110417 dc e edition

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Daylight Saving Time Don’t forget to turn clocks back one hour tonight

Saturday Nov. 4,

2017

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Daily Corinthian Vol. 121, No. 264

Toy store in need of help

Tonight

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66

20% chance of rain

MRHC: Santa’s helpers Holiday

parade growing

BY BRANT SAPPINGTON

Please see TOY | 2

Today

• Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

bsappington@dailycorinthian.com

The start of registration for the 2017 Lighthouse Foundation Toy Store showed a big need for help in the community this Christmas. The foundation kicked off registration last Thursday for this year’s edition of the annual program helping those in need provide Christmas presents for their children. Foundation Executive Director Gary Caveness said they had 55 people sign up for assistance Thursday. He said it’s absolutely vital for those wishing to participate in the program to register because the effort works on a tight budget and they must know how many people they need to serve. Registration continues each Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon at the foundation’s building on South Johns Street. These sessions will continue through Nov. 16. There will also be an evening registration session on Tuesday, Nov. 14 from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. for those unable to attend one of the morning sessions. A final registration day for anyone unable to attend one of the earlier sessions is set for Tuesday, Nov. 28 from 9 a.m. to noon. Those registering must bring a Social Security card and birth certificate for each child, along with proof of residency in Alcorn County such as a power bill, water bill or other document showing their physical address in the county. They must also pay a

Storms

“We’ve already had a ton of calls and messages about signing up – this could be one of our biggest years.” BY ZACK STEEN Staff Photo by L.A. Story

everyone,” said Lucy Duffy, MRHC Auxiliary. The volunteers were busy sorting and pricing items Thursday morning in anticipation of the big event. The MRHC Auxiliary runs the hospital’s gift shop. It is important to keep it wellstocked and it is important to shop there. The money earned each year from the gift shop helps fund scholarships for young people going into the medical profession. “How many scholarships we give out each year depends on how much we make in the gift shop,” said Carpenter in a previous interview.

Downtown Corinth comes to life with Christmas spirit each year on the first Saturday in December. Not much will change this year as Main Street Corinth hosts the 2017 edition of the Corinth/Alcorn County Christmas Parade. Entries are now being accepted for the parade set for Saturday, Dec. 2 at 5 p.m. “We’ve already had a ton of calls and messages about signing up – this could be one of our biggest years,” said Main Street Corinth Director Angela Avent. This year’s parade theme is “Fairytale Christmas.” “We think the ‘Fairytale Christmas’ theme will allow people to use their creative nature to interpret how to incorporate the theme into their floats,” added Avent. Application deadline for parade entries is Nov. 18. The annual event normally features more than 100 entries, including marching bands, floats and a special guest appearance by Santa

Please see SALE | 2

Please see PARADE | 2

MRHC Auxiliary members Betty James (left) and Rachel Goddard sort through items that will be for sale at the annual craft sale.

Auxiliary prepares for craft sale BY L.A. STORY lastory@dailycorinthian.com

Santa’s helpers have been working hard at the craft tables making gifts for the upcoming craft sale at Magnolia Regional Health Center’s gift shop. Santa’s helpers – more commonly known as The MRHC Auxiliary (or the “Pink Ladies” because of their pink jackets) – have made a wide variety of items to sell in the annual Christmas Open House and Craft Sale at the MRHC Gift Shop, which is run by the MRHC Auxiliary. The craft Sale and open house will take place from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 8, at the MRHC Gift Shop. Auxiliary members said they usually have a lot of traffic to the annual sale as Christmas shoppers get their hands on handmade crafts.

“We have a lot more items to sell this year than we did last year.” This year, shoppers have even more to look forward to. “We have a lot more items to sell this year than we did last year,” said MRHC Auxiliary member Rachel Goddard. Among the items one can expect are a beautiful and unique cotton boll wreath. “Cotton is so popular right now,” said Linda Carpenter, MRHC Auxiliary. There are also lots of soft baby blankets with scalloped lace edges, a merrily jingling Santa door hanger, Christmas place mats and handmade scarves in a variety of styles and that is just a sample of the items which will be available for sale. “We try to have pieces for

zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

Volunteer fire department acquiring closed school building BY BRANT SAPPINGTON bsappington@dailycorinthian.com

A former school building torn apart by vandals could help bring a community together. The Pisgah Volunteer Fire Department is in the process of acquiring the former Pisgah School from the Prentiss County School District with the goal of creating a community center and fire department training facility. The transfer of the property, located adjacent to the fire department, has been approved by the county school board but action still must be taken by the board of supervisors. “We want to create something that will benefit the community,” said Pisgah VFD Chief Gary Yancey. First, however, the depart-

“We want to create something that will benefit the community.” ment will have to repair major damage caused by vandalism since the school was shuttered with the closing of the Pisgah Head Start center prior to the start of the 2015-16 school year. The school is located in north Prentiss County not far from the Alcorn County line. Windows throughout the Please see SCHOOL | 2

Pisgah Volunteer Fire Department Chief Gary Yancey stands in the hall of the former Pisgah School building. The building has been heavily damaged since it ceased being used as the Pisgah Head Start center two years ago.

25 years ago

Janessa Taylor wins the title of “Deb” Little Miss Mississippi.

Dr. John Shipp M.D.

10 years ago

“An Evening at the City Cemetery” tour raises funds for the Crossroads Museum.


2 • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Attorneys mum about mistrial Associated Press

GREENWOOD — Attorneys would not immediately say why a Mississippi judge declared a mistrial in the case of a man charged with killing his wife. Edward Broom was arrested in January 2016 in Manhattan, Kansas, where he had moved after his wife, Lakeyla Broom, was killed in the couple’s home in Greenwood, Mississippi, in September 2014. Circuit Judge Carol White-Richard declared a mistrial Wednesday, the Greenwood Commonwealth reported. The defense can seek a mistrial based on improper procedure or improper handling of evidence by

prosecutors, or a mistrial can caused by jury tampering or prejudice, or jurors speaking to the media. “I was just heartbroken when they called me to say it was a mistrial,” said Maggie Foreman of Greenwood, Lakeyla Broom’s grandmother, told the newspaper. “It’s been three years we’ve been waiting.” District Attorney Tim Jones had said during opening arguments that Lakeyla Broom had up to 80 knife wounds. He said he will retry Edward Broom early next year. The judge said she will decide later whether Broom can be released from jail while waiting for the second trial.

PARADE CONTINUED FROM 1

Claus. The parade route begins near First Baptist Church on Fillmore Street in downtown Corinth. “The parade serves as a great community event,” said Avent. “It brings people of all walks of life and areas of the county together to celebrate the Christmas season.” Entry cost includes industrial float $100; business float $75; church, civic club or school float $40; vehicle $40; and walking groups $25. School bands receive free entry. No animals are allowed in the parade and Main Street requires that

no float have a Santa. Due to outdated equipment not owned by Main Street, the parade has not been shown on local cable TV in recent yards. Avent hopes to change that this year. “We plan to use Facebook Live to broadcast the Christmas parade,” she added. “If everything works out, we will begin using this technology every year.” (Parade entry applications are available at The Alliance office on Wick Street. To request an application, email corinthmainstreet@ gmail.com. For more information, contact Avent at 662-665-1600.)

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$5 registration fee. “We’re really concerned about getting the word out so hurting families can take advantage of one of the positive things the Christian community is doing,” said Caveness. The foundation is also seeking donations to support the effort. Caveness said he knows they are blessed to live in a community that always supports their efforts to help others and they are again counting on the people of Alcorn County to come together to make a difference this

year for hurting families. Donations can be made in person at the foundation or by mail to P.O. Box 2121, Corinth, MS 38835. Volunteers are also needed to assist recipients on Toy Store shopping day set for Dec. 7. All volunteers must attend one of two training sessions in order to participate. Volunteer training is set for 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. on Dec. 4 and Dec. 5. For more information on the program and how to help, call the Lighthouse Foundation at 662-286-0091.

Death penalty upheld in furniture store slayings Associated Press

JACKSON — The Mississippi Supreme Court on Thursday again affirmed the death sentence for a man convicted of killing four people at a furniture store where he previously worked, with a majority of justices saying they found no racial prejudice in the way jurors were chosen. Curtis Giovanni Flowers , now 47, has been tried six times in the July 16, 1996, fatal shootings in Winona, a town of about 5,000 residents that’s roughly 90 miles north of Jackson. Tardy Furniture Store owner Bertha Tardy and three of her employees, Robert Golden, Carmen Rigby and Derrick Stewart, were each shot in the head. Flowers told investigators he worked at Tardy Furniture a few days and had been fired July 6, 1996. Court records show that police said Flowers gave inconsistent accounts of where he was the day of the

“Flowers claims that the questioning of AfricanAmerican and white jurors was so ‘starkly different’ that the questioning led to purposeful discrimination. ... However, evidence of disparate questioning alone is not dispositive of racial discrimination,” killings. He said he was babysitting his girlfriend’s children when the killings took place. Flowers moved to Texas in September 1996, then was arrested and brought back to Mississippi, where he was indicted in March 1997. Flowers was convicted and sentenced to death in the first three trials, but those were overturned because of mistakes by prosecutors. The first trial, in 1997, was only for the killing of Tardy. The second trial, in 1999, was only

for the killing of Stewart. The third, in 2004, was for all four killings. Jurors couldn’t agree on a verdict in the fourth and fifth trials. At the sixth trial, in 2010, Flowers was convicted in all four killings and sentenced to death. The state Supreme Court upheld that conviction in 2014. Then, in 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court told state justices to review whether there was discrimination in how some black people were excluded as potential jurors in the sixth trial of

SALE CONTINUED FROM 1

The purpose of the Auxiliary is to aid the hospital, direct visitors and provide assistance. It is an important work and provides a friendly face to people coming to MRHC to visit a patient or for patients coming for medical treatment. (For those who would like to work as a volunteer for the MRHC Auxiliary, an application can be picked up at the hospital gift shop, or simply ask one of the Pink Ladies at the information desk.)

Staff photo by L.A. Story

Items that can be used as Christmas tree ornaments or used as part of decorative packaging of a large gift will be for sale at the MRHC Auxiliary Craft Sale and Open House next week.

SCHOOL CONTINUED FROM 1

building have been shattered and the halls and rooms are strewn with debris. Paint can be seen sprayed across walls and floors. Toilets and sinks have been shattered into piles of porcelain rubble. Holes have been ripped and gouged into the walls and even in the ceilings. Yancey said it’s difficult to comprehend the level of destruction without seeing it first hand. “It’s disheartening,” he said. “But it’s nothing that can’t be fixed.” The school, believed to

have been built between 1956 and 1957 according to plaque above the entrance, has also suffered from the ravages of time with repairs needed to the roof and other areas due to aging. The fire chief said he’s gotten a great deal of interest from other fire departments in the area as well as numerous individuals about helping repair the building. He’s also hoping to work with local and state officials to seek any possible grant funding to help with repairs. He envisions the school as a centerpiece for the

community and wants to see it repaired and restored so it can benefit the citizens for years to come. Yancey said they want to use a large portion of the building for fire department training programs including confined space search and rescue, rope rescue and other such hands on learning, as well as renovating classrooms to allow fire training classes to be taught. Training offered at the location would be made available to all departments in the county and would reduce the need for firefighters to travel to the state fire

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academy and other location to gain vital lifesaving skills. “This building was built for education and we want to see it used for education again,” he said. He also wants to see the auditorium, kitchen and other spaces repaired so they could be made available to the community for hosting events such as family reunions, benefits and other activities. Yancey also hopes to create a space recognizing and celebrating the history of firefighting in the county. He said he understands there’s a long road ahead to bring the building back to usefulness and the first step is completing the transfer of the property to the department. Once those legal details are finalized they will begin cleaning up all the damage and determining exactly what needs to be done next. He said they will be seeking volunteer labor and help with funding and there will be fundraisers in the future to support the work.

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Flowers, who is black. Tardy, Rigby and Stewart were white, and Golden was black. “Flowers claims that the questioning of African-American and white jurors was so ‘starkly different’ that the questioning led to purposeful discrimination. ... However, evidence of disparate questioning alone is not dispositive of racial discrimination,” state Justice Josiah Coleman wrote for the majority in the ruling released Thursday. Five justices agreed with the ruling, and four disagreed. Justice Leslie King, who disagreed, wrote that the U.S. Supreme Court sent the case back to the Mississippi Supreme Court because a majority of federal justices believed “that a reasonable probability exists that this Court got it wrong on the first try. Yet, this Court ignores that strong implication and makes the same erroneous decision.” No execution date has been set.

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Local/Region

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Today in History Today is Saturday, Nov. 4, the 308th day of 2017. There are 57 days left in the year. A reminder: Daylight Saving Time ends Sunday, Nov. 5 at 2:00 a.m. local time. Clocks go back one hour.

Today’s Highlight in History On Nov. 4, 1942, during World War II, Axis forces retreated from El Alamein in North Africa in a major victory for British forces commanded by Lt. Gen. Bernard Montgomery.

On this date In 1922, the entrance to King Tutankhamen’s tomb was discovered in Egypt. In 1939, the United States modified its neutrality stance in World War II, allowing “cash and carry” purchases of arms by belligerents, a policy favoring Britain and France. In 1952, Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower was elected president, defeating Democrat Adlai Stevenson. The highly secretive National Security Agency came into existence. In 1956, Soviet troops moved in to crush the Hungarian Revolution. In 1979, the Iran hostage crisis began as militants stormed the United States Embassy in Tehran, seizing its occupants; for some of them, it was the start of 444 days of captivity. In 1980, Republican Ronald Reagan won the White House as he defeated President Jimmy Carter by a strong margin. In 1987, 6-year-old Elizabeth (Lisa) Steinberg was pronounced dead at a New York City hospital in a child-abuse case that sparked national outrage; her illegal adoptive father, Joel Steinberg, served nearly 17 years behind bars for manslaughter. In 1991, Ronald Reagan opened his presidential library in Simi Valley, California; attending were President George H.W. Bush and former Presidents Jimmy Carter, Gerald R. Ford and Richard Nixon — the first-ever gathering of five past and present U.S. chief executives.

Daily Corinthian • 3

Across the Region Prentiss County Booneville High School to get new principal BOONEVILLE — A new face will be at the helm of Booneville High School this January when students return from Christmas break. The Booneville School Board recently accepted the retirement plans of longtime BHS Principal Terry King and voted to appoint current Assistant Principal Bo Sandlin as his replacement. Superintendent Dr. Todd English said King will retire at the conclusion of the current semester and Sandlin will begin his new job with the start of the new semester in January. King will have served as principal of the high school for 10 and a half years when he steps down. “Mr. King has been invaluable in getting the high school and the district where it is today,” said English. “Booneville High School is a tremendous

asset to our community and he has worked tirelessly to get BHS where it is.” Sandlin has served as assistant principal for five and a half years. “He has complete support of the teachers and he’s shown he knows what it takes academically to ensure we are one of the top high schools in the state,” said English. The superintendent noted he and the district’s board believe strongly in promoting from within and in promoting leaders who are already established on their campuses. “Stability in leadership is one of the reasons that we’re able to do what we do,” he said.

McNairy County District attorneys honor Dunavant

McNAIRY COUNTY, Tenn. – The state’s 31 District Attorneys have recognized U.S. Attorney Mike Dunavant, formerly

the District Attorney General for the 25th District which includes McNairy County, with the McCutchen Award. The award was established in 2000 in memory of Tennessee District Attorneys General Conference Director Pat McCutchen. “Director McCutchen’s goal was for the Conference to be the voice of criminal justice,” said Jerry Estes, Executive Director of the Tennessee District Attorneys General Conference. “Like Pat, Mike has been a key player in the Conference’s work since being elected in 2006, serving in multiple leadership roles. His commitment to justice led to his being appointed a U.S. Attorney. He is more than deserving of this award.” This award is given annually to a prosecutor who shows an extraordinary embrace of McCutchen’s vision of the Conference as Tennessee’s definitive voice for criminal justice. “I am honored that my fellow

prosecutors would consider me to be in the same category as Pat McCutchen, an exemplary leader,” Dunavant said. “During my time as a District Attorney, I was proud to serve in multiple leadership roles with the Conference. The Conference is the voice of criminal justice, and that in many ways is thanks to Pat McCutchen’s work.” Dunavant has served in several Conference leadership positions, including President, Vice President and Secretary, and has chaired the Justice and Professionalism Committee since 2014, and previously served on the Legislative and Child Support committees. Dunavant was first elected as a District Attorney for the 25th Judicial District in 2006, and was re-elected in 2014. He was nominated in June 2017 by President Donald J. Trump to serve as the U.S. District Attorney for the Western District. The U.S. Senate confirmed his nomination in September.

City dedicates its own Vietnam Memorial Associated Press

TUPELO — A Mississippi community has dedicated its own smaller-scale replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial that’s in the nation’s capital. Veterans, local residents and elected officials held a ceremony Thursday at Veterans Park in Tupelo, the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal reported. The memorial is 60 percent the size of the one in Washington with

the same design — two black granite walls forming a wide angle. They are inscribed with the names of more than 58,000 Americans killed or missing in Vietnam. Jerry Smith of Saltillo was drafted into the Army and served in 1969 and 1970, spending most of that time in Vietnam. On Thursday, he searched the walls for the names of two soldiers from his hometown who were killed in the war — Charles El-

bert Finney and Larry Edward Hand “It’s long overdue,” Smith said of the memorial. The state of Mississippi paid $750,000 of the roughly $1 million cost, with the rest paid in about equal parts from private donors and the city of Tupelo. Tupelo Mayor Jason Shelton said the monument was born from the vision and initiative of private citizens, primarily volunteers from near-

by Itawamba County. One of the volunteers, Janie Alexander, is credited locally as a key figure behind the initial idea and the success of early fundraising. She said Thursday was one of the happiest days of her life, but she sought to deflect attention from herself. “It’s about the names, the stories,” Alexander said. Traveling walls have toured the United States. The one in Tupelo is per-

manent. John Rowan, president of the Vietnam Veterans of America, said the monument is “perfect” because it shows equality: Names of citizens alongside those of immigrants, names of privates alongside those of high rank, all branches of services together, with no distinction. “It personalized the war,” Rowan said. “It’s all of America on that wall. Everybody.”

State on track for record opioid deaths in 2017 Associated Press

JACKSON — Mississippi officials are anticipating a record number of opioid deaths statewide in 2017. The Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics has confirmed 195 deaths from opioid overdoses through the end of October. Based on an average of 19.5 deaths being reported each month, the total could top 234 fatal overdoses at the end of this year, said John Dowdy, the bureau’s director. A total of 211 opioid deaths were confirmed by

the state narcotics bureau last year, The ClarionLedger reported . Dowdy said he fears the 2017 opioid death toll could be far higher — potentially surpassing 300 fatal overdoses in Mississippi once backlogged paperwork comes in confirming more cases long after the year ends. “We have a lot of counties where the coroners are not reporting overdose deaths,” Dowdy said. “But in the counties where the coroners have consistently year after

year reported to us, we’ve seen substantial spikes.” For example, Hinds County reported six fatal opioid overdoses in 2016. There have been 25 confirmed so far this year. Harrison County had 13 deaths last year, and so far has 24 in 2017. Jackson and Jones counties both reported no opioid overdose deaths in 2016, but to date both have confirmed six this year. Rankin County Coroner David Ruth said he’s confirmed eight opioid deaths so far this year — but he’s

Legal Scene

still awaiting toxicology reports in 21 additional death cases. Last year, Ruth said, the county had 11 deaths. “We have got to get a sense of urgency about this epidemic,” Dowdy said. “...We have to make sure that people understand this is not a joking matter, it’s a life or death situation.” Prescription drug abuse in Mississippi has risen 400 percent in the past decade and many teens now say it is easier to acquire prescription drugs than it is to buy

beer, according to the Mississippi Department of Mental Health. Its statistics show 486 reported drug overdoses statewide in the past three years. And 394 of those overdoses were opioid related. An opioid task force appointed by Gov. Phil Bryant has made more than 40 recommendations for stemming opioid abuse in Mississippi ranging from recommending new limitations on painkiller prescriptions to imposing stiffer penalties for drug dealers.

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How do we know if we’re actually alive?

Opinion

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Saturday, November 4, 2017

Corinth, Miss.

BY DR. GLENN MOLLETTE Columnist

We applaud people who feel like doing something. In an age where so many people spend so much time sitting or who are doing nothing let’s celebrate the people who are doing something. Celebrate their living. I’ve always been blessed with energy. Energy is a good asset. For years I would occasionally go to the local Steak N’ Shake restaurant at about 2 and write until 5 in the morning. I was only one of two or three people in that place at that hour. They would pour coffee and pour coffee for me while I wrote myself into almost oblivion some nights. I wrote a lot of stuff that didn’t amount to a hill of beans as some of us country folks might say. However, I enjoyed it at the moment and a lot of books came out of those early morning sessions of writing. I’ve heard from people around the world that have read some of my books and they’ve told me about how much they enjoyed them. Thus, such compliments are my reward. When I first started playing basketball in school, I had to find a way to appease my old fashioned grandpa. He was unhappy I was playing basketball. “Basketball players,” he said, “played naked.” He thought I should try to play baseball. Baseball players wore clothes and were decent. I finally talked him into saying that he guessed it was OK to play basketball. I was so relieved. I went on to enjoy years of shooting hoops in school. I still enjoy shooting in my backyard today. I grew up in an era when old time ministers preached against going to movies, rock and roll, dancing and of course smoking and drinking and gambling. I never wanted to smoke, drink or gamble but I loved movies, music and dancing. There is a point to this column and the point is do not let other people stop you from activity. Be active in life. Be out and about. Be doing something. People are critical of any and everything other people do. Whatever you do in life people will find fault with what you are doing. As long as it’s legal and right then don’t let people stop you from living your life. Be true to yourself. You will lose acquaintances. You might even lose a semi close friend or two. Let them go. Move on because the new friends you will make will be worth it all. Remember the only way you will never receive much criticism in life is to do nothing. And then, you will have people in your family who will say, “Well, he never did anything with his or her life.” So, it’s a double edged sword in many ways. The person carrying the ball is the one they always try to tackle. So, my friend, pick up the ball in your life and if it’s okay with God and it’s good with you then why would you care if anybody else is against you? By the way, don’t ask the people at your church because they’ll want to vote on it or something crazy like that. Keep it between you and God. The two of you can figure it out. Oh yea, I remember the line I used to get about offending people. They always got us in church about being a stumbling block. I agree there is no need to be in people’s faces trying to offend them. What are the point and the future of that? However, with whatever you do in life you will offend somebody. Let them be offended or let them get over it. Yes, I know what Jesus said about that and you need to research the context of what he said. Life is short dear friend. Applaud yourself and others if you have the emotional and physical wherewithal to jump up from your chair and go to work, sing, dance, mow the yard, chop down a tree, jog down the road, preach a 30 minute sermon, golf or fish all day, write a book, paint a picture, wash down the house, start a new venture, but rejoice for activity and feeling like you want to live. It’s a sign that you are really alive! Enjoy and live it! Glenn Mollette is a syndicated columnist and author of 12 books. He is read in all 50 states.

Prayer for today Lord God, I rejoice in the blessedness of peace. May I not try to force peace where cruelty has entered, but keep a watch for what may come into my life. I pray that if I may be in turbulence to-day, thou wilt quiet me with thy peace which knows no fear or wrong. Amen.

