102315 daily corinthian e edition

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Prentiss County Tax assessor to step down early

Tishomingo County Couple helps protect those who protect and serve

McNairy County Police warn residents of doctor scam

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Friday Oct. 23,

2015

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 119, No. 254

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• Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages • Two sections

District works to lift graduation rate BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

Alcorn School District board president Mary Coleman is concerned about her district’s graduation rate. “Our current rate is 77 percent,” said Coleman. “That

seems pretty low.” A new state mandate requires school districts attain at least a 85 percent graduation rate by the 2018-19 school year. Failure to meet the requirement will result in the district grade dropping.

Coleman and her fellow board members approved a new dropout prevention plan earlier this month. Among the changes include a restructuring of student scheduling in the middle schools and more credit bearing courses.

Last year, the district realigned its goals to the state’s goals and acted to increase the graduation rate to 85 percent, reduce the dropout rate by 50 percent and reduce the truancy rate by 50 percent. “To achieve these goals the

district has introduced more Carnegie Unit courses at seventh and eighth grade classes at Biggersville, Alcorn Central and Kossuth,” said Superintendent Gina Rogers Smith. Please see GRADUATION | 2A

Explaining the Initiative Lighthouse thrift

store closing doors BY BRANT SAPPINGTON bsappington@dailycorinthian.com

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann (center) speaks with (from left) Frank Davis, Bill Davis and Sam McDonald following a talk before Corinth Rotary on Thursday.

Hosemann clarifies Initiative 42 process BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann visited Corinth Thursday to try to help sort out some of the confusion surrounding Initiative 42. The proposal on education funding takes up a chunk of the Nov. 3 general election ballot with a description of Initiative

Measure 42 and the Legislature’s Alternative Measure 42A. If nothing else, it is unusual. “It’s the first time in history that we’ve had competing amendments,” said Hosemann during a talk with Corinth Rotary. Initiative 42, brought to the ballot by petition, says the state “shall provide for the es-

tablishment, maintenance and support of an adequate and efficient system of free public schools. The chancery courts of this state shall have the power to enforce this section with appropriate injunctive relief.” Proponents say this is needed because schools haven’t been Please see INITIATIVE | 2A

The Lighthouse Foundation is getting out of the thrift store business. The foundation’s thrift store, located next to The Open Market on U.S. Highway 72, will close at the end of October after four years of fundraising and ministry. The decision is based on finances and stewardship of resources, said foundation Executive Director Gary Caveness. He said during the last few years the store has simply not brought in enough to justify the time and expense required to keep it open. It’s final day will be Oct. 31. More than just a fundraising project, the store has turned out to be blessing in all areas of the foundation’s ministry. “The thrift store was originally started as a way to raise funds for Lighthouse programs. While this hasn’t worked out as intended, the store has actually broadened the scope of our ministry to the hurting families in the community,” Caveness said. Items donated to the store

Parade will honor veterans BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

Judgement House brings message of hope BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

SELMER, Tenn. — Insecurities and pressure. Teenagers deal with them all too often. First Baptist Church-Selmer wants young people to know there is an answer to defeating the judgement of others. The solution can be found in Jesus Christ. FBC’s goal is to influence others for Jesus during its 12th Annual Judgement House, beginning Sunday at 4 p.m. “Treasured” is also scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 28 from 6-9 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 31 from 4-9 p.m. and on Sunday, Nov. 1

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Please see MESSAGE | 6A

Emma (Abbie Sweat) tries to convince Michelle (Molly Grace King) there is a better solution than turning to pills.

have allowed the foundation to provide clothes and other essentials to people rebuilding their lives after fires, other tragedies or getting out of prison. It also provided two full-time jobs and numerous opportunities for volunteer service. “We’re sorry to see the store close but our board of directors feels it’s financially necessary at this time,” the director said. Caveness thanked Sheila Hurst, Willie Key and all the employees and volunteers who have worked so hard to support the store through the years. He asked the community to continue to support the store during its final days and come by to visit and shop. While one chapter of outreach and service is closing for the foundation, the future remains bright. The group continues to serve the youth of the community with opportunities to learn and to connect with the message of hope through Christ. Caveness said they will continue to find new and innovative ways to support the ministry and provide for those who are hurting and struggling.

A local veteran would like to see Fillmore Street packed on Nov. 11. The 16th Annual Veterans Day Parade is slated for 10 a.m. that day. “We owe our very existence to God,” said parade organizer Bobby McDaniel. “We also owe Him for our troops who protect us every day.” McDaniel expects around 50 entries to take part in the annual parade down Fillmore and Cruise. “All of the high school bands will take part,” he said. “I also want to encourage every Boy and Girl Scout Troop to attend.” MS Project Package Coordinator and Founder Rickey Pope will serve as parade grand marshal. “Rickey and volunteers have been responsible for

sending over 60,000 packages to service personnel,” McDaniel said. It costs Project Package $6,000 to send a package to everyone serving from the mid-south. Mid-South Project Package, a volunteer 501 c 3, organization, sends around 600 packages out every month. Cost to mail the boxes are $11 per package. Following the parade, which begins at First Baptist Church, a brief ceremony will take place at the Alcorn County Courthouse. “It won’t last long, maybe 30 minutes,” added McDaniel. American Legion Post 6 will be cooking stew the night before the parade. A meal will be served at Post 6 at 11 a.m. after the parade. “Stew will also be available for people to buy Please see PARADE | 2A

25 years ago

10 years ago

Corinth Rotary Club brings the Carson and Barnes Circus to Corinth. Rotary President Ernie Rice describes the program as a fun-filled fundraiser for the club.

Corinth native Airman First Class Timothy Jeremiah Faulkner, a 2000 Corinth High School graduate, is honored by the Air Force for his hard work and dedication to duty as a member of the Civil Engineering squadron at the U.S. air base operating at Baghdad International Airport.

286.6006

HWY 72 E • Corinth MS www.brosenissan.com


2A • Daily Corinthian

Local/Region

Friday, October 23, 2015

GRADUATION CONTINUED FROM 1A

“Each school also added courses in which they had licensed staff to teach the classes.” Smith said the implementation of the new 4x4 block schedule at the district’s middle schools are actually part of a state pilot program with the Mississippi Department of Education. “MDE will be reviewing this plan at the end of the year to see if Alcorn School District’s idea has had an impact on student achievement,” said Smith. “The team’s focus goal was to have the students take the state test just like the high schools’ SATPs which are given at the conclusion of the se-

“MDE will be reviewing this plan at the end of the year to see if Alcorn School District’s idea has had an impact on student achievement ...” Gina Rogers Smith Superintendent mester.” According to Smith, other districts across the state have taken notice. “The more districts willing to pursue this scheduling would reduce the cost for MDE and make this option financially feasible,” she said. Another way the district is attempting to increase its graduation rate

is by adding more options that a student can choose for their pathway and course of study in middle and high school. A career pathway Keystone course was added to ninth grade at Alcorn Central High School, while a STEM career pathway course was moved down to eighth grade at Alcorn Central Middle School. “The courses will now be able to give the stu-

dents more information and instruction on potential career and college choices,” said Smith. “This is a pilot for the district and the plan is to implement this course alignment at Biggersville and Kossuth.” However, Smith said the future direction of the plan will be determined by the new administration. In other board news: ■ The new pay scale for custodial employees will be implemented immediately in the school district. The pay scale top off amount remains the same at .20 cent increments, however the years experience increases from 13 to 20 years with the changes. In August, board member Randy Wilbanks questioned the current pay scale used and asked

for a change. Earlier this month, he pushed for the new scale to become active immediately rather than waiting until a new school year began. With the new pay scale, custodial staff members with 20 or more years experience will have an opportunity to make more than $21,000 per year for around 220 days worked. ■ The board approved one release request to Corinth School District and one transfer into Kossuth Elementary School from the Prentiss County School District. ■ Four requests for resignations were accepted by the board. Biggersville Elementary School special ed teacher Elizabeth Boler, Alcorn Central special ed teacher

assistant Tiffany Cooper, Alcorn Central Middle School teacher assistant Destany Gray and Kossuth High School librarian Ginger Mattox will each resign within the next few months. ■ New hires approved by the board this month include Alcorn ACMS sped assistant Charlotte Myracle, Kossuth High School science teacher Alison Wade and paraprofessional fast-pitch softball coach Haylie Bell. Four substitutes were also hired. Brandi Green, Mike Killingsworth, Sonja Palmer and Kaye Robertson will substitute during the 2015-16 school year. The board also approved Leo Choate as a volunteer at ACHS. ■ The next meeting is set for Nov. 9 at 6 p.m.

that 42 will absolutely destroy the state as we know it. I suspect, like most things, the truth is somewhere in between.” Hosemann expects the issue for many voters will come down to the question of whether a judge should be involved. Either way, he thinks voters are up to the task of making an informed decision. “I think Mississippians will not be confused when they actually read the two things … I disagree with the ones that say that Mississippians won’t make a good choice. I think, in the end, you will,” he said. Amending a constitution that has stood since 1890, he said, is a serious matter. “People will come and go, politicians will be elected and leave, judges

will come and go, but your constitution stays, so you’re talking about something for your children and grandchildren,” said Hosemann. The first step of the vote is the selection of either “for approval of either” or “against both.” In the second step, a voter in favor of one of the initiatives would then select either “for Initiative Measure 42” or “for Alternative Measure 42A.” A person who opposes the initiatives would select “against both.” The voter can stop there if he chooses, but Hosemann said an opposing voter also has the right to vote in the second step, giving preference to one of the two initiatives. Opponents have said the initiative would put

the fate of education funding in the hands of the judicial system. If a judge becomes involved, it may or may not be one located in Hinds County, Hosemann said. The initiative or the alternative must clear a couple of mathematical hurdles to win passage. Even if a majority vote in favor of approval of either in the first step of the vote, one of the two initiatives must receive 40 percent of the total number of votes cast for the office of governor in order to become a state constitutional amendment. Whatever the outcome, “I think it’s become a good, healthy discussion about the education system in Mississippi,” said Hosemann.

PARADE CONTINUED FROM 1A

and take home,” said McDaniel. Those who have never been in the parade before are asked to call McDaniel 662-415-

6475, J.C. Parker 662415-6744 or Carlean Parker 662-462-3443. For more information about the stew meal call Post Commander Tommy Watson at 662-4159017.

INITIATIVE CONTINUED FROM 1A

funded at the level called for by state law. It would require an additional $201,031,129 above the fiscal 2016 budgeted amount to meet the statutory formula, the Legislative Budget Office concluded. Alternative Measure 42A calls for the Legislature to “provide for the establishment, maintenance and support of an effective system of free public schools.” It does not provide for the question of funding to go to the courts. “I have heard the rhetoric about why Initiative 42 is absolutely critical to save our educational system,” said program organizer Bill Davis. On the other side, “I’ve heard


Friday, October 23, 2015

Today is Friday, October 23, the 296th day of 2015. There are 69 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History: On October 23, 1915, tens of thousands of women paraded up Fifth Avenue in New York City, demanding the right to vote.

On this date: In 1707, the first Parliament of Great Britain, created by the Acts of Union between England and Scotland, held its first meeting. In 1864, forces led by Union Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis repelled Confederate Maj. Gen. Sterling Price’s army in the Civil War Battle of Westport in Missouri. In 1935, mobster Dutch Schultz, 34, was shot and mortally wounded with three other men during a gangland hit at the Palace Chophouse in Newark, New Jersey. In 1942, during World War II, Britain launched a major offensive against Axis forces at El Alamein in Egypt, resulting in an Allied victory. In 1944, the World War II Battle of LeyteGulf began, resulting in a major Allied victory against Japanese forces. In 1956, a studentsparked revolt against Hungary’s Communist rule began; as the revolution spread, Soviet forces started entering the country, and the uprising was put down within weeks. In 1983, 241 U.S. service members, most of them Marines, were killed in a suicide truckbombing at Beirut International Airport in Lebanon; a near-simultaneous attack on French forces killed 58 paratroopers. In 1989, 23 people were killed in an explosion at Phillips Petroleum Co.’s chemical complex in Pasadena, Texas. In 1995, a jury in Houston convicted Yolanda Saldivar of murdering Tejano singing star Selena. (Saldivar was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole.)

City to crack down on park vagrancy BOONEVILLE — Booneville officials will be cracking down on improper use of city parks by homeless residents. Mayor Derrick Blythe told the board of aldermen Tuesday numerous recent incidents have prompted the decision to begin aggressively enforcing vagrancy and trespassing laws in the parks. Restrooms have been damaged and there is evidence someone has been attempting to live in the woods at West Side Park, said the mayor. He said all park restrooms will be locked unless scheduled activities are underway, except for the restrooms located near the KidsTown playground. Police have been instructed if anyone is found in the park after hours or engaging in any improper activity they are to be escorted out and potentially arrested and charged with trespassing or vagrancy.

Couple helps buy bullet proof vests IUKA — A local couple has donated cash to the Tishomingo County Sheriffs Department for the purchase of new bullet proof vests. Jeff and Angie Sparks of Belmont recently presented Tishomingo County Sheriff Glenn Whitlock a $3,380 check to aid in the purchase. The Sparks saw a need for new vests and began raising money several weeks ago with a GoFundMe account.

Beware of ‘doctor’ scam, police say ADAMSVILLE, Tenn — The Adamsville Police Department reports they’ve received a number of calls about an over-the-phone scam. Investigators said a man, who is claiming to be a doctor, is calling residents about an upcoming appointment and asking they pre-pay for the exam. The scammer identified himself as a physician with “Censeo

Eastview Pentecostal Church Sale is new merchandise at 50% off. Items are toys, tools, housewares, and electronics. 7810 Hwy 45 in Ramer, TN. Sale begins at 8:00 Friday and Saturday.

Healthcare”, according to authorities. Police said there are reports of similar incidents in the area.

Elementary school needs recyclables MICHIE, Tenn. — Michie Elementary is in need of recycling items. The school is competing in the Recycle Bowl competition from October 19-November 15. Items that can be recycled are cardboard, paper, plastics, glass, metal, electronics and appliances. No wood items, televisions, styrofoam or windshields are allowed. Items can be donated behind the school or at the Michie Fire Department. For more information, contact 731-6455909.

Police find stolen NASCAR collection BOONEVILLE — Prentiss County Sheriff’s investigators recently recovered numerous NASCAR items. Sheriff Randy Tolar said the thousands of dollars worth of collectibles were taken in the October burglary of a Prentiss County residence. Invstigators are still putting the case together and hope to make the arrest soon.

Drought disaster aid counties announced Farmers and ranchers in two-thirds of Louisiana’s parishes and nearly 60 percent of Mississippi’s counties are now eligible for drought disaster aid, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said. In a news release Wednesday, the department named 25 Louisiana parishes as primary drought disaster areas. Another 16 are eligible because they’re adjacent to those parishes. Eight of those 41 parishes also are contiguous with primary disaster areas in Mississippi. In Mississippi, USDA named 19 counties as primary disaster areas, and 27 as contiguous. Eleven, including two that were not already on Mississippi’s list, are ad-

Wildfire spreading in north Alabama MOULTON, Ala. — More than three dozen firefighters from five states are trying to contain a wildfire in the Sipsey Wilderness of northwest Alabama. The U.S. Forest Service says the so-called Big Tree Wildfire had burned 1,135 acres by Thursday. That’s nearly double the amount of damage from a day earlier. The agency says crews are using hand tools in an attempt to create a boundary around the blaze to keep it from spreading. But the fire is only 12 percent contained. Firefighters from Alabama are being assisted by others from Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee.

UM professor aids in tortoise discovery OXFORD — A University of Mississippi biologist collaborated as part of an international research team on the discovery of a new species of the Galapagos giant tortoise, findings that are included in the Oct. 21 issue of PLoS ONE, a peer-reviewed journal published by the Public Library of Science. Working as part of a group led by Yale Univer-

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sity, Ryan C. Garrick, UM assistant professor of biology, used genetic data to help uncover the existence of the new species on the Santa Cruz Island in the Galapagos. “Giant tortoises occur in two separate locations in Santa Cruz,” Garrick said. “Until now, it was assumed that these groups belonged to the same species. However, genetic analyses have now revealed that they are actually separate species: the Western Santa Cruz Tortoise (Chelonoidis porteri) and the newlynamed Eastern Santa Cruz Tortoise (Chelonoidis donfaustoi) have been reproductively isolated from one another for a long time.”

Pontotoc teenager killed in accident NEW ALBANY — The Mississippi Highway Patrol is still investigating a Tuesday afternoon crash in Pontotoc County that claimed the life of a teen. Carson Craig, 18, of Pontotoc, was an unrestrained passenger in a one-car wreck that happened around 2:45 p.m. near the intersection of State Highway 41 and Pontocola Road. Craig was transported to the North Mississippi Medical Center and later died from injuries suffered in the crash. MHP Master Sgt. Ray Hall said it appears that Arianna Fallin, 20, of Randolph, was traveling north on State Highway 41 when she lost control of her 2006 Nissan Altima, causing it to overturn. She was airlifted to NMMC with life-threatening injuries. A second passenger, Shelby Luther, 18, of Pontotoc, was transported to NMMC with serious injuries. All three occupants were ejected from the vehicle. It appears none of the occupants were wearing seat belts.

Celebration Village begins biggest year TUPELO — For the past 14 years, Sanctuary Hospice has put on Celebration Village. This year is the holiday

market’s biggest year with over 140 different vendors and 400 volunteers. Celebration Village opens starting Thursday and lasts until Saturday with tickets at the door for $7.

City workers’ cars receive black boxes TUPELO — More than a dozen Tupelo city employees are now driving around with black boxes inside their city vehicles. The Verizon Networkfleet system collects a vast amount of data and has the capability of monitoring the exact location of the vehicle at all times, as well as how fast it has gone and even whether the driver was wearing a seat belt. But the city won’t be monitoring everything. The black boxes, about the size of a large smart phone, are connected to the vehicle’s onboard computers to record engine performance data. It includes GPS to allow officials to track where the vehicles have been. Public Works, Parks & Recreation and the Tupelo Police Department are participating in the free, 60-day trial. A total of 13 boxes were installed Wednesday morning in vehicles ranging from dump trucks to police cruisers.

Drive-by shooting suspect in custody STARKVILLE — One man is in custody and Starkville police add another suspect to their list in a pair of drive-by shootings. On Oct. 14, authorities responded to driveby shootings at the Camelot Apartments and at 109 Tabor Street. Police say 21-yearold Derek Hardnett, or “Magic,” from Starkville turned himself in Wednesday for possession of a stolen firearm and drive-by shooting. His bond was set at $350,000 and he is being held at the Oktibbeha County jail. Authorities are still looking for 26-year-old Corey Quinn, also known as Smooth, of Woodland on the same charges.

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jacent to drought disaster areas in Louisiana, for a total of 48. Parishes and counties now eligible for aid: Mississippi primary: Adams, Amite, Bolivar, Choctaw, Covington, Jasper, Jefferson, Jefferson Davis, Jones, Lamar, Marion, Montgomery, Neshoba, Newton, Pearl River, Pike, Walthall, Wilkinson, Winston. Mississippi contiguous: Attala, Carroll, Claiborne, Clarke, Coahoma, Copiah, Forrest, Franklin, Grenada, Hancock, Harrison, Kemper, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Leake, Lincoln, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Perry, Scott, Simpson, Smith, Stone, Sunflower, Washington, Wayne, Webster. Mississippi contiguous to Louisiana primary drought areas and not on other lists: Issaquena, Warren.

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Opinion

Mark Boehler, editor

4A • Friday, October 23, 2015

Corinth, Miss.

Politicians’ words

At the recent televised debate among candidates for the Democrats’ nomination for president, Hillary Clinton declared that “the wealthy pay too little” in taxes and “the middle class pays too much.” Thomas Some people might wish Sowell to argue about whether that is true or not, but no rational Columnist argument can be made on either side of this issue, because the words used are completely undefined. Nor is Hillary Clinton the only one who talks this way. It is one of the many signs of the mindlessness of our times that all sorts of people declare that “the rich” are not paying their “fair share” in taxes, without telling us concretely what they mean by either “the rich” or “fair share.” Whether in politics or in the media, words are increasingly used, not to convey facts or even allegations of facts, but simply to arouse emotions. Undefined words are a big handicap in logic, but they are a big plus in politics, where the goal is not clarity but victory – and the votes of gullible people count just as much as the votes of people who have common sense. What a “fair share” of taxes means in practice is simply “more.” No matter how high the tax rate is on people with a given income, you can always raise the tax rate further by saying that they are still not paying their “fair share.” Advocates of higher tax rates can get very specific when they want to. A recent article in the New York Times says that raising the tax rate on the top one percent of income earners to 40 percent would generate “about $157 billion” a year in additional tax revenue for the government. This ignores mountains of evidence, going back for generations, showing that raising tax rates does not automatically mean raising tax revenues – and has often actually led to falling tax revenues. A fantasy expressed in numbers is still a fantasy. When Maryland raised its tax rate on people with incomes of a million dollars a year or more, the number of such people living in Maryland fell from nearly 8,000 to fewer than 6,000. Although it had been projected that the tax revenue collected from such people in Maryland would rise by $106 million, instead these revenues FELL by $257 million. There was a similar reaction in Oregon and in Britain. Rich people do not simply stand still to be sheared like sheep. They can either send their money somewhere else or they can leave themselves. Currently, there are trillions of dollars of American money creating jobs overseas, in places where tax rates are lower. It is easy to transfer money electronically from country to country. But it is not nearly so easy for unemployed American workers to transfer themselves to where jobs have been driven. Conversely, there have been some reductions in high tax rates that brought in more tax revenues at the lower rates. This happened as far back as the Coolidge administration in the 1920s. It also happened in the Kennedy administration in the 1960s, the Reagan administration in the 1980s and most recently in the Bush 43 administration. There was a similar reaction in Iceland. There is nothing inevitable about either a higher or a lower amount of tax revenues, whether the tax rate is raised or lowered. The government can only set tax rates. How that will affect the tax revenues actually received depends on how people react, and you can know that only after the fact. Sophisticated projections have often been laughably wrong. But politics is not about what happened in the past. That is left for historians. What politicians are interested in is what they can get the public to believe in the present and to vote on in the future. Plans to “soak the rich,” who are not paying their “fair share,” have worked politically, time and time again – and may well work yet again in the 2016 elections. (Daily Corinthian columnist Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.)

Prayer for today Heavenly Father, I pray that thou wilt give me a generous heart. May I not lose sight of the truth, that thou hast made others to have the same needs and wants that I may have. May I not through pride or egoism fail to help, and neglecting to speak, miss an opportunity to assist. May I be self-forgetful in friendly service. Amen.

