taylor of Jackson follows McMahon and has been sensational in the defensive backfield with 26 tackles. His 17 solo stops are tied for the most on the team with Mc-

Mahon. Kylin Washington of Fort Smith, Arkansas, has a team-best four tackles for loss, including a pair of sacks. McMahon has the second most takedowns in the backfield with 2.5 while Sam Williams of Montgomery, Alabama, has 1.5. Southwest (0-3) has utilized a tandem of quarterbacks themselves in Brady Anderson and Juwan Adams. The two have racked up 664 passing yards and four touchdowns compared to five interceptions. Neil McLaurin, who signed with the University of Minnesota after last season, is back for the Bears and at receiver after starting at quarterback one year ago. He has a team-high 17 catches for 335 yards and two scores. Chanler Ferguson tops Southwest’s defensive charts with 24 tackles, including two for loss, plus a fumble recovery and a blocked kick. Von’Darius Freeman and Mark Smith are credited with the Bears’ only sacks this year. The series between Northeast and Southwest is the second least played in school history among MACJC members. The Bears are slightly ahead in the all-time series by a 14-13-1 margin, but the Tigers won by a 55-30 score in Summit during the previous campaign.


12 • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

ANNOUNCEMENTS

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

0232 GENERAL HELP

MERCHANDISE

)5, 6$7 +XQWHU )5, 6DW 3LQH 5G /DQH )DP )XUQ 3LF WXUHV + + ,WHPV %DE\ %R\ &ORWKHV %87/(5 '28* )RXQGD /RWV RI )XUQ ,WHPV &KHDS $GXOW WLRQ IORRU OHYHOLQJ 0LVF ,WHPV %DE\ &ORWKHV 0LVF EULFNV FUDFNLQJ URWWHQ ZRRG EDVHPHQWV 6$7 21/< VKRZHU IORRU 2YHU %\QXP 'U RII 1 \UV H[S )5(( (67,0 6KLORK 5G PLOH $7(6 RU IURP +Z\

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES )5, 6$7 1 3DUN ZD\ )DOO ;PDV 'HFRU )OHD 0NW &ORVH 2XW *ULOO /DPSV &KDLUV 6KHOYHV 4XLOW /LQHQV )5, 6$7 &RQIHG HUDWH 6W &+85&+ <$5' 6$/( )XUQ &ORWKHV + + ,WHPV 0LVF ,WHPV

MEDICAL/DENTAL 0220

7+856 )5, 6DW 6+,)7 0$1$*(5 QHHGHG HOUSEHOLD &5 2DN )RUUHVW DW /RQJ %UDQFK $SSO\ LQ 0509 GOODS 0XOWL )DP +DUOH\ 'DY SHUVRQ DW 7D\ORU 6W LGVRQ ,WHPV )XUQ + + JET SKI,Yamaha 800, ,WHPV 'ROODU ,WHPV needs piston, one is good, 0244 TRUCKING $500. 662.643.3565 (;3(5,(1&(' 758&. 7+856 )5, 6DW 'ULYHUV QHHGHG /RFDO .HQGULFN 5G MUSICAL +DXO 0XVW KDYH &ODVV $ 0512 0LVF ,WHPV MERCHANDISE RU &ODVV % OLFHQVH &DOO 3,$12 )25 6DOH /LNH 6$7 WR &KHVW 1HZ &RQVROH 6WXGLR EMPLOYMENT QXW /RWV RI &KLOGUHQ V 7\SH $VVXPH /RZ 3D\ PETS ,WHPV PHQWV 6HH /RFDOO\ 6$7 0DWURVH &DU 0320 CATS/DOGS/PETS UROO 5G 0LFKLH 71 0232 GENERAL HELP MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE 029,1* 6$/( 7UDFWRU CAUTION! ADVERTISE- 0$/( <25.,( \UV (TXLS 7RROV $QW &ROO MENTS in this classifica- R O G 1 H X W H U H G $ O O 3& ([WUD +HDY\ 'XW\ %RDW 0RWRU )XUQ 0LVF tion usually offer infor- 6KRWV *RRG 3HW *UHHQ 6ODQW %DU +D\ mational service of FDVK )HHGHU 7+856 )5, XQWLO products designed to 6DW %DUQ 6WDEOH help FIND employment. )25 6$/( &KLKXDKXDV 2%2 5G RII .LPEHUO\ &ODUN Before you send money 4 TIRES. 205-40-17 $120. 5G 7RR 0XFK 7R 0HQ to any advertiser, it is 662.643.3565 WLRQ 3ULFHG WR VHOO your responsibility to 4 WHEELS & tires 225-60verify the validity of the FARM 16 offer. Remember: If an $160. ad appears to sound 662.643.3565 “too good to be true�, FARM then it may be! Inquir- 0470 INDUSTRIAL FAN 36x44, EQUIPMENT ies can be made by conpurchased at Lowes, $160. tacting the Better Busi- )25 6$/( 0LQQHDSROLV 662.643.3565 0ROLQH =$8 -RKQ ness Bureau at 'HHUH % 1-800-987-8280.