A verse to share May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. —Romans 15:13

A year removed from ‘death’ BY RAY MOSBY Columnist

“A bowl of oatmeal tried to stare me down—and won.” —John Prine ROLLING FORK — Just a few days over a year ago last week, a very good physician sat down on a stool in front of me in his office, looked me dead in the eyes and said one of those things that is guaranteed to command you entire attention: “Well, it’s what we thought. You have lung cancer.” For a very long time for a great many people, hearing those words was tantamount to hearing a judge pronounce a death sentence. I just didn’t have “the C word.” I didn’t have just “the Big C.” I had lung cancer, a malignant lesion in my left lung, and lung cancer is far too often a killer. Considering that this was being said to a man who had not been a patient in a hospital for any reason since 1978, it seemed pretty surreal. So after processing that in the millisecond it took to do so, I was just about to ask that good pulmonologist about things like odds and times and to make clear to him that as I had but recently watched my dad, my mom and my wife respectively die in hospital beds and hence, had no intention of doing so myself, when he raised his hand in the universal gesture we have all come to

interpret as “wait.” “That’s the bad news,” he said and then with a smile which radiated comfort, he said, “the good news is, yours hasn’t spread and it’s in almost the perfect place to be cut out.” “I have a friend who is the best surgeon in the state,” he said. “He stays busy, but I am going to give him a call.” When he returned a remarkably short time later, he handed me a card with a name and address on it. “Be at this address at this time next week,” he said. And then he said, “you are going to be all right — and quit worrying about all the dying crap because you are not going to.” And so it was that about 10 days later I found myself in the ridiculously wee hours of the morning lying on a gurney in the pre-op ward in Jackson’s Baptist Hospital. When the surgeon who I had come to learn hails from just up the road a bit from here and was nothing less than a legend among what seemed like the entire staff of Baptist Hospital came in, patted me once on the shoulder and said, “No sweat. I’m fixing to save your life.” And while I am a literate man, one who has more than a passing familiarity with a great many words, the inane ones that came out of my mouth were, “OK, doc, have at it.”

I awakened (fully, that is) in a room in a bed with a drainage tube in my chest and what was to be a pretty quick realization that morphine and I do not get along — at all. But that was quickly rectified and I was once again glad to have been blessed with an extremely high threshold for pain that made Tylenol sufficient for the remainder of my stay. And I must say, should you ever find yourself in some medical emergency situation, make sure the first three words you say are “Baptist in Jackson.” This isn’t a commercial, but it is an endorsement. Other than the suggestion that they serve actual food instead of not always reasonable facsimiles, I have nothing but the highest praise and appreciation for the physicians, nurses, and auxiliary staffs at Baptist Hospital. I will go to my grave (not quite yet) remembering the tender voices and caring faces of those truly remarkable human beings — credits all to their professions. (And to Phil, who works the night shift in respiratory therapy with whom I shared many chats, you are damn right, my friend, it is mighty hard to beat Kristofferson.) The well-founded legend who is that surgeon removed the top half of my left lung and with it, every single bit of that cancerous mass. If

“I love you” are indeed the most beautiful words in the world, then “I got it all—no chemo, no radiation,” are not far behind. On a Wednesday morning in October of last year, I walked into a hospital with cancer and on the next Wednesday afternoon — exactly six weeks to the day from its diagnosis — I walked out of that hospital cancer free. And not just because it is me, I think there is something downright remarkable about that. Some men believe that they are fortunate in this life. Other men believe that they are blessed. I’m inclined to believe that a lot of those men may actually be both, and that I am certainly one of them. On my last night in the hospital, my respiratory therapy pal said, “My friend, I have seen a lot of folks come through here, and I’m telling you, the Man Upstairs has got some more for you to do.” And so, not without poetic bent, I could not help but smile when as they wheelchaired me out to the car the next day to go home, its radio was playing. The group was Emerson, Lake and Palmer. The song was “Oh, What a Lucky Man.” Ray Mosby is editor and publisher of the Deer Creek Pilot in Rolling Fork.

Advice for the Trump era: Keep calm and carry on

Keep calm and carry on. Those words, though not appearing as extensively on posters in wartime Britain as often supposed, are good advice for Americans now appalled by the presidency of Donald Trump. It is widely proclaimed that he is a president unlike any other, a threat to the institutions of republican government and democratic processes, an ignoramus whose impulsiveness may lead to nuclear war. It’s true that every president since 1945 has had access to the nuclear trigger. And Trump’s insult-laden style and constant tweeting are repugnant and, if sometimes momentarily effective in framing issues, often selfdefeating, in both the short run and the long run. But Trump’s actions, in contrast with many of his words, strike me as comparable to those of other presidents. One could argue that an office designed for someone as sternly self-disciplined as George Washington is overly powerful and prominent, but no one seriously contemplates restructuring the Constitution.

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On a multitude of issues, the Trump administration has operated like others Michael replacing a Barone p r e s i d e n t of the opColumnist posite party. His judicial nominations, starting with Justice Neil Gorsuch, have been just what one would expect from a Republican president. His appointees have reversed predecessors’ regulations -- e.g., Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on college kangaroo courts handling sexual assaults and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt on regulations aimed at shutting down coal mining. The Trump team is operating in a target-rich environment because of Barack Obama’s legally dubious “pen and phone” actions, such as the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program and spending unappropriated funds on Obamacare’s cost-saving reduction payments. The

Congressional Review Act, a Newt Gingrich innovation that lay dormant for 20 years, has enabled narrow Republican congressional majorities to overturn more regulations than Democrats ever anticipated. On legislation generally, Trump’s record more resembles the hapless first two years of Bill Clinton’s administration than it does the more productive initial bienniums of George W. Bush and Obama. Presidential ignorance and disengagement contributed to the Republican failure on health care and may do so on taxes. On two major issues -trade and immigration -- on which Trump has taken positions at odds with the past 10 presidents, course corrections were arguably overdue. Trump favors bilateral trade agreements with single partners over multilateral agreements, which have been foundering. On immigration, Trump wants to scale back on extended-family unification and expand places for highskilled immigrants. Many journalists and historians are expecting a re-

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enactment of the Watergate scandal, and many political strategists are hoping “the resistance” will be a replay of the anti-Vietnam War movement, even though neither of those episodes seems like good precedent for what is actually happening now. Ideological conservatives dismayed at Trump Republicans’ apostasies should remember that when William F. Buckley Jr. founded National Review in 1955, neither party embraced pure conservatism. A certain amount of tension between coherent conservatives and party politicians can be productive for both. It is to be expected that democratic republics will sometimes produce leaders as irritating to many citizens as fingernails scratching a blackboard. As in wartime Britain, the best response will usually be to keep calm and carry on. Michael Barone is a senior political analyst for the Washington Examiner, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and longtime co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.

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Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • 5

Military judge spares Bergdahl from prison BY JONATHAN DREW Associated Press

FORT BRAGG, N.C. — Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, who walked away from his post in Afghanistan and triggered a search that left some of his comrades severely wounded, was spared a prison sentence by a military judge Friday in what President Donald Trump blasted as a “complete and total disgrace.” The judge gave no explanation of how he arrived at his decision, but he reviewed evidence that included the five years Bergdahl was held captive by the Taliban and the wounds suffered by troops who searched for him, including one who now uses a wheelchair and cannot speak. The case was politically

divisive. President Barack Obama traded Taliban prisoners to bring Bergdahl back, drawing sharp Republican criticism. As a presidential candidate, Trump called for the soldier to face stiff punishment. He could have received up to life in prison. The judge also gave the 31-year-old a dishonorable discharge, reduced his rank from sergeant to private and ordered him to forfeit pay equal to $1,000 per month for 10 months. In court, Bergdahl appeared tense, grimaced and clenched his jaw. His attorneys put their arms around him and one patted him on the back. One defense attorney cried after the sentence was announced. Defense lawyer Eugene Fidell told reporters that

his client had “looked forward to today for a long time.” Bergdahl “is grateful to everyone who searched for him,” especially those who “heroically sustained injuries,” Fidell added. Trump’s statement came in a tweet about 90 minutes after the sentencing. “The decision on Sergeant Bergdahl is a complete and total disgrace to our Country and to our Military,” the president wrote. Bergdahl pleaded guilty last month to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy. He has said he left his post in 2009 with the intention of reaching other commanders and drawing attention to what he saw as problems with his unit. The judge, Army Col. Jeffery Nance,

had wide leeway in deciding the sentence because Bergdahl made no deal with prosecutors to limit his punishment. Prosecutors sought a serious penalty because of wounds suffered by service members who searched for Bergdahl after he disappeared. The defense tried to counter that evidence with testimony about Bergdahl’s suffering as a captive, his contributions to military intelligence and survival training, and his mental health problems. The argument for leniency also cited Trump’s harsh campaigntrail comments. The dishonorable discharge threatens to deprive Bergdahl of most or all his veterans’ benefits, but it also triggers an au-

tomatic appeal to a higher military court. Before that, a general who can reduce, but not increase, the sentence will also review it. Fidell told reporters that he looks forward to the appeals court review of Trump’s campaign statements, which included calling Bergdahl a “dirty, rotten traitor” and declaring that he should be shot or thrown out of an airplane without a parachute. As a candidate, Trump “made really extraordinary reprehensible comments targeted directly at our client,” Fidell told reporters Friday, calling the situation “one of the most preposterous states of affairs” in American legal history. He said the defense team sees “an extremely strong basis for

dismissal of the case.” Earlier in the week, Bergdahl described the brutal conditions of his captivity, including beatings with copper wire, unending bouts of gastrointestinal problems brought on by squalid conditions and maddening periods of isolation. After several escape attempts, he was placed in a cage for four years, and his muscles atrophied to the point he could barely stand or walk. A psychiatrist testified that his decision to leave his post was influenced by a schizophrenia-like condition called schizotypal personality disorder that made it hard to understand the consequences of his actions, as well as post-traumatic stress disorder brought on partly by a difficult childhood.

After truck attack, NYC circles U.S. bombers the wagons around marathon train over Korea BY KIM TONG-HYUNG

BY TOM HAYS AND COLLEEN LONG Associated Press

NEW YORK — In a city shaken by its deadliest terrorist attack since 9/11, police are promising an unprecedented security effort to try to secure a soft target spanning five boroughs and 26.2 miles: the New York City Marathon. City officials have sought to calm the nerves of more than 50,000 runners and huge crowds of onlookers expected to line the marathon route by insisting it will go off Sunday without a hitch only days after a truck attack killed eight people in lower Manhattan. The security detail will include hundreds of extra uniformed patrol and plainclothes officers, roving teams of counterterrorism commandos armed with heavy weapons, bomb-sniffing dogs and rooftop snipers poised to shoot if a threat emerges. The Police Depart-

ment is also turning to a tactic it has used to protect Trump Tower and the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade: 16-ton sanitation trucks filled with sand. The trucks, along with “blocker cars,” will be positioned at key intersections to try and prevent anyone from driving onto the course. Marathoners from around the world who have been streaming into the city in anticipation of the race expressed mixed feelings about running so soon after the carnage. “I can be really scared of it when I am at home and in front of the TV,” Annemerel de Jongh, 28, of The Hague, Netherlands, said Thursday as she picked up her race number at a Manhattan convention center. “But when I am running I feel maybe a little bit invincible, like nothing can happen to me. I can run away from it.” The New York Police Department said it has no information pointing

to any credible threat against the race. There is no question, though, that the course provides a security challenge, even for a police department with 35,000 officers. The race starts in a relatively secure location. Runners gather at Staten Island’s Fort Wadsworth, a former military installation now partially occupied by the U.S. Coast Guard. From there, though, the race heads through residential neighborhoods with hundreds of spots where an attacker could steer a vehicle onto the thickly packed course. Streets leading to the course are closed, but on many of them, in most years, the only barrier is a blue, wooden sawhorse and a thin plastic tape. The crowd is so big, runners start in waves, meaning some people will still be standing on the starting line while competitors in the wheelchair division are

crossing the finish. “It will be an extraordinary event, as it always is,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said this week at a news conference. “It will be well protected, as it always is.” Police said they’ll use more of the blocker vehicles for the marathon than they’ve ever used for any other event. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the state police, the National Guard, the state Office of Emergency Management and other agencies will provide added security. Cuomo, a Democrat, said the state police will double the number of troopers posted at high-profile locations, including Kennedy and LaGuardia airports. The attack Tuesday, on a bicycle path miles from the marathon route, was a grim reminder of how the Islamic State group is using its propaganda to encourage radicalized “lone wolves” to cause harm with unsophisticated means in easily accessible settings.

High-tax states worried about higher bills from new Republican tax plan BY DAVID PORTER AND GEOFF MULVIHILL Associated Press

SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. — Homeowners in high-tax states like New Jersey, where a modest house within commuting distance of New York City can easily carry property taxes of over $15,000 a year, are wondering whether the Republican bill being sold as a tax cut would actually result in higher bills for them. At issue are provisions that would end deductions for state and local sales and income taxes and would cap the property tax deduction at $10,000. James Ledoux, a computer programmer who lives in South Orange

with his veterinarian wife and their toddler and is expecting a second child, said he now has $46,000 in itemized deductions — around $19,500 from property taxes, $7,000 in state income taxes and the rest from mortgage interest. He estimates that losing those deductions would drive up his federal taxes by $4,000 a year — enough to call into question whether they can continue to afford the $630,000 house they bought three years ago. If not for the mortgage interest deduction, “I would have rented,” he said. “We did the math, said, ‘Hey, we could afford this. It’s a great school district, quiet

neighborhood. We’ll have a bedroom for each child and a bedroom for ourselves.’ It’s not an extravagant mansion.” The changes could hit hard in New Jersey and other hightax states such as New York, Massachusetts and California. Those are places dominated by Democrats. But the deduction changes are giving Republican members of Congress pause, too. Three of New Jersey’s five Republican congressmen said they would against it because of the change. Rep. Frank LoBiondo called the change “detrimental” to New Jersey residents and Rep. Leonard Lance said it was “unacceptable.” Another major feature

of the GOP plan being considered would nearly double the standard deduction to $24,000 for married couples. That would simplify taxes for many people, while also wiping out the benefits of itemizing deductions for some. In Roseville, Minnesota, Craig Stilen and his wife itemize their tax returns. But in part because of the way the GOP proposal gives with one hand and takes with the other, Stilen hasn’t been able to work out what the tax overhaul could mean for his family financially. “There are a lot of moving parts that me, as Joe Consumer, is trying to digest,” said Stilen, a 56-year-old who works in information technology.

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SEOUL, South Korea — Two U.S. supersonic bombers flew over the Korean Peninsula for bombing exercises that are also a show of force against North Korea ahead of President Donald Trump’s first official visit to Asia. A South Korean military official said Friday the B-1B bombers based in Guam were escorted by two South Korean F-16 fighter jets during the drills Thursday at a field near the South’s eastern coast. The drills simulated attacks on land targets, but didn’t involve live weapons, said the official, who did not want to be named, citing office rules. The B-1B was originally designed with nuclear capabilities, but switched to a conventional combat role in the mid-1990s. However, North Korea’s state media denounced the exercise as a “surprise nuclear strike drill” and said “gangster-like U.S. imperialists” were seeking to ignite a nuclear war. The North Korean nuclear threat will likely overshadow Trump’s trip to Asia, which starts Sunday in Japan and will include stops in South Korea, China,

Vietnam and the Philippines. In recent months, North Korea has tested intercontinental ballistic missiles that could reach the U.S. mainland with further development and has conducted its most powerful nuclear test. It also flew new midrange missiles over Japan and threatened to launch them toward Guam, a U.S. Pacific territory and military hub. The United States has responded by sending its strategic assets to the region more frequently for patrols or drills. That has angered North Korea, whose foreign minister said in September the North had “every right” to take countermeasures, including shooting down the U.S. warplanes, though many experts doubt it has the actual intent or ability to do so. The North’s official Korean Central News Agency said Friday that the “U.S. imperialist warmongers” should not act rashly. “The U.S. imperialists are making last-ditch efforts to check the dynamic advance of (North Korea) by deploying their nuclear strategic assets in succession, but its army and people are never frightened at such moves,” the report said.

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(N) (L) Josh Josh” Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU All in the All in the HoneyHoneyPIX11 News at Ten (N) HoneyHoneyFriends Friends Family Family mooners mooners mooners mooners } ››› Predator (87) A team is stalked by an (8:50) } ›› Predator 2 (90) Danny (:40) } ›› Alien vs. Predator (04) intergalactic trophy hunter. Glover, Gary Busey. Sanaa Lathan. Shameless Boxing: Deontay Wilder vs. Bermane Stiverne. Wilder takes on Stiverne in world heavyWhite Faweight title bout from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y. mous } ››› Get Out (17) Daniel Kaluuya, (:45) Boxing: Dmitry Bivol vs. Trent (:15) } ››› Get Out (17, Horror) Daniel Kaluuya, Broadhurst. Allison Williams. Allison Williams. (6:30) } ››› The Devil Wears Prada MTV Special Americn (6:00) College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Scoreboard College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) (5:00) } ››› Pretty } ››› The Blind Side (09) Sandra Bullock, Tim McGraw. 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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Fab Finds - Gifts for the Holidays; Community Cookbook - local readers’ recipes; Christmas in Cotton Plant; Travel - A Smoky Mountain Christmas; and Making Holiday Memories — these features and more in Crossroads Magazine — Holiday Edition coming out on Nov. 19

Food gives overweight teen an escape from depression

D E A R ABBY: My 15-yearold granddaughter is an emotional eater and has gained a Abigail lot of weight. When she Van Buren was quite young, her Dear Abby m o t h e r walked out, and that rejection, combined with her dad laying a lot of the household responsibility on her, makes her anxious and depressed. Her dad isn’t great with the whole “feelings” thing, and I live 800 miles away and can be supportive only from afar. I buy her most of her clothing, and she’s now so large she can’t fit into most of the trendy stores’ plus-sizes. Another family member recently called her fat — which, of course, made her feel awful and drove her to bury her feelings with more food. How can I help her take better care of herself without making her feel even worse? — CONCERNED NANNY FROM AFAR DEAR CONCERNED NANNY: The challenges your granddaughter is facing cannot be resolved from afar, regardless of how much you may wish to.

She needs a caring female influence in her life. A way to teach her healthy habits and help boost her selfesteem might be to invite her to live with you if you are able.

DEAR ABBY: We are members of a postcard club living in a nursing home in Ontario, Canada. We reach out to other nursing homes all over the world, sending them homemade postcards. We have made connections with neighboring communities and across the globe. We have also sent cards to the queen and our former prime minister — and received letters from both in return! We have a group here who gather together to read Dear Abby letters. We then give our opinion/response, and finish by reading your actual reply. We get a huge kick out of comparing our answers and advice to yours. It’s a beloved program here at our residence and has been for years. Just thought you’d like to know. -- HAPPY OLDIES IN CANADA DEAR HAPPY OLDIES: You thought correctly, and thank you for writing to let me know. The original artwork on your postcard is charming, and it’s easy to see why you have made friends worldwide. With every

effort you make, you are spreading good will. The concept of a Dear Abby discussion group has resonated for many years in places where people gather to make interesting conversation — from the water cooler to senior centers. I hope you will continue to enjoy participating for many years to come. DEAR ABBY: After 24 years of unhappy marriage, my wife informed me that she married me only out of guilt. I’m sorely tempted to bail. Your thoughts? — UNHAPPY IN THE SOUTH DEAR UNHAPPY: After nearly a quarter of a century of misery, my thought is that you both have probably suffered enough. DEAR READERS: It’s time for my annual reminder that daylight saving time ends at 2 a.m. Sunday, so don’t forget to turn your clocks back one hour at bedtime tonight. And while you’re at it, change the batteries in your smoke alarms/detectors. That’s what I’ll be doing. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). If you fear that you’re bothering someone by reaching out, it’s a sign that this person hasn’t made you feel comfortable and accepted enough to relax. Not your fault. Also, probably not a good match for you. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Thinking ahead will help you play your moments better. A lot of moments won’t even happen unless you make a plan. Just don’t get stuck there. You don’t live inside the plan; you live inside the moment. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’re a very responsible person. You’ll take charge of the situation as far as it should be taken charge of, all the while keeping in mind that some things are better left alone. CANCER (June 22-July 22). Inspiration will come in the form of people you may feel competitive with. It’s something you’ll likely keep hidden, and wisely so. Let it burble up in you to be examined and turned into improvement-fuel later.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ll look back and laugh at some of the rules you used to give yourself. It’s a good time to ask: “Am I doing the same thing now? Is there a rule I’m imposing on myself that is unnecessarily holding me back?” VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). That tough person you admire (but wouldn’t exactly want to be exactly) will help you find the courage to cut out a piece of nonsense and get down to what’s important to you. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Your fantasies are the celluloid that will project onto the real world like film to the silver screen. Shift what you think about toward a topic that makes you feel giddy, warm and inspired. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Friends are blessings. You wouldn’t take that for granted. And yet, you really should be able to feel free, even a little bit careless around them. Shake off the uptight energy and, hopefully, they will, too. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Even though you can tell when someone is lying, it’s not always wise to call the person out right away. Going along may give you a strategic advantage. You can watch and understand what’s really going on today. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You may feel a little bit irritable. Do you need more excitement or less excitement to get back into the zone? Let intuition speak to you and then take action (or inaction as the case may be). AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’re ready to admit, if only to yourself, what makes you feel secretly superior. Then you can release the belief and let compassion take its place. The more equal and connected you feel to others, the easier life will be. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Synchronicity happens so often in your life that it’s almost de rigueur by now. Nonetheless, it will be a delight to learn the one you think of is also thinking of you. You could even show up randomly at the same place.