A verse to share “Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.” 2 Corinthians 5:17

Hillary’s hollow debate victory Hillary Clinton’s laugh is so often transparently forced and insincere that it is a staple of Kate McKinnon’s impression of her on “Saturday Night Live.” At the Democratic debate in Las Vegas, though, the former secretary of state let loose a long peal of amused delight and relief that had about it a strong hint of genuineness. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders had just said we had heard enough about her “damn emails.” The crowd erupted in a standing ovation. Sanders had the signature line of the night, and it was in the cause of buttressing his opponent. He had put away the email issue for the debate, and perhaps for the duration of the primary campaign. If Joe Biden was sitting at home plotting his electability case against Clinton based on her ethics, the episode had to give him pause. Democrats evidently have about as much interest in delving into Hillary’s email and related controversies as they do in re-litigating Bill Clinton’s impeachment. Las Vegas was a reminder that it is awfully hard to lose a nomination if no one truly plausible, let alone formida-

ble, is running against you. The structure of the Democratic race from the beRich ginning has Lowry been about propping up National Hillary ClinReview ton, and it still is. The party is putting on a master class in how to nominate someone under FBI investigation, and is in willful denial about her vulnerabilities. Yes, Hillary had a good night. She was polished, knowledgeable, shrewd and hard-hitting – clearly, not someone to be trifled with. But the debate was a false indicator of her strength. First, consider her competition (so far). Three former officeholders with nothing better to do, and one current officeholder who was crazy enough to launch a no-hope bid that has caught fire in the precincts of progressive America, but who isn’t taken seriously as a general-election candidate, and probably never will be. The CNN debate was like Jeb Bush swooping in and dominating a debate against

Jim Gilmore, George Pataki and Lindsey Graham, and everyone concluding he’s a marvelous performer. On top of their plausibility or lack thereof, Hillary’s opponents have an instinct for the capillary, not the jugular. One candidate (Sanders) wants to argue that she isn’t socialist enough. Another (Lincoln Chafee) wants to go after her hammer and tongs on an Iraq War vote from more than a decade ago. Yet another (Martin O’Malley) wants to make the case against her on something or other. And, finally, there’s the candidate (Jim Webb) who wants to prove her unsuitability for the Democratic Party circa 1948. If she can’t handle these challenges, she is truly in a meltdown. Second, Las Vegas wasn’t much of a road test of the issues bedeviling her candidacy, especially the email scandal. Outside of the friendly confines of the Democratic debate hall, it will continue to be pursued by the media, the GOP and, most importantly, the FBI. Clinton remains a hostage to fortune in what the feds conclude about the lawfulness of her private server

and email arrangement, and what is yet to be found on her emails. Finally, Hillary Clinton’s problem is not Democrats. She has lost some altitude with them, and Sanders is a real threat in the early states. But it’s with the rest of the voters that she’s been tanking. There is a drastic split between how her party and the rest of the country considers her. Sixty-eight percent of Democrats say she is honest and trustworthy in the latest CBS poll; 61 percent of all voters say she is not. She has a 69 percent-19 percent favorable/unfavorable rating among Democrats; among the general public, she is badly upside down, with a 33 percent-53 percent favorable/unfavorable rating. In the latest Fox poll, she loses nationally to Donald Trump, Bush, Carly Fiorina and Ben Carson. Yet Democrats consider her the most electable of their candidates. It’s not a great tribute to Hillary Clinton that they are right. (Daily Corinthian columnist Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: comments.lowry@nationalreview.com.)

Our Democrat welfare-state drug lords Five liberal Democrat presidential candidates – one actually honest enough to label himself a socialist – appeared before the American public in their first debate. They made it apparent that the only variation between any of them was just how much bigger and how much faster each one wants to grow government. Democratic Party politicians no longer feel any need to even pay lip service to the idea that America has anything to do with a free people. Their unabashed rendition of the American dream is increasing percentages of the American population dependent on getting money recycled to them from the government – money taken from other citizens or from ever-increasing government debt. And seeing as record numbers of Americans have become dependent on government, Democrats have a pretty powerful political strategy. More and more Americans just want assurance that they won’t lose their government money. They are less interested in where the money is coming from; whether we are going bankrupt; what bloated government is doing to the performance of our economy; or the moral price they are paying for this government

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dependency. According to the Office of Management and Budget, 70 percent of Star U.S. governParker ment spending in 2013 Columnist was government transfers – direct payments of the government to individuals. Before 1960, transfer payments used less than 20 percent of the U.S. government budget. American Enterprise Institute economist Mark Perry notes that these government transfer payments in 2013 amounted to $2.6 trillion, or 15 percent of our GDP – an all-time high. According to a Pew Research survey, 55 percent of Americans have received benefits from at least one of the six best-known federal entitlement programs. And it is no accident that most loyal Democratic Party supporters are those most dependent on government. Twenty percent of Democrats report having received benefits from three or more government programs in their lifetime, compared to 12 percent of Republicans. And 27 percent of blacks report receiving benefits from three or more programs compared to 14 percent of

whites. You might say that more Democrat voters get government money because more Democrat voters are lowincome earners. But then I ask: Which is the chicken and which is the egg? Black poverty is overwhelmingly concentrated in single-parent households. The breakdown of marriage and the American family has occurred in parallel with the massive growth of big government and the America welfare state. Back in 1960, when government transfer payments were less than 20 percent of the federal budget, 75 percent of American adults were married. Today, with 70 percent of the federal budget being paid out to individuals, 50 percent of American adults are married. Over this same period of time, the number of singleparent black households tripled. It is also no accident that Democrats peddling big government answers to all of life’s problems also are out front supporting abortion and redefining marriage. Democrat politicians are simply America’s equivalent to drug lords. They get richer and more powerful coaxing Americans – particularly our weakest and most

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at-risk communities – into welfare-state oblivion. Forbes recently estimated the net worth of 20 of the current presidential candidates. Third wealthiest is Hillary Clinton at an estimated $45 million. Only Donald Trump and Carly Fiorina are wealthier. But Trump’s and Fiorina’s money come from business. How did Clinton, who introduced herself in the Democratic debate as the granddaughter of a factory worker, accumulate this massive wealth? Did she start a business? Build a company? Invent something? No; these are the huge dividends of political power and influence. All projections show growing federal budget deficits, growing debt, and mindboggling red ink as result of entitlement programs that cannot be sustained. Does our nation have to formally crash and burn in order to wake us up? The question now is whether Republicans can produce a strong enough leader to counter the power and destructiveness of the Democrat welfare-state drug lords. (Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal and Education. Contact her at www.urbancure.org.)

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Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 23, 2015 • 5A

Prentiss County tax assessor to step down early BY ANGELA STOREY astorey@dailycorinthian.com

Prentiss County Tax Assessor Steve Eaton plans to leave office Oct. 31. “With over 25 years of service I decided to retire now. In my opinion Oct. 31 was the best time for me to step down from office,” Eaton said. Eaton presented his formal letter of resignation to supervisors Wednesday. The new term of office begins in January. Eaton chose not to run again for tax assessor in the 2015 election. His political career began when he was elected as tax assessor-collector in a special election held in November 1990. The jobs of tax assessor and tax collector were split for the 2003 election and he has served solely as tax assessor since then. After having served as tax assessor for a quarter century, Eaton describes himself as “the last of the Mohicans” as none of the same elected officials remain as when he first took office. “I’ve been blessed to come in at a time in a different era when people were so close ... where every office shared a closeness like family,” he said. Eaton, 62, says he plans to continue working in a different arena in some fashion. “I don’t know at this time what. I have several things I’m looking

Staff photo by Angela Storey

Steve Eaton plans to retire and step down from office as Prentiss County Tax Assessor on Oct. 31. into.” Although he won’t be serving in office, Eaton assures his constituents he will continue to serve the public as he always has. His goal has always been to help people in any way he could in more ways than just the tax assessor’s office, he said. From the beginning of his career he has emceed an untold number of benefits, fundraisers and community events over the years. “I was blessed that I could help people ... and if not for that job I couldn’t have.” Eaton said the office

has allowed him to serve the way he was raised to help people. “People will still be able to get in touch with me and I’ll help them in any way whatsoever,” he said. Campaigning countywide introduced him to many people over the years. “I could sit here 10 years and say thank you and it still wouldn’t be enough appreciation I could give the people,” Eaton said. “I thank them for trusting me and the overwhelming support over the years people have given me. I’ll be proud at

Cat of the Week Sleeves is a very pretty and gentle young adult female cat. Before coming to the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter, Sleeves was involved in a dog attack. A place on her hip shows she was a lucky cat escaping from the dog. The scars are there, but hair will cover. Sleeves is available for adoption at the CorinthAlcorn Animal Shelter, a no-kill, non-profit organization on a mission to save the abused, neglected, abandoned and injured animals of Corinth and Alcorn County. For more information or to make a donation to the shelter, contact 662-284-5800, email alcornpets@gmail.com or visit alcornpets.com.

anytime to say my home is Prentiss County,” said the Jumpertown native. As far as any future political plans, “I’m not saying I’ll be back in some type of elected capacity later on but my options will be open.” He wishes all the best to his successor, tax assessor-elect Bob Maddox. “Any way that I can help him I’ll be there. I ask the people to stand behind Bob because there’s some hard decisions he will have to make and for everybody to keep him in their prayers to do the job that needs to be done.”

Abbie (#4338) is a very young female Setter mix puppy close to five months old. She’s a little shy and seems to like women best. Abbie is available for adoption at the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter, a no-kill, non-profit organization on a mission to save the abused, neglected, abandoned and injured animals of Corinth and Alcorn County. For more information or to make a donation contact 662-284-5800, email alcornpets@gmail.com or visit alcornpets.com.

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“The people have to have somebody to come and talk to one-on-one for their voice to be heard. I’ve always accepted that as being part of my job.” Through it all, he’s felt the support of the county’s citizens. “One thing about this county is when I’ve been down this county has picked me up. I thank them for that.” Eaton and his wife, Amy, reside in the Jumpertown/Blackland area. He said he wanted to publicly thank his wife for standing by him during election time, for her support and love; and his mother, Maxine Eaton, and his entire family for their support and help during seven political campaigns. “I thank God for my father, the late Bud Eaton, who has instilled the traits in me for who I am today. He taught me to care about others before yourself.” He again expressed appreciation to his fellow Prentiss Countians. “There’s not enough words for me to express the appreciation and love I’ve been shown while serving in this office. I can’t say thank you enough. “Prentiss County has been my life and will always be my life. I thank them for believing in me and trusting me for the past 25 years.”

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Eaton gives high accolades to his staff. “I’m just one person. But my staff from the very beginning to the end has stood by me and trusted me. Without the ladies of the office I couldn’t have done what I’ve done. “To me an elected office belongs to the people and I believe that anyone that comes through that door should be treated as I would want to be treated.” In looking back over the past 25 years, he notes the many technological changes from doing everything by pencil to going to computer systems and more. Known for his fun-loving personality and sense of humor, some have suggested Eaton could write a book. “I’ve done and seen things I never dreamed,” he admits. “I could write a very humorous book of events that have taken place in our county and the people and characters I’ve met.” The ability to laugh comes in handy in any stressful political office, he said. “Like I’ve always said, very few times people walk through that door and say ‘Let’s go eat lunch.’ “The old saying was it’s easier to blame one than it is to blame several. That job has always been the one that people come to express dissatisfaction.

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6A • Friday, October 23, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths Roxie Elizabeth Burcham

Funeral services for Roxie Elizabeth Burcham, 68, of Corinth are set for 3 p.m. Saturday at Mt. Olive Church of God – 359 County Road 1371 – in Booneville with burial in The Family Cemetery beside Vanderford Cemetery. Mrs. Burcham died Wednesday, October 21, 2015 at Methodist Le Bonheur in Germantown, Tenn. Born December 28, 1946, she was a homemaker and member of Mt. Olive Church of God. She loved her grandkids, enjoyed cooking Sunday dinner, crocheting and working in her yard. Survivors include her husband of 47 years, Jimmy L. Burcham of Corinth; four sons, Sammy Burcham and wife Roni Jill, Nathan Burcham and wife Sonda, Keith Burcham and wife Christie and Cory Burcham and wife Andrea; grandchildren, Levi Burcham, Kasen Burcham, Ethan Bur-

Dee Hancock Jr.

Funeral services for Dee Hancock Jr., 78, are set for 11 a.m. Saturday at Corinthian Funeral Home with burial in Corinth Church of God Cemetery. Mr. Hancock died Wednesday, October 21, 2015. He was born March 27, 1936 to Dee and Tina Hanson Hancock. He worked in Carpet Mills. Survivors include his sons, Billy Hancock and Tony Hancock both of Corinth; his daughter, Janice Hancock (Charlie Odem) of Booneville; grandchildren, Jessica Hancock, Eric Marcus Hancock, Hannah Hancock, Clayton Dunn, Allen Black and Amanda Black; and five great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents; wife, Kathryn Smith Hancock; brothers, George,

cham, Paige Rickman, Hugh Eddie Henry, Lauren Robbins, Taylor Hill, Kobie Burcham, Baley Burcham, Layton Burcham, Hannah Burcham, Kaleb Burcham, McKayla Burcham, Wesley Burcham and McCarley Burcham; great-grandchildren, Madilynn Rickman and Peyton Burcham Stone; brothers, Jimmy Robbins (Nelda) and John Robbins (Mary); sisters, Shirley Rorie, Ola Mitchell, Helen Gray (Jimmy), Beatrice Rorie (Richard), Mary Spencer, Reatha Spencer (Jimmy), Leatha Wamble and Sarah Whittemore. She was preceded in death by her parents, Hulet Simpson Robbins and Minnie Parker Robbins; brother, Henry Robbins; sisters, Susie Killough and

Joyce Killough; father-in-law, Tillman C. Burcham; and mother-in-law, Virgie Burcham. Bro. Don Boren and Bro. Ronnie Cartwright will officiate. Visitation is 5-10 p.m. tonight and from 1 p.m. until service time Saturday at the church. Pallbearers will be Tim Rorie, Fenton Whittemore, Levi Burcham, Kobie Burcham, Ethan Burcham, Kaleb Burcham, Kason Burcham, Wesley Burcham and Baley Burcham. Honorary Pallbearers will be Hugh Eddie Henry, Lauren Robbins, Taylor Hill, Paige Rickman, Layton Burcham, Hannah Burcham, McKayla Burcham and McCarley Burcham. Magnolia Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Melvin, R.C., Clyde and Robert; and sisters, Francis Austin, Ethel Bearden, Florence Smith and Nonnie Faye Mullins. Bro. Kenneth Sisk and Bro. David Bledsoe will officiate Visitation is 3-8 p.m. tonight at the funeral home.

KenLicia Jones, Fredrick Jones, Iaisay Jones and Alecia Jones. He was preceded in death by a grandparent, Zifpher PatMorrison ton. Rev. Howard Keith will officiate.

Robert Morrison Jr.

A memorial service for Robert Anthony Morrison Jr., 32, of Corinth is set for 3 p.m. Sunday at the Lighthouse. Mr. Morrison died at his home Monday, October 12, 2015. Born Jan. 18, 1983, he was a Corinth High School graduate. Survivors include his parents, Robert Anthony Morrison Sr. and Alicia G. Jones; grandmother, Mary Jane Baldwin; and siblings, Zidikiyha Morrison, Kewise Morrison, Krystal Southern, Michael Denmark, Winford Jones, Gregory Jones,

Nancy Latitia Smith

MICHIE, Tenn. — Funeral services for Nancy Latitia Smith, 67, are set for 11 a.m. Saturday at Fairview Com-

Jean Price

Jean Price, 94, died Wednesday, October 21, 2015. Survivors include her daughters, Janis S. Price of Bessemer, Ala. and Karen Simone and husband Robert of Muscle Shoals, Ala.; grandchildren, Jackelyn Price Martin, Milton Ray Price and April Magic Simone; and one great-grandchild.

Ryan is in, will seek job of House Speaker Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Rep. Paul Ryan formally declared his candidacy for speaker of the U.S.

House Thursday evening, pledging in a letter to GOP colleagues, “We have an opportunity to turn the page.”

Ryan will face elections in a closed-door House GOP meeting on Wednesday and on the House floor Thursday.

munity Church with burial in Fairview Community Church Cemetery. Mrs. Smith died Wednesday, October 21, 2015 at Hardin Medical Center in Savannah, Tenn. Born December 20, 1947, she was co-owner and operator of Smith’s Smith Discount Building Supply of Savannah for 25 years. She was a member of Kendrick Baptist Church and attended services at Fairview Community Church in North Crossroads. Survivors include her husband of 49 years, James “Tommy” Smith of Michie; a son, Steven Smith (Vanessa) of Michie; three step-grandchildren, Jimmy Phillips, Derek Phillips and Brianna Phillips; her mother, Kate M. Whiting Campbell of

East Peoria, Ill.; brother, Artie Ray Campbell of East Peoria, Ill.; sisters, Susan Harr (David) of East Peoria, Ill., Sally McKinney (Danny) of East Peoria, Ill., Kay Flynn (Fred) of East Peoria, Ill. and Melanie Campbell of East Peoria, Ill.; brothers-in-law, Bro. Dewey Smith (Elaine) of Corinth and Virgil Wayne Smith (Pam) of Ottwa, Ill.; sisters-in-law, Debbie Smith of North Crossroads and Rosa Spencer (Doyle) of Corinth; and special friends, Jeffery and Louise Barnes. She was preceded in death by her father, Alva R. Campbell; father-in-law, Virgil Wayne Smith; brothers-in-law, Rayburn Smith and Leland Smith; and sister-in-law, Linda Sullivan. Pallbearers will be Dewayne Dunn, Johnny Knight, Jeffery Barnes, Jason Smith, William Rikard and Chris Crotts. Bro. Dewey Smith and William Rikard will officiate. Visitation is 5-9 p.m. tonight at Magnolia Funeral Home.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Milton Price; her parents, George Lafayette Hosey and Alvareta Gay Hosey; and siblings, Martha Sue Baldwin, Sarah Ellen Sanders and Bobbye Jo Paulk. Ludlam Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

of the Teamster Horsemen Motorcycle Club. Survivors include his parents, Bobby and Nancy Scott of Iuka; one daughter, Sarah Scott of Ruidoso, N.M.; two brothers, David Scott (Gina) of Iuka and John Scott (Kim) of Little Rock, Ark.; three sisters, Carol Ann Smith (Ronnie) of Brownsville, Tenn., Janet Carter (Barney) of Collierville, Tenn. and Billie Jo Kennedy (Chuck) of Plantation, Fla.; and one grandchild, Raven Duncan. Lance Foster will officiate. Visitation is 10 a.m. until service time Saturday at the church. Memorials may be made to the American Heart Association by phone at (800) AHAUSA1, or online at https://donate.americanheart.org/. An online guestbook can be accessed at www.cutshallfuneralhome.com.

Charles ‘Steve’ Scott

DICKSON, Tenn. — Funeral arrangements for Charles Stephen “Steve” Scott, 54, are set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Iuka Church of Christ with burial in Oak Grove Cemetery. Mr. Scott died Tuesday, October 20, 2015 in Birmingham, Ala. Mr. Scott was a member of Collierville Church of Christ. He was a truck driver and was employed at Y.R.C. Freight in Nashville. He was also a member and current vice-president

MESSAGE CONTINUED FROM 1A

from 4-9 p.m. There is no admission to attend. “The drama hits home for me as a youth director because so many kids deal with the pressure of teenage life,” said John Chandler of FBC. “Our number goal in this is to show people we are a treasured possession to

God and there is nothing we can do to be separated from Him.” Deuteronomy 7:6 is proof of how much God loves people. “For you are a holy people to the Lord your God; the Lord your God has chosen you to be a people for Himself, a special treasure above all the peoples on the face of the earth.”

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“Treasured” is about a girl named Michelle, a teen who has been constantly crushed by her parents’ expectations. She is constantly compared to her older brother and it destroys her self-esteem. “The drama deals with the importance of a godly relationship between parents and children,” said Chandler. Michelle is also bullied at school and feels like her life is crashing down, until her friend, Emma, shares a solution. Emma, a Christian, believes Jesus is the answer to Michelle’s problems. “As a youth minister, I want to know my kids are comfortable impacting their peers for God,” said Chandler. A record 96 students are taking part in some aspect of the production. “We want each student in grades 7-12 to have a chance to serve in judgement house,” said the FBC youth director. Last year, around 1,800 attended the church’s drama with 148 decisions made to accept Jesus Christ as their personal savior. “The world today needs to know God,” said Chandler. “All it takes is repenting and turning to Him.” Walk-ins are welcome, but reservations are recommended. Reservations can be made by calling 731-645-5326. “This is one of our bigger outreach events,” said Chandler. “It takes the whole church to make it work.” First Baptist ChurchSelmer is located at 310 West Court Avenue.

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Friday, October 23, 2015

State/Nation

Across the Nation Associated Press

Teenager kidnapped at gunpoint rescued KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Police say a 16-year-old girl has been found safe after she was kidnapped at gunpoint from a Knoxville apartment. An Amber Alert was issued Thursday for Harlea Hunter Webster. Knoxville Police said on Facebook that officers responded to a robbery report at the apartment about 1:50 a.m. Police said an unknown black male entered the apartment, demanding money, and then grabbed Harlea by the arm and threatened her with the gun, forcing her out of the apartment. Police are still searching for the kidnapper. He is described as 35 yearsold, about 6 feet tall and 220-230 pounds, with long dreadlocks. He was wearing black pants, a black hoodie sweatshirt, and a black toboggan with white trim and white design.

Philadelphia voters could win $10,000 PHILADELPHIA — Philadelphia voters now have extra incentive to go to the polls: They could win $10,000. The editor of The Philadelphia Citizen on Thursday announced an election lottery. Larry Platt says one random voter will win the money Nov. 3, when residents vote for mayor. The prize aims to reverse abysmal turnout and spark a conversation about civic engagement. The online news site says turnout for mayoral elections in the heavily Democratic city has plummeted from 77 percent in 1971 to about 20 percent in 2011. David Thornburgh heads the civic watchdog group Committee of Seventy and says he supports trying new ideas to spur more people to cast ballots. This year, a voter education organization gave $25,000 to a random voter in a Los Angeles school board election.

Agency typo sends callers to ‘party line’ BOSTON — The words “free” and “fun” are not the first things that come to mind when talking about the Massachusetts Department of Administration and Finance. Yet a typo in a phone number on a news release issued by the agency Wednesday sent media inquiries to a “free and fun party line” advertising adult hotlines. The Boston Herald reports that the release declaring October as Cyber Security Awareness Month mistakenly substituted area code “617” instead of “857” in a spokesman’s number. Department chief of staff Dominick Ianno says the error was an ob-

vious typo since “nothing is free and fun in the Executive Office for Administration and Finance.” The mistake was quickly corrected.