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

0220

MEDICAL/DENTAL

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

C.N.A. POSITIONS AVAILABLE PART-TIME ALL SHIFTS

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

WHITFIELD NURSING HOME 2101 E. PROPER ST. 662-286-3331 Apply in person

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

MOBILE HOMES 0675 FOR RENT

day of August 2017.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

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

TRANSPORTATION

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00 0868 CARS FOR SALE EXTRA Call 662-287-6111 2013 FORD for details. REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

HOMES FOR 0620 RENT 2BR, 1B.,TVRHA Welcome $600./$600. REF REQ. New. Appl 287-6752 %5 % &+ $ $SSO LQFO 'HS 5HI UHT

FOCUS SE

Black-Grey Interior, New Tires, Clean & READY TO GO! $7,900 Richard’s Auto Sales 662-663-0051

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

0955 LEGALS TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN WHEREAS ON July 15, 2015, LENNARD E. STANCIL executed a Purchase Money Deed of Trust to CONNIE B. JOHNSON, HOLLY SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI, Trustee for the benefit of EDDIE C. BOATWRIGHT, JR and filed for record in as Instrument number 201600481 in the records of the Chancery Clerk’s office of Alcorn County, Mississippi. Debtor defaulted and legal holder accelerated the note and requested foreclosure. AS Trustee in lawful hours at the South door of the Alcorn County Courthouse in Corinth, Mississippi on September 26, 2017 I will sell to the highest cash bidder at public outcry the following described land in Alcorn County, Mississippi;

8am-2pm

#

$ )

Save the Fire Truck Campaign

booth space rental 10x10 $25

plus receive a free yard sale ad in the daily corinthian!

crossroads museum at Corinth depot ' ! (

! "! # $ % ! &

0955 LEGALS

A 2.562 acre, more or less tract of land located in the Northwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 1 South, Range 5 East, in Alcorn County, Mississippi and being more particularly described as follows: Commence at a flat iron bar found at the Southeast Corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 1 South, Range 5 East, in Alcorn County, Mississippi and run thence North 00°41’ 12â€? East 60.00 feet to a point; thence North 89°06’53â€? West 140.52 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence North 89°06’22 â€? West 448.53 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence North 00°19’ 03â€? West 890.20 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set, said point being the POINT OF BEGINNING; thence North 00°19’03â€? West 210.05 feet to a ½ re-bar set; thence South 89°06’22â€? East 543.59 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set on the West right-ofway of S.A.P. Number 2(40); thence South 06°18’48â€? West along the West right-of-way of said road 210.95 feet to a ½â€? rebar set; thence North 89°06’22â€? West leaving the West right-of-way of said road 519.22 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING. Said tract containing 2.562 acres more or less. Purchaser shall pay his bid in cash at the time of sale. I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Trustee. Done this the 24th

CONNIE B. JOHNSON, T R U S T E E 420 W Peyton Road Holly Springs, Mississippi 38635 662 252-2591 4t 8/31, 9/7, 9/14, /21/2017 16021

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE WHEREAS, on the October 3, 2008, Jennifer Barnes and Bobby Barnes, executed a Deed of Trust to Recon Trust Company, N.A., Trustee for the use and benefit of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for Countrywide Bank, FSB, its successors and assigns, which Deed of Trust is on file and of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Deed of Trust Document No. 200806473 thereof; WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was ultimately assigned to Bank of America, N.A. by assignment on file and of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in November 3, 2011, Document No. 201105221 thereof; and WHEREAS, the legal holder of the said Deed of Trust and the note secured thereby, substituted Wilson & Associates, PLLC, as Trustee therein, as authorized by the terms thereof, by instrument recorded in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk in June 28, 2017, Document No. 201702558 thereof; and WHEREAS, default having been made in the performance of the conditions and stipulations as set forth by said Deed of Trust, and having been requested by the legal holder of the indebtedness secured and described by said Deed of Trust so to do, notice is hereby given that Wilson & Associates, PLLC f/k/a Adams & Edens, P.A., Substitute Trustee, by virtue of the authority conferred upon me in said Deed of Trust, will offer for sale and will sell at public sale and outcry to the highest and best bidder for certified funds paid at the conclusion of the sale, or credit bid from a bank or other lending entity pre-approved by the successor trustee, during the legal hours (between the hours of 11 o'clock a.m. and 4 o'clock p.m.) Southern Steps of Courthouse, on October 12, 2017, the following described land and property being the same land and property described in said Deed of Trust, situated in Alcorn County, State of Mississippi, to-wit: Lying and being partly in the Northeast Quarter of Section 19, Township 2 South, Range 9 East and partly in the Southeast Quarter of section 18, Township 2 South, Range 9 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and being further described as follows: Commence at the Northwest corner of the Northeast Quarter of Section 19, Township 9 South, Range 9 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; thence run East along said Section line 302.340 feet to an iron pin set for the point of beginning; thence run partially along the remnants of an old wire fence the following: North 82 degrees 00 minutes 00 seconds East 279.000 feet to an iron pin set; thence run North 68 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds East 193.000 feet to an iron pin set; thence run North 73 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds East 91.000 feet to an iron pin set; thence leaving said fence line, run South 79 degrees 30 minutes 00 seconds East 206.474 feet to the West right of way line of Alcorn County Public Road No. 182 (Brown Road); thence run along the West right of way line of said Public Road the following: South 19 degrees 33 minutes 31 seconds West 63.558 feet; South 27 degrees 28 minutes 23 seconds West 68.674 feet; South 30 degrees 33 minutes 30 seconds West 109.014 feet; South 31 degrees 45 minutes 26 seconds West 152.449 feet; South 28 degrees 04 minutes 18 seconds West 71.831 feet; South 25 degrees 29 minutes 08 seconds West 125.778 feet; South 28 degrees 11 minutes 50 seconds West 69.659 feet; South 28 degrees 01 minutes 02 seconds West 16.260 feet to a point being the intersection of the West right of way line of CR No. 182 with the North right of way line of Alcorn County Public Road No. 200 (Farmington

Unclaimed Furniture For Sale! SEVERAL HOUSES OF FURNITURE & HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE!!

