Friday Sept. 9,
2011
50 cents
Daily Corinthian Vol. 115, No. 215
Partly Sunny Today
Tonight
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• Corinth, Mississippi • 24 pages • 2 Sections
Main Street Corinth searching for director Rinehart takes on new role as Alliance marketing coordinator BY MARK BOEHLER editor@dailycorinthian.com
Main Street Corinth is searching for a new director. Current Main Street Corinth Director Kelly Rinehart is leaving the position to accept a new role as The Alliance Membership and Marketing Coordinator.
“We sure hate to lose Kelly. She’s done a great job,” said Main Street Corinth President John Orman. “But we are glad we are keeping her with The Alliance and she’ll remain part of the team.” The Alliance President Gary Chandler said The Alliance will use Rinehart’s talent in mar-
keting, where she as an extensive background. “She brings a high level of talent to the new position,” he said. Orman is part of a six-person search committee of Main Street board members in search of a new director. Interested applicants can pick up a job description at The Alliance office. Deadline to apply is Friday, Sept. 23, then the committee will interview potential candidates, said Or-
man. Resumes can either be delivered or e-mailed to The Alliance. The position is full-time and pay is based upon experience. The director’s “job is more than a festival coordinator,” said the Main Street president. “We need a person who is very organized and who can work with our members to not only promote downtown, but who can work to have a better downtown both economically and aesthetically.”
Although Main Street Corinth produces the Slugburger Festival, Hog Wild, Celebrate Corinth and Corinth Christmas Parade, the position is as much about helping downtown businesses, he noted. Rinehart is making a gradual change to the new position and is assisting with the upcoming Hog Wild event. During her tenure in the diPlease see DIRECTOR | 2A
Beloved musical ‘Annie’ hits the stage FAA grant to boost Turner Airport look
CT-A play returns to Crossroads Playhouse
Facility is set to undergo several improvements
BY BOBBY J. SMITH bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com
Tonight CT-A patrons will experience one of the most beloved musicals of all time — the story of a Depressionera orphan determined to find her parents despite the twisted schemes of Miss Hannigan — who holds sway over the Municipal Girls Orphanage. The Corinth Theatre-Arts production of “Annie” begins tonight at 7:30, as the local theatre company returns to its home at the Crossroads Playhouse following almost a year of renovations. With the glitz of billionaire Oliver Warbucks held in contrast to the homeless community of Hooverville, the play is infused with themes relevant to world today, said CT-A Artistic Director Tyson Stephenson. “With the country on the borderline of going into a recession, “Annie” is extremely relevant to what’s Please see ANNIE | 2A
BY BOBBY J. SMITH bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com
The CT-A production ‘Annie’ features 10-year-old Anna Kate McEllhiney, of Pickwick, Tenn., in the title role of the little orphan in search of a family. The role of Oliver “Daddy” Warbucks is played by one of CT-A’s staple actors, Corinth’s Dan Marsh. The role of Warbucks’ secretary, Grace Farrell, is played by Lesley Petty.
Films, Celebrate Freedom highlight weekend events BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com
Outdoor activities and “Annie” top the list of things to do this weekend. Those interested in enjoying a nice night at the movies can check out the Films on Fillmore showing of “The Blind Side” tonight at 8 p.m. The movie will be shown on 12-foot by 7-foot inflatable screen at the CARE Garden and is sponsored by Main Street Corinth and the Crossroads Museum. The production is the third at the Depot. There is no admission and concessions will be available. The Corinth Theatre-Arts is set to present the musical “Annie” starting tonight at the Crossroads Playhouse. Show time is 7:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday. A Sunday matinee is set for 2 p.m. The production is the first for CT-A back at the Crossroads Playhouse following around a year of renova-
tions. Celebrate Freedom Day is scheduled for 10 a.m. Saturday at Crossroads Regional Park. Sponsored by the Alcorn County Patriots, the day gives the community a chance to say thanks to those who provide safety and welfare. First Responders, firefighters, law enforcement officers and emergency personnel will be honored with an opening ceremony at 10 a.m. There will be a car show, relics show, arts crafts and kid games during the day. It will be a day of fun for the whole family. Local and state political candidates have also been invited to attend. At 4 p.m., law enforcement officials and firefighters will do battle on the diamond in a charity softball game. Last year’s freedom event drew 1,800 people to the city park.
Community support sought for struggling Boys and Girls Club BY BRANT SAPPINGTON bsappington@dailycorinthian.com
BOONEVILLE -- A large crowd of concerned citizens gathered on the Northeast Mississippi Community College Campus this week as officials with the Boys and Girls Club of Booneville pleaded with the community to help them continue to make a difference in the lives of local youth. The club is facing a funding crisis and its leaders say they’re counting on the community to get behind their efforts if they truly want to see the club succeed. “We’re at the crossroads here in Booneville (Tuesday) where we need you and we need your support,” said Boys and Girls Clubs of Northeast Mississippi Executive Director David Roberts, who heads the organization that oversees clubs in Booneville as well as Corinth, Baldwyn and Iuka. The club recently exhausted an ongoing grant and is oper-
Index Stocks....13A Classified......5B Comics......4B
Roscoe Turner Airport will soon be undergoing some major improvements — thanks to a grant for over $1 million from the Federal Aviation Administration. The Alcorn County Board of Supervisors voted to accept the grant in a special meeting Thursday. “In these days of gloom and doom, this is some good news,” said Jimmy Tate Waldon, fifth district supervisor. The FAA has agreed to pay 95 percent of the costs to rehabilitate the airport’s taxiway, expanding it to 8,900 feet long and 50 feet wide. The FAA has committed a maximum of $1,197,556 to fund the airport development project. Alcorn County and the city of Corinth will each contribute 1.25 percent of the project’s total cost, a little under $15,000 each. Roscoe Turner Airport is jointly owned by the city of Corinth and Alcorn County. The board applied for the project in an application dated July 13, 2011.
Crossroads ....3B Weather......5A Obituaries......3A
“We’re at the crossroads here in Booneville where we need you and we need your support ... We need you all. We need you now more than ever.” David Roberts Boys and Girls Clubs of Northeast Mississippi Executive Director ating on only approximately $13,000 in annual funding from the United Way, a handful of individual donations and the assistance of volunteer and student workers. The City of Booneville also allows the club to meet at the Eastside Community Center in Eastside Park free of charge. Officials said they are aiming for a budget of approximately $80,000 for the next year which would allow them to hire additional full-time staff and provide a full range of services to youth in the community. While they acknowledge that is a high goal to reach, they said the believe its possible if the community will come together
to support them. “We need you all. We need you now more than ever,” said Roberts. Angelique Jumper, who has served as unit director of the Booneville Boys and Girls Club since its founding in 2003 said she has worked hard to do as much as possible with the resources available to her and she believes the club has the potential to be a powerful force in the community but it will take a conscious effort by the community to make the club a priority if it is to succeed. “You can take this Boys and Girls Club here and make it
On this day in history 150 years ago President Abraham Lincoln comes under pressure from his cabinet and the influential Blair family to remove the controversial General John C. Fremont from his command in Missouri.
Please see CLUB | 2A
Local/Region
2A • Daily Corinthian
Friday, September 9, 2011
Corinth woman remains hospitalized after traffic accident BY BOBBY J. SMITH bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com
A two-vehicle wreck on U.S. 72 resulted in life-threatening injuries for a Corinth woman. The accident occurred at the intersection of
U.S. 72 and Gaylean Road. Wendy Strain, 42, of Corinth, was the driver of a 2007 Nissan that was traveling eastbound on U.S. 72 when it crashed into a 2000
Pontiac driven by Sherry Cockrell, 56, of Corinth, who was pulling into the highway after traveling north-bound on Gaylean Street. “It was a T-bone type wreck,” explained Scot-
ty Harville, deputy chief of the Corinth Police Department. Cockrell was airlifted from the scene with lifethreatening injuries. As of Thursday, Cockrell remained hospitalized
at North Mississippi Medical Center in Tupelo. Strain had a complaint of pain but was not transported for medical attention. Her two passengers, ages
16 and 10, were not injured. Corinth Police received the call about the accident at 7:38 a.m. Tuesday. Officer L’Brien Miller was in charge of the investigation.
ANNIE: Production showtime set for 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday at Crossroads Playhouse CONTINUED FROM 1A
going on today,” the director explained. The Broadway musical “Annie,” loosely based on the popular comic strip “Little Orphan Annie,” was first performed in 1977 and ran for almost six years, setting records and inspiring many more productions and spin-offs. Two of its most popular songs — “Tomorrow” and “Hard-Knock Life” — have become as well-known as the play itself. The CT-A production features 10-year-old Anna Kate McEllhiney, of Pickwick, Tenn., in the title role of the little orphan in search of a family. “She’s one powerhouse little actor,” Stephenson said. “She’s going to be a star, and she’s just a treasure to watch.” The role of Oliver “Daddy” Warbucks is played by one of CT-A’s staple actors, Corinth’s Dan Marsh. Marsh was recently on stage in the CT-A production of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.” Another Corinth native, Melissa Miller, plays the role of the cruel and embittered Miss Hannigan, the boss of the orphanage and the bane of An-
nie’s existence. The rich and elaborately designed set is constructed in moving pieces that will be assembled mostly in front of the audience. Two “wagons” are rotated to serve as the orphanage and the tenement building. When the wagons roll off the set, the gorgeous, luxurious interior of Warbuck’s private quarters is revealed. Stephenson and the CT-A team wish to thank their sponsor, the Kimberly-Clark Corp., and the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter for partnering with them in an effort to encourage people to adopt orphaned pets — which resulted in the adoption of two of these four-legged orphans at the recent Green Market. “There are so many orphaned pets, and we want people to adopt these orphans rather than going to a pet store and buying bred animals,” Stephenson said. Beginning at 7:30 p.m. Friday, the CT-A production of “Annie” will continue Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. For more information visit Villians in ‘Annie’ are played by (from left) Deanna McEllhiney, Mike McEllhiney and Melissa Miller, who plays the role of the cruel and embittered Miss Hannigan. corinththeatrearts.com.
CLUB: ‘The Boys and Girls Club can become a vital part of this community, and it should be,’ director says CONTINUED FROM 1A
anything you want to make it, if we come together,” she said. Thomas Norman, ex-
ecutive director of the Mississippi Alliance of Boys and Girls Clubs, said clubs throughout the country have suffered during the eco-
nomic downturn and he’s seen the overall number of clubs across the state drop dramatically in the last three years from 83 sites down to 63.
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He presented statistics showing students involved in the club have much higher grades and graduation rates and are less likely to get involved in crime and other negative behaviors. He said it’s been proven time and time again that the Boys and Girls Club movement works and its focus on providing a safe place for young people to learn, grow, study and build character can make a difference in the communities it serves. “The Boys and Girls Club can become a vital part of this community, and it needs to be,” said Norman. Booneville Mayor Joe Eaton praised Jumper and the club’s efforts and encouraged everyone at the meeting to get involved. He said the city will continue to work with the club and support
its efforts any way they can. Several parents also spoke at the meeting about the impact the club has had on their children. Sam Gray said he grew up attending a club and has now seen what its done for his own 11-year-old son. “I’ve watched my son get a taste of what it means to be responsible among other adults,” he said. Gray said his son has learned character, responsibility and more through attending the club. Parent Willie Madison said he believes the club is vital for the success of the future generation and he hopes the community will step up with him and help support the effort. He said young people face many negative influences and the club can be a positive force in their
DIRECTOR: Group began many events, festivals CONTINUED FROM 1A
rector’s job, she credits her board for any accomplishments. “The Main Street board is the work force behind the program,” she said. “I am proud of what we as an organization have accomplished.” “One of the most exciting things we have done as a Main Street board over the last two years is move the Slugburger Festival to its current location,” she said. “The green space of the CARE garden is such a great place for a
festival.” Another exciting achievement, she noted, is the increase in programs with downtown retailers. “We have created events, sales and programs,” said Rinehart. The welcomed addition of now sevenmonth-old daughter Stella was the underlying reason she decided to change roles. The director has many late nights at festivals, she noted. “Main Street has so many great events and
programs throughout the year,” said Rinehart. “That I want them to have a program director who can dedicate their time without hesitation.” The outgoing Main Street director is looking forward to her new position at The Alliance. “I’m excited about the potential of this new role,” she said. “I really want our members to know how much we appreciate them being a part of The Alliance. I want us to be doing everything we can to help them succeed on today’s economy.”
CORRECTION In The Wednesday, September 7th Gardner’s & Rogers’ Grocery Ad In The Daily Corinthian, Fritos or Cheetos Snacks Should Have Read As Below.
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lives. “Things of this nature are really vital to their future and our future in this country,” he said. Jumper said her goal with the club has always been to help the young people see the bigger world and prepare them to be productive and responsible adults. She said she continues to have faith that the community will see the need and come together to help them. She asked anyone interested to contact her to learn more and to look at ways they can use their own talents and resources to help the club make a difference. “I do not with anything in me believe this is the end. This is the beginning,” said Jumper. (For more information on how to get involved with the club, call Jumper at 662-210-0841.)
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Local
3A • Daily Corinthian
Food festival calls all Hog cookers Proceeds to benefit charity BY JEFF YORK For the Daily Corinthian
SELMER, Tenn. – An attempt to begin a new fall festival is the idea behind the first-ever McNairy County Fall Hog Food Festival. This festival on Saturday, Nov. 5 will be the first event held on the historic Dixie Property in Selmer. The event is a cooperative effort between the McNairy Regional Alliance, Arts in McNairy and other partners. They hope this festival will grow and become as popular as Relay for Life and the Rockabilly Highway Festival. “We believe the weather will be much better in November for an outdoor event,” said Russell Ingle, director of chamber programs. “The tem-
“We believe the weather will be much better in November for an outdoor event. The temperatures will be much more comfortable and the only thing that could hurt us would be rain.” Russell Ingle Director of chamber programs peratures will be much more comfortable and the only thing that could hurt us would be rain.” Ingle said the plan is to build an event with a Memphis in May feel with a combination of different activities to attract people to the festival. The teams will compete for the Fall Hog Food Grand Champion and will be able to sell their food as well. There is no entry fee for the contest, but teams will be asked to donate 10 percent of their sales back to the event to be given to a charity of their
choice. A portion of the revenue from the festival will go to this year’s title charity -- Jack Cheshier’s Children’s Christmas Shopping Spree. “God promises that if we will concentrate on blessing others, He will take care of our needs,” said Cheshier. “There’s almost nothing that God will not do for the person who really wants to help other people.” Arts in McNairy has organized a culinary arts committee and the group will help play a role in this year’s festival. “McNairy County has
a rich tradition of southern cooking. Recipes, cooking tips or secrets, and culinary traditions passed down from generation to generation are as much a part of our culture as anything,” said AiM founder Dr. Shawn Pitts. “Fall Hog will celebrate that heritage and AiM is proud to support it. We think it will be a popular event -- one that locals and visitors alike will find very attractive.” Ingle said there would be a car show and musical entertainment in addition to the great food. The plan is to make it an all-day event from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. There will be food from chili, hot wings to Boston butts available at the festival. The McNairy Regional Alliance will release more information later about the festival. (If a person would like to sing at the event or enter the car show, contact Ingle at 731-645-6360.)
Fire department honors 9/11 responders BY BRANT SAPPINGTON ing to the terrorist attack bsappington@dailycorinthian.com on the World Trade CenBOONEVILLE — Three ter in New York City. simple digits adorn the The sign also includes large red, white and blue the patches of the New sign above the doors of York Fire Department Booneville Fire Station and the Booneville Fire No. 1, but those three Department and the numbers tell a story phrase “Never Forget”. written in the blood of It was the brainchild of heroes. firefighter Mike Kilgore Three hundred and who had seen a similar fourty-three. sign at a fire station in The digits represent Tupelo and wanted to do the number of firefight- something here to mark ers and paramedics who the 10th anniversary of lost their lives on Sept. the attacks and celebrate 11, 2001, while respond- the common bonds that
unite all those in emergency service. “We want to let those in New York know we remember what happened and show the union between firefighters,” said Kilgore. He said while the initial idea was his, his fellow firefighters embraced it and they all helped pay for the sign together out of their own pockets. He said they hope to add similar signs at the other stations as they’re able to gather the
funds. Kilgore said 9/11 was a difficult day for all firefighters and emergency personnel and though the attacks happened thousands of miles away, they feel a brotherhood with those who responded and understand they could just as easily lose one of their own while responding to a call locally. The sign is simply a way of honoring those that are lost and keeping the memory of their sacrifice alive.
Stabbing suspect arrested by Booneville Police BY ANGELA STOREY astorey@dailycorinthian.com
Booneville police said they have arrested a woman following a reported stabbing on Mobley Street. Rhonda D. Baswell, 32, of 33 CR 8310, Rienzi, was arrested on a charge of one count aggravated assault/ domestic violence, said Interim Police Chief Michael Ramey. Booneville PD was called to a disturbance on Mobley Street Aug. 20 where it
appears there was a victim who had received a stab wound in the arm, he said. “There was some sort of altercation between her and the victim who was apparently stabbed in the arm with a knife.” The victim was taken to the ER at Baptist Memorial-Booneville. Bond for Baswell was set at $5,000. The case is still under investigation. In a separate, unrelated
arrest, Booneville Criminal Investigation Division (CID) arrested Collin H. Box, 20, of 8511 CR 600, Booneville, on a charge of felony taking of a motor vehicle and felony malicious mischief. He is accused of taking a 2009 Chevrolet pickup from a parking lot on North Second Street. “It appears Mr. Box ran it into a building on North Second Street,” Ramey said. His bond was $5,000.
In a separate, unrelated arrest, Booneville CID arrested Adrian Shinault, 32, of 109 Jacinto Heights #1, Booneville, on a grand larceny charge. His bond was $5,000. This charge stems from a complaint report filed Aug. 17 where it appears he apparently stole two transmissions valued about $600, and later took them to a business on Jacinto Road and sold them, he said.
Emergency Awareness Day honors first responders BY JEFF YORK For the Daily Corinthian
SELMER, Tenn. – The 10th anniversary of 9/11 is the perfect time to salute the many people who serve as law officers, firemen, EMTs and other emergency workers. McNairy County will have the chance to show their thanks during Emergency Awareness Day on Saturday, Sept. 10 beginning at 10 a.m. at the Selmer City Park. The proceeds from this day will go to support the First Responders in the county. There is no admission, but donations to the First Responders will
be welcome. “This will be a great time for people to come out and meet the people who are working as emergency responders,” said Dana Swims, the E-911 director in McNairy County. There will be plenty of events during the day that will be interesting to children and adults, according to Jamie Robertson, vice-president of the First Responders. A couple of helicopters from Air Evac and Hospital Wing will be there for everyone to see for a show-and-tell demonstration.
Diabetes Tip Want to know how a particular meal affects your blood sugar? Check it just before the first bite of that meal and again one and a half to two hours after that. Its OK to go up about 50-60 points. If it goes up more then you may need to make an adjustement ment ininfood foodorormedicine. medicine.Remember Rememberyour your after meal blood sugar goal should be under 180 according Jimmy B Ji Bennett to the American Diabetes Association. Some doctors even recommend that you be under 140. Controlling your diabetes can help you to reduce the risk of damage to your eyes, kidneys, nerves and most of all your heart.
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The Selmer Fire Department will have their training house on the scene. Their firemen will demonstrate fire safety and some of the ways they will train the firemen. The Tennessee Highway Patrol will have their rollover truck there and it will demonstrate what happens during a rollover. This will show the people the importance of wearing seatbelts. Adamsville’s Rescue Squad will have an extrication demonstration during the day. There will be inflatables, the National Guard
will bring a rock climbing wall, a dunking booth and other fun events during the day. E-911 will have raffles to give away door prizes as part of the fund-raiser. McNairy County Sheriff Guy Buck will bring the department’s two drug dogs and a patrol car will be there to show the laptop computers are used by the deputies. Noted local barbecue cook Danny Joe Montgomery will be cooking barbecue to sell during the day. Montgomery has donated his time to cook the barbecue.
The Holiday House
is now open for Fall and Holiday decorating.
Come by and sign up for free “How to Decorate with Netting” classes
6 Farris Lane (off N. Polk/Old 45) Corinth, MS 662-665-4925 Tuesday-Friday 10:30 am - 5:00 pm Saturday: 10:30 am - 3:00 pm
Come and bring a friend.
Rachel Huff, Owner/Designer
Friday, September 9, 2011
Deaths Edith Summers Cardwell RAMER, Tenn. — Funeral services for Edith Summers Cardwell, 93, of Ramer, Tn., are set for 1 p.m. today at Ramer Baptist Church will burial in the Ramer Baptist Church Cemetery. Mrs. Cardwell graduated from Ramer High School. She was a homemaker and member of the Ramer Baptist Church for 60 years. She was preceded in death by her parents, Samuel Henry and Belzona Springer Summers; her husband of 70 years, Clinton Eugene Cardwell; a daughter, Gwendolyn Cardwell Majors; three sons, Royce Cardwell, Jerry Cardwell, and Rodney Cardwell; two grandchildren, Bobby Majors and Michael Cardwell; two sisters, Elmo Rogers and Minnie Farris; and two brothers, Lonnie Summers and Orlan Summers. Survivors include a daughter, Karen Cardwell of Memphis, Tn.; a son, Sam Cardwell and his wife Linda of Selmer, Tn.; a son-in-law, Gerald Majors of Adamsville, Tn.; grandchildren, Clint Majors, Kara Hill and her husband Cory, Regina Bargery, Clinton Cardwell, Mary Ann Morris and her husband Mike, Jennifer McCollum and her husband Jordan, and Delinda Cardwell; great grandchildren, Baylee Hill, Rob Hill, Ben Hill, Caylan Bargery, Hunter Bargery, Ryan Bargery, Kendal Morris, Hailee Cardwell, Zackary Cardwell, Nicholas Cardwell, John Michael Cardwell, Jillian McCollum, Jacob McCollum and Addison Spencer; and great-great grandchild, Fallon Beaird. Shackelford Funeral Directors is in charge of arrangements.
James ‘Cotton’ Gattis
TISHOMINGO — James “Cotton” Gattis, 56, of Tishomingo, died Thursday. September 8, 2011 at his residence. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Cutshall Funeral Home.
Susan Darwin
Susan Darwin, 51, of Corinth, died Thursday, September 8, 2011 at her residence. Visitation is 5-9 p.m. tonight at Cutshall Funeral Home in Glen. All other arrangements will be announced later.
Sherry Pickering
BURNSVILLE — Sherry Pickering died Thursday, September 8, 2011 at her residence. Arrangements are incomplete and will announced by Magnolia Funeral Home.
Smith Simmons
BOONEVILLE — Smith Simmons, 79, of Booneville, died Thursday, September 8, 2011 at Sanctuary Hospice in Tupelo. Arrangements are incomplete and will be announced by Patterson Memorial Chapel.