Man with ‘disability’ caught using ladder DOYLESTOWN, Pa. — A Pennsylvania man who has filed more than 30 lawsuits claiming to be disabled — including one seeking food stamps for his service dog — pleaded guilty to perjury for claiming under oath that he couldn’t walk or hold a glass of water. James Douris, 60, of Upper Makefield, and his attorney, didn’t comment on Wednesday’s guilty plea in Bucks County, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported. Douris left the courtroom in a wheelchair. The perjury charge stemmed from a court proceeding last year. County prosecutors said investigators caught Douris standing on a ladder, pushing a wheelbarrow and using a power saw after Douris claimed he hadn’t been properly served with court papers because he couldn’t pick up documents left at his door. Douris lost a 2010 Commonwealth Court decision after trying to qualify his dog as a household member for the purposes of getting food stamps. The dog ate the same food as Douris and should have qualified as a dependent eligible for food stamps, Douris argued at the time. Douris, an unemployed veteran, has sued municipalities, officials and businesses claiming his various physical disabilities haven’t been accommodated over the past few decades. Nearly all have been thrown out of court.

Across the State Associated Press

Firm to plead guilty in boating fatality GULFPORT — Federal court records show a Louisiana-based dredging company has agreed to plead guilty to criminal negligence resulting in the boating death of a 54-year-old Biloxi man. The Sun Herald reports Thursday a plea hearing and sentencing for C.F. Bean LLC of Belle Chasse is set for 2 p.m. Oct. 27 before U.S. District Court Judge Sul Ozerden. Mark Barhanovich died Sept. 16, 2012, in a boating accident near the eastern tip of Deer Island. His 23-foot

fishing vessel struck an object, causing his outboard motor to break and flip into the boat. Its propeller struck him in the back. The Coast Guard said the object was a partially submerged dredging pipe and C.F. Bean had taken down lights and other warning devices before a hurricane and failed to replace them.

2 men sentenced in drug conspiracy GULFPORT — A Florida man who coordinated trips to move large amounts of cocaine from Florida to Texas by way of South Mississippi will serve a total of

14 years in prison, federal prosecutors said. The Sun Herald reports U.S. District Judge Sul Ozerden on Tuesday sentenced Herman McGee Jr., 27, of Jacksonville, on two federal charges. On a drug conspiracy charge, Ozerden sentenced him to the 14-year prison term followed by five years of supervised release and an $8,000 fine. That sentence will run concurrently to another 14-year sentence and $8,000 fine on a charge of conspiracy to possess a firearm in a drugtrafficking scheme. Another man, Michael Lamar Ricks, 27, also of Jacksonville, will serve

a little more than nine years in prison followed by five years of supervised release on a drug conspiracy charge. Four people were arrested in the case. The others, Jaylyn Holland and Keriyae Simmons, also of Jacksonville, admitted serving as couriers who received $500 each time they moved the multi-kilo shipments of cocaine from one state to another for McGee. They are serving four-year sentences. A federal grand jury indicted all four on drug conspiracy charges, possession with intent to distribute cocaine and interstate travel in aid of racketeering.

SALUTE OR PAY TRIBUTE TO YOUR SPECIAL VETERAN IN OUR SPECIAL VETERAN’S DAY ISSUE COMING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2015 As part of our special Veteran’s Day Issue, we will publish photos of local Veterans living and deceased.

$10.00 PER PHOTO

Worker finds stolen McDonald’s statue NORTHAMPTON, Mass. — A Ronald McDonald statue hamburgled from a western Massachusetts home during a teenage house party has been found. The three-foot high statue of the McDonald’s mascot was turned over to Northampton police Wednesday by a McDonald’s employee who found it next to a trash bin outside a health club. That person turned it over when he read about the missing statue in The Daily Hampshire Gazette. Mary Ryan says her husband bought the sculpture of a kneeling Ronald from an antique store years ago for $1,200. They think it dates to 1972. It disappeared in August when their teenage daughter hosted an unauthorized party at their summer home in Leverett. It was seen in a tree and outside the health club, before the trail went cold.

Daily Corinthian • 7A

SAMUEL D. SMITH U.S. Army 1967-1970

one person per photo. All photos must be submitted by 5 p.m. on Monday Nov. 2, 2015.

I give my permission to publish the enclosed information in the Daily Corinthian Veteran’s Day issue. Signature________________________Phone___________________ Relationship to person in picture:______________________________ Veteran’s Name___________________________________________ Branch of Service__________________________________________ Years of Service, ex. 1967-1970_______________________________ Credit/debit card #_________________________________________ Exp. date___________Name & Address associated w/ card_______________ ________________________________________________________ Cash_____________________Check#_________________________ Mail to Veterans Picture, c/o The Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835, bring by 1607 S. Harper Rd. 38834. You may email picture & info to: classad@dailycorinthian.com


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Today

Up in the air The world’s largest airline reports its results for the third quarter today. American Airlines Group has benefited this year from dramatically cheaper jet fuel. The savings helped American nearly double its second-quarter earnings. A strong pickup in passenger traffic has helped, too. However, the company’s revenue has lagged in part because of lower average fares.

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103.62 34.75 19.19 100.77 14.72 51.60 34.79 14.54 1.13 9.98 103.08 147.68 4.12 4.99 33.33 89.55 82.61 36.23 109.95 21.51 109.71 4.62 20.98 63.63 108.83 63.84 27.37 22.09 62.55 74.85 20.20 20.48 31.63 20.71 32.48 43.62 18.16

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

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

Chris Marshall Financial Advisor 401 E. Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-7885

www.edwardjones.com

Member SIPC

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15.40 60.43 19.32 32.31 9.21 11.76 48.88 6.11 55.39 54.68 7.01 174.80 111.69 36.56 205.26 64.19 36.30 36.45 42.15 37.15 61.82 77.37 77.09 .35 78.26 29.45 6.87 39.24 16.37 13.86 3.97 46.19 81.69 57.99 6.99 46.50 44.08 11.67 28.50 10.09 4.46 44.65 67.88 50.82 79.24 68.42 23.88 54.46 42.64 45.39 105.47 12.65 61.49 14.06 98.53 29.08 7.80 14.85 40.79 6.98 14.82 20.64 31.83 .67 41.71 22.51 77.11 52.28 6.73 25.52 28.24 18.63 55.96 58.09 39.17 124.00 156.00 72.53 50.76 15.88 29.79 30.09 29.15 47.18

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Growing pains An unexpected twist has Netflix investors wondering whether they’ve stumbled into a surreal, nothing-is-what-it-seems thriller like “Mr. Robot” — or if they’ve started to binge-watch “American Horror Story.” The concerns revolve around the company’s suddenly slowed growth in the U.S., by far the biggest market among the 80 countries where it currently operates. Netflix added just 880,000 U.S. subscribers in the third quarter, substantially undershooting its own target of 1.15 million. Netflix management blames the letdown on bad credit-card numbers. Specifically, the company claims a bunch of U.S. customers vanished simply because they’d been

’14

Netflix (NFLX)

Thursday’s close: $97.32

’15

120 announcement of subscriber numbers

Cut down Subscriber growth fell short of expectations last quarter for the first time in a year.

90 60 30 1Q

2.5 million 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0

2Q

3Q

4Q

1Q

2Q

3Q

Subscribers projected

actual

Sources: FactSet; Netflix

Michael Liedtke; J. Paschke • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 18,351.36 15,370.33 9,310.22 7,452.70 657.17 539.96 11,254.87 9,509.59 5,231.94 4,248.22 2,134.72 1,867.01 1,551.28 1,319.12 22,537.15 19,619.26 1,296.00 1,078.50

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

Last 17,489.16 8,238.93 605.36 10,448.84 4,920.05 2,052.51 1,432.76 21,394.53 1,154.52

Dow Jones industrials

17,520

Close: 17,489.16 Change: 320.55 (1.9%)

17,200

Net Chg +320.55 +120.00 +7.05 +142.40 +79.93 +33.57 +10.54 +301.29 +9.58

16,880

18,400

YTD 52-wk %Chg %Chg %Chg +1.87 -1.87 +4.86 +1.48 -9.86 -2.92 +1.18 -2.06 +4.91 +1.38 -3.60 -.67 +1.65 +3.89 +10.49 +1.66 -.31 +5.21 +.74 -1.36 +4.41 +1.43 -1.27 +4.04 +.84 -4.17 +3.41

10 DAYS

17,600 16,800 16,000 15,200

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

Div 1.56 1.88 ... 3.24 2.20 2.24f 1.16 1.56 1.08 2.40 .40f 3.08 4.28 1.32 1.00 4.40a 2.40 .28f 1.68f .80 .60 .24 .52 .92 .28f 2.07 .96 .32 3.52 .42f 1.12 3.40

PE 10 34 ... 28 18 17 ... 20 13 ... 17 12 14 28 18 20 12 12 14 ... 17 ... 25 ... 3 18 15 16 64 20 25 25

Last 62.22 33.96 16.67 137.83 61.54 59.17 92.80 60.65 36.92 35.92 24.26 70.88 91.62 43.24 61.70 139.62 79.35 91.29 64.00 45.71 15.58 13.61 37.47 29.58 32.57 102.58 34.40 22.96 120.80 38.29 73.42 110.87

YTD Chg %Chg Name Div .48 +.88 +1.8 OldNBcp +.36 +1.1 Penney ... +.13 -8.9 PennyMac 1.88m +2.29 -4.4 +.72 -7.3 PepsiCo 2.81 +.23 -2.6 PilgrimsP 5.77e +.09 +2.9 .24 +.34 +8.8 RegionsFn +.64 -5.1 SbdCp 3.00 +.78 -5.8 SearsHldgs ... +.52 +7.8 2.68 +1.98 -22.6 Sherwin +2.29 -18.3 SiriusXM ... +1.05 +2.4 SouthnCo 2.17 +.59 +6.4 .44e +2.12 -.8 SPDR Fncl +2.70 -10.3 Torchmark .54 -.82 -27.1 Total SA 2.93e +2.12 -10.8 +1.69 -27.2 US Bancrp 1.02f +.17 +.5 WalMart 1.96 -.07 -21.8 WellsFargo 1.50 +.51 -15.9 .22 +.73 +17.1 Wendys Co +.08 +14.0 WestlkChm .73f +3.81 +2.7 +1.03 -5.2 WestRock n 1.50 1.24 +.35 +5.2 Weyerhsr +2.71 +4.6 Xerox .28 +.21 +19.3 ... +.70 +6.7 YRC Wwde ... +8.33 +18.3 Yahoo

PE 15

Last 14.07

YTD Chg %Chg +.16 -5.4

...

9.98

+.17

+54.0

10

15.02

-.05

-28.8

31 103.08 +2.83 +9.0 cc 25.14 -.79 17 16.66 +.15 6 19.66 +.51 -29.0 cc 93.81 -5.34 14 9.21 +.18 -12.8 17 97.01 +3.60 8 56.05 +1.50 13 3201.00 +67.64 -23.7 25 106.43 +1.17 ... 23.83 -.19 -27.7 12 73.90 +6.70 13 41.84 +.74 25 246.93 +8.57 -6.1 q 10.86 -.09 44 3.97 +.06 +13.4 q 14.51 +.08 dd 11.29 +.44 19 46.50 +.42 -5.3 15 99.79 +1.82 ... 23.88 +.38 -3.4 18 113.81 -4.30 18 111.73 -13.74 14 58.39 +.77 +7.8 ... 4.73 +.22 ... 3.82 +.11 ... 50.76 +.41 -.9 62 109.87 -8.74 13 41.84 +.74 -6.9 7 60.36 +1.06 q 45.95 +.61 12 58.90 +.26 -31.4 q 36.17 +.77 13 54.06 +.94 -1.4 q 52.23 +.50 q 38.27 +.45 30 8.67 -.19 -4.0 ... 8.50 +.01 13 60.76 +2.60 -.5 18 45.89 +1.03 12 49.65 +1.13 ... 52.50 -.07 -17.2 51 19.36 +1.22 29 30.01 +.79 -16.4 31 76.42 +.96 26 56.79 +1.37 19 10.29 +.13 -25.8 ... 33.21 +1.28 72 16.52 +.21 -26.5 cc 93.31 +5.21 dd 7.42 -.17 ... 31.67 +.55 -37.3 21 83.74 -4.81 12 58.90 +.26 30 88.63 +.59 dd 10.10 +.90 20 15.43 +.03 13 54.06 +.94 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) 30 8.67 -.19 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg 11 69.96 -1.48 Name 12 19.66 +.59 GenElec 806622 29.58 +.73 Quotinet wt 2.71 +2.11 +351.7 EnantaPh 23.90 -16.35 -40.6 29 30.01 +.79 BkofAm 731748 16.16 +.26 ChHouLd rs 4.37 +1.52 +53.3 ReadgIntB 11.15 -6.66 -37.4 47 18.75 +.04 SiriusXM 614514 3.97 +.06 SmrtPros 3.52 +.97 +38.0 CmtyHlt 26.30 -14.25 -35.1 19 32.53 -.45 ValeantPh 566943 109.87 -8.74 GoodrP pfC 3.49 +.89 +34.2 ApolloEdu 7.19 -3.42 -32.2 72 39.81 -.67 Microsoft 522298 48.03 +.83 GoodrP pfD 2.93 +.63 +27.4 EnvisnHlth 25.40 -11.09 -30.4 q 59.75 +2.13 458459 48.27 -5.56 GblPowEq 5.65 +1.13 +25.0 Relypsa 11.76 -4.39 -27.2 37 17.90 +1.53 AbbVie eBay s 439052 27.58 +3.37 WashFd wt 7.57 +1.48 +24.3 AMN Hlth 23.70 -8.42 -26.2 q 53.64 +1.14 Ambev 437045 5.00 +.08 BridgfdFds 10.95 +1.90 +21.0 ArcticCat 16.64 -5.72 -25.6 13 17.94 -.23 414168 17.60 +.89 TrueBlue 27.55 +4.76 +20.9 Adeptus 69.09 -16.51 -19.3 33 63.18 -1.29 Corning 411443 29.75 -1.67 TrinityBio 13.02 +2.18 +20.1 TenetHlth 28.24 -6.57 -18.9 19 10.29 +.13 KindMorg 22 47.63 +.94 cc 31.67 +.55 YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY dd 2.44 +.07 2,346 Total issues 3,230 Advanced 1,768 Total issues 2,920 dd 24.65 -.11 Advanced 805 New Highs 116 Declined 993 New Highs 88 32 72.68 -.88 Declined Unchanged 79 New Lows 57 Unchanged 159 New Lows 90 44 40.80 -.86 Volume 4,326,318,068 Volume 2,101,835,131 dd 2.42 +.05

MARKET SUMMARY G

N

$45.99

AAL

’15 $37.85

30 Operating EPS

issued new credit-card numbers but didn’t update their accounts, meaning the company couldn’t charge them. Those new numbers, Netflix said, resulted from banks’ move to new cards that rely on embedded computer chips instead of magnetic stripes. The implication: Once everyone updates their Netflix accounts, everything will be fine. But Wall Street is full of horror fans. Its skeptics suspect Netflix is having trouble retaining subscribers given competition from rivals Amazon.com, Hulu.com and HBO’s new Internet-based streaming service. The doubts triggered the biggest one-day drop in Netflix shares in a year.

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+2.98 +.50 -.07 -.98 +.40 +1.29 +.96 -.78 +.03 +.17 +2.83 -7.56 +.22 +.21 -.13 +.57 +2.11 +.22 +2.12 +.43 +2.19 +.16 -.38 +2.00 +6.09 +3.01 -6.13 +.30 +4.79 +1.26 -.72 -.79 -1.37 -1.31 -1.73 +.44 -1.29

$1.66

est. $2.72

3Q ’14

3Q ’15

Price-earnings ratio: 8 based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $0.40 Div. yield: 0.9% Source: FactSet

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Friday, October 23, 2015

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Sales slide Procter & Gamble has been trying to boost its earnings by cutting costs and shrinking its portfolio of products. The maker of products including Tide, Pampers and Charmin has been weighed down by softer sales volume and unfavorable currency exchange rates. The consumer goods giant’s sales have declined the past six consecutive quarters. Did the sales trends continue in Procter & Gamble’s fiscal first quarter? Find out today when the company reports its latest results.

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Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 72.42 +1.20 +1.3 500IdxAdvtgInst72.42 +1.19 +1.4 500IdxInstl 72.42 +1.19 +1.3 500IdxInv 72.41 +1.19 +1.3 ExtMktIdAg d 53.36 +0.41 -2.0 IntlIdxAdg d 38.09 +0.24 +2.4 TotMktIdAg d 60.13 +0.89 +0.7 Fidelity® SeriesGrowthCoF12.53+0.19 +4.6 First Eagle GlbA m 52.61 +0.37 +0.3 FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.35 +0.01 +1.5 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.44 ... +1.8 GrowthA m 76.00 +1.02 +1.8 HY TF A m 10.44 -0.01 +1.7 Income C m 2.27 +0.03 -2.9 IncomeA m 2.24 +0.02 -2.6 IncomeAdv 2.22 +0.02 -2.5 RisDvA m 50.75 +1.01 -1.7 StrIncA m 9.50 +0.02 -1.7 FrankTemp-Mutual Discov Z 32.05 ... -2.6 DiscovA m 31.48 ... -2.8 Shares Z 28.43 ... -2.9 SharesA m 28.14 ... -3.1 FrankTemp-Templeton GlBond C m 11.61 ... -5.1 GlBondA m 11.78 +0.20 NA GlBondAdv 11.54 ... -4.5 GrowthA m 23.07 +0.14 -3.1 WorldA m 16.90 +0.11 -1.7 GE S&SUSEq 53.70 +0.95 -1.1 GMO EmgMktsVI d 8.89 +0.12 -8.6 IntItVlIV 21.61 +0.16 -1.2 USEqAllcVI 15.41 +0.24 +0.1 USTrsy 25.01 ... +0.1 Goldman Sachs MidCpVaIs 38.87 +0.25 -6.5 SmCpValIs 53.72 +0.57 -3.5 Harbor CapApInst 63.28 +0.85 +8.1 IntlInstl 64.77 +0.62 Hartford CapAprA m 37.45 +0.50 +1.0 CpApHLSIA 44.89 +0.61 +1.0 INVESCO ComstockA m 24.38 +0.49 -3.6 DivDivA m 18.89 +0.32 +4.3 EqIncomeA m 10.12 +0.13 -1.1 GrowIncA m 25.83 +0.45 -1.9 HiYldMuA m 10.00 ... +4.2 IVA WorldwideI d 17.46 +0.06 -0.1 Ivy AssetStrA m 24.12 +0.27 -5.4 AssetStrC m 23.09 +0.25 -5.9 AsstStrgI 24.40 +0.27 -5.2 JPMorgan CoreBdUlt 11.78 ... +2.0 CoreBondSelect11.77 +0.01 +1.9 DiscEqUlt 23.08 +0.40 -1.7 EqIncSelect 13.90 +0.25 -1.3 HighYldSel 7.26 -0.01 -0.4 LgCapGrA m 36.15 +0.53 +4.7 LgCapGrSelect36.26 +0.52 +4.8 MidCpValI 36.74 +0.40 -1.1 ShDurBndSel 10.90 ... +1.1 USEquityI 14.44 +0.23 USLCpCrPS 29.15 +0.47 -0.9 ValAdvI 29.16 +0.44 -2.2 Janus BalT 30.13 +0.18 -0.4 GlbLfScT 52.75 -0.94 +0.4 John Hancock DisValMdCpI 20.41 +0.21 +2.2 DiscValI 18.35 +0.28 -3.3 GAbRSI 11.02 ... +0.8 LifBa1 b 15.36 +0.11 +0.3 LifGr1 b 16.33 +0.15 +0.3 Lazard EmgMkEqInst d14.91 +0.13 -12.9 IntlStEqInst d 13.71 +0.08 -0.1 Legg Mason CBAggressGrthA m195.43+1.63 -4.1 CBAggressGrthI212.38+1.78 -3.8 WACorePlusBdI11.61 +0.03 +2.2 Longleaf Partners LongPart 26.12 +0.41 -16.4 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.04 +0.05 -3.4 BdR b 13.97 +0.04 -3.6 Lord Abbett AffiliatA m 15.73 +0.27 -1.6 BondDebA m 7.69 +0.02 +1.2 ShDurIncA m 4.38 ... +1.3 ShDurIncC m 4.41 ... +0.8 ShDurIncF b 4.38 ... +1.6 ShDurIncI 4.38 ... +1.7 MFS IntlValA m 35.33 +0.37 +6.9 IsIntlEq 21.50 +0.14 +2.8 TotRetA m 18.09 +0.18 +0.9 ValueA m 34.83 +0.71 +1.1 ValueI 35.01 +0.71 +1.3 Matthews Asian China 22.16 +0.37 +3.3 India 28.14 +0.17 +6.3 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.87 +0.01 +1.2 TotRtBd b 10.87 ... +0.9 TtlRtnBdPl 10.25 +0.01 +1.2 Natixis LSInvBdY 11.32 +0.04 -3.0 LSStratIncC m15.33 +0.11 -4.9 Northern HYFixInc d 6.79 ... +0.5 StkIdx 25.25 +0.42 +1.3 Nuveen HiYldMunI 17.04 +0.01 +3.2 Oakmark EqIncI 31.12 +0.28 -2.5 Intl I 23.14 +0.04 -0.9 Oakmark I 65.44 +1.13 -1.4 Select I 39.45 +0.55 -3.3 Oberweis ChinaOpp m 13.05 +0.16 -5.4 Old Westbury GlbOppo 7.64 +0.05 +0.7 GlbSmMdCp 15.68 +0.07 +1.4 LgCpStr 12.85 +0.20 -0.5 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 31.76 +0.32 -10.6 DevMktY 31.41 +0.31 -10.4 GlobA m 79.63 +0.88 +4.7 IntlGrY 36.56 +0.22 +4.2 IntlGrowA m 36.69 +0.22 +4.0 MainStrA m 49.25 +0.69 +2.8 SrFltRatA m 7.88 ... +0.6 Oppenheimer Rocheste FdMuniA m 14.84 -0.02 +1.9 Osterweis OsterStrInc 11.10 -0.01 +1.5 PIMCO AllAssetI 10.77 ... -5.4 AllAuthIn 8.24 ... -7.6 ComRlRStI 7.28 ... -16.0 EMktCurI 8.65 ... -4.6 EmgLclBdI 7.04 ... -12.0 ForBdInstl 10.63 ... +0.1 HiYldIs 8.87 ... +1.5 Income P 12.18 ... +3.1 IncomeA m 12.18 ... +2.8 IncomeC m 12.18 ... +2.2 IncomeD b 12.18 ... +2.9 IncomeInl 12.18 ... +3.2 LowDrIs 9.90 ... +0.6 RERRStgC m 6.31 ... +4.1 RealRet 10.71 ... -1.2 ShtTermIs 9.74 ... +0.8 TotRetA m 10.58 +0.03 +1.2 TotRetAdm b 10.58 +0.03 +1.3 TotRetC m 10.58 +0.03 +0.6 TotRetIs 10.58 +0.03 +1.5 TotRetrnD b 10.58 +0.03 +1.3 TotlRetnP 10.58 +0.03 +1.4 UnconstrBdIns 10.66 ... -2.6 PRIMECAP Odyssey AggGr 32.65 +0.33 -0.9 Growth 26.55 +0.35 +1.9 Stock 24.07 +0.45 +1.7 Parnassus CoreEqInv 40.85 +0.74 +1.2 Principal DivIntI 11.54 +0.10 +1.5 L/T2030I 14.38 +0.13 +0.6 LCGrIInst 13.22 +0.21 +6.3 Prudential Investmen JenMidCapGrZ 39.25 +0.28 -1.9 TotRetBdZ 14.30 +0.02 +1.7 Putnam CpSpctrmY 35.81 +0.24 -7.7 GrowIncA m 20.31 +0.26 -5.5