Sale Every Friday from 9 AM-5PM Bring Your Truck to Load Up!! DOWNTOWN Booneville, MS at 207 W. College St.


Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • 13

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

Road No. 200 (Farmington Road); thence run along the North right of way line of CR No. 200 the following: North 55 degrees 25 minutes 34 seconds West 110.858 feet; North 62 degrees 57 minutes 32 seconds West 99.982 feet; North 70 degrees 07 minutes 26 seconds West 78.443 feet; North 75 degrees 59 minutes 49 seconds West 91.718 feet; North 81 degrees 11 minutes 51 seconds West 76.966 feet to a concrete right of way monument found; North 85 degrees 58 minutes 12 seconds West 20.902 feet to an iron rod set; thence leaving the North right of way line of said road, run North 06 degrees 00 minutes 00 seconds East 105.000 feet to an iron pin set in an old road bed; thence run North 224.304 feet to the point of beginning. Containing 6.565 acres, more or less. Legal description revised pursuant to a Final Judgment recorded in the property records of Alcorn County, Mississippi on June 18, 2015 as Instrument No. 201502369. Title to the above described property is believed to be good, but I will convey only such title as is vested in the aforementioned Substitute Trustee.

TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS ON July 15, 2015, LENNARD E. STANCIL executed a Purchase Money Deed of Trust to CONNIE B. JOHNSON, HOLLY SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI, Trustee for the benefit of EDDIE C. BOATWRIGHT, JR and filed for record in as Instrument number 201600479 in the records of the Chancery Clerk’s office of Alcorn County, Mississippi.

Purchaser shall pay his bid in cash at the time of sale. I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Trustee.

A 2.419 acre, more or less, tract of land located in the Northwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 1 South, Range 5 East in Alcorn County, Mississippi and being more particularly described as follows;

9/14,

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

• • • • • • •

YEAR: 1999 MAKE: DODGE: MODEL: RAM 2500 VIN NO: 1B7KF2367XJ509946 SAID VEHICLE AND ITS CONTENTS WILL BE SOLD OR DISPOSED OF ON 10/6/17. TIME OF DISPOSAL: 12:00 PM PLACE OF DISPOSAL: 813 S PARKWAY ST, CORINTH, MS, 38834. SIGNED: GRANT BROSE NAME OF BUSINESS: BROSE AUTOPLEX; LOCATION: 813 S PARKWAY ST, CORINTH, MS, 38834. PHONE: 662.286.6006 ABANDONED MOTOR VEHICLE PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 63-23-1, ET SEQ OF THE MS CODE OF 1972, THE UNDERSIGNED NOTIFIES ANY AND ALL PARTIES HAVING OR CLAIMING ANY INTEREST LEGAL OR EQUITABLE, IN THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED VEHICLE. YEAR: 2002 MAKE: CHRYSLER: MODEL: PT CRUISER V I N N O : 3C4FY48B02T264759 SAID VEHICLE AND ITS CONTENTS WILL BE SOLD OR DISPOSED OF ON 10/6/17. TIME OF DISPOSAL: 12:00 PM

PHONE: 662.286.6006 3t 9/21, 9/28, 10/5 16048

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

662-286-9158 or 662-287-2296

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

Hat Lady

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

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

Mary Coats Thank you for

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

40 Years FORESTRY MULCHER SERVICES

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

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

CROSSROADS

CHIROPRACTIC, LLC

S&M

CLEANING SERVICE

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

COMMERCIAL & RESIDENTIAL OVER 15 YEARS EXP. LICENSED AND INSURED

CALL MELANIE FOR AN APPT. 769-226-6830

Now Accepting New Patients Committed To Your Complete Health with A Natural Method of Care.

Property Directory

ABANDONED MOTOR VEHICLE PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 63-23-1, ET SEQ OF THE MS CODE OF 1972, THE UNDERSIGNED NOTIFIES ANY AND ALL PARTIES HAVING OR CLAIMING ANY INTEREST LEGAL OR EQUITABLE, IN THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED VEHICLE.