Corrieleen Prather Cuff
Funeral services for Corrieleen Prather-Cuff, 76, of Corinth, are set for 1 p.m. Saturday at Mason St. Luke M.B. Church with burial in Mason St. Luke Cemetery. Mrs. Cuff died Sunday, September 4, 2011 at her residence. Born March 29, 1935, she was a loving mother, grandmother and great grandmother. She was a member of Mason St. Luke Baptist Church and a member of the usher board and choir. She dedicated her life to caring for others. She was preceded in death by her parents, Henry and Sarah Prather; her husband, Abraham Cuff; and four brothers, Tommy Lee Prather, Lewis Prather, Douglas Prather and Arthur Sim Prather. Survivors include her children, Nathan Stubbs and his wife Felicia of Richton Park, Ill., Terry Stubbs of Corinth, Vanessa Stubbs of Corinth, Maria Curry of Jackson, Tn., Paula Weaver and her husband Jerry of Park City, Ill., and Cheryl Patterson of Corinth; two brothers, James Prather and his wife Sandra of Jackson, Tn., and Medford Prather and his wife Vera of Corinth; a sister, Lucille Walker of Corinth, a sister-in-law; Mary Prather of Corinth; 10 grandchildren; four great grandchildren; and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins and friends. Rev. Lynn Bass will officiate. Visitation is 6-8 p.m. tonight at Grayson Funeral Home. Online condolences can be made at www.grayson-porters.com
Obituary Policy The Daily Corinthian include the following information in obituaries: The name, age, city of residence of the deceased; when, where and manner of death of the deceased; time and location of funeral service; name of officiant; time and location of visitation; time and location of memorial services; biographical information can include date of birth, education, place of employment/occupation, military service and church membership; survivors can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), and grandchildren, great-grandchildren can be listed by number only; preceded in death can include spouse, children, parents, grandparents, siblings (step included), grandchildren; great-grandchildren can be listed by number only. No other information will be included in the obituary. All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituaries will only be accepted from funeral homes. All obituaries must contain a signature of the family member making the funeral arrangements.
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Opinion
Reece Terry, publisher
Mark Boehler, editor
4A • Friday, September 9, 2011
Corinth, Miss.
Guest View
Questions are the answer
Are you looking for answers? Are there things in life you are trying to figure out? Are you trying to solve problems? Would you like to take a new direction? Are there things you would like to change? Is there a challenge you would like to overcome? If you are like many others, there are probably numerous questions you would like to have answers to. However, before you can get the answers you need, Brian the right questions have to be Golden asked. Questions are most effective when they are stated Dare to Live in a positive manner because Without Limits they invite proactive solutions whereas negative ones tend to be defensive, attracting excuses and justifications. You may have questions in many of your life such as your job, career, relationships, family, friends, health, happiness, attitude, goals, money, and self-image. I mention these categories just to get you thinking. Modify this list to match your lifestyle and values. The following are some examples of both positive and negative questions. Job Negative questions: Why don’t I get paid more? When will I get a raise? How will I make it through until 5 p.m.? How much more can I take? Will I ever get a promotion? Positive questions: What can I do to increase my value? How can I become an expert? How can I become qualified for the promotion I want? Career Negative questions: How much longer until I can retire? Why did I ever pick this career in the first place? How many more hours are there until the weekend? Positive questions: If I could do anything, what would it be? What do I have to do in order to change careers? Where can I learn new skills? Relationships Negative questions: Why don’t people like me? Why is it so difficult to meet people? Why do I always get into arguments? Positive questions: What can I do to be more sociable? Are there more activities I can get involved with where I can meet people? How can I improve my communication skills? Health Negative questions: Why can’t I lose weight? Why am I always so tired? When did I get so out of shape? Why am I always eating junk food? Will I ever be able to fit into my clothes? I’m just getting older, what can I do? Positive questions: What can I do to lose weight? How can I change my schedule so I get enough sleep? How can I start getting in shape? How can I improve my diet? What are some fun things I can do to be more physically active? Money Negative question: Why don’t I ever have enough money? Will these bills ever stop? Where does all the money go? Why is everything so expensive? Why am I always struggling? Positive questions: What should I be doing to get a raise or a better paying job? Am I wasting money? How can I make better spending decisions? Goals and Attitude Negative questions: Why can’t I figure out what I want to do? Why am I unhappy? Will I ever find something I like? Why do these things always happen to me? Positive questions: What do I like to do? What situations make me happy? Are there changes I need to make? What do I need to do differently to get the results I want? Negative questions reinforce problems. Positive questions get your mind programmed to find solutions. It’s important to ask the right questions, in a positive way. Don’t limit your questions because you are worried about what the answer might be. With a little practice, you will learn to use questions to find the answers you are seeking. The result will be a more fulfilling life. (Bryan Golden is a management consultant, motivational speaker, author, and adjunct professor. He is author of the book, “Dare to Live Without Limits.” Visit www.BryanGolden.com or email Bryan at bryan@columnist. com.)
Prayer for today O God of comfort, when trials come, help us to remember that you care about us and desire to bless us and help us. Amen.
Worth Quoting Football builds self-discipline. What else would induce a spectator to sit out in the open in subfreezing weather? — Anonymous
Reece Terry publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com
Looking back at ‘The Good War’ In the early morning hours of Sept. 1, 1939, 72 years ago, the German army crossed the Polish frontier. On Sept. 3, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, having received no reply to his ultimatum demanding a German withdrawal, declared that a state of war now existed between Great Britain and Germany. The empire followed the mother country in. The second world war was on. It would last six years, carry off scores of millions and end with Germany in ruins, half of Europe under Josef Stalin’s rule and the British Empire on the way to collapse. Though it may prove to be the mortal wound that brings about the death of the West, most today accept World War II as inevitable, indeed as “the good war.” For it is said and believed that Adolf Hitler was not only the incarnation of evil but also out to conquer, first Poland and then Europe and then the world. To stop such a monster, one must risk everything. Which makes these two sentences in the final chapter of British historian Richard Overy’s new book, “1939: Countdown to War,” riveting: “Few historians now accept that Hitler had any plan or blueprint for world conquest. . . . (R)ecent research has suggested that there were almost no plans for what to do with a conquered Poland and that the vision of a new German empire . . . had to be improvised almost from scratch.” But if Hitler had no “plan
or blueprint for world conquest,” this raises perhaps the great question of the 20th century. What was Britain’s stake in a Polish-German territorial quarrel to justify a war from which the British nation and empire might never recover? How the war Pat came about is Buchanan the subject of Overy’s book. By August Columnist 1939, Hitler had come to believe that Polish intransigence over the city of Danzig meant Germany would have to resolve the issue by force. But he desperately did not want a war with Britain like the one in which he had fought from 1914-18. To prevent a German-Polish clash from bringing on a European war, however, Hitler had to sever the BritishPolish alliance formed the previous spring. To split that alliance, Hitler negotiated his own pact with Stalin, a coup that meant any British declaration of war to save Poland would be an utterly futile gesture. But when the Hitler-Stalin pact was announced, spelling Poland’s doom, Britain publicly reaffirmed her commitment to Poland. Hitler instantly called off an invasion set for Aug. 26. In the last analysis, says Overy, British “honour,” Chamberlain’s honoring of his war guarantee to the Poles, caused Britain to go to war.
When and why was this commitment given? On March 31, 1939, Chamberlain, humiliated by the collapse of his Munich agreement and Hitler’s occupation of Prague, handed, unsolicited, a war guarantee to a Poland then led by a junta of colonels. To understand the rashness, the sheer irrationality of this decision, one must understand the issue involved and Britain’s situation in 1939. First, the issue: The PolishGerman quarrel was over a city, Danzig, most British leaders believed had been unjustly taken from Germany at the end of World War I and ought to be returned. The German claim to Danzig was regarded as among the most just claims Germany had from what most agreed by then had been an unjust and vindictive Treaty of Versailles. What did the people of Danzig themselves want? Writes Overy: “In May 1933, shortly after Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany, Danzig’s National Socialist Party won 38 out of the city’s 72 assembly seats and formed the city government. . . . By 1936 there was a virtual one-party system. . . . The strongly nationalist German population agitated in 1939 to come . . . back home to Germany.” In short, the Germans wanted their city back, and the Danzigers wanted to go home to Germany. And most British had no objection. Yet Britain backed up Poland’s refusal even to negoti-
ate, and when that led to war, Britain declared war on Poland’s behalf. Why did Britain do it? After all, the war guarantee was given in response to the destruction of Czechoslovakia, but the Polish colonels had themselves participated in that destruction and seized a slice of Czechoslovakia. Second, despite the guarantee, Britain had no plans to come to Poland’s aid. Third, Britain lacked the means to stop Germany. When Hitler bombed Warsaw, British bombers dropped leaflets on Germany. If Britain had no ability to save Poland and no plans to save Poland, why encourage the Poles to fight by offering what the British knew was a worthless war guarantee? Why declare a European and world war for a country Britain could not save and a cause, Danzig, in which Britain did not believe, in an Eastern Europe where Britain had no vital interest? Said British Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax, “(We must) throw all we can into the scales on the side of law as opposed to lawlessness in Europe.” And throw it all in they did. And what became of Poland? At Tehran and Yalta, another prime minister, Winston Churchill, ceded Poland to Stalin’s empire, in whose captivity she remained for a half-century. (Pat Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, author, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcaster.)
A plan that works This will be a stretch for some, but stay with me. Suppose someone presented a plan that is guaranteed to achieve the objectives everyone (or almost everyone serious about such matters) agrees are necessary to create jobs, end our financial dependence on China, reform the tax code and repair Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid so they not only continue to support people now, but ensure the health and welfare of future generations. Would the politicians accept this gift from the political gods? Or would they prefer the dysfunction that characterizes virtually everything they do and prevents solutions, guaranteeing instead the continuation of the issue for partisan political gain? This was the central question preceding President Obama’s Thursday night address to Congress. The problem with so much of Washington today is that no Democrat will accept a good idea if it comes from a Republican and, conversely, Republicans will reject any good idea that comes from Democrats. So here’s a plan whose author shall remain anonymous until the end of
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Mark Boehler
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this column in hopes you will read on. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, this author contends, “consumes 43 percent of today’s federal spending.” Most people might agree there is ample evidence Cal the federal Thomas government is bloated, Columnist overextended and not living within its constitutional bounds, which has caused its dysfunction. Elevators have weight limits. Put too many people on one and it might not run. The federal government has no “weight limits.” Increasing numbers of us worry America may be overweight and in decline. We are mired in debt and government seems incapable of telling anyone “no” or “do for yourself” for fear of a backlash from entitlement addicts. How about a plan that truly reforms these three massive social programs, protecting those now on them, but focusing in the future on the truly needy? I know, Democrats rejected the Paul Ryan
plan, but this one goes further. How many would endorse a plan that “encourages Americans to become more fiscally responsible” and eliminates the incoherent tax code in favor of an “expenditure tax” with a single flat rate? This could lead to more personal savings of one’s own money, rather than handing increasing amounts to government to poorly redistribute. It would also promote stronger capital formation (the key to job growth in the private sector) and produce a more robust economy. This plan, “substantially reduces the size and scope of the federal government, fundamentally increases the role of the states in choosing their own practices, and brings decision-making closer to the people rather than un-elected administrators.” The plan purports to have a “higher moral purpose” because if entitlements are not reformed, the next generation and future ones will have to pay punitive tax rates that will “end liberty as we have known it.” Do I have your attention now? Humans have a tendency to live in the moment, think-
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ing little about what those who have gone before have bequeathed to us and what we are passing on to those who follow. If we don’t fix what ails us, including these soon to be bankrupt social programs (without reform, entitlement spending will consume all tax revenue in about 40 years), future generations will rightly condemn us. Details of this plan are easy to understand and difficult to oppose for other than partisan political reasons. Read it at www.savingthedream.org. Yes, it was written by the “conservative” Heritage Foundation, but good ideas come in all sorts of packages and this is one that should not be rejected out of hand by Democrats. If President Obama had borrowed from it for his Thursday night address, rather than talk about “infrastructure” and more government jobs, he might actually achieve something and improve his prospects in the 2012 election. Medicine can’t work if it remains on the shelf. This plan is the cure for our “disease.” Open wide . . . your mind. (Readers may e-mail Cal Thomas at tmseditors@tribune.com.)
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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 • Friday, September 9, 2011 • 5A
Local Community Events Bishop Center This week’s activities for the week of Sept. 5-9 include: Today — Grocery shopping at Rogers’ supermarket. Senior citizens age 60 and above are welcome and encouraged to attend. Daily activities include crafts, jigsaw puzzles, quilting, dominoes, Rook, washer games and Rolo Golf. Films on Fillmore Main Street Corinth and the Crossroads Museum are teaming together again to bring outdoor scenes to the big screen with their “Films on Fillmore.” The M&M combination is set to show “The Blind Side” tonight at the CARE Garden. The Blind Side” is a 2009 American semi-biographical drama film about former Ole Miss player Michael Oher. It’s based on the 2006 book “The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game” by Michael Lewis. The film depicts the life of Oher from his impoverished upbringing to his adoption by Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy. Actress Sandra Bullock won the Academy Award for Best Actress and Golden Globe Award for her role as Leigh Anne Tuohy. The film -- which also stars Tim McGraw and Kathy Bates along with several current and former coaches of the SEC -- also received an Academy Award nomination for Best Picture. Movie goers will be available to purchase popcorn, candy and Coca-Cola products for the 8 p.m. showing. They will need to bring their own lawn chairs. Main Street Corinth and the Corinth Museum also have a movie lined up for next month. “Casper” is slated to be shown on Oct. 14. Bulbs for sale A large variety of spring
bulbs are for sale until midSeptember. The bulbs are being sold by Ethan Norvell in order to raise money for a school trip to Europe in March. Your help in this fundraiser will be greatly appreciated. To order your bulbs call: 662-643-3452 or 662463-8306, or email at ethannorvell@gmail.com Battle reenactment On Sept. 15-18, the town of Farmington will host a reenactment of the battle of Farmington, free of charge for spectators and reenactors alike, on the actual site where the battle was fought. The reenactment will feature over 600 living history reenactors from 16 states, including 20 pieces of artillery, 60 mounted troops and several hundred infantrymen. The activities begin with the Educational Days on Sept. 15 and 16, two days of demonstrations and educational programs for students of schools around the area. On Friday night a Garden Social will be held at the Generals’ Quarters Inn in Corinth. Living history actors portraying Gens. Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant will be in attendance and available to answer questions and pose for pictures. Tickets for the Garden Social can be obtained through Fortenberry or the Generals’ Quarters Inn. Cannons will boom and the rifle shots will crack when the reenactors stage the battle of Farmington on Saturday and Sunday, beginning each day at 2 p.m. Farmington Baptist Church will hold a special morning service Sunday in honor of the Confederate soldiers buried in the churchyard. For more information on the Farmington reenactment, contact Mayor Dale Fortenberry at battleoffarmington.com or 662-
665-9647. Alcorn County Fair The 2011 Alcorn County Fair is going to be an old fashioned, family event that includes a carnival, fair food, a number of competitions including a Cheer Off, beauty pageant, talent show, a Livestock Show, Quilt Show (professional, amateur and vintage), 4-H Cow and Horse Show and Ranch Rodeo, music, arts & crafts, etc. Drop off for the Quilt Show is at 10 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 15 at the Crossroads Arena Conference Center. Categories: Large Quilts, Small Quilts, Wall Quilts and Antique/ Vintage Quilts. For more information or to register go to http://www.alcornfair.com/Quilt_Show.htm or contact Amy Mercer at 731-609-9430. There is also a call for participants for the Blue Ribbon Exhibitors, a canning competition for “Best Pickles” and more. The categories for the Blue Ribbon Exhibitors are: Fruits and Vegetables; Jams and Jellies; and Pickles and Relishes. Drop off is at 10 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 15 at the Crossroads Arena Conference Center. For more information, rules or to register go to http://www. alcornfair.com/Blue_Ribbon_Exhibitors.htm or contact Mary Catherine Coleman at 287-3310. The Fair will be held Sept. 13-17 at Crossroads Arena. There will be no ticket pre-orders. Admission is first-come, firstserved at the door each day. Fair food will be available outside and concessions inside. Sponsorships (including VIP access) are available at alcornfair.com/sponsors.htm. For more information about sponsorship contact Christ Porterfield at 662-808-5309 or porterfield.chris@gmail.com. More information is available at alcornfair.com.
Band Boosters The Purple Pride Band Boosters will meet Tuesday, Sept. 13 at 6 p.m. at the band hall. Parents, grandparents and guardians of all band students are encouraged to attend. Discussion will include upcoming competitions and future fund-raisers. Operation Christmas Child Tonight, Operation Christmas Child speaker Livia Satterfield will share how a simple shoe box gift changed her life and how Corinth residents have the opportunity to touch the lives of needy children across the world. She will be at Farmington Baptist Church, 84 CR 106, Corinth, beginning at 7 p.m. This event will inform the community about Operation Christmas Child and how to participate in the program. Karen Howell is the Corinth volunteer organizing the event. Feel free to contact her at 662-2868855. 4-H Exhibit Day 4-H Exhibit Day is an opportunity for 4-H members ages 5-19, to exhibit project work they have completed since September of last year. Youth ages 5-7 are eligible to enter 10 exhibits in the Clover Shop. Youth ages 8-19, have the opportunity to enter 20 exhibits in the following categories: clothing, foods, food preservation, garden, home improvement, holiday shop, crafts, creative arts, wildlife & conservation, woodwork, collections, and photography. Exhibits are not limited to 4-H club projects. Items youth have made at vacation bible school or with other club activities are also eligible. Youth who join 4-H by Monday, Sept. 12 are eligible to enter items in 4-H Exhibit Day. All exhibits will
be on display during the annual 4-H Promotion Day, Sept. 17, at the Alcorn County Extension facility. For more information about 4-H, call 286-7756, or e-mail alcorn@ext.msstate.edu. Family reunions ■ The Hodum Reunion is being held Saturday, Sept. 10 at Ann (Mercer) and Otis Hinton’s home, CR 611, fourth house on left after leaving U.S.. Hwy. 72 from 11 a.m. until. Bring a covered dish and enjoy the meal and fellowship. For more information, call 662-223-5500 or 662223-5247. ■ The Suggs Reunion will be Saturday, Sept. 10 at the Eastview Civic Center. Everyone will meet at 3 p.m. and eat at 5 p.m. Bring a covered dish. ■ The Nagle Reunion, descendants of Patrick and Emelia Nagle, will meet in Mineral Springs Parks in Iuka, Sunday, Sept. 11. Lunch will begin around 1 p.m. For additional information, call Rilla Wiley at 662-423-5252. Mended Hearts
Mended Hearts will meet at 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 12 at the Magnolia Community Service Complex in the Cardiac Rehab. Conference Room, 1001 South Harper Road, Corinth. The program will be given by Dick and Judy Wood reporting on the Mended Hearts Convention held in New Or-
All Stadium Seating Birthday Parties Online Tickets Friday, September 9, 2011
TRANSFORMERS: OF 4:35 THE MOON (non(no 3-D)pass) (PG13) CONTAGION DARK (PG13) 7:30 9:55 12:00, 12:50,(R) 3:20,4:25 4:10, 6:50, 7:30, 10:05 CREATURE 7:20 9:30 (no pass) THE GREEN(PG13) LANTERN4:05 (non7:05 3D) 10:00 (PG13)(no - 10:00 WARRIOR pass) BAD TEACHER (R) - 1:20, 4:20, 7:35, 9:40 APOLLO 18 (PG13) 4:20 7:25 9:30 (no MR. POPPER’S PENGUINS (PG) - 12:20, 2:40, pass) 4:55 SHARKHORRIBLE NIGHT (NON 3-D)(R)(PG13) 9:459:45 (no pass) BOSSES - 1:25,4:30 4:30,7:35 7:25, DEBT(PG13) (R) 4:35 7:15 2:30, 9:45 (no LARRYTHE CROWNE - 12:10, 4:50,pass) 7:20, 9:40 DON’T BE AFRAID THE DARK (R) 4:35 7:15 9:50 SUPER 8OF(PG13) - 7:20, 9:50 SPY KIDS:ZOOKEEPER ALL THE TIME (PG) IN THE- 1:10, WORLD4:15, (non 3-D) 4:15 7:00 9:10 7:00,(PG)9:20 CARS 2THE (non HELP 3-D) (G) - (PG13) 12:15, 1:00,4:10 3:00,7:30 4:00,(no 6:45,pass) 7:20, 9:15 RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES4:05,(PG13) MONTE CARLO (PG) - 1:05, 7:05,4:20 9:307:05 9:25
leans in June. Information will also be shared regarding the upcoming Mended Hearts Southern Region Cluster Meeting in Johnson City, Tenn. Mended Hearts is a support group open to all heart patients, their families and others impacted by heart disease. Visitors are welcome.
Class reunion ACHS Class of 1964 Reunion is being held Saturday, Sept. 10 at Chapman’s Restaurant at 6 p.m. For more information, call Tommy Barnes, 73139-3684. ‘Annie’ Corinth Theatre-Arts’ production of musical favorite, “Annie,” is being presented tonight and Saturday, Sept. 9-10 at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, Sept. 11 at 2 p.m. at Crossroads Playhouse on Fulton Drive in Corinth. Tickets are $12 for adults and $6 for students. Reservations strongly recommended. Call 287-2995 for more information.
State
8A â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
Court upholds election on constitutional initiatives Associated Press
JACKSON â&#x20AC;&#x201D; An amendment that seeks to define life as beginning at conception and one about eminent domain can appear on the Nov. 8 general election ballot, the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled on Thursday. A majority of the nine justices reinforced a 2000 ruling that said they cannot rule on the constitutionality of measures until voters or the Legislature has had a chance to pass them. They dismissed challenges filed by opponents. An initiative to require people show proper ID to vote also will be on the ballot. The state Election Commission meets Friday to finalize the sample ballot that will be sent to counties. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Over 100,000 Mississippi citizens expressed their desire to have a voice on the Personhood and Eminent Domain constitutional initiatives. The Supreme Court has decided to allow the initiatives to stay on the ballot.
Voters will now determine whether these initiatives will be part of our constitution,â&#x20AC;? Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann said in a statement. A Hinds County judge had earlier rejected opponentsâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; arguments against the amendments dealing with life beginning at conception or â&#x20AC;&#x153;personhoodâ&#x20AC;? and eminent domain. The judge said both had gotten the proper number of signatures to be placed on the ballot. The judge did not address the constitutional issues raised in either lawsuit. While abortion has been the central issue in debate about the initiative, opposing sides in the lawsuit have clashed over whether the â&#x20AC;&#x153;personhoodâ&#x20AC;? amendment oversteps the boundaries for proposed state constitutional amendments. Groups that support abortion rights â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Planned Parenthood Federation of America and the state and national chapters of the
American Civil Liberties Union â&#x20AC;&#x201D; helped file the original lawsuit. â&#x20AC;&#x153;A measure will be on the ballot that will allow the government to dictate what is a private matter thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s best decided by a woman, her family and within the context of her faith. Mississippi voters should reject this intrusive and dangerous measure,â&#x20AC;? said Nsombi Lambright, executive director of the ACLU of Mississippi. Others â&#x20AC;&#x201D; such as Pro-Life Mississippi, the American Family Association and the Mississippi Baptist Convention â&#x20AC;&#x201D; support it. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Today we rejoice and celebrate this hard-won victory, but tomorrow we roll up our sleeves and return to work. Our opponents are discouraged, but not yet ultimately defeated. They will be back, spreading fear, confusion, and dire â&#x20AC;&#x2DC;sky-isfallingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; warnings about this simple Amendment, and we must be ready to rebut their baseless charges and
set the record straight,â&#x20AC;? said Stephen Crampton, the attorney for the proponents. Eminent domain is the process that government uses to take private land for projects ranging from road construction to industrial development. The proposed constitutional amendment would prohibit state and local government from taking private land to give to another person or business. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This court is without power to determine the constitutionality of a proposed statute, amendment, or initiative prior to its approval by the Legislature or electorate,â&#x20AC;? wrote Justice Randy Pierce in a 7-2 decision. Pierce also said that the Supreme Court couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t review a constitutional question that was not addressed by the Hinds County court. Opponents were asking the court to rule on whether a proposal was constitutional before it had been adopted into the constitution, he said.