Variety Comics

7 • Daily Corinthian

BEETLE BAILEY

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Crossword

RELEASE DATE– Saturday, November 4, 2017

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

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

ACROSS 1 It features remotely controlled utilities 10 Blue Moon of ’60s-’70s baseball 14 One who fits perfectly 15 Your, of yore 16 Consequences of compliments 17 Seashore birds 18 Oscar Wilde, e.g. 19 Bud 20 Biscotti bits 22 Lane of “Unfaithful” 24 Sunny 25 Without question 27 Expo display 29 Deli option 30 Action film scene 31 Works out 33 Hair piece 34 Lines at department stores 35 Blanc, e.g. 36 Online place for handmade goods 38 Vexes 39 Bustle 40 Koi __ 41 In a romantic fashion, lightingwise 42 “Grey’s Anatomy” star Ellen 44 Running legend 46 Rabbit danglers 48 2015 World Golf Award winner for Golf Course Designer of the Year 49 Ended a standing ovation 52 Light __ 53 Crowdfunding website 56 Focus quartet 57 Disorderly places 58 “Vous __ ici” 59 Bar item DOWN 1 Eurasian duck 2 Star followers 3 Loads

4 Gray 5 Sprint competitor 6 “Woo-hoo!” 7 Can’t stop eating, as snack food 8 Bumped into 9 Animated queen of Arendelle 10 Laura’s classic cry on “The Dick Van Dyke Show” 11 Restaurant freebie 12 Sale limit 13 Private dining rooms? 15 Playing speeds 21 Sweetener units 22 Like late twilight 23 Facebook co-founder Saverin 25 “I’ve had enough!” 26 Program that holds you up? 28 Palindromic supermodel 30 Easy-to-please companion 31 Grunt

32 Mosque leaders 34 Condescend 37 Sticks a fork in 38 Root widely used in traditional Chinese medicine 41 Remove from an exchange 43 Barre bends 45 United with

47 Formal addressees 49 Player who failed to lead the league in all three seasons in which he hit 60+ home runs 50 CIA operatives 51 Scrap 54 Casual denial 55 Holder of locks

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

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

11/04/17

11/04/17

Husband drops bombshell after 60 years WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

Dear Annie: If anyone could ever die of a broken heart, it would be me at 77. I have been a faithful, loyal wife for 60 years. My husband, whom I’ve always thought was wonderful, and I have always been godly people. We’ve gone to church and helped our neighbors often. He had chest pains earlier this year, and while in the hospital, he revealed that he’d been having sexual affairs our whole marriage. He said he’d cheated on me with 50 women. I went into shock and ended up in the hospital myself for a week. I am so devastated. I’m sick to my stomach. I am underweight, nervous and heartsick. He is in a nursing home and says he has done no wrong. He just says, “I am sorry you’re hurting.” I can’t undo any of this. I want to forget, but I don’t know how. What now? How do I go on? — No Name Dear No Name: Your husband’s revelation was so out of the blue and his callousness so out of character that I’m concerned about the possibility that he’s suffering from cognitive decline and not really aware of what he’s saying. Talk to his health care providers about having him evaluated for dementia. Whatever the case may be, you’re ex-

Dear Annie

periencing a tremendous deal of stress. I implore you to seek the help of a licensed therapist. Your physician can refer you to one if you’re not sure where to start. I know you’re hurting, and my heart goes out to you. Dear Annie: I was surprised and delighted to see that you printed my letter (I am “Exhausted by the Guilt Trips.”) Thank you so much for the validation and encouragement. There is so much more I could have written about the situation with my mother, but your straightforward response arrived at a much-needed time, and I truly appreciate it. I am quite sure I am not alone in saying that you are excellent at what you do, and you truly make a difference to many people, with many issues. — Trying to Be Less Exhausted Dear Trying to Be Less Exhausted: I’m so glad my words provided some reassurance. I heard from dozens of readers with whom your letter resonated. I’m printing a few responses to give you further confirmation that it’s not you; it’s

your mom. Dear Annie: I had to write you after reading the letter from “Exhausted by the Guilt Trips.” I struggled for years with my mother’s doing exactly the same thing. I finally said to her that I would never be able to please her and that I would stop trying — and I did stop! What a load off my shoulders, and though she remained demanding and complaining, I ignored it and left her to her own devices. I felt relieved. Her several elderly siblings said I did the right thing, as she could never be satisfied. — Been There, Done That Dear Been There, Done That: Good for you. You might enjoy the following reader’s book recommendation. Dear Annie: I would highly recommend that you tell “Exhausted by the Guilt Trips” to read the book “Stop Walking on Eggshells,” by Paul Mason. I was in a very similar situation with my husband, and the book changed my life. After I read the book, I found a support group for me, and I learned how to deal with a family member who has a mental illness. Setting boundaries is the key to living a healthy life. — L.N. Dear L.N.: I couldn’t agree more. Thank you for the book recommendation.


8 • Daily Corinthian

Sports

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Coming up Sunday Coming up in the Sunday print edition of the Daily Corinthian sports pages we’ll have the complete game stories from the Ole Miss and Mississippi State football contests along with a complete SEC Summary. We’ll also have the complete local prep scoring summaries from Friday night’s games. Plus Plaza Lanes league results along with Conservation Corner where the subject this week will be traveling the Natchez Trace Parkway in the fall with its sweet gum and dogwood trees. Don’t miss these features and more in Sunday’s print edition of the Daily Corinthian sports pages.

Local Scores Regular Season Finales Smithville 27 Biggersville 6 Falkner 28 Thrasher 6 2A Playoffs Walnut @ West Tallahatchie/ postponed til Sunday at 7pm due to adverse weather 3A Playoffs Ruleville Central 27 Kossuth 17 Yazoo County 42 Booneville 7 4A Playoffs Corinth @ Clarksdale/ Late kickoff at 10:15 due to adverse weather

Prep Scores Prep Football Brookhaven 26, West Jones 0 Cleveland 55, Canton 14 D’Iberville 31, St. Martin 16 Falkner 28, Thrasher 6 Forest Hill 28, North Pike 20 French Camp 56, Leake County 44 Germantown 42, Ridgeland 10 Grenada 21, Saltillo 3 Gulfport 27, Biloxi 14 Hancock 18, Pascagoula 15 Hattiesburg 62, West Harrison 20 J.F. Kennedy 38, McAdams 12 Laurel 47, Natchez 14 Lumberton 52, Salem 0 Madison Central 38, Greenville 6 Neshoba Central 14, Callaway 8 Ocean Springs 28, Harrison Central 27 Okolona 41, Potts Camp 14 Pearl 28, Brandon 27, OT Picayune 54, Pearl River Central 0 Sacred Heart 42, Stringer 38 Smithville 27, Biggersville 6 South Jones 57, Wingfield 22 Starkville 21, Clinton 15 Stone 48, Long Beach 40 Tupelo 34, Oxford 8 Vicksburg 26, Holmes County Central 6 Warren Central 28, Provine 0 Washington School 14, Copiah Aca. 6 Wayne County 42, Gautier 21 West Lowndes 36, Sebastopol 18 West Point 63, Lewisburg 3

Photo by Kent Mohundro

Kossuth running back Adarius Moore weaves his way through the Ruleville Central defense Friday night on his way to 106 rushing yards. The visiting Tigers, the No. 3 seed from Division 4-3A, shocked Aggie-Nation with an improbable 27-17 win to move on in the MHSAA playoffs. Kossuth’s season comes to an end at 8-4. These KHS seniors are the winningest 4-year group of Aggies in the history of the program.

Aggies fall to Tigers; Lions lose at Smithville BY JOEL COUNCE AND KENT MOHUNDRO Daily Corinthian

Outside of Ruleville, Mississippi, it’s highly unlikely anyone expected the shocker that took place at Kossuth’s Larry B Mitchell Stadium Friday night. The Tigers used a variety of big plays and a pair of interceptions to stun the homestanding and favored Aggies 27-17 in a first-round playoff contest. The win propels Ruleville Central on to a second-round game with a 5-6 record while the loss ends Kossuth’s season earlier than expected. The Aggies finish the 2017 campaign 8-4 and runnersup in Division 1-3A. Huddled at midfield with his players following the defeat, many in tears, head coach Brian Kelly made it known he was proud of his team and the effort they have given at KHS. “I’m really proud of this team, especially you seniors

who have given us so much over the last four years,” Kelly said. “You are the winningest group of four-year seniors in the history of the school and that’s something you can be proud of and hang your hat on.” From the opening kickoff the Aggies could never find their groove on offense and, despite a safety and two touchdowns, uncharacteristically gave up three big plays that sealed their fate. Kossuth was also hounded by costly and untimely penalties that stalled drives and kept the momentum from swinging fully to their sideline. Three sacks of quarterback Matthew Bobo didn’t help matters much either. “We gave up some big plays but we also had our opportunities on offense in both halves and couldn’t take advantage,” Kell continued. “The turnover on our very first drive was big. This loss does hurt but this group of seniors has done a lot of good

things during their four years here. I’ll always be proud of them for that.” On the game’s initial drive the Aggies drove from their own 39 to the Tigers 20 when Bobo was hit hard and fumbled the ball away. A Ruleville Central defender scooped up the loose pigskin and raced 80 yards for an apparent touchdown. But the score was called back due to a holding call and the Tigers started the drive from their own 10. Two plays later Kossuth defensive end Mason Foster tackled 6’5” RCHS quarterback Joseph Perez in the end zone for a safety and a 2-0 lead at the 3:26 mark of the first quarter. Following a pair of punts the Tigers finally broke thru and scored on a 14-yard pass from Perez to wideout Markevean Graham just 4:55 before halftime. The kick failed and Ruleville Central claimed a 6-2 lead. But Kossuth would score again just before intermis-

sion when Kenner Mills scored from two yards out at the 1:39 mark. Andres Perez added the PAT and the Aggies were up 9-6 at the break. Ruleville Central regained a brief lead with 1:34 remaining in the third on a big play when QB Perez found WR Fabin Carter on a 60-yard strike. The two-point run by Randarious Maxon was good and the Tigers led 14-9. Kossuth responded and took the lead back when, with 8:30 left in the final quarter, Bobo ran in from two yards after Adarius Moore had rumbled 17 yards to set him up a play earlier. Bobo then hit Austin Higgs with the 2-point conversion pass to move the Aggies ahead 17-14. On the ensuing kickoff, the Tigers Charles Cox raced 65 yards to score and help Ruleville Central retake the lead at 21-17. After the Aggies’ next drive stalled they punted and the Tigers took advantage with a Please see ROUNDUP | 9

Class AAAA First Round East Central 63, Lanier 13 Florence 14, Pass Christian 7 Greene County 36, Quitman 10 Itawamba AHS 17, Kosciusko 14 Louisville 41, Shannon 6 Noxubee County 48, Amory 26 Poplarville 42, Northeast Lauderdale 27 Purvis 42, Mendenhall 41, OT South Pike 30, Moss Point 19 St. Stanislaus 35, McComb 7 West Lauderdale 54, Sumrall 19 Yazoo City 24, Ripley 23 Class AAA First Round Charleston 48, Belmont 0 Choctaw County 44, Independence 7 Forest 31, Wilkinson County 20 Hazlehurst 51, Morton 27 Jefferson Davis County 79, St. Andrew’s 38 Kemper County 36, Franklin Co. 9 Port Gibson 28, Southeast Lauderdale 14 Ruleville 27, Kossuth 17 Seminary 21, Velma Jackson 20 West Marion 22, Raleigh 20 Yazoo County 42, Booneville 7 Class AA First Round

Baldwyn 28, O’Bannon 0 Bay Springs 54, West Lincoln 20 Calhoun City 32, Lake 6 Collins 47, Pelahatchie 14 Enterprise Clarke 60, Amite County 27 Heidelberg 34, Loyd Star 14 North Forrest 50, Mize 30 Perry Central 49, St. Joseph-Madison 0 Philadelphia 45, Eupora 13 Pisgah 17, Richton 12 Scott Central 51, East Webster 0 Taylorsville 47, Bogue Chitto 7 Division II Class AA Round 1 Lausanne Collegiate, Tenn. 35, Northpoint Christian 0 MAIS Class AAAA-D1 Play-In Jackson Aca. 34, Oak Forest, La. 17 Madison-Ridgeland Aca. 28, Presbyterian Christian 23 MAIS Class AAAA-D2 Play-In Simpson Aca. 46, East Rankin Aca. 21 MAIS Class AAA Quarterfinal Adams Christian 44, Heritage Aca. 20 Indianola Aca. 28, Leake Aca. 0 Starkville Aca. 30, Central Hinds Aca. 0 MAIS Class AA Quarterfinal Centreville Aca. 52, Brookhaven Aca. 33 Prairie View, La. 44, Amite School 30 St. Joseph-Greenville 35, Manchester Aca. 0 MAIS Class A Quarterfinal West Memphis Christian, Ark. 49, Columbus Christian 0 MAIS 8-Man Quarterfinal Prentiss Christian 63, Calhoun Aca. 38 Postponements And Cancellations Aberdeen vs. North Panola, ppd. to Nov 4th. East Union vs. South Delta, ppd. to Nov 4th. Humphreys vs. North Pontotoc, ppd. to Nov 4th. Lafayette vs. Lake Cormorant, ccd. New Albany vs. Greenwood, ccd. New Hope vs. Pontotoc, ccd. Ray Brooks vs. Broad Street, ccd. Rosa Fort vs. Senatobia, ppd. to Nov 4th. Shaw vs. Coffeeville, ccd. South Pontotoc vs. Water Valley, ppd. to Nov 4th. Vardaman vs. Hamilton, ccd. Walnut vs. West Tallahatchie, ppd. Winona vs. Newton, ccd.

Photo by Tee Rage Photography

Corinth, on defense against Ripley, traveled to Clarksdale Friday night for a first round playoff game but severe weather forced a more than three hour delay. The Warriors and Wildcats didn’t kick off until 10:15 p.m., causing the game to run past our midnight deadline. We’ll have the story and scoring summary in Sunday’s print edition of the Daily Corinthian sports pages.

Kentucky’s challenge: stopping Rebels’ passing game The Associated Press

LEXINGTON, Ky. — As generous as Kentucky’s pass defense has been this season, an opportunity for redemption awaits against Mississippi’s successful air attack. Kentucky (6-2, 3-2) is yielding a Southeastern Conference-worst 266.6 yards passing per contest and facing its biggest challenge on Saturday against Mississippi (3-5, 1-4). The Rebels have the SEC’s top-rated passing attack at 338.1 yards per game, leaving the Wildcats no room for error. “We can’t afford to give that many opportunities against such an explosive offense like we’re going to

A.J. Brown face,” Kentucky coach Mark Stoops said. Kentucky’s pass rush recorded a season-high seven sacks in last week’s 29-26 win against Tennessee , but

the Wildcats still yielded 242 yards passing. Kentucky also remains vulnerable to big plays, allowing a 48-yard Hail Mary pass that was just a few yards short of the goal line as time expired. The Wildcats have had several close calls like that this season, a situation it aims to avoid this week by stiffening up throughout the defense. “At the end of the day it’s going to be the same deal,” Kentucky defensive coordinator Matt House said. “Guys leveraging the football, being violent in the run game and when the opportunity comes, being the guy that wants to make the play.” Ole Miss meanwhile looks

to bounce back from a 3837 loss to Arkansas in which its offense didn’t miss a beat even with a new quarterback. Junior quarterback Jordan Ta’amu made his first start in place of injured Shea Patterson and completed 20 of 30 attempts for 368 yards, the most for a Rebels QB in his first start. Ta’amu also rushed for two touchdowns, but threw an interception and fumbled an exchange that the Razorbacks returned for a TD. Rebels coach Matt Luke nonetheless praised Ta’amu’s performance and looks forward to seeing how his dualthreat QB builds on it. Please see CHALLENGE | 9


9 • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard Basketball

National Basketball Association

Photo by Michael H Miller

McKay, Tigers ready for season opener Northeast guard Conner McKay (above) and the defending MJCAA North Division champion Tigers are set for the 2017-18 season opener next Monday. The Lady Tigers will tip the night off at 5:30 against Shelton State (AL) while the Tigers will play Faith Prep Academy following the women’s contest.

ROUNDUP CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

four-yard pass from Perez to Xavier Murray. Any hopes Kossuth had of rallying for a late win were dashed when the Tigers intercepted Bobo and shut the door. “Zack (Mitchell) and Adarius (Moore) ran the ball well tonight and I thought our effort was good but we had too many penalties and key turnovers that we just were not able to overcome,� said Kelly. In other action from around the area last night: Yazoo County 42, Booneville 7 Mississippi-Alabama All Star selection Kenny Gainwell finished 6-for8 for 60 yards and two touchdowns passing and with 71 yards on four carries on the ground to lead the Yazoo County Panthers past the Booneville Blue Devils 42-7 in first round playoff action Friday. The Panthers jumped out early, scoring on their first three possessions and scored a fifth time on a punt return for a touchdown to take a 35-0 lead into halftime. “We just didn’t have the horses,� Booneville head coach Mike Mattox said. “I see why their quarterback is playing in the Mississippi-Alabama All-Star game. They have some good kids around him. The kids played hard, but with all our injuries, we just ran out of bullets.� The Blue Devils complete an injury-plagued season at 5-6. “This year didn’t turn how we wanted it to,� Mattox said. “But maybe we learned some lessons beyond the field.� The Panthers held the Booneville offense in check, allowing only 177 yards and one third quarter score, a five yard touchdown strike from John Daniel Deaton to Tristan Vandiver with 5:37 remaining in the period. The Blue Devils could manage only 3.5 yards per play. Booneville quarterback Dallas Gamble finished 3-for-7 for 53 yards and an interception. Gamble also finished with 56 yards on 19 carries. Terrance Bell had 25 yards on 10 carries to go with a 21-yard reception. Davian Price had 24

yards on three carries to go with a 14 yard reception. Amoni Grizzard finished with 14 yards on six carries. Falkner 28, Thrasher 6 The Falkner Eagles scored on the final play of the first half to take a 6-0 lead into the locker room en route to a 28-6 victory over the Thrasher Rebels on Friday. “We just didn’t cash in on our opportunities,� Thrasher head coach Perry Murphy said. “Some of it was us shooting ourselves in the foot and some of it was what they kept us from doing.� The Rebels looked promising on their first possession, driving inside the Falkner 10 before being turned away. “We had a couple of times where we put ourselves in position to score and didn’t,� Murphy said. “They scored at the end of the half and flipped the momentum on us.� Thrasher’s lone score came in the third quarter on a Jonathan Watkins 50-yard pick six. Shawn-Dalton Weatherbee, playing at less than 100 percent finished the game with 125 yards on 17 carries. Clay Lee finished with 47 yards on five carries and one reception for 17 yards. Austin Pace finished with 18 yards on four carries. Quarterback Easton Borden finished with 16 yards on five carries. Taytay Walker had three yards on two carries. Jayman Allen had a reception for 10 yards Thrasher finishes the season at 5-5 after backto-back losses to Okolona and Falkner. Smithville 27, Biggersville 6 The Smithville Seminoles scored 13 in the first quarter en route to a 27-6 win over the Biggersville Lions in the regular season finale on Friday. The Lions got on the board only once, a three yard run by Qua Davis with 4:47 left in the half. Davis finished with 61 yards on 12 carries to go with 68 yards 8-for-20 passing. Quon Mayes finished with 21 yards on 11 carries. Biggersville finishes the regular season at 8-3 and travels to Brooks for the first round of the playoffs on Friday. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.

EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Boston 6 2 .750 Toronto 4 3 .571 Philadelphia 4 4 .500 New York 3 4 .429 Brooklyn 3 5 .375 Southeast Division W L Pct Orlando 6 2 .750 Charlotte 5 3 .625 Washington 4 3 .571 Miami 3 4 .429 Atlanta 1 7 .125 Central Division W L Pct Indiana 5 3 .625 Detroit 5 3 .625 Milwaukee 4 4 .500 Cleveland 3 5 .375 Chicago 1 5 .167 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct Houston 6 3 .667 Memphis 5 3 .625 San Antonio 4 3 .571 New Orleans 3 5 .375 Dallas 1 8 .111 Northwest Division W L Pct Minnesota 5 3 .625 Utah 5 3 .625 Oklahoma City 4 3 .571 Portland 4 4 .500 Denver 4 4 .500 Pacific Division W L Pct L.A. Clippers 5 2 .714 Golden State 5 3 .625 Phoenix 4 4 .500 L.A. Lakers 3 4 .429 Sacramento 1 7 .125

GB — 1½ 2 2½ 3 GB — 1 1½ 2½ 5 GB — — 1 2 3 GB — ½ 1 2½ 5 GB — — ½ 1 1 GB — ½ 1½ 2 4½

Thursday’s Games Golden State 112, San Antonio 92 Portland 113, L.A. Lakers 110 Friday’s Games Chicago 105, Orlando 83 Cleveland 130, Washington 122 Detroit 105, Milwaukee 96 Philadelphia 121, Indiana 110 Houston 119, Atlanta 104 New York 120, Phoenix 107 Charlotte 101 San Antonio 108, New Orleans 99, Dallas 94 Denver 95, Miami 94 Toronto 109, Utah 100 Boston at Oklahoma City (n) Brooklyn at L.A. Lakers (n) Today’s Games Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 2:30 p.m. Sacramento at Detroit, 6 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Chicago, 7 p.m. Golden State at Denver, 8 p.m. Sunday’s Games Atlanta at Cleveland, 2 p.m. Miami at L.A. Clippers, 2:30 p.m. Boston at Orlando, 5 p.m. Washington at Toronto, 5 p.m. Phoenix at San Antonio, 6 p.m. Utah at Houston, 6 p.m. Indiana at New York, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Minnesota, 7 p.m. Oklahoma City at Portland, 8 p.m. Memphis at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Monday’s Games Boston at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. Brooklyn at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Miami at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.

Football

National Football League

AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA New England 6 2 0 .750 216 179 Buffalo 5 3 0 .625 174 149 Miami 4 3 0 .571 92 152 N.Y. Jets 4 5 0 .444 191 207 South W L T Pct PF PA Jacksonville 4 3 0 .571 183 110 Tennessee 4 3 0 .571 158 173 Houston 3 4 0 .429 215 188 Indianapolis 2 6 0 .250 142 246 North W L T Pct PF PA Pittsburgh 6 2 0 .750 167 131 Baltimore 4 4 0 .500 170 148 Cincinnati 3 4 0 .429 122 135 Cleveland 0 8 0 .000 119 202 West W L T Pct PF PA Kansas City 5 2 0 .714 207 161 Denver 3 3 0 .500 108 118 L.A. Chargers 3 5 0 .375 150 152 Oakland 3 5 0 .375 169 190

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF PA 7 1 0 .875 232 156 4 3 0 .571 198 161 3 4 0 .429 160 180 1 6 0 .143 112 156 South W L T Pct PF PA New Orleans 5 2 0 .714 191 145 Carolina 5 3 0 .625 148 142 Atlanta 4 3 0 .571 153 152 Tampa Bay 2 5 0 .286 148 168 North W L T Pct PF PA Minnesota 6 2 0 .750 179 135 Green Bay 4 3 0 .571 164 161 Detroit 3 4 0 .429 176 169 Chicago 3 5 0 .375 134 171 West W L T Pct PF PA Seattle 5 2 0 .714 175 132 L.A. Rams 5 2 0 .714 212 138 Arizona 3 4 0 .429 119 191 San Francisco 0 8 0 .000 133 219 Thursday’s Game N.Y. Jets 34, Buffalo 21 Sunday, Nov. 5 Tampa Bay at New Orleans, Noon Baltimore at Tennessee, Noon L.A. Rams at N.Y. Giants, Noon Cincinnati at Jacksonville, Noon Indianapolis at Houston, Noon Atlanta at Carolina, Noon Denver at Philadelphia, Noon Arizona at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m. Washington at Seattle, 3:05 p.m. Kansas City at Dallas, 3:25 p.m. Oakland at Miami, 7:30 p.m. Open: Chicago, Minnesota, New England, L.A. Chargers, Cleveland, Pittsburgh Monday, Nov. 6 Detroit at Green Bay, 7:30 p.m. Philadelphia Dallas Washington N.Y. Giants

College Top 25 Schedule

Friday No. 22 Memphis 41, Tulsa 14 Saturday No. 1 Alabama vs. No. 19 LSU, 7 p.m. No. 2 Georgia vs. South Carolina, 2:30 p.m. No. 3 Ohio State at Iowa, 2:30 p.m. No. 4 Wisconsin at Indiana, 11 a.m. No. 5 Notre Dame vs. Wake Forest, 2:30 p.m. No. 6 Clemson at No. 20 NC State, 2:30 p.m. No. 7 Penn State at No. 24 Michigan State, 11 a.m. No. 8 Oklahoma at No. 11 Oklahoma State, 3 p.m. No. 9 Miami vs. No. 13 Virginia Tech, 7 p.m. No. 10 TCU vs. Texas, 6:15 p.m. No. 12 Washington vs. Oregon, 9 p.m. No. 14 Iowa State at West Virginia, 2:30 p.m. No. 15 UCF at SMU, 6:15 p.m. No. 16 Auburn at Texas A&M, 11 a.m. No. 17 Southern Cal vs. No. 23 Arizona, 9:45 p.m. No. 18 Stanford at No. 25 Washington State, 2:30 p.m. No. 21 Mississippi State vs. UMass, 11 a.m.