Done this the 24th day of August, 2017. PLACE OF DISPOSAL: 813 S PARKWAY ST, CORINTH, MS, 38834. CONNIE B. JOHNSON, TRUSTEE SIGNED: GRANT BROSE 420 W Peyton Road NAME OF BUSINESS: Holly Springs, Mississippi BROSE AUTOPLEX; LOC38635 ATION: 813 S PARKWAY 662 252-2591 ST, CORINTH, MS, 38834. 4t 8/31, 9/7, 9/21/2017 16019

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

AS Trustee in lawful hours at the South door of the Alcorn County Courthouse in Corinth, Mississippi on September 26, 2017 I will sell to the highest cash bidder at public outcry the following described land in Alcorn County, Mississippi;

Debtor defaulted Done this the 24th and legal holder acceler- day of August, 2017. ated the note and requested foreclosure. CONNIE B. JOHNSON, TRUSTEE AS Trustee in lawful hours 4 2 0 W P e y t o n R o a d at the South door of the Al- Holly Springs, Mississippi corn County Courthouse in 38635 Corinth, Mississippi on 662 252-2591 September 26, 2017 I will sell to the highest cash bid- 4t 8/31, 9/7, 9/14, /21/2017 der at public outcry the fol- 16020 lowing described land in Alcorn County, Mississippi;

Commence at a flat iron bar found at the Southeast Corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 1 South, Range 5 East in Alcorn County, Mississippi and run thence North 00° 41’ 12â€? East 60.00 feet to a point; thence North 89° 06’ 53â€? West 140.52 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence North 89° 06’ 22â€? West 448.53 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence North 00° 19’ 03â€? West 1290.20 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set, said point being the POINT OF BEGINNING; thence North 00° 19’ 03â€? West 190.04 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence South 89° 06’ 22â€? East 591.94 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set on the West right-ofway of S.A.P. Number 2 (40); thence along said West right-of-way of said road along a curve to the left with a delta angle of 11° 59’ 45â€? having a radius of 622.96 feet and a arc length of 130.43 feet, with a chord bearing and distance of South 12° 35’ 52â€? West 130.19 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence South 82° 54’ 19â€? East 10.00 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence South 06° 18’ 48â€? West 61.71 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence North 89° 06’ 22â€? West leaving the West right-of-way of said road 565.63 feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING. Said tract containing 2.500 acres more or less.

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

Debtor defaulted and legal holder accelerated the note and requested foreclosure.

Commence at a flat WITNESS MY SIGNA- iron bar found at the SouthTURE, this the 30th day of east Corner of the Northwest Quarter of Section 20, August, 2017. Township 1 South, Range 5 East in Alcorn County, Sincerely, Mississippi and run North / s / J i l l i a n W i l s o n , 00° 41’ 12â€? East for a disWILSON & ASSOCIATES, tance of 60.00 feet to a PLLC, Substitute Trustee point; thence North 89° 06’ 53â€? West for a distance of 140.52 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence North 89° 06’ PREPARED BY: Wilson & Associates, PLLC 22â€? West for a distance of 448.53 feet to a ½â€? re-bar 400 West Capitol Avenue set; thence North 00° 19’ Suite 1400 03â€? West along a blue and Little Rock, AR 72201 white painted line for a dis(501)219-9388 tance of 1100.25 feet to a File # 1478 ½â€? re-bar set; and point W being the POINT OF BEGINNING; run thence 16028 North 00° 19’ 03â€? West for a distance of 190.04 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set; thence TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF South 89° 06’ 22â€? East for SALE a distance of 565.53 feet to a ½â€? re-bar set on the West right-of-way of S.A.P. NumSTATE OF MISSISSIPPI ber 2 (40); thence South COUNTY OF ALCORN 06° 18’ 48â€? West along said West right-of-way for a disWHEREAS ON tance of 190.85 feet to a ½â€? March 5, 2014, LENNARD re-bar set; thence North E. STANCIL executed a 89° 06’ 22â€? West leaving Purchase Money Deed of said right-of-way for a disTrust to CONNIE B. JOHN- tance of 543.59 feet to the SON, HOLLY SPRINGS, POINT OF BEGINNING. MISSISSIPPI, Trustee for Said tract containing 2.419 the benefit of EDDIE C. acres more or less. BOATWRIGHT, JR and filed for record in as InstruPurchaser shall pay ment number 201600477 in his bid in cash at the time the records of the Chan- of sale. I will convey only cery Clerk’s office of Al- such title as is vested in me corn County, Mississippi. as Trustee.

A 2.500 acre, more or less, tract of land located in the Northwest Quarter of Section 20, Township 1 South, Range 5, East, in Alcorn County, Mississippi and being more particularly described as follows;

& Business

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

FOR SALE OR RENT Home For Sale By Owner, 186 Cr 1040 Booneville, 8.9 ac., 13 yrs. old, 4540 sq. ft., 4 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2-half baths, lg. kitchen w/island, walk-in pantry, living room w/ďŹ replace & built-ins, dining room, craft room, bonus room, sunroom, laundry room, lots attic storage, hardwood, tile & carpet, 9 & 10 ft ceilings, 3 car garage, c. vacuum, storm shelter, 30x50 workshop, approx., 1 acre pond. For more details and appt. 728-1604 or 416-1979.

For Sale: Lovely, immaculate, maintenance free home in gated Pickwick Pines Resort. In exc. cond., has been stayed in very little. 1600 sq feet. Sleeps 8 easily. Just bring your bags. Will sell with most furniture if desired. New central air unit and new deck on back. Also has an extra lot out back. Priced to sell at $120,000. Please call or text 731-413-9005.

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

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

D L O S HOUSE FOR RENT

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

FOR LEASE PRIME LOCATION!

3BR, 2 Bath Central School Area Newly Renovated

IN EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER HWY 72 EAST.

$800 Month Dep. & Ref. Req.