Teen births cost $154.9M in 2009 Associated Press
JACKSON â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Groups pushing for comprehensive sex education classes in Mississippi schools say thereâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a good economic reason for what theyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re doing. A new analysis shows births to teen or preteen mothers cost the state $154.9 million in 2009. That includes increased costs of foster care, social services and incarceration for young people born years ago to teen moms. It also takes into account lost revenue from people who have lower levels of education and lower-paying jobs because they became parents when they were younger than 20. The study was done by a nonprofit, nonpartisan group called the Mississippi Economic Policy Center and was sponsored by the Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Fund of Mississippi. It was also supported by Mississippi First, an advocacy group for health and education issues. Carol Penick, executive director of the Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s
Fund of Mississippi, said an evidence-based sex education curriculum that includes information about contraception, disease prevention and responsibility can help reduce the rates of teen and preteen pregnancies. â&#x20AC;&#x153;This is not an unsolvable problem,â&#x20AC;? Penick said. Jamie Holcomb, director of programs for the Womenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Fund, said parents also need information about how to talk to their children about sex. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Parents are part of the solution,â&#x20AC;? she said. Mississippi has long had one of the highest teenage birth rates in the country. State Health Department statistics show that in 2009, there were 7,078 live births to mothers aged 10 to 19. That meant that for every 1,000 girls or women in that age group, 64.1 gave birth to a baby who lived. The rate for the U.S. was 39 live births among every 1,000 girls or women younger than 20. The statistics do not include pregnancies that ended in stillbirths, mis-
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carriages or abortions. A new state law enacted this year requires school districts to teach some form of sex education. Parents must give permission for their children to take the classes. Districts must choose between teaching abstinenceonly or â&#x20AC;&#x153;abstinence-plus,â&#x20AC;? which includes information about contraceptives and sexually transmitted diseases. Each district must adopt a policy by June 30, 2012. The state Department of Education will spend the next several months reviewing proposed courses before adopting a curriculum list for districts to use. Under a previous law, Mississippi school districts were not required to teach either comprehensive sex education or abstinence. Districts were allowed to teach abstinence, but if they wanted to teach more than that, they needed local school board approval. The new law requires classes to be separated by gender, and schools wonâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t
be allowed to demonstrate the use of condoms. Rachel Canter, executive director of Mississippi First, said the teen pregnancy rate shows that an abstinence-only approach is not working. She said young people often will take pledges to abstain from sex until marriage, â&#x20AC;&#x153;but then they donâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t behave that way after the programs.â&#x20AC;? An effective, comprehensive sex education program starts with a base of abstinence but includes medically accurate information about contraceptives and health, Canter said. Legislators whoâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve objected to schools offering comprehensive sex education say itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s a subject that parents, not government, should teach. State Rep. Alyce Clarke, D-Jackson, pushed for years to enact a law that would allow comprehensive sex education to be taught in schools. She said Mississippi has an epidemic of â&#x20AC;&#x153;almost babies having babies.â&#x20AC;?
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Friday, September 9, 2011
Briefs Associated Press
Man killed outside Hattiesburg home HATTIESBURG â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Hattiesburg police have arrested an 18-year-old man on a charge of murder in the shooting death of Rogerick Balam. Forrest County Coroner Butch Benedict says Balam died at Forrest General Hospital shortly after the shooting of what appeared to be a gunshot wound to the chest. An autopsy was being conducted. Police detectives Capt. Michael Shappley says James Harold Smith was charged with murder. Smith was being held without bond in the county jail. Shappley says Balam was found in the backyard of a home. Â
Desoto to Memphis bus temporarily nixed
HERNANDO â&#x20AC;&#x201D; DeSoto County has shelved for the moment a proposal to offer a rapid transit system to Memphis, Tenn., along the proposed Interstate 69. Board of Supervisors president Allen Latimer tells The Commercial Appeal that the action was taken after the countyâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s cash-strapped cities bowed out. Latimer says the county canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t under take the project alone. Planners had put capital costs at about $3.5 million with an 80/20 percent federal-local funding formula. Annual operating costs would have been split between Memphis and DeSoto County and its participating cities. Ridership forecasts had been projected nearly 1,200 daily boardings and more than 343,000 annual boardings by 2018. Latimer says local cities had expressed interest but had no money to dedicate to the project. Â
Man gets 5 years for targeting 2 banks
JACKSON â&#x20AC;&#x201D; A federal judge has sentenced Samuel Terrail Young to more than five years for the robbery of a Jackson bank and the attempted stickup of another. U.S. District Judge Dan Jordan sentenced Young in federal court in Jackson on Thursday. Young also must spend five years on supervised release after getting out of prison. Another suspect, Pierre J. Daughtry, pleaded guilty in the case on Wednesday. His sentencing is set for Nov. 28. Authorities say they tried to rob the State Bank and Trust the morning of Oct. 12, but didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t get any money. They robbed a Jackson Trustmark branch later the same day. Court records said
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both men were convicted felons at the time of the robberies. They allegedly used guns during the crimes. Â
Toddlerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s death under investigation
HATTIESBURG,â&#x20AC;&#x201D; A Hattiesburg man has been charged with felony child abuse after the death of a 17-month-old child. Forrest County deputy coroner Jonathan Nobles says Kamarie Echols died Wednesday in Forrest General Hospitalâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s emergency room. Police spokeswoman LaKeisha Bryant says 28-year-old Johnny Elliot Craft, identified as the boyfriend of the childâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mother, has been charged with felony child abuse. He was being held without bond in the Forrest County Jail pending an initial court appearance. Bryant says officers are waiting for the preliminary autopsy results to decide whether to upgrade Craftâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s charges. Bryant says the child showed signs of abuse. Â
Leflore supervisors results disputed
GREENWOOD, â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Leflore County Circuit Judge Ashley Hines will hold a hearing Sept. 15 to decide who won a dispute Democratic primary for a supervisorâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s post. The Greenwood Commonwealth reports that the dispute has also split the local Democratic Party executive committee. One committee faction certified oneterm incumbent Preston Ratliff and another certified challenger Anjuan Brown. However, those actions were taken without a quorum of the 30-member committee. The winner, whoever it may be, will face independent Charles McCain Jr. in the Nov. 8 general election. Unofficial results showed Ratliff losing to Brown. Ratliff was leading before the count of absentee ballots gave the lead to Brown by 89 votes. Ratliff had challenged the result, alleging that fraud and other problems involving absentee ballots cost him the nomination.
Former judge released from prison JACKSON â&#x20AC;&#x201D; A former judge has been released early from prison for good behavior after serving almost four years related to a judicial corruption case that toppled one of Mississippiâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s most prominent lawyers. Former Harrison County Chancery Judge Wes Teel had been in prison since December 2007. He was convicted in a judicial corruption case along with Gulf Coast attorney Paul Minor and former Harrison County Circuit Court Judge John Whitfield. Prosecutors said Minor went to banks and guaranteed loans for the judges, then used cash and third parties to pay off the debts himself. The judges allegedly ruled in his favor in civil cases. Minor has said the loans were meant to help friends in times of need and that he expected nothing in return. Federal Bureau of Prisons spokesman Ed Ross says the 60-yearold Teel was released Tuesday. His attorney, George Lucas, was out of the office and didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t immediately respond to a message.
Nation
9A • Daily Corinthian
Friday, September 9, 2011
Nearly 100K told to flee in Northeast Associated Press
WILKES-BARRE, Pa. — Nearly 100,000 people from New York to Maryland were ordered to flee the rising Susquehanna River on Thursday as the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee dumped more rain across the Northeast, closing major highways and socking areas still recovering from Hurricane Irene. At Binghamton, N.Y., the wide river broke a flood record and flowed over retaining walls downtown as more than 8 inches of rain fell in some areas. Road closures effectively sealed the city off to outside traffic as emergency responders scrambled to evacuate holdouts who didn’t heed warnings to leave neighborhoods. “It’s going to get worse,” said Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who urged residents to heed evacuate orders rather than wait until the flood danger is obvious. “By the time it looks that bad, you won’t be able to leave, so leave and leave now,” he said. Most of the people ordered to evacuate their homes were about 80 miles downstream in Wilkes-Barre, where the river was projected to crest later Thursday at 41 feet — the same height as the levee system, officials said. Residents were ordered to leave by 4 p.m. In Port Deposit, Md., rising water levels at the Conowingo Dam forced officials to open the floodgates and order the evacuation of most of the Susquehanna River town’s 1,000 residents. There was also flooding upstream from Binghamton in Oneonta, N.Y., where dozens of evacuees sought help at a church center. “By seven o’clock (Thursday morning), we got a knock on our door saying we had to leave,” said Kevin Olm-
stead, a cab driver who had to leave with his fiancee, 10-year-old daughter and other relatives so quickly that he only had clothes, cell phone and an iPad. “We actually had to tread through the water to get out.” Roads and highways closed around the region, including sections of New York’s Interstate 88, which follows the Susquehanna’s path. In Philadelphia, flooding and a rock slide closed the eastbound lanes of the Schuylkill Expressway, a major artery into the city, and it could take hours for the road to reopen. New York’s Thruway Authority expected to close a 105-mile stretch of its busiest east-west highway, Interstate 90, because the nearby Mohawk River had overflowed its banks in some areas. Wet weather followed by Hurricane Irene and its remnants have saturated the soil across the Northeast, leaving water no place to go but into already swollen creeks and rivers. After three days of living in shelters because of Irene, Edith Rodriguez, her mother and her sister spent Wednesday night at a high school outside Schenectady when the latest storm chased them from their home near the Mohawk River. “We just finished cleaning up after the flood from Irene,” the 19-yearold said. “Now we have to start all over again.” Many areas flooding this week had been spared a direct hit by Irene, but authorities took no chances in the same places inundated by historic flooding after Hurricane Agnes in 1972. The National Weather Service predicted 4 to 10 inches of rain across the mid-Atlantic and Northeast through Thursday. Flood watches and warnings were in effect from
Maryland to New England. The service said the river level in Binghamton is above 25 feet, higher than the record set in 2006 and more than 11 feet above flood stage. It’s expected to rise another foot or so. Evacuation orders were issued Wednesday to some 20,000 people in Binghamton and neighboring communities along the Susquehanna. More than 70,000 residents in Wilkes-Barre and Kingston were told to leave. So were people in about 170 homes about 90 miles downstream in Harrisburg, where crews put sandbags around the governor’s mansion. Wilkes-Barre Mayor Tom Leighton said residents should prepare for an evacuation of 72 hours and advised them to take clothing, food and prescription medicine. He also asked city businesses to close their doors by noon. The evacuations come as the remnants of Lee, which has caused flooding and power outages across the South since hitting the Gulf Coast last week, slogged northward. At least nine deaths have been blamed on Lee and its aftermath. In New Jersey, where many residents were still cleaning up after Irene, the remnants of Lee were expected to drop anywhere from 2 to 5 inches of rain. There was some flooding along rivers including the Passaic, which breached its banks during Irene and caused serious damage. Heavier flooding is expected Thursday. Flash flooding shut down roads and closed schools in many parts of Pennsylvania. A bridge spanning the Delaware River between New Hope, Pa., and Lambertville, N.J., closed Thursday morning as flood waters carried debris downriver.
Tuition hikes fail to stop cutbacks in higher ed Associated Press
FORT COLLINS, Colo. — America’s public colleges and universities have burned through nearly $10 billion in government stimulus money and are still facing more tuition hikes, fewer course offerings and larger class sizes. Many college students are already bearing the brunt of the cuts in their wallets as they prepare for their future careers. “This next academic year is going to be the hardest one on record” for cashstrapped colleges, said Dan Hurley, director of state relations for the American Association of State Colleges and Universities. Hurley said the higher education system has entered a phase in which cuts will begin to affect academics. Public university systems used the stimulus to prevent deeper layoffs, maintain degree programs and keep campuses open and are now bracing for the end of the federal program. The effects will be greater in some states than others. Since 2009, Colorado has used more than $600 million in stimulus money for higher education, accounting for more than a quarter of the higher education budget over that period. Stimulus money covered 35 percent of South Carolina’s higher education budget in 2009 but less than 2 percent last year, according to a report by the New America Foundation. California used $1.4 billion in stimulus money to pay nearly 30 percent of its higher education tab two years ago, but stimulus accounted for less than 1 percent in 2010. Like most states, Nevada’s stimulus infusion only softened a steep spending slide. The higher education budget fell about $210 million, almost 30 percent, over the last three years, even with the stimulus. “We have frozen pay in the system. We have closed programs. We have cut back everything we could. You name it, we’ve cut it,” said Dan Klaich, chancellor for Nevada’s higher education system. Without the stimulus boost, at least 35 states have been forced to make
further cuts in higher education spending for the 2011-12 school year, with double-digit decreases in 13 states. That means tuition hikes, which for years had exceeded the rate of inflation, are even greater. At Colorado State University in Fort Collins, students are paying about 20 percent more this year, up to about $8,000 for instate and $24,000 for outof-state tuition. For many, that means extra roommates, second jobs or giving up dreams of studying abroad. The rising costs were the reason junior Ryan Thistlethwaite to join the Air Force ROTC program. The human development and family services major pays out-of-state tuition with student loans and said he made the decision after figuring he would owe about $125,000 after four years at Colorado State. He will not receive an ROTC scholarship, but he will be guaranteed a job after finishing school to help pay off his loans. “The money, I’d say that’s 60 percent of it, why I’m joining ROTC,” he said. The cost shift from states to students has been going on for years, according to State Higher Education Executive Officers, a group that tracks college funding. Adjusted for inflation, public colleges and univer-
sities in 1985 received about $7,479 per student from their states, with about $2,274 per student coming from tuition. The group says the amount coming from state budgets dropped to an average of $6,451 in 2010, while the tuition portion rose to $4,321. Mike McNeil, who was helping his freshman daughter move into her dorm at Colorado State, shook his head at the tuition hike and the bind it places on middle-class families. McNeil attended the university when the government picked up more of the tab. He now relies on money inherited from his parents and loans to help his two children pay for college. “Back then, I worked
at Arby’s, had a summer job to pay for school,” said McNeil, a manager from the Denver suburbs. “A kid working today, no way they could work enough to raise the kind of money you’d need.” However painful the rising tuition has been on students and families, it has not done enough to balance the effects of state budget cuts at many colleges and universities. The seven-campus University of Maine system, for example, has cut about 20 programs, including Latin, and reduced employment by 7 percent since the recession began. Those cuts came even as Maine used some $29 million in stimulus money on higher education between 2009 and 2011.
Briefs Associated Press
Obama to appeal to Republicans for help WASHINGTON — Struggling to fix the sickly economy, President Barack Obama was appealing for support from a divided Congress Thursday night for a battery of ideas to create jobs quickly and keep more cash in the pockets of dispirited Americans. His message to Republican lawmakers: This is your mess to clean up, too. Obama’s furious push on employment, his latest stab at the defining issue of his presidency, aimed to shore up his chances of keeping his own job next year. He must stem eroding confidence in his leadership as the public mood darkens and Republican presidential challengers assail his record. In a nationally televised address to Congress, Obama was expected to announce a program of tax cuts, construction spending, unemployment aid and money for states. The core elements include extending the current reduction in the amount of Social Security payroll tax that workers pay, and expanding jobless benefits for those who can’t find work month after month. The cost was expected to be at least $300 billion, and perhaps more. Obama was to promise a way to pay for it without sinking the nation deeper in debt. In the best case, such a package could provide help that people would feel in their daily lives. It would boost consumer and investor confidence and spur hiring.
GOP race drops down to two The GOP presidential contest has quickly narrowed to a two-man race. As Rick Perry and Mitt Romney jockey over their ability to defeat President Barack Obama, there are deepening fault lines between the two on Social Security, immigration, jobs and more that could shape the contest. Their stylistic differences are as stark as their disagreements on substance. Romney, the
former Massachusetts governor, also is a former venture capitalist who is at his best when he’s talking about how to help businesses help the economy grow. Perry, the Texas governor, is a fiery, red-meat conservative who has already shown he loves to go on the attack — and isn’t afraid to go after his chief GOP rival. Those contrasts have driven Romney’s campaign to fundamentally change a strategy that was previously aimed squarely at Obama. Until Perry jumped into the race and almost immediately displaced Romney as the front-runner, the former Massachusetts governor focused his public appearances and messaging on the president. Now, instead of running a general election campaign in primary season, Romney will spend the early months trying to convince Republicans that Perry can’t beat Obama in November. It will start with Social Security, an issue Romney’s campaign has decided is Perry’s biggest liability. Aides privately say they plan to make it a singular focus in the coming weeks.
Virginia health care reform law survives RICHMOND, Va. — The federal health care overhaul survived two lawsuits dismissed Thursday on technicalities, leaving President Barack Obama’s signature initiative headed toward a final resolution in the U.S. Supreme Court as early as next year. It’s possible the high court could rule on the issue by June 2012, in the midst of Obama’s reelection bid. A three-judge panel of the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ignored the core issue of whether the law can require that individuals buy health insurance or pay a penalty starting in 2014. In the lawsuit filed by Liberty University, the court ruled that the penalty amounted to a tax — and that a tax can’t be challenged before it’s collected. The panel said the state of Virginia lacked legal standing to file its lawsuit.
Healthy Marriage Tip... 6th Year Anniversary September 1st-October 31st
10 things you can do to have a healthy marriage:
1. SpendEXPERIENCE time with each other LIFE’S A PLUS
2.Learn negotiate ict. The rhythmtoand flow in confl a relationship is often a 3.Show respect for each other at all times. result of just living life. Life teaches us to manage 4.Learn About yourself first. finances, work with difficult people, navigate change 5.Explore intimacy. within the social and cultural environment, adapt to 6.Explore common interests. a7.Create healthy lifestyle, and to just get through ordinary a spiritual connection. daily routines. In your marriage, draw upon one 8.Improve your communication skills. 9.Forgivelife’s each other. the successes and another’s experiences, 10.Lookrelieving for thestress best in your each relationship other failures, that For more crgowen@bellsouth.net often comes frominfo thecontact inexperience of life in general. For more information about healthy relationships and marriages contact the Booneville School District Healthy Marriage Project, Carolyn Gowen,
Project Director, at crgowen@bellsouth.net. Although we promote healthy For more information about healthy marriages contact relationships and/or marriage, we dorelationships not advocateand staying in an abusive relationship the Boonevilleand/or Schoolmarriage. District Healthy Marriage Project, Carolyn Gowen,
Sports
10A • Daily Corinthian
Local Scores
Tested Aggies seeking 4-0 start
Football Northeast 32, Southwest 9 Walnut 48, Middleton (Tn.) 14
Local Schedule TODAY Football Corinth @ Bolivar, Tn., 7 McNairy @ Adamsville, 7 Mooreville @ Central, 7:30 (WXRZ) Houlka @ Biggersville, 7:30 Kossuth @ Tish County, 7:30 Booneville @ Saltillo, 7:30
SATURDAY Softball Tupelo Tournament Kossuth Booneville Tournament Booneville Cross-Country CHS @ Pontotoc Inv. 9 a.m. AC @ Pontotoc Inv., 9 a.m.
MONDAY Softball Biggersville @ Corinth, 5 Kossuth @ New Albany, 5 Booneville @ Nettleton
TUESDAY Softball Biggersville @ Pine Grove, 5 Belmont @ Central, 6 Booneville @ Kossuth, 6:30
THURSDAY Football NE @ Miss Delta, 6:30
Softball Holly Springs @ Kossuth, 4:30 Thrasher @ Biggersville, 5 Falkner @ Central, 6
FRIDAY, SEPT. 16 Football South Side @ McNairy, 7 New Albany @ Corinth, 7:30 (WXRZ) Hatley @ Central, 7:30 Biggersville @ TCPS, 7:30 Tish County @ Booneville, 7:30 Open: Kossuth
SATURDAYT, SEPT. 17 Softball New Albany Tournament Kossuth Cross-Country CHS @ Saltillo Inv., 9 a.m. AC @ Saltillo Inv., 9 a.m.
BY H. LEE SMITH II lsmith@dailycorinthian.com
KOSSUTH — Fresh off a thrilling Homecoming victory, the Kossuth Aggies will look to maintain their unbeaten streak with a trek to cross-county rival Tishomingo County. Kossuth scored twice in the game’s final minute to knock of Hamilton 34-20 last week. The Lions, who once trailed 20-7, had scored twice in the fourth quarter on long passes to knot the game at 20. The Aggies sealed the game with their fourth and fifth take-aways of the night. Antonio Moore forced a fumble at the Hamilton 3, setting the stage for Brandon Pittman’s third scoring run of the night. On Hamilton’s ensuing series, Zach Cooper picked off a pass at returned it 59 yards to the house. “We had to go through some adversity and the kids stepped up, especially the seniors,” said Kossuth Head Coach
BY SEAN SMITH GLEN — Kossuth’s Jordan Dickson nailed the coffin shut against Alcorn Central Thursday afternoon, with a two-run in the top of the fifth to give the Lady Aggies a 15-0 win. Already up 4-0 going into the top of the fourth, Kossuth scored eight runs to bust the game wide open. Kossuth played solid defense all day only allowing four hits and committing two errors. Alcorn Central had the bases loaded in the first inning with one out, but failed to score. The Lady Bears never threatened again. “They out hit us,” said Alcorn Central Coach Jeremy Smith. “When we didn’t score in the first inning that hurt us. We made some errors that helped them too.” Kossuth improved to 8-4 overall and 2-0 in Division 1-3A. “I’m proud of them,” said Kossuth Head Coach Steve Lyles. “We practiced hard all week and finally hit the ball hard after the third inning.” Along with Dickson, Kossuth’s Shelby Stewert, Paden Tomlin, Madison Hales and McKenzie Holland all had extrabase hits on the day. Kristen Devers added three singles and McKinley Ragan had two. Felecia Laird took the loss, while Eryn Coleman got the win. Alcorn Central dropped to 6-7 and 2-1. Kossuth will travel to Tupelo on Saturday and face Choctow Central at 12:40 p.m. and Mooreville at 2:00 p.m. “Nine of our players will be taking the ACT test Saturday so we’ll need others to step up for us,” said Lyles. Alcorn Central will host Belmont on Tuesday, Sept. 13 in division play. “We gotta keep working and get prepared to play Belmont,” added Smith.
Softball
Softball Central @ Holly Springs, 5 Biggersville @ Belmont, 5:30 Booneville @ New Albany
THURSDAY, SEPT. 22 Football Holmes @ NE, 7
Softball Falkner @ Biggersville, 5 Kossuth @ Belmont, 5:30 Central @ Booneville, 6
FRIDAY, SEPT. 23 Football Hardin Co. @ McNairy, 7 Central @ Corinth, 7:30 (WXRZ) Thrasher @ Biggersville, 7:30 Mooreville @ Kossuth, 7:30 Tish County @ Wilson, Ala., 7:30
SATURDAY, SEPT. 24 Softball Central @ Falkner, 4
Cross Country CHS @ Tupelo Inv., 9 a.m.