NewOpp 80.19 +0.99 Schwab 1000Inv d 52.96 +0.81 FUSLgCInl d 15.07 +0.25 S&P500Sel d 32.57 +0.54 Sequoia Sequoia 219.70 -1.51 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 71.90 +0.90 CapApprec 27.43 +0.21 EmMktBd d 11.71 +0.02 EmMktStk d 30.47 +0.38 EqIndex d 55.26 +0.90 EqtyInc 30.79 +0.59 GrowStk 55.83 +0.69 HealthSci 70.41 -1.20 HiYield d 6.47 -0.01 InsLgCpGr 29.12 +0.36 IntlBnd d 8.46 -0.06 IntlGrInc d 13.84 +0.09 IntlStk d 15.84 +0.13 LatinAm d 17.46 +0.39 MidCapE 45.57 +0.25 MidCapVa 28.41 +0.28 MidCpGr 79.52 +0.42 45.29 +0.32 NewHoriz NewIncome 9.51 +0.01 OrseaStk d 9.55 +0.07 R2015 14.57 +0.10 R2025 15.85 +0.13 R2035 16.83 +0.16 ReaAsset d 9.99 +0.13 Real d 27.83 +0.24 Rtmt2010 17.85 +0.11 Rtmt2020 20.89 +0.16 Rtmt2030 23.24 +0.21 Rtmt2040 24.15 +0.24 Rtmt2045 16.15 +0.16 ShTmBond 4.75 ... SmCpStk 42.88 +0.32 SmCpVal d 45.94 +0.51 SpecInc 12.32 +0.03 Value 33.78 +0.45 TCW TotRetBdI 10.33 ... TIAA-CREF 10.90 +0.01 BdIdxInst EqIx 15.63 +0.24 IntlE 17.91 +0.16 Templeton InFEqSeS 20.40 +0.07 Thornburg IncBldA m 20.06 +0.16 IncBldC m 20.05 +0.16 IntlI 29.26 +0.06 LtdTMul 14.55 ... Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 26.24 +0.15 Vanguard 500Adml 189.55 +3.11 500Inv 189.54 +3.11 BalIdxAdm 29.59 +0.28 BalIdxIns 29.59 +0.28 BdMktInstPls 10.82 +0.01 11.79 +0.01 CAITAdml CapOpAdml 121.06 +1.85 DevMktIdxAdm 12.27 +0.11 DevMktIdxInstl 12.28 +0.11 DivGr 23.19 +0.43 EmMktIAdm 29.94 +0.38 EnergyAdm 89.36 +1.35 EqInc 30.94 +0.63 EqIncAdml 64.85 +1.32 ExplAdml 82.78 +0.36 ExtdIdAdm 64.72 +0.50 ExtdIdIst 64.71 +0.49 ExtdMktIdxIP 159.70 +1.23 GNMA 10.75 +0.01 GNMAAdml 10.75 +0.01 GrthIdAdm 55.11 +0.83 55.10 +0.82 GrthIstId HYCorAdml 5.79 -0.01 HltCrAdml 90.13 -0.98 HlthCare 213.60 -2.32 ITBondAdm 11.54 +0.01 ITGradeAd 9.83 +0.01 ITrsyAdml 11.55 +0.01 InfPrtAdm 25.81 +0.08 InfPrtI 10.52 +0.04 InflaPro 13.14 +0.04 InstIdxI 187.70 +3.08 InstPlus 187.71 +3.07 InstTStPl 46.34 +0.68 IntlGr 21.66 +0.18 IntlGrAdm 68.91 +0.57 IntlStkIdxAdm 25.51 +0.25 IntlStkIdxI 102.01 +0.98 IntlStkIdxIPls 102.02 +0.98 IntlVal 33.39 +0.28 LTGradeAd 10.23 +0.03 LifeCon 18.38 +0.12 LifeGro 28.68 +0.31 LifeMod 24.06 +0.21 MidCpAdml 152.07 +1.77 MidCpIst 33.59 +0.39 MorgAdml 82.75 +1.09 MuHYAdml 11.21 +0.01 MuInt 14.19 ... MuIntAdml 14.19 ... MuLTAdml 11.65 +0.01 MuLtdAdml 11.04 ... MuShtAdml 15.83 ... PrecMtls 7.52 +0.10 Prmcp 103.45 +2.09 PrmcpAdml 107.23 +2.17 PrmcpCorI 21.66 +0.42 REITIdxAd 115.55 +1.00 REITIdxInst 17.88 +0.15 S/TBdIdxInstl 10.55 ... STBondAdm 10.55 ... STCor 10.67 ... STFedAdml 10.83 +0.01 STGradeAd 10.67 ... STIGradeI 10.67 ... STsryAdml 10.76 +0.01 SelValu 27.90 +0.38 ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.28 +0.02 SmCpGrIdxAdm43.08 +0.23 SmCpIdAdm 54.28 +0.38 SmCpIdIst 54.27 +0.37 SmCpValIdxAdm44.00 +0.36 Star 24.63 +0.21 StratgcEq 32.39 +0.27 TgtRe2010 26.58 +0.15 TgtRe2015 15.43 +0.12 TgtRe2020 28.69 +0.25 TgtRe2025 16.65 +0.16 TgtRe2030 29.21 +0.30 TgtRe2035 17.91 +0.19 TgtRe2040 29.81 +0.34 TgtRe2045 18.69 +0.22 TgtRe2050 29.67 +0.35 TgtRetInc 12.88 +0.06 TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.25 +0.06 TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.89 +0.09 TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.63 +0.03 TotBdAdml 10.82 +0.01 TotBdInst 10.82 +0.01 TotBdMkInv 10.82 +0.01 TotIntl 15.25 +0.15 TotStIAdm 51.22 +0.76 TotStIIns 51.22 +0.75 TotStIdx 51.20 +0.76 TxMCapAdm 104.29 +1.61 ValIdxAdm 32.02 +0.54 ValIdxIns 32.02 +0.54 WellsI 25.55 +0.23 WellsIAdm 61.90 +0.57 Welltn 38.87 +0.49 WelltnAdm 67.13 +0.84 WndsIIAdm 64.61 +0.91 Wndsr 20.96 +0.32 WndsrAdml 70.70 +1.08 WndsrII 36.40 +0.51 Virtus EmgMktsIs 9.57 +0.09 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 10.78 +0.13 SciTechA m 14.45 +0.17

-0.4 +0.9 -1.4 +1.3 -5.6 +6.9 +5.0 +2.0 -5.9 +1.1 -4.7 +7.5 +3.6 +0.1 +6.0 -3.9 +0.5 +1.5 -20.4 +5.7 -1.4 +5.4 +3.4 +1.3 +1.4 +0.7 +0.9 +1.0 -7.6 +5.2 +0.7 +0.9 +1.0 +1.0 +0.9 +1.1 -3.2 -1.8 -0.4 -2.5 +1.8 +1.7 +0.8 +2.7 +1.8 -0.9 -1.5 +7.9 +1.5 +0.8 +1.3 +1.2 +1.2 +1.2 +1.5 +2.2 -0.6 +3.0 +3.0 +2.9 -7.7 -11.2 +1.2 +1.3 -4.2 -2.0 -2.0 -2.0 +1.7 +1.8 +3.5 +3.6 +1.6 +3.8 +3.8 +2.9 +2.6 +3.1 -0.2 -0.2 -0.3 +1.3 +1.4 +0.7 +0.6 +0.6

-1.6 -0.8 +1.2 +0.5 +0.9 +0.4 +0.4 +5.4 +2.5 +1.8 +1.9 +2.3 +1.3 +0.6 -16.5 +0.6 +0.6 +0.1 +3.3 +3.3 +1.8 +1.8 +1.7 +1.5 +1.7 +1.8 +1.3 -1.7 +0.4 -2.1 -2.0 -2.0 -1.9 +0.8 +0.7 +1.0 +0.9 +0.8 +0.7 +0.6 +0.4 +0.2 +0.2 +0.2 +1.0 +1.1 +1.2 +1.2 +1.5 +1.5 +1.5 -0.1 +0.7 +0.7 +0.6 +1.7 -1.0 -1.0 +2.1 +2.2 +1.1 +1.2 -1.3 -1.5 -1.4 -1.4 -3.2 +2.4 -3.6

Spotlight on Whirlpool

$159.81 WHR Wall Street anticipates that $250 Whirlpool’s latest earnings improved from a year earlier. 200 ’15 The appliance maker, 150 whose brands also include $155.27 Maytag and KitchenAid, is due 100 to report third-quarter results est. Operating today. Whirlpool has benefited $3.04 $3.29 EPS from growing sales worldwide 3Q ’14 3Q ’15 through the first half of the year. Price-earnings ratio: 19 Investors will be listening for based on past 12-month results an update on how the stronger dollar is affecting the company’s Dividend: $3.60 Div. yield: 2.3% sales overseas.

Source: FactSet


9A • Daily Corinthian

Variety

BEETLE BAILEY

Friday, October 23, 2015

Crossword Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 Locale of TV’s Krusty Krab restaurant 7 “The Hitch-Hiker” director Lupino 10 Meatless lasagna ingredient, perhaps 14 “I wanna go too!” 15 Presumed threats to letter carriers 17 “ ... according to my abilities” 18 Half, statistically 19 Familiar material, on the base? 21 __ loss 22 The Hammer of baseball 26 Backbone of capitalism, on the base? 31 Natural mole fur hue 33 Balm source 34 Hand analog 35 Fruity quaffs 36 “Actions speak louder than words,” e.g. 38 Short pooch, for short 39 It’s hardly a smash 40 Lowlands feature 41 __ metabolism 42 Disciplinary action, on the base? 46 Undemonstrative sort 47 Med. recording 48 Important find, on the base? 56 Cleaned, in a way 59 Lethargy cause 60 One assessing sentiment 61 Digital image format 62 It keeps the team together 63 Calculating 64 Studio equipment DOWN 1 Companion to Artemis 2 Simplicity 3 Related 4 2014 Best Rock Album Grammy winner

5 Spring (from) 6 Mean 7 Teen __ 8 “And there you have it!” 9 Old 10 Problem for a conductor wannabe 11 1930s-’40s slugger 12 Limited 13 Mil. morale booster 16 Oaf 20 Lacking color 23 Best for consumption, perhaps 24 Panasonic headquarters city 25 Staircase support 26 Southwestern community 27 No. twos 28 Perennial political debate subject 29 Priest in 1 Samuel 30 N.T. book written by Paul 31 Soothing applications 32 Add to the family

36 “What a piece of work is a __!”: Hamlet 37 Legendary fighter 38 Broadway flier 40 Coins of old Venice 41 Colorful tropical perennial 43 Clearasil target 44 Guys 45 Mrs. Miller’s partner in a 1971 Altman film

49 Scribbles 50 Hamilton’s undoing 51 Modest sentence 52 November honorees 53 Rylan of “Guiding Light” 54 Currency of Iran 55 Doesn’t shut up 56 Le Carré figure 57 Ply with flowers and chocolate 58 JFK was one

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By Jeffrey Wechsler ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

10/23/15

10/23/15

Avoid overstepping your boundaries WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: Two nights ago, I witnessed my best friend being verbally abused by her boyfriend. The boyfriend was drunk and probably doing something illegal. I listened to him yell at her on the phone all night while we were supposed to be spending time together for her birthday. It was 3 a.m., and he was demanding that I pick him up on my way to take her home. I told him no, because I didn’t want him being drunk and possibly violent in my car. I let my friend know that she can call me if she needs anything, and dropped her off at their house. Although I’m sure her boyfriend will eventually get himself arrested for violating his probation, I feel it is up to me to report him. But if I do, I will lose her friendship. Should I turn him in for the sake of my friend’s safety or mind my own business? — Unsure in Ohio Dear Unsure: We aren’t certain what this man was doing that violated his probation. Yelling at his girlfriend isn’t enough to warrant a report, unless there is a restraining order preventing him from phoning her. Does his probation state that

Annie’s Mailbox he cannot drink? If so, you should report him and let the chips fall. But a suspicion that he might have been doing something illegal is not sufficient, and the police likely would not pick him up for that unless you could provide proof. And without any evidence, he could accuse you of harassment. Please be careful. This guy sounds like a loose cannon. Your friend should call the National Domestic Violence Hotline (thehotline.org) at 1-800-799-SAFE and ask for help. Dear Annie: I’d like to offer some additional advice to “Can’t Stop Crying,” who wants to keep the dog confined because “Lassie” scratches the floors, wears down the furniture and leaves dog hair all over. Her husband thinks she’s being cruel and refuses to compromise. Now he sleeps with the dog, and she’s in tears. Your suggestion to get a

trainer to intercede was good, but it won’t help with the dog hair. My savior was an indoor invisible fence. It is a small unit that plugs into an outlet creating a barrier. Our dogs have freedom throughout the downstairs, except for the formal living and dining room. And the invisible fence also prevents the dogs from going upstairs to our bedrooms. We allow the dogs on the family room furniture, which gives them lots of snuggle time with us. The durability of washable dog blankets protects the furniture and can be removed when we have company. Our dogs are spoiled and happy, and so am I. I’d also like to note that “Crying’s” dog probably has become accustomed to sleeping with the husband and it will take a little tough love to break that habit. A friend found that it helped to give their dog a large stuffed animal to sleep with instead. — M. Dear M.: Thanks for the additional suggestions. We hope the husband is willing to compromise, but he seems quite content to romance the dog and leave his wife by herself in the bedroom.


10A • Friday, October 23, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Presentation of the Daily Corinthian’s family of quality magazines continues with Crossroads Magazine Holiday Edition coming out on Saturday, Nov. 21.

Paying grandma for child care becomes divorce war weapon Abigail Van Buren Dear Abby

D E A R ABBY: My daughter and her husband are divorced, and I take care of their twin daughters after school. I love the girls and treasure the time I get to spend with

them. Their parents’ combined income is more than $120,000. I am on a fixed income and ask for only $10 per day (plus $10 a week for gas) so I can take the girls places like the zoo or an occasional movie (which usually costs more than I am given). I feed them one meal a day on this budget as well. Whenever discussions about money occur, the ex-husband repeatedly tells my daughter he thinks it’s “offensive” that a grandparent charges money to watch the grandchildren. He uses it as a tactic to threaten to not pay for other needed expenses. How do I tell him I think he’s out of line for making me feel bad for requesting the money? -- STUNNED AND HURT IN TEMPE, ARIZ. DEAR STUNNED AND HURT: Your former son-in-law may have some bitterness be-

cause of the divorce. Whatever his reason, his children should not suffer for it. Frankly, he should be ashamed of himself. If he raises the subject of being “offended” with you, remind him in PLAIN ENGLISH that you are on a limited income, food is expensive and if the money wasn’t NEEDED you wouldn’t ask for it. It’s the truth. It’s nothing to be ashamed of and certainly not offensive. Let’s do the math: Your granddaughters go to school five days a week; that’s $50, plus $10 a week for gas. That’s $60! If they were in day care instead of being looked after by you, the cost would be many times that amount. DEAR ABBY: I am an executive assistant. A few years ago, my boss passed away after a long illness. My 13 years with her accounted for the longest consistent span of my career, and for obvious reasons, I was not able to get a letter of recommendation. It was difficult applying for jobs without being able to provide a first-hand reference from my longest employer. I am now happily employed, but I worry sometimes about what if it happens again. My current boss is in his early 50s, but not in the best health. I have no intention of going anywhere, and I don’t want to send him the

wrong signal, but I’m wondering if it would be inappropriate to ask him for a reference letter, just to make sure I don’t find myself in the same situation again. BTW, he knows about my former situation, so I think he would understand, but I’m not sure. -- EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT IN GEORGIA DEAR EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT: I’m sorry about the death of your former employer, but your lack of a letter of reference should not have prevented you from finding another job. Your length of employment should have been proof enough that you were an asset to the company. I do not think it would be a good idea to approach your boss about giving you a letter of reference for a couple of reasons. First, it might be regarded as a signal that you are not happy with your job. And second, because of fear of litigation, many employers today are reluctant to give out any information about an employee other than the length of time the person worked for the company. 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). You want to know how things work, but not quite as much as you want to know how people work. You’ll look for subtle indicators, seek understanding, search for motives and learn quite a lot. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Many people like you and want to show you how much. If you are embarrassed by constant, doting attention, then you should keep 10 paces away from the one you suspect has a crush on you. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). While looking for fun, don’t expect to find it in leisure. All the excitement is bound up inside a knotty problem. The best part will be working things out with the others who are trying to solve this. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Though it would seem only fair that the one who does the most work is also the one most rewarded when the work is done, unfortunately, it doesn’t always happen that way. You’ll have to

make it happen. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). This day will spike with excitement, and then -- whoosh -- fall into lulls of long, flat time. It’s a roller coaster you’ll find enjoyable once you resign yourself to going along for the ride. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). When they don’t act right (and they won’t in some of today’s instances), try to think of the bad manners as a sign of lacking knowledge and training, not as a personal deficit. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). As many people try to get your attention at once, your powers of focus will be challenged. Though it’s nice to be needed and popular, you could also feel harried by all the commotion. Take a breather when you need it. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). What you most want to do might be something you know is wrong. Just know you’re not alone. Being good isn’t easy. The average person struggles to do the right thing on a daily basis.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You might not agree with or approve of another person’s choices, but your sophistication of mind and your worldly style hinge on the one crucial attitude that peace depends on: tolerance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). In the same way that bad art lacks an artistic point of view, bad dates lack a romantic point of view. You’ll have the most fun with people who know what they like, what they are looking for and why. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). It’s easier for you to meet another person’s needs when you know what they are. Ask. If what you learn isn’t what you wanted to hear, chances are you’ll be willing to adjust your thinking in the name of harmony. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). So much will go right when you avoid two things: worrying about the future, and worrying about now. Without the anxious energy, you’ll enjoy seizing your opportunities.


Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 23, 2015 • 11A

Saddled by obstacles, the South can ultimately prevail I would like to believe that the South will rise again, as the mantra rampant on bumper stickers likes to claim. Now don’t get me wrong: I haven’t yet hung out a Confederate flag or stuck one Stacy of those Jones i n f a m o u s stickers on The my conDowtowner vertible. So if I find myself dispassionate about Confederate loss in a war that ended 150 years ago, yet I do believe that the South can rise again, exactly what do I believe is holding the South down? The answer: a number of factors, many of which are tied together. First, there’s K-12 public education. On average, public education tends to be more underfunded in the U.S. South than in other regions in the nation, a fact that can be confirmed by examining U.S. Census Bureau data

updated in June 2015 for the fiscal year 2013. There were only four states that spent less per student than Tennessee and Mississippi: Oklahoma, Arizona, Idaho and Utah. The amount per student in Tennessee dropped three percent from 2008, and the amount spent per student in Mississippi decreased almost six percent from 2008. Then there’s lack of college education. According to a 2013 Forbes magazine article, “every state in the Southeast falls below the national average of the percentage of residents aged 25 and older with a bachelor’s degree� when it comes to postsecondary educational achievement. The inconsistency of degreed residents in the South isn’t the paramount problem, though. Our region has too many citizens who are simply illiterate, for which there should be little excuse, as free public education has been available for some time in the United States.

