111115 daily corinthian e edition

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Tishomingo County Eight students score over 30 on ACT

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Wednesday Nov. 11,

2015

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Vol. 119, No. 270

• Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

New sheriff takes over jail, prison BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Sheriff-elect Ben Caldwell is getting an early start on part of his new job. The Alcorn County Board of Supervisors voted in a special meeting on Tuesday to contract with Caldwell for management of both the regional correctional facility and county jail effective immediate-

ly. Sheriff Charles Rinehart, whose term expires at the end of the year, gave his consent. The board approved Caldwell’s request to hire Allen Lyles, who works for the Mississippi Highway Patrol, as warden effective Dec. 1 with pay of $4,000 monthly. The move comes after the Mississippi Department of Corrections pulled state inmates from the cor-

rectional facility and gives Caldwell the authority to immediately begin working with MDOC toward the return of inmates. Reimbursements for those prisoners pay the county’s debt on construction of the new facility. “I’ve been in contact with MDOC over the last several days,” said Caldwell. “They don’t want to hold Alcorn County hostage, and they

will work with us and try to speed this process up as much as possible.” About 20 correctional officers are currently laid off because of the lack of inmates. “The most important thing right now is the county and those employees out there and getting the Please see CALDWELL | 5A

Caldwell

Veterans prepare stew luncheon School board wants appointed leader BY STEVE BEAVERS

sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

The stew is on – almost. Around 400 gallons of Brunswick Stew will be ready to eat by 11 a.m. today at American Legion Post 6. Post 6 veterans were busy all day Tuesday getting ready for the annual free luncheon. The post expects to feed close to 300 people today. Individuals will be able to eat at no cost. Those wanting to take stew home can purchase it for $6 a quart. Veterans got up early to get the 250 pounds of beef, chicken and pork ready in five huge cooking pots. Another 100 gallons each of corn, tomatoes, potatoes, onions and other seasonings also make up the tasty stew. “We have modified the stew just a little bit,” said Post 6 Commander Tommy Watson of the over 50-year tradition. The stew event is the post’s biggest fundraiser of the year. Money raised from the event will go to fund the many programs of the post. Festivities to honor veterans begin at 10 a.m. today with the 16th Annual Veterans Day Parade in downtown Corinth. MS Project Package Coordinator and Founder Rickey Pope will serve as parade grand marshal.

BY ZACK STEEN zsteen@dailycorinthian.com

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

American Legion Post 6 members Dwight Johnson (left) and Michael Blome cook beef and pork for today’s Brunswick Stew luncheon set for 11 a.m. at the post.

Putting the authority back where it should be. Alcorn School District leaders united Monday on a resolution which will end the district’s long running use of the electoral process to fill the superintendent of education seat. “It’s a historical decision that will greatly benefit our students,” said board member Russ Nash. “It will take a lot of politics out of the school system and give the authority back to board members.” The resolution urges the Mississippi Legislature and the governor to support the passage of a bill to change the selection of the Alcorn County superintendent from election to appointment by the Alcorn County school board. The board hopes to find a local representative to sponsor the bill and introduce it in January during the next Legislative session. If the bill is approved by the House of Representatives and the Senate, it would appear before the governor to be signed and would become

a law in July 2016. “Coahoma County got it done this year without a problem. I think now is the perfect time for us. With a new superintendent about to take office, it will give us four years to transition to the new process of finding and hiring a superintendent,” said Nash. “This would give us -- the board -- the ability to look for a superintendent not just in this county, but across the state and country as well.” Nash added, “it will also give us the ability to find someone who we think is the best person for the job.” Nash said if passed, the district could seek superintendent selection help from the Mississippi School Boards Association, where he also serves as a board member. Board president Mary Coleman commended her fellow board members for unifying together on the resolution vote. “This is a big step ... but I think it’s a step in the right direction,” she said. Coleman, Nash and the Please see BOARD | 5A

Local veteran reflects Lighthouse Toy Store seeks support on his 24-year career BY BRANT SAPPINGTON

bsappington@dailycorinthian.com

The clock is ticking for those in need to seek help this Christmas from the Lighthouse Foundation Toy Store. Little more than a week is left for people to register for assistance from the annual program that helps provide Christmas gifts to children in struggling families in Alcorn County. The

BY KIMBERLY SHELTON kshelton@dailycorinthian.com

Remembering those who paid the ultimate price for freedom this Veterans Day, Command Sgt. Maj. David D. Mills reflected upon his 24 years of military service. Born and reared in Rocky Mountain, N.C., the reverend was just 17 years old and in the 10th grade when he made the decision to trade his scholastic career in for the life of a solider. Enlisting in the United States Army in December of 1954, Mills was eager to travel the globe and to aid in the war effort. “When you’re young, everyPlease see MILLS | 2A

final day for registration is Thursday, Nov. 19. Foundation Executive Director Gary Caveness said he knows there’s a great need for help as families struggle in a difficult economy and he strongly encourages those in need to get registered for the program. Due to limited financial and volunteer resources, only those who preregister will be able to

receive help when gifts are distributed on Dec. 10. Registration sessions will be held each Monday, Tuesday and Thursday through next Thursday, Nov. 19 from 9 a.m. to noon each day at the foundation on Johns Street. There will also be one evening registration next Tuesday, Nov. 17 Please see STORE | 5A

Annual Christmas Basket Fund begins BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com

The Rev. David D. Mills

It’s the season of giving. A civic organization and local newspaper are combining to put the phrase into action again this Christmas season. The 20th Annual Corinth

Rotary Club/Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund will begin receiving applications, starting today through Friday, Nov. 20. An application for the basket fund can be found on Page 2 in today’s newspaper. Applications for the yearly

project are also available at the newspaper office at 1607 South Harper Road from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Deadline to accept applications is 4 p.m. on Nov. 20. Please see BASKET | 5A

25 years ago

10 years ago

House numbering begins for the county’s upcoming new Enhanced 911 system. Jim Loncar, E-911 coordinator, says all homes and other buildings must have consistent numbers for the system to work.

Kingsford Manufacturing Company breaks ground on its new plant near Glen. Director of Manufacturing Solids Jeff Brubaker praised the community and officials for support of the project.

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Wednesday, November 11, 2015

MILLS CONTINUED FROM 1A

thing is just go, go, go,” said Mills with a laugh. “I was anxious to see the world and to serve my country while doing it.” He would later complete his GED while serving in the military as well as earn two years of college credit from the Sergent Majors Academy in Ft. Bliss, Texas. Having served two tours in Vietnam, the retired veteran has also been stationed in Korea; Anchorage, Alaska before it was a state with the 23rd Infantry at Fort Richardson; Ft. Bliss, Texas as a drill sergeant; Ft. Polk, La. with

the training command as a drill sergeant; and Ft. Benning, Ga., as a command sergeant major. His military career would also take him to Germany on three different occasions, all during peacetime. A decorated veteran, the retired CSM has received five good conduct awards, the Vietnam Cross of Gallantry with Palms, an Army Commendation Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters, a Vietnam Campaign Medal; three Overseas Service Bars, a National Defense Service Medal, Air Medal and a Vietnam Service Medal with a Silver Star

and two Bronze Stars. In addition, the now 77 year-old has also been honored with a M-16, Presidential Unit Citation, Civil Action Honor Medal (1st Class) and a Meritorious Service Medal. While he is grateful for all his medals, the Alcorn County resident said he is most humbled as being the recipient of a Silver Star, Legion of Merit, a Bronze Star Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster, a Purple Heart, and his Combat Infantry and drill Sergeant Identification badges. He has served his country as a member of the 1st Infantry Division, 4th

2015 CHRISTMAS BASKET APPLICATION Mr. and Mrs.

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Infantry Division, First Calvary Division, and 3/8 Delta Company – Ivy Dragons. As a drill sergeant for three training commands, the dedicated solider was responsible for the training of new inductees as they joined the ranks. “I was classified as a CSM E-9, the highest solicited rank you can obtain upon my retirement from Ft. Benning, Ga., in February of 1979,” said Mills, who was injured in Vietnam after he was hit by shrapnel in his right thigh. As he contemplated upon the events that will forever plague his mind, the retired army-man was especially saddened by his recollections of Hill 947 for which he was awarded a Silver Star and Purple Heart. “Many of my medals are a reflection of being outnumbered and carrying out a mission,” said Mills, as he recalled how the odds were stacked against his platoon as they journeyed across enemy lines

“There are many things I remember which still affect me from my time of service. The stench of dead bodies is something I will never, ever forget, but the thing which really struck me and has stuck with me all these years is that as I watched young men being cut down in their prime, the last word upon many of their lips was ‘mama’.” The Rev. David Mills U.S. Army veteran to retrieve the bodies of their fallen comrades. “Several companies were sent out, approximately 150 men per company, and sustained many casualties and wounds. We were all ambushed. Out of our company, many were badly wounded or killed – only a few lived to tell the tale.” “We hold a reunion every two years for those of

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us who are still around,” added Mills, who is an active chaplain for Purple Heart Association 813 in Corinth. “As General Douglas MacArthur once said, “‘Old soldiers never die, they just fade away’.” A dedicated family man and devoted pastor of God’s Church in Biggersville, Mills is married to Wilma Mills of Kossuth with whom he shares seven children, 13 grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Due to the debilitating effects of agent orange, Mills is now a fully-retired veteran having worked for 20 years at the Corinth Post Office after his military retirement. “There are many things I remember which still affect me from my time of service,” he said. “The stench of dead bodies is something I will never, ever forget, but the thing which really struck me and has stuck with me all these years is that as I watched young men being cut down in their prime, the last word upon many of their lips was ‘mama’.”


Local/Region

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Today in History Today is Wednesday, Nov. 11, the 315th day of 2015. There are 50 days left in the year. This is Veterans Day in the U.S., Remembrance Day in Canada.

Today’s Highlight in History: On Nov. 11, 1918, fighting in World War I came to an end with the signing of an armistice between the Allies and Germany.

On this date: In 1620, 41 Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower, anchored off Massachusetts, signed a compact calling for a “body politick.” In 1778, British redcoats, Tory rangers and Seneca Indians in central New York killed more than 40 people in the Cherry Valley Massacre. In 1831, former slave Nat Turner, who’d led a violent insurrection, was executed in Jerusalem, Virginia. In 1921, the remains of an unidentified American service member were interred in a Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in a ceremony presided over by President Warren G. Harding. In 1938, Irish-born cook Mary Mallon, who’d gained notoriety as the disease-carrying “Typhoid Mary” blamed for the deaths of three people, died on North Brother Island in New York’s East River at age 69 after 23 years of mandatory quarantine. In 1942, during World War II, Germany completed its occupation of France. In 1966, Gemini 12 blasted off from Cape Kennedy with astronauts James A. Lovell and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin Jr. aboard. In 1972, the U.S. Army turned over its base at Long Binh to the South Vietnamese, symbolizing the end of direct U.S. military involvement in the Vietnam War. In 1990, Stormie Jones, the world’s first heart-liver transplant recipient, died at a Pittsburgh hospital at age 13.

Daily Corinthian • 3A

Across the Region Local makes FHU homecoming court HENDERSON, Tenn.— A student from Burnsville has been selected as a member of the homecoming court at Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson, Tennessee. Lucas Russo, a Bible major, will represent the sophomore class. FHU students selected representatives from each class to serve on the court. Two members of the senior class will be named homecoming king and queen. The royalty will be crowned, Saturday, Nov. 14, during halftime of the Lady Lions’ basketball game. The game is set to begin at 1 p.m. in Brewer Sports Center. Representatives from all classes were presented to the student body, Tuesday, Nov. 10, during the university’s daily chapel service. (For more information about FHU or the homecoming events, visit www.fhu.edu.)

State parks free today for veterans PICKWICK DAM, Tenn. — Tennessee State Parks welcomes all veterans to enjoy a free day in the park today as part of its annual free state parks day for all Tennessee veterans. Veterans can take part in one free night of camping and/or a complimentary round of golf with appropriate identification. “On Veterans Day we honor the many brave men and women who have served our country,” Deputy Commissioner Brock Hill said. “We have nine golf courses and campsites spread across this beautiful state, and our Tennessee State Parks family invites these veterans to come enjoy their day with us.” The free day is in addition to Tennessee State Parks’ current veterans’ policy, which includes a camping discount within the state parks system and is available annually beginning November 1 through March 31, offering a 25 percent reduction off the standard

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nightly base rates (depending on the type of site chosen). This camping discount is available to Tennessee residents showing proof of prior military duty. A special state park discount is also available for active duty military personnel and members of the Tennessee National Guard. This year-round discount is given to all U.S. military – regardless of their branch of service or where they are stationed. Disabled veterans also are eligible for the Tennessee State Parks year-round ADA discount that provides a 25 to 50 percent discount for campsites. To receive the free benefits and extended discounts, veterans need to provide proof of residency with a Tennessee driver’s license; and proof of veteran’s status, with a Certificate of Discharge (DD214) or Veterans Administration benefit card.

Tish Co. students score big on ACT IUKA — Eight Tishomingo County High School students made a perfect score (30 or above) after a recent round of ACT testing. The average ACT test score at TCHS is 24.3, which is above the national average of 20.9. The highest score on the ACT test is a 36. The ACT test score predicts how well a student will succeed in college.

War monument is finally completed SAVANNAH, Tenn. — Every war the United States has fought in is now a part of the Savannah community. After three years of work, a ribbon cutting marked the official completion of the downtown war monument this week. An 80-foot American flag, along with flags to represent each branch of the military, accompanies the monument which represent every war, from the American Revolution to Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Tupelo firefighters get live fire training TUPELO – Local firefighters participated in a live fire training exercise Monday in Tupelo at the BancorpSouth Arena. Twenty-five firefighters were trained in liquefied petroleum gas tactics presented by the Mississippi Fire Academy’s Extension Services Division. The fire drill was designed to help emergency responders better understand the hazards of gas. Firefighters fought two live fires during the training class. One involved the rear portion of a propane gas delivery vehicle. The other involved a 250-gallon propane tank similar to those used at many residential houses and mobile homes for heating systems. The Tennessee State Fire Marshal’s Office (SFMO) announces its second “100 For 100” smoke alarm challenge on Saturday, November 14, 2015 in communities across Tennessee.

Fire departments install 1,116 alarms Last month, the first “100 For 100” smoke alarm installation event challenged 10 Tennessee fire departments to install 100 smoke alarms in one day to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the SFMO. Participating fire departments responded by installing 1,116 smoke alarms in just a few hours’ time. “We were thrilled with the outcome of our October challenge,” said Fire Marshal and Tennessee Department of Commerce & Insurance Commissioner Julie Mix McPeak. “We can’t wait to see the results of the November challenge and look forward to recognizing the life-saving efforts of our partnering fire departments.” According to National Fire Protection Association research, working smoke alarms cut the chance of dying in a fire in half. Meanwhile, three out of five fire deaths resulted from fires in homes with no smoke alarms or no working

City leaders name interim police chief

smoke alarms. The smoke alarms provided for the challenge are part of the SFMO’s “Get Alarmed, Tennessee!” program. The program, launched in 2012, has distributed more than 90,000 free smoke alarms to 446 partnering fire departments across the state to install within high-risk homes. Those smoke alarms have saved the lives of 106 people so far and helped dramatically reduce Tennessee’s fire death rate.

COLUMBUS — The acting police chief of the city of Columbus will serve as interim chief while the city council conducts a nationwide search. Capt. Fred Shelton received the nod from council members during a special called meeting Tuesday. Shelton was named acting chief last week after Mayor Robert Smith announced Tony Carleton was stepping down to accept a job in Alabama. Shelton has been with the department for 32 years. City council members say they will accept applications for the position through December 14.

Initiative to provide Thanksgiving meals TUPELO — UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of Mississippi and Alcorn State University Extension Program are partnering together to give Thanksgiving turkeys to eligible Mississippians this holiday season. It’s all part of UnitedHealthcare’s Farm-toFork initiative to bring healthy and nutritious food to the state. One of the team’s stops is in Tupelo at The Link Centre on Thursday at 1 p.m. The farm-fresh produce and turkey giveaways are for UnitedHealthcare Community Plan members enrolled in the CHIP and MississippiCAN programs only. Members must present their identification card at registration to receive the food, which will be distributed on a first-come, firstserved basis. The team will also make stops in Meridian, Southaven, Indianola, Gulfport and Jackson.

Grant will help city build storm shelter SALTILLO — The City of Saltillo will soon have a storm shelter for the general public. Thanks to the Lee County Board of Supervisors and FEMA, the city received a grant to build a shelter big enough to hold at least 96 people. The shelter will measure ten by forty-eight and will have an arched roof. It should be completed within six months.

Robbery suspect asks for more time OXFORD — The man accused of robbing a Saltillo bank earlier this year is asking a judge for more time to prepare for trial. Chris Eugene Cosner, 56, is accused of robbing the First American National Bank on Mobile Street on July 1. Police says Cosner entered the bank with a .9 mm handgun and a pipe bomb in his possession. He was captured a short distance from the bank. Cosner pleaded not guilty to two federal charges in connection with the incident. His trial is currently set for November 30, but his attorney says they need more time to prepare for trial and asked the judge for a delay.

Guardsman arrested on charge of AWOL OXFORD — A Lafayette County man is in custody after being accused going “absent without leave” from the Mississippi National Guard. Lafayette County sheriff’s deputies arrested 23-year-old Bobby J. Hutchins on Friday without incident. Hutchins will remain at the county detention center until he is transferred to a military detention facility to face the charges.

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Opinion

Mark Boehler, 4A • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 editor Corinth, Miss.

U.S. House passes 6-year highway bill STARKVILLE — New U.S. House speaker, new House federal highways bill gets passed, but in great measure it’s the same political can kicked down the same political road. Sid Salter By a margin of 363 to 64, newly-minted U.S. House Columnist Speaker Paul Ryan led a new six-year, $300 billion highway bill to passage. But the new House bill fails to address the ongoing, chronic shortfall in funding for the Federal Highway Trust Fund. For Ryan, it’s the political equivalent of a new freshman college quarterback completing a short pass in the flat to bolster his confidence. Ryan’s ability to get a majority on the highways bill is seen as a personal political victory. Yet in terms of actually addressing the long term problem of financing federal infrastructure construction based on a gas tax formula that no longer works, this really isn’t much of a victory. During the summer, President Obama signed the $8 billion package that extended federal infrastructure spending until Nov. 20, effectively punting the issue for consideration until this fall. Without Obama’s signature on the short term fix, federal funds for surface transportation projects would have expired on July 31. Back in August, the U.S. Senate passed a six-year long term highway bill the day before the temporary extension was passed in Congress, the result of a negotiation between Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer of California. But House Republicans left town without taking up the Senate’s highway bill. But the new House bill, just like the earlier Senate bill, provides about three years of funding despite being touted as a six-year highways bill. Obama had asked for a package closer to $500 billion. Most experts slammed the new House bill as simply too small to make a real impact on the nation’s crumbling infrastructure. The construction industry, however, sees the House version just adopted as a lifeline of sorts to get federal highway projects funded again in the short term. That hinges, of course, on reconciling the new House bill with the Senate bill passed months ago. Mississippi has long been dependent on federal highway funds. From 2007 to 2011, the federal government provided $1.27 for road improvements in Mississippi for every one dollar paid in federal motor fuel fees and during the same period, federal revenues accounted for 51 percent of state spending on Mississippi’s roads, highways and bridges. The Federal Highway Trust Fund faces the same problems that the Mississippi Department of Transportation faces in raising state highways funds from state fuel taxes. Fuel consumption is flat and fuel efficiency continues to improve, so as we drive less and get more miles to the gallon, the federal gas tax — currently at 18.4 cents per gallon — doesn’t raise enough revenue to sustain the current transportation infrastructure or to expand it. In 2012, a national report found that Mississippi has an estimated $30 billion in highway and bridge needs between 2008 and 2035 but that the state’s current gas tax structure would only generate $15.3 billion to meet those expenses in a “best-case” scenario. Here in Mississippi, the state’s Transportation Commission was re-elected and all three commissioners are Republican – which should help their efforts with a Mississippi Legislature still firmly in Republican control. Central District Commissioner Dick Hall has led the charge in calling for a serious review of Mississippi’s gas tax. But getting legislative action on that call has proven difficult. But the fact remains that Mississippi has some 4,700 miles of highways in dire need of at an estimated costs of about $1 billion. At some point, substandard roads and bridges are issues that will no longer be such that they can be ignored. (Daily Corinthian columnist Sid Salter is syndicated across the state. Contact him at 601-507-8004 or sidsalter@sidsalter.com.)

Prayer for today Almighty God, help me to guard against gratification that leads to disappointment, that I may not miss the true way. I pray that thou wilt lift me in my weakness, and carry me over the rough and discouraging places, that I may be made strong in thy loving care, and be able to continue alone. Amen.

A verse to share For if, by the trespass of the one man, death reigned through that one man, how much more will those who receive God’s abundant provision of grace and of the gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man, Jesus Christ. —Romans 5:17

Should we fight for the Spratlys? Trailed by two Chinese warships, the guided-missile destroyer USS Lassen sailed inside the 12-nautical-mile limit of Subi Reef, a man-made island China claims as her national territory. Beijing protested. Says China: Subi Reef and the Spratly Island chain, in a South China Sea that carries half of the world’s seaborne trade, are as much ours as the Aleutians are yours. Beijing’s claim to the Spratlys is being contested by Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei, the Philippines and Taiwan. While Hanoi and Manila have occupied islets and built structures to back their claims, the Chinese have been more aggressive. They have occupied rocks and reefs with troops, dredged and expanded them into artificial islands, fortified them, put up radars and are building air strips and harbors. What the Chinese are about is easy to understand. Having feasted and grown fat on trade surpluses with the United States, the Chinese are translating their economic strength into military power and a new strategic assertiveness. They want to dominate East Asia and all the seas around it. We have been told our warships are unwelcome in the Yellow Sea and the Tai-

wan Strait. Beijing also claims the Senkakus that Japan occupies, which are Pat covered by Buchanan our mutual security Columnist treaty. And not only is the South China Sea one of the world’s crucial waterways, the fish within can feed nations, and the floor below contains vast deposits of oil and gas. Who owns the islands in the South China Sea owns the sea. Moreover, our world has changed since Eisenhower threatened to use nuclear weapons to defend Taiwan and the offshore islands of Quemoy and Matsu – and since Bill Clinton sent two U.S. carrier battle groups through the Taiwan Strait. Now we send a lone destroyer inside the 12-mile limit of a reef that, until recently, was under water at high tide. What China is doing is easily understandable. She is emulating the United States as we emerged to become an imperial power. After we drove Spain out of Cuba in 1898, we annexed Puerto Rico and the Hawaiian Islands, where American settlers had deposed the queen, took Wake

and Guam, and annexed the Philippines. The subjugation of Filipino resistance required a three-year war and thousands of dead Marines. And the reaction of President McKinley when he heard our Asian squadron had seized the islands: “When we received the cable from Admiral Dewey telling of the taking of the Philippines I looked up their location on the globe. I could not have told where those darned islands were within 2,000 miles.” In 1944, General MacArthur, whose father had crushed the Filipino resistance, retook the islands from the Japanese who had occupied them after Pearl Harbor. At the end of the Cold War, however, Manila ordered the United States to get out of Clark Air Force Base and Subic Bay naval base. We did as told. Now our Filipino friends want us back to confront China for them, as do the Vietnamese Communists in Hanoi. Before we get ourselves into the middle of their dispute, before we find ourselves in an air war or naval clash with China, we ought to ask ourselves a few questions. First, why is this our quarrel? We have no claim to any of the Spratly or Paracel Islands in the South

China Sea. Yet, each of the claimants – Beijing, Taipei, Manila, Hanoi – seems to have maps going back decades and even centuries to support those claims. Besides freedom of the seas, what is our vital interest here? If these islands are Chinese territory, Beijing has the same right to build air and naval bases on them as we do in the Aleutians, Hawaii, Wake and Guam. What do we hope to accomplish by sailing U.S. warships into what China claims to be her territorial waters? China today is in trouble. She is feared and distrusted by her neighbors; her economy has lost its dynamism; and the Communist Party is riven by purges and rampant corruption. If we believe this will be the Second American Century, that time is on our side, that Chinese communism is a dead faith, we ought to avoid a clash and show our opposition to Beijing’s excesses, if need be, by imposing tariffs on all goods made in China. China’s oligarchs will understand that message. (Daily Corinthian columnist Pat Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, author, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcaster.)