MONDAY, SEPT. 26 Softball Biggersville @ Central, 6
Brian Kelly. “We had to play all four quarters and it was good to see what the kids are made of.” Pittman finished with 116 yards on 17 totes, giving Kossuth a 100-yard rusher for the third straight game. Cooper, who came in with consecutive threedigit efforts, was held to 22 yards on 11 carries. Kossuth’s other score came on a 28yard hookup between Jay Vanderford and Heath Wood. Vanderford was 5-of16 passing for 71 yards and didn’t throw a pick for the first time this season. The Aggies are a plus-7 in the turnover department with 11 take-aways to just four give-aways. Ten of Kossuth’s take-aways are via fumble recoveries, including four by Dylan Rider. Joseph Moreland led the defensive effort with 10 tackles, including eight
solo stops. Also included in the senior’s stellar line were four tackles for loss, two sacks, a forced fumble and fumble recovery. Moore chipped in six tackles, four for loss and 1.5 sacks. Chase Settlemires added four tackles, two for loss, and half a sack. Kossuth enters Week 4, averaging 35.7 points and 352 yards per game. The Aggies will go against a Brave squad that has dropped two of its three contests, sandwiching losses to Byhalia and rival Belmont around a win over Alcorn Central. It will be another homecoming of sorts for Kelly, who began his career as an assistant at Tishomingo County. “They have a very good quarterback who runs around and makes a lot of plays,” said Kelly. “They’re scrappy on defense and get after it.” Kossuth will have an open date next Friday, before hosting Mooreville on Sept. 23.
ssmith@dailycorinthian.com
Kossuth 15, Central 0
TUESDAY, SEPT. 20
Kossuth Notebook
Lady Aggies shut out Lady Bears
MONDAY, SEPT. 19
Kossuth @ Central, 6
Friday, September 9, 2011
Kossuth Central
@ Glen 103 83 -000 00 --
15 19 2 0 43
WP: Eryn Coleman. LP: Felecia Laird. Multiple Hits: (K) Kristen Devers
Staff Photo by Sean Smith
Kossuth’s Eryn Coleman delivers a pitch to the plate during the Lady Aggies’ game against Alcorn Central on Thursday. 3, Shelby Stewart 3, Jordan Dickson 3, Paden Tomlin 2, Madison Hales 2, McKinley Ragan 2. 2B: Stewart, Dickson, Tomlin, Hales, McKenzie Holland. 3B: Tomlin. HR: Dickson. Records: Kossuth: 8-4, 2-0 Division 1-3A; Central: 6-7, 2-1
Corinth 10, Itawamba 0 @ SportsPlex Itawamba 000 00 -Corinth 310 6X --
0 30 10 12 0
WP: Elizabeth Williams (10-3). LP: Katelyn Sintes. Multiple Hits: Portia Patterson 3, Stennett Smith 3, Bailee Kramer 3, Rebekah Williams 2. 2B: Patterson 2, Smith 2, R. Williams. Record: Corinth: 12-3, 1-0 Division 1-4A What’s Next: Corinth will play Saturday against Tupelo at 10 a.m. and Choctow Central at 11:20 a.m. in the Tupelo Tournament.
Frazier leads Northeast to 32-9 victory College Bulldogs.
BY SEAN SMITH
NE -- Earhart 41 field goal, 5:10
ssmith@dailycorinthian.com
BOONEVILLE — Corinth’s own Parks Frazier quarterbacked the Northeast Tigers to a 2-0 start Thursday night by completing 13-of-21 passes for 181 yards and three touchdowns in a 32-9 win over the Southwest Bears. The Tigers are 2-0 for the first time since 2005. Northeast will travel to face the Mississippi Delta Trojans next Thursday at Moorehead. Northeast will be home the following week to face Holmes Junior
Northeast Southwest
13 3 9 7 6 0 0 3
---
32 9
1st Quarter NE -- Markie Dukes 6 pass from Frazier (kick failed), 11:49 SW -- Brennan Dunklin 101 interception return (kick failed), 4:42 NE -- Tres Houston 10 pass from Frazier (Taylor Earhart kick), 0:00
2nd Quarter
3rd Quarter NE -- Earhart 31 field goal, 11:32 NE -- Michael Poole 3 pass from Frazier (pass failed), 3:27
4th Quarter SW -- Jake Saltalamacchia 30 field goal, 8;03 NE -- Jamarcus Goodloe 4 run (Earhart kick), 4:27
Braves complete sweep of Mets in doubleheader Associated Press
NEW YORK — Julio Teheran gave flashes of his vast potential in earning his first big league win and the Atlanta Braves, using a lineup with Chipper Jones starting as the No. 2 hitter for the first time in 15 years, beat the New York Mets 5-1 Thursday night to complete a sweep of a doubleheader made neces-
sary by the threat of Hurricane Irene. Jones had a sacrifice fly and RBI double in the nightcap and a solo homer and a double in the opener, a 6-5 victory for Atlanta. The Braves were making a quick stop in New York to play two games postponed Aug. 27-28 after being handed their first three-game sweep of the sea-
son, by the Phillies. The Braves next head to St. Louis for a crucial series with the team they lead in the wildcard race by 71⁄2 games. Only several hundred fans were on hand to see the start of the twinbill at 4:10 p.m. A few thousand more sat through a misty rain in the nightcap, though the announced attendance was 25,953.
Teheran (1-1), the International League’s Most Valuable Pitcher and Rookie of the Year, gave up two hits to start the first and a sacrifice fly then little more in 51⁄3 innings. He left after walking two with one out in the sixth but Cristhian Martinez retired two in row to end New York’s best threat. Please see BRAVES | 11A
11A • Daily Corinthian
Scoreboard
Shorts
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KMS Meeting The Kossuth Middle School Booster Club will meet Saturday at 8:30 a.m. in the old gym lobby. All members are encouraged to attend.
Golf Tournament The 11th Annual Owen B. Whitehurst Memorial Scholarship Tournament is set for Saturday at Shiloh Ridge. The four-man scramble will begin at 9 a.m. and is $60 for each player. The golf package includes a T-shirt -- those who register by Sept. 1 receive a moisture wicking shirt -- and tote bag. Eighteen holes of golf -- cart included -- and a Subway lunch are also part of the package along with pre-drawn door prizes and awards ceremony. For more information call Mike or Tracy Whitehurst at 662-4155514 or the Winners Circle at 662287-7678.
Soccer Clinic The HRAY Soccer Clinic will be held in Middleton, Tenn., on Saturday at 9 a.m. Shinguards required. For more info contact Robert Browder at 731212-0578.
Wrestling CWA Championship wrestling is coming to the Tippah County Coliseum on Saturday, Oct. 8. Bell time will be 8 p.m. Superstar wrestlers Buff “The Stuff” Bagwell, “Dogface Gremlin” Rick Steiner, “The Black Machismo” Jay Lethal, Carlito, “Dangerous” Doug Gilbert and special guest “The Legendary” Jerry Jarrett will be there. Tickets can be purchased at Jimmy Johns Ice Cream in Corinth and Bailey’s Country Cafe in Booneville. For more information visit the web site www.cwachampionshipwrestling.com.
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INDIANAPOLIS — Peyton Manning underwent more neck surgery Thursday, the third time in 19 months, and will miss not only the opening game but possibly the entire season. Losing Manning for any stretch of time is a huge blow to the Colts and throws the race for the AFC South wide open. The four-time NFL MVP hasn’t missed a game in 14 NFL seasons, with 227 consecutive starts, including postseason. “Rehabilitation from such surgery is typically an involved process,” the team said in a statement, calling the procedure “uneventful.” The Colts said there would be “no estimation of a return date at this time. We will keep Peyton on the active roster until we have a clear picture of his recovery process.” Team owner Jim Irsay tweeted that the 35-year-old Manning would be out “awhile.” The Colts could have put Manning on injured reserve to open a roster spot, but it would have meant not playing at all during a season that ends with a Super Bowl at Lucas Oil Stadium in downtown Indianapolis. If Manning recovered in 10 weeks, he could be back for a Nov. 13 game against Jacksonville, the week before the Colts have a bye.
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BRAVES: Jones responds while batting in second slot for first time since ’96 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10A
Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez tried shaking up his scuffling club, losers of five of six coming in, by stacking his top on-base percentage guys up front. Jones started as the No. 2 batter for first time since 1996, responded in the opener. Cleanup hitter Freddie Freeman hit a two-run double and Martin Prado had an RBI single in the first. They each had three hits. Jason Heyward had the go-ahead hit, an RBI single in the third off Chris Schwinden (0-1), making his major league debut. Jones tied it with his 48th homer against the Mets J7NÂ<H;;Ã?DL;IJ?D= tqxÃ;:K97J?EDÃI7L?D=IÃFB7D <?N;:Ã?D9EC; I H;J?H;C;DJÃFB7DD?D=
:L?9;Å<EHÅOEKHÅH;J?H;C;DJ If you’re not at your old job, your 401K shouldn’t be either. Chuck Counce of BancorpSouth Investment Services, Inc., specializes in retirement plan rollovers. Call him for a free consultation on rollover options and other investment products and services. Contact Chuck at 662-396-6016. Investment Services, Inc. Not FDIC No bank guarantee. insured. May lose value.
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Sign-ups for Upward Basketball at Wheeler Grove Baptist Church will be held through today. Cost is $55, which includes jersey and shorts. All games will be played on Saturday, from Oct. 15 to Dec. 10. For more info call 287-2764.
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Friday, September 9, 2011
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leading off the third, his most against any opponent. Reyes led off the ninth with a pinch-hit single off Craig Kimbrel, but the closer extended his rookie record by retiring the next three for his 43rd save. In the opener, a matchup of young starters got off to a rough start. Minor settled down first, though. Schwinden gave up three runs with two outs in the first. Making his 12th start this year, Minor was tagged for a two-out grand slam in the bottom half. He was nicked for just four more hits in five innings while Schwinden gave up two more runs and left trailing 5-4 after throwing 100 pitched in his
five. The Braves scored a run in the eighth with a single, two walks and a hit batter to make it 6-4. The run was needed, because Nick Evans hit a sacrifice fly off Jonny Venters in the bottom half. After Minor got two easy flyouts to start his outing, Lucas Duda singled, David Wright doubled and Angel Pagan walked. Bay followed with his second grand slam of the season and fourth of his career. NOTES: Mets ace Johan Santana (shoulder) will make his second rehab start Friday with Class-A Savannah in a playoff game. The lefty threw three scoreless innings for Class-A St. Lu-
cie in late July but was shut down because of fatigue in the surgically repaired shoulder. ... Mets longtime spokesman Jay Horwitz broke his ankle Thursday and will have surgery on Monday. ... Gonzalez said Tommy Hanson (shoulder tendinitis) could throw off a mound this weekend. Gonzalez said Hanson was progressing nicely. ... Mets reliever Bobby Parnell turned 27. ... The Braves swept the Mets in a doubleheader April 16, a makeup from a rainout a day earlier. ... Freeman set a Braves rookie record for hits in a season when he singled in the third inning of the opener for his 147th knock. Ron Gant had 146 in 1988.
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12A • Friday, September 9, 2011 • Daily Corinthian
District puts Southern white Dem in tough spot BY SHANNON MCCAFFREY Associated Press
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Nearly 50 years ago, every congressman from the Deep South was a white Democrat. Now the U.S. House has just one white Democrat from the five states that comprise the region: Georgia’s John Barrow. Barrow last year survived the Republican tide that wiped out 20 white Democratic members of Congress from the across the South, yet his toughest battle may lie ahead. New political maps approved by the Republican-controlled Georgia legislature leave him politically homeless, placing his residence outside the 12th District that he now represents and stripping away the base of his Democratic support — largely African American — along the coast. His precarious fate raises a larger question: Can white Democrats chart a course back in the Deep South — Georgia, Mississippi. Alabama, Louisiana and South Carolina — where they were once as plentiful as sweet tea on a hot summer day? Or will the party that once dominated the Bible Belt become reliant almost exclusively on black urban voters, leaving the region even more racially polarized? “For the Democratic party to be defined by race means that it’s politically marginalized,” said Merle Black, an Emory University political science professor and author of “The Rise of Southern Republicans.” The recent trend could portend a struggle for Democrats to win statewide offices or be successful outside of safe Democratic districts, Black said. Another outcome is
“One very real effect of partisan redistricting is that congressional districts have become far more extreme politically than the American public is. You have members in ‘safe districts’ that never have to consider what the other side is saying or what is best for the folks back home.” John Barrow U.S. Representative from Georgia Democratic elected officials who are more liberal than voters in the state, said John Kirincich, a former Georgia Democratic Party head. He served as chief of staff to former U.S. Rep. Jim Marshall, a conservative white Democrat who lost his seat last year. “It’s a systematic disenfranchisement of moderate and conservative Democrats,” Kirincich said. Barrow, 55, a conservative Democrat with deep family roots in the region, pledged to soldier on in his redrawn district and get to know his new constituents. But he lamented the shift away from swing districts that are more representative of the views of most Americans. “One very real effect of partisan redistricting is that congressional districts have become far more extreme politically than the American public is,” Barrow said. “You have members in ‘safe districts’ that never have to consider what the other side is saying or what is best for the folks back home.” The Deep South once was solidly Democratic, represented in Washington by white segregationist senators. But after President Lyndon Johnson won passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965, that began to change. Republicans such as Richard Nixon ran on a “Southern strategy” of appealing to
white voters unhappy with Democrats over civil rights legislation. Johnson himself recognized there would be a backlash, admitting to an aide, “We have lost the South for a generation.” Democrats have had the hardest time in Deep South states in recent years, particularly last November, when Republicans capitalized on voter dissatisfaction with the economy, the health care overhaul and President Barack Obama to score major gains. Republicans now control the governorships and legislatures in the five Deep South states, allowing them to redraw political lines to conform with population changes as measured by the Census. Georgia Democrats are expected to file a legal challenge to the Republican map, alleging it unfairly dilutes minority voting strength. Meanwhile, Barrow must focus on winning in his new, more conservative district. Political observers say Barrow will need to forge a new multiracial coalition. “The Democratic Party cannot allow itself to be defined by race, so John’s fate is ours as well,” said U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a Georgia Democrat and a leader in the civil rights movement. A trial lawyer and former county commissioner first elected to Congress in 2004, Barrow has survived his share of political near-death ex-
periences. “John has been handling, fairly masterfully, a swing district for many years now,” said U.S. Rep. Jack Kingston, a Republican whose district borders Barrow’s and which will now include the Democratic stronghold of Savannah. “It’s winnable for him to hang in there, but it will be a tough, tough fight,” Kingston added. Barrow has not said whether he plans to move to the new 12th District. In Savannah, Spanish moss hangs in languid sheets from the live oak trees that arch protectively over Georgia’s oldest city. Graceful, and a little eccentric, the city surrendered with such charm that Gen. William Sherman famously spared it the destruction that he rained down on other Georgia cities on his ruinous Civil War march to the sea. Barrow has called Savannah home since 2006, when lawmakers drew him out of his old district in Athens, a liberal enclave that’s home to the University of Georgia. Barrow moved to Savannah and eked out a win, defeating Republican Max Burns by just more than 800 votes. Since then, Barrow has beaten back challenges from the left and the right, straddling a careful line between satisfying his largely AfricanAmerican Democratic base and crossing party lines to appeal to more
conservative white swing voters. Tom Bordeaux, a Democratic former state representative and a longtime supporter, said Barrow won again and again by hewing to political pragmatism rather than party orthodoxy. “He remembers what he’s going to have to say at a town hall meeting on Saturday when he’s casting a vote in Washington on Wednesday,” Bordeaux said. In an interview, Barrow said he votes with his constituents rather than his party. “I evaluate every issue on how it affects my district,” he said. “More members of Congress should do that.” The divorced father of two seems, at first glance, an unlikely candidate for the role of scrappy survivor. A Harvard-educated lawyer, he wears round Harry Potter-style glasses and seems ill-at-ease with the backslapping style favored by many Southern politicians. But Barrow is a shrewd political tactician. He voted against the health care overhaul, but still managed to survive a Democratic primary challenge last year from a black opponent in a district that is about 45 percent African-American. He is a formidable fundraiser, with many of his contributions flowing from fat Atlanta wallets outside his district. Barrow hails from Georgia political aris-
tocracy: His father was a lawyer and judge who helped integrate the University of Georgia. His mother was a matriarch in the Democratic politics of Barrow County, the northeastern Georgia county that bears his family’s name. While supporters praise his willingness to cross the aisle, critics paint him as a contortionist who will say just about anything to get elected. “I just can’t trust someone like that,” said Don Hodges, who owns a construction company in Savannah. “He’ll do what he needs to do to survive so you can’t say what he really believes.” Barrow said he sees both sides. He voted against capand-trade controls on air pollution emissions but for an increase in the debt ceiling. He voted against efforts to limit war spending in Iraq and supports tough limits on illegal immigration but supported bank bailouts and a minimum wage increase. Barrow has also distanced himself from national Democrats at times, such as in 2004 when — looking to woo swing voters — he stayed far away from Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry’s presidential bid. But in 2008, facing a black primary opponent, Barrow touted an endorsement from President Obama. At a town hall meeting in Savannah earlier this year, Barrow may have summed up his philosophy, answering a question about ways to reduce the deficit and control government spending. “I am an ‘all of the above’ kind of guy,” Barrow said. “If it’s a good idea, an idea that will work, than I am for it.”
Rising costs lead to catfish production decline across South BY MARY SELL The Montgomery Advertiser
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MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Four men in chest-high waders stood recently in a man-made pond at Pearce Catfish Farm, corralling thousands of fish into large nets. The whiskered fish roiled the water around the men. The men were gathering 2-pounders, the ideal weight for harvesting — and eating. It’s a typical scene at one of the state’s largest catfish farms, but one being seen less often across the Southeast. Experts said the reason for the decline in catfish production is two-fold: Rising production costs, most notably the cost of fish feed; and farmers’ decisions to stop feeding corn and soybeans to fish and start growing it themselves. “What we’ve seen happen, particularly in the Mississippi Delta, catfish farmers have gone into row crops to take advantage of that (increased worldwide demand),” said Mitt Walker, head of the Alabama Farmers Federation’s catfish division. Catfish pond acreage
dropped by 9,000 acres in Mississippi and 6,000 acres in Arkansas between 2009 and 2010, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries. In Alabama, the decline was less, only about 600 acres. The remaining farmers are getting more for their fish. Prices have gone from 70 cents a pound a few years ago to about $1.30 a pound, Walker said. That’s good news for Will Pearce, co-owner of Pearce Catfish Farm in Dallas County. But it also concerns him. “When will consumers get tired of paying that?” he said. Farmers like Pearce were paying about $235 per ton in 2005 for fish feed. Now, the cost is about $430 per ton. And by the ton is how Pearce feeds his fish. He puts up to 180,000 pounds per day into his 1,400 acres of catfish ponds. The Pearces’ farm produces about 9,000 pounds of catfish per acre per year. Once the largest catfish farm in Alabama, the farm has about 20 em-
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ployees for its year-round, 24-hour-a-day operation. June, July and August are the busy months, when the fish grow the fastest, Pearce said. It takes about 18 months to grow a catfish from fingerling to filet. “We stopped selling fish for a month in May because we didn’t have the supply,” Pearce said. “What we are feeding right now is mostly for next year.” On a recent morning, employees were rounding up the next batch of 2-pounders to be sent to Heartland Catfish, a processing company in Greensboro. Earlier this year, Heartland, which is based in Itta Bena, Miss., laid off employees at both its Mississippi and Alabama locations because of a lack of production. Calls to the company weren’t returned, but Pearce said that he knew it had rehired some workers in Greensboro. All the processors in Alabama and neighboring states are struggling, Walker said. “I don’t know of any plants that are running at full capacity right now,” he said. Along with capacity concerns, there are also concerns about foreign competition and the safety of imported products. Walker said that in recent years, more than 50 percent of frozen filets, “the industry’s bread and butter,” in stores have been from foreign countries. In 2007, Alabama temporarily banned catfish from China, after it determined that the fillets contained antibiotics that had been banned here. Other states, and then the FDA, soon followed.
Daily Corinthian •Friday, September 9, 2011 • 13A
Business
THE MARKET IN REVIEW DAILY DOW JONES
Feds investigate solar firm receiving a $535M loan
11,760
Dow Jones industrials Close: 11,295.81 Change: -119.05 (-1.0%)
11,320 10,880
13,000
10 DAYS
12,500 12,000 11,500
BY JASON DEAREN AND KEVIN FREKING
10,500
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STOCK EXCHANGE HIGHLIGHTS NYSE
AMEX
NASDAQ
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last
Chg %Chg
Name
Last
Chg %Chg
Name
Last
Chg %Chg
Gramrcy lf 3.55 SilvrcpM g 9.07 GencoShip 7.76 iPBetaCttn 44.90 FGldBlSPBr46.04 Standex 32.54 MediaGen 2.14 Spartch 4.36 DirEMBear 21.81 NavigCons 9.39
+.41 +13.1 +.85 +10.3 +.62 +8.7 +3.61 +8.7 +3.12 +7.3 +2.18 +7.2 +.14 +7.0 +.28 +6.9 +1.36 +6.7 +.53 +6.0
DocuSec ClaudeR g TravelCtrs Banro wt AlexcoR g ExtorreG g Richmnt g Nevsun g Solitario EvolPetrol
2.95 2.25 4.54 3.00 9.23 10.69 12.03 7.15 2.16 6.80
+.30 +11.3 +.20 +9.8 +.34 +8.1 +.20 +7.1 +.60 +7.0 +.69 +6.9 +.70 +6.2 +.35 +5.1 +.10 +4.9 +.31 +4.8
CaliperLSc PennMill Tangoe n NSecGrp BSD Med FstBkshs CharlsColv BioSante Orbcomm ValleyFin
10.43 20.13 13.45 11.31 3.15 7.17 2.57 2.89 2.27 4.90
+3.04 +3.83 +2.00 +1.58 +.41 +.86 +.26 +.26 +.20 +.42
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Name
Last
MarineP 4.25 Primero g 3.12 Pandora n 11.02 AlonHldgs 5.46 Comeric wt 4.57 Fusion-io n 20.27 PallCorp 44.03 MensW 26.73 QksilvRes 8.76 Hill Intl 4.85
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Chg %Chg
Name
-.69 -.49 -1.35 -.65 -.53 -2.36 -4.79 -2.79 -.85 -.45
AdcareH wt 2.10 -.37 HaderaPap 35.80 -5.75 NovaGld g 9.51 -1.21 StreamGSv 2.39 -.30 SalisbryBc 23.35 -2.39 PhrmAth 2.23 -.22 MastechH 3.75 -.30 Metalico 3.94 -.25 GrahamCp 16.06 -1.01 SbdCp 2055.00-124.00
-14.0 -13.6 -10.9 -10.6 -10.4 -10.4 -9.8 -9.5 -8.8 -8.5
+41.1 +23.5 +17.5 +16.3 +15.0 +13.6 +11.3 +9.9 +9.7 +9.4
Last
Chg %Chg -15.0 -13.8 -11.3 -11.2 -9.3 -9.0 -7.4 -6.0 -5.9 -5.7
Name
Last
Chg %Chg
G-III TitanMach DynaVox EmmisC pf MatrixSv HSW Intl h CIFC Corp Cimatron IBC Cap pf Mitcham
23.82 22.89 5.07 14.55 9.95 4.14 4.35 3.52 15.10 15.02
-4.84 -4.47 -.90 -2.45 -1.39 -.56 -.58 -.42 -1.71 -1.61
-16.9 -16.3 -15.1 -14.4 -12.3 -11.9 -11.8 -10.7 -10.2 -9.7
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
S&P500ETF 2294511119.04 BkofAm 1941817 7.20 GenElec 1040350 15.59 SPDR Fncl 839449 12.63 iShR2K 641672 69.55 iShEMkts 554451 41.41 DrxFnBull 552586 13.21 iShJapn 552000 9.45 Altria 459940 27.01 FordM 444786 10.34
-1.25 -.28 -.21 -.28 -1.30 -.94 -.84 -.12 +.02 -.22
Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
NovaGld g 113027 9.51 -1.21 NwGold g 53594 14.05 +.42 NthgtM g 50159 4.34 +.07 GoldStr g 45187 2.62 -.09 OpkoHlth 26931 4.18 +.01 CheniereEn 23482 7.35 -.27 VantageDrl 22805 1.25 -.06 CFCda g 17936 25.40 +.16 GrtBasG g 17093 2.34 +.07 AvalRare n 14042 4.27 -.01
Name
Vol (00) Last Chg
Cisco Yahoo Microsoft MicronT SiriusXM PwShs QQQ Level3 Oracle Intel CaliperLSc
999515 16.29 881613 14.44 642342 26.22 624136 6.25 592144 1.75 546166 54.39 544290 1.63 497180 26.72 417701 19.90 391611 10.43
+.41 +.83 +.22 +.19 -.05 -.25 -.07 -.91 -.19 +3.04
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST Name
Ex
AFLAC AT&T Inc AMD AlliantTch Altria Aon Corp BP PLC BcpSouth BkofAm Bar iPVix rs Bemis CaliperLSc Caterpillar Checkpnt Chevron Cisco Citigrp rs CocaCola Comcast Corning Deere DrxFnBull DirxSCBull Dover DowChm EMC Cp EnPro ExxonMbl FstHorizon FordM FrkUnv FredsInc GenElec Goodrich iShJapn iShEMkts iShR2K Intel IBM JPMorgCh KimbClk Kroger Level3
NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY NY NY Nasd NY NY Nasd NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY NY NY NY Nasd
YTD Div Yld PE Last Chg %chg 1.20 1.72 ... .80 1.64 .60 1.68 .04 .04 ... .96 ... 1.84 ... 3.12 .24 .04 1.88 .45 .20 1.64 ... ... 1.26 1.00 ... ... 1.88 .04 ... .46 .20 .60 1.16 .17 .84 .94 .84 3.00 1.00 2.80 .42 ...