In 2003, a study conducted by the National Assessment for Adult Literacy conveyed a range of five to 22 percent of illiterate adults who “lacked basic prose skills� in Lafayette County, Mississippi, home to Nobel Prize-winning writer William Faulkner and to the University of Mississippi. There is, of course, a strong correlation between lack of education and literacy and the blight of poverty. According to a Census Bureau report, several Southern states, including North Carolina, saw the biggest increases in the number of those living in “poverty areas� between 2000 and 2010. Southern states consistently lag behind other states when it comes to health care access, wages, and economic mobility; on the other hand, the South consistently leads when it comes to poverty, teen pregnancy and obesity. In 2009, according to TIME magazine, Mississippi had an obesity rate of 33 percent, having

held the title of “chubbiest state,� deemed by the magazine, for five years in a row. Could it be simply that our biscuits and barbeque and fried delicacies are sating us with all of that fat? Perhaps so, but obesity is also strongly correlated with poverty and lack of access to health care. “When you’re poor, you tend to eat more calorie-dense foods because they’re cheaper than fruits and vegetables,� explains Jeff Levi, executive director of Trust for America’s Health, a Washington, D.C.-based health policy organization. What must we Southerners do in order to combat these problems that plague us? We need to forget about celebrating stereotypes a la Duck Dynasty, stop becoming so infuriated about a piece of cloth that truly has no connection to us personally, instead work to see that more Southerners are properly educated, and, further, try to ensure that those citizens invest some of their money back

into our communities in order to properly fund education, the only real solution to combating poverty. Change will not come, though, without a concerted effort. While we don’t have to alter our accents, we do need to become more progressive, especially in rural areas. Metropolitan cities in the South may be flourishing: Dallas, Atlanta, Nashville; others, not so much. Recently, for example, in the small city of Celina, Tenn., authorities had to close public schools until this coming November because funding is depleted. Soon we may not be much better off in nearby McNairy County, Tenn., as voters recently struck down a wheel tax proposal intended to fund education, roads and public services. Our director of schools says his only option in future years is to make cuts if the funding problem is not solved. We could take some lessons from two Mississippi storytellers. We must,

like the forlorn but determined Old South character of Miss Emily Grierson in Faulkner’s story “A Rose for Emily,� maintain our dignity, in light of those naysayers around us. We should, like the optimistic character of grandmother Phoenix Jackson in Eudora Welty’s story “A Worn Path,� continue to press forward and metaphorically rise from the ashes. We are, after all, a strong people in the South, a culture of storytellers whose soft, lilting accents have comforted and entertained us through a war that divided the country, an economic depression that drained the land, and a division of race through which we continue to work. We can, however, rise again. (Daily Corinthian columnist Stacy Jones teaches English at McNairy Central High School and UT Martin and has served on the board of directors at Corinth Theatre-Arts. She enjoys being a downtown Corinth resident.)

citizens 60 and above are welcome and encouraged to attend. Â

be a potluck supper; so guests are encouraged to bring their favorite dish. Call 662-286-7756 for more information about the county 4-H program. Â

Community Events Veteran’s Wreaths Wreaths Across America has kicked off its local goal of placing a wreath at each grave in the Corinth National Cemetery. The annual ceremony to lay the wreaths at the cemetery is set for 11 a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 12. The cost is $15 per wreath. The deadline to purchase one is Tuesday, Nov. 24. Donations are also welcome. For more information and to purchase a wreath, contact McPeter’s Funeral Directors at 662-286-6000. Â

Gallery exhibits • The Corinth Artist Guild Gallery has extended the Laquita Thomson exhibit “Prints and Cyanotypesâ€? through Saturday, Oct. 24. The Corinth native and Freed-Hardeman University professor of art’s exhibit includes techniques such as collagraph and cyanotype. • The exhibit of photography by longtime Corinth photographer Joe McKewen is extended through Saturday, Oct. 31. Images from senior photo shoots, family portraits and sports action are available for purchase, with proceeds benefiting the gallery’s educational efforts. Visit the gallery Tuesday through Saturday, 10

a.m. to 4 p.m. Call 662665-0520 for more information. Â

Musicians Needed A volunteer opportunity is available for a guitar or banjo musician to play with a band as part of a nursing home ministry during special programs held at 2 p.m. twice a month at Cornerstone and Mississippi Care Center. For more information call 662-2873560. Â

Easom Community Garden Free and open to the public for the fall season, the Easom Community Center Garden will reopen to the public from 2:30 to 5 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Danny Finger, the Center’s volunteer planter has planted a combination of turnip and mustard greens which are ready for picking. In addition to making vegetables available to the public, the fresh vegetables are also used to support the Foundation’s hot meals program. The garden is available to individuals for their personal picking and consumption only. Items are not for sale. Those interested in picking should first stop by the cafeteria, sign in and ob-

tain a bag for their convenience. Cooperation is appreciated. The Garden is located at the Easom Community Center (the former South Corinth School) at 700 S. Crater Street. For questions, contact Samuel Crayton at 404386-3359 Â

Art Exhibit Northeast Mississippi Community College will host the photography of Joey Wilder now through Thursday, Nov 19. Anderson Hall art gallery is open Monday – Thursday from 8 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.  Contact Terry Anderson for more information at tfanderson@ nemcc.edu or 662-7207336. Â

answer and someone will return the call A.S.A.P. Â

Bishop Activity Center Bishop Activity Center will hold the following activities: Monday, Oct. 26: Entertainment by Ricky Gillentine; Tuesday, Oct. 27: Exercise at Tate Baptist Church; Wednesday, Oct. 28: Bible Study by Jackie Calvart from Oakland Baptist Church; Thursday, Oct. 29: Halloween Party; and Friday, Oct. 30: Grocery Shopping at Roger’s Supermarket. Daily activities include: Open discussion, jigsaw puzzles, table games, Rolo golf and washer games. Senior

4-H Volunteer Leaders  The Alcorn County 4-H Volunteer Leaders will hold their annual program planning meeting at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 26 at the Alcorn County Extension office.  This is a very important meeting, as members will discuss changes to program areas, youth and volunteer training needs and plan county contests and activities. Volunteers and parents are encouraged to attend and share ideas. There will

Halloween Bash The “Bees� Best Ever Extraordinary Seniors will hold a Halloween Bash at 11:45 a.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 28 at First United Methodist Church, located at 109 North Fillmore St. in Corinth. Lunch will be furnished. There will be games, stories and prizes to follow. Donations will be appreciated. For more information or to covey attendance call

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Haunted Theatre The Corinth Area Arts Council will hold a Haunted Theatre at the historic Coliseum Civic Center in downtown Corinth on Thursday, Oct. 22–Saturday, Oct. 24 and again on Thursday, Oct. 29– Saturday, Oct. 31. The cost is $10 at the door. Tickets are available, first come, first served. Entry is limited to those 10 and up. For more information call or Text Barbara Trapp at 662808-0267 or Myra Burns at 662-603-5776. Leave a message if their is no

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12A • Daily Corinthian

Local Schedule Today Football Benton Co. @ Kossuth, 7 Houlka @ Biggersville, 7 Corinth @ Shannon, (WXRZ) Central @ New Site, 7 Booneville @ Belmont, 7 Tish County @ Amory, 7 Walnut @ Baldwyn, 7 Byhalia @ Ripley, 7 Falkner @ Coffeeville, 7 Coldwater @ Thrasher, 7 Liberty @ McNairy, 7:30

Saturday Volleyball Class II Playoffs Oxford @ Corinth, 2:30 Football Itawamba @ Gulf Coast, 3:30 Northeast @ Holmes, 4

Sports

Friday, October 23, 2015

Aggies seek home playoff game BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Kossuth will honor its seniors tonight as they take the field for their final regularseason home game. If the Aggies take care of business tonight against Benton County, they’ll have another chance to play in front of the home faithful. Kossuth (8-1, 3-0) and Benton County (5-3, 2-1) take the field tonight at Larry B. Mitchell Stadium hoping to open the Class 3A playoffs at home. The Aggies still have a date next week at Booneville, while Benton County -- which lost to Booneville last week -- plays New Site. “Both of us

are playing for the same thing .. a home playoff game,” said KHS Head Coach Brian Kelly. A Kossuth win tonight and a Booneville victory over Belmont would set up a winnertake-all game next Friday at Tiger Stadium. The loser would still be a No. 2 seed and open the playoffs at home. The Buccaneers are a co-op of players from Ashland and Hickory Flat. It’s the fifth year for the varsity program, but the first time they’ve played division contests. “They’re an upstart program, but they’re not intimidated,” said Kelly. “We’ve got to execute and not turn the ball over. “They’ve got a bunch of good athletes and

the best inside linebackers I’ve see all year.” Kossuth has been rolling since a loss to Pontotoc in Week 2. The Aggies have won seven straight overall and have tossed three shutouts in league play while hanging 148 points. “We’ve been able to sub some and also get our linemen some reps,” said Kelly. “We played a stacked nondivision schedule and now we’ve been able to heal some injuries.” Kossuth continues to put up big numbers offensively, while on the other side they’ve tossed four shutouts. With four 54-plus point games in five outings, the Aggies are averaging a robust 42.8

points per game. Behind Jaley Adams 1,804 yards and 23 scores, Kossuth is netting 326.1 yards per night and 45 total TDs on the ground. Kelly also points out the importance of Elijah Potts at QB (1,072 total yards and 15 TDs) and on the defensive side. Potts has played all four years and pretty much every position outside of the line. “He finally gets to go through Senior Night,” laughed Kelly. “Our offense revolves around him and the checks he makes at the line. Defensively, he’s our leader and making sure everyone gets lined up. “The only break he gets is on extra points.”

Shorts Win $1,000 with Kiwanis The Booneville Kiwanis Club is selling chances for its upcoming punt, pass and kick competition. Chances are $5 each or five for $20. During halftime of the BoonevilleKossuth game on Oct. 30 in Booneville, one name will be drawn and the lucky winner will have the chance to come out on the field and punt, pass and kick their way to $1,000 by first punting the ball, then passing from that spot and then kicking a field goal from that location. Hit the field goal and win $1,000. If they miss they’ll still receive a $50 gift card from Grambo’s restaurant. Tickets are available at the game or from any Kiwanis Club member.

Youth Basketball The Chewalla Baptist Basketball League is taking registrations for the season. Forms will soon be in the schools or you can contact Ross Shelton by e-mail Randyross19@yahoo.com for a form. League ages are 5-6th Grade. Fee is $20. The league is open to anyone that wants their child to play. You can also text Shelton at 731-610-0458.

MC Hall of Fame McNairy Central’s Sports Hall of Fame Banquet will be held Saturday, Oct. 24, in the commons at MCHS. The banquet will honor five new members into the Hall of Fame. The Class of 2015 includes the late Kenny Walker, Sherry Smith, Ross Shelton, Chad He’bert, and Wilburn Gene Ashe, will be inducted as the first contributor in the Sports Hall of Fame. A ticket will cost $15. You can buy tickets online at mchscats.org or from a committee member – Chris Whitten, Richie Bodiford, Ricky Whitaker, Mike Smith, Glenn Davis, Danny Hendrix, Dr. Martha Glover, and Lisa Forsythe.

CHS Baseball Raffle The Corinth Warrior Baseball team is having a raffle for a 32 quart “LIT” cooler. A $329 dollar value for $5 per entry. Drawing will take place at halftime on Oct. 30 at the last regular-season home football game. They will be set up to sell chances at every home game before that night or you may call Amp Marshall at 662212-4604.

Golf Tournament Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club will be hosting a 2-person Calculus Tournament on Saturday, Oct. 31. The tournament will be a shotgun start at 9 a.m. Tournament fee will be $30 per person and non-member green fee will be $25. All tournament fees put in player pool. Winners will receive cash. Call Pro Shop at 286-8000 for more info.

Halloween 5K The initial Trick-or-Trot 5K will be held Saturday, Oct. 31 at Big Hill Pond State Park beginning at 8 a.m. The run will benefit the Ramer Dixie Youth Baseball and Softball Leagues. This will be a great run through the manicured trails of the scenic Big Hill Pond State Park. Entry fee is $25. Halloween Hike: $15, ages 10-andunder free, but must be accompanied with registered adult. Treats will be given to children along the trail. For more information, visit the Facebook page at facebook.com/RDYTrickOrTrot. Phone: 731-610-1660 or e-mail RamerDixieYouth@yahoo.com. Please see SHORTS | 13A

Photo by Randy J. Williams

Corinth’s Javen Morrison (1) follows teammate Quentin Patterson to the end zone on a 50-yard interception return in last week’s 64-25 win over Itawamba. The senior has 13 total touchdowns, two via return.

Tonight’s Ticket: Friday Night Football Capsules 1-4A play, Corinth is hoping to win out. Best case is their Corinth (6-3, 2-1) @ Shannon second Division 1-4A title in (5-3, 2-1) three years, worst case is a When: Tonight, 7 home game to open the playWhere: Shannon High School Coaches: Corinth, Doug Jones (4th offs as a No. 2 seed. Shannon has recorded its year, 32-12); Shannon, Darryl Carter (4th year, 15-26) most wins since a 5-6 season On the Air: WXRZ-FM (94.3) in 2011. From 2004-2009 the Last Week: Corinth rolled Itawamba Red Raiders posted winning 64-25, Shannon beat Amory 28-6. Last Meeting: Corinth won 31-6 records. The Raiders had dominated the series until last season. Series History: Shannon leads 13- recently. SHS won 13 of the 7-1. First meeting was in 1976. first 16 meetings -- with one The Skinny: After getting tie --before Corinth began off to an 0-1 start in Division its current 4-game winning BY H. LEE SMITH II AND JEFF YORK

streak. Corinth’s offense continued to do its thing last week and helped post the most points in the Doug Jones Era. The Warriors are now averaging 39.7 points and 408.9 yards per game, 250 on the ground. The Warrior defense probably played one of its better games. CHS scored twice on that side, came away with four total turnovers, and locked down a high-powered Indian offense the final three quarters.

QB Antares Gwyn went over the 1,000-yard mark (1,063) for the second straight season. Only L.P. Spence (94-96) has done it more and Gwyn is the lone QB to accomplish the feat. Gwyn has amassed 2,489 total yards and accounted for 34 scores. However, the Red Raiders have been his nemesis. Gwyn has accounted for a TD in 20 of his last 22 games, with Shannon the exception. Please see CAPSULES | 13A

Tigers, Dogs celebrate Golden Anniversary BY BLAKE D. LONG NEMCC Sports Information

An anniversary of sorts is on tap for the Northeast Mississippi Community College football program during its final contest of the 2015 campaign. The Tigers face Holmes Community College on the gridiron for the 50th time on Saturday. Kickoff between the

two Mississippi Association of Community and Junior Colleges (MACJC) North Division members is scheduled for 4 p.m. at Ras Branch Stadium. Both squads look to conclude their respective seasons on a two-game winning streak. Northeast was triumphant at Pearl River Community College last week while

the Bulldogs defeated Coahoma Community College in Clarksdale. It is the second consecutive weekend contest as well for the Tigers. Northeast (2-6, 1-4) has captured victories in four of its previous five Saturday outings over the last four years. The Tigers held the Wildcats to only 32 rushing yards

for the entire matchup, which was the lowest total of any opponent this season. Northeast’s defense will try to equal those numbers against a Holmes offense that focuses on the triple option. “They do a good job of running the option,” said Tigers headman Greg Davis. “It’s a Please see GOLDEN | 13A

Dodgers, Mattingly mutually agree to part ways The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Don Mattingly and the Los Angeles Dodgers stuck to their scripts Thursday, insisting they agreed to a mutual parting of the ways while never revealing the exact reason he won’t return as manager. Like a publicist announcing the demise of a Hollywood marriage, the parties insisted the split was amicable. Mattingly even suggested he “will

be friends like forever” with his former bosses. “I don’t really want to get into details of our conversations. They were good conversations, they were open and they were honest,” Mattingly said by phone from his offseason home in Evansville, Indiana. “It just became evident that this was the best thing for both parties.” At Dodger Stadium, president of baseball operations

Andrew Friedman and general manager Farhan Zaidi parroted the same vacuous message. “It was kind of organic,” Friedman said. “It just kind of crystalized that is something that potentially made a lot of sense.” Before they came to that conclusion, the parties discussed extending Mattingly’s contract beyond next year, its final season.

“When we started on Friday we expected him to be our manager in 2016,” Friedman said. “I think that was his thought process, also.” But something clearly changed as the discussions wore on. Exactly what it was neither side would specify. “It came back to this was the right time and right thing,” Mattingly said. “Andrew, FarPlease see MATTINGLY | 13A


Scoreboard

13A • Daily Corinthian

SHORTS

Auto racing Sprint Cup schedule

CONTINUED FROM 12A

Turkey Trot 5K The Corinth Warrior and Lady Warrior track team is hosting a 5K race on Saturday, Nov. 14 on the campus of Corinth High School Academic and Performing Arts Center. Entry fee is $20 before Nov. 5 and $25 on race day. Race, which includes eight age divisions, begins at 8 a.m. Race day registration will be held at 7 a.m. Â

Tiger Trot The Tiger Trot Run/ Walk — formerly the Turkey Trot — will be held Nov. 14 at 200 Tennessee Street in Savannah, Tennessee. The event will benefit the Hardin County High

CAMPINGWORLD.COM 500 Site: Talladega, Alabama. Schedule: Today, practice (NBC Sports Network, 1-2 p.m., 3:30-4:30 p.m.); Saturday, qualifying (NBC Sports Network, 3-5 p.m.); Sunday, race, 1:30 p.m. (NBC Sports Network, 1-5 p.m.). Track: Talladega Superspeedway (oval, 2.66 miles). Race distance: 500.08 miles, 188 laps. Last year: Brad Keselowski raced to the last of his six 2014 victories. Last week: Joey Logano won at Kansas Speedway for his second straight victory, spinning out Matt Kenseth to take the lead. Logano earned a spot in the third round of the Chase two weeks ago with his Charlotte win. Fast facts: The Chase field will be cut from 12 to eight after the race, the second-round finale and sixth event in the 10-race playoffs. The championship field will be cut to four after the ninth race. Drivers get a spot in the next round with a victory. Points are reset after each round and the title will be decided by finishing order in the Nov. 22 finale at Homestead. ... Denny Hamlin leads the points race for the remaining third-round spots, five points ahead of Kurt Busch. Carl Edwards is six points behind Hamlin, followed by Kevin Harvick (-11), Jeff Gordon (-11), Keselowski (-11), Martin Truex Jr. (-12), Kyle Busch (-18), Ryan Newman (-20), Dale Earnhardt (-43) and Kenseth (-47). ... Gordon, retiring after the season, and Earnhardt lead active drivers with six Talladega victories. Earnhardt won in May at the track and took the restrictor-plate race in July at sistertrack Daytona. Logano won the seasonopening Daytona 500. Next race: Goody’s Headache Relief Shot 500, Nov. 1, Martinsville Speedway, Martinsville, Virginia. Online: http://www.nascar.com CAMPING WORLD TRUCK FRED’S 250 Site: Talladega, Alabama. Schedule: Today, practice (Fox Sports 1, 2-2:55 p.m.); Saturday, qualifying (Fox Sports 1, 9:30- 11 a.m.), race, Noon (Fox Sports 1, 11:30-2:30 p.m.). Track: Talladega Superspeedway (oval, 2.66 miles). Race distance: 250.04 miles, 94 laps. Last year: Timothy Peters won in a twolap sprint to the finish. Last race: John Wes Townley won at Las Vegas on Oct. 3 for his first career victory. Fast facts: Erik Jones leads the standings, four points ahead of two-time defending series champion Matt Crafton and 12 in front of Tyler Reddick. Jones has two victories this year and also has won twice on the Xfinity Series. Reddick won the season-opening race at Daytona, Talladega’s sister track. Next race: Kroger 200, Oct. 31, Martinsville Speedway, Martinsville, Virginia. Online: http://www.nascar.com

School Cross-Country team. Applications can be downloaded at Shoalstrac.com. For more information, contact Deonne Ewoldt at 731412-7699 or Normdeonne3@gmail.com Â

Baseball Record Book The 2015 Mississippi Baseball Record Book has been published. The book includes records for high school and college baseball. There are many area baseball players and teams mentioned in the book. You can order the book for $10 by sending a check to: Mississippi Baseball Record Book Diamonds by Smillie; 3159 Kendrick Road Corinth, MS 38834.

CAPSULES CONTINUED FROM 12A

CHS won 31-6 last season with Gwyn accounting for a season-low 35 yards on 14 plays. Alcorn Central (1-8, 0-3) @ New Site (0-8, 0-3) When: Tonight, 7 Where: Marietta Elementary School Coaches: Alcorn Central, Jeff Boren (4th season, 6-36); New Site, James Lowery (1st year at NSHS) Last Week: Alcorn Central lost 54-0 to Kossuth, New Site lost 54-0 to Belmont. Last Meeting: New Site won 38-14 last season. Series History: Tied 1-1.

The Skinny: Alcorn Central’s best shot at ending its division drought comes tonight. So does the Royals first shot at a win this season. Central has dropped 37 straight division games and the Golden Bears are 2-86 in such contests since 1999. The clubs are similar in scoring offense and defense. New Site has been outscored 377-87, while its 371-85 for the Golden Bears. In league play, New Site has been thumped 156-8, while Central hasn’t scored while giving up 133 points. Central won the first meeting 21-20 in 2013. New Site went 6-6 last season and made the playoffs for the first time, but have dropped 12 straight dating back to last season, Houlka (2-4) @ Biggersville (2-7) When: Tonight, 7 Where: The Lions’ Den, BHS Coaches: Biggersville, Ronnie Lawson (13th season, 35-105) Last Week: Houlka lost to TCPS 42-6, Biggersville beat Thrasher 33-18. Last Meeting: Biggersville won 34-27 last season. Series History: Biggersville leads 3-1.

The Skinny: The Lions picked up a huge win last week mixing in a good running game with

GOLDEN CONTINUED FROM 12A

tough offense to face because you don’t see it anymore. If you’re not disciplined or physical then it’s going to be a long night. That’s something we’re continuing to preach over and over.� The Bulldogs have four players that have compiled over 50 carries and 300 yards apiece. Aquindus Henson guides that group with team-highs of 530 yards and six touchdowns. Dejerric Bryant is a dual-threat quarterback for Holmes (3-5, 2-3). He has accumulated 1,069 yards through the air with eight scores and 447 yards on the ground with an additional six touchdowns.

a great defensive effort. A win tonight would be the most for the program since a 3-8 campaign in 2011. The Lions have been stuck on two victories the previous three years. The Independent Wildcats have beaten Ethel and Potts Camp. The series began in 2010 and has been a good one for the Alcorn County club. Biggersville has won three of the four contests.

Baseball

When: Tonight, 7 Where: McNairy Central High Coaches: McNairy Central, Chad Hodge (2nd year, 6-12); Liberty, Tyler Turner (8-0, first season) On the Air: Q105 105.5 FM Last Meeting: Liberty defeated the Bobcats 34-14 in 2012. Series History: Liberty leads the series 6-2.

The Skinny: Liberty comes into this game with a perfect 8-0 record and will clinch the region championship with a victory over the Bobcats. The Crusaders have a dynamic offense that averages over 41 points a game and a stingy defense that gives up just 15 points a contest. Liberty has won all of their games by 17 points or more, except for a 2624 win over Dyersburg. The Bobcats will say good-bye to 17 seniors tonight as they play their last home game. This will not be an easy night for the seniors to close out their career playing in Don Whitaker Stadium. McNairy had their worst offensive outing of the season in last week’s loss to Dyersburg. The ‘Cats only had 15 yards rushing and 77 yards passing in the loss. If they can’t get their offense untracked in tonight’s game, it will get ugly for the Bobcats.

Basketball NBA preseason EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB W L Pct GB Charlotte 7 1 .875 — Boston 3 1 .750 2 Indiana 5 2 .714 1½ Toronto 4 2 .667 2 Orlando 4 2 .667 2 Atlanta 4 2 .667 2 New York 3 2 .600 2½ Washington 3 2 .600 2½ Miami 4 3 .571 2½ Chicago 3 4 .429 3½ Brooklyn 2 3 .400 3½ Milwaukee 2 3 .400 3½ Philadelphia 2 4 .333 4 Detroit 2 5 .286 4½ Cleveland 1 6 .143 5½ WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GB Memphis 5 0 1.000 — Sacramento 5 1 .833 ½ Oklahoma City 4 1 .800 1 Phoenix 4 2 .667 1½ Denver 4 3 .571 2 Portland 3 3 .500 2½ Houston 3 4 .429 3 Utah 3 4 .429 3 L.A. Clippers 2 3 .400 3 L.A. Lakers 2 4 .333 3½ New Orleans 2 4 .333 3½ Golden State 2 4 .333 3½ San Antonio 1 4 .200 4 Minnesota 1 5 .167 4½ Dallas 0 6 .000 5½ ___ Wednesday’s Games Orlando 110, New Orleans 107, OT Charlotte 99, Detroit 94 Memphis 82, Atlanta 81 Miami 110, Washington 105 Phoenix 99, Dallas 87 Thursday’s Games Indiana 98, Charlotte 86 Boston 99, New York 85 Utah 98, Denver 78 Golden State vs. L.A. Lakers Portland at L.A. Clippers Today’s Games Memphis at Orlando, 6 p.m. Philadelphia vs. Boston at Manchester, NH, 6:30 p.m. Washington vs. Toronto at Montreal, Quebec, 6:30 p.m. Atlanta at Detroit, 6:30 p.m. Dallas vs. Chicago at Lincoln, NE, 7 p.m. Miami at New Orleans, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Houston at San Antonio, 7:30 p.m.