The Top Twenty Five

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 28, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Prv 1. Alabama (59) 8-0 1523 1 2. Georgia (2) 8-0 1465 3 3. Ohio St. 7-1 1332 6 4. Wisconsin 8-0 1256 5 5. Notre Dame 7-1 1254 9 6. Clemson 7-1 1196 7 7. Penn St. 7-1 1189 2 8. Oklahoma 7-1 1147 10 9. Miami 7-0 1075 8 10. TCU 7-1 942 4 11. Oklahoma St. 7-1 936 11 12. Washington 7-1 874 12 13. Virginia Tech 7-1 837 13 14. Iowa St. 6-2 670 25 15. UCF 7-0 654 18 16. Auburn 6-2 576 19 17. Southern Cal 7-2 562 21 18. Stanford 6-2 434 20 19. LSU 6-2 338 23 20. NC State 6-2 333 14 21. Mississippi St. 6-2 279 — 22. Memphis 7-1 270 24 23. Arizona 6-2 204 — 24. Michigan St. 6-2 136 16 25. Washington St. 7-2 122 15 Others receiving votes: South Florida 98, Michigan 73, Toledo 19, West Virginia 13, South Carolina 11, San Diego St. 3, Army 2, Boise St. 2.

CHALLENGE CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

“I’m really happy to see him step into that role,� Luke said. “I think he adds a dimension with the ability to pull the ball and run, not to set up a pass down the field, but to hurt you with his legs. “There were some negatives at the end of the game, but we choose to build on the positives.� Some other things to watch as Kentucky hosts Ole Miss: Multiple choices: Sophomore A.J. Brown’s 765 yards and six TDs on 41 catches lead an Ole Miss receiver corps that also features DaMarkus Lodge (511, 6 TDs), D.K. Metcalf (479, 4 TDs) and Van Jefferson (345). Each one is at least 6 feet 1, posing a tall challenge for Kentucky’s secondary as well. Stephen’s steel: Kentucky quarterback Stephen Johnson is expected to play despite injuring his

left (non-throwing) shoulder against Tennessee. The mobile senior was hurt in the third quarter but returned to score the game-winning TD, landing on that same shoulder after he dove into the end zone. Teammates have applauded his toughness and Stoops added, “It does say a lot about him and it does help us.� No mistakes: Both schools seek better ball protection after turnoverprone performances. The Wildcats won despite losing four fumbles, dropping their overall margin to plus-2. Ole Miss committed three turnovers and is minus-6, ranking next to last in the SEC. Back in form: Kentucky junior linebacker Jordan Jones has returned from a four-game absence with a shoulder injury to make his presence felt all over the field again.

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Television Today’s Lineup AUTO RACING 2 p.m. — (CNBC) NASCAR, Monster Energy Series, AAA Texas 500, practice, at Fort Worth, Texas 4 p.m. — (CNBC) NASCAR, Monster Energy Series, AAA Texas 500, final practice, at Fort Worth, Texas 5 p.m. — (CNBC) NASCAR, Xfinity Series, O’Reilly Auto Parts 300, qualifying, at Fort Worth, Texas 7:30 p.m. — (NBCSN) NASCAR, Xfinity Series, O’Reilly Auto Parts 300, at Fort Worth, Texas 10 p.m. — (FS2) FIA World Endurance, Six Hours of Shanghai (first 31/2 hours), at Shanghai 1:30 a.m. — (FS1) FIA World Endurance, Six Hours of Shanghai (continued, last 21/2 hours), at Shanghai BOXING 4:45 p.m. — (HBO) Dmitry Bivol vs. Trent Broadhurst, for Bivol’s WBA light heavyweight title, at Monte Carlo 8 p.m. — (SHO) Deontay Wilder vs. Bermane Stiverne, for Wilder’s WBC World heavyweight title; Sergey Lipinets vs. Akihiro Kondo, for the vacant IBF super lightweight title, at Brooklyn, N.Y. COLLEGE FOOTBALL 11 a.m. — (ABC) Wisconsin at Indiana 11 a.m. — (BTN) Illinois at Purdue 11 a.m. — (CBSSN) East Carolina at Houston 11 a.m. — (ESPN) Auburn at Texas A&M 11 a.m. — (ESPN2) Florida at Missouri 11 a.m. — (ESPNU) W. Kentucky at Vanderbilt 11 a.m. — (FOX) Penn St. at Michigan St. 11 a.m. — (FS1) Kansas St. at Texas Tech 11 a.m. — (FSN) Baylor at Kansas 11 a.m. — (SEC) UMass at Mississippi St. 2 p.m. — (FSN) Georgia Tech at Virginia 2:30 p.m. — (ABC) Clemson at NC State 2:30 p.m. — (BTN) Northwestern at Nebraska 2:30 p.m. — (CBS) South Carolina at Georgia 2:30 p.m. — (CBSSN) Army at Air Force 2:30 p.m. — (ESPN) Ohio St. at Iowa 2:30 p.m. — (ESPN2) Iowa St. at West Virginia 2:30 p.m. — (ESPNU) South Florida at UConn 2:30 p.m. — (FOX) Stanford at Washington St. 2:30 p.m. — (NBC) Wake Forest at Notre Dame 3 p.m. — (FS1) Oklahoma at Oklahoma St. 3 p.m. — (SEC) Mississippi at Kentucky 6 p.m. — (CBSSN) Colorado St. at Wyoming 6 p.m. — (ESPNU) Nevada at Boise St. 6:15 p.m. — (ESPN) Texas at TCU 6:15 p.m. — (ESPN2) UCF at SMU 6:30 p.m. — (FOX) Minnesota at Michigan 6:30 p.m. — (SEC) Southern Miss. at Tennessee 7 p.m. — (ABC) Virginia Tech at Miami 7 p.m. — (CBS) LSU at Alabama 9 p.m. — (FS1) Oregon at Washington 9:30 p.m. — (ESPNU) San Diego St. at San Jose St. 9:45 p.m. — (ESPN) Arizona at Southern Cal 9:45 p.m. — (ESPN2) BYU at Fresno St. GOLF 4 a.m. — (GOLF) European PGA Tour, Turkish Airlines Open, third round, at Antalya, Turkey 3:30 p.m. — (GOLF) PGA Tour, Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, third round, at Las Vegas 9:30 p.m. — (GOLF) LPGA Tour, TOTO Japan Classic, final round, at Ibaraki, Japan. 2:30 a.m. — (GOLF) European PGA Tour, Turkish Airlines Open, final round, at Antalya, Turkey HORSE RACING 12:30 p.m. — (NBCSN) Breeders’ Cup (Juvenile Fillies, Turf Sprint, Filly & Mare Sprint, Filly & Mare Turf, Juvenile, Mile, Sprint and Turf), at Del Mar, Calif. 7 p.m. — (NBC) Breeders’ Cup (Classic), at Del Mar, Calif. MIXED MARTIAL ARTS 7 p.m. — (FS1) UFC 217, prelims, at New York SOCCER 7:30 a.m. — (NBCSN) Premier League, Stoke City vs. Leicester City 9:20 a.m. — (FS2) Bundesliga, RB Leipzig vs. Hannover 10 a.m. — (NBCSN) Premier League, Newcastle United vs. Bournemouth 12:30 p.m. — (FS2) Bundesliga, Borussia Dortmund vs. Bayern Munich 12:30 p.m. — (NBC) Premier League, West Ham vs. Liverpool

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10 • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

APOSTOLIC Jesus Christ Church of the Second Chance, 1206 Wood St., Corinth. Bishop Willie Davis. S.S 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. worship 7 pm. “We care and are in the neighborhood to be a service.� Christ Temple Church, Hwy. 72 W. in Walnut, MS. Rev. J.C. Hall, ; Clay Hall, Asst. Pastor. Services Sun. 10am & 6pm; Wed. 7:30pm Community Tabernacle, 18 CR 647, Kossuth, MS. Pastor: Kelley Zellner (662) 284-4602 Services Sun. 10am & 5 pm, Thurs. 7:00 pm Grace Apostolic Church, CR 473 on left off Hwy 45 S. approx 2 1/2 mi. S. of Biggersville, Bro. Charles Cooper, Pastor; Sun. Service 10am, Sun. Evening 6 pm; Wed. night 7 pm; 462-5374. Holy Assembly Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ, 201 Martin Luther King Dr., Booneville, MS; Pastor: Bishop Jimmy Gunn, Sr.; 1st Sun.: SS 10am, Worship 11:45am; 2nd Sun: Pastoral Day 11:45am; 3rd Sun: Missionary Serv. 11:45am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm Souls’ Harbor Apostolic Church, 26701 Hwy 15 S. A., Walnut, MS; Pastor: Rev. Jesse Cutrer; Service Times Sun 10am and 5pm, Wed 7pm

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ASSEMBLY OF GOD Canaan Assembly of God, 2306 E. Chambers Dr. 728-3363, Pastor Ricky & Sarah Peebles, Deaf Ministry: Michael Woods 728-0396. S.S. 9:30 am; Children’s Church 10:30 am; Worship 10:30 am & 6 pm; Wed. 7 pm. Christian Assembly of God, Hwy 2. S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm. Wed. Bible Study & Youth 7pm First Assembly of God, Jason Pellizzer, pastor, 310 Second St., S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm BAPTIST Alcorn Baptist Church, CR 355 Kossuth, MS; Rev. Larry Gillard, Pastor, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6pm. Antioch Baptist Church, Galda Stricklen, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm. Antioch Baptist Church No. 2, County Rd. 518. Bro. David George, pastor. S.S. 9:45am,Worship 11:00am, D.T. 5:00pm-6:00pm, Wed. Service 6:30pm, Wed. Prayer Mtg.7:00pm, Sun Night Service DT 5pm, Preaching 5:45pm Bethlehem Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am, DT 5:30pm, Worship 6:30pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm; WMU 1st Sun. monthly 4pm; Brotherhood 1st Sun. monthly 7am; Youth Night Every 4th Wed. Biggersville First Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm. Training Union 6pm, Wed. 7pm. Brush Creek Baptist Church, Off Hwy. 72 West. Bro. Cody Hill, pastor. S.S. 10am; Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Service 6:30pm. Butler’s Chapel Baptist Church, Bro. Wayne McKee, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:45am & 6pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Service 7pm. Calvary Baptist Church, 501 Norman Rd. Hwy. 72 West (1 block South of Buck’s 66 Station). Bro. Joe Marsh, pastor. Morning Worship 9:45am, S.S. 10:45am, Wed Bible Study/Children-Youth Missions 6:30pm, Stump the Preacher 7pm Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, Burnsville. Bro. John Cain, Pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Prayer Meeting 7pm; Ladies’ Auxiliary 2nd & 4th Tuesday 6pm. Center Hill Baptist Church, Keith Driskell, pastor. S.S. 10am. Worship 10:55am & 6:30pm Church Training 6pm Prayer Mtg 7pm. Central Grove Baptist Church, County Road 614, Kossuth, MS, 287-4085. S.S. 10:15 am; Worship Service 11:00 am; Wednesday Night 6:30 pm, Bible Class and Usher Board Meeting immediately following Central Missionary Baptist Church, Central School Rd, Bro. Frank Wilson, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pm Chewalla Baptist Church, Chewalla, TN. Richard Doyle, pastor, 239-9802 or 239-6222. S.S. 9 a.m., Worship 10 a.m. & 6:30 p.m., Discipleship 5:30 p.m.; Wed. Bible Study-Youth-Children 6:30 p.m. County Line Baptist Church, 8 CR 600, Walnut. Pastor, Dr. David Shepheard. Sunday School 10am, Morning Worship Service 11am Covenant Baptist Church, 6515 Hwy 57 E, Miche, TN; Pastor K. Brian Rainey Sun Worship 10am and 6pm, Wed. Night 7pm Crossroads Baptist Church, Salem Rd (CR 400), Warren Jones, pastor. S.S. 9:45am.; Worship 10:45 am & 6pm. Wed. Prayer Service 7pm Danville Baptist Church, Danville Rd., Pastor: Roger Wood. S.S.10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. Prayer 7pm. East Fifth Street Missionary Baptist Church, Rev. Richard Wade, pastor S.S. 9:30am. Worship 10:45am; Wed. bible study & prayer meeting 6pm. Choir Rehearsal Saturday 11am. East Corinth Baptist Church, 4303 Shiloh Road. 286-2094. Pastor Ralph Culp, S.S. 9:30am; Service 10:45am & 6:30pm. Wed.Service 6:30pm. Eastview Baptist Church, Ramer, TN. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.; all youth organizations Wed. 7pm. Farmington Baptist Church, 84 CR 106A, Corinth. SS 10am, Worship 10:45am, Wednesday Awana, Youth & classes for all ages 6:15-7:30pm Fellowship Baptist Church, 1308 High School Rd., Selmer, TN. Pastor, Bro. J.D. Matlock. S.S. 10am; Serv. 11am & 6pm.; Wed. 7pm. First Baptist Church, Corinth, 501 Main. Rev. Dennis Smith, Pastor. Sun. Worship Service 8:20am;Bible Study 9:30am; Worship 10:45am & 7pm Youth Choir Rehearsal 4:45pm DT 5:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 6:30pm; Adult choir rhrsl. 7:30pm. First Baptist Church, Burnsville. S.S. 10-10:50am. Worship 11am & 6pm; DT 5:30pm; Wed.Bible Study 7pm. First Baptist Church, Michie, Tn. Pastor: Ben Martin; S.S. 10am; Sun. Morn. Worship 11am; Sun. Evening Worship 6:00pm; Wed. Night Discipleship Training 7pm. First Baptist Church of Counce, Counce, TN. Bro. Jimmy McChristial. S.S. 9am; Worship 10:15am & 6pm; Prayer Meeting Wed. 6:30pm. Friendship Community Church, CR 614, Corinth; Don Roseberry, Pastor; Early Morn Service 9:30am; S.S. 10:00 am; Worship 11:00am; Wed. night 6:30pm. Grace Community Church, 1527 Highway 72. Pastor: Bro. Tim Alvis, S.S. 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., Wed. Bible Study, 6 p.m. Glendale Baptist Church, US 72 East, Glen. Pastor: Bro. Jon Haimes; Awana Program: Sunday Nights 5:30; S.S. 9:45am;Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Discipleship Training 5:30pm; Choir Practice: Sunday, Children & Youth 5pm, Adults: 7:30pm; Wed. Prayer Mtg. & Bible Study 7pm.; glendalebaptist.net Hinkle Baptist Church, Internim Pastor Paul Stacey. Min. of Music Beverly Castile, S.S. 9am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Holly Baptist Church, Holly Church Rd. Pastor, Bro. Thomas Magers. 8:45 am- Early Morning Worship, 10:00 am S.S., 11:00 am Late Worship, 6:00 pm Evening Worship, Wed. Service 6:30 pm Adult Prayer & Bible Study, Children & Youth Activities, www.hollybaptist.org Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church, Physical: 464 Hwy 356, Rienzi. Mailing: P.O. Box 129, Rienzi, 38865. Church: 662-350-0188, Life Center: 662-350-0064. Rev. Gabe Jolly III, Pastor; S.S. 9am; Children’s Church 10am; Worship 10am; Bible Study Wed 6:30pm; Communion 1st Sunday every three months; Meals on Wheels 1st Saturday of each month. Web: hopewellchurchrienzi.org Email: hopewellmbchurch@yahoo.com Facebook: Hopewell MB Church Jacinto Baptist Church, Ken White, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Wed. service 6:30pm. Kemps Chapel Baptist Church, Bro. David Heg, pastor. Rt. 1, Rienzi. S.S. 10am; Whp 11am & 6:15pm; Church Trng. 5:30 pm; Wed. Bible Study. 7 pm. Kendrick Baptist Church, Kossuth First Baptist Church, 893 Hwy 2; Bro. Keith Fields, pastor. Sundays: 8:45am Contemporary Worship, 10am Sunday School, 11am Traditional Worship, 5pm Discipleship Training, 6pm Evening Worship. Wednesdays: 6:30pm Adult and Youth Bible Study and Team Kids Lakeview Missionary Baptist Church, Charles Martin, pastor. 5402 Shiloh Rd. 287-2177 S.S. 10am; Worship 11am& 6pm; Wed. Adult Bible Study, Youth Min. 7pm. Liberty Hill Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 5:00pm; Wed. 7:00 pm. Life-Gate Free Will Baptist, 375 CR 218. 662-665-1987 Little Flock Primitive Baptist Church, 4 mi. so. of Burnsville off Hwy. 365. Turn west at sign. Pastor: Elder Johnathan Wise. Sun. Bible Study 9:45 am; Worship 10:30am. Little Zion Missionary Baptist Church, 3395 N Polk St, Pastor - Christopher Traylor; Sunday School - 9am; Worship 10:15 am - Communion - 1st Sunday at 11am; Bible Study - Wednesday Night at 6:00 pm Lone Oak Baptist Church, Bro. Jay Knight, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Prayer Service 5pm; Wed. 7pm. Love Joy Baptist Church, on the Glen-Jacinto Road, Hwy 367. Pastor, Bro. David Robbins, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6 pm. Macedonia Baptist Church, 715 Martin Luther King Dr.; Bro. Lawrence Morris. 9:30am; Worship 11am; Wed. Worship. 6pm Mason St. Luke Baptist Church, Pastor: Rev. Ricky Grigg; Mason St. Luke Rd. 287-1656. S.S. 9:45 am Worship 11am.; Wed. 6:30pm. McCalip Baptist Chapel, Rt.1 Pocahontas,TN Pastor, Rev. Johnny Sparks Services Sunday 11am & 6p.m. Michie Primitive Baptist Church, Michie Tenn. Pastor: Elder Ricky Taylor. Worship Service Sunday 10:30 am. Everyone is cordially invited. Mills Commuity Baptist Church, 397 CR 550 Rienzi, MS. Bro. Robby Johnson, pastor. S. S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am & Sun. Night 5pm; Wed. Bible Stdy. 6:30pm New Covenant Baptist Church, 1402 E. 4th St., Pastor David Harris, pastor, Sunday School 9:45am; Worship 11am, Bible Study Wed 6:30 pm. New Lebanon Free Will Baptist Church, 1195 Hwy. 364, Cairo Community; Jack Whitley, Jr, pastor; 462-8069 or 462-7591; 10am S.S. for all ages; Worship, 11am Children’s Church, 5pm; Choir Practice, 6pm; Evening Worship, Wed. 7 pm Midweek Bible Study & Prayer Meeting, 7pm;Young People Bible Classes. North Corinth Baptist Church, 3311 N. Polk Street.Bro.. Bill Wages, pastor. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm 662-287-1984 Oakland Baptist Church, 1101 S. Harper Rd., Dr. Randy Bostick, Pastor. SS all ages 9am; Worship Serv. 10:15am & 6:20pm; Sun. Orchestra Reh. 4pm; Student Choir & Handbells 5pm; Children’s Choir (age 4-Grade 6) 5:15pm; Wed. AWANA clubs (during school year) 6pm; Prayer & Praise 6:30pm; Student “XTREME Life� Worship Service 6:45pm; “Life Institute� Small Group Classes 7pm; Sanctuary choir reh. 8:05pm 662-287-6200 Olive Hill Baptist Church, Guys, TN; S.S. 10am; Worship 11 am & 6pm; Training 5:30; Wed. 7pm Pinecrest Baptist Church, 313 Pinecrest Rd., Corinth, Bro. Jeff Haney, pastor. S.S.9:30am; Worship 10:30am; Sun. Serv. 6:00pm; Wed. Worship Serv. 6:00pm Pleasant Grove Missionary Baptist Church,Inc., 1572 Wenasoga Rd, Corinth; Pastor Allen Watson. Sunday School - 9:45am; Worship Serv. - Sun 11am; Bible Class & Prayer Service-Wed 6pm; Every second Sunday 6PM

(Need a ride to Church - Don Wallace 286-6588) Pleasant Grove M.B. Church, 470 County Road 8021 Rienzi; Pastor: Rev. Leroy Harris; Church office: 662-462-7339; Worship: 11am except 2nd Sunday when worship is 9am; Sunday school: 9:45-10:45am; Sunday fellowship breakfast begins January 11, 2015 from 7-8:45am. 2015 summer schedule: No Sunday School; Worship begins at 9am on Sunday Ramer Baptist Church, 3899 Hwy 57 W, Ramer, TN; Pastor: Bro. Joe Loncar; Church office: 731-645-5681; SS 9:45am, Morn. Worship 11am; Discipleship Training 6pm, Evening Worship 7pm; Wed. Family Supper 5:30pm, Mid-Week Prayer Service 6:30pm Ridge Crest Baptist Church, 4176 CR 200, Corinth., Pastor: Harold King, Tel: 731-610-7303; SS: 10am; Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Serv. 6pm. Rienzi Baptist Church, 10 School St, Rienzi, MS; Pastor Titus Tyer S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 6:30pm

Saint Luke Missionary Baptist Church, 140 Rd 418., Pastor, John Pams, Jr. ; S.S. 9am; Worship 10:30am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pm St. Mark Baptist Church, 1105 White St. Kim Ratliff, Pastor, 662-287-6718, church phone 662-286-6260. S.S. 10am; Worship Service 11am; Wed. Prayer Service & Bible Study 6:30pm. Shady Grove Baptist Church, 19 CR 417, Bro. Jimmy Lancaster, Pastor, Bro. Tim Edwards, Youth Minister;. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Sun. Night Service 5pm; Wed. Prayer Service 7pm. Shiloh Baptist Church, U.S. 72 West. Rev. Phillip Caples, pastor S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Wed. 7pm. South Corinth Baptist Church, 300 Miller Rd., Charles Stephenson, Pastor SS 10am; Worship Service 11am & 6pm, Wed. Prayer & Bible Study 6 pm St. Rest M.B. Church, Guys TN Avence Pitman, Jr., pastor. Sun.Worship 11am; S.S. 9:45am; Wed. Bible study 6:00pm. Strickland Baptist Church, 554 CR 306 Corinth, MS., SS 10am, Worship Service 11am, Sunday Night 6pm, Wed Night 7pm. Synagogue M.B. Church, 182 Hwy. 45, Rieniz, 462-3867 Steven W. Roberson, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Morning Worship & Praise 11 am, Community Bible Study (Tues.) 11 am, Evening Bible Study (Wed.) 7 p.m. Tate Baptist Church, 1201 N. Harper Rd. 286-2935; Mickey Trammel, pastor Sun.: SS 8:30am, 9:30am; Morn. Worship, Preschool Church; Children’s Worship (grades 1-4) 10:45am; Worship 6pm; Wed., Fellowship Meal 4:45 pm, Nursery, Mission Friends, Tater Chips (grades 1-4), Big House (grades 5-8), Youth (grades 9-12), Adult Bible Study/ Prayer 6 PM; Adult Choir Rehearsal 7 PM Tishomingo Chapel Baptist Church, 136 CR 634; Pastor: Cory Flanagin. S.S. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Discipleship Training 5pm, Worship 6pm, 4th Sunday Worship at 5pm, Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm Trinity Baptist Church, Michie, Tenn., 901-239-2133, Pastor: Bro. George Kyle; S. S.10am; Sun. Worship 11am & 6:30pm; Prayer Service Wed. 6:30pm. Tuscumbia Baptist Church, S.S. 10am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Church Training 6pm; Prayer Service Wed. pm. Union Baptist Church, Rayborn Richardson, pastor. S.S. 10 am., Sunday service 11 a.m., Sunday evening service 6 p.m., Wed. evening worship 6 pm. Unity Baptist Church, 5 CR 408, Hwy. 45 South Biggersville. Excail Burleson, Pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm. Unity Baptist Church, 825 Unity Church Rd, Ramer, TN, Dr. Ronald Meeks, Pastor; Bro. Andrew Williams, Music Director; Jason Webb, Youth Minister; Janice Lawson, Pianist; Sunday: Men’s Prayer 9:45am; SS 10am, Morning Worship 11am, Evening Worship 6pm; Wed. AWANA-Prayer Meeting 6:30pm. West Corinth Baptist Church, 308 School St., Bro. Seth Kirkland, Pastor; Andy Reeves, Youth Pastor; Worship 9am & 6pm; S.S. 10am Wed Awana 6:30pm, Bible Study 6:45pm. Wheeler Grove Baptist Church, Kara Blackard, pastor. S.S. 9am. Worship Service10am & 6:30pm; Wed. prayer mtg. & classes 6:30pm.