3.4 6.2 ... 1.4 6.1 1.3 4.5 .4 .6 ... 3.2 ... 2.1 ... 3.2 1.5 .1 2.6 2.1 1.4 2.1 ... ... 2.4 3.7 ... ... 2.6 .6 ... 7.2 1.8 3.8 1.3 1.8 2.0 1.4 4.2 1.8 3.0 4.1 1.8 ...
8 35.07 8 27.96 6 6.81 6 58.94 17 27.01 16 45.02 14 37.08 22 10.33 ... 7.20 ... 41.86 15 30.17 ... 10.43 14 87.04 29 14.13 9 98.41 14 16.29 9 27.98 14 71.17 15 21.42 7 14.36 13 77.26 ... 13.21 ... 42.52 12 52.99 12 26.90 23 21.76 20 35.63 10 72.82 38 6.39 5 10.34 ... 6.29 14 11.20 13 15.59 20 87.19 ... 9.45 ... 41.41 ... 69.55 9 19.90 13 165.25 7 33.51 16 68.11 12 23.35 ... 1.63
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Name
Ex
Lowes MGM Rsts McDnlds MeadWvco Merck MicronT Microsoft NY Times NewsCpA NiSource NorthropG Oracle Penney PepsiCo Pfizer Popular PwShs QQQ PrUShS&P ProctGam RadioShk RegionsFn S&P500ETF SaraLee SearsHldgs Sherwin SiriusXM SouthnCo SprintNex SPDR Fncl SP Inds TecumsehB TecumsehA Trchmrk s US Bancrp VangEmg WalMart WellsFargo Wendys Co Weyerh Xerox Yahoo
NY NY NY NY NY Nasd Nasd NY Nasd NY NY Nasd NY NY NY Nasd Nasd NY NY NY NY NY NY Nasd NY Nasd NY NY NY NY Nasd Nasd NY NY NY NY NY NY NY NY Nasd
YTD Div Yld PE Last Chg %chg .56 ... 2.44 1.00 1.52 ... .64 ... .19 .92 2.00 .24 .80 2.06 .80 ... .42 ... 2.10 .25 .04 2.44 .46 ... 1.46 ... 1.89 ... .18 .67 ... ... .48 .50 .82 1.46 .48 .08 .60 .17 ...
2.9 ... 2.8 3.7 4.6 ... 2.4 ... 1.2 4.3 3.8 .9 3.1 3.4 4.3 ... .8 ... 3.3 2.1 1.0 2.0 2.6 ... 2.0 ... 4.6 ... 1.4 2.2 ... ... 1.3 2.2 1.9 2.8 2.0 1.6 3.5 2.2 ...
13 19.58 ... 10.58 18 88.61 15 26.70 12 32.78 10 6.25 10 26.22 ... 7.43 14 16.32 20 21.53 8 52.78 16 26.72 15 26.07 16 61.34 12 18.82 5 1.81 ... 54.39 ... 23.67 16 62.91 8 11.97 ... 4.18 ... 119.04 9 17.74 ... 54.43 16 74.00 58 1.75 17 41.36 ... 3.45 ... 12.63 ... 31.01 ... 7.90 ... 8.09 8 36.56 11 22.86 ... 42.63 12 52.21 9 24.40 ... 4.93 4 17.30 15 7.84 16 14.44
-.08 -.27 -.68 -.57 -.19 +.19 +.22 -.26 -.32 +.10 -.33 -.91 -.62 -.28 -.19 -.13 -.25 +.49 +.19 -.29 -.19 -1.25 -.01 -1.48 -.33 -.05 +.04 -.02 -.28 -.48 -.10 +.03 -.69 +.17 -.89 -.21 -.56 -.12 -.30 -.19 +.83
-21.9 -28.8 +15.4 +2.1 -9.1 -22.1 -6.1 -24.2 +12.1 +22.2 -10.2 -14.6 -19.3 -6.1 +7.5 -42.5 -.1 -.4 -2.2 -35.3 -40.3 -5.3 +1.3 -26.2 -11.6 +7.4 +8.2 -18.4 -20.8 -11.1 -39.5 -38.0 -8.2 -15.2 -11.5 -3.2 -21.3 +6.7 -8.6 -31.9 -13.2
AGRICULTURE FUTURES Open High
Low SettleChange
Open High
Low SettleChange
CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Sep 11 Dec 11 Mar 12 May 12 Jul 12 Sep 12 Dec 12
Oct 11 Dec 11 Feb 12 Apr 12 Jun 12 Aug 12 Oct 12
722.25 739.75 734 751.50 746.75 764 752.50 770.50 757.25 774.50 698.25 708.75 656.75 665
721.75 723.25 -13.25 731.25 734 -14 744.25 746.75 -14 751.50 754 -13.75 756 758.50 -13.50 691 696 -9.75 650.75 659 -4.75
SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Sep 11 1403.501412.751402.50 Nov 11 14181425.50 1410 Jan 12 14251436.25 1422 Mar 12 14301440.25 1429 May 12 1433.25 1445 1430.75 Jul 12 14391450.751437.25 Aug 12 1429.751429.75 1426
1407.25 1418.25 1428.50 1434.75 1437.25 1443.25 1429.75
118.70 119.40 119.10 119.55 122.30 122.50 126.15 126.27 124.35 124.45 123.80 124.50 126.45 126.70
117.02 118.15 120.97 124.80 123.27 123.67 125.77
HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. -3.75 -2.50 -3 -2.50 -1.75 -1.25 -.75
Oct 11 Dec 11 Feb 12 Apr 12 May 12 Jun 12 Jul 12
86.00 83.10 88.52 91.45 95.42 97.85 96.60
86.90 83.47 88.75 91.70 95.90 98.70 96.95
85.12 82.32 87.47 90.57 95.42 97.70 96.50
WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel
COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb.
Sep 11 Dec 11 Mar 12 May 12 Jul 12 Sep 12 Dec 12
Oct 11 Dec 11 Mar 12 May 12 Jul 12 Oct 12 Dec 12
709.75 712 736.75 755 772.50 791.75 793.25 811 796 813.25 812.25 821 831.75 842.50
703 733.50 768.50 789 794.75 808 826.25
118.82 +1.17 119.05 +.35 122.25 +.60 126.10 +.70 124.42 +.37 124.45 +.25 126.20 -.30
709.25 -5.50 738 -13.50 774.25 -14.75 794.50 -14.50 799.75 -11 811.25 -9.75 830.50 -11.25
112.75 114.19 112.91 115.47 108.91 111.10 108.07 109.50 106.78 108.50 ... ... 99.62 100.95
111.03 111.17 107.17 106.02 104.87 ... 99.20
86.80 +1.95 83.12 +.72 88.72 +1.15 91.65 +.85 95.90 +.50 98.60 +.80 96.95 +.45
112.45 113.63 110.27 108.64 107.36 105.02 100.00
+2.21 +3.29 +3.68 +2.89 +2.49 +2.27 +1.27
Tables show seven most current contracts for each future. Grains traded on Chicago Board of Trade; livestock on Chicago Mercantile Exchange; and cotton on New York Cotton Exchange.
MUTUAL FUNDS Name
Total Assets Obj ($Mlns) NAV
Total Return/Rank Pct Min Init 4-wk 12-mo 5-year Load Invt
PIMCO TotRetIs American Funds GrthAmA m Vanguard TotStIdx American Funds CapIncBuA m Fidelity Contra Vanguard InstIdxI American Funds CpWldGrIA m American Funds IncAmerA m Vanguard 500Adml Vanguard TotStIAdm American Funds InvCoAmA m Dodge & Cox IntlStk American Funds WAMutInvA m Dodge & Cox Stock American Funds EurPacGrA m Vanguard InstPlus FrankTemp-Franklin Income A m
CI 144,330 11.03 LG 62,446 28.55 LB 58,721 29.73 IH 58,091 48.81 LG 57,045 66.24 LB 55,901 108.95 WS 53,019 32.08 MA 52,940 16.25 LB 49,870 109.69 LB 47,454 29.75 LB 46,376 25.87 FV 40,297 30.64 LV 38,653 26.59 LV 38,205 97.38 FB 37,103 36.94 LB 34,848 108.96 CA 34,484 2.06
+0.3 +6.1 +6.6 +4.2 +6.7 +6.2 +2.6 +4.4 +6.2 +6.7 +4.3 +1.1 +6.3 +5.1 +1.5 +6.2 +3.6
+4.2/E +7.8/E +10.7/A +6.6/C +12.7/C +10.1/B +1.0/E +8.5/A +10.1/B +10.8/A +5.6/E -1.3/C +11.3/A +5.9/C +0.4/C +10.1/B +6.6/B
+8.4/A +0.7/D +0.9/B +2.3/C +3.9/A +0.3/B +0.9/C +2.4/C +0.3/B +1.0/B -0.6/D -0.6/A +0.3/A -3.3/E +1.2/A +0.4/B +3.5/C
NL 1,000,000 5.75 250 NL 3,000 5.75 250 NL 2,500 NL 5,000,000 5.75 250 5.75 250 NL 10,000 NL 10,000 5.75 250 NL 2,500 5.75 250 NL 2,500 5.75 250 NL 200,000,000 4.25 1,000
BL -Balanced, GL -Global Stock, IL -International Stock, LC -Large-Cap Core, LG -Large-Cap Growth, LV Large-Cap Val., MT -Mortgage, SB -Short-Term Bond, SP -S&P 500, XC -Multi-Cap Core, XG -Multi-Cap Growth, XV -Multi-Cap Val.Total Return: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is in top 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. NA = Not avail. NE = Data in question. NS = Fund not in existence. Source: Morningstar. Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf = Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split of at least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least 20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = When issued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: x = Ex cash dividend. NL = No up-front sales charge. p = Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r = Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. t = Both p and r. Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worth at least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
Associated Press
FREMONT, Calif. — FBI agents executed search warrants Thursday at the headquarters of California solar panel manufacturer Solyndra, which received more than $500 million in federal loans before filing for bankruptcy last week. Blue-jacket-clad agents swarmed the company’s headquarters in Fremont as part of an investigation with the Department of Energy’s Office of Inspector General into the manufacturer once touted by President Barack Obama as a beneficiary of economic stimulus, according to FBI spokeswoman Julianne Sohn. The agents carried evidence in dozens of boxes and bags out of Solyndra’s offices late Thursday afternoon, loading the items into a large white truck. Sohn said she could not provide details about the investigation, including what agents were gathering as the search continued hours after the early morning raid. The agents were expected to finish their search Thursday. Solyndra spokesman Dave Miller said agents
were collecting documents but the company did not know the reason for the search. Company executives were on the premises but were not likely to make a statement Thursday, he said. “It certainly was a shock this morning to arrive and see the FBI here,” Miller said. The assumption was that the search was related to the loans, he said. Those loans — part of the $862 billion economic stimulus package that Congress passed in 2009 — have for months been the subject of a probe by the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Republicans are using Solyndra’s financial woes as ammunition in attacking the effectiveness of the stimulus package. The raid Thursday morning came just hours before the president appears before both chambers of Congress to appeal for more legislation that would help the economy and reduce the nation’s 9.1 percent unemployment rate. “The FBI raid further underscores that Solyndra was a bad bet from the beginning and put taxpayers at unnecessary risk,” said
top Republican leaders on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Reps. Fred Upton of Michigan and Cliff Stearns of Florida, in a joint statement “Irresponsibly choosing winners and losers on projects like Solyndra is a perilous and often doomed method to create jobs,” they said. Thursday’s raid by federal agents came about a week after Solyndra’s announcement that it was filing for bankruptcy and laying off 1,100 workers. Solyndra, like other companies in the nation’s solar energy industry, faced declining prices for solar panels, in part because of heavy competition from Chinese companies. The bankruptcy announcement was a sharp departure for a company that had been held up as the model for government investment in green technology. Obama visited Solyndra last year, saying the company represented the future of American renewable energy innovation and noting that it expected to hire 1,000 workers. Other state and federal officials such as former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and En-
ergy Secretary Steven Chu also visited the company’s facilities. Solyndra’s technology relied on a solar tube of sorts that could soak up sunlight from many different angles, producing energy more efficiently and using less space. The company’s panels were also light and easy to install, which was meant to save up-front costs. But over the past few years, other companies caught up and provided similar products at a lower cost. “It’s really sad to everybody who worked here,” Miller said on Thursday. “We believed in the technology.” Mohammad Walahi, 41, worked for Solyndra for five years before showing up a week ago only to be told by a colleague that the company was going bankrupt. He blamed management, saying they had made bad decisions. “See these buildings?” he asked, gesturing to the company’s gleaming new campus. “They put all that money they got into buildings. What do you need these for? It only should have gone into making our solar panels better.”
Obama: Congress should stop ‘political circus’ BY BEN FELLER Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Struggling to fix the sickly economy, President Barack Obama planned to appeal to Congress Thursday night to support nearly $450 billion in tax reductions and new federal spending, including deeper payroll tax cuts to keep more cash in the pockets of dispirited Americans. He urged Congress to stop what he called a “political circus” and quickly pass legislation to promote new hiring. In excerpts released by the White House ahead of the president’s speech to a joint session of Congress, Obama said the U.S faces a weighty question: whether elected officials will meet their responsibilities the same way regular Americans do. “We can help,” he said. “We can make a difference.” Congressional officials said the president would ask lawmakers to give a Social Security payroll tax cut to employers as well as workers as he looks for ways to cut into a national unemployment rate of 9.1 percent. At the same time, Obama was expected to ask lawmakers to approve new money to build schools and demolish vacant housing and to help states to hire teachers and police. The officials provided the details on condition of anonymity because the president had not yet delivered his speech. Obama’s furious push on employment, his latest stab at the defining issue of his presidency, aimed to shore up his chances of keeping
his own job next year. He must stem eroding confidence in his leadership as the public mood darkens and Republican presidential challengers assail his record. Obama was expected to announce a program of tax cuts, construction spending, unemployment aid and money for states. Besides the payroll tax, the core elements include expanding jobless benefits for those who can’t find work month after month. The president was to promise a way to pay for the plans without sinking the nation deeper in debt. In the best case, such a package could provide help that people would feel in their daily lives. It would boost consumer and investor confidence and spur hiring. Yet even that might not help the recovery enough to assuage the millions of unemployed, let alone satisfy voters. And that’s assuming Obama gets what he asks from Capitol Hill. His plan would require approval by a Congress that is deeply divided, with many House Republicans strongly opposed to his efforts. To pay for his plan, Obama will challenge a new debt panel in Congress to go beyond its charge of identifying $1.5 trillion in deficit reduction, so the extra savings could offset the cost of short-term stimulus ideas. That panel met for a first time Thursday, members expressing determination but facing a demanding assignment. Obama was expected to propose paying for some of his jobs initiatives by clos-
ing corporate tax loopholes and increasing taxes on wealthier Americans, measures he failed to win during summer negotiations over increasing the nation’s debt ceiling. Offsetting some costs of his economic plan with new tax revenue is likely to meet stiff resistance from Republicans. But the White House has argued that the public has supported a mix of spending cuts and revenue as a way to avoid higher deficits. White House Chief of Staff William Daley said before the speech that wealthy Americans “ought to pay a little more.” The American public is weary of talk and wary of promises that help is on the way. About 14 million people are unemployed. There is just one job opening available for every four job seekers, on average, in the richest nation on earth. In one striking sign of discontent, nearly 80 percent of people think the country is headed in the wrong direction. That’s about the same level of pessimism as when Obama took office. It reflects both persistently high unemployment and disgust with Washington infighting. No incumbent president
in recent history has won re-election with the unemployment rate anywhere near the current level, 9.1 percent. Writ large, Thursday night was about more than a speech or plan, suggesting whether the nation’s leaders can agree on any ways to help a nation in economic peril. Some Republican leaders, under their own pressure from constituents to get results, offered signs of compromise before Obama spoke. “The American people want us to find common ground, and I’m going to be looking for it,” House Speaker John Boehner told reporters. The top Republican in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, wasn’t so upbeat. He cast Obama’s expected ideas as retreads, saying: “This isn’t a jobs plan. It’s a re-election plan.” Obama chose not just to give a speech but to convene Congress, allowing him to challenge House Republicans on their own turf. The strategy is to appeal to the lawmakers in front of him to pass a deal — and to try to show the voters watching at home, particularly independents, that he isn’t the one to blame for inaction.
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Shocker: Power demand from U.S. homes is falling BY JONATHAN FAHEY AP Energy Writer
NEW YORK — American homes are more cluttered than ever with devices, and they all need power: Cellphones and iPads that have to be charged, DVRs that run all hours, TVs that light up in high definition. But something shocking is happening to demand for electricity in the Age of the Gadget: It’s leveling off. Over the next decade, experts expect residential power use to fall, reversing an upward trend that has been almost uninterrupted since Thomas Edison invented the modern light bulb. In part it’s because Edison’s light bulb is being replaced by more efficient types of lighting, and electric devices of all kinds are getting much more efficient. But there are other factors. New homes are being built to use less juice, and government subsidies for home energy savings pro-
grams are helping older homes use less power. In the short term, the tough economy and a weak housing market are prompting people to cut their usage. As a result, many families can expect their monthly bills to remain in check, even if power prices rise. For utility executives, who can no longer bank on ever-growing demand, a major shift is under way: They’re finding ways to profit when people use less power. “It’s already having an impact and we may just be in the early innings of this,” says Michael Lapides, a utilities analyst at Goldman Sachs. From 1980 to 2000, residential power demand grew by about 2.5 percent a year. From 2000 to 2010, the growth rate slowed to 2 percent. Over the next 10 years, demand is expected to decline by about 0.5 percent a year, according to the Electric Power Research Institute, a nonprofit group funded
by the utility industry. Overall demand, including from factories and businesses, is still expected to grow, but at only a 0.7 percent annual rate through 2035, the government says. That’s well below the average of 2.5 percent a year the past four decades. Utility executives have been aware that the rate of demand growth is slowing, but a more dramatic shift than they expected may be under way. Executives were particularly surprised by a dip during the first three months of this year, the most recent national quarterly numbers available. Adjusted for the effects of weather, residential power demand fell 1.3 percent nationwide, an unusually sharp drop. Executives and analysts are perplexed because residential demand doesn’t usually track economic ups and downs very closely. Even when the economy is stagnant, people still watch TV and keep their
ice cream cold. “No one knows if it’s customer concern about the economy or a structural change,” says Bill Johnson, CEO of Progress Energy, which serves Florida and the Carolinas. For now, meters are spinning more slowly due to a mix of long-term and short-term factors: ■ Lighting, which accounts for 10 to 15 percent of a typical family’s power use, is much more efficient than it used to be. Americans are installing compact fluorescent bulbs and light emitting diodes, which are up to 80 percent more efficient than incandescent bulbs. Traditional incandescent bulbs will start disappearing from store shelves next year because they waste too much energy to meet federal standards crafted in 2007. ■ Federal and state efficiency programs have expanded rapidly. Twentyeight states have passed laws that force utilities to
help customers use less power. The federal stimulus program allocated $11 billion to local efficiency programs, including subsidies for home weatherization and the purchase of energy-efficient appliances. ■ With the U.S. economy in the doldrums and gas prices high, families are trying to save money. It’s easier to turn off the air conditioner than shorten your commute, says John Caldwell, director of economics at the Edison Electric Institute, a trade group. ■ The weak housing market has kept people from moving into bigger homes. And high unemployment is forcing college graduates and other family members to live together. When Stephen Botelho, a software designer in Westwood, Mass., moved his family into a 2,000-square foot, 80-year-old ranch, he knew his electric bill would rise. There was an electric dryer in the base-
ment. The insulation was poor. And the kitchen was lit with 15 high-watt incandescent light bulbs. “You could get a suntan if you turned all the lights on,” he says. “I could practically hear the meter spinning outside.” He requested an energy audit from his utility, Nstar, to help cut his power use. Nstar installed what Botehlo estimates to be $200 worth of compact fluorescent bulbs. He replaced his electric dryer with a gaspowered one. And with the help of rebates from the state, he had insulation blown into his attic. Next up: replacing a 14-year-old electric water heater with a gas model, which he expects will cut his $950 annual waterheating bill in half. National Grid, a gas and electric utility whose territory includes Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York and Rhode Island, is seeing the effects of such behavior.