Football

Postseason schedule LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised by FS1 Kansas City 3, Toronto 2 Friday, Oct. 16: Kansas City 5, Toronto

Liberty (8-0, 5-0) @ McNairy Central (3-5, 2-4)

Sunday, Oct. 18: New York 4, Chicago 1 Tuesday: New York 5, Chicago 2 Wednesday: New York 8, Chicago 3 WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Tuesday, Oct. 27: N.Y. Mets at American League Wednesday, Oct. 28: N.Y. Mets at AL Friday, Oct. 30: AL at N.Y. Mets Saturday, Oct. 31: AL at N.Y. Mets x-Sunday, Nov. 1: AL at N.Y. Mets x-Tuesday, Nov. 3: N.Y. Mets at AL x-Wednesday, Nov. 4: N.Y. Mets at AL

0 Saturday, Oct. 17: Kansas City 6, Toronto 3 Monday: Toronto 11, Kansas City 8 Tuesday: Kansas City 14, Toronto 2 Wednesday: Toronto 7, Kansas City 1 Today,: Toronto (Price 18-5) at Kansas City (Ventura 13-8), 7:07 p.m. x-Saturday: Toronto at Kansas City, 7:07 p.m. National League All games televised by TBS New York 4, Chicago 0 Saturday, Oct. 17: New York 4, Chicago 2

Friday, October 23, 2015

West W L T Pct PF PA 6 0 0 1.000 139 102 2 3 0 .400 107 124 2 4 0 .333 136 161 1 5 0 .167 127 159 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 144 110 N.Y. Giants 3 3 0 .500 139 136 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 101 131 Washington 2 4 0 .333 117 138 South W L T Pct PF PA Carolina 5 0 0 1.000 135 94 Atlanta 5 1 0 .833 183 143 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 110 148 New Orleans 2 4 0 .333 134 164 North W L T Pct PF PA Green Bay 6 0 0 1.000 164 101 Minnesota 3 2 0 .600 96 83 Chicago 2 4 0 .333 120 179 Detroit 1 5 0 .167 120 172 West W L T Pct PF PA Arizona 4 2 0 .667 203 115 Seattle 3 4 0 .429 154 128 St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 84 113 San Francisco 2 5 0 .286 103 180 Thursday’s game Seattle 20, San Francisco 3 Sunday Buffalo vs. Jacksonville at London, 8:30 a.m. Atlanta at Tennessee, Noon Pittsburgh at Kansas City, Noon Cleveland at St. Louis, Noon Tampa Bay at Washington, Noon Minnesota at Detroit, Noon Houston at Miami, Noon New Orleans at Indianapolis, Noon N.Y. Jets at New England, Noon Oakland at San Diego, 3:05 p.m. Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 3:25 p.m. Philadelphia at Carolina, 7:30 p.m. Open: Chicago, Cincinnati, Denver, Green Bay Monday, Oct. 26 Baltimore at Arizona, 7:30 p.m. Denver Oakland San Diego Kansas City

AP Top 25 schedule Thursday No. 20 California at UCLA, 8 p.m. No. 22 Temple at East Carolina, 6 p.m. Today No. 18 Memphis at Tulsa, 7 p.m. Saturday No. 1 Ohio State at Rutgers, 7 p.m. No. 2 Baylor vs. Iowa State, 11 a.m. No. 3 Utah at Southern Cal, 6:30 p.m. No. 5 LSU vs. Western Kentucky, 6 p.m. No. 6 Clemson at Miami, 11 a.m. No. 7 Michigan State vs. Indiana, 2:30 p.m. No. 8 Alabama vs. Tennessee, 2:30 p.m. No. 9 Florida State at Georgia Tech, 6 p.m. No. 10 Stanford vs. Washington, 9:30 p.m. No. 14 Oklahoma State vs. Kansas, 2:30 p.m. No. 15 Texas A&M at No. 24 Mississippi, 6 p.m. No. 17 Oklahoma vs. Texas Tech, 2:30 p.m. No. 19 Toledo at UMass, 2 p.m. No. 21 Houston at UCF, 11 a.m. No. 23 Duke at Virginia Tech, 2:30 p.m. No. 25 Pittsburgh at Syracuse, 11 a.m.

Golf

NFL standings AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 5 0 0 1.000 183 N.Y. Jets 4 1 0 .800 129 Buffalo 3 3 0 .500 145 Miami 2 3 0 .400 103 South W L T Pct PF Indianapolis 3 3 0 .500 126 Houston 2 4 0 .333 128 Tennessee 1 4 0 .200 112 Jacksonville 1 5 0 .167 113 North W L T Pct PF Cincinnati 6 0 0 1.000 182 Pittsburgh 4 2 0 .667 145 Cleveland 2 4 0 .333 141 Baltimore 1 5 0 .167 143

MATTINGLY

PGA-FedExCup standings PA 103 75 139 111 PA 147 155 129 176 PA 122 108 158 162

Through Oct. 18 Rank Player Points YTD Money 1. Emiliano Grillo 500 $1,080,000 2. Kevin Na 300 $648,000 3. Jason Bohn 145 $312,000 3. Justin Thomas 145 $312,000 3. Tyrone Van Aswegen 145 $312,000 6. Kyle Reifers 89 $194,250 6. Patrick Rodgers 89 $194,250 6. Justin Rose 89 $194,250 6. Charl Schwartzel 89 $194,250 10. Luke Guthrie 63 $128,571 10. Smylie Kaufman 63 $128,571 10. Andrew Loupe 63 $128,571 10. Ryan Moore 63 $128,571 10. Chris Stroud 63 $128,571 10. Jhonattan Vegas 63 $128,571

10. Will Wilcox 17. Daniel Berger 17. Lucas Glover 17. Fabian Gomez 17. Charles Howell III 17. Hideki Matsuyama 17. Chez Reavie 17. Brandt Snedeker 17. Brendan Steele 17. Hudson Swafford 26. Erik Compton 26. Rory McIlroy 26. Sean O’Hair 26. Brendon Todd 30. Mark Hubbard 30. William McGirt

63 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 44 44 44 44 41 41

$128,571 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $73,333 $45,300 $45,300 $45,300 $45,300 $39,900 $39,900

Champions: Schwab Cup leaders Through Oct. 18 Points 1. Colin Montgomerie 3,078 2. Jeff Maggert 3,039 3. Bernhard Langer 3,012 4. Marco Dawson 1,332 5. Kevin Sutherland 1,137 6. Esteban Toledo 1,127 7. Joe Durant 1,122 8. Billy Andrade 1,071 9. Woody Austin 1,008 10. Scott Dunlap 978 11. Tom Lehman 948 12. Lee Janzen 917 13. Kenny Perry 868 14. Michael Allen 717 15. Paul Goydos 677 16. Mark O’Meara 656 17. Tom Pernice Jr. 616 18. David Frost 609 19. Fred Couples 591 20. Olin Browne 569 21. Kirk Triplett 562 22. Miguel Angel Jimenez 541 23. Ian Woosnam 535 23. Gene Sauers 535 25. Bart Bryant 533 26. Wes Short, Jr. 522 27. Jeff Hart 521 28. Jeff Sluman 489 29. Russ Cochran 479 30. Grant Waite 430

Money $2,008,979 $2,158,236 $2,065,390 $1,036,694 $1,059,615 $1,095,472 $1,194,556 $1,073,021 $856,011 $1,070,385 $1,086,298 $859,998 $948,815 $909,025 $964,981 $797,964 $769,841 $848,340 $575,241 $877,767 $674,226 $554,576 $655,147 $612,220 $807,631 $715,739 $466,402 $634,314 $580,597 $360,003

Transactions Thursday’s deals BASEBALL American League MINNESOTA TWINS — Assigned OF Shane Robinson, C Eric Fryer and LHP Aaron Thompson outright to Rochester (IL). TEXAS RANGERS — Reinstarted 2B Jurickson Profar from the 60-day DL. Announced 1B Kyle Blanks declined outright assignment and elected free agency. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Assigned INF Darwin Barney outright to Buffalo (IL). National League CINCINNATI REDS — Announced the contracts of bench coach Jay Bell, pitching coach Jeff Pico and assistant hitting coach Lee Tinsley will not be renewed. Reassigned third base coach Jim Riggleman to bench coach, first base coach Billy Hatcher to third base and outfielders coach and infield coach Freddie Benavides to first base and infielders coach. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Announced manager Don Mattingly agreed not to return next season. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS — Waived G/F Terran Petteway. CHICAGO BULLS — Waived Gs Jordan Crawford and Marcus Simmons. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS — Signed F Tristan Thompson to a five-year contract. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Released RB Mike Gillislee from the practice squad. Signed WR Ryan Spadola to the practice squad. Re-signed RB Robert Hughes to the practice squad. CHICAGO BEARS — Terminated the contract of DL Jeremiah Ratliff. Signed DL Ziggy Hood. Signed DE Olsen Pierre to the practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed OT Andrew McDonald and QB Matt Blanchard to the practice squad.

The Cottages

CONTINUED FROM 12A

han and Josh (Byrnes) are great guys and they’re going to do great things. The organization is in great shape.� Mattingly said he felt wanted, his players backed him, and Friedman and Zaidi expressed their respect and admiration for him, making it all the more puzzling why he’s walking away from a storied organization that boasts baseball’s highest payroll. Neither side shed any light to help the franchise’s longtime fans understand the move. “If there is a reason that this happened we would share it,� Friedman said. “It’s not so black-andwhite here. There’s a huge middle, and it’s gray there. We’re not hiding anything. It really is how things played out.�

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2B • Friday, October 23, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

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Religion

3B • Daily Corinthian

Friday, October 23, 2015

Worship Call Truckload Sale

Harvest Festival

Hallelujah Night

Eastview United Pentecostal Church, located at 7819 Hwy 45 South in Ramer, will hold a truckload sale at 8 a.m. today and Saturday, in the church gym. There will be toys, tools, grills, school supplies and household goods. New merchandise will be added.

“Let Your Light Shine for Jesus” is this years harvest festival theme at Forty Forks Baptist Church. The festival will be held at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24. Activities will include Trunk-or-Treat, indoor games, a costume contest, pumpkin carving contest, candy, food, fellowship and fun. Kids of all ages are invited to attend. Pumpkins may be picked up at the church Wednesday night, Sunday morning or Sunday night after services for those interested in carving for the contest. Amanda Edwards is the coordinator. Bro. Randy Smith is pastor. Forty Forks Baptist Church is located at 672 Ed Barham Rd. in Bethel Springs. For more information or a ride call 731-610-1716 or 731-610-9652.

A Christian alternative to Halloween, Hallelujah Night will be on Saturday Oct. 31 at Peoples Tabernacle Church, located at 64 Airways Blvd, in Savannah, Tenn. America’s Favorite Mixed Qt “The Perrys” will be the special musical guest along with host and Pastor, Josh & Ashley Franks. The free admission concert will begin at 6 p.m.. A Love offering will be received. For more information visit www.joshandashleyfranks.com.

Concert Brian Free and Assurance will be in concert at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24 at Tate Baptist Church, located at 1201 North Harper Road in Corinth. The doors will open at 5 p.m. Admission is free, but a free will love offering will be accepted. The southern gospel group has been honored with several awards, including Favorite Male Singer, Favorite Tenor (a record of eight times), Favorite Young Artist (twice), Favorite Horizon Group, Favorite Album (4 God so Loved), etc. For more information, call Marcia Burkeen at 731-6101444 or Tate Baptist Church at 662-286-2935. Visit their website at www.brianfreeandassurance.com.

Tent or Treat First United Methodist Church will have a Tent or Treat on Wednesday, Oct. 28 from 6-8 p.m. in the church courtyard. Hot dogs and drinks will be provided with joy jumpers and other kid activities also available. Admission is free.

will begin at 9:30 a.m. All are invited to attend.

Male Choir Concert The male chorus of Oak Grove CME Church invites all male choirs, soloists, quartet groups and church families to attend their annual male choir concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22. Participants should sign in upon arrival and have an A and B selection. The theme is: Praise the Lord. For more information contact Bro. Jesse Latherwood, Bro. Willie Bush or Bro. Bobby Strickland.

Honoring Veterans

every Wednesday at 7 a.m. The menu and speakers will change weekly. The prayer breakfasts are being held at the American Legion Building on Tate St. in Corinth. Post membership is not required to attend. Donations for breakfast will be accepted. For more information, call 662-4625815.

Bible Study City Road Temple will hold a Bible study each Wednesday at 6 p.m.

Living Free Ministries

Mt. Gilead Baptist Church, located at 6185 Rowsey School Rd. in Bethel Springs, Tenn. will host its 28th Annual Veterans Day Celebration at 10 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 8. All veterans and active duty personnel are invited to participate in the service which honors those who have served the country. Following the service at 10 a.m., there will be a meal given in their honor. For more information or directions, contact the church office at 731-645-8868 or Pastor Mike Hollaway at 731-610-1077. Registration for the service

Precept Bible Studies Precept Bible Studies – a new study from Kay Arthur covering the Gospel of Luke – Bible studies are currently being held in the First Baptist Church Chapel. Classes will be from 9-11:30 a.m. The cost for two workbooks is $40.50. To register call Dorothy Taylor at 396-1512. Luke Part 2 – The Savior of Sinners – is slated for Aug. 18-Sept. 29.

Prayer Breakfast The American Legion Post 6 is hosting a prayer breakfast

Living Free Ministries will meet at 6 p.m. on Monday nights in small groups. There will be a ‘Celebration Night’ at 6 p.m. on Thursday nights. There will also be a Mens’ Bible Study Group meeting at 7 a.m. on Saturday mornings. There is no cost to attend and all meetings are open to everyone. Living Free Ministries is located behind Magnolia Funeral Home in the two metal buildings at the rear of the parking lot. For more information call Living Free Ministries at 662287-2733.

Friends become more precious as time passes As I grow older, and hopefully wiser, I become more increasingly aware of what has helped me get to this point in life. With the help of the Lord Jesus Christ, my wife and I have made many, many friends along the way of our marriage with the many stops we have made through our moves. We made the decision to get out of the U.S. Air Force some 40 years ago because of not wanting to move around. Being in the print media business over these past 40 years, we have moved seven times and each time has been a true blessing. These moves were and continue to be great educational rewards for, not only for my wife and me, but for our children. The many people we have met

along the way and the friends we have made continue to be one of the Gary blessings Andrews that we will cherDevotionals ish for as long as we are on this earth. I can remember many of my high school classmates. Through the Internet many of us have had the opportunity of catching up on old times and bring back memories of things we used to do and places we used to go. The best description I have heard of a friend was stated by Elbert Hubard; “Your friend is the man who knows all about you, and still likes you.”

As I have grown to the state of retirement and the world is slowing down a bit, I find myself wanting to know how and what my friends of the past are doing and how they are getting along. Even those I haven’t seen for many years I considered my friend because of our closeness of years past. Friends are the ones who have celebrated good times with you and listened to you in your down times. Things in life are always going to change but where ever your life takes you no one can take away your friends. I have to say that throughout my marriage my best friend on earth has been my wife. No one could or will ever take her place and I feel this has been the secret to our

Kids are special; handle with prayer T h e o t h e r morning I had just opened my eyes when I Lora Ann heard the Huff school bus turn the Back Porch corner in front of our house. I remembered all those years when my husband and I were up at 5:30 every morning and I would feel like I had done a day’s work when I finally watched our four young ones go down the front walk to catch the bus. Then I remembered how different our world is today – how concerned we are for the safety of our little ones at school and everywhere. I said a silent prayer for God to protect our teachers and children that day. It’s always been important to do that, but it seems there are more violent attitudes and personalities out there today and we never know what to expect. I recently read an article about the terrible incident at Sandy Hook Elementary School in quiet Newtown, Conn., just before Christmas in December of 2012. Twenty children and six staff members lost their lives, and some of the details are too horrific for me to write for print. The article was written by Joshua Dubois, a pastor who worked in the White House and assisted the President during this awful time. He says the private facts of the inci-

We need to whisper a prayer for (the children) and everyone responsible for them, whether teacher, parent, grandparent or guardian. dent were almost unbearable to visualize, and he was having a terrible time with the news when President Obama called and asked that he accompany him on a visit to try to help comfort the devastated families in Newtown. Dubois went ahead with a team to prepare and organize the gathering. They prepared several classrooms and directed a couple of families to each room so the meetings could be private and personal. Naturally the families were angry and hurt, needing someone to blame for the pain they were feeling and hardly knew how to compose themselves. The writer said for hours the President went from room to room and with “engulfing hugs” for each person, he asked the families to share details and special stories about their deceased loved ones. With tears in his eyes he listened and loved, offering prayers and support, after which he would have to pause in the hallway for a few minutes before going to the next room. Pastor Dubois was close

during the whole time and commented that Air Force One carried a silent President back to Washington that day and very little was ever repeated about what the families told him. It was too sacred and too private to share with the public, and I’m sure also too painful to hear spoken again. …And so we see where we are today – in shopping centers, on college campuses, on elementary school grounds, we never know what’s going through the minds of troubled individuals. Only God above knows the hearts of men and women …so that’s why we need to pray to Him, asking for His protection over our kids and loved ones wherever they are. Ask Him to intervene in the minds of the people who obviously are so strongly influenced by the enemy who loves to steal and destroy. Every time we see or hear a school bus, see a group of precious children, hear their laughter or watch their games at play, we need to whisper a prayer for them and everyone responsible for them, whether teacher, parent, grandparent, or guardian. Life is so precious and needs to be handled with care and much, much prayer! (Lora Ann Huff is a Wenasoga resident and special columnist for the Daily Corinthian. Her column appears Friday. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)

Daily Bible Readings Sunday – Romans 5:1-11 Monday – Proverbs 20:5-7 Tuesday – Ecclesiastes 4:8-12 Wednesday – James 4:4-6 Thursday – 2 Timothy 1:15-18 Friday – John 15:9-17 Saturday – Mark 9:50 long and happy marriage. Even though we have been thoroughly blessed with a lifetime of love we are both anxious to hear from friends of our past. Many times we scan the news media and find some of our friends have gone to be with the Lord.

We read about our friends losing loved ones when we read the obituary pages and our heart goes out to them. We try to call them just to say we are thinking about them so that they can hear a friendly voice from the past. Something that everyone should remember, a friend is one who strengthens you with prayers, blesses you with love and encourages you with hope. Even though our earthly friendships will dissolve we have one true friend that will last forever. His name is Jesus and should you not know Him personally, get on your knees and ask Him to come into your heart and join Him through His saving grace. In the Gospel of John 15:13 He says, “Greater love has no one than this,

that he lay down his life for his friends.” Jesus did just that for you and me when He died on the cross to save us from our sins. Never lose sight of your many friends you have on earth and enjoy these tremendous lifelong relationships but know that God is the only one that will be with you in eternity. Prayer: Thank you Lord for your love and your saving grace. Thank you for taking my place on the cross to save me from my sins so that I will live with you throughout eternity. Amen. (Daily Corinthian columnist and Corinth native Gary Andrews is retired after 35 years in the newspaper and magazine business. He may be contacted at gary@gadevotionals.com.)

Religion Briefs Associated Press

UN chief urges calm amid Palestinian-Israeli violence JERUSALEM — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has called for calm during a surprise visit to Jerusalem ahead of meetings with Israeli and Palestinian leaders. The visit comes amid unrest that erupted a month ago over rumors that Israel was plotting to take over Jerusalem’s most sensitive holy site. A spate of Palestinian attacks, most of which have involved stabbings, has caused panic across Israel and raised fears that the region is on the cusp of a new round of bloodshed. The hilltop compound in Jerusalem’s Old City is revered by Jews as the Temple Mount, site of the two Jewish Biblical Temples. It is the holiest site in Judaism. Known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary, it houses the Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock. It is the third-holiest site in Islam after Mecca and Medina in Saudi Arabia. Israel has insisted it has no plans to change the status quo at the site, where Jews are allowed to visit but not pray.

Vatican denies report pope has small, curable brain tumor VATICAN CITY — The Vatican is denying a report in an Italian newspaper that Pope Francis has a small, curable brain tumor. The Vatican spokesman, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, said the report Wednesday in the National Daily was “unfounded and seriously irresponsible.” “The pope is carrying out as always with his intense activities,” Lombardi said in a statement. Citing unnamed sources, the newspaper said the pope had traveled to the San Rossore di Barbaricina clinic near Pisa in recent months to see a Japanese specialist, Dr. Takanori Fukushima. The newspaper said the doctor determined that the small dark

spot on Francis’ brain could be cured without surgery. The newspaper’s editor, Andrea Cangini, said it expected Lombardi’s denial but stood by its story.

Mormon leader: Kentucky clerk takes wrong approach on gays SALT LAKE CITY — The Mormon Church is criticizing Kentucky clerk Kim Davis for refusing to license gay marriages. Mormon leaders say Americans should find common ground instead and seek compromises between protecting religious liberties and prohibiting discrimination. Mormon leader Dallin H. Oaks says cultural differences should not become “culture wars.” His speech was delivered Tuesday to a gathering of judges and clergy in Sacramento, Calif. The Associated Press was given an advance copy. Oaks is a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles that guides The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and was chosen to deliver the statement because he also served as a Utah Supreme Court judge. Davis and her attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Police release name of man killed in Detroit church shooting DETROIT — Police on Tuesday released the name of a man who they say was shot and killed by a pastor during a confrontation in a Detroit storefront church. Officer Jennifer Moreno said investigators are still questioning witnesses about the killing Sunday of 26-yearold Deante Smith, who was shot several times by the pastor at the City of God church. Police say the pastor shot Smith after Smith threatened him with a brick. Authorities have declined to publicly identify the pastor, who was questioned and released without charge and who is cooperating with the investigation.