662-415-6888

CALL 662-415-9187

HOUSE FOR SALE

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


14 • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

0955 LEGALS Deese, any and all persons claiming or having a legal or equitable interest in the Estate of Jerry Hughes Deese, all of whose names and last known post office box and street addresses remain unknown after diligent search and inquiry.

You have been WAYNE HUGHES DEESE made an interested party in PETITIONER the Petition to Establish Heirs at Law and Wrongful VS. Death Beneficiaries of Jerry No. 17-460-02TKM Hughes Deese, Deceased E S T A T E O F J E R R Y under §11-7-13 of the Mississippi Code of 1972, as HUGHES DEESE, amended, seeking the deDECEASED termination Heirs at Law and Wrongful Death BeneSUMMONS BY ficiaries of the Jerry PUBLICATION Hughes Deese. THE STATE OF MISSISYou are required to SIPPI appear and defend before TO: The unknown Re- this Court against said Petispondents/Defendants tion to Establish Heirs at consisting of any and all Law and Wrongful Death at 9:00 unknown heirs at law, ex- Beneficiaries Heirs nd day of ecutors, administrators, a.m. on the 2 devisees, legatees, or November, 2017, in the statutory wrongful death courtroom of the Pontotoc beneficiaries of the Es- County Chancery Building tate of Jerry Hughes at Pontotoc, Mississippi.

0955 LEGALS IN CASE OF YOUR FAILURE TO APPEAR AND DEFEND, A JUDGMENT WILL BE ENTERED AGAINST YOU DETERMINING HEIRS AT LAW AND WRONGFUL DEATH BENEFICIARIES OF THE ESTATE OR OTHER THINGS DEMANDED IN THE PETITION.

0955 LEGALS The Town of Rienzi will hold a public hearing on its proposed budget and proposed tax levies for the fiscal year 2017-2018 on Friday September 22nd, 2017 at 3:00P.M. at Rienzi Town Hall. Tax levy will be set at 53.75 mills.

Any citizen of the Town of Rienzi is invited to attend and will be allowed to Issued under my speak for a reasonable hand and seal of said amount of time and offer Court, this the 18th day of tangible evidence before September, 2017. any vote is taken. Greg Younger/by W. Justice D.C. G r e g Y o u n g e r Clerk of Alcorn County, MS

Town of Rienzi P.O. Box 53 Rienzi, MS 38865 662-462-5315

Prepared by:

2t 9/20, 9/21/2017 16049

John Booth Farese Farese, Farese & Farese, P.A. 720B North Lamar Blvd. Oxford, MS 38655 662-281-5884 Attorneys for Petitioner 3t 9/21, 9/28, 10/5/2017 16050

DOCUMENT 00030 ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS NOTICE TO BIDDERS

0955 LEGALS Repairs and Renovations Corinth, Mississippi For Alcorn County School District Corinth, Mississippi 1. Sealed Bids will be received in the office of the Superintendent, 31 County Road 401, Corinth, MS 38834 on Thursday, October 19, 2017 at 2:00 pm, at which time and place Bids will be opened and publicly read. Contractor's company name, current certificate number, or "bid under $50,000" shall be written on the outside of the sealed envelope. 2. The Project is “Alcorn County School District Repairs and Renovations“, for new HVAC units at the Kossuth High School and Alcorn Central Gymnasiums.

Alcorn County School District

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

3. Plans and Specifications are available for viewing at the office of the Architect, Shafer Zahner Zahner, 510 University Drive, Starkville, MS 39759, telephone (662) 323-1628, or may be obtained as outlined below:

by a Bid Bond, Certified Check, or cash in the amount of 5% of the Base Bid (100%). The Bid Bond, if used, shall be payable to the Owner. Performance and Payment Bond will be required from the successful bidder. Bids are requested for a Lump Sum Base Bid with Additive Alternates.

g g lowest bidder for any deletions or additions to the contract, as they desire.

A. Bid documents are being made available via digital and original paper copy. Plan holders are required to register and order bid documents at www.jaxblue.com. Bid documents are non-refundable and must be purchased through the website. All plan holders are required to have a valid email address for registration. Questions regarding website registration and online orders please contact Jackson Blueprint Online Planroom at (601) 353-5803. 4. Bid proposals must be submitted, in duplicate, on copies of the “General Construction Bid Form� included in the specifications and must be accompanied by a Bid Bond, Certified

Larry Mitchell, Superintendent Alcorn County School District

Published: The Daily Corinthian September 21 and 28, 5. All bids submitted in 2017 excess of $50,000.00 by a Prime or Sub-Contractor to 16051 do any erection, building, construction, repair, maintenance, or related work HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY must comply with the Mississippi Contractors Act of STORAGE, INDOOR/ 1985, by securing a Certificate of Responsibility from OUTDOOR the State Board of Public $0(5,&$1 Contracts. 6. The Contract will be awarded to the lowest and best bidder, except the Owner reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive any informality whenever rejection of waiver is in the best interest of the Owner. The Owner also reserves the right to negotiate with the

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

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

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

FOR SALE

FOR SALE 2004 fifth wheel Holiday Rambler Savoy 50th anniversary - $8300

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

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

662-284-5598

Sleeps 8 queen bed , bunk beds, couch full size bed, and kitchen table makes a bed, SUPER NICE !! Located at Goat Island Pickwick Lake. Call Larry 662-404-6448. Or Holly 662-404-6447.