Rhodes president Bill Troutt keeps inspiring BY RICHARD MORGAN The Commercial Appeal
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Higher education in Memphis is a tricky thing. And so Rhodes College, being an elite college in a city where only 23 percent of Memphians hold a college degree, is in an especially tricky position. Public conversations here about the role of colleges tend to center on cranking out more graduates for more jobs and more money. That is why the top majors among University of Memphis’ 23,000 students are nursing, professional studies and teaching, and not, say, political science or literature or history. But Rhodes, the small, private, liberal arts campus of 1,800 diverse students near Overton Park, with its Hogwarts aesthetic, is flush with English and history majors. “Education is not valued in rural or even poor urban Tennessee,” said Lewis Lavine, the ex-chief of staff of current Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn. Lavine, now in Nashville working as president of the Center for Nonprofit Management, added: “Parents don’t want their kids highly educated, because then they’ll move away.” So “Rhodes was a little embarrassed to be in Memphis,” he said. “But in just 10 years, Bill has changed that.” That would be his longtime friend Bill Troutt, Rhodes’ president since 1999, who last year celebrated the college’s ranking by Newsweek as the nation’s top service-minded student body (a title it repeated this month). In addition to routine student participation in soup kitchens for the needy, Troutt has created partnerships with FedEx, Snowden School, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and more. Don’t let his bow ties, Milquetoast grins or happygo-lucky manner -- which his assistant describes as “Mister Rogers on speed” -- fool you. Troutt, 62, is an education titan who headed a national college cost-cutting committee in the late ‘90s that left indelible marks on the Higher Education Act, the umbrella law Congress uses to control and fund colleges. Not bad for someone who grew up a poor farm boy from Bolivar, Tenn. He saw his exhausted father go from single-handedly running their 100-acre farm, to taking a second job, initially as a night watchman at the local tannery and then in the engineering department at Western Mental Health Institute. Troutt would come to Memphis to buy school clothes at the old Goldsmith’s or Lowenstein’s de-
partment stores. After some winning performances as part of the Bolivar Brass band -- “think Tijuana Brass,” he said -- he was whisked to New York on his first airplane ride to perform on host Ted Mack’s nationally televised “The Original Amateur Hour,” the “American Idol” of its day. On the heels of his anointment as “most likely to succeed” at Bolivar Central High School, he graduated from Union University in Jackson, Tenn., earned a master’s from the University of Louisville and a Ph.D. from Vanderbilt, then determined fervently -- and a bit weirdly, given his youth -- to become a university president. After a few years as a higher education consultant in Washington, he ended up becoming vice president and then president of Belmont University in Nashville, crowned the nation’s youngest college president at the time. He was 32. This school year he passes another milestone: He is one of only four presidents at the nation’s 3,000-some colleges to have devoted 30 years of service to the job. Not that you’d ever catch him bragging. When Belmont named its new theater after Troutt and his wife of 41 years, Carole, the first performance there was the aptly-titled “Much Ado About Nothing.” This is still a man who has dinner with his mother. He wears bow ties not as panache but as homage, seeing as his first was a gift to him from the family of the late Sen. Paul Simon, a giant in popular education advocacy (Troutt can now tie one faster than a necktie). When he left Belmont, he was living with his wife and a 100-pound Old English sheepdog named Martha, and what Carole describes as “a diabolical cat named Nietzsche” in a 400-squarefoot space. His house was roofless amid an epic renovation. His possessions were in a PODS container in the backyard. Everything else was in a Dumpster out front. His empathy toward the blues-and-blahs dilapidation of Memphis is personal, born in part out of four hours one January afternoon in 1982 when Carole and their children, then 6 and 4, were kidnapped in a Nashville parking lot by a knifewielding man who said he was a prison escapee from Mississippi (Carole, at the time, was trusting enough to leave her car unlocked regularly). While Bill fretted and prayed at church, the convict made Carole take $65 out of the bank and drive into the countryside before deciding to go back to Nashville and then, as she recalled recently, “just walk back into the shadows.”
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Religion
2B • Daily Corinthian
Friday, September 9, 2011
Worship Call Anniversary celebrated ■ Middleton Pentecostal Tabernacle, 560 Neely Rd., Middleton, Tenn., will continue its 26th Anniversary Services tonight with Bro. Jeff Storey at 7:30 p.m. and on Sunday at 2 p.m. with Bro. James Rich preaching. ■ Grace Bible Baptist Church, 2109 N. Polk St., Corinth, will cel‘An Evening with The Hoppers,’ will be held Thurs- ebrate its 50th anniverday, Sept. 25, at the Hardin County High School audi- sary on Sunday. torium in Savannah, Tenn., beginning at 7 p.m. The church will be havThe church made the deing dinner-on-the-grounds In concert cision to move the obserand will begin a four-day Josh and Ashley Franks vance to the fire station Missions Revival. Preachare hosting, “An Evening this year in recognition of ers will include John with The Hoppers,” on the 10th anniversary of Bailes, USA director for the attacks on the World Thursday, Sept. 25, at the Baptist International MisHardin County High School Trade Center and the sions Incorporated; Neal auditorium in Savannah, Pentagon and in memory Ray, missionary to China; of United Flight 93. Tenn., beginning at 7 p.m. John Hallman, missionThe Hoppers have The church is also havary to Iceland; and Ted been awarded numerous ing a Service of ThanksMock, missionary with giving for the area First Southern gospel music Lighthouse Children’s Responders. Following the Home in Mississippi, awards with hit songs, service, military honors “Shoutin’ Time,” “Yes I Costa Rica and India. will be rendered. A light Am,” and “Jerusalem.” Services are at 10 reception will be held. a.m., 11 a.m. and 6 p.m. Tickets can be purAll area churches and chased at New Life Sunday, Sept. 11, and clergy are invited to atChristian Bookstore in 7 p.m., Monday through tend and participate. Corinth. Doors will open Wednesday, Sept. 12-14. one hour before concert. There is still plenty of Call 286-5760 for time for a local choir, For more information or more information. music group, pastor or to purchase tickets on laity who would like to line, go to www.joshanIn revival be part of this service to dashleyfranks.com or be included in the procall 731-607-1948. Fairfiew Community gram Local elected offi Church, 126 CR 356, ‘Old-fashion’ service cials are also encouraged Iuka, will be in Revival to attend, but no camMonday, Sept. 12, thru paigning will be permitted Wednesday, Sept. 14, at There will be old-fashduring or surrounding the ioned Sunday service at 7 p.m. nightly. service. However, a brief Souls Harbor Apostolic Special speakers will Church in Walnut on Sun- period of time will be afbe Bro. Larry Vanderforded anyone who would ford on Monday, Sept. day, Sept. 11 at 2 p.m. like to recall their memoThe special speaker will 12; Bro. Dale Shows on ries of Sept. 11. be the Rev. Mike Allen Tuesday, Sept. 13, and For more information, from Louisiana Bro. Dewey Smith on or to be included in the Souls Harbor will also Wednesday, Sept. 14. program, call Bro. Rick have revival services, Monday-Wednesday, Sept. Wells at 662-587-9602. Singing 12-14 at 7:30 nightly with ■ A special 9/11 serevangelist Mike Allen. vice will honor McNairy ■ Breaking Grass will County’s firemen, law be singing at Hilltop enforcement, emergency Church of God on SaturSept. 11 personnel and medical day, Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. ■ The annual Sept. workers at Chewalla The church is located Observance sponsored Baptist Church. The wortwo miles east of Jacinto by Indian Springs United ship service will begin at on Hwy. 356. Methodist Church, 541 10:45 a.m. on Sunday. ■ There will be a Singing at Old Pleasant Hill CR 300 in Glen will be The church will recogheld on Sunday, Sept. nize those who serve us Church, North Cross Roads, (located Hwy. 25, 11, beginning at 3 p.m. during the “We Believe” at the Glen Volunteer Fire service. This will be the north of Iuka; Hwy. 365, Department Building, 10th anniversary of 9/11. north of Burnsville), on Saturday, Sept. 10 at 6 2551 Hwy. 72 E, Glen.
p.m. with special singer Ricky Ryan. ■ The Old Church Opry House, located at the corner of Cooper and Jackson Streets in Ripley, is presenting Gospel Night Saturday, Sept. 10, from 6:30-9:30 p.m. featuring Blackjack Connection from Oxford and Wesley and Debbie Price with Dancing Poodle from Batesville. For more information, call Bobby Hodges, 5879885 or Wayne Windham, 662-837-1766 or 662-837-8709.
Homecoming concert The Lovelace Family Homecoming Concert is being held Saturday, Oct. 1, at Wheeler Grove Baptist Church in Corinth. The third annual Homecoming Concert will begin at 6 p.m. with doors opening at 5 p.m. Along with the host group, The Lovelace Family from Burnsville, Tiffany Blackard, Diamond award duet nominee from Savannah, Tenn. Josh and Ashley Franks, and the Mark Trammell Quartet, will be performing. There is no admission fee, however a special love offering will be taken. For more information, call 731-607-1948.
Musicians appreciation The Alcorn M.B. Church is having its 3rd Musicians Appreciation on Sunday, Sept. 18, at 3 p.m.
Pastor’s appreciation Little Zion M B Church will be having its Pastor’s Appreciation Day for their pastor the Rev. Christopher Traylor on Sunday, Sept. 11, at 3 p.m. The Rev. Jeffery Daniels and the White Hill M.B. Church of Tupelo will be their special guests.
Homecoming ■
Hopewell United
Freddie Burns — a local treasure (This is Part 1 of a twopart series.) A portion of his story has been written before, but a life of 97 years cannot be packed into just one article, so I went on a mission to learn more about a local retiree. Mr. Freddie Burns is a treasure and he’s full of information and life experiences as a teacher, a businessman and a musician. This guy says he’s just from “sage grass country,” but he surely is a wise and insightful person. I sat mesmerized for two hours as he told me about his colorful life and I wasn’t even close to being finished with my questions. I stopped because I didn’t want to wear out my welcome! Mr. Burns began our visit by telling me how fortunate he has been in his adult life to have so many privileges present themselves. He took advantage of them and has been the better for it. Born in Booneville in 1914, he likes to refer to his beginning as being born “in Dixieland on a cold and frosty mornin’.” The baby of eight kids, he agreed that he probably had too many bosses when he was little. His five-year-old sister was disturbed when her place as the “baby” was taken by baby brother and she really didn’t want him around — until the wise mother explained she had so much to do, she would need a helper. The formerly jealous sister turned into the best babysitter ever and also
the best teacher a little boy could have. Mr. Fred said she spent The Back so much Porch time with h i m , Lora Ann teaching Huff him everything she knew. He could read her little “Baby Ray” books long before attending school and was in her care even after starting first grade at their oneroom schoolhouse. Mr. Burns speaks properly and uses the English language carefully, and I expect one reason is his caring sister. When he didn’t say something right, she would call him aside and say, “Look, boy, you’re too old to be talking that way. This is the way to say it,” and would proceed to speak correctly. Today, one opportunity he cherishes is getting to teach English to a group of Vietnamese who came to the States after the war. They wanted to learn to be preachers. They could write English but could not communicate well with Americans because we use so many contractions and slur the language. One way he taught was by using a hymnbook. They sang a song and then he explained the words. The Burns kids’ daddy was an elected official in Prentiss County but by the time Freddie was three years old, his dad
bought a farm on Bay Springs Road and moved to the country. That’s where he found the life he loved. Freddie attributes his interest in music to his dad, who was a fine musician. He played the fiddle and was very good at it. He would take his little boy up on his lap in front of the fireplace and hold his hand on the bow while he played a song. In fact, his dad taught all the family to play and sing. The music and the farm life was a happy experience for Freddie, but his daddy passed away only a short time after they moved to the farm, leaving hard times ahead for Freddie’s mom and her children. With the help of a teenage son, Mrs. Burns was able to hold on for a while, but finally she had a chance to work as a seamstress in Booneville, so they rented out the house and farm and moved to town. Mrs. Burns was paid a dollar per day to sew, bringing in $6 per week. Freddie missed “home” so much and finally they moved back, trying farm life once more. It was too hard so they sold the farm and moved back to town. Freddie was big enough now to want a bicycle. He asked for a job at the City Market delivering meat and was paid $3 per week. He bought the only bicycle in the hardware store for $21 and paid $3 at the end of each week until it was paid off. Soon the market owner
announced he was going to sell groceries also and Fred would have to deliver them in the storeowner’s Model T truck. Not ever driving a vehicle before, it was quite a challenge but one Freddie mastered rather quickly. With practice in the country, he soon could maneuver the Model-T and knew every street up and down. He says he delivered to every class of people in every profession, to homes, businesses and hotels, setting him up for an exciting future in public life. After Freddie had been without a dad for several years, his mom announced she was getting married again to a shoe repairman who soon moved them to Sheffield, Ala. Still, Freddie missed home so much. He says he kept the trains and the Corinth Depot busy, riding back and forth to Booneville to visit siblings. It was interesting to hear him tell how he rode his bicycle to the train station in Sheffield, put it in the baggage car, boarded the train and came to Corinth. At the depot he transferred his bike to another train to go to Booneville. When he arrived, he rode his bike to the family’s house. He and his bicycle were the best of friends for many years. (Lora Ann Huff is a Wenasoga resident and special columnist for the Daily Corinthian. Her column appears Friday. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)
Methodist Church, 4572 CR 200, (Old Farmington Road), in Corinth will celebrate its annual Homecoming on Sunday, Sept. 11, beginning at 10 a.m. Special musical guests for the Homecoming Service are The Unity Four, the well-known gospel quartet from Iuka. There will be two special video presentations as well during the service and the oldest male and female member of the church will also be honored. A very special moment for any congregation, the Sacrament of Baptism will be observed at the conclusion of the worship service. Following the service, a traditional covered dish luncheon will be served (provided by the members of the church). For more information about the worship service or for directions to the church, call the pastor at 662-587-9602. ■ Ridgecrest Baptist Church, 4176 CR 200 (Farmington Rd.), Corinth, is having its Homecoming, Sunday, Sept. 11. Bro. Larry Hamlin will be the guest speaker starting at 10:30 a.m. Lunch will follow. Abundant Life Trio from Moulton, Ala., will begin singing at 1:30 p.m. There will be no evening services. For more information, contact Pastor Floy Lamb, 415-0307. ■ Fairview Community Church’s Homecoming is being celebrated Sunday, Sept. 11. Singing starts at 10 a.m. with The Prospectors and worship begins at 11 a.m. with Bro. Dewey Smith. Lunch served at noon, bring a covered dish. Singing will continue after lunch. Fairview Community Church is located at 126 CR 356, Iuka, Piney Flatt Community off Hwy. 350 and Hwy. 25. ■ Charity Christian Church, 1235 Hwy. 356, Rienzi, is celebrating its Homecoming on Sunday, Sept. 18, at 11 a.m. Lunch will be served af-
ter the morning worship service. The Lovelace Family will be singing after the meal.
Ordination service Central Grove M.B. Church, 274 CR 614, Kossuth is having an Ordination Service for its associate minister, Kevin L. Crane. Ordination will take place on Sunday, Sept. 18, at 3 p.m. The guests will be Pastor Robert W. Garrison of McIntyre M.B. Church in Holly Springs accompanied by his church family.
Bible study Hungry Hearts Church, 408 Hwy. 72 W., Corinth, (across from Gateway Tire), is having a bible study every Wednesday from 6:30-8:30 p.m. The subject is “U.S., Great Britain and Bible Prophecy.” For more information, call 287-0277.
B.O.M. Ministries B.O.M. Ministries (Bikers, Outcasts and Misfits), Crossroads Baptist Church, 1020 CR 400, Corinth, is meeting the second Saturday of each month at 5 p.m. The ministries was created to serve the needs of those who don’t feel comfortable in a conventional church. B.O.M. Ministries is non-denominational. Everyone is welcome to attend and to come as they are. A banner is placed on the building for easy identification. For more information, call Chris Grimes, 662415-6987.
Men’s Day Program St. Mark Baptist Church will be having their Annual Men’s Day Program 4th Sunday, Sept. 25, at 3 p.m. Brown Baptist Church (Southaven) along with Pastor Bartholomew Orr and Brown Baptist Male Choir returning for the third year.
Please elect Jesus Christ as your personal savior BY STEVE BEAVERS sbeavers@dailycorinthian.com
There are political signs everywhere. One can’t drive a mile down the road without seeing a sign promoting a candidate. Signs of all colors and shapes are placed along the highway and overpasses. The number of signs has somewhat dwindled as the election year has progressed. But one sign that should remain up all year long isn’t even put out by a candidate. West Corinth Baptist Church has produced a sign that all of us need to get behind. I’m not talking about just in November. The church sign I saw was placed at the entrance of Alcorn Central High School. It had the patriotic colors of red, white and blue. It supported the perfect candidate -- one of high morals and without faults. One that will be there through the good times and periods of struggle. The right man at the right time. His name — Jesus Christ. That’s right. West Corinth is making a statement. We all need the Lord. Their sign — “Elect Jesus Christ Lord of Your Life” — makes the rest of those signs a lot less important. Nothing against any of the candidates, but all of us have certain faults. Everything they set out to do if put in office, won’t get done. It’s just the way
things are in life. It’s not that way with Jesus. He paid a price none of us could ever replay — He gave his life for us. No other candidate in the world has ever done that. Since I’m not eligible to vote in Alcorn County, I hope someone from West Corinth reads this and gets me one of those signs. Hey, I will even take a button if they have one. See, I fall way short when it comes to processing Jesus as my Savior. I can wear the apparel of my favorite team, but when it comes to letting others see Jesus through how I live, it’s most of the time a failed campaign. I need to take up my cross and hit the campaign trail. Whither it be at work or just out doing something, I should let others see the difference Jesus has made in my life. I’m pointing the finger right at the man in the mirror -- he is the one who needs it most. Voters will go to the polls again on Nov. 8. But one doesn’t have to wait until then to make the most important decision in their life. The bible says in 2 Corinthians 6:2 — behold, now is the day is salvation. When you vote Jesus, it’s more than a four-year term. His term lasts forever when one chooses Him. Don’t forget — Vote Jesus! (Steve Beavers is a staff writer for the Daily Corinthian.)
Crossroads
3B â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
Friday, September 9, 2011
Brown becomes president of academy
Locks of Love
Submitted
Makalyn Grace Powers donated 15 inches of her hair to Locks of Love to help disadvantaged children suffering from medical hair loss. Stylist Zina Varnado of Angieâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Salon in Corinth cut her hair. Makalyn, age 9, is in the fourth grade at Iuka Elementary. Her parents are Rick and Brandy Powers. Locks of Love is a public non-profit organization that provides hairpieces to financially disadvantaged children in the United States and Canada under age 21 suffering from long-term medical hair loss from any diagnosis.
(This information was prepared by Mrs. Vivian Skinner of Iuka on July 20, 1940 for the WPA Mississippi Writerâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Project. This original paper is on file at the Tishomingo County Archives & History Museum. Mrs. Skinner interviewed Prof. Brown on June 19, 1940. This item was transcribed exactly as it was written by RaNae S. Vaughn, Aug. 8, 2011.) J. E. Brown, Blue Mountain, Mississippi, was born August 20, 1866, in Tishomingo County, five miles north of Iuka, Mississippi. He attended the common schools and was a graduate of the Iuka Normal Institute, Tishomingo County, Mississippi. He was one of five men whom graduated at Blue Mountain, Miss., the year of 1930, at the age of 63. He said he was a modern teacher and was abreast of the times. He was married to Miss Addie Lorena Garrow, Liberty, Miss., August 29, 1897. To this union was born three children, two girls and one
boy. Annie, Mrs. Malott, her husband, Mr. Henry Malott, was a nephew of General Grant. She now resides at Meridian, Miss. Natalie, Mrs. Wyatt Watson, Blue Mountain, Miss. Her RaNae S. h u s b a n d , Wyatt Vaughn Mr. Watson, Historcally having deSpeaking parted this life some years ago. Mrs. Natalie Watson, manager or secretary for her father J. E. Brown. The only son, John Edd, Jr., 126 Terrace Drive N.E., Atlanta, Georgia. He is a surgeon. He graduated at Ole Miss and New Orleans, La., and married a Miss Rhodes of Trenton, Tenn. They have one child, a daughter age 14, the only grandchild of President J. E. Brown. President Brown, after having taught school in Tishomingo County went to Jasper County and taught school at Pleasant Hill High
School 1886, to Webster County 1889-90, to Iuka and taught with Professor Dean 1895, to Gloster, Miss., was Supt. of City School two years 1899, to New Albany, Miss., taught there up to 1904, and in the spring of 1904, the citizens of Blue Mountain organized a school company and equipped a school plant and placed it, as well as the management of the school, in the efficient hands of Prof. J. E. Brown, who has had 50 years of successful experience in the training of young men. The school has been under the same management since it was founded; and its success has been due to the energy, intelligence and business administration of its president and his wife. â&#x20AC;&#x153;Mississippi Heights Academyâ&#x20AC;? which is a private institution and is self-sustaining. Its course of study has met the standards required by the colleges and universities of our own State and of other States. The school is an accred-
ited high school, according to the State Department of Education. Prof. Brown is very active, and enjoys his work very much. Great good has been and is being accomplished through his work not only for the state of Mississippi, but other states as well. Supplement to J. E. Brown Prof. J. E. Brown was the son of John B. Brown, who came from Anderson, S.C., 1840, at the age of 12, to Tishomingo County. His mother was Elizabeth (Akers) Brown, born in Tishomingo County, Mississippi. Grandparents were maternal Jack Akers and Miss Sarah Castleberry before her marriage to Jack Akers. Paternal Robert C. Brown and Miss Emily ay before her marriage to Robert C. Brown. (RaNae Vaughn is board member and in charge of marketing and publications for the Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society, P.O. Box 203, Iuka, MS 38852.)
Dinner disaster makes office party planner want to disappear DEAR ABBY: I am a confident, well-established administrative professional who has worked with an executive team most of my career. I organized a very large company party and, because my regular caterer didnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t specialize in the kind of barbecue that was needed, I took a chance on an unknown one. I had never used this caterer, but went on the recommendation of three colleagues I trust. In the end, it was the most humiliating disaster Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;ve ever experienced. Not only was there not enough food, but it was presented
in a sloppy, unprofessional manner. No beverages arrived, so we had to do without them for the event. I have never had Dear a n y t h i n g this Abby like happen beand Abigail fore, van Buren the responsibility was mine. It was embarrassing for me and the people I work with. I couldnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t even show my face. I stayed in the background trying to fix things as best I could.
I canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t seem to get past this. I feel like a failure. I am seriously thinking of applying for a job at another company so I can put it all behind me. I had red flags along the way, but ignored them because I trusted the individuals who recommended the caterer. What are your thoughts? â&#x20AC;&#x201D; WISH Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;D GONE WITH MY GUT DEAR WISH: Youâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re a perfectionist, and I respect that. But before you punish yourself by throwing away a perfectly good career with your current company over one regrettable screwup, please consider that NO-
BODY bats 1000. Yes, what happened was regrettable, but itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s in the past. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s possible that the recommended caterer was also having a bad day. If you need absolution, discuss this with your employer. You have learned your lesson. Now let it go. DEAR ABBY: Iâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;m four months pregnant with our second child and dreading the birth because of my fianceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s parents. After the birth of our first child, I asked â&#x20AC;&#x153;Cliffâ&#x20AC;? to allow me two weeks without overnight visitors so I could settle in with the new baby. That following weekend
his parents called and said, â&#x20AC;&#x153;Weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re coming, and weâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;re staying with you guys!â&#x20AC;? My mom and Cliff were the only ones in the delivery room, and thatâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s how I wanted it. I want it that way again this time. Cliffâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mom had made it clear her feelings were hurt because she wasnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t â&#x20AC;&#x153;being invited in.â&#x20AC;? Because my son will be less than 2 years old when the new baby comes, my mom will be taking vacation time to come and help me out. Is it wrong of me to tell Cliffâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s parents they canâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t come and stay that soon after the birth of the new one? Cliff and his dad
act like long-lost frat guys when they see each other, and I find it irresponsible, childish and a sore spot in our relationship. â&#x20AC;&#x201D; PREGNANT WITH APPREHENSION DEAR PREGNANT: Your problem isnâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;t your fianceâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s parents. Itâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s his inability to act like a mature adult. When his parents announced they were coming, he should have put a stop to it then and there. Because he seems unwilling to speak up, YOU must assume that responsibility, unless you want a repeat of the â&#x20AC;&#x153;open houseâ&#x20AC;? party that happened the last time.