Liberals’ response to dissent: ‘Shut up’ “‘Shut up,’ he explained.” That’s a sentence from Ring Lardner’s short story “The Young Immigrunts.” It’s an exasperated father’s response from the driver’s seat to his child’s question, “Are you lost, Daddy?” They also can be taken as the emblematic response of today’s liberals to anyone questioning their certitudes. As with the father in the story, it’s a response that indicates uneasy apprehension – the fear that they have no good answer. It was not always so. Today’s liberals, like those of Lardner’s day, pride themselves on their critical minds, their openness to new and unfamiliar ideas, their tolerance of diversity and differences. But often that characterization seems as defunct as Lardner, who died far too young in 1935. Consider the proliferation of speech codes at our colleges and universities. The website of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education sets out the speech codes at 400 of the nation’s largest and most prestigious institutions of higher learning. The liberals who run these institutions have decided to limit their stu-

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dents’ First Amendment right of freedom of speech. O n e would have Michael thought that Barone universities would be the Columnist last place to limit free speech. The American Association of University Professors was founded a century ago this year precisely to champion free speech on campus. That was then and this is now. We are told that speech codes are necessary because some students may be offended by what others say. In recent years we have been warned that seemingly innocuous phrases may be “micro-aggressions,” which must be stamped out and that “trigger warnings” should be administered to warn students of possibly upsetting material. Fortunately, there are dissenters. FIRE has brought successful lawsuits against some codes and has persuaded some universities to drop their codes. The University of Chicago recently issued a strong statement

supporting free speech on campus. So did former Chicago adjunct law instructor Barack Obama. Even beyond the campus, liberals are eager to restrict free speech. This is apparent in some responses to those who argue that global warming may not be as inevitable and harmful as most liberals believe, and that while increased carbon emissions would surely raise temperatures if they were the only factor affecting climate, some other factors just might be involved. Many liberals won’t hear of this – and don’t want anyone else to, either. Some extremists call for global warming “deniers” to be imprisoned or even executed as heretics. Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse has called for criminal investigation of global warming critics under the federal anti-racketeering statutes. Whitehouse is not the only Democratic senator who is determined to stamp out the free speech of those who disagree with him. In September 2014, 54 Democratic senators voted to amend the First Amendment of the Constitution to allow Congress and state legislatures

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to set “reasonable” limits on how much candidates can raise and spend during their campaigns and how much individuals and corporations could spend to influence elections. This was an attempt to overturn the 2010 Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. FEC. The case involved government efforts to bar distribution of a movie critical of Clinton during the 2008 campaign. When Justice Alito asked the deputy solicitor general whether the government could ban a book that expressly backed or opposed a candidate, the answer, after some uncomfortable stammering, was yes, they could. In the 1930s liberals expressed outrage over Nazi book burnings in Germany. Today, liberals’ response to opposition is that of Lardner’s lost parent: “Shut up,” they explain. (Daily Corinthian columnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a coauthor of The Almanac of American Politics.)

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


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • 5A

CALDWELL CONTINUED FROM 1A

money flowing back in,” said Caldwell. “I’m going to do whatever it takes to make that happen.” The board had a brief executive session with Caldwell to discuss other staffing at the jail. “I’m not looking to come in and clean house,” he said, “but we are going to have expectations, make sure that they are held accountable, and we’re going to have a professional staff.” In addition to new leadership, one of MDOC’s conditions for inmates to return to Alcorn County is a written plan of action with preventive security measures. After the Oct. 29 shakedown, State Auditor Stacey Pickering described the situation at the cor-

rectional facility as a “free-for-all.” Caldwell said he will look at policies and procedures of MDOC and get input from other correctional facilities. “Now that I’ve taken control, we can sit down and start moving forward on that,” he said. His previous working relationship with MDOC Commissioner Marshall Fisher, the former head of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics, is a plus for his new role. “We don’t have to worry about the process of building trust,” said Caldwell. “We have that.” In another setback last week, MDOC removed 11 of 26 inmate laborers housed at the Community Work Center, causing concern among the community groups like the

animal shelter that rely on them. Supervisor Tim Mitchell asked Caldwell to try to get an answer on whether the inmate labor program will continue. “We’re going to have to do something if it’s not,” said Mitchell. Caldwell believes the correctional facility situation is getting headed in the right direction. “I think we’re a lot better off now than we were a week ago,” he said. “We want to just keep looking toward the future.” The board agreed to his request to be paid $3,500 monthly — the same amount he was making at his previous job with MBN — through the end of the year. The supervisor-elect for the Second District, James Voyles, was also present.

need for help comes a big need for support and the foundation is more than ever counting on the community to help them financially with the project this year. Donations may be brought to the foundation office or may be mailed to The Lighthouse Foundation, P.O. Box 2121, Corinth, MS 38835. Volunteers are also needed. All volunteers are required to attend one of two training sessions set for Dec. 7 and Dec. 8 in order to participate. Caveness said with sev-

eral changes to the operation of this year’s program everyone who volunteers must attend one of the training sessions.

STORE CONTINUED FROM 1A

from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. for those unable to attend a morning session. Applicants must be residents of Alcorn County and should bring current identification, proof of Alcorn County residence (a utility bill, rent receipt or other document showing their current address in the county) and a Social Security card and birth certificate for each child they wish to be assisted. There is also a $5 per person registration fee. Caveness said with a big

Donations may be mailed to The Lighthouse Foundation, P.O. Box 2121, Corinth, MS 38835. Those interested in learning more about the program or in volunteering their time can call 662-286-0091 for more information. Donations can also be made through the foundation’s new website at www.lighthousecorinth.org.

Teaming up to fight cancer Biggersville High School and Thrasher High School cheerleaders recently teamed up in the fight against breast cancer. The cheerleaders from both schools sold balloons in honor or in memory of those who have battled cancer. Cheerleaders released the balloons from the BHS football field at half-time of a recent game.

Congress OKs bill banning Gitmo detainees Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Congress sent President Barack Obama a $607 billion defense policy bill that he is expected to sign even though he adamantly opposes its ban on moving some Guantanamo Bay detainees to U.S. prisons. The Senate overwhelmingly approved the bill, 91-3, on Tues-

CONTINUED FROM 1A

three other board members, James Voyles, Carroll Morton and Randy Wilbanks, all voted for the resolution. Currently, more than half of North Mississippi school districts have appointed superintendents

including Corinth, Tishomingo, Booneville and North Tippah. Only 56 of 146 districts statewide currently have elected superintendents. Mississippi is actually one of only three states in the nation who still allow elections to be held for superintendents.

Current Superintendent Gina Rogers Smith was unseated during the August primary by former Kossuth High School Principal Larry B. Mitchell. After serving one fouryear term, Smith will relinquish duties to Mitchell in January.

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at the Crossroads Arena. Baskets will be distributed beginning at 8 a.m. Around 1,000 baskets are filled with food and paper products to help those less fortunate during the Christmas year. Organizers have set a goal of $25,000 to accommodate the need in the community. Donations to help with the ef-

fort can also be dropped off at the newspaper office or mailed to the above address. Donations can be made in memory or in honor of an individual or group. All donations will be acknowledged in the newspaper in a daily update published on the front page throughout the holidays.

Forms can be dropped off at the Daily Corinthian office or mailed to Daily Corinthian Christmas Basket Fund, P.O. Box 10, Corinth, MS. 38835. Mailed applications should be sent by Wednesday, Nov. 18. The basket giveaway is set for Saturday, Dec. 5

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to be dead on arrival on Capitol Hill, with Republicans and some Democrats opposed to any move to detain some of the terror subjects on U.S. soil. The decision to retain a ban on transferring detainees to the U.S. prompted debate on whether the president will try to bypass Congress and close the prison through executive action.

BASKET CONTINUED FROM 1A

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day just days after the House passed the bipartisan measure, 370-58. The legislation authorizes Pentagon spending on military personnel, ships, aircraft and other war-fighting equipment. The president plans to send Congress a blueprint for fulfilling his campaign pledge to close the U.S. prison in Cuba. But the plan is widely expected

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6A • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths Ruthie Pearl Duncan

A celebration of life for Ruthie Pearl Duncan, 79, is set for 2 p.m. today at Corinthian Funeral Home with burial at the Antioch Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery. Mrs. Duncan went to be with her Lord on Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at her home in Rienzi. Mrs. Duncan was born in Alcorn County on Dec. 16, 1935, to Clarence and Cora Bell Sanders Green. She was a member of Hinkle Holiness Church. A seamstress by trade, her hobbies included her family and friends, flowers, cooking, and crocheting. She is preceded in death by her parents; a son, John Nathanial Duncan; a granddaughter, Regenia Duncan; and siblings Billy Smith, Bobby Hudson, Charlie Hudson and Becky Moats. Those left to carry on her memories include her hus-

Tammy M. Adamson

TISHOMINGO — Funeral services for Tammy Michelle Adamson, 44, are set for 1 p.m. today at Cutshall Funeral Home in Iuka with burial at Mt. Joy Cemetery. Ms. Adamson died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at North Mississippi Medical Center in Iuka. Survivors include her mother, Pat Stephens of Tishomingo; her father, Robert Harris Sr. of Brandon; her grandmother, Mary Tillery of Mt. Pleasant, Texas; two brothers, Robert “Robbie” Harris Jr. (Vickie) of Brandon and John Mark Stephens (Sheryl) of Iuka. She was preceded in death by her stepfather, Kendall Stephens, and her grandparents, Eldridge Boyd Harris, Mack Meeks, and Helen and Emmett Strickland.

Terry D. Gardner

SELMER, Tenn. — Funeral services for Terry D. Gardner, 64, are set for 3 p.m. today at Shackelford Funeral Directors in Selmer with burial at Pleasant Site Cemetery. Mr. Gardner died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015. He was born Feb. 9, 1951, to the late Elmer D. and Loneda Rickman Gardner. He was a retired deputy sheriff of 25 years for McNairy County and a member of Unity Baptist Church in Ramer, Tenn. He also did mechanic work. Survivors include his wife of 30 years, Marilyn Wilson Gardner of

band, Winford Harry Duncan; sons Wayne Duncan (Regenia) of Rienzi, Winford Duncan (Janie Sue) of Booneville, James Duncan M a t h i s (Tami) of Henderson, Tenn.; daughters Janie Pittman (Sonny) and Charlotte Sloan, both of Corinth, and Patricia Crum (Jimmy) of Michie, Tenn.; her brothers, Anthony Smith of Michie, Tenn., Clayton Green and Coyte Green, both of Ripley, and Clarence Green Jr. and Jerry Green, both of Arkansas; her sisters, Eva Mae Butler and Loretta Lancaster of Memphis, Tenn., Debbi Wells of Burnsville, Betty Crawford of Arkansas and Debra Green of Ohio; 17 grandchildren, Towana Holland, Nathan Duncan,

Wayne Duncan, Nikki Duncan, Camren Duncan, Terry Ligon, Edward Ligon, Dora Stricklin, Daniel Ligon, Josh Ligon, Harley Sloan, Michael Duncan, Brian Duncan, Michelle Alford, Halie Love, Junior Ray Willis and James Ray Mathis Jr.; and 34 great-grandchildren. Grandsons will serve as pallbearers and granddaughters as honorary pallbearers. Ray Bennett will officiate the service.

Ronnie Howard

MICHIE, Tenn. — Funeral services for Ronnie Howard, 72, are set for 2 p.m. today at Lebanon United Methodist Church with burial at Lebanon Cemetery. Visitation is from 11 a.m. until service time. Mr. Howard died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015, at Hardin Medical Center in Savannah, Tenn. Born July 31, 1943, he drove a truck for 45 years. To his truck-

Ramer; one son, Tyler Gardner of Ramer; one daughter, Chelsea Gardner of Ramer; and sisters Barbara Bright (Junior) of Selmer, Linda Kay Smith (Perry) of Michie and Robbie Todd (Mark) of Bethel Springs.

Dolores St. James

A memorial service for Dolores St. James, 73, of Corinth, is set for 2:30 p.m. Thursday at Corinthian Arbors, 3121 N. Harper Road. Ms. St. James died Tuesday, Nov. 10, 2015, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. Born Aug. 16, 1942, in Pennsylvania, she was a longtime resident of Corinthian Arbors and a dedicated volunteer for the Bishop Center, hospice, Sharing Hearts Alzheimer’s program and Corinthian Arbors. Survivors include three sons, George Laguna, Nick Laguna and Mike Laguna; one daughter, Maggie Martin; 10 grandchildren; and eight great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by one son, Genaro Laguna. Bro. Warren Jones will officiate the service. Memorial contributions may be made to one of the above organizations.

Martha Sanders

IUKA — Funeral services for Martha Sanders, 61, are set for 6 p.m. today at First United Pentecostal Church with burial at Mt. Evergreen Cemetery.

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ing friends, he was known as “Rubber Strap.” After retiring, he started a lawn mowing service. He was a people person and enjoyed all of the new friendships he made. Ronnie was a member of Lebanon United Methodist Church. He loved bluegrass music and anything George Jones. He was an avid moon and star collector, but his greatest joy was being “Pops.” He is going to miss his store buddies but will be waiting on everyone in heaven. Survivors include his wife of 51 years, Sarah Moore Howard of Michie; sons O’Neal Howard (Annette) and Craig Howard (Shannan), both of Michie; grandchildren Cody Howard, Allison Howard, Colton Howard and Chloe Howard; brothers-in-Law Buddy Moore (Patty) of Michie and Charles Moore (Cathy) of Michie; his mother-in-law, Marjorie Moore of Michie; two aunts, Pat Blanton of Michie and Vonita Howard

Visitation continues until service time at the church. Mrs. Sanders died Monday, Nov. 10, 2015, at her residence. She was a member of First United Pentecostal Church, where she served as secretary and taught Sunday School for 36 years. She was a CNA at Tishomingo Community Living Center. Survivors include two sisters, Betty Shields and Anna Mae Shadburn, both of Iuka, and several nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents, Talmadge and Helen Barnett Sanders; three brothers, Bobby Gerald Sanders, Paul Sanders and David Sanders; and a sister, Lois Sanders Grissom. Bro. William Lambert, Bro. Troy Helton and Bro. James Embrey will officiate the service under the direction of Cutshall Funeral Home.

Ed C. Sullivan

TISHOMINGO — Ed C. Sullivan, 58, died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2015. Visitation is today from 6 until 9 p.m. at Ludlam Funeral Home in Iuka. No service is scheduled. Survivors include his wife, Anita Sullivan of Tishomingo; two daughters, Stephanie Shephard and Victoria Rahmam of California; and two grandchildren, Zach and Zaharah. He was preceded in death by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Sullivan.

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VA weighs homelessness goals, backlog on claims Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Though it has made much progress, the Department of Veterans Affairs is likely to miss its target on two ambitious goals: ending veteran homelessness in 2015 and ending the backlog in disability claims. The latest count available showed about 50,000 homeless veterans on a single night in January 2014. That’s a decline of 33 percent from January 2010. Results from the January 2015 count are expected later this month. The disability and pension claims backlog also is on a downward path, although not before the claims processing system became so overwhelmed that lawmakers and veterans groups demanded changes at the VA. The number of claims pending for more than 125 days soared from about 180,000 at the start of 2010 to more than 611,000 by March of 2013. It now stands at about 76,000. Those are the kind of

trends that politicians would surely like to cite during election season. Yet, as one crisis began to fade at the VA, another blossomed. Reports of thousands of veterans waiting months and sometimes years for health care have taken priority and colored the way all other issues are viewed. Investigators looking into delayed care found that inappropriate scheduling practices were a nationwide systemic problem. More than a year after the scandal broke congressional Republicans want to know why the number of employees fired is so low. VA Secretary Robert McDonald faces complaints that he has overstated the number of employees disciplined. The VA’s reputation suffered another blow earlier this month after two highranking officials refused to testify at a congressional hearing on allegations that they manipulated the agency’s hiring system for their own gain.

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of Michie; four nephews, Mark Moore (Tracye), Chris Moore (Jana), Jamie Moore (Wendy) and Justin Moore (Candy); a special cousin, Scarlette King; his best friend and reclining buddy, “Stubby;” other relatives; and a host of friends. He was preceded in death by his parents, Herburt J. Howard and Jewelle Blanton Howard; a brother, Dean Howard (Mary); a niece, Theresa Howard; and his father-in-law, Travis Moore. Pallbearers are Cody Howard, Colton Howard, Larry White, Buddy Moore, Kenneth Howard, Ray Rickman, Justin Moore and Charles Moore. Honorary pallbearers are Junior Raines and Danny Elam. Bro. George Kyle and Bro. Walter German will officiate the service under the direction of Magnolia Funeral Home of Corinth. Online guestbook: magnoliafuneralhome.net

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State/Nation

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Across the Nation Associated Press

National park marks atom bomb creation WASHINGTON — More than 70 years ago scientists working in secret created the atomic bomb that ended World War II and ushered the world into the nuclear age. On Tuesday, at a ceremony in a federal building where clandestine plans for the bomb were developed just blocks from the White House, Interior Secretary Sally Jewell and Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz formally established the Manhattan Project National Historical Park. The park preserves three sites where work on the bomb was completed: Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Hanford, Washington; and Los Alamos, New Mexico. Jewell, Moniz and other officials said the sites will not glorify war or nuclear weapons, but will tell the story of the three historical sites from a range of perspectives, including the cities in Japan where two nuclear bombs were dropped in 1945. “It certainly is a celebration that we will be telling the story of these three important historical sites,” Jewell told reporters. “It’s not necessarily a celebration of the consequences of that, but rather an opportunity to tell that story to a broader audience.”

Fast food workers aim for candidates NEW YORK — Workers from McDonald’s, Taco Bell and other chain restaurants protested in cities around the country Tuesday to push fast food companies to pay them at least $15 an hour. The protesters also had a message for presidential candidates: Support the cause or lose their vote next year. The fast food protests were planned by organizers at more than 270 cities nationwide, part of an ongoing campaign called “Fight for $15.” Janitors, nursing home workers and package delivery workers also joined some protests,

organizers said. Dominique McCrae, who serves fried chicken and biscuits at a Bojangles’ restaurant for $7.55 an hour, joined a protest outside a McDonald’s in Durham, North Carolina. Her pay isn’t enough to cover rent or diapers for her child, the 23-year-old says. She dropped out of college to care for her grandfather, making finances tight. “We just want to be able to support our families,” says McCrae, who has worked at Bojangles’ for two months. A representative for Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bojangles’ Inc. did not respond to a request for comment. The campaign began about three years ago and is funded by the Service Employees International Union, which represents low-wage workers. Several protests have been scheduled in front of fast food restaurants, garnering media attention.

Obama to justices: Shield immigrants WASHINGTON — The Obama administration will ask the Supreme Court to save the president’s plan to shield as many as 5 million immigrants living in the country illegally from deportation, after lower courts blocked it. A federal appeals court in New Orleans on Monday upheld a Texasbased federal judge’s injunction against President Barack Obama’s plan. Obama has issued executive orders to protect from deportation parents whose children are citizens or legal permanent residents, along with other immigrants who came to the country illegally as children. The Justice Department said Tuesday it disagrees with the 2-1 ruling by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and would appeal to the high court. Republicans have criticized the plan as illegal executive overreach since Obama announced it last November. Twenty-six states challenged the plan in court. The administration

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argued that the executive branch was within its rights in deciding to defer deportation of selected groups of immigrants, including children who were brought to the U.S. illegally. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott praised the ruling. “President Obama should abandon his lawless executive amnesty program and start enforcing the law today,” Abbott said in a news release.

Forecasters calling for snow, tornadoes NORMAN, Okla. — Forecasters say a mixture of bad weather including heavy snow and tornadoes is expected as a strong storm system plows toward the central U.S. from the Rocky Mountains. A blizzard warning was issued for Tuesday night and Wednesday in the Great Plains east of Denver, while tornadoes and high winds could rake parts of the Midwest on Wednesday. “November has a history of producing some significant weather events. We will have to keep an eye on things,” said Greg Carbin, warning coordination meteorologist at the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Oklahoma. Wet, heavy snow fell in Nevada on Tuesday morning, shuttering schools in Reno and knocking out power to thousands before moving eastward. Northeastern Colorado and western Kansas and Nebraska expected 6 inches of snow and wind gusts up to 60 mph overnight — a combination that can cause white-out conditions. At Pi Kappa Cino Coffee in Sterling, Colorado, workers were checking their heaters and stocking up on coffee Tuesday to handle a busy morning on the first significant snowfall of the season.

Associated Press

Man pleads guilty to assaulting officer PHILADELPHIA — A Mississippi man faces up to eight years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine after pleading guilty to one count of assaulting a Choctaw tribal police officer. The U.S. attorney’s office says Tuesday that 29-year-old Jason Gooden of Philadelphia entered his plea Monday before U.S. District Judge Daniel P. Jordan III. Gooden’s sentencing is set for Jan. 28. U.S. Attorney Gregory K. Davis says that on April 4, Gooden was asked to leave the Choctaw-run Silver Star Casino in Neshoba County because he appeared to be drunk. When Gooden didn’t leave, Choctaw Police Department officers were called to assist a security guard, and Gooden grabbed an officer and threw him to the ground.

Last plea entered in BP fraud case GULFPORT — The last of seven defendants in a BP claims fraud case, 33-year-old Thi Houng Le, has pleaded not guilty to 95 felony charges. The Sun Herald reports Le was represented in U.S. District Court on Monday by Public Defender John Weber because, she said, she could not afford an attorney. Weber said he has been representing the Grand Bay, Alabama, resident for two years. U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert H. Walker released Le, 33, on an unsecured bond of $25,000, which she will have to pay in cash if she fails to appear in court. All seven defendants are scheduled to be tried together in the court term beginning Dec. 7, although they could ask for more time to prepare their cases.

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Federal money funds restoration projects JACKSON — Mississippi is receiving almost $30 million from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation for four coastal restoration projects. Gov. Phil Bryant announced the projects Tuesday for areas affected by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion and oil spill. Nearly $11.8 million will go toward studies of how to make oyster populations more resilient and productive. About $9.9 million will be used to enhance habitat on federal coastal lands, including restoration of more than 30,000 acres through invasive species removal, forest thinning and prescribed burns.