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

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

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

662-660-3433

$8,500.

662-415-5071

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

2017 FOREST RIVER CAMPER

SOLD

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

ASKING $10,700 CALL 662-415-9188 OR 662-665-9606

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

662-415-0399 662-419-1587

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD SLEEPS 6

LD 51,000 SOMILES $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

PROGRESSIVE TURF MOWER

2003 W/W HORSE TRAILER

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH EQUIPMENT POWER STEERING GOOD PAINT

200000

$ 0.00

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

$

662-286-1519 662-287-9466

1956 FORD 600

10FT GOOD SHAPE PRO FLEX 120 MODEL

5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

CALL 662-665-8838

$4,200 662-287-4514

$5000.00 $3500.00

662-416-5191

5 FT. WOODS GROOMING MOWER

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

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

5000.00.00 6000

$$

662-286-6571 662-286-3924

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.

804 BOATS

FOR SALE

FOR SALE 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,

57 Chevy 4 door.

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

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

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

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 662-808-4464

14FT BOAT

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

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

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

1989 FOXCRAFT

1986 ASTROGLASS 15’ BASS BOAT 90 HP EVINRUDE

$1800 662-415-9461

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

$4500. 662-596-5053

2004 21’ PONTOON SUNTRACKER 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

1999 RANGER 120 HP ENGINE 17 FT.

$7000.00

662-210-1707

$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

REDUCED! 2008 NITRO 288 Sport Fish/Ski 150 HP Mercury Motor SHOW ROOM COND. Loaded with Options Call for details 662-287-3821 $16,000

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

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

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

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


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

1984 EL CAMINO 2009 Pontiac G6

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

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

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

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

D L O

D L O

D L O

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • 15

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

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

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

2010 Chevy 2017 86 TOYOTA Equinox LS

LESS THAN 4K MILES 1 OWNER 662-415-0846

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

1998 CORVETTE CONV. 130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

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

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

901-485-8167

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

1986 Corvette

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

662-223-0865 no text please

1995 MAZDA 2014 Nissan MIATA 25,000 MILES LEATHER WITH HARD TOP $10,500.00

662-665-1124 1985 Mustang GT,

2014 Toyota Corolla S 1.8 LOW MILES!!

$15,999 (Corinth Ms)

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

(205-790-3939)

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

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

662-287-4848

2014 HYUNDAI ACCENT HATCHBACK STANDARD SHIFT LIKE BRAND NEW! ONLY 44,000 MILES AND GETS 34 MPG!

$9,800 OBO 662-287-0145

2008 FORD RANGER

MUST SELL SPORTS CAR

1970 MERCURY COUGAR FOR SALE Excel. Cond.

93 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

Exc. Cond. Low Miles Loaded $16,500.00 662-415-2250

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

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

WANTED TO BUY WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE VAN LOW MILES LATE MODEL

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

662-415-2250

872-3070

2001 Ford Explorer Sport Trac 4WD Truck

FOR SALE

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

Pathfinder SV

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

Inside & Out All Original

6,900 8,9000000 662-415-0453 662-664-0357 $$

1989 Corvette 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

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 REDUCED $3250.00 OBO 284-6662

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

08 DTS CADILLAC 72,000 Miles Leather seats with sunroof and Original Owner low miles. $10,500. 728-4258 CALL OR TEXT 416-0736 662-396-1105

$3,900

2004 LINCOLN AVIATOR Low Miles 3rd Row Seat Ready To Roll $4,950 OBO 662-415-8180

2008 Nissan Frontier 4 door crew cab, loaded, one owner, bought new in Corinth, MS, 117000 Miles, REDUCED to $13,900.

256-577-1349

832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

ATV FOR SALE

HONDA 3 WHEELER

KICK START, RUNS GOOD, MIGHT NEED TIRES. $

750 OBO

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

HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE 2005 Harley Davidson Trike

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

MODEL SH 150 I LESS THAN 400 MILES PRISTINE NEW COND. $2150. OBO 662-396-1082

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

03 Harley Davidson Ultra

662-415-5071

07 HONDA RANCHER ES 2009 HONDA SCOOTER

MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE

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

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

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

2006 HONDA VTX 1800

YAMAHA V STAR 650

D L OMILES 22,883 S $2,350.00 665-1288

14K MILES EXC. COND. RADIO, USB PORT $6500. OBO CASH TALKS!!! NO TRADES

662-284-6653

2005 Heritage Softail 32,000 Miles Super Bike Super Price

$8500.00 OBO 662-212-2451

2008 Harley Davidson FXDF

Bought New, One Adult Owner 2,139 Miles, Many Harley Accessories SHOW ROOM CONDITION Oil & Filter changed annually SCREAMING EAGLE SYN 3 Over $22,000. invested, asking $12,500. or best reasonable offer.