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4B • Friday, September 9, 2011 • Daily Corinthian
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(N) (Live) Peters ish family on the eve of WWII. (6:15) } › Our Family Mel Brooks and Dick } ›› Dinner for Schmucks (10, Comedy) Steve May} Avatar Cavett weather Wedding Carell, Paul Rudd. (09) Jersey Shore Jersey Shore } › Billy Madison (95) Adam Sandler. Ridic. Ridic. (6:00) College Football: Florida International at College College Football: Missouri at Arizona State. (N) (Live) Louisville. (N) (Live) Football Gangland “You Rat, UFC Unleashed (:10) UFC Unleashed (:20) UFC Unleashed } Man on You Die” Fire NCIS A friend of Gibbs’ NCIS “Stakeout” CSI: Crime Scene Inves- CSI: Crime Scene Inves- Law & Order: Special daughter. tigation tigation Victims Unit The Penguins Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Man, Woman, Wild “Lost Man, Woman, Wild (N) One Man Army “Time Man, Woman, Wild One Man Army “Time at Sea” Bomb” (N) Bomb” Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Storage Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Wars Boxing: Dyah Ali Davis vs. Francisco Sierra. From The New College Foot- High School Football: Hamilton (Ariz.) at Notre Maywood, Calif. ball Show Dame (Ariz.). (6:30) } ›› Barbershop } › The Perfect Holiday (07) Gabrielle Union. } Who’s Caddy Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Int’l Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City The Fashion Chelsea E! News Chelsea Modern Marvels “Made 9/11: The Days After (N) (:28) Super City: New York (:01) Modern Marvels in the USA” NASCAR Racing Baseball Tonight SportsCenter (N) Baseball Tonight Say Yes: Say Yes: Say Yes: Say Yes: Four Weddings (N) Say Yes: Say Yes: Four Weddings ATL ATL ATL ATL ATL ATL Dina’s Diners, Diners, Diners, Heat Seek- Sugar High Diners, Diners, Diners, Diners, Party Drive Drive Drive ers (N) Drive Drive Drive Drive The Waltons The Waltons Today J. Meyer Human Human Wind at My Back Reba Reba Reba Reba Roseanne’s Roseanne’s Against the Wall Reba Reba Behind Lindsey First Praise Praise the Lord Increas First } ›› King Arthur (04) Clive Owen. Arthur and his knights em- } ›› King Arthur (04) Clive Owen. Arthur and his knights embark on a rescue mission. bark on a rescue mission. America’s Funniest America’s Funniest America’s Funniest The 700 Club (N) Whose Whose Home Videos Home Videos Home Videos Line? Line? } ››› I’ll See You in My Dreams (51) Doris Day, } ››› The Jazz Singer (53, Musical) Danny } ›› Big City Margaret Danny Thomas. Thomas, Peggy Lee. O’Brien. } ››› Hitch (05) A smooth-talker helps a shy ac- (:15) } ››› Hitch (05) Will Smith. A smooth-talker helps a shy } Legend countant woo an heiress. accountant woo an heiress. Family Guy Family Guy } ›› What Women Want (00) A chauvinistic ad executive can (:40) } ›› What Women Want (00) suddenly read women’s minds. Mel Gibson. Be a Millionaire Deal or No Deal FamFeud FamFeud Newly Baggage Drew FamFeud Star Thundr. King-Hill King-Hill American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua M*A*S*H M*A*S*H } ››› The Matrix (99) Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne. Nanny Nanny Trucker Trucker Trucker Trucker Trackside At... (N) SP Cen The Grid Formula 1 Debrief How I Met How I Met } ›› The Proposal (09) Sandra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds. A woman pretends Rescue Me “Ashes” to be engaged to evade deportation. Bassmasters Span. Fly Bill Fishing Fishing Spear Extreme Hunting Bone Elk Fe Buck Gun It Whitetail Bucks Tred Elk Fe Buck Gun It Whitetail Dr. Phil Dr. Phil Dr. Phil Dr. Phil Dr. Phil The O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) 9/11: Timeline The O’Reilly Factor Hannity Tanked “Be Cool” Tanked (N) Rat Busters NYC Tanked Rat Busters NYC Little House on the Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Golden Golden Prairie Girls Girls Phineas So RanMy Baby- GoodWizardsWizardsPhineas A.N.T. Farm (6:15) } ››› Up and Ferb dom! sitter Charlie Place Place and Ferb Voices of Ed Asner. WWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Haven “Lockdown” (N) Paranormal Witness Haven “Lockdown”
FOR BETTER OR WORSE
MOTHER GOOSE & GRIMM
BLONDIE
Lynn Johnston
Mike Peters
Dean Young & Stan Drake
Horoscopes Friday, Sept. 9 By Holiday Mathis
SNUFFY SMITH
Fred Lasswell
Creators Syndicate
ARIES (March 21-April 19). Check your drawers, closets, garage, barn, shed and attic to find usable and reusable possessions. You’ll find items to give away and items to make you smile and reminisce. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Someone will try to use an old catalyst to elicit a reaction from you. Little does this person know how much you have grown. You will be impervious to this person’s emotional stimuli. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll lend your wit to a conversation and win both approval and disapproval. Those who disapprove are clearly jealous. And those who approve may fall in love with you. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You have been delivering a consistent performance, giving a high level of support to those who depend on you and doing an overall commendable job. Therefore, you deserve the respect that’s coming to you. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). If you are angry, use it to embolden your mission. Your audacity will separate you from the herd. Your force will be a wakeup call to others. The element of surprise will work in your favor. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll benefit from subtle self-promotion. In your charming way, you’ll keep others informed of who you are, what you do and what you want and need in order to make your dream happen. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Do not be afraid to accept help -- the more someone helps you the greater his or her investment will be in your relationship. Relationships become bonded in this kind of sharing. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). As much as you try to avoid life’s potholes, there are some you can’t see until you land in them. When you hit one, it’s best to get back up immediately and keep marching on. The only way to lose is by giving up. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). One way to change your destiny is to change the cast of characters around you. You’ll thrive among people who can understand, challenge and contribute to your interests. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). While someone else tries to persuade, cajole and manipulate people for status, you’ll show your social brilliance by taking a different approach. You’ll win friends with a smile and a listening ear. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Speak up, even if you know very little about the people or topic at hand. You may stumble clumsily into a conversation, but you express yourself from a pure place in your heart, and others will feel this and accept you. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll dream boldly and differently. You’ll ask for what you really want, instead of asking for what you think you should want. Your wishes may not be granted, but this kind of asking will make you stand out and be admired.
BABY BLUES
GARFIELD
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott
Jim Davis
Chris Browne
Today in History 1776 - The Second Continental Congress changed the name of the nation to the United States of America, from the United Colonies. 1850 - California became the 31st state. 1926 - The National Broadcasting Company (NBC) was created by the Radio Corporation of America. 1948 - The People’s Democratic Republic of Korea (North Korea) was created. 1956 - Elvis Presley appeared on television for the first time on The Ed Sullivan Show. 1976 - Communist Chinese leader Mao Zedong died in Beijing at age 82.
BEETLE BAILEY
Mort Walker
CLASSIFIEDS Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 9, 2011 • 5B
DAILY CORINTHIAN
BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE
In The Daily Corinthian And The Reporter
RUN YOUR AD FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH ON THIS PAGE (Daily Corinthian Only 165) $
THAULING/BACKHOE
AGREED DIVORCE
ALEX
WAMSLEY Hauling &
$399 + FILING FEE
286-9411
40 Years
60 CR 620
PAMPERED PET CARE, LLC 2004 Hwy 72 E. Annex
(across from Lake Hill Motors)
662-287-3750
Providing personalized pet boarding and grooming. 20 years experience Owner: Tanya Watson
Two like new homes in the Alcorn Central School District! 341 CR 306 3 BR, 2 BA, 2.050 sq. ft., $134,900 3 CR 329 B 3 BR, 2 BA, 1600 sq. ft., 24x36 shop. $149,900 For more information call Bailey Williams Realty at 662-286-2255 or visit www.corinthhomes.com
Phone: 662-287-6510 Cell: 662-415-3896
662-286-2255
HOUSE FOR SALE
PET CARE
•Fill Sand • Top Soil •Gravel • Crushed Stone •Licensed Septic Service • Septic Repairs • Foundations •Site Preparation
Come check out our downtown location on Cass Street!!! One bedroom one bath apartments with furnished kitchens, private balconies and hardwood floors. Coin operated laundry on site. Its definitely an apartment that you will be able to call HOME!! To view our apartments and find out about great rental deals going on right now, call April at
3110 heated sq. ft., 3 BR, 3 full BA w/4th full bath in garage. Newly remodeled master bath, laundry room, gas fireplace w/built-ins, 24x24 metal shop w/roll-up door & 24x14 side shed. All appliances included. On 2 acres. In Kossuth School district. By appt. $225,000. 662-415-5973 or 662-587-0055
HOUSES FOR SALE
Backhoe Service
Looking for somewhere to call HOME?
HOME REPAIRS
• Carports • Vinyl Siding • Room Additions • Shingles & Metal Roofing • Concrete Drives • Interior & Exterior Painting FREE ESTIMATES 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE FULLY INSURED 731-689-4319 JIMMY NEWTON
JIMCO ROOFING.
SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BID ALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY
$1,000,000 LIABILITY INSURANCE
• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975 • 30 YEAR UP TO LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/ TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY (NO SECONDS) • METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE, SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS & DO CARPENTRY WORK
662-665-1133 662-286-8257
JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER
CHIROPRACTOR
Dr. Jonathan R. Cooksey Neck Pain • Back Pain Disc Problems Spinal Decompression Therapy Most Insurance Accepted Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5 3334 N. Polk Street Corinth, MS 38834 (662) 286-9950
STORM SHELTERS
FAIN STORM SHELTERS
HALE EDUCATIONAL & LEARNING PROGRAMS (H.E.L.P.) EDUCATION CONSULTING AND TUTORING
Concrete Storm Shelters, Underground, Hillside, and Above Ground
Free Initial Consultation Affordable, Convenient, Professional
• TUTORING (ALL SUBJECT AREAS) • SOCIAL SKILLS • IMPULSE CONTROL • DYSLEXIA • ADHD • AUTISM
Starting Starting at @ $3095.00 $2795.00Installed. installed.
MS us Licensed Contractor Call to find out how you 75% or receive meet Allcan shelters Federal on exceedReimbursement FEMA specs. your storm shelter Call 1-888-527-7700 1-888-527-7700.
Shana Hale Masters of Education Educational Specialist
662-643-9908 www.spedhelponline.com
AUTO SALES ALES
See Lynn Parvin Lynn Parvin General Sales Manager
JONES GM 545 Florence Road, Savannah, TN 731-925-4923 or 1-877-492-8305 www.jonesmotorcompany.com
FOR LEASE
Office space downtown at The Belhaven. Approx. 2000 sq. ft. Furnished reception area, 1 executive office, 2 other offices, conference room. Lease includes utilities.
For more info call
662-665-7904
CALL NOW!
287-6147 To place your ad in THE DAILY CORINTHIAN & THE REPORTER
6B • Friday, September 9, 2011 • Daily Corinthian
The Daily Corinthian Net Edition is now better than ever! Updated nightly with local news, sports and obituaries.
GUARANTEED Auto Sales 401 902 FARM EQUIP. AUTOMOBILES
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
FOR SALE
1979 FORD LTD II SPORT LANDAU
Exc. cond. inside & out. Mechanically sound cond. Leather seats, only 98,000 mi reg.
$7500 731-934-4434
902 AUTOMOBILES
’09 Hyundai Accent
2nd owner, 4 cyl., under 30,000 mi., 36 mpg, looking for payoff.
731-610-7241
906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today! REDUCED
35TH EDITION SERIES MUSTANG
96 FORD 555D BACKHOE,
$17,000 286-6702
520 BOATS & MARINE
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
CONVERTIBLE, like new, asking
$8,000 OR WILL TRADE for Dodge reg. size nice pickup.
731-438-2001
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
FOR SALE 1961 CHEV.
1980 25’ Bayliner Sunbridge Cabin Cruiser A/C, frig., microwave, sink, commode, full bed midship & full bed forward in V berth, inboard/outboard, 228 HP V8 gas engine, fiberglass hull, 25’ EZ loader trailer w/dual axles & hydraulic brakes, needs minor repair.
$3500 obo 286-1717
2 dr. hardtop (bubble top), sound body, runs.
$10,000
Days only, 662-415-3408.
2010 BUICK LUCERNE CXL Loaded, 20,000 miles, burgundy,
$17,700.
662-603-1290 or 662-603-3215
2006 NISSAN MAXIMA black, CD player, A/C, gray int., 150,000 miles, loaded.
$13,500
662-808-1978 or 662-643-3600
2000 DODGE DAKOTA SLT
factory sunroof, all electric, automatic, extra clean, garage kept
$5,650
or will trade for anything of equal value
287-1834, Phil
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Here’s How It Works: Your ad will be composed 1 column wide and 2 inches deep. The ad will run each day in the Daily Corinthian until your vehicle sells. Ad must include photo, description, and price. You provide the photo. Certain restrictions apply. 1. No dealers. 2. Non-commercial only 3. Must pay in advance. No exceptions. 4. Single item only. 5. Categories included are auto, motorcycle, tractor. boat, RV and ATV 6. After every 30 DAYS, advertised price of listing needs to be reduced. 7. NO REFUNDS for any reason 8. NON-TRANSFERABLE. Call 287-6147 to place your ad!
906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S
906 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S
908 910 910 RECREATIONAL MOTORCYCLES/ MOTORCYCLES/ VEHICLES ATV’S ATV’S
2006 GMC YUKON Exc. cond. inside & out, 106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front & rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded
1991 Ford Econoline Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one owner, serious interest. $7000. 287-5206.
2008 Jayco Eagle 5th Wheel 38’, 4 slides, exc. cond., $28,000 firm. Trailer located in Counce, TN. 425-503-5467
$14,900
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
black, quadra steer (4-wheel steering), LT, 80k miles, loaded, leather, tow package, ext. cab.
2005 MERCURY MOUNTAINEER 83,000 mi., leather interior, 3rd row seating, asking
$10,000
Info call 731-610-6879 or 731-610-6883
908 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
26’ Dutchmen Aristocrat Extra clean, $4,200.
2001 F150 $6,000.
731-645-2158 (C) 731-645-6872
$13,000 OBO. 662-415-9007.
2000 DODGE RAM 1500 EXT. CAB
’96 Winnebago
$3,950 662-396-1248 or 662-415-8027
$17,000. 287-8937 or 415-7265
2-dr., one owner, 135,000 miles, runs great, looks good, black & silver, new tires, new battery
gas, 2 TVs, 3 beds, stereo(3), A/C, stove, frig., couch, recliner, 52,000 miles.
2008 SUZUKI FORENZA
75,000 miles, 4 cy, auto, CD/MP3 player, great gas mileage.
$5,350. 662-665-1995 Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
‘06 MALIBU LT,
v-6 eng., under 72k miles, burgundy, keyless entry, remote start, manual lumbar, auto. headlamp sys., sunroof, anti lock brakes, traction control sys., in exc. cond., sell price
$8499
462-8274
26’ DUTCHMEN ARISTOCRAT
Extra clean. $4,200.
F150
$6,000. 731-645-2158 or 731-645-6872
910 MOTORCYCLES/ ATV’S
Buy car, get wheel chair free. $2200 Call 287-1683
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
1999 CHEROKEE SPORT 4X4, 6 cyl., all works good except for A/C
$4000. 662-665-1143.
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
2008 GMC Yukon Denali XL
2005 NISSAN QUEST charcoal gray, 103k miles, seats 7, $10,000 OBO 662-603-5964
2007 DODGE RAM 4X4 HEMI, black, gray
FOR SALE:
731-422-4655
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
1996 Ford F-150
2005 RED DODGE 1500 RAM
1961 STUDEBAKER PICKUP $2850 OBO
170,000 mi., reg. cab, red & white (2-tone).
loaded with all options, too many to list, 108,000 miles, asking
$2500 obo
662-415-9202
662-423-8702
$25,900 firm.
leather int., 78k miles
$16,500
662-603-7944
Hemi-V8 w/ matching Leer topper, 46k miles, leather interior, PDL, PW, CD, Cruise.TN rebuilt title
$7,800 o.b.o. Info. Call: 731-645-4928 OR 731-610-5086.
2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT
30 ft., with slide out & built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.
$75,000. 662-287-7734
REDUCED
2007 Franklin pull camper, 36’, lots of space, 2 A/C units, 2 slide outs, 2 doors, shower & tub, 20’ awning, full kitchen, W&D, $13,000.
662-415-7063 662-415-8549
‘03 HARLEY DAVIDSON HERITAGE SOFTTAIL (ANNIVERSARY MODEL)
exc. cond., dealership maintained.
$10,900
662-462-7158 home or 731-607-6699 cell
2003 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC looks & rides real good!
$3000
2005 Honda Shadow Spirit 750
8,400 miles with LOTS of chrome and extras
$3,500 OBO Call Jonathan at
WITH 13 FT. SLIDE,
very clean and lots of extras,
$10,500
. Call 662-315-6261 for more info.
2-DR., $2000
White, used for 12-15 hrs., bought brand new
1979 CHEVY 1 TON DUMP TRUCK, $3500 J.C. HARRIS 700 TRENCHER,
662-279-2123
Call 662-423-6872 or 662-660-3433
2006 YAMAHA FZI 3k miles, adult owned, corbin seat, selling due to health reasons, original owner.
2001 HONDA REBEL 250
$3,000
$4000.
$5200 286-6103
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
WITH EXTRAS, BLUE, LESS THAN 1500 MILES,
$1850
662-287-2659
For Sale: ‘04 Kawasaki Vulcan Classic 1500 8,900 miles, 45 m.p.g. Red & Black
$5,500 Call: 662-423-5257 after 5:00 pm
REDUCED
2007 Yamaha R6 6,734 Miles
$5,000
’04 HONDA SHADOW 750 $
3900
662-287-2891 662-603-4407
662-664-2754
VW TRIKE $4,000 VET TRIKE $6,000
All for Sale OBO
Call 662-808-2474, 662-415-2788 or 662-284-0923 REDUCED
32’ HOLIDAY RAMBLER TRAVEL TRAILER
2009 YAMAHA 250YZF
1980 HONDA 750-FRONT (TRI) 4-CYC. VOLKSWAGON MTR., GOOD TIRES, $8500. 1993 CHEVY LUMINA,
REDUCED
462-3707
902 AUTOMOBILES
1989 SIGNATURE LINCOLN TOWN CAR
'97 HONDA GOLD WING, 1500 6 cylinder miles, 3003 Voyager kit. 662-287-8949
REDUCED
REDUCED
'03 CHEVY SILVERADO,
3010 Model #KAF650E, 1854 hrs., bench seat, tilt bed, 4 WD & windshield, well maintained. Great for farm or hunting. $6500.
731-212-9659 731-212-9661.
662-286-1732
Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV, & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD Call 287-6147 today!
2004 KAWASAKI MULE
2000 Custom Harley Davidson Mtr. & Trans., New Tires, Must See
$10,500 $12,000
662-415-8623 or 287-8894
2006 YAMAHA 650 V-STAR CUSTOM Blue/silver, 2000 miles, like new, lots of chrome, garage kept,
2003 Honda 300 EX 2007 black plastics & after market parts.
(will trade).
$2,500 462-5379
2009 Hyundai Accent
1995 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER 1200
$3,500 o.b.o. 662-808-8808
Looking for payoff. 2nd owner, 4 cyl, under 30,000 mi, 36 mpg.
(731) 610-7241
Screaming Eagle exhaust, only 7K miles, like new,
$5,000 662-415-8135
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS When Placing Ads 1. Make sure your ad reads the way you want it! Make sure our Ad Consultants reads the ad back to you. 2. Make sure your ad is in the proper classification. 3. After our deadline, the ad cannot be corrected, changed or stopped until the next day. 4. Check your ad the 1st day for errors. If error has been made, we will be happy to correct it, but you must call before deadline to get that done for the next day. Please call 662-287-6147 if you cannot find your ad or need to make changes!
Garage/Estate 0151 Sales
3-FAM. SALE. Kids/adult clths, furn., toys, h/h items, much more. Fri., Sat., Sun. 7:30 'til. 808 Blasingame St.
fice of Alcorn County, Mississippi, and run thence South 58 degrees 11 minutes East Legals 0955feet; 72.9 thence run South Vans for Sale 0244 Trucking 0860 REAL ESTATE FOR RENT 166 feet; thence run West '10 WHITE 15-pass. van, 3 130 feet; thence run North AAA SEPTIC, truck to choose f r o m . 18 degrees 37 minutes 20 Unfurnished 1-800-898-0290 o r seconds East 215 feet to the driver, PT, may turn into 0610 point of beginning. Being a Apartments 728-5381. FT, CDL required. part of the Southeast Quarter 2 BR apt. for rent. 662-286-6100. of Section 12, Township 2 462-7641 or 293-0083. Trucks for South, Range 7 East. 0864
PETS
0320 Cats/Dogs/Pets
Sale
2 BR, 1 BA, all appl. furn., gas & water incl. $650 '05 GMC Crew Cab LTR, LESS AND EXCEPT the fol38k, #1419. $16,900. lowing described property: mo. 287-1903. CANE CREEK Apts., Hwy 72W & CR 735, 2 BR, 1 BA, stove & refrig., W&D hookup, Kossuth & City Sch. Dist. $400 mo. 287-0105.
(1) FREE MAMA CAT & 8 KITTENS to a good home. Mama is 1 1/2 yrs. old, has had 2 litters, good mouser, black/gray striped, kittens black/gray striped. Appx. 6 wks. old. Call MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR, 662-415-6954 o r stove, refrig., water. 415-4893. $365. 286-2256.
1 FEM. Chihuahua, 7 E. BROOKE APTS., 2 BR, 1 wks, $150; Bobtail Feist, BA, D/W, icemaker, 850 6 wks, $50 ea. 287-6664.
sq. ft. 287-8219.
FARM MERCHANDISE
Musical 0512 Merchandise
FOR RENT: 2BR, 1BA, stove/refrig/water furn, W&D hookups, Central Sch. Rd. $400 mo., $400 dep. 662-808-1144 or 808-1694.
Homes for 0620 Rent
BIG SALE. Corner of CR 1975 WURLITZER Organ, 217 off Farmington Rd. mint cond., beautiful, 1319 $250. 703-625-3175. Thurs., Fri., Sat.