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CATHOLIC CHURCH St. James Catholic Church, 3189 Harper Rd., 287-1051 - Office; 284-9300. Pastor: Fr. Mario Solorzano. Sun. Mass: 11 am in English and 1:30 pm in Spanish CHRISTIAN CHURCH Charity Christian Church, Jacinto. Minister, Bro. Travis Smith S.S. 10am;Worship 11am; Bible Study 5pm; Wed. 7pm. Guys Christian Church, Guys, Tenn. 38339. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am. Oak Hill Christian Church, Kendrick Rd. At Tn. Line, Frank Williams, Evangelist, Bible School 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm (Winter); 6pm (Summer) Salem Christian Church, 1030 CR 400, Dennis Smith, minister. SS 9 am, Morning Worship 10am, Evening Service 5pm (Standard time) 6pm (Daylight Saving time). Need a ride? - Bro. Smith at 662-396-4051 Waldron Street Christian Church, Chuck Hassell, Minister. S.S. 9:30am; Worship10:45am & 6pm; Youth Mtgs. 6 pm; Wed. 6pm. CHURCH OF CHRIST Acton Church of Christ, 3 miles north of Corinth city limits on Hwy. 22. Shawn Weaver, Minister; Michael Harvill, Youth Min. S.S. 10am; Worship 10:50am & 6 p.m; Wed. Bible Study 7:00pm. Berea Church of Christ, Guys, TN. Minister Will Luster. Sun. School 10am, Worship Service 11am. Central Church of Christ, 306 CR 318, Corinth, Don Bassett, Minister, Sun. Bible Study 9:30am; Sun. Worship 10:30am & 5p.m., Wed. Bible Study 6p.m. Clear Creek Church of Christ, Waukomis Lake Rd. Worship 9am & 5pm; Bible School 10am; Wed. 6:30pm. Danville Church of Christ, 287-0312, 481 CR 409. Tim Carothers, Minister. Corinth; Sunday Bible Study 10am; Worship 11am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. East Corinth Church of Christ, 1801 Cruise Ronald Choate, Minister. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Worship 10:30am & 5pm;Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Foote Street Church of Christ, Red Swindle, Minister., Mason Cothren, Youth Minister; S.S. 9am; Worship 10am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm.

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Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • 11

The Daily Corinthian Church Directory is made possible by these businesses who encourage all of us to attend worship services. Local church photos and information appear on these pages free of charge. Corrections, additions and photos can be emailed to design1@dailycorinthian.com. We need a photo of your church! Send church photos to design1@dailycorinthian.com.

11am (nursery provided). Mons: Boy Scouts 5pm; Witness/Evangelism work 6pm; Tues: Cub Scouts 5:30pm; Weds: Gather & Worship 5:30pm City Road Temple (C.M.E.) Church, Martin Luther King Dr., Rev. Jeffrey Freeman, S.S. 9 am; Worship 10:00 am; Wed. Youth Meeting 5 pm.; Wed. Bible Study 6:30 pm First United Methodist Church, Rev. Roger Shock, Pastor; Dave Cornelius, Music Dir.; Tim Coman, Youth Minster; S.S. 9am, Worship 10 am; Youth @ Loft 6pm; Adult Choir Practice 6pm Gaines Chapel United Methodist Church, 1802 Hwy 72 W, Rev. Trey Lambert, Pastor, S.S. 9:45 am. Worship 10:45am & 6:30pm; Children’s Activities 5pm, Youth 6:30pm & Wed. Night Children/Youth Activities and Adult Bible Study 6:00pm Hopewell United Methodist Church, 4572 CR 200; Jonathan E Cagle, Pastor; SS 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.; Sun night Bible Study 5 p.m. Indian Springs United Methodist Church, Rev. Richard C Wells, Jr. Pastor; Sun: SS 9am, Worship 10am; Youth 5pm; Worship 6:30 pm; Wed: Youth 5pm, Bible Study 6:30pm Kossuth United Methodist Church, Mark Nail, pastor, Sunday School 10:00 a.m., Worship Service 11am & 6pm. Mt. Moriah United Methodist Church, Meigg St., S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship 10:30 a.m. Wed. night bible study 6 p.m. Children & Youth for Christ Sat. 9:30 a.m. Sapada Thomas Pastor. Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church, W.C. Alexander, pastor. S.S. 10:30am Worship Service 11am; Wed night prayer service 6pm; Wed night Christ’s Kids (age 3-12) 6pm. Oak Grove C.M.E. Church, Alcorn County Road 514, West of Biggersville, MS, Rev. Ida Price, Pastor Sunday School 9:30am, Worship services 10:45am, Bible Study Wed. Night 7pm Pickwick United Methodist Church, 10575 Hwy 57 So., Pickwick Dam, TN 731-689-5358, Worship Services: Sun 8 a.m. & 11 a.m., SS 10 a.m. Pleasant Hill United Methodist Church, Mark Nail, pastor, Sun Services, Worship 9:15am, Sunday School 10:30am, Evening 5pm. Fraley’s Chapel Church of Christ, Minister, James Pasley. Bible Study Saulter’s Chapel CME Church, Acton, TN; Rev.James Agnew, pastor. S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 5pm. Wed. Bible Study7pm. 10 a.m. Service 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Jacinto Church of Christ, 1290 Hwy 356, Rienzi, Jerry Childs, Minister, Shady Grove United Methodist Church, Rod Taylor, pastor, S.S. S.S. 10am; Worship 11am; Wed. Bible Study 6:30pm. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m., Sunday night 6:30, Wed night 6:30 Auto Sales & Brokers Jerusalem Church of Christ, Farmington Rd. David Lynch, Minister. S.S. Stantonville United Methodist Church, 8351 Hwy 142, Stantonville, TN; 10am; Church 10:45am; Sun. Bible Study & Worship, 5pm. David Harstin, pastor, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Kossuth Church of Christ, Duane Estill, Minister, 287-8930. S.S. 10am; 1109 Highway 72 East Phone: 662-284-9860 New Hope Methodist Church, New Hope & Sticine Rd., Guys/Michie, TN; Corinth, MS 38834 Worship 11am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Cell: 662-816-3514 Pastor David Harstin; Services: Sun. Worship 10 am, S.S. 11 am, Wed. Globalautosales@comcast.net Meeks St. Church of Christ, 1201 Meeks St; Brian Meade, minister, Fax: 662-284-9858 Bible Study 6:30 pm. 287-2187 or 286-9660; S.S. 9am; Wed. 7pm. Meigg Street Church of Christ, 914 Meigg St. Will Luster, Jr., MORMON Minister. S.S. 9:30 am; Worship Service 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Corinth Ward. Hwy. 2 New Hope Church of Christ, Glen, MS, Minister, Roy Cox .S.S. 9:30am; Old Worsham Bros. Building Sun, 9:00 a.m. til noon, Wed. 6:30 pm. Worship Service 10:30am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 204 George E. Allen North Rienzi Church of Christ, Located in Rienzi by Shell Station on 356 Dr. Booneville, MS. Services: Booneville Ward 9-12 am Wed 6:30 pm Minister, Wade Davis, Sun. 10am, & 6pm., Wed. 7:00pm NON-DENOMINATIONAL Northside Church of Christ, Harper Rd., Lennis Nowell, Minister. S.S. Agape World Overcoming Christian Center, 1311 Lyons St. Pastor Doris 9:45am; Worship 10:35am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm. Day. S.S. 9:45 a.m. Corporate Worship 11:30 a.m., Tues. Night Prayer/Bible Pleasant Grove Church of Christ, 123 CR 304, Doskie, MS, Craig Study 7pm Chandler, Minister-287-1001; S.S. 9:45am; Worship 10:45am. Brand New Life Church, 2079 Hwy 72 E, Corinth MS 38834 (in the old South Parkway Church of Christ, 501 S. Parkway St., Bro. Andrew Marty’s Steak house) Pastors John & Sally Wilbanks; Sunday Service 10:30am. Blackwell,Minister, S.S. 9:30am; Worship 10:30am & 6pm; Wed. 7pm. Ekklesia Ministries, 2066 Tate St, Corinth. Dr. Kobee Fitzgerald, pastor. Strickland Church of Christ, Central Sch. Rd. at Hwy. 72 E., Brad Sunday school 10 a.m. Sunday services 11 a.m. Tuesday bible study 7 p.m. Dillingham, Minister, S.S. 10am;Worship 10:45am & 5pm; Wed. 7pm. Bethel Church, CR 654-A, Walnut (72W to Durhams Gro, left at store, Theo Church of Christ, Ron Adams, minister. Hwy. 72 W. Bible follow signs), Sun. Morn 10am; Sun. Worship 5pm; Thurs. Service 6pm. Study 9am; Worship 10am & 5pm; Wed. Bible Study pm. Brush Creek House of Prayer, 478 CR 600 (just out of Kossuth) Walnut, Wenasoga Church of Christ, Worship Service 9am & MS. Pastor Bro. Jeff and Sister Lisa Wilbanks. 5pm; Bible Class 10am; Wed. 7pm. Burnsville Tabernacle Church, Bro. Sheldon Lambert, pastor. Sunday West Corinth Church of Christ, Hwy 45 No. at Henson Rd. Blake Nicholas, Minister S.S. 9:45am; Worship service 10:40am & 5pm; Wed 7pm. School 10a.m., Worship Service 11 a.m., Eve. Worship 5p.m., Wed Service 7 p.m. Church of the Crossroads, Hwy 72 E., Nelson Hight, pastor, 286-6838, 1st CHURCH OF GOD Corinth Church of God, 1703 Levee. Pastors: Bro. Al and Nancy Crawford. Morn. Worship 8:30, 2nd Worship 10am, 3rd Worship 11:30am; SS 10 am & Life Groups 5pm; Wed. 6:30 pm Life Groups & Childrens Services 1505 South Fulton Drive in Corinth S.S. 10 a.m. Worship services 11 a.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Cicero AME Church, 420 Martin Luther King Dr., Corinth, MS 286-2310 S.S. Church of God of Prophecy, Bell School Rd. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 9:30 am; Worship 11am & 7pm; Wed. Bible Study 7pm 662-287-2156 services 11 a.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. Pastor James Gray. City of Refuge, 300 Emmons Rd. & Hwy 64, Selmer, TN. 731-645-7053 or Hilltop Church of God, 46 Hwy 356 - 603-4567, Pastor, David Basden, 731-610-1883. Pastor C. A. Jackson. Sun. Morn. 10am, Sun. Evening 6pm, 662-462-7603 or 662-808-2669. SS 10am, Sun. Worship 10:45am, Sun. Even. Wed. Bible Study 7pm. 5pm, Wed. 7pm. New Mission Church of God in Christ, 608 Wick St. Pastor Elder Yarbro. Christ Gospel Church, Junction 367 & 356, 1 1/2 miles east of Jacinto. James Dixon, pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun 6:30 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. Fri Night 7 p.m. S.S. 10 a.m. Sunday Worship 11 a.m., & 7 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7pm. Church On Fire Dream Center, Intersection of Holt Ave. & Hwy 365 New Life Church of God in Christ, 305 West View Dr., Pastor Elder North, Burnsville. Michael Roberts, pastor, Sun. Morn. Worship 10am, Willie Hoyle, 286-5301. Sun. Prayer 9:45 am, S.S. 10 am, Worship 662-415-4890(cell) 11:30 am, Thurs. Worship 7:30 pm, Wed. night worship services 7 pm, City of Refuge Church, 706 School Street, Corinth, MS YPWW 1st & 3rd Sunday 6 pm. Pastor, Harvern Davis; Sun Prayer Service 10 am; Worship 10:30 am St. James Church of God in Christ, 1101 Gloster St. S.S. 10 a.m. Wednesday Service, 7 pm Worship Services 11:30 a.m.; Youth/Adult Bible Study Thurs. 7pm Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 145 South. Services: Sun. 10am Pastor Elder Anthony Fox. Youth and Home Meetings, Wednesday Night. Billy Joe Young, pastor. St. James Church of God in Christ-Ripley, 719 Ashland Rd, Ripley, MS, Cross Way Church, 3192 Kendrick Rd., Corinth. Services: Sun. sch. 9:15 662-837-9509; Sun. Worship Morning Glory 8am; SS 9am; Worship 11am; a.m.; Sun. worship 10 a.m.; Wed. Bible study, 7 p.m.; Haskell Sparks, pastor. Thurday is Holy Ghost night 7pm; Superintendent Bernell Hoyle, Pastor. 662-423-8767 Church of God of Union Assembly, 347 Hwy 2, (4 miles from Hwy 45 FaithPointe Church, Lead Pastor, Mike Sweeney. 440 Hwy. 64 E. bypass going East to 350), North Gospel Preaching and singing. Services Adamsville, TN. Sun. 9 am SS,10:30 am Morn. Worship; Wed. Bible Study Wed. 6:30 pm , Sun.Evening Service 6:30 pm, Sun. morning 10:30 am. 7 p.m. (all ages) Website: faithpointechurch.com Everyone invited to come and worship with us. Pastor Brother David Full Gospel House of Prayer, 2 miles S. of Hightown. Ancel Hancock, Our Family Serving Your Family, Bledsoe; 286-2909 or 287-3769 Minister, Jane Dillingham, Assoc., Serv every Mon. night 7pm The Church of God , Hwy 57, West of four-way in Michie, TN. Foundation of Truth Christian Fellowship, 718 S. Tate St., Corinth, MS, Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow Paster Joe McLemore, 731-926-5674. Frederick C. Patterson Sr, pastor, S.S. 9:30 a.m. Worship Service 11 p.m. Wings of Mercy Church, 1703 Levee St. (Just off 45 S. at Harper Exit). Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Church: 287-4900; Pastor: James Tipton, Sunday Morn. 10:30am, Sunday Hungry Hearts Church, 717 Taylor Street, Corinth. Pastor: Edith Mosby. Evening 5:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm Sat. Service 10am Frazier, Jones & Wooley Kossuth Worship Center, Hwy. 2, Kossuth. Pastor Bro. Larry Murphy and 613 Bunch St. • Corinth, MS • 662-286-2900 EPISCOPAL Mike Green. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Wed. Services 6 p.m. 287-5686 St. Paul’s Episcopal, Hwy. 2 at N. Shiloh Rd. Rev. Ann B. Fraser, Priest; Life in the Word Fellowship Church, Pastor Merle Spearman. 706 School 9:30am Holy Eucharist followed by Welcome & Coffee; 10:45am Sunday St, Worship Sun. 10:30 am & 6:00 pm; Wed. 7:00 pm. Mount Carmel Community Church, 2 CR 712, Corinth. Pastor: Dr. School. Nursery opens at 9:15am. William Godwin, Jr. Sundays 9:45a empowerment class, Sundays 11a morning worship, Tuesdays 6:45p bible study; Thursdays 7p mid week FREE WILL BAPTIST service Calvary Free Will Baptist Mission, Old Jacinto Supply Building, Jacinto. Open 8am-7pm Mon-Sat Mt. Zion Church, Highway 365 N. of Burnsville. Pastor Billy Powers. S.S. 10 am Worship 11 am & 5 pm Wed. Service 7 pm. Northface Clothing Worship Service 2 pm; Wed. Serv 7 pm. Life Gate Free Will Baptist Church, 377 CR 218, Corinth, MS, Under Armour Clothing Mt. Carmel Community Church, 58 CR 713, Corinth. Mike Snyder, pastor. 462-8353, S.S. 10am, Worship Serv 10:45 am & 6 pm. Wed. Bible Study Sun worship 10am, Tues Bible Study 7:15pm, Tues Service 7:15pm 7pm. Mt. Carmel Non-Denominational Church, Wenasoga Rd. Macedonia Freewill Baptist Church, 9 miles S. of Corinth on Pastor Bro. Jason Abbatoy. Sunday Morning Service 11:00 am CR 400. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Pastor: Rev. Nathaniel Bullard; Sun River of Life Worship Center, 2401 Hwy 72 E on Skylark Drive Sun. 10:30 Worship 11 a.m& 6 pm; Wednesday 6 p.m. a.m. and 5:30 p.m.; Wed. 6 p.m.; Pastor Jacob Dawson Rutherford Chapel, CR 755, Theo Community, Rev. Casey Rutherford, HOLINESS Pastor, Sun. 10:30 am Worship & 6 pm; Thurs. 7 p.m. 662-396-1967 By Faith Holiness Church, 137 CR 430, Ritenzi, MS, 662-554-9897/462 Still Hope Ministries, Main St, Rienzi; Pastor: Bro. Chris Franks, 662-603 7287; Pastor: Eddie Huggins; Sun 10am& 6pm; Thurs. 7pm 3596. Services: Sun 2pm; Fri. 7pm. Theo Holiness Church, Hwy. 72 West, Corinth. Pastor: Rev. Ronald The Anchor Holds Church, Hwy 348 of Blue Springs, MS. 662-869-5314, Wilbanks, Phone:662-223-5330; Senior Pastor: Rev. Rufus Barnes; SS Pre-Planned Funerals | Burial Insurance Pastor Mike Sanders, Sun. School 9:30 a.m; Sun. Morning Worship 10:30 10am, Worship Service 11am, and 6:30 pm, Wed. Prayer Meeting 7 pm True Holiness Faith Church, 1223 Tate St., Corinth. 662-872-3220. Pastor: am; Sun. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m; Wed. Service 7:00 p.m; Nursery Provided For Ages 0-3; Children Church For Ages 4-10; Youth Program For Bro. Willie C. Saffore. Sun. School, 10a; S.S., 11:30a; Tues. Bible Study, 7p Ages 11-21; Anointed Choir and Worship Team Triumph Church, Corner of Dunlap & King St. S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship INDEPENDENT BAPTIST 2024 Hwy 72 East Annex Brigman Hill Baptist Church, Pastor Bob Harris, S.S. 10am; Sun Worship 11:30 a.m. Tuesday night worship 7:00 p.m. Corinth, MS 38834 Triumphs To The Church and Kingdom of God in Christ, Rev. Billy T., 11 am & 5 pm.; 7 mi. E. on Farmington Rd.; 256-503-7438 Kirk, pastor S.S. of Wisdom 10 a.m. Regular Services 11:30 a.m. Tuesday & {662) 286-9500 Grace Bible Baptist Church, Hwy. 145 No. Donald Sculley, pastor. Thursday 7:30p.m. 286-5760, S.S.10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m., Children’s Word Outreach Ministries, Hwy. 45 North, MS-TN State Line. Pastor Bible Club 7 p.m. Elworth Mabry. Sun. Bible Study 10am, Worship 11am, Wed. 6:30pm. Juliette Independent Missionary Baptist Church, Interim Pastor, Harold Talley, S.S.10 a.m. Preaching 11 a.m. Evening Service 5 p.m. PENTECOSTAL Maranatha Baptist Church, CR 106, Bro. Scotty Wood, Pastor. S.S.10 Calvary Apostolic Church, Larry W. McDonald, Pastor, 1622 Bunch St. a.m. Sun Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m. Services Sun 10am & 6pm, Tues 7:30 pm For info. 287-3591. Jones Chapel Free Will Baptist Church, S.S. 10 a.m. Sun. Worship The Central Church, Central School Road. Terry Harmon II, Pastor. Sunday Services 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. Night Bible Study 7 p.m. School 10 a.m., celebration service 11 a.m., Wednesday Bible Study and Kid Strickland Baptist Church, 514 Strickland Rd., Glen MS 38846, Pastor Central 7 p.m. Free meal, Wednesday, 6 p.m. Harold Burcham; Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday Services 11 a.m& 6 pm; Apostolic Life Tabernacle, Hwy. 45 S. Sunday Worship & S.S. 10 am & Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. 6 p.m. Thurs. Prayer Meeting 7:15pm Mike Brown, pastor. 287-4983. Biggersville Pentecostal Church, U.S. 45 N., Biggersville. Rev. T.G, Ramsy, INDEPENDENT FULL GOSPEL pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Youth Services, Sunday 5 p.m. Evangelistic Harvest Church, 349 Hwy 45 S., Guys, TN. Pastor Roger Reece; Service 6 p.m. Bible Study Wednesday 7 p.m. Share your photos 731-239-2621. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship & Children’s Church 11am; Burnsville United Pentecostal Church, Highway 72 West of Burnsville. L. with the Daily Evening Service 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m. Rich, pastor. S.S. 10 am; Worship Service 11 am and 6:30 pm; Youth Service 5:30 pm; Wed Prayer and Bible Study 7:15 pm. Corinthian. Family INDEPENDENT METHODIST Community Pentecostal Church, 401 CR 206, Walnut. (662) 224-4114. Get-to-togethers, Pets, Clausel Hill Independent Methodist Church, 8 miles S. of Burnsville, Pastor: John M. Fuller. Sun. 2 p.m., Wed. prayer 6:30 p.m., Wed. bible study just off 365 in Cairo Community. Pastor, Gary Redd. S.S. 10 a.m. Morning 7 p.m. Birthdays, Hunting, Worship 11:15 a.m. Evening Worship 5:00 p.m. Wed. Night Prayer Counce, Tenn. First Pentecostal Church, State Route 57, Rev. G.R. Big vegetables, Meeting 6:45 p.m. Miller, pastor. S.S. 10 a.m. Evening Worship 6 p.m. Wed 7 p.m. Chapel Hill Methodist Church, , 2 1/2 mi. W. of Burnsville. CR 944. Landscapes, or Eastview United Pentecostal Church, Rev. Wayne Isbell, pastor. Scotty McCay, pastor. S.S. 10 am, Sunday Worship, 11 am. & 5 pm. 662-665-2334 (pastor) S.S. 10 am; Worship Service Grandparentsʼ 11am & 6pm; Wed. Bible Study 7:15 p.m. Bragging rights. LUTHERAN Gospel Tabernacle, Glover Drive. Rev. Josh Hodum, pastor. S.S. 10 am Worship 11am & 6pm; Wed. Service 7 p.m. Prince of Peace Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. 4203 Shiloh Rd. 287 1037, Divine Worship 10:00 a.m. Holy Communion celebrated on the first, Greater Life United Pentecostal Church, 750 Hwy. 45 S. Rev. Tommy Callahan, Pastor; SS 10am, Sun. Morn. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. Worship third and fifth Sunday. Christian Ed. 9 a.m. Mike Dixon, Pastor. It itʼs imortant 6pm; Wed. Night 7:15pm to you, itʼs Life Tabernacle Apostolic Pentecostal, 286-5317, Mathis Subd. METHODIST Sunday Worship 10am&6:30pm;Wed. Bible Study 7 p.m. Bethel United Methodist, Jerry Kelly, pastor. Worship 10 am S.S. 11 am important to us! Box Chapel United Methodist Church, Anne Ferguson, Pastor 3310 CR Little Chapel Pentecostal Church, Canal St., Selmer, Tenn., Sun. Worship 100 (Intersection of Kendrick & Box Chapel Road) S.S. 10:00 a.m. Worship 10 am & 5 pm., Thurs. 7 p.m. Pastor: Lee Willis Pleasant Hill Pentecostal Church, C.D. Kirk, pastor, Hwy. 2, 11 am, Evening Worship 5 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study 6 p.m. Send photo and information to news@dailycorinthian.com Burnsville United Methodist Church, 118 Front St., Burnsville. 423-1758. S.S. 10am, Adult Worship 10am, Sun. Night Explosion 6pm & Please include your phone number for questions. Wed. night 7:30pm Wayne Napier, Pastor, S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 9 a.m. Rockhill Apostolic, 156 CR 157, 662-287-1089, Pastor Steve Danville CME Methodist Church, Rev. James Agnew, Pastor, Sun. S.S. Findley SS. 10am, Sun. Morn. 11am, Sun. Night 6pm, Wed night 7:15pm 10 am, Worship Service 11 am, Bible classes Wed. night 6:30 to 7:30. Christ United Methodist Church, 3161 Shiloh Rd. Pastor: Steven “Lud” Sanctuary of Hope 1108 Proper St,, Sun. Worship 10 a.m. & 6pm; Thursday worship 7:30 p.m. “Where there’s breath, there’s hope.” Ludlam; 286-3298. S.S. 9:45 am (all ages); Fellowship 10:45am; Worship