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A-B-C-D ADT Corp AES Corp AK Steel AT&T Inc AbbottLab AbbVie Achillion ActivsBliz AMD Aecom Aegerion AerCap AEtern g h Aetna Agilent AlcatelLuc Alcoa Alibaba Allergan AllyFincl AlpAlerMLP Altria Amazon Ambev Amedica h AMovilL AmAirlines AmCapLtd AEagleOut AmExp AmIntlGrp Amgen AmicusTh Anadarko Anavex rs AnglogldA Annaly Anthem Apache Apple Inc ApldMatl Approach ArcelorMit ArchCoal rs ArchDan AscenaRtl Atmel AtwoodOcn Autodesk AvagoTch Avon BB&T Cp BHP BillLt BHPBil plc BP PLC BRF SA Baidu BakrHu BcBilVArg BcoBrad s BcoSantSA BkofAm BkNYMel B iPVixST BarrickG Baxter s BerkH B BestBuy BioMedR BlackDiam BlackBerry Blackstone BlockHR BloominBr BonanzaCE BostonSci BrMySq Broadcom BrcdeCm CBRE Grp CBS B CF Inds s CMS Eng CSX CVS Health CabotO&G Cadence CalifRes n CallonPet Calpine CdnNRs gs CdnSolar CapOne Carlisle Carnival Caterpillar Celgene Cemex Cemig pf CenterPnt CentAl CntryLink ChesEng Chevron Cirrus Cisco Citigroup CitizFincl CliffsNRs Coach CocaCola ColgPalm Comcast CommScpe ConAgra ConocoPhil ConsolEngy Constellm ContlRescs Corning CSVLgNG rs CSVLgCrd rs CSVInvNG CSVelIVST CSVixSh rs CrestwdEq Cummins CyberArk CypSemi DDR Corp DR Horton Darden DeanFoods DeltaAir DenburyR Depomed DBXEafeEq DevonE DiamOffsh DirSPBear DxSCBear rs DxGBull rs DxFnBull s DirDGldBr DrxSCBull DiscCmA Disney DollarGen DollarTree DomRescs DonlleyRR DowChm DuPont DukeEngy DukeRlty

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32.55 10.07 2.70 32.79 45.76 62.30 10.40 33.86 2.02 30.88 10.64 40.30 .06 108.74 37.98 3.94 8.35 81.43 306.70 19.91 13.04 56.79 659.68 4.92 .23 16.28 44.49 14.23 16.32 73.37 61.35 158.37 10.08 63.42 5.44 6.94 9.58 135.27 53.31 116.77 16.76 2.52 5.23 1.60 40.63 12.44 7.52 18.66 63.36 119.86 3.16 38.33 29.88 28.89 34.77 14.44 196.99 49.83 8.42 5.65 5.51 17.85 43.63 18.49 7.20 37.98 134.73 34.66 23.32 3.99 7.69 32.25 37.13 16.36 8.57 18.80 65.05 51.45 10.50 35.96 49.75 47.34 34.99 27.95 97.84 22.64 22.78 4.93 8.89 14.75 24.49 22.25 79.38 85.85 53.13 72.43 113.77 5.96 2.05 17.13 3.75 28.60 7.06 93.23 29.43 27.98 55.80 26.00 3.31 31.37 41.77 66.38 61.57 27.79 41.15 54.65 8.17 7.21 35.60 18.78 3.70 8.95 11.92 31.32 5.94 2.53 103.73 40.50 10.37 16.54 31.15 54.68 18.97 50.30 4.20 21.21 28.04 47.76 22.49 16.51 40.63 24.81 31.69 21.09 73.60 30.06 117.42 66.04 67.85 67.80 16.34 51.71 66.34 67.37 19.95

E-F-G-H eBay s EMC Cp EOG Rescs EV Engy Eaton EdisonInt EldorGld g EliLilly EmersonEl EmpDist EnCana g Endo Intl EgyTrEq s EngyTsfr ENSCO Ericsson Etsy n Exelixis Exelon ExxonMbl Facebook FedExCp FiatChrys FifthThird FireEye

16 29.14 21 25.25 ... 86.58 1 4.13 12 56.23 13 60.05 dd 3.22 34 80.06 12 47.79 17 22.12 32 7.76 dd 55.57 21 19.27 cc 41.55 dd 18.29 ... 9.36 ... 8.49 dd 6.33 13 28.74 17 82.35 cc 107.91 47 161.50 ... 14.05 12 20.63 dd 23.24

Chg FstData n ... 17.80 FstNiagara 18 10.88 FstRepBk 21 65.87 -.74 FstSolar 10 55.87 +.17 FirstEngy 11 29.48 +.02 Fitbit n ... 35.92 -.05 Flextrn 12 11.46 +.71 Flotek cc 9.04 -.93 FootLockr 17 65.65 +.02 FordM 12 14.28 -.19 Fortinet ... 33.38 -.09 FourCorPT ... 20.38 +.56 FrptMcM dd 9.83 -2.48 FrontierCm dd 4.74 -.92 GATX 9 45.61 -.00 GalenaBio dd 1.53 +.74 Gap 10 27.29 +.06 GenDynam 16 143.94 -.08 GenElec dd 30.12 -.26 GenGrPrp 18 26.84 +.05 GenMotors 13 35.62 +9.88 Genworth dd 4.76 +.11 Gerdau ... 1.48 -.29 GileadSci 10 108.85 -.29 GlaxoSKln ... 40.96 +4.19 GluMobile ... 3.17 +.09 Goldcrp g dd 11.68 -.02 Goodyear 3 32.44 -.15 GoPro 19 25.02 -.16 GraphPkg 18 13.66 +.17 GtBasSci f ... .06 +.29 Groupon 25 2.71 -.05 HCA Hldg 13 70.08 +.14 HCP Inc 65 33.16 -1.26 HP Inc ... 14.12 -.21 HRG Grp 69 13.05 -4.48 Hallibrtn 48 38.91 -.76 Halozyme dd 16.21 -.17 HeclaM 63 1.90 +.07 Hertz dd 16.37 +1.50 HP Ent n ... 14.41 -.63 Hilton 37 25.70 -3.80 Hologic 89 41.00 -.05 HomeDp 24 125.26 -.01 HonwllIntl 18 102.40 -.15 HopFedBc 34 11.88 +.04 HorizPhm cc 22.38 -.89 HostHotls 20 17.21 +.22 HuntBncsh 14 11.61 -.14 Huntsmn 29 13.14 +1.70 I-J-K-L -.15 dd 1.41 -6.64 IAMGld g ... 7.93 +.11 ICICI Bk s q 10.50 -.32 iShGold q 23.78 -.06 iShBrazil q 36.16 -.06 iShEMU q 26.41 -.11 iShGerm q 14.45 -.21 iShItaly q 12.48 +2.98 iShJapan iSTaiwn q 13.74 -1.83 q 13.76 -.09 iShSilver +.05 iShChinaLC q 37.91 -.04 iSCorSP500 q 209.72 +.17 iShUSAgBd q 108.38 q 34.27 -.04 iShEMkts q 118.68 -.54 iSh20 yrT q 60.27 -.16 iS Eafe q 84.00 +.32 iShiBxHYB q 118.17 +.73 iShR2K q 39.10 -.70 iShUSPfd q 73.65 +.01 iShREst q 27.44 -1.18 iShHmCnst dd 12.28 -.39 iStar 5 7.22 +.20 IconixBr 26 30.93 +.39 IngrmM Intel 14 33.21 +.17 9 135.47 +.03 IBM dd 42.80 +.21 Intrexon Invesco 13 32.97 +.06 q 41.66 -1.74 iShCorEM q 25.21 -.33 iShCHGer Isis cc 64.12 ... 7.33 +1.21 ItauUnibH dd 28.20 -.83 JD.com +.59 JPMorgCh 12 67.68 16 23.96 +.17 Jabil 44 48.85 -.15 Jarden s 16 26.34 +.07 JetBlue 18 101.45 +.20 JohnJn 7 16.81 +.06 JoyGlbl dd 29.61 -.26 JnprNtwk 15 13.35 +.05 KB Home 15 50.04 -.34 KeurigGM 12 13.22 -.78 Keycorp KindMorg 48 25.45 -1.07 dd 1.77 +.01 Kinross g 11 45.60 +.56 Kohls KraftHnz n ... 72.08 +.54 19 37.27 -.31 Kroger s 17 46.93 -.02 LVSands dd 5.09 +.12 Lattice 15 49.40 -.37 LennarA 20 27.11 -.29 LibQVC A 52 39.83 -.21 LionsGt g ... 4.44 -.21 LloydBkg 19 214.07 +.91 LockhdM 25 73.34 -2.78 Lowes -.20 LyonBas A 10 93.47 +.09 M-N-O-P +.13 11 9.51 +.06 MGIC Inv +.49 MGM Rsts dd 23.43 MSCI Inc 36 67.25 +.23 12 47.02 +.61 Macys +.22 Magna g s 10 46.36 ... 62.58 -.70 Mallinckdt dd 2.30 -.17 MannKd cc 18.78 +.01 MarathnO q 18.90 -.06 MVJrGold q 13.47 -.14 MktVGold q 31.30 -.06 MV OilSvc q 16.66 +.01 MktVRus 39 153.56 +.10 MartMM 10 8.73 +.06 MarvellT lf 27 28.80 -.33 Masco MasterCrd 30 100.65 +.78 27 24.34 -.34 Mattel cc 5.94 -.09 McDrmInt McDnlds 24 113.22 -1.47 32 76.40 -4.28 Medtrnic -.24 MelcoCrwn 32 18.08 15 54.43 +.29 Merck 12 50.77 +2.38 MetLife 6 15.55 -.26 MicronT 36 53.51 -.28 Microsoft Mobileye cc 43.79 -.33 +.01 MolsCoorB 36 88.31 35 44.59 +1.10 Mondelez 20 92.86 +.01 Monsanto 12 35.24 +.78 MorgStan 9 31.76 -.54 Mosaic Mylan NV 26 45.44 -.10 dd 13.58 -.31 NRG Egy ... 80.57 -2.05 NXP Semi dd 10.18 +.42 Nabors ... .58 +1.41 NBGreece 5 12.72 +.57 Navient Netflix s cc 112.70 +1.06 dd 2.35 +1.00 NwGold g 10 13.01 -.93 NewResid +.24 NY CmtyB 14 15.90 ... 11.33 +.07 NY REIT -.31 NewfldExp dd 39.67 23 17.46 +.01 NewmtM dd 14.44 -.05 NewsCpA +.23 NiSource s 16 19.25 33 130.00 +.15 NikeB NobleCorp dd 13.77 NobleEngy cc 37.84 ... 7.22 -.04 NokiaCp 18 64.73 -.58 Nordstrm 16 88.57 +1.21 NorflkSo -.05 NthStarAst 19 13.42 -.13 NorthropG 17 181.49 +.80 NStRFn rs dd 18.77 dd 7.02 -.15 Novavax 25 30.81 +1.20 Nvidia 7 12.58 -.05 OasisPet 8.44 +.42 OcataThera dd 33 76.26 -.29 OcciPet 30 11.22 +1.07 OnSmcnd dd 10.72 -.15 OpkoHlth 19 39.92 +.33 Oracle PG&E Cp 24 53.37 cc 11.89 -.63 PMC Sra 20 101.12 -.31 PPG s 11 33.28 +.23 PPL Corp dd 13.03 +.24 Pandora dd 16.24 +.40 PattUTI ... 37.00 +1.42 PayPal n dd .65 +.95 PennVa dd 8.68 -.16 Penney 20 16.78 +.22 PeopUtdF 29 98.83 -.52 PepsiCo

Today

Holiday sales outlook?

+.34 PetrbrsA Petrobras Pfizer PiperJaf PlainsGP PlatfmSpc PlugPowr h PlumCrk Potash PS KBWBk PwShs QQQ PUVixST rs PrUCrude rs ProctGam ProgsvCp ProUShSP PShtQQQ PUShtSPX PulteGrp

-2.11 -2.52 +.36 -1.54 -.15 -5.56 -1.57 -.05 -.06 +1.13 -.66 -.10 -.39 -.19 -.40 -.35 +.37 +.21 -.05 +.01 +.04 +.74 +.05 -.26 -.11 -.90 -.13 -.00 +.03 +.10 +.10 +.25 +.13 -.19 -1.67 -.03 -.07 +.21 +.26 +1.36 +.76 -.31 +.01 +.09 +.07 +.04 -.06 -.10 -.13 -.03 +.42 -.12 -.07 +.08 +.13 -.14 -.13 -.26 +.51 +.20 -.15 +.35 -.04 -.19 +.35 +.10 +.67 +.68 +.15 +.17 +.24 -.14 +.16 +3.02 -.47 -.13 +.06 +1.35 +.11 -.56 +.29 -.09 +.20 +.59 +.61 -.08 +.37 +.58 -2.34 +.05 -.11 -.06 +1.62 +.84 +.18 +.32 -.09 +1.60 +.70 +1.55 -.03 -.63 +1.32 -1.02

-.03 +.11 +.76 +.78 -1.03 +4.57 -.33 +.42 -.44 -.36 -.04 -.01 +1.41 -.17 +.39 +.18 -.36 +.69 +.29 +.53 +.42 +.19 -.03 -.29 -.65 -1.03 +.95 +.20 -1.41 +.13 -.88 +.30 +.28 -.55 +.03 -.04 -.23 +2.84 -.04 +.17 +.08 +.21 +.22 -.40 +.02 +.33 -.48 +.14 +.62 -.21 +2.03 -.05 -.60 -.17 +.04 -.48 -.60 +.11 +3.98 +1.05 -.29 +.77 -.18 +.87 +.14 -.61 +.23 +.52 +.07 +.40 -.15 +.15 +.07 -.05

... ... 25 11 11 dd dd 35 11 q q q q 27 14 q q q 14

4.08 4.93 33.79 35.78 12.59 11.68 1.91 46.21 20.24 39.25 113.28 26.80 21.11 75.77 31.45 19.54 18.68 30.85 18.19

+.08 +.04 +.14 -2.11 -.35 -.22 -.46 -.61 -.60 +.10 -.29 -1.60 +.09 +.37 -.02 -.07 +.17 -.20 +.63

11 16 11 33 19 15 17 ... 30 16 dd 12 ... 22 13 q q q q q q q q q dd 27 34 dd 3 7 41 23 30 24 41 17 20 dd dd 16 17 17 16 dd 20 30 dd q q q q q q q q q cc 34 22 17 38 94 32 ... dd 13 13 21 12 ... dd 62 24 22 ... dd ... dd dd 23 21 dd dd 20 16 19 9 ... dd ... 13 11 8 8 dd 8

52.29 52.27 21.49 30.33 32.14 10.07 44.59 35.26 7.80 104.18 20.61 50.54 .18 56.52 6.83 177.78 104.18 208.56 35.77 26.95 35.85 45.70 45.65 39.23 .37 78.77 33.33 9.73 6.64 36.54 45.66 26.36 36.29 12.47 4.14 28.13 80.37 26.46 2.90 29.86 6.64 44.44 46.46 11.43 27.04 9.69 4.08 44.69 71.68 48.98 81.06 69.26 24.57 54.43 43.62 42.74 13.04 62.18 77.15 71.43 17.10 14.11 97.60 29.48 5.77 43.75 16.67 19.97 31.08 30.90 .54 37.03 36.64 71.82 22.51 77.19 5.10 14.43 216.50 8.80 57.03 23.62 9.64 157.59 69.74 35.14 41.39 49.58 14.98 14.50 13.40 9.68 30.08 30.33 27.05 8.35

-1.80 -.67 +.25 +3.24 -1.15 +.08 +.02 +.50 -.03 -3.61 -.28 -.43 +.04 +.93 -.20 +.36 -.22 +.48 +.40 -.04 -.11 +.06 +.35 +.15 -.03 +.86 -.16 -1.84 -.08 -1.74 -1.25 -.23 +1.67 -.24 +.03 -.24 -4.52 -1.43 +2.04 -2.15 -.45 +.42 +.09 -.37 -.34 +.06 -.20 -.33 +.48 +.13 +.76 +.15 +.11 -.01 -.29 +.38 +.21 +.84 +.22 -.99 -.63 +.01 +.79 +.14 -1.63 +.52 +.11 -.15 -1.44 -1.06 -.07 -1.53 -.31 +.75 -.45 +.96 -.15 -3.87 -8.83 +.96 -.18 -5.81 -.45 +.12 +1.25 +.70 +.41 +.05 -.07 +.22 +.46 -.52 +.59 +.63 -.04 +.11

YOUR FUNDS

Financial strategies. One-on-one advice. Eric M Rutledge, CFP®, AAMS® Financial Advisor 1500 Harper Road Suite 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409

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

Q-R-S-T Qorvo n Qualcom QuantaSvc Rackspace RangeRs RegionsFn ReynAm s RioTinto RiteAid RockwlAut Rowan RoyDShllA Rubicon g RymanHP SLM Cp SpdrDJIA SpdrGold S&P500ETF SpdrHome SpdrShTHiY SpdrLehHY SpdrS&P RB SpdrRetl s SpdrOGEx SandRdge Schlmbrg Schwab SciGames SeadrillLtd SeagateT SealAir ServiceCp ServiceMst SilvWhtn g SiriusXM Skechers s SkywksSol SolarCity SophirisB h Sothebys SouFun SouthnCo SwstAirl SwstnEngy SpectraEn SpiritRltC Sprint SP Matls SP HlthC SP CnSt SP Consum SP Engy SPDR Fncl SP Inds SP Tech SP Util Staples Starbucks s StarwdHtl StateStr StlDynam StratHotels Stryker Suncor g SunEdison SunTrst SwiftTrans Symantec Synchrony SynchFn wi SyntaPhm T-MobileUS TD Ameritr TJX TaiwSemi Target TeckRes g TerraFmP TeslaMot TetraTech TexInst Textura 3D Sys 3M Co TimeWarn TollBros TorDBk gs Total SA Transocn Travelport TriPointe TrinaSolar 21stCFoxA 21stCFoxB Twitter TwoHrbInv

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

www.edwardjones.com

Member SIPC

Growth through mergers more patients seeking treatment as baby The health care industry is hitting a growth spurt that stretches past every other sector of the boomers age and uninsured people gain coverage under the health care overhaul. U.S. economy so far this year. That means the pressure to control costs won’t Nearly a quarter of the roughly $1.99 trillion ease, and one way to do slated to be spent on that is to grow bigger and mergers and acquisigain more negotiating tions will be invested in leverage over prices, drugmakers, insurers or noted Paul Keckley of the other health care Navigant Center for businesses, according to Healthcare Research and financial data provider Policy Analysis. Dealogic. That total Ultimately, what’s good could surge since for the company is good drugmakers Pfizer and for the investor. BusinessAllergan are discussing Annual Top 8 Sectors of US Targeted M&A es that cut expenses, gain what could become the leverage and improve biggest deal of 2015. Others Health care efficiency ultimately can These deals can help 23.8 22.7% improve profits. companies cut expenses “Health care firms, in and become more Utility & general, I believe will need efficient at a time when Energy 5.3 21.2 5.6 to get bigger,” Morningstar health care costs keep Real Estate 6.0 Technology analyst Vishnu Lekraj rising faster than Finance 7.7 7.7 said. inflation. There also are Oil & gas Telecom Combined Approx. annual Main business/focus deal price Proposed merger revenue* UnitedHealth-Catamaran

Pharmacy benefits management

CVS-OmniCare

Pharmacy benefits management

Walgreens Boots Alliance-Rite Aid

Drugstores

Anthem Inc.-Cigna Aetna Inc.-Humana

$12.8 bil. 10.4

$152.1 bil. 145.8

9.4

130.0

Health insurance

48.0

107.8

Health insurance

35.0

Sources: FactSet, SEC filings; Dealogic *before deal completion, not counting divestitures

106.4 Tom Murphy • AP

INDEXES 52-Week High Low 18,351.36 15,370.33 9,310.22 7,452.70 657.17 539.96 11,254.87 9,509.59 5,231.94 4,292.14 2,134.72 1,867.01 1,551.28 1,344.80 22,537.15 19,619.26 1,296.00 1,078.63

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

Last 17,758.21 8,217.49 561.98 10,432.35 5,083.24 2,081.72 1,457.24 21,678.63 1,187.69

Dow Jones industrials

18,000

Close: 17,758.21 Change: 27.73 (0.2%)

17,760 17,520

18,400

Net YTD 52-wk Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg +27.73 +.16 -.36 +.81 +2.31 +.03 -10.09 -9.31 +3.53 +.63 -9.08 -7.04 +17.16 +.16 -3.75 -4.36 -12.06 -.24 +7.33 +9.07 +3.14 +.15 +1.11 +2.06 +6.91 +.48 +.33 +1.55 +33.59 +.16 +.04 +1.01 +3.26 +.28 -1.41 +.66

10 DAYS

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

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STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

U-V-W-X-Y-Z

YTD YTD Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg UBS Grp n ... 19.40 -.18 Name UTiWrldwd dd 6.97 -.07 AFLAC .48 15 14.84 +.04 -.3 1.64f 11 64.31 +.75 +5.3 OldNBcp UltraPt g 4 5.17 -.24 AT&T Inc 1.88 36 32.79 -.05 -2.4 Penney ... ... 8.68 +.15 +34.0 UnionPac 15 84.84 -1.33 AerojetR ... ... 16.25 -.33 -11.2 UtdContl 3 60.06 -.09 AirProd 3.24 22 136.72 +.39 -5.2 PennyMac 1.88m 12 15.50 +.28 -26.5 UPS B 24 104.34 +.33 2.20 16 58.15 +1.34 -12.5 PepsiCo 2.81 29 98.83 -.05 +4.5 US Bancrp 14 43.36 +.02 AlliantEgy 2.24f 15 55.10 +.67 -9.3 PilgrimsP US NGas q 9.79 +.09 AEP 5.77e 7 20.19 +.20 -27.1 1.36f ... 98.87 +1.47 +9.7 US OilFd q 14.09 +.01 AmeriBrgn .24 15 10.07 +.08 -4.6 USSteel dd 10.81 +.35 ATMOS 1.68f 19 60.94 +1.45 +9.3 RegionsFn UtdTech 15 98.68 -.34 BB&T Cp 1.08 14 38.33 -.32 -1.4 SbdCp 3.00 20 3223.00 -7.00 -23.2 UtdhlthGp 18 115.89 +1.63 BP PLC 2.40 ... 34.77 -.11 -8.8 SearsHldgs ... ... 24.81 +.02 -24.8 Vale SA ... 4.11 +.06 BcpSouth .40f 19 26.68 +.14 +18.5 Vale SA pf ... 3.38 -.02 Sherwin 2.68 25 264.57 -1.32 +.6 Caterpillar 3.08 14 72.43 +.54 -20.9 ValeantPh 48 83.68 -1.73 4.28 20 93.23 +.91 -16.9 SiriusXM ... 41 4.14 +.03 +18.3 ValeroE 7 71.32 +.83 Chevron 1.32 27 41.77 +.23 -1.1 VangREIT q 77.76 +.88 CocaCola SouthnCo 2.17 17 44.44 +.42 -9.5 VangAllW q 44.84 -.02 Comcast 1.00 19 61.57 +.22 +6.1 .44e ... 24.57 +.11 -.6 VangEmg q 34.47 -.09 CrackerB 4.40a 20 136.01 +.49 -3.4 SPDR Fncl VangEur q 51.04 -.18 Deere 2.40 12 76.27 +.03 -13.8 Torchmark .54 14 60.05 +.70 +10.9 VangFTSE q 37.52 -.01 Dillards .28f 11 89.14 +2.14 -28.8 Ventas 38 50.15 +.38 Total SA 2.81e ... 49.58 +.05 -3.2 1.68 14 63.99 +.09 -10.8 Vereit ... 8.15 +.10 Dover 1.02 14 43.36 +.02 -3.5 .80 ... 51.25 +.17 -18.3 US Bancrp Verisign 32 81.72 +.48 EnPro .60 12 14.28 -.05 -7.9 WalMart VerizonCm 18 45.10 -.20 FordM 1.96 12 58.68 +.19 -31.7 ViacomB 11 48.40 +.62 FredsInc .24 ... 14.48 -.13 -16.8 WellsFargo 1.50 14 55.91 +.44 +2.0 Vipshop 51 19.52 -1.37 FullerHB .52 26 39.01 -.05 -12.4 Visa s 31 79.48 +1.58 GenElec .24f 30 9.57 +.16 +6.0 .92 ... 30.12 +.37 +19.2 Wendys Co VMware 27 60.44 +.98 Goodyear .28f 3 32.44 -.11 +13.5 WestlkChm .73f 12 60.58 -.03 -.8 Vodafone ... 33.69 +1.38 2.38f 18 102.40 -.31 +2.5 VulcanM 76 100.09 -.54 HonwllIntl WestRock n 1.50 ... 51.33 -.57 -19.0 .96 14 33.21 -.14 -8.5 WPX Engy dd 8.60 -.03 Intel 1.24 28 29.24 -.26 -18.5 .32 16 23.96 -.09 +9.8 Weyerhsr WalMart 12 58.68 +.19 Jabil WalgBoots 26 83.53 +.05 KimbClk 3.52 63 118.92 +.90 +2.9 Xerox .28 33 9.62 -.06 -30.6 Wayfair ... 39.43 -6.41 Kroger s .42f 19 37.27 +.18 +16.1 ... 20 17.47 +.74 -22.3 WeathfIntl dd 10.79 -.13 Lowes 1.12 25 73.34 +1.32 +6.6 YRC Wwde WtWatch 45 22.54 -1.16 McDnlds ... ... 33.99 +.31 -32.7 3.56f 24 113.22 +.29 +20.8 Yahoo WellsFargo 14 55.91 +.44 Welltower 23 59.40 +.39 Wendys Co 30 9.57 +.16 WDigital 11 63.58 -3.03 WstnUnion 12 19.41 -.02 Weyerhsr 28 29.24 -.26 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) WhiteWave 45 42.90 -.48 Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg WhitingPet dd 18.04 -.27 Name WholeFood 20 30.39 -.09 GenElec 2378055 30.12 +.37 SophirisB h 2.90 +2.04 +236.8 MagHR pfC 2.07 -2.35 -53.2 WmsCos 67 36.81 -.14 SunEdison 1150815 5.77 -1.63 OcataThera 8.44 +3.98 +89.2 Flotek 9.04 -5.56 -38.1 WT EurHdg q 61.39 +.08 BkofAm 579334 17.85 +.17 SciClone lf 9.66 +1.67 +20.9 HercOffs n 9.50 -4.70 -33.1 WTJpHedg q 55.30 +.65 Apple Inc 561995 116.77 -3.80 Bellicum n 19.84 +3.08 +18.4 Amaya g 15.99 -7.57 -32.1 WT India q 19.39 -.12 Microsoft 541096 53.51 -.65 C1 Fincl 24.31 +3.66 +17.7 Rentech rs 3.95 -1.78 -31.1 Wynn 35 67.25 -.90 22.80 -8.95 -28.2 xG Tech rs dd .36 -.08 Synchrony 374324 31.08 -1.44 GblDefens h12.75 +1.87 +17.2 RigNet FrptMcM 334742 9.83 -.66 Trovagne 5.35 +.75 +16.3 BarrettB 38.47 -14.28 -27.1 XOMA dd 1.41 -.12 Petrobras 320102 4.93 +.04 Tecogen 4.01 +.50 +14.2 SafeBulk 2.24 -.77 -25.6 XcelEngy 19 35.58 +.57 284474 4.11 +.06 AclarisTh n 17.29 +2.15 +14.2 Mannatech 19.52 -6.46 -24.9 Xerox 33 9.62 -.06 Vale SA 275795 25.25 -.58 McDrmInt 5.94 +.69 +13.1 ExOne 7.84 -2.59 -24.8 Yahoo cc 33.99 +.31 EMC Cp Yamana g dd 1.77 -.09 YoukuTud dd 26.49 +.12 YSE IARY ASDAQ IARY YumBrnds 30 68.76 -.24 1,765 Total issues 3,212 Advanced 1,367 Total issues 2,937 ZayoGrp dd 24.52 -1.27 Advanced 1,366 New Highs 32 Declined 1,420 New Highs 83 Ziopharm dd 14.57 +.59 Declined Unchanged 81 New Lows 92 Unchanged 150 New Lows 102 Zoetis 45 45.88 +.08 Volume 3,751,875,778 Volume 1,846,147,996 Zynga ... 2.52