4B • Friday, October 23, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Taking Applications for

CNA CLASS

Adamsville Healthcare Rehab Center Class to begin on November 16, 2015 409 Park Avenue, Adamsville Apply online www.grace.vikus.net/app Choose Adamsville click on Hospitality aide application Interviews for the class will be scheduled No phone calls please Must be 18 years of age

Codeman, LLC dba Cody’s Cajun Crawfish & Seafood; 4263 Bylar Road Lake Arthur, LA; in Jefferson Davis Parish is hiring aquacultural laborers. The work period will be Monday thru Friday 8:00am – 5:00pm, 40 hours per week. Employees will do various duties on crawfish farm operation that includes: prepare traps for harvesting, harvest crawfish, clean and maintain equipment and general farm maintenance. This is a temporary position, beginning November 1, 2015 and ending May 31, 2016; there are two openings available, $10.18 an hour with ¾ guarantee of total workdays. Codeman, LLC will supply all tools, supplies and equipment needed to do the jobs required at no cost to employees. Codeman, LLC offers no cost housing to those who can not reasonably return to their permanent residence at the end of each workday. Transportation and subsistence will be reimbursed upon completion of 50% of the work contract. Report or send resume’ to: Louisiana Office of Employment Security Job Order # 563292. Lake Charles Job Center, 2424 Third Street, Lake Charles, LA 70601. Employment offered by Codeman, LLC U. S. phone number 337-789-1140, U. S. mailing address; 4263 Bylar Road Lake Arthur, LA 70549

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Skyline Steel is a premier steel foundation supplier and whollyowned subsidiary of Nucor Corporation, the largest producer of steel in the United States. Skyline Steel, Iuka, MS has the following positions available: Repair welders Successful candidates should be able to safely operate manufacturing and welding equipment in an industrial environment. Welding experience is required. All applications are taken at the WIN Job Center Mississippi Department of Employment 1107 Maria Lane Iuka, MS 38852 or email danglin@mdes.ms.gov Skyline Steel Pipe, Iuka, Mississippi 77 County Road 351 Iuka, MS 38852 Email: jeff.hamilton@skylinesteel.com EEOC

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Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand • • • • •

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GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

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GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES FRI 7:30-5, & sat 7:30-12, 2009 N Parkway, Remodeling Sale, Wood Craft Items, H/H items, Clothes & Misc.

RAIN OR SHINE, FRI-SAT, 13 CR 103, Bathrm vanities/faucets,gas stove, winter clthg, h/h & handicap item & MORE!!!

MS CARE CENTER is looking for

Certified CNA’s for all shifts PRN, LPN Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30 E.O.E. ATTN: CANDIDATES

List your name and office under the political listing for only $190.00. Runs every publishing day until final election. Come by the Daily Corinthian office at 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 662-287-6111 for more info. Must be paid in advance.

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT

This is a paid political advertisement which is intended as a public service for the voters. It has been submitted to and approved and submitted by each political candidate listed below or by the candidate’s campaign manager or assistant manager. This listing is not intended to suggest or imply that these are the only candidates for these offices.

4th District Election Commissioner

Scotty L. Bradley Johnny Butler

James Bryant Wayne Duncan

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District Attorney Arch Bullard John Weddle

Justice Court Post 1 Luke Doehner Chris Grisham Steve Little

Justice Court Post 2 Aneysa “Neicy” Matthews Jimmy McGee

Sheriff Billy Clyde Burns Ben Caldwell Mike LaRue David Nunley

State Representative District 1 Lester “Bubba” Carpenter Lisa Benderman-Wigginton

State Representative District 2 Nick Bain Billy Miller

State Senate District 4 Rita Potts-Parks Eric Powell

HERE WE ARE! L & O Construction

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Fr e e Estim ate s

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ANY OF YOUR HOME NEEDS

Tim Mitchell (Inc) Shane Serio

Supervisor District 4 Keith “Dude” Conaway (Rep.) Steve Glidewell


Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 23, 2015 • 5B

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

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0232 GENERAL HELP CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true�, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better Business Bureau at 1-800-987-8280.

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

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SUPPORTS OUR AREA TEAMS O

King Rental Small & Mid Size Car 7 & 15 Passenger Vans Rental Department 8:00AM To 5:00PM Your Keys to Adventure

916 HWY 45 SOUTH | CORINTH, MS 38834 PHONE 662-287-8773 | FAX 662-287-7373

Biggersville Lions Walnut Wildcats Kossuth Aggies McNairy Central Bobcats

Smith Discount Home Center

$

89

2 $ 5/8â€? T-1-11 Siding 1895 $ 19 Corrugated Metal 1 $ 99 Paneling 9 New Shipment Porcelain Tile 69¢ $ 00 Vinyl Floor Remnants 1 ¢-$ 09 Laminate Floor From 39 1 $ 00-$ Pad for Laminate Floor 5 1000 2 X 4 X 92 5/8â€? Stud .....

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HOME FOR LEASE Golf Villa Shiloh Falls Pickwick 3BR/ 3BA, Loft, Fireplace Deck, 2 car garage, gated community $1200.00 per month Minimum 12 month Lease

10 CR 236 3 BR 1 1/2 Bath $675.00 $500.00 Deposit

...........

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li. ft.

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

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6995 $ 3/4� Plywood 2195 $ 1/2� Plywood 1650 $ 95 25 Year 3 Tab Shingle 46 Area Rugs

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35 Year Architectural Shingle ...........................................

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5595

Croft Windows ...................................................... Tubs & Showers.. starting at 2 x 4 x 16 Utility

662-279-7453 662-808-5229

References required

662-279-0935

10AM-6PM

sq. yd.

sq. ft.

$

21500 $ 39 5

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

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

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79 County Road 620, Corinth, MS Luxury! Bring the family, the in-laws, horses, cars, trucks, tractors, boats, golf carts, you name it there is room) for everyone and everything! 7026 square feet with 5,200 feet on the first floor. 5 bedrooms, high-end kitchen, 4 Vz baths, flooring and mill work finishes including stone counters and hardwood. Cross fencing and barn for horses. Workshop has covered parking and living quarters with kitchen and full bath. Warehouse is 60 x 60 with many roll up doors for the RV, boat, ATV and room to spare, situated on 38 acres with timber. For more information, contact Virgil Nutt at 731-609-9118

Patti's Property Rentals

Fall into Savings!

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

Property Directory

Corinth Warriors Tishomingo County Braves

412 Pinecrest Road 287-2221 • 287-4419

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

Nutt Auction and Realty Company 375 South Main Street Middleton, TN 731-609-9118

Booneville Blue Devils

Alcorn Central Golden Bears

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

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MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

House for sale in Hinkle/Rienzi area. $152,000 REDUCED 3BR, 2 bath. 3,000 sq. ft Metal roof. 13 acres (fenced) big barn w/ stalls, 30’x40’ shop w/gas, electrical & 2 roll-up doors, spring-fed pond, 30’ above ground pool, large patio, fi nished basement, sunroom, 2 car garage. Hardwood floors throughout. Beautiful landscape. Call (662) 415-0420

1903 Princess Anne Drive • 3 bedroom • 1 bath • Fenced-in back yard $85,000.00 662-415-8666 Owner financing after down payment

(2) adjoining lots for sale. one 95 feet front on Buchanan and Childs street, one 75 feet by 95 feet deep at 1300 block of Childs Street. $22,500 for both lots. Lot on Pinecrest north of KCS railroad, 1/4 acre, $12,500 obo. Metal building, 60 ft by 40 ft, new paint, insulated, all utilities available on one full acre, East Proper Street in Corinth City limits, zoned Commercial, $75,500. 40 acres plus or minus, Frontage on North Polk Street just north of Madison Street and Polk intersection. South property line abuts North Hills Subdivision. City sewer runs inside property line on north side. $169,000 Call 662 415 7755

BURNSVILLE 40 ACRES OF WOODED LAND

D L O $80,000 S

CALL 662-808-9313 OR 415-5071


6B • Friday, October 23, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISS STATE Purse $5. O N E 2 5 X 1 0 . 0 0 - 1 2 4 662-603-1382 wheeler tires, new $150.00 212-4450 NEW BAMA PURSE. $25. PACK & PLAY, Pink & CALL 662-603-1382 Gray, Like New. $35.00 662-415-4567 NEW HIGH Chair with PARSON STYLE square tray and it's got wheels, wood table in great $35.00 643-5258 shape. $35.00 OBO. 643-5258 NEW MISS State 500pc jig saw puzzle $5. or 2 for $10. 662-603-1382 PATIO SET, 4 chairs, 1 ta-

ble, 1 lounge chair with NEW MS. STATE CAR ottoman,(Lavender) PVC TAGS. $5. 662-603-1382 & washable cushions. $100.00 662-415-7435 NEW NYLON Tow Strap 20ft long $15. 662-603-1382

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

PUSH MOWER Self-Pro- SHARK VACUUM Cleaner. pelled 190cc brand new $50. Never Used. Briggs-Stratton motor 645-5238 $150 212-3883 SINGLE AXEL Trailer 5’ 3” QUEEN SIZE Wrought x 7’ $500. 212-3883 Iron Headboard, Antique look. $40.00 YOU MUST SEE IT! 645-5238 SMALL ROLL Top Desk. Good shape. $50.00 REAL WOOD Toy Box 287-8456 with lid. Excel. Cond. SOFA AND Loveseat , $40. 643-5258 Very Clean. Great cond. REBEL FLAG 3X5 $15. OR $250. 662-603-1860 2/$25. CALL 662-603-1382 SOLID OAK TV cabinet REMINGTON SPEED mas- or can be used in kitter 22 in fair cond. $150. chen or bedroom for 662-720-6855 storage, great condition $150.00 603-1860

PERIDOT & DIAMOND Ring, 14K gold setting. REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00 Custom design, 4 leaf clover , Size 4 3/4 or 5 EXTRA NEW OLE MS CAR TAGS $350. 462-7599 Call 662-287-6111 $5. CALL 662-603-1382 PLAYSTATION 2 $35.00 for details. games $4.00 RIDING MOWER brand OAK CABINET $175. Great 603-1860 new Kohler 19hp motor Cond., 662-603-1860 $500. 212-3883 OLD #5 Milk Jug, few PREFORMED GOLDFISH chigger on it $40. OBO pond ,no holes or leaks RUGER 10-22 rifle $225. 662-720-6855 $40 Call 662-286-5216 662-603-1382

MISC. ITEMS FOR 0563 SALE

FURNISHED 0615 APARTMENTS

1BED UTI+WiFi, Sat. TELEVISION (NOT flat 800.00 +dep&ref screen) 32" $55. 10 min from hospital 643-7650 Leave mess 240 460 2537 TWIN SIZE memory foam mattress. Never Used. PICKWICK LAKE area, 1 $80. 643-5258 BR, 1 BA, studio apt., furn., 731-607-4297. TWO TIRES, 25x8.00-12 one Michelin Tire Like New P265/70 R16 $50.00 HOMES FOR 0620 212-4450 WI $35.00 games $4.00 603-1860 WOMEN'S Skirt Suits Sz 12. $20.00 each OBO. 643-7650

WOODS ACOUSTIC Electric Guitar Mint Cond. SONY PLAYSTATION 1, Onboard tuner, Looks & has memory card, one sounds like a Martin controller, no power $250.00 FIRM 287-3560 cord $20. 662-287-9739 YOUTH BASKET Ball Goal in box. $30. 24' backSWING, DOUBLE chair board. 645-5238 $30.00 662-415-7435

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

RENT

3 BR, 1 BA, all appl. incl., 1017 E. 5th. $650 mo., $600 dep. 731-610-7880.

MOBILE HOMES 0675 FOR RENT REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject 50IN T.V. $200. THOMASRV OLD WOOD SEWING Advertise yourMACAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT,SANYO TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, & ATV here0610 for UNFURNISHED PROFESSIONAL KARAOKI AM-FM RADIO to the Federal Fair APARTMENTS C H I N E . N E W H O M E machine, has dual cas- 212-3883 CASSETTE PLAYER, A Housing Act which $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and price. PLEASE NO BRAND WORKING MOD- settes & cd. Works per- SCOOTER STORE Scoot- REPLICA OF THE AN- W E A V E R A P T S . 5 0 4 makes it illegal to adEL. 125. OBO fect. Has remote. $100. er- $500. 212-3883 TIQUE VERSION. WORKS N.Cass,1BR,porch,w/d vertise any preference, DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS. 662-660-2392 287-3560 $25. 287-3560 or discrimiSingle item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147GREAT. to place your ad. $375/400 + util. 284-7433 limitation, nation based on race, color, religion, sex, VEHICLE DIRECTORY 868 handicap, familial status AUTOMOBILES or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, 6 cyl., 5 speed 2009 2004 Cadillac rental, or advertising of 2004 Hummer H2 estate based on Convertible Pontiac G6 Seville SLS real • 3.0Lin• 155K miles factors addition to Super Nice, Loaded, leather, Leather Seat Covers Really Clean, 134,514 miles those • protected under New tires Oil changed regularly, sunroof, chrome New Tires federal law. We will not All Original Good cold air and has good tires. 160k wheels. knowingly accept any 100K Miles Electric Windows Just serviced and advertising for real esAsking 89,000 Miles Never BeeWrecked Just serviced and & Seats tate which is in violaready for the road. $5400. OBO $5500. ready forlaw. the All road. tion of the per88,000 miles CALL/TEXT Call @ sons areCall hereby in@ Call DANIEL @ formed that all dwell662-664-0210 662-603-1290 ings662-664-0210 advertised are 662-319-7145 available on an equal opportunity basis.

CED REDU

2006 Jeep Liberty

TELEVISION (NOT flat screen) 19" $25. 643-7650

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER

2004 BMW

$13,900 OBO

$12,900 OBO

$7500.00 OBO $8200 OBO 662-664-0357

$15,000. OBO 664-6484

1973 Jeep 1989 Mercedes Benz 300 CE Commando

D L SO

2010 Maxima LOADED 73,000 mi. GREAT CAR $15,000

287-7424

2012 Jeep Wrangler 4WD 00 Miles, Red Garage Kept, it has been babied. All maintenance records available. Call or Text:

662-594-5830

New tires, paint, seats, and window & door seals. Engine like new, 3 speed, 4x4, roll-bar, wench. Great Shape!

10,000

$

731-607-3172

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

1985 Mustang GT, 2005 Honda Element

EX, 4D, VIN 5J6YH18645L001419, Milage, 107,400, one owner, local, Pwr Locks, Windows, Steering, RW defogger, A/C, Rear window wiper, Cruise, Tilt. AM/FM Stereo. Premium sound sys, Anti-social brakes, Alum Alloy wheels, Sat radio, CD, Pwr mirrors, Bucket seats, MP3 player, Keyless entry. $7250.

662 287 4848

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

662-287-4848

864 TRUCKS/VANS/ SUV’S

1997 Mustang GT

Black Like new on the inside and out. Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles

$

4,000.00

662-664-0357 2003 Mustang GT SVT Cobra Clone Tuned 4.6 Engine 5 Speed Lowered 4:10 Gears All Power & Air $6500. 662-415-0149

01 JEEP 4.0

New top front & rear bumper Custom Jeep radio and CD player $9,200 $8,600

662-643-3565

For Sale or Trade

1978 Mercedes 6.9 Motor 135,000 miles. Only made 450 that year. $2,500. OBO Selling due to health reasons. Harry Dixon 286-6359

2010 Chevy Equinox LS

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

$10,000 $10,500 662-415-8343 or 415-7205

REDUCED Antique 1986 FORD F350 XL- Dualley, 7.3 Diesel, new tires, Paint, Lots of Extras, 164,803 Miles, Motor runs well. 2nd Owner, $3500.00Serious inquiries only. 662-287-8894

2011 GMC CANYON-RED REG. CAB, 2 WD 2006 Express 2500 6.6 Diesel Runs 78,380 MILES and drives great. 172,000 miles. A/C and new tires Well serviced! $8500.00 662-594-1860

$11,900 OBO 662-462-7790

95’ 2001 Nissan Xterra CHEVY FOR SALE ASTRO Needs a little work. Cargo Van Good, Sound Good Bargain! Van Call: $2700 662-643-3084 872-3070

1976 F115 428 Motor Very Fast

$3,500.

662-808-9313 662-415-5071

$2500/OBO 662-286-1717

2012 HONDA FOREMAN 500 4x4, 183 miles, $4,800.00 662-665-5363

1500 Goldwing Honda

78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500

662-284-9487

2014 Jeep Wrangler

Approx 15000 miles BOUGHT NEW, Complete History, Loaded, 4x4, All power, Phone, CD, DVD, Satellite, Auto, Removable Tops, Step Bars, Dark Tint, Red - Black, (LIKE NEW) IUKA

256-577-1349 $28,500.00

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

$7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

1998 CHEVY CUSTOM VAN 136,200 mi. Well Maintained Looks & Runs Great

$6,500.00

662-415-9062

2006 Kawasaki Vulcan 1600 13,500 Miles, Serviced in November, New Back Tire, Cobra Pipes, Slingshot Windshield

$4295 OBO 662-212-2451

D L SO

One local owner, dealer serviced, all factory options, navigation, premium sound, sunroof, leather seats, almost new tires, 105,000 mi $6,500 662 286 5668

$14,900.

Call 662-255-3511

662-286-6750

YAMAHA V STAR 650 22,883 MILES $2,850.00 665-1288

78,400 miles $4200.00 or Trade All Original

662-415-3408

MILES 116,700 $13,500. (662)287-7797

VORTEC 8100 V8 ALLISON TRANSMISSION EXCEL. COND. 32K MILES

$18,500.00 662-284-8200 1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

2008 Harley Davidson Electra Glide Classic Black w/lots of Chrome 21,600 miles $14,900 662-286-6750

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

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER

2007 Yamaha VStar 1100 21,900 miles $4,500 Bat-wing Faring and Hog Tunes

662-287-7415 662-415-5163

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

2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster, color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color: blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles, $7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE

1950 Buick

06 Chevy Trailblazer 1987 Power FORD 250 DIESEL everything! UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK Good heat $4000. and Air IN GOOD CONDITION $3,250 OBO 731-645-8339 OR 662-319-7145 731-453-5239

1995 K2500 4X4 Good Condition Runs Great, New Tires 176K miles $3500.

0955 LEGALS

D L SO

2003 CHEVY 2500 HDLT CREW CAB 4X4 2010 GMC Ext-Cab P.U. New tires, Tool Box, Towing Pkg., Bed Liner, Running Boards, Fog Lights, P. Windows, P. Door Locks, Tilt

LEGALS

WHEREAS, on November 27, 2009, Tabitha M. Andrews executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 200906666, recorded on December 11, 2009, in the Chancery Clerk s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted therein, and Farmers and Bank appointed MOBILE HOMES Merchants and substituted GREG E. 0741 FOR SALE BEARD as Trustee therein, by 1998 16X60, 2 BR, 1 Bath, instrument dated June 19, C H / A , G o o d C o n d . , 2015, and duly filed for re$6250.00 731-926-0741 cord in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, as Instrument TRANSPORTATION No. 201502504; and WHEREAS, on August 5, 2011, Tabitha M. Andrews FINANCIAL executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 2011 03252, recorded on August 9, 2011, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named 2004 in said Deed of Trust Nissan or subsequently substituted Quest 104,000 therein, and Farmers and 2003 FORD miles,Bank coldappointed ac, new Merchants tires, fullyGREG loaded, and substituted E. TAURUS BEARD Trustee therein, by dvdasentertainment 142100 MILES instrument dated June and 19, system, runs 2015, and duly filed for re$3500.00 looks great, 4850.00 cord in the office of the 662-665-1995 662-665-5720 aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, in Instrument No. 201502504; and WHEREAS, on May 15, 2014, Tabitha M. Andrews executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 2014 02243, recorded on June 2, 2014, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and1994 Z28 CAMARO WHEREAS, John D. Haynes LT-1 ENGINE was appointed Trustee in said REBUILT Deed of Trust which authorized theTRANSMISSION appointment and substitution of another NEW TIRES Trustee 119,000 in place ofACTUAL the Trustee MILES named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted $3500.00 therein, and Farmers and 662-286-9098 Merchants Bank appointed and substituted GREG E. BEARD as Trustee therein, by instrument dated June 19, 2015, and duly filed for rein the office of the 2008 LEXUS cord aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, in Instrument RX350 No. 201502504; and

(GOLD)

2005 Lincoln LS Sport V8 Ultimate

1987 FORD BRONCO ALL ORIGINAL VINTAGE! RUNS & DRIVES GOOD

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which HOMES FOR makes 0710 it illegal to advertiseSALE 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.

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO 662-808-2994

D L SO

2008 FORD F150 STX

WHEREAS, default having been made in the terms and conditions said Deed of 54,000 ofmiles, 4.2 V-6, Trust, and the entire inautomatic, newthereby tires, debtedness secured dark been blue,declared cold AC, runs having to be due and and payable drives pursuant like new.to the terms of said Deed of Trust and Farmers and MerFIRM chants Bank, the holder of the note and Deed of Trust, having requested the undersigned Substituted Trustee so to do, I will, on the 4th day of November, 2015, offer for sale at public outcry and sell during legal hours, being between the hours of 11:00 o clock a.m and 4:00 o clock p.m. at the main door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, Corinth,Quest Missis1994 Nissan sippi, and being more particuNew Lifters, larly described as follows, towit: Cam, Head, Parcel 2 Struts and Shocks. Commencing at the Southwof Section 2, est Corner$2000. Township 3 South, Range 6 Call East, Alcorn603-9446 County, Mississippi; thence Easterly, 1320 feet, more or less; thence Northerly, 300 feet, more or 832 lessMotorcycles/ATV’S at an iron rod found; thence North, 119.95 feet to an iron rod set for the Point of Beginning; thence West 938.64 feet to an iron rod set on the eastern right-of-way line of Alcorn County Road No. 533; thence North 04 degrees 46 minutes 30 seconds East, 120.37 feet along said right-of-way line to Fat an iron 2002 Harley Boy, rod set; thence East, 928.62 purple, feetcolor: to an iron rod set;27,965 miles, OBO thence South$7,900 119.95 feet to the Just Point of Beginning, good conserviced, taining 2.6 acres, more or or new tires, brakes, less. ready for the road.

$

8950

662-665-1995

@ title as I will convey Call only such is vested662-664-0210 in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 5th Arctic day of October, 2013 Cat 2015. GREG E. BEARD, Substituted Trustee PUBLISH: 10/09, 10/16, 30810/23, miles10/30 Greg Beard w/seat belts 4 Seater P.A. outlet Greg E. Beard, Phone charger Post Office Boxapprox. 285 Driven Booneville,10 MStimes 38829 Telephone: 662-720-8340 Excellent Condition Facsimile: Wench662-720-8342 (front bumper) 15047 (662)279-0801


Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 23, 2015 • 7B

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

chants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 2011 03252, recorded on August 9, 2011, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted therein, and Farmers and Merchants Bank appointed and substituted GREG E. BEARD as Trustee therein, by instrument dated June 19, 2015, and duly filed for record in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, in Instrument No. 201502504; and WHEREAS, on May 15, 2014, Tabitha M. Andrews executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 2014 02243, recorded on June 2, 2014, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted therein, and Farmers and Merchants Bank appointed and substituted GREG E. BEARD as Trustee therein, by instrument dated June 19, 2015, and duly filed for record in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, in Instrument No. 201502504; and

larly described as follows, towit: Parcel 2 Commencing at the Southwest Corner of Section 2, Township 3 South, Range 6 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; thence Easterly, 1320 feet, more or less; thence Northerly, 300 feet, more or less at an iron rod found; thence North, 119.95 feet to an iron rod set for the Point of Beginning; thence West 938.64 feet to an iron rod set on the eastern right-of-way line of Alcorn County Road No. 533; thence North 04 degrees 46 minutes 30 seconds East, 120.37 feet along said right-of-way line to an iron rod set; thence East, 928.62 feet to an iron rod set; thence South 119.95 feet to the Point of Beginning, containing 2.6 acres, more or less.