Box Chapel United Methodist Church GLOBAL Terry Gramling

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The Full Gospel Tabernacle of Jesus Christ, 37 CR 2350, Pastor Jesse Hisaw, 462-3541. Sun, 10am & 5pm; Wed. 7:30 pm. Tobes Chapel Pentecostal Church, 520 CR 400, Pastor: Rev. J.C. Killough, SS. 10am, Sun. Worship 11am, Sun. Even. 5:30am, Wed. Bible Study 7pm, 462-8183. Walnut United Pentecostal Church, Hwy. 72 W. S.S. 10 am; Worship 11 am & 6 pm; Wed. Bible Study 7 pm. Rev. James Sims. West Corinth U.P.C., 5th & Nelson St., Rev. Merl Dixon, Minister, S.S. 10 am. Worship 11 am.; Prayer meeting 5:30 pm., Evang. Serv. 6 pm., Wed. 7 pm. Soul’s Harbor Apostolic Church, Walnut, Worship Sun. Services 10 a.m. & 6, Wed. 7:30 p.m., Rev. Jesse Cuter, pastor, Prayer Request, call 223-4003. Zion Pentecostal Church In Christ., 145 N. on Little Zion Rd. Bld 31, Rev. Allen Milam, Pastor, S.S. 10am. Worship 11am.; Evang. Service 6pm, Wed. 7pm. PRESBYTERIAN Covenant Presbyterian Church, Tennessee St. at North Parkway; S.S.10 am; Worship 11 am. 594-5067 or 210-2991. First Presbyterian Church, EPC, 919 Shiloh Rd., Rev. Waring Porter, Min. Gregg Parker, Director of Youth & Fellowship. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:45; Fellowship 5 & 6 pm. Shiloh Cumberland Presbyterian Church, off U.S. 72 W. Rev. Brenda Laurence. S.S. 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Bible Study 6 p.m. The New Hope Presbyterian Church, Biggersville. Nicholas B. Phillips, pastor; Sunday School for all ages 9:45 am Morning Worship 10:45 am. Trinity Presbyterian Church (PCA), 4175 No Harper Rd; Sun. Morn. Worship 9:30 am; Sunday school, 11:00 am, Wed. Bible study, 5:30 p.m., tpccorinth.org. SATURDAY SABBATH Hungry Hearts, 717 Taylor St. Corinth. 662-603-2764 ; Sat. 10 am Service SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Seventh-day Adventist Church, 2150 Hwy.72 E., Sean Day, Minister. Sat. Services: Bible Study 10am-11:10, Worship 11:20am12:30pm; Prayer Meeting: Tuesday 7:00pm SOUTHERN BAPTIST Crossroads Church, 1020 CR 400 Salem Rd; Warren Jones, Pastor; Sun. -Bible Study 9 a.m., Worship/Preaching 10 a.m.

Victory Baptist Church, 9 CR 256., Alan Parker, Pastor. S.S. 9am; Worship 10am. Church Training 5:30pm; Worship 6:30pm; Wed. 6:30pm

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YOUR STOCKS

Chg FMajSilv g dd 6.46 FstSolar dd 59.87 FirstEngy 12 32.75 -.30 Fitbit n dd 6.02 -.07 Flex Ltd 18 18.27 -.01 Flowserve 23 39.25 -.95 FordM 11 12.36 +.13 FrptMcM dd 14.15 +1.11 Frontr rs ... 7.41 +1.29 GATX 12 58.71 -2.25 GGP Inc 11 19.10 +.27 Gap 13 26.38 -4.18 GenDynam 21 204.06 +4.67 GenElec 17 20.15 -1.60 GenMotors 6 42.34 -.46 GenMark dd 4.26 +.19 Gerdau ... 3.20 +.14 GileadSci 8 73.46 +.09 GlaxoSKln ... 36.15 -.28 Globalstar dd 1.69 -1.91 GlobusM rs ... 1.03 +.01 GluMobile dd 3.77 +17.38 Gogo dd 8.75 -.11 GoldFLtd ... 3.96 +.09 Goldcrp g 41 13.10 +.92 GoldStr g 9 .80 -.18 GoPro dd 9.13 -2.98 GranTrra g dd 2.20 +.12 GreenPlns 23 16.60 -.15 Groupon ... 5.46 -.06 GpTelevisa ... 20.73 +.34 GulfportE dd 13.33 +1.21 HCP Inc 15 27.14 +1.07 HMS Hldgs 41 15.57 +4.39 HP Inc 14 21.47 +.29 HainCels lf ... 34.65 -1.46 Hallibrtn 98 43.23 -.11 Hanesbds s 10 19.36 -.38 HeclaM 45 4.45 +20.23 HeliMAn h dd 9.65 +.37 HSchein s 23 77.64 -2.10 Hess dd 45.46 +.15 HP Ent n 19 13.50 -.21 HimaxTch cc 10.79 +.07 Hologic 14 39.56 -.05 HomeDp 24 164.39 -.11 HopFedBc 26 14.10 +.08 HorizPhm dd 14.17 +.04 Hormel s 19 31.32 -.07 Hortonwks dd 18.33 -.17 HostHotls 13 19.63 -.05 HuntBncsh 20 13.78 -.07 Huntsmn 14 31.72 +.12 I-J-K-L -.05 70 5.61 -.10 IAMGld g ... 9.56 -.16 ICICI Bk iShGold q 12.21 -.42 q 39.31 +.56 iShBrazil q 43.84 +.24 iShEMU iSh HK q 25.03 +.38 iShMexico q 50.13 q 15.92 -.13 iShSilver +.42 iShChinaLC q 46.28 q 46.34 -.01 iShEMkts q 121.13 -.84 iShiBoxIG q 125.64 +14.13 iSh20 yrT q 69.80 -.33 iS Eafe q 87.98 -2.07 iShiBxHYB q 148.61 +.69 iShR2K q 80.43 +.94 iShREst q 65.42 +.18 iShCorEafe dd 1.74 +.05 IderaPhm dd 5.63 -.31 ImunoGn 2.56 -.13 InfinityPh dd 19 86.25 -.03 IngerRd Insignia s dd 1.71 dd 69.45 -.52 Insulet 20 46.34 +.01 Intel +.01 IntcntlExc s 23 66.24 IBM 12 151.58 14 18.93 +.31 Interpublic ... 22.84 -.92 InvitHm n 11 10.45 -.24 IridiumCm +1.06 iShJapan rs q 59.19 q 37.91 +1.84 iSTaiwn rs q 55.91 -.18 iShCorEM ... 12.65 -.18 ItauUnibH cc 38.42 +.25 JD.com -.15 JPMorgCh 15 101.41 q 27.19 -1.09 JPMAlerian 15 28.02 +.64 Jabil 10 19.19 -3.67 JetBlue +1.62 JohnContl n 28 40.68 34 3.06 +.08 Jumei Intl 13 24.55 -.34 JnprNtwk +1.33 JunoThera dd 58.48 dd 20.28 -1.51 KBR Inc 9 20.02 +.26 KKR 15 61.96 +.97 Kellogg 23 16.54 -.99 Kemet dd 6.37 -.37 KeryxBio Keycorp 17 18.51 15 18.57 +.08 Kimco 33 17.74 +2.54 KindMorg 57 3.97 -.34 Kinross g 11 42.03 -.07 Kohls +.09 KraftHnz n 22 78.00 -.09 KratosDef dd 10.99 11 21.50 +.53 Kroger s 14 46.72 -.14 L Brands 14 10.40 +.05 LaredoPet 28 65.88 -.23 LVSands 1.94 +.48 LeadgBr g dd LendingClb dd 5.63 +1.23 14 54.62 +3.88 LennarA ... 29.60 -2.39 LibtyGlobC cc 43.82 +.09 LiveNatn 18 77.92 +1.49 Lowes -.10 Lumentm n dd 59.30 -.01 M-N-O-P -1.45 dd 6.98 +.17 MBIA 13 13.45 +.40 MGIC Inv -.06 MGM Rsts 47 31.26 17 54.39 +.17 Macerich 6 18.36 -.38 Macys ... 3.26 -.31 MannKd rs dd 15.58 +.06 MarathnO MarathPt s 15 62.20 +.11 31 211.81 +3.64 MartMM +.44 MarvellTch 58 18.51 Mattel 94 13.12 +.01 13 7.24 +8.71 McDrmInt 14 13.59 -.58 MedProp 17 78.44 -.43 Medtrnic +.57 MelcoResE 84 25.91 +.05 MercadoL 82 267.35 14 56.06 -.33 Merck 12 54.63 +.51 MetLife 13 47.62 -.79 MKors 9 43.71 -.87 MicronT Microsoft 29 84.14 +.29 -.17 MolinaHlth 58 79.18 28 40.97 -.88 Mondelez 14 50.02 +.39 MorgStan 30 22.38 -.04 Mosaic 7 35.72 +.12 Mylan NV MyriadG 66 28.45 NRG Egy 27 27.62 25 115.02 +.10 NXP Semi dd 5.90 +1.55 Nabors 7 12.22 +.75 Navient cc 200.01 +.32 Netflix s 55 3.29 -1.28 NwGold g NYMtgTr 12 6.28 ... 7.33 +2.35 NY REIT +.97 NewellRub 12 30.77 +.51 NewfldExp 15 30.66 27 36.04 +.65 NewmtM +.48 NextEraEn 23 152.65 -.02 NiSource s 23 27.33 24 55.71 +.28 NikeB s 6 4.09 +.37 NobleCorp +.28 NobleEngy cc 28.30 ... 4.97 +.05 NokiaCp ... 1.93 +.17 NDynMn g -.30 NorthropG 26 301.66 dd 1.14 +.45 Novavax ... 49.94 -.21 NovoNord Nvidia 58 208.69 dd 10.25 -1.65 OasisPet cc 68.26 +.73 OcciPet 7 6.19 +.22 Oclaro dd 3.46 -.35 OcwenFn OfficeDpt 7 3.23 10 28.39 +.12 OmegaHlt 39 21.65 +.18 OnSmcnd 1.32 -1.06 OncoSec rs dd +.29 OpkoHlth dd 6.57 -.14 Oracle 23 50.18 -8.45 PBF Engy 66 30.83 +.45 PG&E Cp 13 56.80 -.14 PPG s 20 116.53 +.07 PPL Corp 16 36.75

-.46 +2.00 +.15 +.05 +.27 +.11 -.06 -.08 -1.77 -.58 -.57 -.07 +.24 +.21 -.26 -3.00 -.04 -.35 +.20 +.07 +.12 -.08 -.20 -.09 +.04 -.03 -.45 -.04 -.18 +.19 -.38 +.21 +.56 -3.31 +.03 -1.09 +.54 -.72 -.13 +.17 +1.34 +1.05 -.13 -.16 +1.14 +1.68

+.33 -.19 +1.36 +.17 -.09 +.06 +.01 -.07 -.06 -.59 -.27 -.07 -.18 -.25 -.17 -.25 +.14 +.34 -.11 +.01 -.10 -.05 -.08 +.06 +.32 +.24 -1.35 +.35 +11.30 -.76 -2.43 -1.77 -.37 -.18 +.14 -.03 -.28 -.03 +.54 -.18 +.23 -.47 +.27 +.03 +.05 +.15 -1.43 +.59 +.29 -.42 +.56 +.62 +.07 -.39 -.06 -.21 -.03 -.99 +.32 -.38 -.29 +.98 +.11 +.01 -.48 -.89 +2.90 +1.27 +.45 -.11 -.82 +.55 -1.26 -.42 +.03 +.14 +.03 +2.85 +.23 +.08 +.13 +.14 +.57 +.37 +31.35 +.69 -.70 -.31 -.63 +.09 +10.18 -.19 -.40 -.08 +.38 -.11 +1.65 -2.44 +.28 -.14 +.69 -.07 +.36 -.24 +.76 +1.17 -.44 +2.79 +.39 +.59 -.02 +.55 -.06 +.01 +.30 +.01 +.30 +2.75 +.36 +.36 +.23 -.04 +.04 +.51 +.41 +.05 +.03 -.10 +.10 +.15 +.37 -.15

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U-V-W-X-Y-Z

US FdsHl n UndrArm s UnAr C wi UtdContl UPS B US Bancrp US NGas US OilFd USSteel UnitGrp Univar n UnivDisp VEON Vale SA Vale SA pf ValeantPh ValeroE VanEGold VnEkRus VnEkSemi VEckOilSvc VanE JrGld VangEmg VangEur VangFTSE Vereit VerizonCm ViacomB Viavi Vipshop Visa s VistraEn n VulcanM WPX Engy WalMart WalgBoots WashPrGp Wayfair WeathfIntl WellsFargo WDigital WstnUnion WhitingPet WmsCos Windstm rs Wingstop n XL Grp XcelEngy Xunlei Ltd Yamana g Yum China ZayoGrp ZimmerBio Zoetis Zynga

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

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

+.23 -.46 +6.97 -1.08 -.57 +.02 +.26 -3.62 -.48 +.10 +.62 +.18 -.05 +.14 -.12 -1.38 -.06 +.23 -.57 +.86 +1.70 -.02 -.07 -.16 +.47 -.27 -.00 -.21 +.61 +.09 +.29 +.33 -.24 +.01 -.59 -.07 -.04 +.73 -.81 +.15 +.16 -.05 +.24 -.11 +.82 -50.00 -.03 +.67 +.01 +.37 +.20 -.11 -.07 +.50 +.20 +1.16 +1.18 +.37 +.39 +.50 +.04 +.22 +.82 +.61 +1.11 -1.61 +.29 -7.57 +.04 -1.20 -.20 -.43 +.33 -.14 -.33 -.76 +6.83 +.17 +1.19 -.25 -.10 -.01 -1.42 +.11 -.24 -.02 +.26 -.87 -.84 -.72 -.09 +.17 +.05 -.17 -.25 +1.38 -1.41 -.23 +.09 +.19 -.55 +.10 -.72 +13.75 -.01 -.17 -.14 +.43 -.71 -.15 -.21 +1.12 +.25 -.30 -.26 -.11 -.04 -.04 -.13 -.02 +.04 +.38 +.11 +2.16 +.27 +.88 +.09 -.87 +4.66 +.20 -.13 -1.59 -.58 +.27 +.15 -.07 +4.22 +.56 +.33 -.13 -.02 +1.64 -1.22 -3.04 +1.38 +.04

Member SIPC

Under achieving

Sometimes it’s fun to root for the underdog, except when it’s Under Armour. The Baltimore-based sportswear maker is still struggling to show investors it can play at the same level as top dogs Nike and Adidas. Under Armour disappointed investors again this week when it reported slumping third-quarter sales. It also cut its profit outlook for the second time in three months, to about half what it promised investors in August. Its shares have fallen more than 60 percent this year, one of the worst showings by S&P 500 stocks. While the entire athletic

The Week Ahead

wear sector has struggled due to a crowded marketplace and changing consumer tastes, Under Armour’s slide has been markedly worse. Restructuring, problems with a new planning system and weak North American sales have weighed on its performance. Under Armour blames retail bankruptcies, store closures and changing fashions for its troubles. But some analysts say external factors don’t explain everything. “It demonstrates issues with the brand and its proposition,” GlobalData Retail managing director Neil Saunders wrote.

Slowing: This quarter saw a sharp sales drop. North America, the company’s most important market, fell more than 12 percent in the third quarter compared to 2016.

Under Armour quarterly revenue $1.5 billion

$60

1.2

50

0.9

40

0.6

30

0.3

20

0.0

’14

’15

’16

Under Armour (UAA) Friday’s close: $11.61

10 ’14

’17

Oct. 31: $33.88 ’15

’16

Sources: Company reports; FactSet

’17

Sarah Skidmore Sell; J.Paschke • AP

INDEXES

52-Week High Low 23,531.38 17,883.56 10,080.51 7,958.79 755.37 616.19 12,443.80 10,281.48 6,759.66 5,034.41 2,588.33 2,084.59 1,845.02 1,475.38 26,913.48 21,583.94 1,514.94 1,156.08

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

Last 23,539.19 9,755.00 753.43 12,373.08 6,764.44 2,587.84 1,835.98 26,875.00 1,494.91

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg +22.93 +.10 +19.11 +31.59 -23.33 -.24 +7.86 +20.80 +2.46 +.33 +14.22 +15.33 +.12 ... +11.90 +20.25 +49.50 +.74 +25.66 +34.05 +7.99 +.31 +15.59 +24.11 +4.64 +.25 +10.56 +24.15 +98.48 +.37 +14.72 +24.45 -1.63 -.11 +10.15 +28.49

23,560

Dow Jones industrials Close: 23,539.19 Change: 22.93 (0.1%)

23,400 23,240

24,000

10 DAYS

23,200 22,400 21,600 20,800 20,000

M

J

J

A

S

O

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

Div 1.80f 1.96 ... 3.80 1.22 2.36 1.46 1.80 1.32 2.38 .56 3.12 4.32 1.48 .63 4.80 2.40 .40f 1.88f .88 .60a .24 .60f .96 .56 2.98f 1.09 .32

PE 13 12 57 24 23 19 13 25 17 29 21 36 76 28 17 24 22 13 25 48 11 ... 22 17 10 21 20 15

YTD Last Chg %Chg Name Div 3.88 83.98 -.43 +20.7 KimbClk 33.30 +.13 -21.7 Kroger s .50 27.97 -4.18 +55.8 Lowes 1.64f 159.25 -.16 +10.7 McDnlds 4.04f 43.83 +.77 +15.7 OldNBcp .52 74.08 +.36 +17.7 Penney ... 74.80 +1.57 -4.3 PennyMac 1.88 87.59 +1.07 +18.1 PepsiCo 3.22 49.54 -.05 +5.4 PilgrimsP ... 40.56 -.11 +8.5 RegionsFn .36 32.55 ... +4.8 SbdCp 6.00 136.63 +.16 +47.3 SearsHldgs ... 114.99 -.34 -2.3 Sherwin 3.40 45.97 +.09 +10.9 SiriusXM .04f 35.68 +.53 +3.3 SouthnCo 2.32 156.07 +.09 -6.5 SPDR Fncl .46e 135.03 +.59 +31.0 Torchmark .60 51.53 -.06 -17.8 Total SA 2.71e 95.92 +.88 +28.0 84.42 +1.10 +25.3 US Bancrp 1.20f 2.04 12.36 -.06 +1.9 WalMart 4.28 -.07 -76.9 WellsFargo 1.56f .28 55.75 -.27 +15.4 Wendys Co .76 20.15 +.21 -36.3 WestlkChm 1.72f 29.45 -.49 -4.6 WestRck 1.24 144.97 -.44 +25.1 Weyerhsr 1.00 46.34 -.76 +27.8 Xerox rs ... 28.02 -.47 +18.4 YRC Wwde

Vol (00)

Qualcom GenElec Pandora Apple Inc TevaPhrm AMD Ambev AT&T Inc Intel BkofAm

784361 651757 600734 550253 517436 434411 427885 398938 382792 363731

Advanced Declined Unchanged

PCLN $1,894.49 Corporate earnings will $2,200 continue to roll in next week as $1,445.33 investors will see results from 1,800 travel website Priceline and department store chain Kohl’s. ’17 More than 300 of the compa- 1,400 nies on the Standard & Poor’s est. Operating $31.18 $34.26 500 index have disclosed their EPS results, and S&P Global Q3 ’16 Q3 ’17 Market Intelligence says S&P Price-earnings ratio: 40 500 earnings are expected to based on past 12-month results grow 6 percent in total as Dividend: none energy and technology compa-

Source: FactSet

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Last Chg Name

61.81 20.15 5.59 172.50 11.40 11.12 6.17 33.30 46.34 27.82

+6.97 +.21 -1.82 +4.39 +.17 +.27 -.11 +.13 -.76 -.05

Last

DianaCnt rs 11.21 Myomo n 4.14 NeosTher n 12.90 CerusCp 3.52 StneEn wt 6.05 BioRadA 261.42 AratanaTh 6.54 Insulet 69.45 Kala Ph n 16.32 ArbutusB g 6.50

NYSE DIARY

1,385 Total issues 1,485 New Highs 151 New Lows

Volume

YTD PE Last Chg %Chg 18 110.79 -.76 -2.9 11 21.50 +.32 -37.7 18 77.92 +1.27 +9.6 29 168.65 +.55 +38.6 18 18.20 -.15 +.3 6 2.37 -.18 -71.5 16 15.22 -.94 -7.0 22 110.22 +.17 +5.3 18 31.39 -.23 +65.3 17 15.81 +.10 15 4429.95 +81.62 ... 5.17 -.26 32 397.11 +5.00 35 5.30 -.04 19 52.44 -.81 ... 26.78 -.11 18 85.42 -.12 ... 56.33 -.24 16 54.65 -.23 20 89.68 +.88 14 56.35 -.13

37 25 ... 30 10 ...

MARKET SUMMARY

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name

Earn, baby, earn

ny profits grow.

Steven D Hefner, CFP® Financial Advisor

3,452,567,613

Chg

-.22 +.15 +.13 +.10 -.42 -.63

+11.1 +53.2 +18.1 +18.7 +26.3 -2.6

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

%Chg Name

Last

Chg

+8.71 +348.4 GenMark 4.26 -3.00 +1.29 +45.3 RubiconPrj 2.07 -1.38 +2.75 +27.1 KEYW Hld 5.17 -2.58 +.64 +22.2 CBL Asc 5.92 -2.07 +1.04 +20.8 PacBiosci 3.03 -1.00 +44.48 +20.5 Pandora 5.59 -1.82 +1.08 +19.8 FinclEngin 26.60 -8.45 +11.30 +19.4 ePlus s 74.25 -21.75 +2.64 +19.3 Stamps.cm171.25 -50.00 +1.05 +19.3 RemaxHld 52.65 -14.05

3,021 Advanced 137 Declined 83 Unchanged

A JOLT to the economy?