MARKET SUMMARY G

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M $47.02 Macy’s latest quarterly report card may $80 $59.88 offer clues as to how consumer demand is shaping up for the holiday season. 60 The department store chain, due to deliver its third-quarter financial results ’14 today, is expected to show that its 40 earnings declined from a year earlier. est. Operating $0.61 $0.55 Macy’s has been looking for new ways EPS to boost its sales as middle-class 4Q ’14 4Q ’15 customers increasingly look for deals Price-earnings ratio: 12 and shop online more. In response, the based on past 12-month results company is opening lower-priced Dividend: $1.44 Div. yield: 3.1% Macy’s Backstage stores this year and in 2016. Source: FactSet

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Housing barometer

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D

Wednesay, November 11, 2015

YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn AMG YacktmanSvc d24.10 +0.06 -4.1 YkmFcsSvc d 24.96 +0.05 -3.6 AQR MaFtStrI 10.85 +0.05 +2.1 Advisors’ Inner Crcl EGrthIns 22.77 +0.12 +12.3 American Beacon LgCpVlIs 28.62 +0.05 -1.7 American Century EqIncInv 8.71 +0.03 +1.1 InvGrInv 30.56 +0.08 +6.2 UltraInv 37.90 +0.05 +8.9 ValueInv 8.45 +0.02 -0.9 American Funds AMCAPA m 27.87 -0.01 +2.8 AmBalA m 24.94 +0.02 +2.4 BondA m 12.64 +0.01 +0.3 CapIncBuA m 56.95 -0.06 -1.9 CapWldBdA m18.94 +0.01 -4.3 CpWldGrIA m 45.32 -0.13 -0.1 EurPacGrA m 47.81 -0.18 +1.4 FnInvA m 53.38 ... +4.6 GlbBalA m 29.34 ... -1.9 GrthAmA m 45.49 +0.03 +6.6 HiIncA m 9.86 -0.03 -3.4 IncAmerA m 20.88 ... -1.0 IntBdAmA m 13.48 ... +0.9 IntlGrInA m 29.22 -0.09 -5.9 InvCoAmA m 36.68 -0.05 +0.8 MutualA m 36.16 -0.02 -1.1 NewEconA m 38.80 ... +5.5 NewPerspA m 38.66 -0.04 +6.6 NwWrldA m 51.11 -0.17 -4.5 SmCpWldA m 46.97 -0.03 +3.7 TaxEBdAmA m12.95 ... +1.6 WAMutInvA m 40.80 +0.06 +1.0 Artisan Intl d 29.17 +0.02 -2.6 IntlI d 29.41 +0.02 -2.5 IntlVal d 34.26 -0.13 +0.1 MidCapI 50.05 +0.14 +4.5 BBH CoreSelN d 22.82 +0.05 +0.6 Baird AggrInst 10.66 +0.02 +0.6 CrPlBInst 10.95 +0.01 +0.5 Bernstein DiversMui 14.43 ... +1.1 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 19.02 +0.04 -22.2 EqDivA m 24.80 +0.06 +0.8 EqDivI 24.85 +0.05 +1.0 GlLSCrI 10.42 ... +0.5 GlobAlcA m 19.69 +0.01 GlobAlcC m 18.04 ... -0.6 GlobAlcI 19.81 +0.01 +0.2 HiYldBdIs 7.50 -0.03 -0.5 StIncInvA m 9.95 -0.01 StrIncIns 9.95 -0.01 +0.2 Causeway IntlVlIns d 14.54 -0.03 -1.7 Cohen & Steers Realty 70.69 +0.86 +1.1 Columbia AcornIntZ 41.05 -0.17 -0.8 AcornZ 31.09 +0.06 +2.2 DivIncZ 18.81 +0.03 +1.2 Credit Suisse ComStrInstl 4.82 -0.01 -19.8 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.31 ... +0.4 2YrGlbFII 9.95 +0.01 +0.5 5YrGlbFII 11.03 +0.02 +1.5 EmMkCrEqI 16.57 -0.11 -11.1 EmMktValI 21.80 -0.12 -14.5 EmMtSmCpI 18.28 -0.10 -7.1 11.54 -0.02 +0.7 IntCorEqI IntSmCapI 19.13 -0.07 +3.5 IntlSCoI 17.56 -0.04 +4.3 IntlValuI 16.73 -0.01 -3.1 RelEstScI 32.16 +0.35 -0.8 TAUSCrE2I 14.20 +0.03 +0.7 USCorEq1I 17.99 +0.02 +1.5 USCorEq2I 17.39 +0.03 +0.5 USLgCo 16.46 +0.03 +2.9 USLgValI 33.53 +0.10 USMicroI 19.33 +0.04 +0.3 USSmValI 33.86 +0.13 -2.5 USSmallI 31.41 +0.10 +1.5 USTgtValInst 22.00 +0.05 +0.1 Davis NYVentA m 34.89 ... +5.7 Delaware Invest ValueI 18.10 +0.03 +0.6 Dodge & Cox Bal 99.95 -0.03 -0.2 GlbStock 11.34 -0.01 -4.1 Income 13.47 ... -0.1 IntlStk 39.38 -0.11 -6.5 Stock 176.16 -0.01 -0.8 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 10.81 ... +1.7 Eaton Vance FltgRtI 8.64 -0.01 +0.4 FMI LgCap 21.29 ... +0.3 FPA Cres d 33.39 -0.03 -0.7 NewInc d 10.02 ... +0.5 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 35.53 +0.04 +1.3 Federated StrValI 5.90 +0.02 +2.3 ToRetIs 10.76 ... +0.2 Fidelity AstMgr20 13.10 +0.01 +0.3 AstMgr50 16.94 +0.01 +0.7 Bal 21.62 +0.01 +1.6 Bal K 21.61 ... +1.7 BlChGrow 69.50 +0.06 +6.8 BlChGrowK 69.59 +0.06 +6.9 CapApr 37.15 +0.08 +3.1 CapInc d 9.44 -0.02 +1.5 Contra 104.95 +0.28 +8.2 ContraK 104.96 +0.29 +8.3 DivGrow 31.10 ... +0.8 DivrIntl d 35.73 -0.03 +3.7 DivrIntlK d 35.70 -0.03 +3.8 EqInc 55.12 +0.07 -1.9 EqInc II 26.11 +0.04 -0.7 FF2015 12.49 +0.01 +1.1 FF2035 13.17 +0.01 +1.7 FF2040 9.26 ... +1.7 FltRtHiIn d 9.38 -0.01 +0.8 FrdmK2015 13.46 ... +1.1 FrdmK2020 14.15 ... +1.3 FrdmK2025 14.77 +0.01 +1.4 FrdmK2030 15.08 +0.01 +1.7 FrdmK2035 15.53 ... +1.8 FrdmK2040 15.57 ... +1.8 FrdmK2045 15.99 ... +1.8 FrdmK2050 16.10 ... +1.7 Free2010 15.24 +0.01 +0.9 Free2020 15.22 ... +1.2 Free2025 13.04 +0.01 +1.4 Free2030 16.00 +0.01 +1.6 GNMA 11.51 ... +0.8 GrowCo 143.23 -0.06 +8.8 GrowInc 29.90 +0.01 +0.4 GrthCmpK 143.16 -0.07 +8.9 HiInc d 8.35 -0.03 -1.6 IntMuniInc d 10.42 ... +1.0 IntlDisc d 39.61 ... +4.3 InvGrdBd 7.68 ... -0.7 LatinAm d 18.22 +0.11 -23.4 LowPrStkK d 49.39 +0.08 +2.2 LowPriStk d 49.42 +0.07 +2.1 Magellan 94.70 +0.26 +5.7 MidCap d 35.98 +0.10 +1.2 MuniInc d 13.34 ... +1.6 OTC 82.21 -0.51 +8.4 Puritan 20.60 +0.04 +2.7 PuritanK 20.59 +0.04 +2.8 RealInv d 39.63 +0.43 +1.5 SASEqF 14.07 +0.01 +2.1 SEMF 15.24 -0.09 -8.7 SInvGrBdF 11.14 +0.01 +0.1 STMIdxF d 61.16 +0.12 +2.4 SersEmgMkts 15.18 -0.10 -8.9 SesAl-SctrEqt 14.07 +0.01 +1.9 SesInmGrdBd 11.14 +0.01 ShTmBond 8.58 +0.01 +0.8 SmCapDisc d 28.83 +0.22 +0.4 StkSelec 35.88 +0.03 +1.6 StratInc 10.35 -0.01 -0.1 Tel&Util 22.33 +0.01 -6.1 TotalBd 10.39 ... +0.3 USBdIdx 11.52 +0.01 +0.4 USBdIdxInv 11.52 +0.01 +0.2 Value 110.14 -0.03 -2.8 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 27.73 +0.08 +4.6 NewInsI 28.29 +0.09 +4.8

Mortgage applications survey Speculation that the Federal seasonally adjusted percent change Reserve may soon raise its key 25.6 interest rate has helped lift average 30% long-term mortgage rates. 11.8 The trend has yet to consistently 15 est. spur more would-be buyers to apply -6.7 -27.6 -3.5 -0.8 0 for a home loan, however. Mortgage applications spiked in early October, but that was followed -15 by an even bigger drop the next week. Will the latest weekly home -30 9/25 10/2 10/9 10/16 10/23 10/30 loan application data, due out today, Week ending show an increase or extend a slide the last two weeks of October? Source: FactSet

Fidelity Select Biotech d 244.20 +0.61 +13.0 HealtCar d 219.27 +0.89 +4.7 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 73.54 +0.13 +2.9 500IdxAdvtgInst73.55 +0.13 +3.0 500IdxInstl 73.55 +0.13 +2.9 500IdxInv 73.53 +0.13 +2.9 ExtMktIdAg d 54.57 +0.13 +0.2 IntlIdxAdg d 37.39 -0.04 +0.5 TotMktIdAg d 61.15 +0.12 +2.4 Fidelity® SeriesGrowthCo13.05 -0.01 +9.0 SeriesGrowthCoF13.07 -0.01 +9.1 First Eagle GlbA m 52.75 -0.10 +1.2 FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.26 ... +1.1 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.38 ... +1.4 GrowthA m 77.48 +0.01 +3.7 HY TF A m 10.39 ... +1.4 Income C m 2.22 ... -4.7 2.19 ... -4.3 IncomeA m IncomeAdv 2.17 ... -4.2 RisDvA m 50.89 +0.06 -1.5 StrIncA m 9.42 ... -2.1 FrankTemp-Mutual Discov Z 32.48 -0.04 -1.3 DiscovA m 31.90 -0.03 -1.5 Shares Z 28.86 +0.03 -1.4 SharesA m 28.56 +0.03 -1.7 FrankTemp-Templeton GlBond C m 11.91 +0.03 -2.6 GlBondA m 11.89 +0.04 -2.2 GlBondAdv 11.85 +0.04 -1.9 GrowthA m 23.08 -0.08 -3.1 WorldA m 16.81 -0.06 -2.3 GE S&SUSEq 54.98 +0.10 +1.2 GMO IntItVlIV 21.03 ... -3.8 Goldman Sachs MidCpVaIs 39.63 +0.08 -4.7 SmCpValIs 54.92 +0.27 -1.3 Harbor CapApInst 65.71 +0.23 +12.3 IntlInstl 64.29 -0.20 -0.8 Harding Loevner IntlEq d 17.63 ... +0.4 Hartford CapAprA m 38.21 +0.08 +3.0 CpApHLSIA 45.76 +0.07 +2.9 INVESCO ComstockA m 24.97 +0.07 -1.2 DivDivA m 18.68 +0.05 +3.2 EqIncomeA m 10.27 +0.01 +0.3 GrowIncA m 26.47 +0.04 +0.6 HiYldMuA m 9.93 -0.01 +3.7 IVA WorldwideI d 17.34 -0.03 -0.7 Ivy AssetStrA m 24.24 +0.07 -4.9 AssetStrC m 23.19 +0.06 -5.5 AsstStrgI 24.52 +0.07 -4.7 JPMorgan CoreBdUlt 11.62 +0.01 +0.9 CoreBondSelect11.60 +0.01 +0.6 DiscEqUlt 23.39 +0.01 -0.4 EqIncSelect 14.00 +0.04 -0.5 HighYldSel 7.17 -0.02 -1.1 LgCapGrA m 37.14 +0.08 +7.6 LgCapGrSelect37.26 +0.08 +7.7 MidCpValI 36.90 +0.17 -0.7 ShDurBndSel 10.85 +0.01 +0.7 USEquityI 14.77 +0.03 +2.3 USLCpCrPS 29.83 +0.06 +1.5 ValAdvI 29.50 +0.10 -1.0 Janus BalT 30.55 -0.02 +1.0 56.56 +0.21 +7.7 GlbLfScT John Hancock DisValMdCpI 20.84 +0.04 +4.4 DiscValI 18.68 +0.02 -1.5 GAbRSI 11.26 +0.01 +3.0 LifBa1 b 15.42 ... +0.7 LifGr1 b 16.45 ... +1.0 Lazard EmgMkEqInst d14.53 -0.06 -15.1 IntlStEqInst d 13.57 ... -1.1 Legg Mason CBAggressGrthA m199.56-0.34-2.0 CBAggressGrthI216.89 -0.38 -1.8 WACorePlusBdI11.49 +0.01 +1.3 Longleaf Partners LongPart 26.31 -0.09 -15.8 Loomis Sayles BdInstl 13.81 -0.02 -4.8 BdR b 13.75 -0.01 -5.0 Lord Abbett AffiliatA m 15.63 +0.02 -2.3 ShDurIncA m 4.36 ... +1.0 ShDurIncC m 4.39 ... +0.5 ShDurIncF b 4.36 ... +1.4 MFS IntlValA m 34.83 -0.08 +5.4 IsIntlEq 21.26 -0.07 +1.7 TotRetA m 18.07 +0.03 +1.0 35.11 +0.10 +1.9 ValueA m ValueI 35.29 +0.09 +2.1 Matthews Asian China 22.37 -0.26 +4.2 India 26.21 -0.16 -0.9 Metropolitan West TotRetBdI 10.75 +0.01 +0.1 TotRtBd b 10.75 +0.01 -0.2 TtlRtnBdPl 10.13 +0.01 +0.1 Natixis LSInvBdY 11.20 +0.01 -3.8 Northern HYFixInc d 6.78 ... +0.6 IntlIndex d 11.24 ... +0.5 StkIdx 25.59 ... +2.7 Nuveen HiYldMunI 16.91 -0.01 +2.7 Oakmark EqIncI 31.23 -0.03 -2.1 Intl I 23.21 -0.07 -0.6 Oakmark I 66.47 -0.03 +0.1 Select I 40.65 +0.02 -0.3 Oberweis ChinaOpp m 13.11 -0.22 NA Old Westbury GlbOppo 7.66 ... +0.9 GlbSmMdCp 15.88 ... +2.7 LgCpStr 13.01 ... +0.8 Oppenheimer DevMktA m 31.61 -0.16 -11.0 DevMktY 31.26 -0.16 -10.8 GlobA m 81.16 -0.01 +6.8 IntlGrY 36.34 -0.09 +3.6 IntlGrowA m 36.47 -0.09 +3.4 MainStrA m 50.18 +0.09 +4.8 SrFltRatA m 7.84 ... +0.3 Oppenheimer Rocheste FdMuniA m 14.70 ... +1.3 Osterweis OsterStrInc 11.08 ... +1.3 PIMCO AllAssetI 10.65 ... -6.5 AllAuthIn 8.11 ... -9.1 ComRlRStI 6.93 ... -20.0 EMktCurI 8.54 ... -5.8 EmgLclBdI 6.93 ... -13.2 ForBdInstl 10.59 ... -0.2 HiYldIs 8.81 ... +1.1 Income P 12.17 ... +3.3 IncomeA m 12.17 ... +3.0 IncomeC m 12.17 ... +2.3 IncomeD b 12.17 ... +3.1 IncomeInl 12.17 ... +3.4 LowDrIs 9.90 ... +0.7 RERRStgC m 5.96 ... -1.7 RealRet 10.59 ... -2.2 ShtTermIs 9.78 ... +1.3 TotRetA m 10.44 ... TotRetAdm b 10.44 ... +0.1 TotRetIs 10.44 ... +0.3 TotRetrnD b 10.44 ... +0.1 TotlRetnP 10.44 ... +0.2 PRIMECAP Odyssey AggGr 34.25 +0.03 +4.0 Growth 27.54 +0.03 +5.7 Stock 24.47 ... +3.4 Parnassus CoreEqInv 40.94 +0.09 +1.4 Pioneer PioneerA m 36.68 +0.08 +0.6 Principal DivIntI 11.44 ... +0.6 L/T2030I 14.38 +0.02 +0.6 LCGrIInst 13.60 +0.04 +9.3 Prudential Investmen JenMidCapGrZ 39.93 +0.06 -0.2 TotRetBdZ 14.08 +0.01 +0.3 Putnam CpSpctrmY 36.34 -0.23 -6.4

GrowIncA m 20.64 +0.03 NewOpp 82.44 +0.16 Schwab 1000Inv d 53.79 +0.10 FUSLgCInl d 15.17 +0.04 S&P500Sel d 33.07 +0.06 TotStkMSl d 37.84 +0.07 Sequoia Sequoia 211.69 -0.12 T Rowe Price BlChpGr 75.25 +0.34 CapApprec 27.89 +0.05 36.83 +0.12 DivGrow EmMktBd d 11.69 -0.02 EmMktStk d 29.85 -0.19 EqIndex d 56.12 +0.10 EqtyInc 30.97 +0.04 GrowStk 58.02 +0.16 HealthSci 75.12 +0.49 HiYield d 6.43 -0.02 InsLgCpGr 30.36 +0.10 IntlBnd d 8.20 ... IntlGrInc d 13.64 -0.04 IntlStk d 15.75 -0.07 LatinAm d 17.41 +0.17 MidCapE 46.60 +0.09 MidCapVa 28.56 +0.06 MidCpGr 81.23 +0.15 NewHoriz 46.80 +0.06 NewIncome 9.39 ... 9.37 -0.03 OrseaStk d R2015 14.55 ... R2025 15.90 +0.01 R2035 16.92 ... ReaAsset d 9.54 ... Real d 27.04 +0.30 Rtmt2010 17.79 +0.01 Rtmt2020 20.90 ... Rtmt2030 23.34 +0.01 Rtmt2040 24.32 +0.01 Rtmt2045 16.27 +0.01 ShTmBond 4.73 ... SmCpStk 44.32 +0.17 SmCpVal d 46.87 +0.19 SpecInc 12.20 ... Value 34.28 +0.08 TCW TotRetBdI 10.22 +0.01 TIAA-CREF BdIdxInst 10.74 +0.01 EqIx 15.89 +0.03 IntlE 17.58 -0.02 Templeton InFEqSeS 19.91 -0.08 Thornburg IncBldC m 19.73 +0.02 IntlI 29.30 -0.07 LtdTMul 14.48 ... Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 26.14 -0.04 Vanguard 500Adml 192.51 +0.34 500Inv 192.49 +0.34 BalIdxAdm 29.72 +0.05 29.72 +0.04 BalIdxIns BdMktInstPls 10.67 +0.01 CAITAdml 11.71 ... CapOpAdml 125.28 +0.02 DevMktIdxAdm 12.04 -0.02 DevMktIdxInstl 12.06 -0.01 DivGr 23.29 +0.05 EmMktIAdm 28.81 -0.21 EnergyAdm 89.29 +0.02 EqInc 31.09 +0.07 EqIncAdml 65.17 +0.15 ExplAdml 85.93 +0.14 ExtdIdAdm 66.20 +0.16 ExtdIdIst 66.19 +0.15 ExtdMktIdxIP 163.36 +0.38 FAWeUSIns 88.21 -0.21 GNMA 10.65 +0.01 GNMAAdml 10.65 +0.01 GrthIdAdm 56.26 +0.06 GrthIstId 56.26 +0.06 HYCorAdml 5.74 -0.02 HltCrAdml 95.78 +0.75 HlthCare 226.99 +1.78 ITBondAdm 11.32 +0.02 ITGradeAd 9.70 +0.02 ITrsyAdml 11.34 +0.02 InfPrtAdm 25.40 -0.01 InfPrtI 10.35 ... InflaPro 12.93 -0.01 InstIdxI 190.63 +0.34 InstPlus 190.64 +0.33 InstTStPl 47.11 +0.09 IntlGr 21.75 -0.07 IntlGrAdm 69.21 -0.23 IntlStkIdxAdm 24.91 -0.07 IntlStkIdxI 99.63 -0.26 IntlStkIdxIPls 99.65 -0.25 IntlVal 32.94 -0.10 LTGradeAd 9.95 +0.02 LifeCon 18.25 +0.01 LifeGro 28.62 +0.01 LifeMod 23.96 +0.02 MidCapIdxIP 166.82 +0.59 MidCpAdml 153.12 +0.55 MidCpIst 33.82 +0.12 MorgAdml 85.29 +0.16 MuHYAdml 11.15 +0.01 MuIntAdml 14.11 ... MuLTAdml 11.57 ... MuLtdAdml 11.00 ... MuShtAdml 15.81 ... PrecMtls 6.49 -0.14 Prmcp 106.01 +0.09 PrmcpAdml 109.88 +0.09 PrmcpCorI 22.09 -0.01 REITIdxAd 110.24 +1.22 REITIdxInst 17.06 +0.19 S/TBdIdxInstl 10.47 +0.01 STBondAdm 10.47 +0.01 STCor 10.61 +0.01 STGradeAd 10.61 +0.01 STIGradeI 10.61 +0.01 STsryAdml 10.69 +0.01 SelValu 28.21 +0.07 ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.16 ... SmCapIdxIP 159.93 +0.40 SmCpGrIdxAdm44.07 +0.06 SmCpIdAdm 55.41 +0.14 SmCpIdIst 55.41 +0.14 SmCpValIdxAdm44.84 +0.15 Star 24.70 +0.02 StratgcEq 32.85 +0.08 TgtRe2010 26.41 +0.02 TgtRe2015 15.35 +0.01 TgtRe2020 28.56 +0.01 TgtRe2025 16.59 +0.01 TgtRe2030 29.13 +0.01 TgtRe2035 17.88 ... TgtRe2040 29.79 +0.01 TgtRe2045 18.67 ... TgtRe2050 29.65 +0.01 TgtRetInc 12.80 +0.01 TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.10 +0.05 TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.66 +0.07 TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.55 +0.02 TotBdAdml 10.67 +0.01 TotBdInst 10.67 +0.01 TotBdMkInv 10.67 +0.01 TotIntl 14.89 -0.04 TotStIAdm 52.06 +0.10 TotStIIns 52.07 +0.10 TotStIdx 52.04 +0.10 TxMCapAdm 106.07 +0.21 ValIdxAdm 32.36 +0.08 ValIdxIns 32.36 +0.08 WellsI 25.37 +0.04 WellsIAdm 61.46 +0.10 Welltn 38.90 +0.05 WelltnAdm 67.19 +0.09 WndsIIAdm 65.31 +0.08 Wndsr 21.19 +0.02 WndsrAdml 71.47 +0.06 WndsrII 36.80 +0.05 Virtus EmgMktsIs 9.18 -0.05 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 11.09 +0.03 SciTechA m 15.02 -0.03

Grocery watch Smart & Final Stores serves up its latest financial results today. The warehouse-style grocery chain, which became a publicly traded company a year ago, is expected to report that its third-quarter earnings declined from a year earlier. Financial analysts also project that the retail chain’s revenue improved.

-3.9 +2.4 +2.5 -0.8 +2.8 +2.3 -9.0 +11.9 +6.7 +3.3 +2.1 -7.8 +2.7 -4.1 +11.7 +10.5 -0.2 +10.5 -6.7 -0.9 +0.9 -20.6 +8.1 -0.9 +7.7 +6.9 +0.1 -0.5 +0.6 +1.2 +1.6 -11.7 +2.3 +0.3 +0.9 +1.4 +1.7 +1.7 +0.8 +0.1 -1.2 -1.1 +0.9 +0.3 +2.5 +0.8 -0.6 -2.9 +8.1 +1.1 +0.4 +2.9 +2.8 +1.6 +1.6 +0.3 +1.6 +2.9 +1.1 +1.2 +3.4 -11.2 -11.3 +1.7 +1.8 -0.6 +0.2 +0.3 +0.3 -2.5 +0.9 +1.0 +5.7 +5.7 +1.0 +10.3 +10.3 +1.1 +1.4 +1.3 -1.8 -1.8 -1.9 +2.9 +2.9 +2.4 +1.0 +1.1 -2.4 -2.4 -2.3 -3.0 -3.3 +0.4 +0.3 +0.5 +1.1 +1.1 +1.1 +8.6 +2.1 +1.4 +1.8 +1.0 +0.5 -28.0 +3.1 +3.1 +2.1 -1.5 -1.5 +1.1 +1.0 +1.2 +1.3 +1.3 +0.7 -0.6 -0.1 +0.1 +0.2 +0.1 +0.1 -0.1 +1.0 +2.1 +0.3 +0.4 +0.4 +0.4 +0.3 +0.2 +0.1 +0.1 +0.1 +0.3 +0.6 +0.6 +0.6 +0.2 +0.3 +0.2 -2.5 +2.3 +2.3 +2.2 +3.5 +0.1 +0.1 +1.4 +1.4 +1.2 +1.3 -0.2 -0.4 -0.3 -0.3 -7.2 +5.3 +0.2


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • 9A

Community Events Veteran’s Breakfast Biggersville High School will honor local veterans with a breakfast at 8 a.m. today at the school. Area veterans are invited to attend. Those who plan to join BHS for breakfast, should call the school at 662-286-3542.