WHEREAS, default having been made in the terms and conditions of said Deed of Trust, and the entire indebtedness secured thereby having been declared to be due and payable pursuant to the terms of said Deed of Trust and Farmers and Merchants Bank, the holder of the note and Deed of Trust, having requested the undersigned Substituted Trustee so to do, I will, on the 4th day of November, 2015, offer for sale at public outcry and sell during legal hours, being between the hours of 11:00 o clock a.m and 4:00 o clock p.m. at the main door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, Corinth, Mississippi, and being more particu-

WHEREAS, on November 27, 2009, Tabitha M. Andrews executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 200906667, recorded on December 11, 2009, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted therein, and Farmers and Merchants Bank appointed and substituted GREG E. BEARD as Trustee therein, by instrument dated June 19,

I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 5th day of October, 2015. GREG E. BEARD, Substituted Trustee PUBLISH: 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30 Greg Beard Greg E. Beard, P.A. Post Office Box 285 Booneville, MS 38829 Telephone: 662-720-8340 Facsimile: 662-720-8342 15047 SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

2015, and duly filed for record in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, as Instrument No. 201502505; and WHEREAS, on August 5, 2011, Tabitha M. Andrews executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 2011 03253, recorded on August 9, 2011, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted therein, and Farmers and Merchants Bank appointed and substituted GREG E. BEARD as Trustee therein, by instrument dated June 19, 2015, and duly filed for record in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, in Instrument No. 201502505; and WHEREAS, on May 15, 2014, Tabitha M. Andrews and Barrett Ward executed a certain Deed of Trust to Farmers and Merchants Bank as shown in Instrument No. 2014 02242, recorded on June 2, 2014, in the Chancery Clerk’s Office, Alcorn County, Mississippi; and WHEREAS, John D. Haynes was appointed Trustee in said Deed of Trust which authorized the appointment and substitution of another Trustee in place of the Trustee named in said Deed of Trust or subsequently substituted therein, and Farmers and Merchants Bank appointed and substituted GREG E. BEARD as Trustee therein, by instrument dated June 19, 2015, and duly filed for record in the office of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk on June 26, 2015, in Instrument No. 201502505; and

ing requested the undersigned Substituted Trustee so to do, I will, on the 4th day of November, 2015, offer for sale at public outcry and sell during legal hours, being between the hours of 11:00 o’c lock a.m and 4:00 o’clock p.m. at the main door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, Corinth, Mississippi, and being more particularly described as follows, to-wit: A 2.50 acre tract being cut out of the John Bonds etal tract as referenced by deed recorded in Deed Book 244 at Pages 592-594 in the Chancery Clerk’s Office of Alcorn County, Mississippi, lying in the Southeast Quarter of Section 30, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and being further described as follows:

or less.

&RULQWK $XWRPRWLYH 5H I N T H E C H A N C E R Y SDLU 6HUYLFH -XQLRU 0955 LEGALS C O U R T O F A L C O R N 6ZLWFKHU :LOO VHOO IRU C O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I WRZLQJ UHSDLU DQG VWRU DJH RQ 6DWXUGD\ 2FWR EHU DW DP &KHYUROHW 3LFNXS 0955 LEGALS IN THE MATTER OF THE 9 , 1 1 8 0 % ( 5 ESTATE OF *&'& + () IN THE CHANCERY S A R A H Y A R B E R , D E - &RULQWK $XWRPRWLYH 5H COURT OF ALCORN C E A S E D SDLU 6HUYLFH 6WXWWV COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI CAUSE NO.:2015-0527-02 'ULYH &RULQWK 06

Commence at a steel post f o u n d a t t h e N o r t h e a st corner of the Southeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 30, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi; Thence run South 471.58 feet to a PK nail found in the centerline of Alcorn County Public Road No. 510; Thence run along the centerline of said Public Road the following: South 87 degrees 44 minutes 15 seconds West 80.66 feet; North 88 degrees 42 minutes 52 seconds West 276.92 feet; North 88 degrees 28 minutes 42 seconds West 258.82 feet; North 88 degrees 27 minutes 02 seconds West 226.88 feet; Thence leaving the centerline of said Public Road run North 20.00 feet to an iron pin set on the North right-of-way line of said Alcorn County Public Road No. 510 for the point of beginning; Thence run along the North right of way line of said Public Road the following: North 88 degrees 27 minutes 11 seconds West 30.00 feet; North 86 degrees 41 minutes 04 seconds West 94.65 feet; North 87 degrees 01 minutes 58 seconds West 113.83 feet; North 87 degrees 36 minutes 29 seconds West 89.28 feet to an iron pin set; Thence leaving the North right of way line of said Public Road run North 324.91 feet to an iron pin set; Thence run East 327.36 feet to an iron pin set; Thence run South 340.81 feet to the point of beginning. Containing 2.50 acres, more

I will convey only such title as is vested in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 5th day of October, 2015. GREG E. BEARD, Substituted Trustee PUBLISH: 10/09, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30 Greg Beard Greg E. Beard, P.A. Post Office Box 285 Booneville, MS 38829 Telephone: 662-720-8340 Facsimile: 662-720-8342 15048 IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF SARAH YARBER, DECEASED CAUSE NO. 2015-0527-02 NOTICE TO CREDITORS

John W. Yarber, Jr. Administrator

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto WHEREAS, default having been made in the terms and conditions of said Deed of Trust, and the entire indebtedness secured thereby having been declared to be due and payable pursuant to the terms of said Deed of Trust and Farmers and Merchants Bank, the holder of the note and Deed of Trust, hav-

Published: October 9, 2015 October 16, 2015 October 23, 2015

Odom and Allred 404 Waldron Street Corinth MS 38834 662-286-9311

SUMMONS

IN RE: IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF

0955 LEGALS

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI VIRGINIA MARIE WEAVER, DECEASED TO: ANY AND ALL UNCAUSE NO. 2015-0526-02 IN RE: LAST WILL KNOWN HEIRS OF AND TESTAMENT OF SARAH YARBER, CORRINE PIERCE, DEDECEASED CEASED You have been made a C A U S E N O . : 2 0 1 5 Defendant in the suit filed in 0 5 3 5 - 0 2 NOTICE TO CREDITORS this Court by John W. Yarber, Jr., Administrator of NOTICE TO the Estate of Sarah Yarber, CREDITORS seeking to adjudicate heirs of Letters of Administration Sarah Yarber, deceased. having been granted on the 1st Notice is hereby given day of October, 2015 by the You are summoned to ap- that Letters Testamentary has Chancery Court of Alcorn pear and defend against the been, on this day, granted to County, Mississippi, to the complaint or petition filed the undersigned on the esundersigned Administratrix against you in this action at tate of Corrine Pierce, deupon the Estate of Virginia 9:00 o’c lock A.M. on the 8 th ceased, by the Chancery Marie Weaver, deceased, noday of December, 2015, in Court of Alcorn County, Mistice is hereby given to all perthe courtroom of the Alcorn sissippi, and all persons have sons having claims against said County Chancery Building, claims against said estate, are estate to present the same to Corinth, Alcorn County, Mis- required to have the same the clerk of this court for sissippi, and in case of your probated and registered by probate and registration acfailure to appear and defend a the Clerk of this Court withcording to the law within judgment will be entered in 90 days after the date of ninety (90) days from the first against you for the money or first publication of this notice publication of this notice or other things demanded in the (October 16, 2015) or the they will be forever barred. same shall be forever barred. complaint or petition.

Letters of Adminstration having been granted on the 1st day of October, 2015, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, to the undersigned Administrator upon the Estate of Sarah Yarber, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons This the 21st day of having claims against said esOctober, 2015. tate to present the same to the clerk of this court for CYNTHIA MARIE WALLIN probate and registration according to the law within Administratrix ninety (90) days from the first publication of this notice or they will be forever barred. This the 9th day of October, 2015.

0955 LEGALS

RHONDA N. ALLRED

You are not required to Witness signature this t h day of October, file and answer or other 14 pleading but you may do so if 2015. you desire. BENJAMIN P. PIERCE, Issued under my hand and JR. the seal of said court, this 15th MARY PIERCE JONES day of October, 2015. Mitchell, McNutt & Sams CHANCERY CLERK OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS- 508 Waldron Street Corinth MS 38834 SIPPI 662-286-9931

SOLICITOR FOR ADMINISBobby Marolt TRATRIX odom and Allred, P.A. 404 Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9311 3 tc 10/23, 30, 11/6/2015 15070

3tc 10/16, 23, 30

BY: Willie Justice DEPUTY CLERK Odom and Allred, P.A. 404 Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9311 3tc 10/23, 30, 11/6/2015 15071

15052

15062

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI IN RE: IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF WILLIE JOE WEAVER, DECEASED CAUSE NO.:2015-0525-02

VEHICLE DIRECTORY

REDUCED Sportsman Camper Queen Bed, Couch sleeps 2, lots of cabinets, pulled 6 times, non-smoker, clean as new on the inside.

$9,500.00 $8500.00 287-3461 or 396-1678

1992 SWINGER CLASS A MOTOR HOME

SOLD

CAMPING TRAILER

2009 WILDWOOD WITH QUEEN BED & TWO BUNK BEDS. $8900.00 256-585-0602 (CELL) 731-632-4296(HOME)

2011 AR-ONE Star Craft, 14ft. Fridge/AC, Stove, Microwave, Full bath, immaculate condition. ReďŹ nance or payoff (prox. $5300) @ Trustmark, payments $198. Excellent starter for small family. 284-0138

32 FT., LOW MILES, NEW TIRES, VG COND. $6500.00 OBO 660-0242 OR 656-0750

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’ REDUCED 2006 WILDERNESS CAMPER 29 FT.

SOLD

5TH WHEEL LARGE SLIDE OUT FULLY EQUIPPED NON-SMOKING OWNER IUKA

gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-flat screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.

CED U D E R $65,000 662-415-0590

CALL 662-423-1727

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT 30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

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

662-660-3433

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1990 Allegro Motor Home

SOLD

Excellent Condition Brand New Refrigerator New Tires & Hot Water Heater. Sleeps Six 7,900 ACTUAL MILES $12,500. OBO Must See!! Call 662-665-1420

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD 2003 CHEROKEE 285 SLEEPS 8 EXCELLENT CONDITION EVERYTHING WORKS 5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER CENTRAL HEAT & AIR ALL NEW TIRES & NEW ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER

$8995 Call Richard 662-664-4927

LD 51,000 SOMILES SLEEPS 6

$4300 662-415-5247

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

CAMPER & TRUCK 2007 F250 Super Duty Power Stroke Diesel Truck

SOLD

2006 Forest River 30 Ft. Camper.

Both for $10,000 Call 662-462-3754

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

$8500

662-808-9313

1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor 1400 Hours

$8500.00 731-926-0006

Older Model Ford Tractor with 2 Row Equipment. $6000.00 662-286-6571 662-286-3924 COMMERCIAL

1993 John Deere 5300 Tractor

w/ John Deere loader. 2900 Hours

$10,500

731-926-0006

Tractor For Sale!

TRACTOR FOR SALE JOHN DEERE 40-20 NEW PUMPS, GOOD TIRES RETIRED FROM FARMING $14,000 662-419-1587

2009 TT45A New Holland Tractor 335 Hours 8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner deceased, Kossuth Area. $12,500- 662-424-3701

601 FORD WORKMASTER

John Deere 16-30 New injectors & Fuel Pump Good Tires

$6500.00 662-419-1587

EXCELLENT CONDITION

$3,500 731-453-5239 731-645-8339

W & W HORSE OR CATTLE TRAILER ALL ALUMINUM LIKE NEW $7000. 731-453-5239 731-645-8339

1956 FORD 600 5 SPEED POWER STEERING REMOTE HYDRAULICS GOOD TIRES GOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

Hyster Forklift Narrow Aisle 24 Volt Battery 3650.00 287-1464

804 BOATS

JOHN DEERE X300 RIDING LAWN MOWER

Clark Forklift 8,000 lbs, outside tires Good Condition $15,000

662-287-1464 1989 FOXCRAFT 18’ long, 120 HP Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot control.

$6500.

662-596-5053

19 Hours (Like New), 42 Inch Cutting Deck, 8 Yard Trailer, Grass Dethatcher & Soil Aerator Attachments $

SOLD

ALL FOR

2500 OBO

53' STEP DECK TRAILER CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1 TON TRUCKS.

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

BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3' PULL OUTS @ FRONT & REAR.

Big Boy Forklift $

1250

Great for a small warehouse

662-594-1090 662-287-1464

Toyota Forklift 5,000 lbs Good Condition

662-287-1464

CALL 662-603-1547

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

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

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

BOOMS, CHAINS & LOTS OF ACCESSORIES

$10,000/OBO

Loweline Boat

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

for only $7995.

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

Bass Tracker Boat

17 foot with console, foot control trolling motor, 2 new batteries, depth finder, live well, life jackets, no leaks, carpet in good shape, 40 hp Johnson, good boat.

15 FT Grumman Flat D Bottom Boat SOL 25 HP Motor $2700.00 Ask for Brad: $ 2800.00 284-4826 662-415-8425

1995 15’ Aluminum Boat, Outboard Motor, Trolling Mtr., New Rod Holder, New Electric Anchor $2550.00 462-3373

Starcraft Semi V Boat

SOLD

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

$2000

Call 662-415-5842 or 415-5375

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

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503


IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

8B • Friday, October 23, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

CHANCERY CLERK OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

Bobby Marolt IN RE: IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF LEGALS 0955 LEGALS 0955 WILLIE JOE WEAVER, DE- BY: Karen Duncan CEASED DEPUTY CLERK CAUSE NO.:2015-0525-02 Odom and Allred, P.A. 404 Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9311 SUMMONS 3tc 10/23, 30, 11/6/2015 THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

0955 LEGALS

NEW 2015 HONDA

ODYSSEY ONLY 3 LEFT!

AVAILABLE

NEW 2015 HONDA

ACCORD SPORT

Auto, Bluetooth Back-Up Camera Stk# 815564

Lease for

0.9% 1.9% OR

/mo.

for 72 months

for 60 months

for 36 mos. + tax. WAC

NEW 2015 HONDA

CIVIC LX

Auto, Bluetooth, Alloy Wheels, Back-Up Camera Stk# 815431

0.9

%

OR

1.9

%

Lease for

for 72 months

for 60 months

0 0 0

$

Down Payment

$

First Month’s Payment

$

/mo. for 36 mos. + tax. WAC

Security Deposit

0

$

Due at Lease Signing

You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint or petition filed against you in this action at 9:00 o’clock A.M. on the 8th day of December, 2015, in the courtroom of the Alcorn County Chancery Building, Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and in case of your failure to appear and defend a judgment will be entered against you for the money or other things demanded in the complaint or petition.

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

0955 LEGALS

15072

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

TO: ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF WILLIE I N T H E C H A N C E R Y JOE WEAVER, DECEASED C O U R T O F A L C O R N COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI You have been made a Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by Cynthia Marie Wallin, Administratrix of the Estate of Willie Joe Weaver, seeking to adjudicate heirs of Willie Joe Weaver, deceased.

0955 LEGALS

IN THE MATTER OF THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF RICHARD W. BRIGGS, SR., DECEASED IN RE: IN THE MATTER OF NO. 2015-0532-02 THE ESTATE OF VIRGINIA MARIE WEAVER, NOTICE TO DECEASED CREDITORS CAUSE NO.:2015-0526-02

IN THE MATTER OF THE IN RE: IN THE MATTER OF LAST WILL AND TESTATHE ESTATE OF WILLIE JOE M E N T O F J E A N E T T E BRIGGS, DECEASED WEAVER, SUMMONS D E C E A S E D NO. 2015-0531-02 CAUSE NO.2015-0525-02 NOTICE TO CREDITORS THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Letters of Administration having been granted on the 1st day of October, 2015 by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, to the undersigned Administratrix upon the Estate of Willie Joe Weaver, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to the clerk of this court for probate and registration according to the law within ninety (90) days from the first publication of this notice or they will be forever barred.

You are not required to file and answer or other This the 21st day of pleading but you may do so if October, 2015. you desire. CYNTHIA MARIE WALLIN ADMINISTRATRIX Issued under my hand and st the seal of said court, this 21 day of October, 2015. RHONDA N. ALLRED SOLICITOR FOR ADMINISTRATRIX

Letters Testamentary having been granted on the 1 st day of October, 2015, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi to the undersigned upon the Estate of Jeanette Briggs, Deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against said Estate to present the same to the Clerk of the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi for probate and registration according to law within ninety (90) days from the date of first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or they will be forever barred. This the 1st day of October, 2015. RICHARD W. BRIGGS, JR., TRACY L. BRIGGS, Co-Executors of the Estate of Jeanette Briggs, Deceased

CHANCERY CLERK OF Odom and Allred, P.A. ALCORN COUNTY, MISSIS- 404 Waldron Street SIPPI Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9311 Bobby Marolt 3tc 10/23, 30, 11/6/2015

PHELPS DUNBAR LLP ONE MISSISSIPPI PLAZA 201 S. SPRING STREET, SEVENTH FLOOR TUPELO, MS 38804 662-842-7907

BY: Karen Duncan DEPUTY CLERK

15053

15069

Odom and Allred, P.A. 404 Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9311

our certified technicians We’ll Put Collision Let quickly restore your vehicle condition Damage in Reverse towithpre-accident a satisfaction guarantee.

3tc 10/23, 30, 11/6/2015

TO: ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN HEIRS OF VIRGINIA MARIE WEAVER, DECEASED

You have been made a Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by Cynthia Marie Wallin, Administratrix of the Estate of Virginia Marie This the 1 st day of October, Weaver, seeking to adjudic- 2015. ate heirs of Virginia Marie RICHARD W. BRIGGS, JR. Weaver, deceased. TRACY L. BRIGGS Co-Executors of the Estate of You are summoned to ap- Richard W. Briggs, Sr., Depear and defend against the ceased complaint or petition filed against you in this action at Phelps Dunbar LLP 9:00 o’c lock A.M. on the 8th One Mississippi Plaza day of December, 2015, in 201 S. Spring Street, Seventh the courtroom of the Alcorn Floor County Chancery Building, Tupelo, MS 38804 Corinth, Alcorn County, Mis- 662-842-7907 sissippi, and in case of your failure to appear and defend a 15054 judgment will be entered against you for the money or other things demanded in the HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY complaint or petition. You are not required to HOME IMPROVEMENT file and answer or other & REPAIR pleading but you may do so if ALL-PRO Home Maintenyou desire. ance and Repair- 662415-6646 Issued under my hand and the seal of said court, this 21st day of October, 2015.

State-of-the-Art Frame

15072 Straightening

CHANCERY CLERK OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

Dents, Dings & Scratches Removed Custom Color Matching Service

Letters Testamentary having been granted on the 1 st day of October, 2015, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi to the undersigned upon the Estate of Richard W. Briggs, Sr., Deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against said Estate to present the same to the Clerk of the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi for probate and registration according to law within ninety (90) days from the date of first publication of this Notice to Creditors, or they will be forever barred.

LAWN/LANDSCAPE/ TREE SVC RICHARDSON'S Lawn Service- Fall Lawn Clean Up 662-212-3883

STORAGE, INDOOR/ OUTDOOR AMERICAN MINI STORAGE

Bobby Marolt BY: Karen Duncan DEPUTY CLERK

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance Company No up-front payments. No hassle. No paperwork.

www.houseofhondatupelo.com

628 S. Gloster | Tupelo, MS 842-4162 or 1-888-892-4162

Free Estimates 25 Years professional service experience Rental cars available

0.9% & 1.9% APR is through American Honda Finance. Lease is 12,000 miles per year through American Honda Finance. WAC. Offer ends 9/30/15.

2058 S. Tate Across From World Color 287-1024

3tc 10/23, 30, 11/6/2015

Corinth Collision Center 810 S. Parkway

Odom and Allred, P.A. 404 Waldron Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-286-9311

MORRIS CRUM MINI-STORAGE 286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

15073

662.594.1023

Falling Down Deals CHANCE to WIN $1500 with every purchase starting 10/15/2015 through 12/19/2015. Drawing will be held on 12/19/2015. Don’t miss out. This is part of our YEAR-END CLEARANCE!

2015 Toyota Tacoma Prerunner $358/mo W.A.C.

2014 Toyota Camry LE $24875/mo W.A.C.

2013 Nissan Altima $20775/mo W.A.C.

13K MILES, EXT CAB, VERY NICE! #18532

46K, LEATHER #18582

52K Miles #18577

2015 Chevy Malibu $27035/mo W.A.C.

2012 Nissan Altima $186/mo W.A.C.

Leather #18557

66K Miles, Power Sunroof #18566

2012 Dodge Diesel 4x4

2012 Nissan Frontier

2010 Buick Enclave CXL

2013 Toyota Corolla $199/mo W.A.C.

CREW CAB, BIG HORN EDITION, #18503

60K MILES, EXT CAB, VERY NICE! #18534

72K Miles, MUST SEE! VERY NICE! #18505

#18531

2014 VW Jetta $199/mo W.A.C. 47K Miles #18549

2013 Toyota Tacoma

2011 GMC Sierra

2013 Chevy Silverado LT 4x4

Nissan Frontier

4 Dr, 4WD, MUST SEE!! #18429

86K MILES, 4WD, NICE, #18540

#18499

4WD, 4 Dr, 76K Miles, SHARP! #18553

2012 Ford F150 Lariat

2009 Chevy Silverado

2010 Chevy Silverado Texas Edition

4Dr, 4WD, MUST SEE!! #18587

97K MILES #18541

86K MILES, #18535

2008 Chevy Silverado LT 112K Miles #18449

★ $1000+Tax,Title, & Doc W.A.C. 72 months at 4% interest.

Bring Us Your Trade-In 662-287-8773

662-842-5277

916 Hwy. 45 South

966 S. Gloster

Corinth, MS 38834

Ricky King

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Farron Gilley “Car Guy”

Tupelo, MS 38804

Readers Choice Favorite Used Car Dealer 2012, 2013, 2014 & 2015!

KING KARS WWW.KINGKARS.NET


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