15.02 85.77 59.95 35.71 29.06 12.94

+10.1 +12.1 -44.3 +47.8 +19.1 +6.6 +15.2 +15.8 +10.5 +6.4 +29.7 +2.3

NASDAQ DIARY 1,409 Total issues 1,446 New Highs 246 New Lows

Volume

2,109,134,220

%Chg -41.3 -40.0 -33.3 -25.9 -24.8 -24.6 -24.1 -22.7 -22.6 -21.1

3,101 158 85

Saturday, November 4, 2017

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AB DiversMunicipal14.41 ... +3.3 AMG YacktmanI d 23.98 -0.06 +12.1 AQR MgdFtsStratI 9.08 ... -2.6 American Beacon LgCpValInstl 31.02 -0.01 +12.5 SmCpValInstl 29.39 -0.12 +6.4 American Century EqIncInv 9.60 +0.01 +10.3 GrInv 35.13 +0.22 +26.4 UltraInv 44.95 +0.34 +28.9 ValInv 9.09 +0.02 +4.1 American Funds AMCpA m 31.97 +0.14 +19.1 AmrcnBalA m 27.51 +0.07 +12.6 AmrcnHiIncA m10.46 -0.01 +6.6 AmrcnMutA m 41.16 +0.12 +13.4 BdfAmrcA m 12.96 ... +3.4 CptWldGrIncA m52.41 ... +21.4 CptlIncBldrA m62.86 ... +11.8 CptlWldBdA m 19.84 -0.04 +6.1 EuroPacGrA m57.22 -0.14 +29.5 FdmtlInvsA m 63.86 +0.27 +19.5 GlbBalA m 32.51 ... +11.8 GrfAmrcA m 51.72 +0.24 +23.0 IncAmrcA m 23.48 ... +10.7 IntlGrIncA m 34.16 -0.09 +22.7 IntrmBdfAmrA m13.41 ... +1.4 InvCAmrcA m 41.22 +0.09 +15.1 NewWldA m 66.47 -0.07 +29.2 NwPrspctvA m45.16 +0.15 +27.8 SmCpWldA m 56.61 +0.18 +23.1 TheNewEcoA m47.69 +0.20 +32.7 TxExBdA m 13.02 +0.02 +4.9 WAMtInvsA m 45.54 +0.13 +15.5 Angel Oak MltStratIncIns 11.32 ... +5.6 Artisan IntlInstl 33.14 ... +28.7 IntlInv 32.91 ... +28.5 IntlValueInstl 39.92 +0.02 +22.7 Baird AggrgateBdInstl10.91 ... +4.1 CorPlusBdInstl 11.27 +0.01 +4.5 ShrtTrmBdInstl 9.69 ... +1.7 BlackRock EngyResInvA m17.92 +0.18 -10.3 EqDivInstl 23.18 +0.04 +13.5 EqDivInvA m 23.11 +0.04 +13.2 GlbAllcIncInstl 20.47 +0.03 +12.1 GlbAllcIncInvA m20.34+0.03 +11.9 GlbAllcIncInvC m18.40+0.02 +11.2 HYBdInstl 7.86 +0.01 +7.9 HYBdK 7.86 ... +8.0 StrIncOpIns 9.97 ... +4.4 TtlRetInstl 11.75 ... +4.1 Causeway IntlValInstl d 17.14 ... +23.6 ClearBridge AggresivGrA m209.47 +1.79 +10.9 LgCpGrI 45.01 +0.36 +20.3 Cohen & Steers PrfrdScInc,IncI 14.29 +0.01 +11.2 Columbia ContrCoreIns 26.34 +0.12 +17.1 DFA EMktCorEqI 22.50 -0.06 +31.5 EMktSCInstl 23.55 -0.08 +28.4 EmMktsInstl 29.73 -0.07 +32.5 EmMktsValInstl 30.54 -0.05 +29.3 FvYrGlbFIIns 11.04 ... +2.4 GlbEqInstl 22.60 +0.02 +17.6 GlbRlEsttSec 10.96 -0.02 +5.4 IntlCorEqIns 14.29 -0.01 +24.8 IntlRlEsttScIns 5.07 ... +7.9 IntlSmCoInstl 21.57 +0.01 +26.1 IntlSmCpValIns 23.54 -0.04 +24.5 IntlValInstl 20.08 -0.07 +22.6 OneYearFIInstl 10.29 ... +0.9 RlEsttSecInstl 35.32 -0.08 +4.0 ShTrmExQtyI 10.85 ... +2.2 TAUSCorEq2Instl17.59+0.02 +13.8 TMdUSMktwdVl30.38 -0.02 +11.1 TMdUSTrgtedVal37.75 -0.10 +7.1 TwYrGlbFIIns 9.98 ... +1.0 USCorEq1Instl 22.07 +0.05 +15.9 USCorEqIIInstl 20.94 +0.03 +13.8 USLgCo 20.15 +0.07 +17.5 USLgCpValInstl39.02 +0.03 +12.8 USMicroCpInstl22.57 -0.14 +8.5 USSmCpInstl 36.19 -0.11 +7.7 USSmCpValInstl38.81 -0.19 +4.3 USTrgtedValIns25.02 -0.07 +5.0 Davis NYVentureA m34.78 +0.04 +18.3 Delaware Inv ValInstl 21.12 +0.06 +8.6 Dodge & Cox Bal 109.26 -0.03 +9.2 GlbStk 13.95 -0.06 +17.1 Inc 13.85 +0.01 +4.2 IntlStk 46.52 -0.30 +22.1 Stk 202.11 -0.04 +12.8 DoubleLine CorFII 11.00 ... +4.4 TtlRetBdI 10.69 +0.01 +3.8 TtlRetBdN b 10.68 ... +3.5 Eaton Vance AtlntCptSMIDCI33.41 +0.29 +20.0 FltngRtInstl 9.01 ... +3.9 GlbMcrAbRtI 9.13 ... +3.9 Edgewood GrInstl 29.59 +0.17 +33.2 FPA Crescent d 35.24 ... +9.3 NewInc d 9.98 ... +2.3 Federated InsHYBdIns d 10.08 -0.01 +7.1 StratValDivIns 6.37 ... +10.9 TtlRetBdInstl 10.94 +0.01 +4.2 Fidelity 500IdxIns 90.59 +0.29 +17.5 500IdxInsPrm 90.59 +0.29 +17.5 500IndexPrm 90.59 +0.29 +17.5 AllSectorEq 13.73 +0.05 +18.3 AsstMgr20% x 13.65 ... +6.2 AsstMgr50% 18.58 +0.02 +12.2 AsstMgr70% 22.78 +0.03 +16.2 BCGrowth 13.86 +0.11 +33.1 BCGrowth 87.81 +0.70 +33.1 BCGrowthK 87.93 +0.70 +33.2 Balanced 23.74 +0.07 +14.4 BalancedK 23.74 +0.07 +14.5 Cap&Inc d 10.33 ... +11.0 Contrafund 127.51 +0.46 +30.4 ContrafundK 127.51 +0.46 +30.4 CptlApprec 38.17 +0.12 +20.5 DivGro 34.53 +0.01 +13.8 DiversIntl 41.49 +0.06 +24.6 DiversIntlK 41.44 +0.06 +24.7 EmMkts 21.48 -0.09 +36.8 EqDividendInc 28.91 +0.11 +9.4 EqIncome 61.22 +0.22 +9.4 ExMktIdxPr 62.64 +0.09 +14.1 FltngRtHiInc d 9.66 ... +3.5 FourinOneIdx 44.15 +0.07 +16.2 Frdm2015 13.60 +0.02 +12.4 Frdm2020 16.75 +0.02 +13.5 Frdm2025 14.50 +0.02 +14.5 Frdm2030 18.16 +0.03 +17.0 Frdm2035 15.24 +0.03 +18.7 Frdm2040 10.70 +0.02 +18.8 GNMA 11.45 +0.01 +1.9 GlobalexUSIdx 13.27 -0.01 +24.6 GroCo 17.98 +0.15 +34.6 GroCo 183.08 +1.60 +33.8 GroCoK 183.04 +1.60 +34.0 Growth&Inc 36.34 +0.18 +11.7 IntlDiscv 47.12 -0.04 +29.2 IntlGr 16.24 +0.04 +26.9 IntlIdxInstlPrm 43.38 -0.05 +22.9 IntlIdxPremium 43.37 -0.05 +22.9 IntlVal 10.86 -0.03 +18.6 IntrmMuniInc 10.42 +0.01 +4.3 InvmGradeBd 11.31 +0.01 +4.2 InvmGradeBd 7.94 ... +3.7 LargeCapStock32.78 +0.15 +13.1 LatinAmerica d24.53 -0.31 +28.8 LowPrStk 52.78 +0.01 +15.2 LowPrStkK 52.74 ... +15.3 Magellan 106.43 +0.70 +23.3 MidCapStock 38.87 ... +15.0 MuniInc 13.26 +0.02 +6.0 NasdCmpIdx 89.39 +0.65 +26.6 NewMktsInc d 16.31 -0.16 +9.1 OTCPortfolio 108.87 +1.17 +36.6 Overseas 50.30 +0.14 +27.2 Puritan 23.25 +0.08 +16.5 PuritanK 23.23 +0.07 +16.6 ShTrmBd 8.61 ... +1.2 SmCpDiscv d 31.83 -0.09 +4.7 SmCpOpps 14.24 -0.01 +9.8

JOLTS job openings The Labor Department will give its in millions latest report on how many jobs are 6.5 available on Tuesday. Analysts est. 6.2 6.2 expect the agency to report that 6.1 6.1 there were 6.1 million jobs available 6.0 6.0 in September, about the same 5.7 as the previous months and the highest number since the Great 5.5 Recession. The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey includes important data on how many people 5.0 are quitting their jobs, which can A M J J A S be a sign of rising pay and worker 2017 confidence. Source: FactSet

YOUR FUNDS StkSelorAllCp 44.27 +0.16 +21.7 StratInc 11.15 -0.01 +7.4 TelecomandUtls26.78 +0.19 +10.3 TotalBond 10.69 ... +4.0 TtlMktIdxF 75.10 +0.22 +16.9 TtlMktIdxInsPrm75.08 +0.22 +16.9 TtlMktIdxPrm 75.08 +0.21 +16.9 USBdIdxInsPrm11.63 +0.01 +3.4 USBdIdxPrm 11.63 +0.01 +3.4 Value 121.50 +0.12 +10.7 Fidelity Advisor EmMktsIncI d 14.11 -0.14 +9.1 NewInsA m 32.84 +0.10 +25.4 NewInsI 33.56 +0.10 +25.7 StgIncI 12.61 -0.01 +7.4 Fidelity Select Biotechnology221.48 +3.41 +27.3 HealthCare 230.76 +2.16 +24.9 Swre&ITSvcs 171.67 +0.42 +36.8 Technology 190.27 +1.04 +51.1 First Eagle GlbA m 60.51 +0.02 +11.5 Franklin Templeton CATxFrIncA m 7.45 +0.01 +5.2 FdrTFIncA m 11.96 +0.01 +3.1 GlbBdA m 12.21 ... +4.1 GlbBdAdv 12.16 ... +4.2 Gr,IncA m 26.81 ... +13.8 GrA m 94.49 +0.33 +23.3 HYTxFrIncA m10.14 +0.01 +3.3 IncA m 2.37 ... +7.5 2.35 ... +7.7 IncAdv IncC m 2.40 ... +7.4 InsIntlEqPrmry 22.60 ... +21.6 MutGlbDiscvA m32.54 ... +8.2 MutGlbDiscvZ 33.22 ... +8.4 MutZ 29.42 ... +5.9 RisingDivsA m 60.77 +0.18 +16.4 GE RSPUSEq 57.84 +0.27 +17.4 GMO IntlEqIV 24.29 -0.03 +24.4 Goldman Sachs HYMuniInstl d 9.50 +0.02 +8.0 ShrtDurTxFrIns10.53 +0.01 +2.1 Harbor CptlApprecInstl 76.11 +0.53 +34.4 IntlInstl 69.88 +0.01 +19.6 Harding Loevner IntlEqInstl d 22.73 ... +27.5 INVESCO ComStkA m 26.42 +0.04 +13.0 DiversDivA m 20.15 ... +5.6 EqandIncA m 11.31 +0.02 +8.2 HYMuniA m 10.09 +0.02 +7.7 IVA WldwideI d 19.25 -0.01 +12.0 JPMorgan CPBondR6 8.31 ... +4.2 CoreBondI 11.65 +0.01 +3.7 CoreBondR6 11.66 +0.01 +3.8 EqIncI 16.95 +0.03 +13.0 HighYieldR6 7.49 ... +6.8 IntlRsrchEnhEqI19.02 -0.01 +21.4 MCapValL 39.73 +0.04 +9.1 USLCpCrPlsI 32.96 +0.13 +17.2 USRsrchEnhEqR627.39+0.10 +17.3 Janus Henderson BalancedT 33.34 +0.11 +15.4 GlobalLifeSciT 54.74 +0.56 +21.3 ResearchD ... +22.8 John Hancock BdR6 16.01 +0.01 +5.2 DiscpValI 22.10 +0.01 +14.1 DiscpValMCI 24.04 +0.07 +12.0 MltMgLsBlA b 16.00 +0.03 +13.3 MltmgrLsGr1 b17.17 +0.03 +16.8 Lazard EMEqInstl 19.61 -0.14 +23.5 IntlStratEqIns 15.38 +0.06 +23.6 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 14.17 -0.01 +6.9 GrY 15.57 +0.12 +29.9 Lord Abbett AffiliatedA m 16.72 +0.05 +10.9 FltngRtF b 9.18 ... +3.3 ShrtDurIncA m 4.27 ... +2.2 ShrtDurIncC m 4.30 ... +1.9 ShrtDurIncF b 4.27 ... +2.5 ShrtDurIncI 4.27 ... +2.6 MFS InstlIntlEq 25.51 +0.06 +25.9 TtlRetA m 19.45 ... +9.5 ValA m 40.45 ... +13.2 ValI 40.67 ... +13.5 Matthews ChinaInv 23.96 -0.01 +54.9 IndiaInv 33.29 +0.02 +29.8 Metropolitan West TtlRetBdI 10.68 +0.01 +3.3 TtlRetBdM b 10.68 ... +3.0 ... +3.3 TtlRetBdPlan 10.05 Northern IntlEqIdx d 12.98 -0.02 +22.9 StkIdx 31.19 +0.10 +17.4 Nuveen HYMuniBdA m17.33 +0.03 +10.1 HYMuniBdI 17.33 +0.03 +10.3 Oakmark EqAndIncInv 33.97 +0.04 +11.7 IntlInv 29.13 -0.05 +28.3 Inv 85.05 +0.05 +17.3 SelInv 48.70 +0.23 +13.2 Oberweis ChinaOpps m 16.56 +0.01 +51.4 Old Westbury GlbSmMdCpStrat17.40+0.02 +14.2 LgCpStrats 14.94 +0.03 +16.4 StratOpps 8.31 +0.01 +11.7 Oppenheimer ... +32.2 DevMktsA m 42.86 DevMktsY 42.34 ... +32.4 GlbA m 99.01 ... +32.5 IntlGrY 43.39 +0.10 +25.1 MnStrA m 53.46 +0.24 +13.8 Osterweis StrInc 11.42 ... +5.4 PIMCO AlAstAllAthIns 9.04 ... +10.7 AlAstInstl 12.17 ... +11.8 CmdtyRlRtStrIns6.79 ... +0.8 FBdUSDHdgI 10.71 ... +3.4 HYInstl 9.05 ... +7.2 IncA m 12.46 ... +7.7 IncC m 12.46 ... +7.1 IncD b 12.46 ... +7.8 IncInstl 12.46 ... +8.1 IncP 12.46 ... +8.0 ... +7.6 InvGdCpBdIns 10.65 LowDrInstl 9.88 ... +1.8 RlEstRlRtStrC m6.59 ... +1.8 RlRetInstl 11.03 ... +3.0 ShrtTrmIns 9.88 ... +2.2 TtlRetA m 10.30 ... +4.7 TtlRetIns 10.30 ... +5.0 PRIMECAP Odyssey AgrsGr 41.61 +0.53 +24.3 Gr 35.90 +0.31 +25.3 Stk 31.13 +0.08 +20.3 Parnassus CorEqInv 44.14 +0.10 +13.3 Principal DiversIntlIns 14.01 ... +27.4 Prudential TtlRetBdZ 14.56 ... +6.0 Putnam EqIncA m 24.10 +0.03 +14.5 MltCpGrY 98.93 +0.68 +27.7 Schwab FdmtlUSLgCIdx16.96 +0.02 +11.4 SP500Idx 40.43 +0.13 +17.5 Schwab1000Idx62.92 +0.21 +17.3 TtlStkMktIdx 46.43 +0.13 +16.8 State Farm Gr 78.60 +0.20 +11.8 T. Rowe Price BCGr 97.61 +0.51 +34.4 CptlAprc 29.76 +0.03 +13.6 DivGr 42.71 +0.11 +15.9 EMBd d 12.63 -0.15 +8.5 EMStk d 43.66 +0.03 +37.8 EqIdx500 d 69.56 +0.22 +17.3 EqInc 34.85 +0.05 +12.3 GlbTech 19.51 +0.07 +47.6 GrStk 70.36 +0.39 +32.1 6.81 ... +7.2 HY d HlthSci 75.13 +0.84 +27.2 InsLgCpGr 39.72 +0.20 +35.8 InsMdCpEqGr 56.69 +0.28 +23.4 IntlStk d 19.30 ... +26.2 IntlValEq d 15.31 -0.04 +19.5 LatinAmerica d24.60 -0.13 +27.1 MdCpGr 92.23 +0.44 +22.4 MdCpVal 31.11 +0.03 +7.1 NewHorizons 55.96 +0.23 +29.2 NewInc 9.52 +0.01 +3.9 OverseasStk d 11.40 -0.01 +25.7

Rtr2015 15.85 +0.01 Rtr2020 23.26 +0.02 Rtr2025 17.95 +0.03 Rtr2030 26.45 +0.04 Rtr2035 19.34 +0.03 Rtr2040 27.80 +0.05 Rtr2045 18.77 +0.04 Rtr2050 15.78 +0.03 SmCpStk 50.61 +0.06 SmCpVal d 50.25 -0.05 SpectrumInc 12.79 -0.01 SummitMnIntr 11.92 ... Val 38.93 +0.13 TCW TtlRetBdI 10.00 +0.01 TIAA-CREF BdIdxIns 10.85 ... EqIdxIns 19.33 ... GrIncIns 14.34 ... IntlEqIdxIns 20.39 ... ... LgCpGrIdxIns 28.30 LgCpValIdxIns 19.64 ... LgCpValIns 19.62 ... Thornburg LtdTrmMnI 14.41 ... Tweedy, Browne GlbVal d 28.59 +0.11 Vanguard 500IdxAdmrl 239.20 +0.76 500IdxInv 239.17 +0.76 BalIdxAdmrl 34.14 +0.07 BalIdxIns 34.15 +0.07 CAITTxExAdm 11.82 +0.01 CptlOppAdmrl155.50 +0.92 DevMIdxAdmrl 14.24 -0.01 DevMIdxIns 14.26 -0.01 DivGrInv 26.27 +0.01 EMStkIdxInAdm37.10 -0.17 EMStkIdxIns 28.21 -0.13 EngyAdmrl 99.87 +0.36 EqIncAdmrl 76.53 +0.07 EqIncInv 36.51 +0.03 EuStkIdxAd 73.18 -0.14 ExplorerAdmrl 94.89 +0.61 ExtMktIdxAdmrl82.29 +0.11 ExtMktIdxIns 82.29 +0.11 ExtMktIdxInsPls203.08 +0.28 FAWexUSIAdmr33.49 -0.05 FAWexUSIIns 106.16 -0.16 GNMAAdmrl 10.53 ... GNMAInv 10.53 ... 31.08 +0.04 GlbEqInv GrIdxAdmrl 70.59 +0.45 GrIdxIns 70.59 +0.44 GrandIncAdmrl 78.15 +0.29 HCAdmrl 88.98 +0.68 HCInv 210.92 +1.62 HYCorpAdmrl 5.97 ... HYTEAdmrl 11.40 +0.02 HiDivYldIdxInv 32.81 +0.02 InTrBdIdxAdmrl11.45 +0.01 InTrInGdAdm 9.83 +0.01 InTrTEAdmrl 14.18 ... InTrTrsAdmrl 11.16 +0.01 InflPrtScAdmrl 25.81 +0.01 InflPrtScIns 10.51 ... InsIdxIns 236.00 +0.75 InsIdxInsPlus 236.02 +0.75 InsTtlSMIInPls 58.01 +0.17 IntlGrAdmrl 95.15 +0.39 IntlGrInv 29.91 +0.12 IntlValInv 39.39 -0.06 LTInGrdAdm 10.68 +0.02 LTTEAdmrl 11.68 +0.02 LfStrCnsrGrInv 19.91 +0.02 LfStrGrInv 33.22 +0.03 LfStrModGrInv 26.99 +0.02 LgCpIdxAdmrl 59.93 +0.19 LtdTrmTEAdmrl10.97 ... MCpGrIdxAdm 53.58 +0.20 MCpVlIdxAdm 54.99 +0.03 MdCpIdxAdmrl184.42 +0.36 MdCpIdxIns 40.74 +0.08 MdCpIdxInsPlus200.92+0.39 MorganGrAdmrl96.05 +0.54 PrcMtlsMngInv 10.07 -0.05 PrmCpAdmrl 135.87 +0.50 PrmCpCorInv 26.93 +0.10 PrmCpInv 131.10 +0.48 REITIdxAdmrl 117.82 -0.25 REITIdxIns 18.24 -0.03 SCpGrIdxAdm 54.97 +0.33 SCpValIdxAdm 55.29 -0.14 ... STBdIdxAdmrl 10.44 STBdIdxIns 10.44 ... STBdIdxInsPlus10.44 ... STInfPrScIdAdmr24.85 ... STInfPrScIdIns 24.86 -0.01 STInfPrScIdxInv24.82 ... STInvmGrdAdmrl10.68 ... STInvmGrdIns 10.68 ... STInvmGrdInv 10.68 ... STTEAdmrl 15.78 ... STTrsAdmrl 10.61 ... SeledValInv 33.18 +0.01 SmCpIdxAdmrl 68.72 +0.09 SmCpIdxIns 68.72 +0.09 SmCpIdxInsPlus198.36+0.27 StarInv 27.25 +0.06 StrEqInv 35.50 -0.02 TMCapApAdm132.95 +0.42 TMSmCpAdm 59.43 -0.38 TrgtRtr2015Inv 15.95 +0.01 TrgtRtr2020Inv 31.67 +0.02 TrgtRtr2025Inv 18.57 +0.02 TrgtRtr2030Inv 33.55 +0.04 TrgtRtr2035Inv 20.61 +0.02 TrgtRtr2040Inv 35.49 +0.04 TrgtRtr2045Inv 22.30 +0.03 TrgtRtr2050Inv 35.87 +0.04 TrgtRtr2055Inv 38.83 +0.04 TrgtRtrIncInv 13.60 +0.01 TtBMIdxAdmrl 10.79 +0.01 TtBMIdxIns 10.79 +0.01 TtBMIdxInsPlus10.79 +0.01 TtBMIdxInv 10.79 +0.01 TtInBIdxAdmrl 21.94 ... TtInBIdxIns 32.93 +0.01 TtInBIdxInv 10.98 +0.01 TtInSIdxAdmrl 30.07 -0.04 TtInSIdxIns 120.27 -0.15 TtInSIdxInsPlus120.29 -0.15 TtInSIdxInv 17.98 -0.02 TtlSMIdxAdmrl 64.67 +0.18 TtlSMIdxIns 64.68 +0.18 TtlSMIdxInv 64.64 +0.18 ValIdxAdmrl 39.86 +0.01 ValIdxIns 39.86 +0.01 WlngtnAdmrl 74.02 +0.08 WlngtnInv 42.86 +0.04 WlslyIncAdmrl 65.48 +0.09 WlslyIncInv 27.03 +0.04 WndsrAdmrl 79.19 +0.22 WndsrIIAdmrl 69.16 +0.10 WndsrIIInv 38.97 +0.06 WndsrInv 23.47 +0.06 Victory SycEsVlI 40.09 +0.03 Virtus VontobelEMOppI11.66 +0.03 WCM FocIntGrIns d 15.43 +0.02 Waddell & Reed Adv AcculativeA m 10.31 +0.08 SciTechA m 18.34 +0.16 Western Asset CorBdI 12.67 +0.01 CorPlusBdI 11.87 -0.01 CorPlusBdIS 11.86 -0.01 iShares S&P500IdxK 307.95 ...