Veterans Day Stew American Legion James A. Long Post 207 will be cooking stew the night before the parade. Stew will be served at Post 207 at 11 a.m. today, after the parade. Stew will also be available for people to purchase and take home. For more information about the stew call Post Commander Robert Turner at 662-603-5861 or Bernita (MiMi) Barnett at 662-665-1422.

Elk’s Veterans Day Meal Corinth Elks Lodge #2573 will hold their Annual Veteran’s Acknowledgment Meal from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 14. The Corinth Elks lodge will be having a traditional Thanksgiving meal for all veterans and active service personnel in honor of all the sacrifices they have made.

Farm Bureau Food Drive Local Farm Bureaus are accepting food donations from now until Christmas to help feed the needy in the community. The donations will be dispersed for Thanksgiving and Christmas. The Corinth Farm Bureau office is located at 517 North Cass Street and is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. All donations will be appreciated, but the following items are being sought: canned vegetables, canned soups, cereal, pudding cups, fruit cups, juice boxes and dried pasta of all kinds.

Gun Safety Workshop A free gun safety course for youth ages

12 and up will be held at Biggersville First Baptist Church, located at 443 CR 514 in Rienzi from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 14. The workshop is entitled, “Safe by choice, not by chance. A free lunch will also be provided. Participants must RSVP by Thursday, Nov. 12. In addition to the church, the gun safety workshop is sponsored by Massengill Properties, Inc. and Johnson’s Construction Company. For more information contact Girl Scout Leader Tina Michael at 662-664-9530 or Project Advisor Shane Mitchell at 662-4167429.

Retired Education Personnel The Alcorn County Retired Education Personnel of Mississippi will meet at 6 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 16 in the Corinth Library. Writer Cathy Wood will be in attendance. For more information contact www. acrem@att.net.

Retirement Seminar A Retirement Seminar under the auspice of AARP will be held from 1:30 to 3 p.m. and again from 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 17 at the Corinth Library. In addition to AARP, Social Security representatives plan to attend.

Coping with Grief The Alcorn County Extension Service will present Potato Soup for the Soul – Coping with Grief During the Holiday Season from 10 a.m. until noon on Tuesday, Nov. 17. A light lunch will be provided. The program is open to the general public. Seating is limited. Call 662-286-7756 to register.Â

Camp Meeting The Colonel William P. Rogers Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp #321 will hold its monthly meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 17, at Martha’s Menu, located at 302 Taylor Street in

MONTHLY CLASSES Next Class November 21 @ 8am • TN Handgun Permit Safety Class • MS Enhanced Permit Safety Class

McKee’s Gun Shop

4639 Hamburg Rd. • Michie TN • 731-239-5635

Corinth. The speaker will be Mr. Gene Ingram, a cousin of General Nathan B. Forrest’s wife Mary Ann. He will show photos and stories about General Forrest. Male descendants of Confederate soldiers may join the SCV, a nonpolitical, educational, historical preservation organization. Visitors are welcome to attend all meetings. For more information contact Larry Mangus at 662287-0766. The website is www.battleof corinth. com.

Mission Mississippi Mission Mississippi will convene on Thursday, Nov. 19, at 11:30 a.m. in the lower level of Martha’s Menu. The community is invited to discuss racial reconciliation issues facilitated by the Revs. Ann Fraser and Bobby Capps.

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

Christmas Hee-Haw The McNairy County Christmas Hee-Haw will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, November 28 at the MCHS Little Theater. Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for ages 7-12 $3 and free for those 6 and under. All proceeds will go to the American Cancer Society.

Easom Christmas Program The Community Center is looking for children ages five and up to cast in its third community-

wide Christmas program which will be presented on three occasions on Saturday, Dec. 19. During the morning the play will be presented at two local nursing homes as in previous years with the finale taking place at the Community Center at 3 p.m. Programming will include singing, dancing and dramatizations. There will also be an opportunity for children to participate in an art project and make a special gift for their parents during the rehearsal times. There will be three rehearsals in the Easom Community Center’s auditorium on the following dates and times: Saturday, Dec. 5 from 1 to 4 p.m.; Saturday, Dec. 12 from 1 to 4 p.m.; and Friday, Dec. 18 from 4 to 6 p.m. The parents of all children will have to sign a participation slip for each youth before they can take part. Forms can be obtained at the Easom Community Center, at the Project Attention Center or contacting Paulette Justice at 662-6034712 or Ernestine Hollins at 662-643-8024.

vide a fax number.

Easom Community Garden Free and open to the public for the fall season, the Easom Community Center Garden will reopen to the public from 2:30 to 5 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Danny Finger, the Center’s volunteer planter has planted a combination of turnip and mustard greens which are ready for picking. In addition to making vegetables available to the public the fresh vegetables are also used to support the Foundation’s hot meals program. The garden is available to individuals for their personal picking and consumption only. Items are not for sale. Those interested in picking should first stop by the cafeteria, sign in and obtain a bag for their convenience. Cooperation is appreciated. The Garden is located at the Easom Community Center (the former South Corinth School) at 700 S. Crater St. For questions, contact Samuel Crayton at 404-3863359.

along with Comedian Marvin Hunter from the Rickey Smiley Tour. It will be hosted by BET Sixtime All Star Comedian Shawn Harris. Tickets go on sale Tuesday, Dec. 1 starting at $23 (for all riser seating) and $33 for reserved floor seating. A limited quantity of 200 tickets will be available at $43 for the VIP meetand-greet reception and first 6 rows. The meetand-greet will be held inside at the Convention Center from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and will include refreshments and light hors d’oeuvres. For more information visit www.crossroadsarena.com or call 662287-7779.

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

Free Medical Clinic

Fish on Friday Comedy Show From 4 to 6 p.m. every Friday, the Easom Foundation will sell eat-in or carry-out farm-fed catfish dinners for $6 to support its hot meals program. The meal includes coleslaw or salad, French fries or roasted potatoes, a dessert, juice and catfish. Dinners are also available from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday at the same price. Side items on the menu for the day may also be purchased. Stop by the Easom Community Center and pick up a monthly menu or contact Chef Ben Betts at 662-415-4003 or Ernestine Hollins at 662643-8024. The menu can also be faxed each month to those who pro-

Patrons are invited to celebrate Black History Month by attending the North Mississippi All Celebrity All Star Comedy Show in Corinth at the Crossroads Arena at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 20. Comedian Rodney Perry will bring his act. Perry who resides in Atlanta was the co-host for the Oscar Academy Winner, Mo’Nique and her show, and the co-creator of BounceTV. He also starred alongside Tyler Perry in the hit movie “Madea’s Big Happy Family� in 2013. The show will also feature Comedienne Barbara Carlyle, from Showtime Apollo, Comedy Central and Comic view,

The Living Healthy Free Medical Clinic, where residents with no way to pay can get free medical treatment, welcomes adults and children age 12 and up with no income and no health insurance. The clinic, now located at 2668 South Harper Road Suite 3 next to Physicians Urgent Care in the former Oasis Medical Center, is open 1-5 p.m., on the second Wednesday and fourth Saturday of each month. The clinic is always looking for both medical and non-medical volunteers. Medical and non-medical volunteers should contact Ann White at eaw3@comcast.net or 662-4159446.

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The Middle Goldbergs Modern (:31) black- Nashville (N) Local 24 (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) Night(N) Family ish News Live line Survivor “You Call, We’ll Criminal Minds “Target Code Black “Buen News Ch. 3 Late Show-Colbert James Haul” (N) Rich” (N) Árbol” (N) Corden In the Kitchen With David Featuring special offers from Keurig. (N) Earth Brands Survivor “You Call, We’ll Criminal Minds “Target Code Black “Buen News Late Show-Colbert James Haul” (N) Rich” (N) Árbol” (N) Corden The Voice “Live Playoffs, Law & Order: Special Chicago PD “Forget My News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth MeyResults” Victims Unit (N) Name” (N) ers Arrow “Lost Souls” (N) Supernatural “Our Little CW30 News at 9 (N) House of Meet the There Yet? Modern World” (N) Payne Browns Family The Middle Goldbergs Modern (:31) black- Nashville (N) News at (:35) Jimmy Kimmel (:37) Night(N) Family ish 10pm Live line The Voice “Live Playoffs, Law & Order: Special Chicago PD “Forget My News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth MeyResults” Victims Unit (N) Name” (N) ers Earth’s Natural WonNOVA (N) The Brain With David Are You As Time Tavis Newsline ders (N) Eagleman (N) Served? Goes By Smiley Person of Interest Person of Interest “Til Person of Interest Manhattan How I Met How I Met “Critical” Death” “C.O.D.” Earth’s Natural WonNOVA (N) The Brain With David Inside Miss Charlie Rose (N) World ders (N) Eagleman (N) News Rosewood (N) Empire “True Love Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 TMZ Dish Nation Ac. HolNever” (N) News (N) lywood Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order Arrow “Lost Souls” (N) Supernatural “Our Little PIX11 News PIX11 Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends World” (N) Sports The Knick “Wonderful Forbidden Science Fea} Good Night, and } ›› Windtalkers A Marine protects a Navajo Surprises” ture 1: Endless Good Luck. (05) code transmitter in World War II. A Season } Cold in (5:55) } ›› The Jackal Homeland Saul orders The Affair Helen makes Inside the NFL a sweep. a decision. With Bruce Willis. July Fight Game Kareem: Minority of One (6:10) } ›› Unbroken (14, Biogra- Getting On The Leftovers “Lens” phy) Jack O’Connell. Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Are You the One? Follow Follow Catfish: The TV NBA Basketball: Los Angeles Clippers at Dallas Mavericks. From NBA Basketball: San Antonio Spurs at Portland Trail Blazers. American Airlines Center in Dallas. From Moda Center in Portland. (N) (6:30) } ›› The Expendables (10, Action) Sylves- } ›› The Expendables 2 (12) A mercenary and his team seek } Top ter Stallone, Jason Statham. vengeance for a murdered comrade. Gun (86) NCIS “Twenty Klicks” NCIS A lieutenant is NCIS “So It Goes” Modern Modern Chrisley Donny! murdered. Family Family Knows Thunder Bella Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends Friends Friends Alaskan Bush People: Alaskan Bush People (:02) Men, Women, (:03) Alaskan Bush (:05) Men, Women, Wild Off the Grid (N) (N) Wild (N) People Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dy- Duck Dynasty nasty nasty nasty nasty nasty nasty nasty nasty nasty (6:00) College Football: Virginia at Miami. ACC Gridiron Live (N) World Poker UEFA Champions League Soccer (:04) Sister Code (15) Amber Rose. The Westbrooks (N) The Westbrooks Wendy Williams Property Brothers Property Brothers “An- House Hunters Property Brothers “Edith Property Brothers “An“Shannon & Darl” gela & Ro” (N) Hunters Int’l & Fred” gela & Ro” Christina Milian Kardashian Kardashian E! News (N) American Pickers American Pickers (N) (:03) American Pickers (:03) American Pickers (:01) American Pickers College Football: Teams TBA. (N) (Live) Fabulous Life: Extra Fat Fabu- Fat FabuFabulous lous lous Cutthroat Kitchen Cutthroat Kitchen (N)

SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Late Joy Fat Fabu- Fat Fabu- Coach lous lous Mystery Mystery Mystery Mystery Cutthroat Kitchen Diners Diners Diners Diners The Waltons JAG Walker, Ranger Matlock Medicine Woman } ››› G.I. Jane (97, Drama) Demi Moore, Viggo Mortensen. A female Navy (:02) Biography Actress (:02) } ››› G.I. Jane Demi Moore. SEALs recruit completes rigorous training. Demi Moore. Trinity Turning Prince By Faith Praise the Lord (N) (Live) War & Duplantis } ››› The Karate Kid (84, Drama) Ralph Macchio. A Japanese handyman } ›› The Karate Kid Part II (86) Ralph Macchio, teaches a teenager to defend himself. Noriyuki “Pat” Morita. Another Cinderella } ›› The Notebook (04, Romance) Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams. A man The 700 Club Story (08) tells a story to a woman about two lovers. } ››› The Night of the Hunter (55) (:45) } ››› Wise Blood (79, Drama) Brad Dourif, (:45) } ›››› To Kill a Mockingbird Gregory Peck. Robert Mitchum. Amy Wright. } ››› The Town (10) Ben Affleck. A woman doesn’t realize } ››› Ransom (96) Mel Gibson. A wealthy executive turns the that her new beau is a bank robber. tables on his son’s abductor. Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Big Bang Conan (N) 2 Broke Conan Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Theory Girls Hellevator (N) Idiotest FamFeud FamFeud Hellevator Idiotest Adven Regular King/Hill Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua The Facts of Life Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King UFC Tonight (N) Ultimate Fighter Ultimate Fighter FOX Sports Live (N) Garbage Sports American Horror Story: American Horror Story: The Bastard Execu(6:00) } ›› Fast & Furious 6 (13, Action) Vin Hotel (N) Hotel tioner Diesel, Paul Walker. Stories Reming Shooting USA Rifleman Stories Defense Sh US Im Shooting USA NHL Hockey: Canadiens at Penguins NHL NFL Fantasy Boxing Dateline on OWN 20/20 on OWN 20/20 on OWN (N) Dateline on OWN 20/20 on OWN The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced Matchmaker Santa A young baker discovers the ’Tis the Season for Love (15, Romance) Sarah The Christmas Spirit magic of Christmas and love. Lancaster, Brendan Penny. (13, Comedy) DescenDescenBunk’d Best Austin & Best Girl Meets Jessie So Raven So Raven dants dants Friends Ally Friends Ghost Hunters (N) Paranormal Witness (N) Ghost Hunters Paranormal Witness (5:30) } ›› Orphan Vera Farmiga. Coach

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Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian Presentation of the Daily Corinthian’s family of quality magazines continues with Crossroads Magazine Holiday Edition coming out on Saturday, Nov. 21. You won’t want to miss local chef Joey Thompson’s favorite holiday recipes.

Husband upset by wife who wears heart on her sleeve D E A R ABBY: I’m a mostly happily married wife and mother. I love tattoos. When I was Abigail y o u n g e r , was enVan Buren Igaged to my soul mate. Dear Abby His name is tattooed on my wrists in honor of the love we shared. Unfortunately, he was killed in a car accident. Several years later, I met and married my husband, “Brett.” When we fight he brings up the tattoos. He says they’re “disrespectful” of him and I should get rid of them. It upsets me because I got the tattoos before I ever met Brett, so how can they be disrespectful? Am I being unreasonable, or should my husband back off? -- ILLUSTRATED WOMAN IN COLORADO DEAR ILLUSTRATED WOMAN: The tattoos are in no way disrespectful to your husband. They are the same body art you had when he married you, and if he didn’t complain back then, he shouldn’t now. When you’re fighting and Brett tells you to get rid of them, he’s doing it to hurt you because he knows they are meaningful and he’s trying to

get under your skin. Insist on dealing with the subject at hand and don’t take the bait. DEAR ABBY: I’d like to know if there’s any way to stop my mother-in-law from inviting herself to every birthday party and graduation our children have. They are pre-teen and teenagers now. She has done this for years, and it often doesn’t end well. Because they are older, they prefer to hang out with their friends, do sleepovers, etc. Because she insists on staying the night, it’s hard to have room for sleepovers. She complains if she has to sleep on the couch, and she also has a fit if she’s not getting enough attention from the kids because they’d rather be with their friends and not her the whole time. I have tried explaining that she should come the weekend before or after, but she shows up on the birthday anyway. Her complaints ruin their birthdays, to the point that I no longer look forward to them. Any advice, since another birthday is right around the corner? (Maybe she’ll read this and have a change of heart.) -- MISERABLE MOM IN CALIFORNIA DEAR MISERABLE MOM: Your mother-in-law sounds like a handful. However, I do believe that grandparents should be in-

vited to milestones like graduations, where family is important. It’s hard to imagine Grandma would simply show up at the kids’ party after being asked to stay away, but you can’t slam the door in her face. When she barges in, for your own sake tune her complaining out. Walk away if you must. As to altering the sleeping arrangements to suit an uninvited guest -- don’t do it. Where is your husband in all of this? She’s his mother; if you can’t make her see reason, then he should. It’s normal for teens to want to celebrate with their contemporaries -- and Grandma had better get used to it before they turn tail and run whenever they see her coming. DEAR VETERANS: I salute each and every one of you for your service to this country. My heartfelt thanks as well to the brave and dedicated men and women who are still on active duty. You are the personification of patriotism and self-sacrifice for your dedication to our country. -- Love, ABBY Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Horoscopes ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll do all that is expected of you and then you’ll do more because that’s just how you roll. Success comes from standing out as someone for whom “good enough” isn’t good enough. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Without conflict there is no drama. Also there is no story. And since everyone will be looking to you at the end of this day for a good story, welcome the little bit of conflict that comes your way. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Don’t trust the reviews today. Whether the reviews are good, bad or indifferent, they will paint the wrong picture for you. You’ll only find out how things really are by diving in and tasting them yourself. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ve been known to listen so actively to another person that you forget yourself completely as you become immersed in this person’s world. This is a talent, really, and a rare one at

that! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The wish you made long ago is still filed away in the archives of your heart under the category “unfulfilled.” Pull it out and work on it. There’s no reason this can’t happen. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Many different cultures exist inside the culture of your workplace. Learning to communicate in the “language” of others will lead you to increase your influence, effectiveness and power. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You can and will complete the hard job. Every little incremental step will help, even if it’s a step backward. This is to be expected. The most important part will be to keep moving in faith. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You and your group agree on the big picture so you’ll likely go along with some of the finer details that you don’t find particularly pleasing. Someone has to compromise. It’s just your turn; that’s all.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). In nature you will feel connected to all things. This connection is made easier by comfortable, weather-appropriate garments. If you needed a reason to shop, here it is. You’re welcome! CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). There’s nothing standing between you and love except the limits of your own thinking. Know that you deserve a pure embrace, full attention and unconditional affection. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). There’s a time for playfulness and a time to let others know that you have serious regard for them and their contributions. A social genius, you’ll gracefully toggle between these two tones. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). It will happen quite naturally. You’ll put your foot down and stop going along with the unsatisfying status quo. Things need to change and you have very little to lose.


NEXT UP...

Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • 11A

SPRINT CUP

CAMPING WORLD TRUCKS

XFINITY SERIES

Race: Race for Heroes 500 Where: Phoenix International Raceway When: Sunday, 2:30 p.m. (ET) TV: NBC 2014 Winner: Kevin Harvick (right)

Race: DAV 200 Where: Phoenix International Raceway When: Saturday, 4 p.m. (ET) TV: NBCSN 2014 Winner: Brad Keselowski

Johnson claims his fourth straight fall victory at Texas

Alan Marler/HHP for Chevy Racing

As the Sprint Cup Series heads to Phoenix International Raceway and the final race of the Eliminator Round of the Chase for the Sprint Cup, the scenarios for the Championship Round the following week at Homestead-Miami Speedway are far from certain. The finish of last Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 saw to that. For 330 of the race’s 334 laps, it looked as if Brad Keselowski would win and punch his ticket to the Championship Round at Homestead. But Jimmie Johnson, who was eliminated from the Chase after the first round, raced past Keselowski to get his fourth straight win in the fall race at Texas. Keselowski finished second, but his wreck at Martinsville has him in jeopardy of missing the championship round at Homestead. “I am still very proud of our effort,” he said.

Jimmie Johnson’s win at Texas was his fifth of the season and 75th of his career.

do that. On the other side of the chart, Kyle Busch is in position to make the finale at Homestead even without a win at Phoenix, as are Kevin Harvick and Martin Truex Jr. Just getting to Homestead would be a major accomplishment for Busch, who missed the first 11 races of the season recovering from injuries suffered at Daytona in February. He won four races in midsummer, which allowed him to move into the top 30 in the standings and thereby claim a Chase berth. “We barely made it in [the Chase],” said Busch, who finished fourth at Texas. “We were the last guy through the first round. We were the last guy through the second round.” Busch said he has a feeling that the big story at the season finale will either be one of his great comeback, or one of Jeff Gordon ending his great driving career with a championship. “The script’s written,” he said. “I think there are two scripts written; it’s just which one’s going to come true. “Jeff Gordon certainly has one. I feel like we have one as well, too, with this 18 car. Hopefully, it’s our Cinderella story that can end the season on the 18.” Kevin Harvick might say there’s a third scenario — one in which he wins at Phoenix, where he’s dominated the track for several years, then goes to Homestead and successfully defends his championship. But Harvick said there’s been nothing predictable about this Chase, especially for him and his No. 4 team. “We’ve just had to overcome things week after week after

Johnson said he took no pleasure in keeping Keselowski from earning a berth in the championship round. “I’m not happy I kept somebody from advancing,” Johnson said. “I just don’t think along those lines. I’m happy I beat the dominant car. That definitely was in my mind.” Johnson’s win, his fifth of the season and 75th of his career, puts him one shy of tying the late Dale Earnhardt on the career-win list. It also kept the Chase scenarios in play for every driver other than Jeff Gordon, whose Martinsville victory assures him of a berth as one of the four drivers who will compete for the championship at Homestead. Joey Logano, the hottest driver for most of the Chase, is now at the bottom of the Chase standings and in need of a win at Phoenix to compete for the title. His hopes of winning at Texas and earning a berth in the finale were quashed 10 laps into the race when the left-rear tire blew on his No. 22 Ford, relegating him to a 40th-place finish. It marked the second straight week that misfortune robbed Logano a chance at victory, the first coming at Martinsville when he was wrecked by Matt Kenseth while leading the race. Now, he and his Team Penske teammate Brad Keselowski are both in need of a win at Phoenix to advance, and only one can

Race: Lucas Oil 150 Where: Phoenix International Raceway When: Friday, 8:30 p.m. (ET) TV: FOX Sports 1 2014 Winner: Erik Jones

Kenseth’s Sprint Cup start streak ends Matt Kenseth’s streak of 571 consecutive Sprint Cup starts came to an end after he was suspended for two weeks for intentionally spinning Joey Logano at Martinsville Speedway. Kenseth and his team owner, Joe Gibbs, appealed his penalty, but it was upheld, although his initial probation period was reduced from six months to the rest of this year. “I’m obviously more than a little disappointed on the decision and the penalties to start with,” Kenseth told reporters after Thursday’s appeals were denied. “I feel like I was unfairly made the example instead of knowing where the line is and what the penalties are. I’m extremely disappointed.” But Kenseth also appeared to be still standing his ground. His statements earlier indicated that he spun Logano in retaliation for an earlier incident between the two of them at Kansas Speedway. In that race, Kenseth was leading and blocked Logano several times before the two made contact, with Kenseth spinning and Logano going on to win. “I’m not going to change who I am, not going to change what I stand for,” Kenseth said. “I’m not going to change how I race. I’ve been in this business for a long time, I feel like I’ve had a pretty good career to this point and I feel like I’m going to continue to have the respect on the race track I feel like I deserve.”