662-837-8787

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

SO


16 • Thursday, September 21, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

THIS WEEK IN THE INSIDE ONE OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL’S PREMIER CONFERENCES | COMPILED BY PATRICK STEVENS, SPECIAL TO GATEHOUSE MEDIA

GAME OF THE WEEK NO. 17 MISSISSIPPI STATE (3-0, 1-0 SEC) AT NO. 11 GEORGIA (3-0, 0-0)

BY THE NUMBERS STANDINGS (Through Sept. 16)

POWER RANKINGS Breaking down the SEC

When: 7 p.m. EDT Saturday Where: Sanford Stadium, Athens, Ga. TV: ESPN

EAST Team Kentucky Florida South Carolina Georgia Vanderbilt Tennessee Missouri

Conf. 1-0 1-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-1 0-1

All 3-0 1-1 2-1 3-0 3-0 2-1 1-2

T25 0-0 1-1 0-0 1-0 1-0 0-1 0-0

WEST Team Mississippi State Alabama Ole Miss Auburn Texas A&M Arkansas LSU

Conf. 1-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-1

All 3-0 3-0 2-1 2-1 2-1 1-1 2-1

T25 1-0 1-0 0-0 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-0

1. Alabama (3-0): Not ultra-sharp against Colorado State, but plenty good enough for a comfortable victory. (Last week: 1)

DOG DAYS OF FALL

2. Mississippi State (3-0): It’s probably too early to anoint the Bulldogs as a credible challenger to Alabama. (LW: 8)

GEORGIA, MISSISSIPPI STATE BRING PERFECT RECORDS TO SHOWDOWN

3. Georgia (3-0): The Bulldogs’ biggest test yet comes in their conference opener against Mississippi State. (LW: 3)

INDIVIDUAL LEADERS (Through Sept. 16) PASSING YARDS Player 1. Shea Patterson, MISS 2. Drew Lock, MIZ 3. Jake Bentley, SC 4. Kyle Shurmur, VAN 5. Quinten Dormady, TENN

Yds. 1,281 899 706 703 674

PASSING TOUCHDOWNS Player 1. Shea Patterson, MISS 2. Kyle Shurmur, VAN 2. Drew Lock, MIZ 4. Nick Fitzgerald, MSST 5. Jake Bentley, SC

No. 11 8 8 7 6

RUSHING YARDS Player 1. John Kelly, TENN 2. Aeris Williams, MSST 3. Damarea Crockett, MIZ 4. Jalen Hurts, ALA 5. Derrius Guice, LSU

Yds. 349 336 318 312 300

RECEIVING YARDS Player 1. A.J. Brown, MISS 2. DaMarkus Lodge, MISS 3. J’Mon Moore, MIZ 4. Deebo Samuel, SC 5. D.K. Metcalf, MISS

Yds. 389 284 277 250 246

SCORING Player 1. Deebo Samuel, WR, SC 2. Andy Pappanastos, PK, ALA 3. Nick Fitzgerald, QB, MSST 3. John Kelly, RB, TENN 5. Daniel LaCamera, PK, TA&M

Pts. 36 32 30 30 29

TEAM STATISTICS (Through Sept. 16) TOTAL OFFENSE Team Ole Miss Mississippi State Missouri Texas A&M Alabama Tennessee LSU Auburn Georgia Kentucky Vanderbilt South Carolina Arkansas Florida

Yds./G 497 493 480 448 418 402 401 387 384 348 346 321 341 286

Pts./G 36.0 47.7 29.3 37.7 35.3 34.7 26.3 23.7 31.0 24.7 28.0 26.3 28.0 21.5

PASSING OFFENSE LEADERS Team Yds. Ole Miss 1281 Missouri 899 Vanderbilt 728 Tennessee 715 South Carolina 706

Yds./G 427.0 299.7 242.7 238.3 235.3

RUSHING OFFENSE LEADERS Team Yds. Mississippi State 893 Texas A&M 756 Alabama 717 Georgia 690 LSU 651

Yds./G 297.7 252.0 239.0 230.0 217.0

STARS OF THE WEEK F7 C^X` ;^io\ZgVaY! B^hh^hsippi State: Accounted for two TD passes and another two TDs via the rush as the Bulldogs smacked Louisiana State. 87 8#?# =ZcYZghdc! ;adg^YV/ Returned an interception for a TD for the second time in as many games as the Gators upended Tennessee.

STAT OF THE WEEK

4. Florida (1-1): Redshirt freshman Feleipe Franks will be a staple of Hail Mary highlight packages for the rest of his life. (LW: 6)

B^hh^hh^ee^ HiViZ fjVgiZgWVX` C^X` ;^io\ZgVaY (7) celebrates a touchdown run against LSU. [ROGELIO V. SOLIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

KEYS FOR MISSISSIPPI STATE Fitzgerald gets free. The Bulldogs’ 37-7 rout of Louisiana State last week illustrated the year-overyear progress of QB Nick Fitzgerald as well as anything he’s done so far this season. Fitzgerald has developed into a worthy dual-threat heir to Dak Prescott in the Mississippi State offense, and stymieing him in the running game in the first step to shutting down the Bulldogs. Stay strong against the run. Georgia is much more about the steak than the sizzle on offense, and that’s perfectly fine. The question for anyone going against Kirby Smart’s team is how to shut down a running game led by Nick Chubb

and Sony Michel. Georgia enters the week with 230 rushing yards per game, good for 29th nationally. KEYS FOR GEORGIA Fromm on target. So far, so good for Georgia QB Jake Fromm, who is 34 of 57 for 449 yards, five TDs and one interception since taking over early in the opener for the injured Jacob Eason. Fromm isn’t going to be asked to win games on his own, and Georgia isn’t built to overpower opponents through the air, anyway. Avoid long defensive possessions. Mississippi State held a nearly 3-to-2 advantage in time of possession against Louisiana State, holding the Tigers to less than 60 snaps. Georgia

needs to make sure it is on the field to establish the run, something LSU and TB Derrius Guice were unable to do last week. PREDICTION Georgia 24-21. The Bulldogs (SEC East version) certainly look like division favorites after both Florida and Tennessee struggled to generate any offense for 50 minutes last week, but this is a tricky game for them. Mississippi State certainly has Georgia’s attention after swatting LSU last week, and Fitzgerald is firmly in the conversation for best QB in the league. This game could be one of the best mixes of offense and defense in the SEC this season.