+11.8 +14.0 +15.8 +17.4 +18.7 +19.8 +20.2 +20.1 +12.6 +11.3 +6.1 +4.1 +15.7 +3.4 +3.3 +16.5 +19.6 +23.2 +25.3 +9.0 +8.6 +3.0 +14.2 +17.5 +17.4 +11.4 +11.4 +4.8 +25.2 +23.7 +23.8 +13.8 +27.1 +27.1 -0.8 +14.2 +14.1 +25.0 +18.0 +14.1 +14.1 +14.1 +24.4 +24.4 +2.2 +2.1 +25.2 +24.3 +24.3 +16.5 +17.4 +17.3 +7.2 +6.9 +11.8 +4.1 +4.4 +4.5 +2.2 +2.2 +2.2 +17.5 +17.5 +16.8 +41.3 +41.2 +24.1 +9.9 +5.8 +9.5 +16.2 +12.9 +17.7 +2.6 +18.5 +10.8 +14.3 +14.4 +14.4 +27.3 +7.2 +24.8 +21.4 +24.8 +3.6 +3.6 +18.1 +7.7 +1.5 +1.5 +1.5 +0.9 +0.9 +0.8 +2.3 +2.3 +2.2 +1.3 +0.7 +15.3 +12.3 +12.3 +12.3 +15.9 +9.7 +18.0 +8.6 +9.9 +12.1 +13.6 +14.9 +16.2 +17.5 +18.1 +18.0 +18.0 +7.4 +3.5 +3.5 +3.5 +3.4 +2.1 +2.2 +2.2 +24.5 +24.5 +24.5 +24.4 +16.9 +16.9 +16.8 +12.1 +12.1 +11.9 +11.8 +8.4 +8.4 +15.3 +12.1 +12.0 +15.2 +11.5 +29.3 +28.0 +11.3 +34.5 +4.9 +6.5 +6.5 +17.1

CVS’ check-up When drugstore chain and pharmacy benefits manager CVS Health reports its quarterly results on Monday, investors will be looking at a lot more than its profits and losses. They’ll want clues about whether CVS is pursuing its reported interest in buying health insurer Aetna, as well as its thoughts about the possibility of Amazon.com starting to distribute drugs or medical devices. Both could have a huge impact on CVS’ business.


Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • 13

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&5$)760$1 5,',1* PRZHU /7 +3 CAUTION! ADVERTISE- PRWRU LQ FXW QHHGV MENTS in this classifica- PRWRU ZRUN tion usually offer infor- mational service of products designed to '$9(< $//,621 SKRQH help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is / $ 1 ( 2 7 7 2 0 $ 1 R Q your responsibility to F D V W H U V H [ F F R Q G verify the validity of the [ [ W D O O U L F K offer. Remember: If an E U R Z Q O H D W K H U Q H Z ad appears to sound RYHU VHOO “too good to be true�, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better Business Bureau at 1-800-987-8280.

0232 GENERAL HELP

TRUCK DRIVER &RULQWK DQG %RRQHYLOOH 3ODQW 6,*1,1* %2186 &RPSDQ\ 3DLG +HDOWK ,QVXUDQFH . 5HWLUHPHQ 3ODQ 3DLG 9DFDWLRQ 6LFN DQG +ROLGD\V $QQXDO %RQXV 3RVVLEOH /RFDO 'HOLYHULHV +RPH (YHU\ 1LJKW 0XVW EH DW OHDVW \HDUV ROG 0XVW KDYH YDOLG 06 &'/ DQG FOHDQ 095 7UDLQLQJ IRU 0L[HU 'UXP 2SHU DWLRQ SURYLGHG $33/< ,1 3(5621 12 3+21( &$//6 3/($6( (TXDO 2SSRUWXQLW\ (PSOR\HU % % &21&5(7( &203$1< ,1& 6RXWK +DUSHU 5RDG &RULQWK RU % % &21&5(7( &203$1< ,1& +DUH 5RDG %RRQHYLOOH

0244 TRUCKING

2)),&( 326,7,21 /RFDO &RPSDQ\ VHHNV PRWLYDWHG SHUVRQ WR ILOO RIILFH SRVLWLRQ LQ FXV WRPHU VHUYLFH LQ YRLFLQJ DQG JHQHUDO RI ILFH GXWLHV 0XVW KDYH JHQHUDO FRPSXWHU VNLOOV DQG JRRG SKRQH HWLTXHWWH 6KRXOG EH DYDLODEOH WR ZRUN KRXUV SHU ZHHN 6HQG UHVXPH WR %R[ F R 7KH 'DLO\ &RULQWKL DQ 6 +DUSHU 5G &RULQWK 06

FINANCIAL

0955 LEGALS

BUSINESS & SERVICE LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

0734 LOTS & ACREAGE

/(*$/ 127,&( '(326,725< )25 )81'6 2) /2&$/ *29(510(17

/276 LQ 'HQQLV 7RZQ $UHD FDOO R U H P D L O IJDWKLQJV#JPDLO FRP

7KH %RDUG RI $OGHUPHQ RI WKH &LW\ RI )DUPLQJ WRQ 06 ZLOO DW WKH DG GUHVV RI 3 2 %R[

&RULQWK 06 WDNH ELGV IURP EDQNV DSSURYHG E\ WKH 6WDWH RI 0LVVLVVLSSL 7UHDVXU\ 'HSDUWPHQW DV D TXDOL ILHG GHSRVLWRU\ IRU WKH SULYLOHJH RI NHHSLQJ WKH FLW\pV IXQGV DQG DQ\ SDUW WKHUHRI LQ DFFRUG DQFH ZLWK $UWLFOH &KDSWHU 7LWOH 0LVVLVVLSSL &RGH RI DV DPHQGHG E\ 6 % $SULO HQ WLWOHG q'HSRVLWRULHV IRU

We Haul:

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

Loans $20-$20,000

• • • • • • •

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

662-286-9158 or 662-287-2296

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

Hat Lady

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

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

Mary Coats Thank you for

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

TORNADO SHELTERS 40 Years FORESTRY MULCHER SERVICES

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

★

★

★

MAGNOLIA STUMP GRINDING REASONABLE RATES FREE ESTIMATES JACKIE COOKSEY 662-415-2425

★

ALL - STARS Auto Glass Service Inc. Established 1999

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

Specializing in Repairs and Replacements

1(: (1*/$1'

Insurance Approved

Matt Jones

1(: 0(1 V GUHVV SDQWV [ WDQ LQ FRORU VWLOO KDV WDJV RQ WKHP RULJ FRVW WDNH 0DNH JUHDW &KULVWPDV JLIW

Mobile Service Available P.O. Box 1046 203 Hwy. 72 West Corinth, MS 38834-1046

2)),&,$/ 7+(5$3< WUDSH]H EDU Z FKDLQ WR PRXQW LQ FHLOLQJ MRLVW RYHU EHG SG VHOO IRU

(662) 665-0050 (662) 415-9211 1-888-270-9128

5$',2 6+$&. GHVNWRS UDGLR VFDQQHU

Property Directory

5(0,1*721 ULIOH RU

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00 EXTRA Call 662-287-6111 for details.

(;3(5,(1&(' 758&. 'ULYHUV QHHGHG /RFDO +DXO 0XVW KDYH &ODVV $ 5281' 2$. 7DEOH Z RU &ODVV % OLFHQVH &KDLUV &KLQD &DELQHW &DOO

0248 OFFICE HELP

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.

0955 LEGALS

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

ZLWK D VFRSH &DOO RU WH[W

HUD PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination. State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of

TRANSPORTATION

& Business

$8720$7,& VDYDJH &DOO RU WH[W

6$7 5$,1 RU 6KLQH $0 %XLOGLQJ EHKLQG 1HZ ) , 5 ( 6 7 2 1 ( 3 /LIH &KULVWLDQ 6XSSO\ 5 ILUP :RPHQ *LUO &ORWKHV 6KRHV + + ,HPV 0RUH 6$7 &HGDU &UHHN 3 5 W L U H V ' U L Y H 5 D L Q R U ILUP 6 K L Q H 0 X O W L ) D P $GXOW .LGV FORWKHV + + LWHPV 7R\V )XUQ 0LVF ; )7 XWLOLW\ WUDLOHU 7$* 6$/( /LTXLGDWLQJ WKH KRPH RI %LOO 0\UD &+(55< ),1,6+ HQWHU &DUXWK /DNH 7HU WDLQPHQW FHQWHU WDEOH UDFH 'U &RULQWK 6DW FDELQHW GRRUV H[WUD 6XQ +DOI 3ULFH VKHOI OLNH QHZ

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

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

52// D ZD\ EHGV LQ PLQW FRQG RU ERWK

(67$7( 6$/( RI &KDU OHQH /DQFDVWHU *DWH ZRRG )UL 6DW &5 5ROOLQJ :RRG &LUFOH 0867 6(// $//

HOMES FOR 0710 SALE

6$/$'0$67(5 67$,1 /(66 VWHHO SHUFRODWRU 61$3 21 DXWRPRWLYH IUHRQ PDFKLQH ZLWK FRYHU OLNH QHZ TANNING BED 16 new bulbs $400. 662.644.3565 :+,7( 5,',1* PRZHU LQ FXW PRWRU UXQV

MEDICAL/DENTAL

HOUSE FOR SALE 1601 Buchanan Street Corinth, MS 3BR, 2 Bath Large Living Room w/Fireplace Appliances Included Central Heat/Air (Electric) 2 Car Garage Nice Neighborhood Near School $116,000.00 662-415-1499 or 662-287-7673

0220

MS CARE CENTER Is Looking For

RN

Please apply in person 3701 Joanne DR., Corinth MS Monday- Friday 8am- 4:30pm E.O.E

FOR LEASE 4BR, 2Bath, Paved Concrete Driveway, Completely Remodeled, New Drywall, Wiring, Roof, Kitchen Appl., & Cabinets. Your Choice Of Carpet/Hardwood for Bedrooms. 2 Car Garage, Covered Rear Deck, 2375 FT Total, 1450 FT Heated.,

$119,500. 329 County Road 400

662-415-6594

PRIME LOCATION! IN EASTOWN SHOPPING CENTER HWY 72 EAST. CALL 662-415-9187

HOUSE FOR SALE

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


14 • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

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'HERUD -DFNVRQ &LW\ &OHUN W IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

0955 LEGALS 0955 LEGALS JENIA TACKETT and WILLIAM TACKETT CAUSE NO. 17-535-2TKM RULE 81 SUMMONS SUMMONS by PUBLICATION

VANCE A N T O N I O THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI LADEWIG TO: JENIA TACKETT and WILLIAM TACKETT UNKNOWN ADDRESS

VS.

LOCAL or LONG DISTANCE Morgan Moving & Storage, Inc

CALL TODAY: BILL Q. MORGAN Corinth: 662-287-2828 or Booneville: 601-728-7824 2719 S. Second St, Booneville, MS 38829

You have been made a party in the petition filed in this Court by Vance Antonio Ladewig, attempting to determine paternity and request for custody. You are summoned to appear and defend against the petition filed against you in this action at 9:00 a.m. on the 15 t h day of December, 2017, at the Prentiss County Annex Building in Booneville, Mississippi, and in case of your

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,1 5( /$67 :,// $1' 7(67$0(17 2) /87+(5 2/(1 $512/'

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

FOR SALE

FOR SALE

2002 Keystone Sprinter 31’

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

$9800

662-808-2629 662-808-1645

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

662-284-5598

Cougar-Fifth wheel, 30 feet long with one slide, very clean. Inside a building most of it's life. New electric awning. 662-286-8948 or 662-415-1026

MOTOR HOME 1969 ULTRA VAN

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

662-415-1026 or 662-286-8948

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

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

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

662-279-1415

$8,500.

662-415-5071

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

2017 FOREST RIVER CAMPER

2006 WILDERNESS RLS CAMPER Only 2 Owners 29.5’ with 1 Lg. Slide Out Good Cond. Great For Lake Queen Size Bed And Bath Fixtures Are Separate Including The Octagan Shaped Shower Sleeps 6 Comfortably

D L O D 51,000 MILES L S SO SLEEPS 6

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

ASKING $10,700

MUST SEE! $7500. OBO 662-665-1420

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

1959 MASSEY FERGUSON 35

FOR SALE

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

4020 JOHN DEERE TRACTOR

$4500.00 $3950.00 731-926-0006

30' MOTOR HOME 1988 FORD

662-415-0399 662-419-1587

$4300

662-415-5247

SOLD

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

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

SOLD

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

$6500. CALL 662-279-3683

SOLD

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

$5000.00

662-603-4400

PROGRESSIVE TURF MOWER 10FT GOOD SHAPE PRO FLEX 120 MODEL

$5000.00 $3500.00

CALL 662-665-8838

2003 W/W HORSE TRAILER

FORD 601 WORKMASTER TRACTOR WITH EQUIPMENT POWER STEERING GOOD PAINT

200000

$ 0.00

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

$

662-286-1519 662-287-9466

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

$4,200 662-287-4514

1953 FORD GOLDEN JUBILEE TRACTOR

5000.00.00 6000

$$

662-416-5191

662-286-6571 662-286-3924

5 FT. WOODS GROOMING MOWER

7x19 heavy duty trailer

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

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

804 BOATS

FOR SALE

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

8,500 OBO

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

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

$

1,500 OBO

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

86 chevy 4 wdr,

57 Chevy 4 door.

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

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

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

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 or 662-808-4464

662-286-1717 662-808-4464

14FT BOAT

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

FOR SALE

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

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

1989 FOXCRAFT

1986 ASTROGLASS 15’ BASS BOAT 90 HP EVINRUDE

$1800 662-415-9461

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

$4500. 662-596-5053

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

662-603-3902

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

SOLD

1999 RANGER 120 HP ENGINE 17 FT.

$7000.00

662-210-1707

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

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

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

for only $7995.

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

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

SOLD

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

DECK BOAT BAYLINER CLASSIC

1993 21FT TRACKER PONTOON

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

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

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

01 COBRA BOAT & TRAILER

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

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

BOAT & TRAILER 13 YR OLD M14763BC BCMS Includes Custom Trailer Dual 19.5 LONG Axel-Chrome BLUE & WHITE Retractable Canopy $4500.00 REASONABLY PRICED 662-279-1415 662-419-1587 1985 Hurricane-150 Johnson engine


s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • 15

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

1984 EL CAMINO 2009 Pontiac G6

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

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

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

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

REDUCED

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

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

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

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

2005 JAGUAR X-TYPE 2007 CHRYSLER PACIFICA 4.0 L, limited, loaded, well maintained, new tires, 200,000 miles, $3800. OBO. 603-5491

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

$3900 obo.

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

1986 Corvette

1977 CORVETTE 350, Auto, PS, PW, AIR T-TOPS, Red with Gray Leather Interior

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

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

286-6707

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

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

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

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

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

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

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

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

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

901-485-8167

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

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

662-223-0865 no text please

2014 Toyota Corolla S 1.8 LOW MILES!!

$15,999 (Corinth Ms)

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

(205-790-3939)

2016 Toyota Camry SE Super White, Power Glass Sunroof, 4-Door Sedan, 6-Speed Shiftable Automatic, Navigation System, 4-Cylinder, 25 / 35 Highway, 2-Wheel Drive Front, Only 20,300 miles, One Owner, Non-smoker, Exc. Cond., $16,495/OBO, Pictures available. Call/Text 407-353-9043

Call 662-720-6661

2004 Chrysler

95’ CHEVY ASTRO

2010 Chevy 2017 86 TOYOTA Equinox LS

1998 CORVETTE CONV.

official pace car convertible, automatic 90,000 miles, 350 motor red in color air and heat lots of new parts REDUCED $5800.00 obo

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

MUST SELL SPORTS CAR

1970 MERCURY COUGAR FOR SALE Excel. Cond.

93 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

Town & Country. Blue-Gray. Great Condition. 161,000 Miles, Mostly Road. $3,500.00

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

Cargo Van Good, Sound Van

$2700

662-415-8682

872-3070

2001 Ford Explorer Sport Trac 4WD Truck

FOR SALE

REDUCED $2,900.00 Leather seats with sunroof and low miles. CALL OR TEXT 662-396-1105

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

Pathfinder SV

662-665-1124

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

1985 Mustang GT,

1989 Corvette

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

662-287-4848

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

$9,800 OBO 662-287-0145

2016 GMC TERRAIN SLE 7000 MILES $19,500.00 CALL OR TEXT 662-212-3510

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

2006 Ford F-150 Extended cab truck 175,000 miles

REDUCED $6,500.00 662-808-7677 2008 Ford Focus SES One Owner Red, 4-door, CD Player, Sync System, Power windows & door locks, Excellent Condition 155,000 miles Price: $4200. OBO Call: 662-415-0313 or 662-643-7982

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

08 DTS CADILLAC 72,000 Miles Original Owner $10,500. 728-4258 416-0736

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

Inside & Out All Original

$$

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

2008 Nissan Frontier 4 door crew cab, loaded, one owner, bought new in Corinth, MS, 117000 Miles, REDUCED to $12,900.

256-577-1349

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

662-479-5033

1993 Chevy Explorer Limited Extra Clean Exc. Condition REDUCED $3250.00 OBO 284-6662

2016 JEEP COMPASS 1 Owner, White 4X4, 5 Speed, Back Up Camera, 12K Miles, 238,000 Left On Powertrain & Transmission Exc. Cond.

731-412-1863

RENEGADE TRIKE Chevy 350 Ram Jet Factory Built Call For Info.

662-396-1493

832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

ATV FOR SALE

HONDA 3 WHEELER KICK START, RUNS GOOD, MIGHT NEED TIRES. $

750 OBO

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

HARLEY-DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE 2005 Harley Davidson Trike

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

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

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

662-415-7407 662-808-4557

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

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

03 Harley Davidson Ultra

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

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

1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

950 V STAR TOUR Black Metallic Garage Kept 3000 Miles All Stock

$4,200. Cash. No Trades

731-609-5425

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

662-284-6653

2005 Heritage Softail 32,000 Miles Super Bike Super Price

$8500.00 OBO 662-212-2451

2008 Harley Davidson FXDF Bought New, One Adult Owner 2,139 Miles, Many Harley Accessories SHOW ROOM CONDITION Oil & Filter changed annually SCREAMING EAGLE SYN 3 Over $22,000. invested, asking $12,500. or best reasonable offer.

662-837-8787

1993 Harley Davidson Springer Softail Blue

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO

Good Cond. Good Tires $6,000. OBO

662-808-2994

731-453-4395

2006 HONDA VTX 1800

07 HONDA RANCHER ES 2009 HONDA SCOOTER

MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE

2008 Yamaha V-Star 1300 Touring Edition New Tires, New Battery and New Hard Bags, less than 18000 miles. Reduced Price $4000.00. Cash Only. Great Bike, Road Ready call Kevin at 662-772-0719

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


16 • Saturday, November 4, 2017 • Daily Corinthian

Snapshot Saturday “The Force” was with Jim Wigginton and the staff of the Corinth Family Medical Center as they brought a touch of Star Wars to their Halloween celebration. Have a photo to share for Snapshot Saturday? Send it and related information to at news@dailycorinthian. com.

Jackson Price portrayed Capt. Jack Sparrow from “Pirates of the Carribean” on Halloween. He is the son of Steven and Lani Price of Michie, Tenn., and Matt and Meribeth Carpenter of Selmer, Tenn. Grandparents are Van and Leigh Carpenter of Kossuth, Rufus Butler and Susan Price of Michie, Tenn., and Mark and Dawn Boehler of Corinth.

Scarlett Marcinek shared this photo of her daughter Ava Klaire celebrating Halloween as Little Bo Peep with her “sheep.” Have a photo to share for Snapshot Saturday? Send it and related information to news@dailycorinthian.com.

IT’S BACK! Snapsh t

Saturday Share your photos with the Daily Corinthian. Family Get-to-togethers, Pets, Birthdays, Hunting, Big vegetables, Landscapes, or Grandparentsʼ Bragging rights.

If itʼs important to you, itʼs important to us! Send photo and information to news@dailycorinthian.com Please include your phone number for questions.

www.dailycorinthian.com • 662.287.6111

Midway through NFL season, football ratings remain down BY DAVID BAUDER AP Media Writer

NEW YORK — Midway through a season remembered for its protests by some players during the national anthem as much as bone-crunching hits, viewership for NFL football games is down 5 percent from last year. The NFL has slowed a decline that was more pronounced in 2016, and the erosion is actually less than it is for other forms of television programming. Yet Wall Street analysts have noticed the trend and sports programmers are searching for reasons. The NFL’s aura of invincibility as an entertainment product has taken a hit. “It’s certainly not cause for panic,” said Rick Gentile, a former CBS Sports executive and now a Seton Hall University professor, “but they like to keep going up.” The average NFL game this season has attracted 14.8 million viewers, down from 15.6 million at the same point last year, the Nielsen company said. The decline was 14 percent between the 2015 and 2016 mid-seasons, although more people returned when election year politicking left the airwaves. What has put the NFL in news headlines this fall, instead of just the sports pages, is the protest primarily by black players about the treatment of minorities by law enforcement. It has been expressed most often by players kneeling for “The Star Spangled Banner” before the games, an action that incurred the wrath of President Donald Trump. It briefly brought the national anthem back

to TV broadcasts. Since then, the networks usually tape it in case there’s a significant protest to report. Asked about the impact of the protests, NFL spokesman Alex Riethmiller said the league believes the ratings drop is part of a broader trend in television consumption instead of a single issue or controversy. Yet Gentile, who runs a nationwide poll on sports issues for Seton Hall, said his surveys show differently. “I was in denial for a while,” he said, “but every time we asked the question, ‘why do you watch fewer games?’ it came back the same way — the protests.” In the last week of September, Seton Hall’s poll of 850 people found that half were watching the same number of football games they watched in the past. Twenty-nine percent said they watched fewer games, 5 percent said they watched more and the remainder didn’t know. Of the people who watched fewer games, 47 percent said it was because of the protests, by far the most frequent reason cited. Shrinking audiences are the norm, rather than the exception, for most TV shows, and the NFL points out that the audience for prime-time broadcast programming has dropped 9 percent this fall. That comparison isn’t totally fair since one of the biggest reasons ratings are off for entertainment shows — people recording them to watch later — usually doesn’t apply to a live event like football. Two worries for the rest of the NFL season are in-

juries that have sidelined marquee players like Odell Beckham, Jr., Aaron Rodgers and J.J. Watt, and lousy teams with little to play for in major markets like New York and Chicago. Viewership for this past weekend’s games was the lowest of the season, Nielsen said. The NFL has focused with some success this season on improving prime-time products, said Michael Nathanson, an analyst for MoffettNathanson Research. Viewership is up 5 percent for ESPN’s “Monday Night Football,” which is concentrating this year on rivalry games between teams in the same division. In another healthy sign, ad prices for NBC’s Sunday night game are going up 12 percent next year, according to a survey by Variety magazine. “Ratings go up and ratings go down, but the NFL is actually stronger than it has been in recent years, relatively speaking, to the rest of the television world,” said CBS Sports President Sean McManus. “The good news is that viewers are consuming more NFL programming. We’re just trying to make sure that we still allow access to that programming without hurting the traditional packages.” The chief weakness has been the Sunday afternoon games, the league’s bedrock, and among younger viewers. Young fans weaned on video games are increasingly attracted to “Red Zone” products that allow them to peek in at key moments in different games and highlight packages of big plays, instead of sitting through contests that last more than three hours.


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