Erik Jones dominates CWTS at Texas

Harold Hinson/HHP for Chevy Racing

Camping World Truck Series points leader Erik Jones dominated Friday’s Winstar World Casino 350 at Texas Motor Speedway, leading 117 of 147 laps, including the final 48, en route to his third win of the season and the seventh of his career. The victory allowed Jones to extend his points lead from 10 to 17 markers over second-place Matt Crafton, who started from the pole and finished fourth. Daniel Suarez finished second, with Ryan Blaney in third. Tyler Reddick finished fifth and is third in the standings, 21 points out of the lead with two races remaining this season. He’s out of the Chase, but Johnson said he’s happy that he beat The race saw just one caution flag and ended the dominant car in the closing laps of the AAA Texas 500. with an average speed of 158.002 miles per week,” he said. “But we’ve managed to survive and advance, hour. It was the fastest Truck race ever at and that’s what we’ve got to do next week.” Texas, with a total time of one hour, 23 minutes and 48 seconds. Jones, who has led the points standings after the past seven races, was as low as fourth at one point this season. Brad Keselowski, driving the No. 22 Ford for Team Penske, took Keselowski, Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney all contributing to the “We’ve went through a lot of ups and downs the lead from Austin Dillon with 12 laps remaining in Saturday’s total. It is Penske’s third straight and fourth overall owner champithese past couple of months, and trying to get O’Reilly Auto Parts Challenge Xfinity Series race at Texas Motor onship in NASCAR’s No. 2 series. back into this championship hunt and getting Speedway, and went on to score the victory and thereby clinch the “To get our team owner, Roger Penske, No. 4, as far as Xfinity our Tundra back in there,” he said. “It’s pretty circuit’s owner championship for team owner Roger Penske. championships go, I’m really proud of that,” Keselowski said. awesome, a swing up and it’s nice to get back in The Texas victory was the eighth of the season for the No. 22, with Keselowski, who won the driver’s title in 2010, took Saturday’s vicVictory Lane at Texas — a place I love.” tory after some of his challengers had problems along the way. Jones ran all three races at Texas, finishing Kyle Busch was fast early, but fell back after the shifter broke in fourth in the Xfinity Series race and 12th in his No. 51 Toyota, leaving him with only fourth gear. Kyle Larson Sprint Cup, where he drove the No. 20 Toyota in led 50 laps, but blew a tire on Lap 176 of 200. And pole-sitter Austin place of the suspended Matt Kenseth. Dillon fell to third at the finish, behind Keselowski and runner-up Kevin Harvick, and ahead of Erik Jones and Ty Dillon. “Austin Dillon was really good, and he was one of the toughest guys to beat,” Keselowski said. “He ran a heck of a race. Harvick looked really good, Kyle Busch looked really good, and Kyle Larson I thought was going to run away with the race until he had that flat. “There was a lot of competition out there, and that makes this win very special.” Series points leader Chris Buescher finished 11th and heads into the final two races of the season with a 24-point lead over secondplace Chase Elliott, who finished eighth at Texas. “It isn’t comfortable yet,” Buescher said of his points lead. “You average that out to 12 spots per race, so if we go out and finish top10 the last two, we should be in good shape. That would be cutting it too close for comfort, but we need to just have some solid runs the Drivers Brad Keselowski (pictured), Joey Logano and Ryan Blaney Erik Jones led 117 of 147 laps en route to victory next two weeks.” all contributed to the owner championship title for Roger Penske. Courtesy of Toyota Racing

Sarah Crabill/Getty Images for NASCAR

Keselowski’s Xfinity victory earns owner championship for Penske

Jeff Gordon retains a slim points lead in Chase for the Sprint Cup Points standings and race results from Sunday’s AAA Texas 500 at Texas Motor Speedway. 1. JEFF GORDON

(finished ninth) 4,082 points A week after Gordon’s win at Martinsville gave him an automatic advance to the Championship Round of the Chase at Homestead-Miami Speedway in two weeks, he scored another top10 finish, but needs to improve by Homestead if he wants to end his Cup career with a fifth championship.

2. KYLE BUSCH

(finished fourth) 4,080 points; behind -2 Kyle Busch’s storybook recovery from serious injuries suffered at Daytona in February continues as he heads to the next-to-last race of the season, at Phoenix International Raceway, needing only a mediocre finish to compete for the championship in a season that saw him miss the first 11 races as he recovered from a broken leg and broken foot.

3. KEVIN HARVICK

(finished third) 4,079 points; behind -3 Harvick overcame two flat tires and a balky shifter that caused him to drive with one hand while holding his car in gear with the other, to finish strong and put himself in position to defend his championship in the season finale no matter how he finishes at Phoenix — and Phoenix is his best track. He has seven wins there, including victories in five of the past six races.

4. MARTIN TRUEX JR. (finished eighth) 4,076 points; behind -6 When the green flag flew for the final restart at Texas, Truex Jr.

bolted past Keselowski to take the lead, but dropped back due to a loose wheel and problems with his power steering. “All in all, we didn’t beat ourselves,” he said. “We are still in it. We will have to go to Phoenix and run hard and put together a really good run.”

5. CARL EDWARDS

(finished fifth) 4,069 points; behind -13 Edwards hasn’t been a standout in the Chase, but steady finishes have him in position to advance to the Championship Round at Homestead. He has two wins at Phoenix, in 2010 and 2013, but hasn’t finished better than eighth since his last victory there.

6. BRAD KESELOWSKI

(finished second) 4,057 points; behind -25 Keselowski started on the pole and led 312 of 334 laps, but a late caution for debris gave his challengers a chance to overtake him, and Jimmie Johnson did just that. Now Keselowski needs to win at Phoenix, where he has never won but has finished in the top 6 in his past three starts, to compete for the championship.

7. KURT BUSCH

(finished seventh) 4,048 points; behind -34 Kurt Busch continues to be hampered by a wreck at Martinsville. Despite a strong run at Texas — like Keselowski — he needs a win at Phoenix to be assured of advancing in the Chase. “It was a good, hard fought battle with limited practice we had to go with our best effort to get the setup,” he said. “We battled through it. It just wasn’t the winning car we needed to advance.”

8. JOEY LOGANO

(finished 40th) 4,013 points; behind -69 For the second straight week Logano had a fast car, but wound up near the bottom of the finishing order. At Martinsville, he was taken out by Matt Kenseth. At Texas it was a blown tire 10 laps into the race. Now he has to win at Phoenix to advance to the Championship Round, and he’s never won there. His three most recent finishes at Phoenix were a fourth, a sixth and an eighth.

in the WinStar World Casino 350 at Texas.

NUMERICALLY

SPEAKING 19

Sprint Cup races won at Phoenix from a starting spot outside the top 10 — in 38 races.

4

Sprint Cup poles at Phoenix International Raceway won by Ryan Newman — tops among all drivers.

41

Drivers running at the finish of May’s Sprint Cup race at Phoenix International Raceway, tying a track record for the most drivers still running at the finish. This has happened three other times.

2

Non-Chase drivers finishing among the top 9 in the AAA Texas 500: Jimmie Johnson, in first place, and Dale Earnhardt Jr., in sixth.


12A • Daily Corinthian

Cross Country

Bears, Aggies finish 3rd-4th at state meet BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Alcorn Central and Kossuth combined for four Top 10 finishes at the Class 3A State Cross Country Meet held Monday at Mississippi College’s Choctaw Trails in Clinton. The best performance came in the boys’ event with the Bears and Aggies finishing third and fourth, respectively. St. Andrews won the event with 18 points — just three off of a perfect score. Mooreville was a distant second with 100 points. The Bears finished third with 108, with the Aggies right behind their rivals with 122. All told 16 teams had the minimum of five runners to score in the event. Teams receive points for the finish of their participants, with the lower score the better. Alcorn Central’s Trevor Godwin turned in the best performance, finishing ninth out of 120 participants with a time of 18:24. Teammate Luke Holley (18:28) was the next highest finisher in 11th. Other Golden Bear finishers included: Austin Settlemires (21, 19:45), Blake Burnett (33, 19:59), Josh Harbor (43, 20:26), Joe Harbor (61, 21:12) and Ben Williams (77, 22:25). Rick Hodum paced Kossuth’s efforts, finishing 15th in 18:45. Other Aggie finishers were: Tanner Childs (18, 19:28), Zack Shawl (19, 19:31), Charlie Meeks (26, 19:43), Seth Blackard (56, 21:05), Owen Hill (67, 21:27) and Jes Patrick (78, 22:36).

Sports

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Central, Kossuth split road games BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Briley Talley scored Alcorn Central’s final four points in overtime, including three straight makes from the line as the Lady Bears edged West Union 55-54 on Tuesday. In the nightcap, West Union spoiled Mike Lewis’ second debut at AC with a 7359 decision. Blake McIntyre led the Bears with 22 points in their season opener. • Lauren McCreless scored 15 of her game-high 27 points in the third as the Lady Bears (2-0) rallied from a 28-16 halftime deficit. Central used a 21-8 advantage out of the break to take a 37-36 lead into the fourth

quarter. with 13 points. Talley added 11 for the Lady Bears. (G) Central 55, • At Springville, Kossuth West Union 54, OT got 24 points from Rick Ho- Central 10 6 21 12 6 -- 55 dum and another 23 from Nik W.Union 17 11 8 13 5 -- 54 CENTRAL (55); Lauren McCreless Wilcher in downing South 27, Briley Talley 11, Malory Wigginton Pontotoc 81-66. T.J. Essary added 16 and 7, Jordan Whitten 5, Alexus Lainez 3, Kennedy Dye chipped in 13 Mary Fran Robbins 2. W. UNION (54): Kylie Massengill as the Aggies (2-0) got 79 of 22, Gracen Conlee 18, Marley Long 7, their 81 points from their Jeslyn Brewer 4, Savannah Shirley 3. starters. 3-Pointers: (C) McCreless 3, Talley. Kossuth knocked down 10 (WU) Massengill 3, Conlee 3, Shirley. 3-pointers with Hodum’s six Record: Central 2-0 leading the way. • In the opener, the Lady (B) West Union 73, Aggies (1-1) jumped out to a Central 59 16-3 lead after one. Kossuth Leading Scorers: (AC) Blake Mcwould score only 14 points Intyre 22, Brandon Turner 14, Connor over the next two quarters Lewis 10; (WU) Andrew Childers 25, and trail 37-30 after three. Hayden Basil 14, Adam Grubbs 14. Record: Central 0-1 Jade Barnes paced Kossuth

(G) South Pontotoc 48, Kossuth 43 Kossuth 16 3 11 13 -- 43 S.Pontotoc 7 16 14 11 -- 48 KOSSUTH (43): Jade Barnes 13, Morgan Hodum 9, Abby Gray 7, Kasey McKee 5, Darbie Coleman 4, Sara Talley 3, Kaylee Bonds 2. S.PONTOTOC (48): Crudup 18, Harmon 11, Bowen 6, Ward 4, Nelson 2, Williams 2, Hayles 2, Brasher 2, Cougar 1 3-Pointers: (K) Hodum 2, Barnes, Gray, McKee. (SP) Crudup 2, Bowen 2, Ward. Record: Kossuth 1-1

(B) Kossuth 81, South Pontotoc 66 Kossuth 21 12 31 17 -- 81 S.Pontotoc 13 15 20 18 -- 66 KOSSUTH (81): Rick Hodum 24, Nik Wilcher 23, T.J. Essary 16, Kennedy Dye 13, Jonah Smith 3, Charlie Meeks 2. 3-Pointers: (K) Hodum 6, Wilcher 2, Dye, Smith. Record: Kossuth 2-0

Girls The Lady Aggies finished fifth, missing out on the Top 3 by just 29, with 150 points. Alcorn Central cracked the Top 10, ending the evening ninth overall with 207 points. St. Patrick (24), Choctaw Central (65) and St. Andrews (111) led the way in Class 3A girls. Kossuth’s Grace Stanford’s seventhplace finish in 21:27 topped the local entrants. Alcorn Central’s Ashlee Manahan paced the Lady Bears with a 12th-place showing in 21:55. Other Lady Aggie finishers were: Lauren Green (15, 22:11), Annalee Turner (40, 24:53), Morgan Hodum (41, 24:55), Bailey Holt (54, 25:47), Kaylee Bonds (67, 27:32) and Angie Hopper (69, 28:08). Completing Alcorn Central’s finishers were: Emilee Manahan (44, 24:59), Ella Mask (48, 25:33), Alexis Riggs (53, 25:47), Autumn Hindmon (59, 26:23), Edye Ross (62, 26:33) and Lauren Walker (70, 28:29).

Local Schedule Thursday Bowling Corinth @ Nettleton, 4

Friday Football Class 3A Playoffs East Side @ Kossuth, 7 Booneville @ Yazoo Co., 7 Class 2A Playoffs Baldwyn @ J.Z. George, 7 Class 1A Playoffs Falkner @ Shaw, 7 Basketball Saltillo @ Central, 6 Ingomar @ Biggersville, 6

Saturday Basketball Itawamba Girls Shootout Tremont-Aberdeen, 10 a.m. Caledonia-Tish Co., 11:30 a.m. Baldwyn-Hamilton, Ala., 1 Corinth-Lafayette Co., 2:30 Calhoun City-Amory, 4 Belmont-Nettleton, 5:30 Itawamba-Red Bay, Ala., 7 Hamilton-Mooreville, 8:30 Soccer Amory @ Corinth, 11 a.m.

Shorts 13U USSSA Baseball The 2016 13U Mississippi Marlins will conduct a tryout for the upcoming 2016 USSSA baseball season. The tryout will be on Saturday, Nov. 14, at 10 a.m. on Jesse Bynum field at the Corinth City Park. The team is looking for 3-4 players to complete their roster. If you have any questions Please see SHORTS | 13A

Photo by Randy J. Williams

Mississippi State’s De’Runnya Wilson (right) celebrates a touchdown with quarterback Dak Prescott. Wilson ranks fourth in the SEC with 626 yards receiving and second with eight touchdowns.

Wilson becoming factor for MSU BY DAVID BRANDT Associated Press

STARKVILLE — Mississippi State’s De’Runnya Wilson certainly looks like an elite Southeastern Conference receiver: 6-foot-5, 215-pounds, huge hands and plenty of speed. But for much of the first half of the season, the junior was an afterthought in the Bulldogs’ offense, even as the team’s passing game flourished. He’s picked up the production over his past two games, though, and figures to be very

important for No. 20 Mississippi State (7-2, 3-2 SEC) when it hosts No. 3 Alabama (8-1, 5-1) on Saturday. Wilson had one of his best games of the season last week in a 31-13 win over Missouri, catching four passes for 102 yards and two touchdowns despite rainy conditions that usually put a damper on the passing game. Mississippi State coach Dan Mullen said he didn’t expect Wilson to be a big factor in the game because of the weather and Missouri’s defensive tendencies. But when the Ti-

gers pulled some unexpected moves early, Mullen changed course and called Wilson’s number. He didn’t disappoint. “For a guy like Wilson who wasn’t expecting to be a major factor, but ended up being one, it gave him confidence,” Mullen said. That’s good timing for the Bulldogs, who need Wilson to create some matchup problems against Alabama’s talented defense, which is giving up just 16.3 points per game. Wilson ranks fourth in the SEC with 626 yards receiving

and second with eight touchdowns. Alabama coach Nick Saban said Wilson was “difficult to cover because of the mismatch he creates using his body and his size to help himself, and he has really good hands.” Alabama linebacker Reggie Ragland said the presence of Wilson and quarterback Dak Prescott — who is third in the league with 2,351 yards passing, 18 touchdowns and just one interception — is a major concern for the Tide defense. Please see MSU | 13A

Griz get Chalmers in multi-player deal Associated Press

MIAMI — Mario Chalmers and Memphis are linked again. Best known in college for helping beat Memphis in the NCAA championship game, Chalmers was traded by Miami to the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday in a four-player deal that helps the Heat move closer to escaping would be a very punitive tax bill after the

season. The Heat also sent little-used forward James Ennis to the Grizzlies, who gave up point guard Beno Udrih and power forward Jarnell Stokes in the deal. “Rio can hold his head high, leaving on a great note here,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “He’ll always be remembered as a two-time champion point guard here in Miami, welcomed in Miami

from here on out.” The trade ends months of questions about the status of Chalmers, an eight-year veteran and the starting point guard on the 2012 and 2013 NBA title teams in Miami. His contract seemed one of the most likely candidates to be moved in Miami’s quest to escape the repeater tax and have maximum flexibility on the free-agent market next

summer. The trade doesn’t get Miami under the tax line, but moves the Heat significantly closer. “This is a move we feel good about,” Spoelstra said. “We feel good about who we’re acquiring.” Chalmers was averaging 5.5 points on 31 percent shooting this season for the Heat, and Ennis had been scoreless in seven minutes of action.

Irish break into top 4 in CFB playoff rankings Associated Press

Notre Dame moved into the top four in the second College Football Playoff selection committee rankings of the season Tuesday night. Clemson remained No. 1, with Alabama moving up two spots to No. 2, Ohio State staying at No. 3 and the Fighting Irish up a spot to No. 4. Notre Dame and Alabama each has one loss. Unbeaten Iowa received an

eye-catching promotion, rising four spots to No. 5. Baylor is the highest-ranked Big 12 team at No. 6. Two previously unbeaten teams tumbled. LSU, No. 2 last week, dropped to No. 9 after losing at Alabama, and Michigan State, which was No. 7, dropped to No. 13. Takeaways from the second playoff rankings: Eye on Hawkeyes —One of the biggest surprises was

Iowa’s rise to No. 5 after winning 35-27 on the road against an Indiana team that is 0-5 in Big Ten play. Committee chairman Jeff Long pointed out the Hawkeyes have beaten two top 25 teams on the road (Wisconsin and Northwestern), and Iowa’s strength of schedule is No. 2 behind Clemson among the six remaining unbeaten teams. “It’s a recognition by the

committee that they were increasingly impressed by Iowa and their body of work,” Long said. “Three teams lost ahead of them, so we felt they needed to move up.” Last week Long said the committee had concerns about Iowa’s offense. “We recognize they are consistent on both sides of the ball,” he said Tuesday. “They aren’t flashy, but they are consistent.”


13A • Daily Corinthian

Scoreboard

SHORTS

Auto racing Sprint Cup leaders

6th grade. Fee is $20. The league is open to please contact Brian anyone that wants their Johnson (662-415child to play. You can 2683), Anthony Marshall also text Shelton at 731-610-0458. (662-212-4604), or  Keith Settlemires (662396-1377). Turkey Trot 5K  The Corinth Warrior Basketball League and Lady Warrior track Wheeler Grove Bapteam is hosting a 5K tist Church is signing race on Saturday, Nov. up kids Pre-K through 14 on the campus of 6th Grade for RAISE EM Corinth High School UP SPORTS basketball Academic and Performleague. Season will last ing Arts Center. 6 weeks, going from Entry fee is $25. Jan. 16-Feb. 20. Cost Race, which includes per child is $25. You eight age divisions, becan register at Wheeler gins at 8 a.m. Race day Grove Baptist Church or registration will be held New Life Christian Supat 7 a.m. ply. Deadline to register  is Dec. 10. For more Tiger Trot info contact Cory Holley 662-415-2149 or Shane The Tiger Trot Run/ Evetts 662-415-1947. Walk — formerly the Tur key Trot — will be held Nov. 14 at 200 TennesChildren’s see Street in Savannah, Basketball Tennessee. The event will benefit the Hardin The Chewalla Baptist County High School Basketball League is Cross-Country team. taking registrations for Applications can be the season. Forms will downloaded at Shoalsoon be in the schools or you can contact Ross strac.com. For more information, contact Shelton by e-mail RanDeonne Ewoldt at 731dyross19@yahoo.com for a form. League ages 412-7699 or Normdeonne3@gmail.com are 5-years-old through CONTINUED FROM 12A

MSU CONTINUED FROM 12A

“Any time you’ve got a quarterback like (Prescott) and you’ve got guys like Wilson who can go up and get it at any time they need a big play, you’ve got to do your job,� Ragland said. Wilson’s talent was obvious last season when he led the Bulldogs with 47 catches for 680 yards. But after surprising some

teams last year, opposing defenses are now almost always aware of him. That led to some quiet games in September and October while other receivers flourished — Fred Ross currently leads the Bulldogs with 51 catches. Ross has been so effective that opponents have started to pay more attention to him. That’s helped open up some room for Wilson.

Through Nov. 8 POINTS 1, Jeff Gordon, 4,082. 2, Kyle Busch, 4,080. 3, Kevin Harvick, 4,079. 4, Martin Truex Jr., 4,076. 5, Carl Edwards, 4,069. 6, Brad Keselowski, 4,057. 7, Kurt Busch, 4,048. 8, Joey Logano, 4,013. 9, Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,259. 10, Denny Hamlin, 2,257. 11, Ryan Newman, 2,253. 12, Jimmie Johnson, 2,240. 13, Jamie McMurray, 2,235. 14, Paul Menard, 2,208. 15, Matt Kenseth, 2,197. 16, Clint Bowyer, 2,153. 17, Aric Almirola, 903. 18, Kasey Kahne, 896. 19, Greg Biffle, 821. 20, Kyle Larson, 809. MONEY 1, Kevin Harvick, $8,486,466. 2, Joey Logano, $8,039,567. 3, Jimmie Johnson, $6,940,810. 4, Denny Hamlin, $6,322,343. 5, Brad Keselowski, $6,130,249. 6, Matt Kenseth, $5,834,025. 7, Dale Earnhardt Jr., $5,804,015. 8, Jeff Gordon, $5,725,429. 9, Martin Truex Jr., $5,172,076. 10, Ryan Newman, $5,036,348. 11, Clint Bowyer, $5,026,977. 12, Greg Biffle, $4,939,191. 13, Aric Almirola, $4,915,974. 14, Jamie McMurray, $4,910,704. 15, Austin Dillon, $4,732,192. 16, Trevor Bayne, $4,706,405. 17, AJ Allmendinger, $4,455,333. 18, Kurt Busch, $4,452,406. 19, Kyle Larson, $4,418,761. 20, Carl Edwards, $4,414,308.

Basketball NBA schedule EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pct Toronto 5 3 .625 New York 4 4 .500 Boston 3 3 .500 Brooklyn 0 7 .000 Philadelphia 0 7 .000 Southeast Division W L Pct Atlanta 7 2 .778 Miami 5 3 .625 Washington 3 4 .429 Charlotte 3 4 .429 Orlando 3 5 .375 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 7 1 .875 Detroit 5 2 .714 Chicago 5 3 .625 Indiana 4 4 .500 Milwaukee 4 4 .500 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division W L Pct San Antonio 5 2 .714 Houston 4 3 .571 Dallas 3 4 .429 Memphis 3 5 .375 New Orleans 1 6 .143 Northwest Division W L Pct Oklahoma City 5 3 .625 Minnesota 4 3 .571 Utah 4 3 .571 Portland 4 4 .500 Denver 3 4 .429 Pacific Division W L Pct Golden State 8 0 1.000 L.A. Clippers 5 2 .714 Phoenix 3 4 .429 L.A. Lakers 1 6 .143 Sacramento 1 7 .125 Monday’s Games Indiana 97, Orlando 84 Chicago 111, Philadelphia 88 Minnesota 117, Atlanta 107 Denver 108, Portland 104

GB — 1 1 4½ 4½ GB — 1½ 3 3 3½ GB — 1½ 2 3 3 GB — 1 2 2½ 4 GB — ½ ½ 1 1½ GB — 2½ 4½ 6½ 7

San Antonio 106, Sacramento 88 Golden State 109, Detroit 95 L.A. Clippers 94, Memphis 92 Tuesday’s Games Cleveland 118, Utah 114 Oklahoma City 125, Washington 101 New York 111, Toronto 109 Miami 101, L.A. Lakers 88 Charlotte 104, Minnesota 95 New Orleans 120, Dallas 105 Boston 99, Milwaukee 83 Today’s Games Toronto at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Orlando, 6 p.m. New York at Charlotte, 6 p.m. Indiana at Boston, 6:30 p.m. Golden State at Memphis, 7 p.m. Brooklyn at Houston, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Dallas, 7 p.m. New Orleans at Atlanta, 7 p.m. Milwaukee at Denver, 8 p.m. Detroit at Sacramento, 9 p.m. San Antonio at Portland, 9:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games Utah at Miami, 6:30 p.m. Golden State at Minnesota, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Phoenix, 9:30 p.m.

Football NFL standings AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 8 0 0 1.000 276 N.Y. Jets 5 3 0 .625 200 Buffalo 4 4 0 .500 209 Miami 3 5 0 .375 171 South W L T Pct PF Indianapolis 4 5 0 .444 200 Houston 3 5 0 .375 174 Jacksonville 2 6 0 .250 170 Tennessee 2 6 0 .250 159 North W L T Pct PF Cincinnati 8 0 0 1.000 229 Pittsburgh 5 4 0 .556 206 Baltimore 2 6 0 .250 190 Cleveland 2 7 0 .222 177 West W L T Pct PF Denver 7 1 0 .875 192 Oakland 4 4 0 .500 213 Kansas City 3 5 0 .375 195 San Diego 2 7 0 .222 210 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Giants 5 4 0 .556 247 Philadelphia 4 4 0 .500 193 Washington 3 5 0 .375 158 Dallas 2 6 0 .250 160 South W L T Pct PF Carolina 8 0 0 1.000 228 Atlanta 6 3 0 .667 229 New Orleans 4 5 0 .444 241 Tampa Bay 3 5 0 .375 181 North W L T Pct PF Minnesota 6 2 0 .750 168 Green Bay 6 2 0 .750 203 Chicago 3 5 0 .375 162 Detroit 1 7 0 .125 149 West W L T Pct PF Arizona 6 2 0 .750 263 St. Louis 4 4 0 .500 153 Seattle 4 4 0 .500 167 San Francisco 3 6 0 .333 126 Monday’s Game Chicago 22, San Diego 19 Thursday Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 7:25 p.m. Sunday Detroit at Green Bay, noon Carolina at Tennessee, noon Chicago at St. Louis, noon Dallas at Tampa Bay, noon New Orleans at Washington, noon Miami at Philadelphia, noon Cleveland at Pittsburgh, noon Jacksonville at Baltimore, noon Minnesota at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.

PA 143 162 190 206 PA 227 205 235 187 PA 142 182 214 247 PA 139 211 182 249 PA 226 164 195 204 PA 165 190 268 231 PA 140 167 221 245 PA 153 146 140 223

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Kansas City at Denver, 3:25 p.m. New England at N.Y. Giants, 3:25 p.m. Arizona at Seattle, 7:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Indianapolis, San Diego, San Francisco Monday Houston at Cincinnati, 7:30 p.m.