BEST OF THE REST THIS WEEK’S OTHER TOP GAMES

ARKANSAS (1-1, 0-0 SEC) vs. TEXAS A&M (2-1, 0-0)

No. 1 ALABAMA (3-0, 0-0) at VANDERBILT (3-0, 0-0)

No. 15 AUBURN (2-1, 0-0) at MISSOURI (1-2, 0-1)

When: Noon EDT Saturday Where: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas TV: ESPN Notes: Arkansas leads series 42-29-3, but Texas A&M has won all five meetings since it joined the SEC. The Razorbacks have had two Mond weeks to prepare for QB Kelly Mond and the Aggies. The early returns on Arkansas are that it is a defense-first team, with the Razorbacks ranked 17th nationally in total defense and 106th in total offense.

When: 3:30 p.m. EDT Saturday Where: Vanderbilt Stadium, Nashville, Tenn. TV: CBS Notes: Alabama leads series 61-18-4 and has won 21 in a row against the Commodores, whose last defeat of the Crimson Tide Mason came in 1984. While Alabama is more vulnerable than usual on defense, it has more reason to be concerned with the exceptional defense Vanderbilt has constructed under coach Derek Mason.

When: 7:30 p.m. EDT Saturday Where: Faurot Field, Columbia, Mo. TV: ESPNU Notes: Series tied 1-1, with Missouri winning the 1973 Sun Bowl and Auburn claiming the 2013 SEC title game. QB Jarrett Stidham is well-positioned to enjoy a Stidham breakout game against a reeling Missouri team that was smacked at home by Purdue last week. Missouri is ranked 102nd nationally in total defense and 112th in scoring defense.

2-0 Start to conference play that Kentucky is seeking when it meets Florida on Saturday. The Wildcats, who have dropped 30 in a row to the Gators, have not been 2-0 in the SEC since 1977.

ROUNDING IT OUT THE REST OF THE MATCHUPS

Time (EDT) SATURDAY Noon

Matchup

TV

Massachusetts at Tennessee

SEC

DPMS Oracle .223 Rem 16” Contour Barrel 6 Position Pardus Stock (1) 30 Round Magazine $

48999

SAVAGE Bolt Action Rifles in 6.5 Creedmoor Axis $29999 Axis XP w/Scope $31999 Model 11 TH w/Nikon Scope $47999 Model 10FCP-SR in Dark Earth $59999 SILENCERS Silencerco, Gemtech, OSS Suppressors, AAC, Deadair, Yankee Hill Calibers from .17HMR to .45ACP

3:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m.

La. Tech at South Carolina Syracuse at No. 25 LSU No. 20 Florida at Kentucky

SEC ESPN2 SEC

5. Tennessee (2-1): Live by the wacky close game, die by the wacky close game. Vols on short end of stick this time. (LW: 4) 6. LSU (2-1): Syracuse’s middling defense should help alleviate the Tigers’ recent offensive woes. (LW: 2) 7. Vanderbilt (3-0): If the offense can handle its part, Vanderbilt will be a tough out for everyone in league. (LW: 9) 8. Auburn (2-1): Here’s guessing Alabama has an easier time with Mercer in November than Auburn did with the Bears in September. (LW: 6) 9. Kentucky (3-0): Played much better against South Carolina than it did in the season’s first two games. (LW: 14) 10. Arkansas (1-1): Razorbacks’ recent history with A&M is poor. Same will be said of their season if they lose to Aggies this week. (LW: 10) 11. South Carolina (2-1): So much for the Gamecocks emerging as a stealthy SEC East contender. (LW: 7) 12. Texas A&M (2-1): The Aggies’ showdown with Arkansas this week might be needed to salvage something from this season (LW: 11) 13. Mississippi (2-1): Played well for a half at Cal. Rebels get a bye week before back-to-back trips to Alabama and Auburn. (LW: 12) 14. Missouri (1-2): After getting trounced by Purdue, path to six victories is narrowing for Tigers. (LW: 13)

• Large selection of Ammunition – 20 Round Boxes to 1000 Round Cases • Large selection of Holsters • Magpul accessories • Large selection of Magazines • Glock, Browning, Remington, Sig Sauer, Springfield Armory, North American Arms, Colt, Winchester, Ruger, Smith & Wesson, Savage, DPMS, Bushmaster, LWRC, Rock River Arms, Mossberg, Marlin, Henry, Taurus, Keltec, CZ and many more! • Vortex Optics, Nikon, Leupold, ATN – Scopes, Rangerfinders, Thermal Imagers • We buy, sell and trade

J & H GUNS 2036 HIGHWAY 72 EAST ANNEX CORINTH, MS


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.