Top 25 schedule Saturday No. 1 Clemson at Syracuse, 1:30 p.m. No. 2 Ohio State at Illinois, 11 a.m. No. 3 Alabama at No. 20 Mississppi State, 2:30 p.m. No. 4 Baylor vs. No. 12 Oklahoma, 7 p.m. No. 5 Oklahoma State at Iowa State, 2:30 p.m. No. 6 Notre Dame vs. Wake Forest, 2:30 p.m. No. 7 Stanford vs. Oregon, 6:30 p.m. No. 8 Iowa vs. Minnesota, 7 p.m. No. 9 LSU vs. Arkansas, 6:15 p.m. No. 10 Utah at Arizona, 9 p.m. No. 11 Florida at South Carolina, 11 a.m. No. 13 TCU vs. Kansas, 11 a.m. No. 14 Michigan State vs. Maryland, 11 a.m. No. 15 Michigan at Indiana, 2:30 p.m. No. 16 Houston vs. No. 25 Memphis, 6 p.m. No. 17 North Carolina vs. Miami, 2:30 p.m. No. 18 UCLA vs. Washington State, 9:45 p.m. No. 19 Florida State vs. N.C. State, 11:30 a.m. No. 21 Temple at South Florida, 6 p.m. No. 22 Navy vs. SMU, 2:30 p.m. No. 24 Northwestern vs. Purdue, 11 a.m.

Golf PGA-FedExCup leaders Through Nov. 9 Rank Player Points YTD Money 1. Justin Thomas 688 $1,644,000 2. Kevin Na 631 $1,456,233 3. Russell Knox 631 $1,506,560 4. Smylie Kaufman 572 $1,289,878 5. Emiliano Grillo 534 $1,143,000 6. Kevin Kisner 388 $925,632 7. Jason Bohn 315 $682,136 8. Peter Malnati 313 $752,272 9. Adam Scott 301 $798,000 10. William McGirt 258 $592,700 11. Patton Kizzire 216 $510,303 12. Cameron Tringale 215 $494,213 13. Brendan Steele 213 $479,333 14. Alex Cejka 207 $457,233 15. Brett Stegmaier 185 $432,493 16. Patrick Rodgers 173 $359,342 17. David Toms 170 $391,933 18. Daniel Summerhays169 $296,687 19. Tyrone Van Aswegen167 $335,579 20. Tony Finau 166 $318,187 21. Scott Piercy 163 $333,582 22. Branden Grace 163 $378,000 23. Hideki Matsuyama160 $353,333 24. Ryan Moore 155 $316,539 25. Patrick Reed 154 $341,750 26. Jhonattan Vegas 150 $303,109 27. James Hahn 127 $273,000 28. Charl Schwartzel 123 $257,250 29. Chad Campbell 122 $236,508 30. Daniel Berger 120 $194,130 31. Charles Howell III 119 $254,133 32. Kyle Reifers 115 $218,050 33. Spencer Levin 114 $161,246 34. Sergio Garcia 110 $167,767 35. Dustin Johnson 110 $276,500 36. Rory McIlroy 108 $151,467 37. Marc Leishman 104 $150,675 38. Russell Henley 102 $193,800 39. Andrew Loupe 101 $235,171 40. Brendon de Jonge 101 $176,583 41. Fabian Gomez 101 $157,387 42. Brian Harman 100 $240,022 43. Nick Watney 99 $189,880 44. Hudson Swafford 96 $134,933 45. Rickie Fowler 96 $133,832 46. Chris Stroud 94 $156,731 47. Paul Casey 93 $137,350

48. Nick Taylor 89 49. Morgan Hoffmann 89 50. Justin Rose 89

$104,414 $171,823 $194,250

PGA money leaders Through Nov. 8 Trn Money 23 $2,758,417 23 $2,370,096 25 $1,869,487 25 $1,727,436 22 $1,662,898 23 $1,395,927 23 $1,230,303 20 $1,079,711 24 $962,032 26 $959,265 24 $912,048 24 $890,112 21 $864,313 20 $787,963 23 $769,947 27 $760,121 22 $743,163 24 $673,143 29 $643,112 26 $637,227 28 $636,692 22 $620,998 27 $613,020 27 $593,691 27 $588,605 23 $579,102 24 $574,559 23 $574,350 25 $542,941 26 $520,788

1. Lydia Ko 2. Inbee Park 3. Stacy Lewis 4. Sei-Young Kim 5. Lexi Thompson 6. Amy Yang 7. So Yeon Ryu 8. Shanshan Feng 9. Anna Nordqvist 10. Morgan Pressel 11. Hyo-Joo Kim 12. Brittany Lincicome 13. Suzann Pettersen 14. Na Yeon Choi 15. Cristie Kerr 16. Minjee Lee 17. Ha Na Jang 18. Mirim Lee 19. Chella Choi 20. Yani Tseng 21. Mi Hyang Lee 22. Alison Lee 23. Ilhee Lee 24. Brittany Lang 25. Jenny Shin 26. Mika Miyazato 27. Gerina Piller 28. Jessica Korda 29. Candie Kung 30. Sandra Gal

Champions-Schwab Cup leaders FINAL Points Money 1. Bernhard Langer 3,520 $2,340,288 2. C, Montgomerie 3,182 $2,069,619 3. Jeff Maggert 3,143 $2,240,836 4. Billy Andrade 1,951 $1,533,919 5. Joe Durant 1,466 $1,445,956 6. Marco Dawson 1,382 $1,073,227 7. Kevin Sutherland 1,357 $1,233,715 8. Esteban Toledo 1,187 $1,133,612 9. Michael Allen 1,143 $1,152,625 10. Woody Austin 1,140 $942,211 11. Tom Lehman 1,076 $1,164,878 12. Kenny Perry 1,051 $1,079,565 13. Scott Dunlap 1,038 $1,111,250 14. Lee Janzen 1,028 $946,364 15. Mark O’Meara 972 $970,544 16. Paul Goydos 854 $1,107,081 17. Fred Couples 822 $729,991 18. Jeff Sluman 805 $800,954 19. Kirk Triplett 784 $787,296 20. Duffy Waldorf 780 $898,896 21. Olin Browne 721 $974,665 22. Tom Pernice Jr. 686 $811,321 23. David Frost 659 $874,821 24. Ian Woosnam 613 $694,397 25. Bart Bryant 611 $867,779 26. Gene Sauers 583 $650,800 27. Wes Short, Jr. 576 $763,637 28. Stephen Ames 572 $672,427 29. Russ Cochran 543 $615,207 30. Jerry Smith 541 $652,365

Television Today’s lineup COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7 p.m. (ESPN2) – Bowling Green at Western Michigan 7 p.m. (ESPNU) – Northern Illinois at Buffalo GOLF 9 p.m. (GOLF) – BMW Masters, firstround, at Shanghai NBA BASKETBALL 7 p.m. (ESPN) – L.A. Clippers at Dallas 9:30 p.m. (ESPN) – San Antonio at Portland NHL HOCKEY 6:30 p.m. (NBCSN) – Montreal at Pittsburgh SOCCER 4:55 p.m. (FS1) – United States vs. Brazil

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14A • Daily Corinthian

Home & Garden

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Gardeners like to brag about gardens

(Photo by Gary Bachman/MSU Extension Service)

Yaupon holly bushes (above) are either male or female, and only the females produce the red berries that the plants are known for. Prune Knockout roses (right) in the spring to keep their shape and encourage the prolific blooming that give these bushes their name.

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Let’s face it: Gardeners like to talk about their gardens, and I’m no different. We all like to brag about our garden successes and ask questions a b o u t how to improve. Gary T h r o u g h Bachman email and s o c i a l Southern media, I Gardening get many gardening questions throughout the year. These questions concern landscape issues, plant care and plant identification. I enjoy answering questions and helping home gardeners to be successful in their gardening endeavors in Mississippi and beyond. I’ve gotten questions from as far away as California. I have to admit that some of them make me think I’m on a game show called “Stump Gary,” and I learn a thing or two researching the answers. It ends up feeling like two gardeners sharing landscape tips across the back fence. I want to share a couple of recent questions and my responses. Question: “Dear Gary, I have a few native yaupon hollies in the edge of the woods on my property. I really like these plants, but they never have any berries. The yaupons in my neighbor’s yard have beautiful berries. Is there something I can fertilize with to make them produce fruit? Justin, Benndale” Response: “Justin, yaupon hollies, with their gorgeous, translucent, red berries, are some of my all-time favorite native plants for south Mis-

I am beyond humbled by the vote I received from the People of Corinth and Alcorn County. I love this city & county. God Bless You All.

Nick Bain

Pruning roses is actually very easy, and I congratulate you for realizing the need to prune. An overgrown Knockout rose bush is not the most attractive plant in the garden. sissippi. However, there’s no fertilizer that will solve your problem. You see, yaupons, like all hollies, are dioecious, meaning there are male and female plants. My advice is to go to the garden center to find a yaupon with berries and plant that with your other plants. There are some really nice weeping yaupons that I think would complement the native yaupons already growing in your landscape.” Question: “Hey Gary, my landscape roses are still loaded with beautiful, red flowers but are getting a little unruly. When’s the best time to prune these back to a more manageable size? Judy, Pascagoula” Response: “Judy, pruning roses is actually very easy, and I congratulate you for realizing the need to prune. An overgrown Knockout rose bush is not the most attractive plant in the garden. Knockout roses need to be pruned early each spring; that means February for Pascagoula. First, remove any dead or winter-damaged canes close to the base of the plant. Prune the remaining canes up to 50 percent, maintaining the desired shape and size of the shrub as you prune. Cut the canes at a 45-degree angle facing out to prevent canes from holding water. “Always use bypass pruners because they produce the best and cleanest cut, like a pair of scissors cutting paper. Anvil pruners, while less expensive, do a great deal of damage by literally crushing the stem of the rose. The crushed stems are not attractive and can let disease organisms enter the plant. This pruning stimulates vigorous growth in the spring and the abundant flowering Knockouts are known for. “Later this summer when the rose bushes are starting to look a little tired, prune back by about a third. The resulting flush of growth and flowers will bring enjoyment to the fall gardening season. Always protect yourself when pruning roses. Heavy-duty leather gloves are a must, along with long sleeves for keeping those pesky thorns at bay.” If you’ve got questions about anything in the landscape, you can email them to me at gary.bachman@msstate.edu. You can also send me questions via social media: Southern Gardening on Facebook or @SoGardening on Twitter. (Daily Corinthian columnist Dr. Gary Bachman is an associate Extension research professor of horticulture at the Coastal Research and Extension Center in Biloxi.)


1B • Daily Corinthian

Taste

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Thanksgiving turkey 101 Tips can benefit rookies, seasoned cooks BY MICHELE KAYAL Associated Press

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Associated Press

Not feeding a crowd? Roast a turkey breast instead BY SARA MOULTON Associated Press

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Learn how to prepare a better turkey gravy Associated Press

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2B • Daily Corinthian

Variety

Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Crossword

BEETLE BAILEY

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

BLONDIE

HI & LOIS

BC

WIZARD OF ID

DILBERT

GARFIELD

FORT KNOX

PICKLES

ACROSS 1 Inaugural ball, e.g. 5 Calcium source 9 Open, as toothpaste 14 Very dry 15 Down to business 16 Former Cleveland oil company acquired by BP 17 San __, Italy 18 “Of course” 19 Match with bishops 20 Access to 54Across 23 Catalina, e.g. 24 Houston-based scandal subject 25 Wood-shaping tools 27 Phone button trio 30 Badminton barrier 31 Short-legged dog 32 Emotionally out of control 34 “Mad” social in 54-Across 37 Spud 38 Benefit 39 Butte relative 40 Like 2016 41 Antacid choice 42 Deteriorate 43 34-Across napper in 54Across 45 Remove pieces from? 46 Fencing defense 47 Keep out 48 Mao __-tung 49 Shortening brand 51 Divided country 53 Wild West weapon 54 Setting for a novel originally published 11/11/1865 59 Loafs 61 Some intersections 62 Slushy treat 63 Approaches 64 Bond girl Kurylenko 65 Facial area under a soul patch 66 Prickly shrub 67 Corset stiffener 68 Fish caught in pots

DOWN 1 Teri of “Tootsie” 2 Neck of the woods 3 Common perch 4 Acrobat creator 5 Restaurant host 6 Soup server’s caution 7 Use, as a chaise 8 “As seen on TV” record co. 9 Pac-12 powerhouse 10 Baseball rarities 11 Critter who kept disappearing in 54-Across 12 It may be graded in an auditorium 13 Plays to the camera 21 Deep-seated 22 Online money source 26 Alsatian dadaist 27 Took steps 28 “Top Chef” network 29 Hookah smoker in 54-Across 31 Bus. brass 33 Highly respected Buddhists 34 Improvised booster seat for a tot, maybe

35 Romanov royals 36 Selfcongratulatory cheer 38 Active 41 “The Burden of Proof” author 42 Restaurant visitor 44 Hobbit enemy 45 Venture to express 47 Barrio food store 49 Keeping in the loop, briefly

50 Wild West show 51 Lowered oneself? 52 Visitor to 54Across 55 Plains people 56 Overexertion aftermath 57 Diamond of music 58 Man caves, maybe 60 Nottingham-toLondon dir.

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

xwordeditor@aol.com

By D. Scott Nichols and C.C. Burnikel ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

11/11/15

11/11/15

Eating disorders are dangerous to every age a veteran and asked Dear Annie: My mother Annie’s was whether she was eligible has never been a big eater, for benefits. but in the past year, she You recommend several seems to have developed Mailbox organizations, including a serious eating disorder. At age 62, she skips meals regularly and has shrunk to a bony 90 pounds. Her skin is sagging, her hair is thinning, and she is very irritable. Mom acts superior about her size and often criticizes other peoples’ weight or eating habits. Oddly, she watches cooking shows all day, swaps recipes with me and cooks for everyone else. But she only eats her own “special” food. When I call it to her attention, she denies it and says she’s simply watching what she eats. I think it’s ridiculous that a woman in her 60s is behaving like a teenage girl. I am her only daughter and apparently the only one in the family who realizes what a big deal this is. My dad and brothers think she’s just a health freak. I have cut back on my visits because I don’t want my young daughters to be exposed to such a terrible female role model when they already struggle with their own body image issues. I’m also worried that there will be serious health consequences if Mom doesn’t start eating normally. What should I do? — Worried and Annoyed Dear Worried:

Please try to be less annoyed. Your mother sounds anorexic. While you are right that anorexia is more common in teenage girls, it can affect both men and women of any age. This is a mental health problem. Mom’s self-worth is tied to how thin she is, and she doesn’t recognize that she’s in serious trouble. Anorexia can cause heart problems and bone loss, kidney failure and even death. You cannot force Mom to seek help, but you can get information and suggestions on how to approach her by contacting the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders (anad.org) and the National Eating Disorders Association (nationaleatingdisorders.org). Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Frantic Mom,” who desperately wanted help for her middle-aged son who is addicted to drugs and in need of psychiatric help. She said her late husband

the VA. Please tell her to also check with her local VA hospital and the Disabled American Veterans. Both of these organizations have highly trained service officers to help veterans and their families obtain the benefits to which they are entitled. If she has trouble, an officer from any local Veterans of Foreign Wars post should be able to connect her to the right people. I hope this helps. — Kathleen Blake, Past Erie County President, Ladies Auxiliary to the VFW Dear Kathleen Blake: We appreciate the additional suggestion and hope that “Frantic Mom” will look into all avenues of assistance. We would also like to take this opportunity to send our veterans our best wishes on this Veterans Day. Thank you so much for your service. Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.


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REED MAINTENANCE SERVICES, Inc. is accepting applications for qualiďŹ ed and experienced Tri Axle Dump Truck Driver, Conveyor Trailer Driver and Night Shift Rolloff Truck Driver at our Cherokee, AL location. Applicants must be drug free with a safe driving record. We offer life, health, dental, disability, 401k, holiday pay and vacation. Company paid life and disability insurance. To apply, call (256) 533-0505 or apply online at www.reedalabama.com. Reed Maintenance is an Equal Opportunity Employer. QualiďŹ ed females and minorities are encouraged to apply.

3118

FOOTBAL L CON WIN $25! TEST

The Ultimate Cooking Experience For Fall and Football Tailgating

CORINTH LIBRARIAN Applicant should be energetic, creative, and capable of self-direction and have knowledge of library and computer resources, especially Word, Excel, and Publisher. Must be able to deal respectfully with all age groups, pre-school through senior citizens. Good communication skills, both written and verbal, are essential. Forty (40) hours per week. Bachelor's Degree required. Public library experience preferred. Benefits include paid holidays, vacation, & sick leave. PERS participation mandatory. Health & Life Insurance available. Applications available at the Corinth Public Library, Northeast Regional Library Headquarters or on the NRL website: www.nereg.lib.ms.us. Mail or deliver completed application to the Northeast Regional Library, 1023 Fillmore St., Corinth, MS 38834. Application deadline is 5 p.m., Friday November 20, 2015. EOE

1.Tupelo @ Corinth

Bryan Huggins, DVM North Harper

$

3 % &RQFUHWH :RUN 'ULYH :D\V 3DUNLQJ /RWV 6WHSV 5HWDLQHU :DOOV &DOO RU

GARAGE/ESTATE 0151 SALES

Thanks to our super contest sponsors!

$

$'237,21 683(5 )XQ )DPLO\ 9DFDWLRQV 1<& ([HFXWLYH )LQDQFLDO 6HFXULW\ /RWV RI /29( DZDLWV VW EDE\ ([SHQVHV SDLG

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GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

$

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

$

0107 SPECIAL NOTICE

“ I will always try to help you� Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand We Haul:

• • • • •

Lime Rock Iuka Gravel Masonry Sand Top Soil Rip-Rap

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

1299 Hwy 2 West (Marshtown) Structure demolition & Removal Crushed Lime Stone (any size) Iuka Road Gravel Washed gravel Pea gravel Fill sand Masonry 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

Crowell Services, LLC.

Tree Experts • Lot Clearing • Tree Removal • Tree Trimming • Cleanup

• • • • •

We also do: Dozer Back-Hoe Track-hoe Demolition Dig Ponds and Lakes

662-286-9158 or 662-287-2296

GO-CARTS

Go-Carts Starting at $999.00 LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS Ferrell’s Home & Outdoor 807 S. Parkway & Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 287-2165 “The Very Best Place To Buy� Are You Trying to Catch a Contractor?

HERE WE ARE! L & O Construction 662-415-1798 662-415-0320

Fr e e Estim ate s

We work with insurance companies Over 30 years experience • New Additions • Kitchen Remodels • Bath Remodels • Vinyl Siding • Tile Installed • Laminate Flooring • Decks • Metal Roofing ANY OF YOUR HOME NEEDS

ROOF TUNE-UP

Complete Package $295.00

Loans $20-$20,000

40 Years

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

Veteran Owned/Operated Veteran and

662-665-1133

Hat Lady

Plumbing & Electric

• Home Repair & Remodeling • Backhoe

662-396-1023 JASON ROACH

Mary Coats Thank you for 15 years!! Call me with your vehicle needs, new, certified, and pre-owned. Come by, text or call today!!!

OWNER

256-627-8144

1159 B CR400 CORINTH MS 38834

Long Lewis Ford Lincoln of Corinth (662)664-0229 Cell / (662)287-3184 Office mcoatsllf@yahoo.com

STEVENS LAWN MOWING & MAINTENANCE, LLC

QUICK WAY FOR QUICK CASH

R/R Truck & Trailer

TITLE LOANS & CHECK ADVANCE

Diesel Service: Farm Equip., Work Trucks, Big Rigs Portable Welding

Senior Discounts Cacey Crowell

Pressure Licensed & Washing

Fully Insured Licensed & Fully Insured FREE ESTIMATES 662-603-7751 Rhonda & Bubba Stevens Owners

CORINTH 501 HWY. 72 W. 662-286-2274 (Convenient Drive Thru)

BOONEVILLE 613 E. CHURCH ST. 662-728-3070 IUKA 1204 W. QUITMAN ST. 662-423-6600

TORNADO SHELTERS

We can also install H.D. leafguards. JIMCO is your full service roofing company with 38 years experience and 1 Million in liability insurance.

Jason Roach’s

Licensed and Insured Free Estimates

1. Clean off Entire Roof 2. Thorough Inspection (roof and fascias) 3. Replace any missing shingles 4. Seal around pipes, chimneys, and sky lights 5. Locate and Stop Leaks 6. Clean out gutters

Hours 24 HR / 7 day wk.

662-287-2310


4B • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • Daily Corinthian EMPLOYMENT

0142 LOST

PLEASE HELP ME FIND MY WAY BACK HOME! 8 YR. OLD REDDISHBROWN CHIWEENIE LOST BETWEEN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ON SHILOH RD. & 6TH ST. ANSWERS TO WILEY $400.00 REWARDNO QUESTIONS ASKED.

CALL 662-284-5913 OR 662-665-1420

0142 LOST

LOST!

$100 REWARD! Black & White Cat Webster/Main, Fat, Declawed, Short Hair name “Ciara� Call or Text

415-8641 or 415-4913

0121 CARD OF THANKS

A BIG THANK YOU!

Ouida Jane Massengill June 4, 1943 – October 12, 2015 The family of Ouida J. Massengill wishes to thank each of you for your many acts of kindness during our recent loss. The food, gifts, phone calls and visits, flowers and potted plants, but most of all your many prayers, sustained us during this time and will in the days ahead. We ask God’s richest blessings on each of you. Ray Massengill, Pamela (Randy) Hill and family, Petey Strickland and Katie, Sandra (Jerry) Walden and family, Gerald (Shirley) Michael, Charles (Sue) Michael 0542 BUILDING MATERIALS

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

Fall into Savings!

89

each

...........

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

li. ft.

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per sheet

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sq. ft.

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

sq. yd.

..

sq. ft.

New Load of

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

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

0539 FIREWOOD

HOMES FOR 0620 RENT

$

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

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

0955 LEGALS

We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance Company No up-front payments. No hassle. No paperwork. Free Estimates 25 Years professional service experience Rental cars available

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

5595

$

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

$

21500 $ 39 5

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

West 378 feet more or less to the East side of County road; thence run across the road due South 345 feet more or less; thence run due East 378 feet more or less to the point of beginning, containing 3 acres more or less. I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested in me as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 12th day of October, 2015. Shapiro & Massey, LLC SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE Shapiro & Massey, LLC 1080 River Oaks Drive Suite B-202 Flowood, MS 39232 (601)981-9299 211 County Rd 510 Corinth, MS 38834 13-008280AH Publication Dates: October 21 and 28, November 4 and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

WHEREAS, on October 9, 2001, Kevin S. Robertson and Cynthia D. Robertson executed a Deed of Trust to Frank A. Riley as Trustee for the benefit of BancorpSouth Bank, which Deed of Trust was recorded in Book 570, LESS AND EXCEPT: Begin- Page 675 in the Office of the ning at the Southeast corner Chancery Clerk of Alcorn of Section 30, Township 2, County, Mississippi; and Range 7, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and run North 840 WHEREAS, Bancorpfeet to the center of the Kos- South Bank, the holder of said s u t h a n d C o r i n t h r o a d ; Deed of Trust and the Note thence run North 1455 feet secured thereby, substituted more or less to where the Scot P. Goldsholl as Trustee North side of a county road in place of the afore-mencrosses the Quarter Section tioned original Trustee, as auline for a point of beginning; thorized by the terms therethence run North 345 feet of, as evidenced by an instrumore or less; thence run ment dated October 12,

Property Directory 0955 LEGALS

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

Corinth Collision Center 810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

WHEREAS, on December 29, 2006, Faye S. Bonds, Unmarried executed a certain deed of trust to Charles E. Tonkin, II, Trustee for the benefit of Mortgage Electronic

PROPERTY DIRECTORY

Patti's Property Rentals

3 BR 1 1/2 Bath 675 per month Available soon can show by Appointment 3 BR 1 Bath Farmington Area 650/month 3 BR 2 Bath Central Place 675/month 2 BR 1 Bath Corinth 500/month

662-279-7453 662-808-5229 10AM-6PM

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

662-279-0935

.

35 Year Architectural

0955 LEGALS

63/,7 2$. ),5(:22' * * 6WHHO 758&./2$' 25 7:2 6725< EULFN KRXVH Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for Mortgage In&25' '(/,9(5(' &$// IRU \HDU OHDVH MEDICAL/ E H G U R R P E D W K vestors Group, its successors 7HDP 0HPEHUV 1HHGHG 0220 DENTAL FRPSOHWHO\ IXUQLVKHG and assigns which deed of MISC. ITEMS FOR SOXV GH trust is of record in the office * * 6WHHO 0LVVLVVLSSL NURSE, SRVLW UHIHU 1R SHWV RU of the Chancery Clerk of Al:RUNV LV KLULQJ IRU WKH 0563 SALE LICENSED VPRNLQJ QRUWK &DVV corn County, State of MissisSRVLWLRQ RI Practical $ 5 H 7$1($8 %(' &29 6W OHDYH s i p p i i n I n s t r u m e n t N o . :HOGHU (5 )25 '2'*( '$.27$ PHVVDJH 200700359; and The North Mississippi Re,I \RX KDYH LQLWLDWLYH 4 8 $ ' & $ % 3 5 , 0 ( ' gional Center is currently acMOBILE HOMES JRRG ZRUN HWKLF DF WHEREAS, said Deed of 0675 FOR RENT cepting applications for the F R X Q W D E L O L W \ D U H ),6+(5 35,&( 'ROOKRXVH Trust was subsequently asposition of Licensed Practical HDJHU WR OHDUQ H[FHO DW Y H U \ Q L F H L Q F K H V 5($/ 1,&( %5 ORFDWHG signed to JPMorgan Chase Nurse at the ICF/MR comD FKDOOHQJLQJ QHZ UH WDOO IROGV IRU VWRUDJH DW &5 QHDU $LU Bank, National Association by munity homes in Corinth. VSRQVLELOLW\ GRZQORDG WUDQVSRUW QR IXUQLWXUH SRUW PR 1R instrument dated August 22, These facilities serve clients D S S O L F D W L R Q D W 2013 and recorded in Instru3HWV with developmental disabilitJJVWHHO FRP RU DSSO\ LQ ment No. 201303931 of the ies and is a branch of the SHUVRQ DW WKH :,1 -RE +($'/,*+7 $66(0%/,(6 aforesaid Chancery Clerk's North Mississippi Regional REAL ESTATE FOR SALE office; and & H Q W H U L Q , X N D 0 V IRU WKUX 3RQWLDF Center in Oxford. ( 2 ( 0 L Q R U L W L H V ) H *UDQG 3UL[ QR FUDFNV P D O H V 9 H W ' L V D E O H G ERWK VLGHV IRU &DOO WHEREAS, JPMorgan HOMES FOR Chase Bank, National Associ0710 SALE Minimum ation has heretofore substiRequirements: tuted Shapiro & Massey, LLC %5 %$ 9LROHW 6W /$',(6 %/$&. OHDWKHU as Trustee by instrument . 6HOOLQJ DV LV Applicants must possess a valFRDW VL]H ; QHZ FRQGL /2&$/ 758&. '5,9(5 dated November 4, 2013 and id Mississippi License, PracWLRQ ERXJKW DW - & recorded in the aforesaid tical Nurse. HUD Precision Packaging Compon- 3HQQ\ &DOO Chancery Clerk's Office in InPUBLISHER’S ents of Rienzi, MS is accept- strument No. 201305650; and Excellent benefit package, inNOTICE ing applications for a local cluding: All real estate advertruck driver. , 8 Paid HoliWHEREAS, default having tised herein is subject been made in the terms and days, BCBS health insurance, Competitive salaries to the Federal Fair conditions of said deed of Free life insurance, Christmas Paid health insurance Housing Act which trust and the entire debt seBonus. Up to two weeks vacaPaid Vacation Leave makes it illegal to ad- cured thereby having been tion pay. Annual pay inPaid Medical Leave vertise any preference, declared to be due and paycreases. Paid 12 holidays per year :$17 72 PDNH FHUWDLQ limitation, or discrimi- able in accordance with the Public Employee Retirement $SSO\ DW \RXU DG JHWV DWWHQWLRQ" nation based on race, terms of said deed of trust, System of Mississippi 3UHFLVLRQ 3DFNDJLQJ $VN DERXW DWWHQWLRQ color, religion, sex, JPMorgan Chase Bank, Nahandicap, familial status tional Association, the legal &RPSRQHQWV JHWWLQJ JUDSKLFV or national origin, or in- holder of said indebtedness, $$ For an application and inform0$77(' 0$*12/,$ 3LF tention to make any having requested the under +LJKZD\ (DVW ation contact the North MisWXUH PHDVXUHV [ such preferences, limi- signed Substituted Trustee to 5LHQ]L 06 sissippi Regional Center LQFKHV &DOO tations or discrimina- execute the trust and sell said 2IILFH at (662) 287-3070. tion. land and property in accordState laws forbid dis- ance with the terms of said AN EQUAL in the sale, deed of trust and for the purREVERSE YOUR crimination OPPORTUNITY rental, or advertising of pose of raising the sums due PETS EMPLOYER AD FOR $1.00 real estate based on thereunder, together with atfactors in addition to torney's fees, trustee's fees EXTRA Call 662-287-6111 those protected under and expense of sale. federal law. We will not FARM for details. knowingly accept any NOW, THEREFORE, I, 0232 GENERAL HELP : + , 5 / 3 2 2 / & $ % 5 , 2 advertising for real es- Shapiro & Massey, LLC, Sub: D V K H U 6 X S H U 1 L F H tate which is in viola- stituted Trustee in said deed %$1' 6$: 23(5$725 tion of the law. All per- of trust, will on November 0430 FEED/FERTILIZER sons are hereby in- 18, 2015 offer for sale at pubPrecision Packaging Componthat all dwell- lic outcry and sell within legal ents of Rienzi, MS is accept- 5281' 52//6 2) +$< REAL ESTATE FOR RENT formed ings advertised are hours (being between the ing applications for a band 0,;(' *5$66 available on an equal hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 saw operator. $12 - $15/HR., 3(5 52// opportunity basis. p.m.), at the South Main Door 8 Paid Holidays, BCBS health UNFURNISHED 0610 APARTMENTS of the County Courthouse of insurance, Free life insurance, .26687+ $5($ %5 Christmas Bonus. Up to two 0450 LIVESTOCK %$ $OO DSSOV +9$& FDU Alcorn County, located at :($9(5 $376 weeks vacation pay. Annual SRUW SDWLR 0867 6(( Corinth, Mississippi, to the 1 &DVV %5 SRUFK Z G highest and best bidder for pay increases. &$// XWLO cash the following described /22.,1* 72 GRZQVL]H" property situated in Alcorn $SSO\ DW FURNISHED &KHFN RXW WKLV RQH RU County, State of Mississippi, 3UHFLVLRQ 3DFNDJLQJ Now Is The Time For Stocking 0615 W Z R E H G U R R P K R P H to-wit: APARTMENTS &RPSRQHQWV FRQYLHQWO\ ORFDWHG $$ • Channel Catfish %5 %DWK &+ $ EHWZHHQ %RRQHYLOOH DQG Beginning at the Southeast +LJKZD\ (DVW 6WRYH 5HIULJ PR &RULQWK $W VTXDUH Corner of Section 30, Town• Bluegill (Regular & Hybrid) 5LHQ]L 06 %XUQVYLOOH IHHW WKLV HQHUJ\ HIIL ship 2, Range 7, and run 2IILFH • Redear FLHQW KRPH LV VXUURXQ North 840 feet to the center HOMES FOR GHG E\ SRQGV DQG ILHOGV of the Kossuth and Corinth 0620 RENT • Largemouth Bass RQ D GHDGHQG FRXQWU\ Road for a starting point; %5 %DWK &+$ *DU URDG DQG LV SHUIHFW IRU D thence run North 1800 feet, • Black Crappie (if available) DJH 6WRUDJH 6WRYH UH V L Q J O H R U F R X S O H more or less, to the North CAUTION! ADVERTISEIULJ GLVKZDVKHU 1R DQ boundary line of the SouthMENTS in this classifica- • 6-11â€? Grass Carp LPDOV LQVLGH RU RXW 5HI east Quarter; thence West tion usually offer inforMANUFACTURED GHS UHT PR feet; thence South 1590 mational service of • Fathead Minnows 0747 HOMES FOR SALE 645 feet to the Northwest products designed to • Koi (if available) Corner of the Joe Bonds lot help FIND employment. %('52206 EDWK IRU ; %HOPRQW Alcorn County Co-Op thence East 210 feet; thence Before you send money \HDU OHDVH 3ULQ %HG %DWK in Corinth, MS South 210 feet; thence East to any advertiser, it is FHVV $QQH GULYH 1R 0XVW EH PRYHG &DVK Tuesday, November 17, 435 feet to the Point of Beyour responsibility to SHWV RU VPRNLQJ QR H[ RQO\ &DOO 8 - 9 am ginning. Containing 25 1/2 verify the validity of the To pre-order call FHSWLRQV SOXV acres, more or less. offer. Remember: If an Arkansas Pondstockers GHSRVLW UHIHU , 3$< 723 '2//$5 )25 ad appears to sound 1-870-578-9773 H Q F H 86(' 02%,/( +20(6 LESS AND EXCEPT: Com&$// “too good to be trueâ€?, Walk Ups Welcome /HDYH D PHVVDJH mence at the Northeast then it may be! Inquir %5 %$ &+$ &HQWUDO 0 2 9 ( , 1 U H D G \ corner of the Southeast ies can be made by con6 F K R R O 5 G E \ ) L U H 6 R X W K H U Q [ Quarter of Section 30, Towntacting the Better BusiWRZHU UHQW %5 %$ IRU VDOH &HQW ship 2, Range 7, Alcorn MERCHANDISE ness Bureau at UDO KHDW DLU ZDON LQ County, Mississippi; run GHS 1-800-987-8280. ODXQGU\ URRP ZDON LQ thence South 290 feet to the FORVHW JODPRXU EDWK North side of a public road Let our certified technicians LQFO GHOLYHU\ and the Point of Beginning, quickly restore your vehicle VHW XS &$6+ 21/< run thence South 300 feet, to pre-accident condition &$// run thence West 150 feet, with a satisfaction guarantee. run thence North 300 feet, run thence East 150 feet to TRANSPORTATION State-of-the-Art Frame the Point of Beginning. All lyStraightening ing and being in the SouthDents, Dings & east Quarter of Section 30, Scratches Removed FINANCIAL Township 2, Range 7, Alcorn Custom Color County, Mississippi, and conMatching Service taining 1 acre, more or less.

LEGALS

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

$

0232 GENERAL HELP

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

BURNSVILLE 40 ACRES OF WOODED LAND

LD O S $80,000

CALL 662-808-9313 OR 415-5071


Daily Corinthian • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • 5B

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

ment dated October 12, 2011, and recorded as Instru- stitute Trustee's fees and exment No. 201104949 in the penses of sale. Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; NOW, THEREFORE, I, and Scot P. Goldsholl, Substitute Trustee, will on December 2, WHEREAS, default hav- 2015, offer for sale at public ing been made in the terms outcry to the highest bidder and conditions of said Deed for cash, within legal hours of Trust, and the entire debt (between the hours of 11:00 secured thereby having been a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) at the declared to be due and pay- South front door of the Alable, and the legal holder of corn County Courthouse in said indebtedness, Bancorp- Corinth, Alcorn County, MisSouth Bank, having requested sissippi, the following-dethe undersigned Substitute scribed property: Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the INDEXING INSTRUCTIONS terms of said Deed of Trust for the purpose of raising the I n d e x u n d e r S o u t h w e s t sums due thereunder, togeth- Quarter of Section 18, Towner with attorney's fees, Sub- ship 2, Range 7, Alcorn

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

County, Mississippi.

of said public gravel road; thence South 6 degrees 30 Situated in the County of Al- minutes West along said corn, State of Mississippi, to West right of way of said wit: gravel road 150 feet to the Point of Beginning. Beginning at the Northwest Corner of the Southwest Title to the above described Quarter of Section 18, Town- property is believed to be ship 2 South, Range 7 East, good, but I will convey only Alcorn County, Mississippi; such title as vested in me as thence run South 1320 feet to Substitute Trustee. a fence and hedgerow; thence run North 89 degrees 00 WITNESS my signature on minutes East 1178.0 feet to this 6th day of October, 2015. the West right of way line of a public gravel road; thence /s/ Scot P. Goldsholl, SubstiNorth 150 feet to the true tute Trustee Point of Beginning; thence Dyke & Winzerling PLC West 175 feet; thence North 415 North McKinley, Suite 6 degrees 30 minutes East 1177 150 feet; thence East 175 feet Little Rock, AR 72205 to the West right of way line Telephone No. 501-661-1000

0955 LEGALS THIS DOCUMENT PREPARED BY:

0955 LEGALS SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on June 30, 2012, Billy J. Thompson, a single person, executed a deed of trust to Cecil D. McClellan, III, Trustee for the benefit of Reverse Mortgage USA, Inc., which deed of trust is recorded as Instrument No. 201203264 in the Office of D&W No. 82849D-6 the Chancery Clerk of the PUBLISH ON THESE DATES: County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi; and November 11, 2015 WHEREAS, the aforesaid November 18, 2015 deed of trust was assigned to November 25, 2015 Urban Financial Group, Inc. by instrument dated July 9, 15082 2012, and recorded in the OfDYKE & WINZERLING, P.L.C. 415 North McKinley, Suite 1177 Little Rock, AR 72205 Telephone No. (501) 6611000

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

2012, and recorded in the Of y fice of the aforesaid Chan- 201505170; and cery Clerk as Instrument No. WHEREAS, default hav201203578; and ing been made in the terms WHEREAS, by merger ef- and conditions of said deed of fective November 26, 2013, trust and the entire debt seUrban Financial Group, Inc. cured thereby, having been became Urban Financial of declared to be due and payable in accordance with the America, LLC; and terms of said deed of trust, WHEREAS, the aforesaid, and the legal holder of said inUrban Financial of America, debtedness, Urban Financial LLC, f/k/a Urban Financial of America, LLC, having reGroup, Inc., the holder of said quested the undersigned Subdeed of trust and the note se- stituted Trustee to execute cured thereby, substituted the trust and sell said land and Underwood Law Firm PLLC, property in accordance with as Trustee therein, as author- the terms of said deed of ized by the terms thereof, by trust for the purpose of raisinstrument dated October 19, ing the sums due thereunder, 2015 and recorded in the Of- together with attorney’s fees, fice of the aforesaid Chan- Substituted Trustee’s fees and cery Clerk as Instrument No. expense of sale;

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

CED REDU 2009 Pontiac G6

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

Asking $5400. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @ 662-319-7145

2004 Hummer H2 134,514 miles

$13,900 OBO Just serviced and ready for the road. Call @

662-664-0210

2006 Jeep Liberty New Tires 100K Miles Never BeeWrecked

$7500.00 OBO $8200 OBO 662-664-0357

1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER 6 cyl., 5 speed Convertible Leather Seat Covers All Original Electric Windows & Seats 88,000 miles

$15,000. OBO 664-6484

2004 Cadillac Seville SLS Loaded, leather, sunroof, chrome wheels.

89,000 Miles $5500. $5,000 Call 662-603-1290

1973 Jeep 1989 Mercedes Benz 300 CE Commando

D L SO

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

287-7424

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

662-594-5830

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

$

10,000

731-607-3172

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

D L SO

$12,900 OBO

Just serviced and ready for the road. Call @

662-664-0210

GT

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

4,000.00 $3,900.00 $

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

01 JEEP 4.0 New top front & rear bumper Custom Jeep radio and CD player $9,200 $7,800

662-643-3565

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

2005 Honda Element EX, 4D, VIN 5J6YH18645L001419, Milage, 107,400, one owner, local, Pwr Locks, Windows, Steering, RW defogger, A/C, Rear window wiper, Cruise, Tilt. AM/FM Stereo. Premium sound sys, Anti-lock brakes, Alum Alloy wheels, Sat radio, CD, Pwr mirrors, Bucket seats, MP3 player, Keyless entry. $7250.

662 287 4848

2010 Chevy Equinox LS 1996 Dodge Dakota

130K Miles, Fully Loaded GREAT Condition!

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

One Owner, Bought New in Booneville, MS. 139,000 miles, Xtra Cab, Leer Bed liner with cover, Back seat has storage under the seat. 318 Magnum Engine.

$4,200.00 662-672-0222 662-750-1949

2011 GMC CANYON-RED REG. CAB, 2 WD 2006 Express 2500 6.6 Diesel Runs 78,380 MILES and drives great. 172,000 miles. A/C and new tires Well serviced! $7500.00 $8500.00 662-594-1860

2003 FORD TAURUS 142100 MILES $3500.00 662-665-5720

2004 Nissan Quest 104,000 miles, cold ac, new tires, fully loaded, dvd entertainment system, runs and looks great, 4850.00 662-665-1995

1950 Buick

1994 Z28 CAMARO

1985 Mustang GT, HO, 5 Speed, Convertible, Mileage 7500 !! Second owner Last year of carburetor, All original. $16,500

662-287-4848

864 TRUCKS/VANS/ SUV’S

1997 Mustang

D L SO

2004 BMW

• 3.0L • 155K miles • New tires

LT-1 ENGINE REBUILT TRANSMISSION NEW TIRES 119,000 ACTUAL MILES

$3500.00 662-286-9098

662-415-3408 2008 LEXUS RX350 (GOLD)

1976 F115 428 Motor Very Fast

$11,900 OBO

$3,500.

662-462-7790

662-808-9313 662-415-5071

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

78,400 miles $4200.00 or Trade All Original

D L SO MILES 116,700

$13,500.

(662)287-7797

D L SO

2008 FORD F150 STX

54,000 miles, 4.2 V-6, automatic, new tires, dark blue, cold AC, runs and drives like new.

$

8950 FIRM

662-665-1995

06 Chevy Trailblazer 1987 Power FORD 250 DIESEL 1994 Nissan Quest everything! New Lifters, UTILITY SERVICE TRUCK Good heat Cam, Head, $4000. and Air Struts and Shocks. IN GOOD CONDITION $2000. $3,250 OBO 731-645-8339 OR Call 603-9446 662-319-7145 731-453-5239 832 Motorcycles/ATV’S

2003 CHEVY 2500 HDLT CREW CAB 4X4

2005 Lincoln LS Sport V8 Ultimate

1987 FORD BRONCO ALL ORIGINAL VINTAGE! RUNS & DRIVES GOOD

$2500/OBO 662-286-1717

D L SO

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

1500 Goldwing Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500

662-284-9487

2014 Jeep Wrangler

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

256-577-1349 $28,500.00

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

$5900.00 OBO $7200.00

662-664-0357

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

$6,500.00 662-415-9062

D L SO

2006 Kawasaki Vulcan 1600

13,500 Miles, Serviced in November, New Back Tire, Cobra Pipes, Slingshot Windshield

$4295 OBO 662-212-2451

D L SO

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

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

D L SO

2010 GMC Ext-Cab P.U. New tires, Tool Box, Towing Pkg., Bed Liner, Running Boards, Fog Lights, P. Windows, P. Door Locks, Tilt

$14,900.

Call 662-255-3511

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

2000 POLARIS MAGNUM 325 4X4 4 WHEELER

2007 Yamaha VStar 1100 21,900 miles $5,000 Bat-wing Faring and Hog Tunes

662-286-6750

YAMAHA V STAR 650 22,883 MILES $2,850.00 $2,750.00 665-1288

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

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

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

662-287-7415 662-415-5163

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

D L SO

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

$18,500.00

662-284-8200

2002 Harley Fat Boy, color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road. Call @ 662-664-0210

1990 Harley Davidson Custom Soft-Tail $9000

2013 Arctic Cat

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead $9000 OBO

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

662-808-2994

(662)279-0801


6B • Wednesday, November 11, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

0955 LEGALS

0232 GENERAL HELP

0955 LEGALS

0955 LEGALS

Parcel ID: 020623201600

Southern Motion, a locally owned and operated manufacturer of the world’s best reclining furniture, IS IMMEDIATELY EXPANDING PRODUCTION at our Baldwyn, MS facility. This will also create job opportunities at our Pontotoc facilities including Southern Motion, Recline Designs, Cushions To Go and FSR Transport.

NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS Upholsterers Frame Assemblers Fabric Cutters Hardware Assembler Cushion Fillers (Hand Fill) Sewing Machine Operators 2-Needle Sewing Machine Operators (Saddle Stitch) Shipping & Receiving

Reasons to work for Southern Motion Promotion & Career Opportunities Competitive Wages Low Cost Medical & Dental BeneďŹ ts Company Provided Life Insurance 8 Paid Holidays Paid Vacation 401k If you are interested in working for a world class company with competitive wages and beneďŹ ts, you must apply in person at the following locations: • Southern Motion, 309 Robert M. Coggin Drive, Baldwyn, MS • Southern Motion, 298 Henry Southern Drive, Pontotoc, MS • WIN Job Center Locations in Pontotoc, Tupelo, New Albany & Corinth Equal Opportunity Employer

NOW, THEREFORE, WE, Underwood Law Firm PLLC, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, will on the 9th day of December, 2015, offer for sale at public outcry for cash to the highest bidder, and sell within legal hours (being between the hours of 11:00 A.M. and 4:00 P.M.) at the South front door of the County Courthouse at Corinth, County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, the following described property situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

ORDER SETTING HEARING Commonly known as 17 County Road 188, Corinth, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED MS 38834. that the complaint to establish heirs of Bobbie N. Treece, deceased, in the WE WILL CONVEY only above referenced case shall such title as is vested in Un- be brought on for hearing bederwood Law Firm PLLC as fore the Honorable ChanSubstituted Trustee. cery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, on the 17th day of WITNESS OUR SIGNA- December, 2015, at 9:00 TURE, this the 5th day of o ^ c l o c k a . m . i n t h e November, 2015. courtroom in the Alcorn County Chancery Court Underwood Law Firm PLLC Building in the City of CorSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE inth, Mississippi.

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR $// 352 +RPH 0DLQWHQ DQFH DQG 5HSDLU

LAWN/LANDSCAPE/ TREE SVC /($) 5$&.,1* DQG 'HEULV 3LFNXS

TREE SERVICE

),5(:22' )25 6$/( 3LOHG RU The land referred to herein BY: Catherine W. Under- ORDERED this the 9th day of 6WDFNHG November, 2015. below is situated in the wood * : 7UHH 6HUYLFH County of Alcorn, State of Majority Member CHANCELLOR Mississippi, and is described as Control #15060629 BY: follows: STORAGE, INDOOR/ CHANCERY COURT AD1 1 / 1 1 / 2 0 1 5 , MINISTRATOR Lot No. 8 of Brooklyn Hills P U B L I S H : OUTDOOR Subdivision in the Northwest 1 1 / 1 8 / 2 0 1 5 , 1 1 / 2 5 / 2 0 1 5 , $1' IRRW 0HWDO H O N O R A B L E D O N A L D &DUJR &RQWDLQHUV *UHDW Quarter of Section 23, Town- 1 2 / 0 2 / 2 0 1 5 RAY DOWNS ship 1 South, Range 8 East, of VWRUDJH ATTORNEY FOR COMAlcorn County, Mississippi, as Underwood Law Firm PLLC PLAINANT shown by plat of said subdivi- 340 Edgewood Terrace Dr. $0(5,&$1 P. O. BOX 1618 sion on file in the Office of Jackson, MS 39206 0,1, 6725$*( CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI the Chancery Clerk of Al- 601-981-7773 6 7DWH 38835-1618 corn County, Mississippi in $FURVV )URP 15093 FAX NUMBER Plat Book 4 at Page 31. :RUOG &RORU 662/286/5943 Subject to the Protective I N T H E C H A N C E R Y Covenants applicable to said C O U R T O F A L C O R N 4tc 11/11, 18, 25, 12/2 0255,6 &580 subdivision as recorded in the C O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I 15095 0,1, 6725$*( land records of Alcorn County, Mississippi in the RE: ADMINISTRATION OF Chancery Clerk's Office THE ESTATE OF BOBBIE N. thereof in Deed Book 214 at TREECE, DECEASED PROFESSIONAL Pages 306-309.

s e l a S GUARANTEEDAuto

SERVICE DIRECTORY

NO. 2015-0440-02

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

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

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

SOLD

1992 SWINGER CLASS A MOTOR HOME

CAMPING TRAILER

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

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

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

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

SOLD

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

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

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

CALL 662-423-1727

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

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

662-660-3433

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1990 Allegro Motor Home

SOLD

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

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

$8995 Call Richard 662-664-4927

LD 51,000 SOMILES SLEEPS 6

$4300 662-415-5247

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

GOOD CONDITION

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

$2,000.00

$8500

662-287-8894

662-808-9313

24 FT BONANZA TRAILER GOOSE NECK

1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor

LD SOHours 1400

$8500.00 731-926-0006

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

COMMERCIAL

8N FORD TRACTOR GOOD CONDITION $2500.00 287-8456

Tractor For Sale!

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

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

601 FORD WORKMASTER

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

$6500.00 662-419-1587

EXCELLENT CONDITION

$3,500

731-453-5239 731-645-8339

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

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

$4,200 662-287-4514

Hyster Forklift Narrow Aisle 24 Volt Battery 3650.00 287-1464

804 BOATS

53' STEP DECK TRAILER

JOHN DEERE X300 RIDING LAWN MOWER

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

662-287-1464

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

SOLD

ALL FOR

2500 OBO

CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1 TON TRUCKS.

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

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

Big Boy Forklift $

1250

Great for a small warehouse

662-594-1090 662-287-1464

Toyota Forklift

BOOMS, CHAINS & LOTS OF ACCESSORIES

5,000 lbs Good Condition

$10,000/OBO

662-287-1464

CALL 662-603-1547

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

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

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

Loweline Boat

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

for only $7995.

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

731-689-4050 or 901-605-6571

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

$6500.

662-596-5053

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat 25 HP Motor $2700.00 Ask for Brad: 284-4826

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

Starcraft Semi V Boat

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

SOLD

$2000

Call 662-415-5842 or 415-5375

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

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503


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