BRECKENRIDGE, 2BR, 1BA, $300. 286-2194 FRI & Sat. - 174 CR 157. BRASS TROMBONE with or 808-0909.
Clths (youth-plus), furn, case, Bach USA, $75. PS2 games, baseball 731-610-0441. 2 BR, 1 BA, $335 mo. + cards, jackets, misc. dep. 1424 Foote.
FRI & Sat: 1712 Pinecrest, clths, bikes, mtrcycle jackets, helmet, boots, 03 Ford Ranger, hampsters, etc.
0518 Electronics
150 WATT Peavy Escort portable sound system, great for parties, dances or any outdoor events. Speaker stands included. $350. HUGE ESTATE SALE. Fri. & 662-415-4837. Sat. 7-4. 2111 Walnut Dr. off N. Madison past Sports Plex, turn on 0533 Furniture Peachtree, on corner. (2) MATCHING green reHUGE YARD SALES. 11 & cliners, $60 for both. 15 CR 125 (on Kendrick 662-665-5198. Rd., turn into subd. on CR 126) Sat. Furn., TV, COUCH & LOVESEAT, tools, outdoor ceiling hunter green, w/safari fans, heaters, cookware, p i l l o w s , $150. law mower, fishing 662-603-5277. rods, jr. size clths, vacs, FOR SALE: Solid Oak dinstuffed animals. ing room table with 6 LITTLE KIDS, + size wms, chairs and leaf, $400. men's clothes, horse Call 462-4229 b/f 9 pm. trailer & equip. Fri. & Wanted to Sat. 28 CR 102 (Box 0554 Rent/Buy/Trade Chapel Rd.)
SALE. SAT., 8am. 1800 S. Johns around back. Duncan Fife DR table, server, glass, dishes, sm. appl., pictures.
SAT. 6AM-12, boys 5-7, baby girls 12mths-2T, girls 6-8, toys. 125 CR 305 (Oak Forrest Estates).
SAT. 9/11 - 32 CR 271 (off Central Sch. Rd) boy/girls clths, toys, lots of stuff!
YARD SALE. 4287 CR 200. Baby clothes, furniture, odds & ends. Fri. & Sat., 6-2.
YARD SALE: Sat only, 8-til. 3 families, lots of stuff! East end of Waldron St.
YARD SALE SPECIAL ANY 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS Ad must run prior to or day of sale! (Deadline is 3 p.m. Mon.-Fri. before ad is to run!) 5 LINES (Apprx. 20 Words) $19.10 (Does not include commercial business sales) ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID We accept credit or debit cards Call Classified at (662) 287-6147
0180 Instruction
ATTEND COLLEGE ONLINE from Home. Medical, Business, Paralegal, AlliedHealth, Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 888-210-5162. www.Centura.us.com
0232 General Help
CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true”, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better Business Bureau at 1-800-987-8280.
0244 Trucking NOW HIRING! Are you making less than $40,000 per year? SCHNEIDER NATIONAL Needs Driver Trainees Now! No Experience Required. Immediate Job Placement Assistance OTR & Regional Jobs CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMATION. 1-888-540-7364
287-6141 or 603-3891.
3 BR, 1 BA, C/H/A, Rockhill Rd. 662-396-1698. 3BR, 2BA, Brockhill Community, $600/mo, $500/dep. 662-415-8101.
Mobile Homes 0675 for Rent 1 BR duplex apt & 3 BR trailer. Strickland Com. 286-2099 or 808-2474. 2 BR, 1 1/2 BA, stove, refrig., W&D, $450 mo. + dep. 662-415-0251. 2 BR, 1 BA, appl. furn, located in front of airport. 662-415-9111. 3 BR, 2 BA, LR, kit., util.
1-800-898-0290 728-5381.
o r Commencing at the intersection of the West line of the East one-half of Section 12, '08 DODGE RAM 1500, Township 2 South, Range 7 4x4, crew cab, red, East, Alcorn County, Missis$23,400. 1-800-898-0290 sippi, with the South right-of-way line of U.S. Highor 728-5381. way #72; thence run South 58 '93 FORD Ranger, 87K degrees 11 minutes East along miles, good cond., new said right-of-way line 1369.05 tires, $ 3 0 0 0 . feet to the Northeast corner of said Lot #1 of Mercier 662-287-0243. Eastview Subdivision of the City of Corinth, Alcorn 0232 General 0868 Cars for Sale County, Mississippi,Help and the point of beginning; thence '08 CHEVY HHR LT, ltr, continue along said highway moon roof, 33k, $11,900. right-of-way line South 58 de1-800-898-0290 or grees 11 minutes East 200 728-5381. feet to the West right-of-way line of Johns Street; thence run South 0 degrees 28 minFINANCIAL utes 30 seconds West along said West right-of-way line 160 feet; thence run North LEGALS 62 degrees 36 minutes 55 seconds West 247.44 feet; thence run North 18 degrees 37 minutes 20 seconds East 0955 Legals 160 feet to the point of beginning, containing 0.76 acres, STATE OF MISSISSIPPI more or less. COUNTY OF ALCORN
LESS AND EXCEPT a perpetual non-exclusive easement and right-of-way for the purpose of ingress and egress, WHEREAS, on December but not for parking, all over, 5, 2003, a deed of trust was upon and across the following executed by JIMMY GREENE described land: and wife, TERESA GREENE, as Grantors to Carl. L. Gor- A strip of land 7 &frac12; feet day, Trustee for AmSouth on each side of the following Bank (predecessor-in-interest described line: Commencing to First American National at the intersection of the Bank) which deed of trust is West line of the East one-half recorded in the Office of the of Section 12, Township 2 Chancery Clerk of Alcorn South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Book County, Mississippi, with the 642 at page 462 of said re- South right-of-way line of U.S. cords; Highway #72; thence run South 58 degrees 11 minutes WHEREAS, Christe’ Har- East along said right-of-way ris-Leech was appointed Sub- line 1569.05 feet to the West stitute Trustee for the right-of-way line of Johns above-referenced deed of Street; thence run South 0 trust by instrument dated degrees 28 minutes 30 secJune 20, 2011, and recorded onds West along said West on June 29, 2011, in Instruright-of-way line 139.59 feet ment Number 201102648 in to the point of beginning of the Office of the Chancery said Easement; thence run Clerk of Alcorn County, MisNorth 8 degrees 30 minutes sissippi; and 10 seconds West 56.22 feet WHEREAS, default having to the end of said easement. SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE
M&M. CASH for junk cars rm., stove, refrig., & trucks. We pick up. C/H/A. $550 mo., $450 662-415-5435 or d e p . 2 8 7 - 5 7 2 9 o r been made in the payment of 731-239-4114. the indebtedness secured by 286-1083. said deed of trust and the Misc. Items for 0563 Sale NICE 2BR, 2BA, Cent. holder of the note and deed Sch. Dist. stv/ref., CHA. of trust having requested the ANTIQUE SERVICE sta$425+dep. 662-512-8659. undersigned Substitute Trustion drive on ramp, 27 tee so to do, I will on the 3rd ft. long, 3 ft. high, $500. TAKING APPLICATIONS: 2 day of October, 2011, offer 287-3339 or 665-5318. for sale at public outcry and & 3 BR's. Oakdale Mobile sell during legal hours, beBABY ENTERTAINMENT Home Park. 286-9185. tween the hours of 11:00 a.m. center, used 2 months, and 4:00 p.m. at the South perfect cond., lots of REAL ESTATE FOR SALE front door of the Alcorn activities, retail $100, County Courthouse in Alcorn sell for $40 obo. County, Mississippi, for cash 662-212-3203. to the highest and best bidHomes for der, the following described FISHER PRICE Snug a 0710 property and land lying and Sale Bunny swing, the only being situated in Alcorn way to get one nicer 3 LG. BR's, 2 BA, den, County, Mississippi, being would be to buy it new! kitchen, eat-in combo, more particularly described as $95. 662-212-3203. follows, to wit: LR, $89,500. 286-5116. FOR SALE: Easy Flo high TRACT 1: Lots 1, 2 and 3 of HUD back child's car booster the Mercier Eastview Subdiviseat, asking $30. Call PUBLISHER’S sion in Section 12, Township 462-4229 before 9 pm. NOTICE 2, Range 7, according to the All real estate adverFOR SALE: over the toiplat or map of said subdivision tised herein is subject let elevated chair or on file in the office of the to the Federal Fair potty chair, $30. Call Chancery Clerk of Alcorn Housing Act which County, Mississippi. 462-4229 before 9 pm. FREE ADVERTISING. Advertise any item valued at $500 or less for free. The ads must be for private party or personal merchandise and will exclude pets & pet supplies, livestock (incl. chickens, ducks, cattle, goats, etc), garage sales, hay, firewood, & automobiles . To take advantage of this program, readers should simply email their ad to: freeads@dailycorinthian.com or mail the ad to Free Ads, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835. Please include your address for our records. Each ad may include only one item, the item must be priced in the ad and the price must be $500 or less. Ads may be up to approximately 20 words including the phone number and will run for five days.
makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, limitations or discrimination.
State laws forbid discrimination in the sale, rental, or advertising of real estate based on factors in addition to those protected under federal law. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
HAIR SALON, 12x16 bldg. w/all equipment, asking WORK IN CORINTH, LIVE $8,900. 287-7342. IN TN! 3 BR, 2 BA, paved
driveway, above ground
HOLIDAY BARBIE COL- pool, carport, storage LECTION. $100 each. bldg., 409 Ashley Rd., 662-286-6335. Eastview, Tn. Reduced
to $115,900. Larry Raines Realty, 731-645-7770 or Darlene Cagle, 731-610-6002 MEN'S MEZIAN shoes, LADIES STEEL toe boot, brown leather, size 10M, $25. 662-212-3203.
made in Spain, genuine crocodile, size 10, retail for $1100, asking $350. Must see. 662-212-3203.
0734 Lots & Acreage
lowing described property: Commencing at the intersection of the West line of the East one-half of Section 12, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, with the South right-of-way line of U.S. Highway #72; thence run South 58 degrees 11 minutes East along said right-of-way line 1369.05 feet to the Northeast corner of said Lot #1 of Mercier Eastview Subdivision of the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and the point of beginning; thence continue along said highway right-of-way line South 58 degrees 11 minutes East 200 feet to the West right-of-way line of Johns Street; thence run South 0 degrees 28 minutes 30 seconds West along said West right-of-way line 160 feet; thence run North 62 degrees 36 minutes 55 seconds West 247.44 feet; thence run North 18 degrees 37 minutes 20 seconds East 160 feet to the point of beginning, containing 0.76 acres, more or less.
0747
Subject to delinquent property taxes, if any, owed to Al- WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, corn County, Mississippi, or this the 30th day of August, any city, subdivision or mu- 2011. nicipality thereof.
Subject to any federal tax s/Christe' Harris-Leech to find a See www.dailycorinthian.com liens recorded prior to or CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH subsequent to the date of this Substitute Trustee job at the intersection of both. notice.
affirm posting a Notice of Christe’ Harris-Leech Wouldn’t youISalelike a same jobtimewhere you Trustee can build something, for the at the Substitute customary place of posting in P.O. Box 71 including a Alcorn better future? With Monster’s new filtering County, Mississippi, Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 that being the Alcorn County in on the job that’s right for tools, you can quickly hone Courthouse. PUBLISH: September 9, 16, Subject to anySo and visit all ease-www.dailycorinthian.com 23 and 30, 2011 and you might find you. ments, restrictions, covenants I will convey only such title as 13380 and mineral yourself reservations of in is vested in me as Substitute the middle of the best of both worlds. record. Trustee.
TRACT 2: Beginning at the Southwest corner of Lot 1 of Mercier Eastview Subdivision of the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, Subject to delinquent propaccording to the map or plat erty taxes, if any, owed to Alof said subdivision, recorded corn County, Mississippi, or in the Chancery Clerk’s Of- any city, subdivision or mufice of Alcorn County, Missis- nicipality thereof. sippi, and run thence South 58 degrees 11 minutes East Subject to any federal tax 72.9 feet; thence run South liens recorded prior to or 166 feet; thence run West subsequent to the date of this 130 feet; thence run NorthGeneral Help notice. 18 degrees 37 minutes 20 0232 seconds East 215 feet to the point of beginning. Being a I affirm posting a Notice of part of the Southeast Quarter Sale for the same time at the of Section 12, Township 2 customary place of posting in Alcorn County, Mississippi, South, Range 7 East. that being the Alcorn County LESS AND EXCEPT the fol- Courthouse.
WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 30th day of August, 2011. s/Christe' Harris-Leech CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH Substitute Trustee Christe’ Harris-Leech Substitute Trustee P.O. Box 71 Tupelo, MS 38802-0071
PUBLISH: September 9, 16, 23 and 30, 2011 I will convey only such title as 13380 is vested in me as Substitute Trustee. WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 30th day of August, 2011.
41 Henson Road
Corinthian, Inc. is currently accepting applications/resumes for the position of:
Accounts Receivable / Payable Clerk s/Christe' Harris-Leech CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH Substitute Trustee
Candidates for this position should possess:
Christe’ Harris-Leech Substitute Trustee P.O. Box 71 Tupelo, MS 38802-0071
• A high school diploma or equivalent • 2 to 3 yearsPUBLISH: of documented/verifi able related work experience September 9, 16, and 30, 2011 • Proficiency2313380 in Word, Excel and some knowledge of QuickBooks
If you meet the minimum qualification listed above and are interested in applying, you may apply: In person at Corinthian, Inc. Office of Human Resources between the hours of 7:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday OR Mail your resume using the address above to the attention of HR Manager. Resumes must be postmarked by 09/16/11. OR Fax to 662-287-9184
ORLANDO, FLORIDA, 1 LOTS FOR SALE on Shiloh wk., check in 23 Dec., Rd. in city. Starting at 2011, check out 30 Dec., $19,995. 731-689-5522. 2011. 2 BR, full kitchen, sleeps up to 6 people. Mobile Homes $1200. 12 mins/7.54 mi. for Sale to Disney World. 662-286-5696 or 4 BR, 2 BA home 662-212-4680. LESS AND EXCEPT a perpet$41,500 ual non-exclusive easement RIVAL CHOCOLATE FounOnly At Clayton and right-of-way for the purtain, used once, great Supercenter pose of ingress and egress, for weddings and parCorinth, MS but not for parking, all over, ties. Still in original box. upon and across the following 662-287-4600 $30 obo. 662-212-3203. described land: RIVAL SOFT serve ice Manufactured A strip of land 7 &frac12; feet cream maker, in original Homes for Sale on each side of the following box, never used. Retail described line: Commencing price $100, sell for $35 CLEARANCE SALE at the intersection of the obo. 662-212-3203. on Display Homes West line of the East one-half UNIK LEATHER motorcy- Double & Singlewides of Section 12, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn cle dog jacket, must available County, Mississippi, with the see, large, $20 obo. Large Selection South right-of-way line of U.S. 662-212-3203. WINDHAM HOMES Highway #72; thence run 287-6991 WII BOWLING Ball ConSouth 58 degrees 11 minutes troller, new in box, 3 Wii East along said right-of-way controller skins, Wii line 1569.05 feet to the West TRANSPORTATION pouch and cap for Wii right-of-way line of Johns fit. $25. 662-212-3203. Street; thence run South 0
0741
There is also conveyed hereby all of the interest of Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. in and to (a) the easement conveyed by the Trustees of the Mercier Land Trust to Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. by deed dated August 1, 1986, which has been recorded in the Chancery Clerk’s Office of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Deed Book 229 at Pages 351-352 and (b) Agreement entered into between the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio, The Kroger Co. and Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. dated March 20, 1987, which has been recorded in said records in Deed Book 236 at Pages 104-109 which documents are made a part hereof by reference thereto and the grantees assume the assets and obligations of Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. under the terms of said documents.
way #72; thence run South 58 160 feet to the point of begin- South 58 degrees 11 minutes degrees 11 minutes East along ning, containing 0.76 acres, East along9,said right-of-way Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 2011 • 7B said right-of-way line 1369.05 more or less. line 1569.05 feet to the West Legals 0955 0955 Legals feet to the Northeast corner 0955 Legals right-of-way line of Johns of said Lot #1 of Mercier LESS AND EXCEPT a perpet- Street; thence run South 0 Eastview Subdivision of the ual non-exclusive easement degrees 28 minutes 30 secCity of Corinth, Alcorn and right-of-way for the pur- onds West along said West County, Mississippi, and the pose of ingress and egress, right-of-way line 139.59 feet point of beginning; thence but not for parking, all over, to the point of beginning of continue along said highway upon and across the following said Easement; thence run right-of-way line South 58 de- described land: North 8 degrees 30 minutes grees 11 minutes East 200 10 seconds West 56.22 feet feet to the West right-of-way A strip of land 7 &frac12; feet to the end of said easement. line of Johns Street; thence on each side of the following run South 0 degrees 28 min- described line: Commencing There is also conveyed utes 30 seconds West along at the intersection of the hereby all of the interest of said West right-of-way line West line of the East one-half Ray King Building Mainte160 feet; thence run North of Section 12, Township 2 nance, Inc. in and to (a) the 62 degrees 36 minutes 55 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn easement conveyed by the seconds West 247.44 feet; County, Mississippi, with the Trustees of the Mercier Land thence run North 18 degrees South right-of-way line of U.S. Trust to Ray King Building 37 minutes 20 seconds East Highway #72; thence run Maintenance, Inc. by deed 160 feet to the point of begin- South 58 degrees 11 minutes dated August 1, 1986, which ning, containing 0.76 acres, East along said right-of-way has been recorded in the more or less. line 1569.05 feet to the West Chancery Clerk’s Office of right-of-way line of Johns Alcorn County, Mississippi, in LESS AND EXCEPT a perpet- Street; thence run South 0 Deed Book 229 at Pages ual non-exclusive easement degrees 28 minutes 30 sec- 351-352 and (b) Agreement and right-of-way for the pur- onds West along said West entered into between the pose of ingress and egress, right-of-way line 139.59 feet State Teachers Retirement but not for parking, all over, to the point of beginning of System of Ohio, The Kroger upon and across the following said Easement; thence run Co. and Ray King Building described land: North 8 degrees 30 minutes Maintenance, Inc. dated 10 seconds West 56.22 feet March 20, 1987, which has A strip of land 7 &frac12; feet to the end of said easement. been recorded in said records on each side of the following in Deed Book 236 at Pages described line: Commencing There is also conveyed 104-109 which documents at the intersection of the hereby all of the interest of are made a part hereof by refWest line of the East one-half Ray King Building Mainte- erence thereto and the grantof Section 12, Township 2 nance, Inc. in and to (a) the ees assume the assets and obSouth, Range 7 East, Alcorn easement conveyed by the ligations of Ray King Building County, Mississippi, with the Trustees of the Mercier Land Maintenance, Inc. under the South right-of-way line of U.S. Trust to Ray King Building terms of said documents. Highway #72; thence run Maintenance, Inc. by deed South 58 degrees 11 minutes dated August 1, 1986, which Subject to any and all easeEast along said right-of-way has been recorded in the ments, restrictions, covenants line 1569.05 feet to the West Chancery Clerk’s Office of and mineral reservations of right-of-way line of Johns Alcorn County, Mississippi, in record. Street; thence run South 0 Deed Book 229 at Pages degrees 28 minutes 30 sec- 351-352 and (b) Agreement Subject to delinquent proponds West along said West entered into between the erty taxes, if any, owed to Alright-of-way line 139.59 feet State Teachers Retirement corn County, Mississippi, or to the point of beginning of System of Ohio, The Kroger any city, subdivision or musaid Easement; thence run Co. and Ray King Building nicipality thereof. North 8 degrees 30 minutes Maintenance, Inc. dated 10 seconds West 56.22 feet March 20, 1987, which has Subject to any federal tax to the end of said easement. been recorded in said records liens recorded prior to or in Deed Book 236 at Pages subsequent to the date of this There is also conveyed 104-109 which documents notice. hereby all of the interest of are made a part hereof by refRay King Building Mainte- erence thereto and the grant- I affirm posting a Notice of nance, Inc. in and to (a) the ees assume the assets and ob- Sale for the same time at the easement conveyed by the ligations of Ray King Building customary place of posting in Trustees of the Mercier Land Maintenance, Inc. under the Alcorn County, Mississippi, that being the Alcorn County Trust to Ray King Building terms of said documents. Courthouse. Maintenance, Inc. by deed dated August 1, 1986, which Subject to any and all easehas been recorded in the ments, restrictions, covenants I will convey only such title as Chancery Clerk’s Office of and mineral reservations of is vested in me as Substitute Trustee. Alcorn County, Mississippi, in record. Deed Book 229 at Pages 351-352 and (b) Agreement Subject to delinquent propentered into between the erty taxes, if any, owed to Al- WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, State Teachers Retirement corn County, Mississippi, or this the 30th day of August, System of Ohio, The Kroger any city, subdivision or mu- 2011. Co. and Ray King Building nicipality thereof. Maintenance, Inc. dated March 20, 1987, which has Subject to any federal tax s/Christe' Harris-Leech been recorded in said records liens recorded prior to or CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH Substitute Trustee in Deed Book 236 at Pages subsequent to the date of this 104-109 which documents notice. are made a part hereof by reference thereto and the grant- I affirm posting a Notice of Christe’ Harris-Leech ees assume the assets and ob- Sale for the same time at the Substitute Trustee ligations of Ray King Building customary place of posting in P.O. Box 71 Maintenance, Inc. under the Alcorn County, Mississippi, Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 terms of said documents. that being the Alcorn County Courthouse. PUBLISH: September 9, 16, Subject to any and all ease23 and 30, 2011 ments, restrictions, covenants I will convey only such title as 13380 and mineral reservations of is vested in me as Substitute record. Trustee.
Our company offers competitive pay and excellent benefits.
NO PHONE INQUIRIES WILL BE ACCEPTED This employer participates in E-Verify and Requires a pre-employment drug screen EOE
dated August 1, 1986, which recorded in the Chancery Clerkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Office of Alcorn LegalsMississippi, in 0955 County, Deed Book 229 at Pages 351-352 and (b) Agreement entered into between the State Teachers Retirement System of Ohio, The Kroger Co. and Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. dated March 20, 1987, which has been recorded in said records in Deed Book 236 at Pages 104-109 which documents are made a part hereof by reference thereto and the grantees assume the assets and obligations of Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. under the terms of said documents.
has been 8B â&#x20AC;˘ Friday, September 9, 2011 â&#x20AC;˘ Daily Corinthian
Legal Services
ATTN: CANDIDATES
List your name and office under the political listing for only $190.00. Runs every publishing day until final election. Come by the Daily Corinthian office at 1607 S. Harper Rd. or call 287-6147 for more info. Must be paid in advance.
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT
This is a paid political advertisement, which is intended as a public service for the voters. It has been submitted to and approved and subscribed by each political candidate listed below or by the candidateâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s campaign manager or assistant campaign manager. This listing is not intended to suggest or imply that these are the only candidates for these offices.
ALCORN CO. CONSTABLE (POST 1) Scotty L. Bradley (R) Chuck Hinds
ALCORN CO. CONSTABLE (POST 2) Roger Voyles
ALCORN CO. CORONER
Jay Jones Gail Burcham Parrish (R)
erence thereto and the grantees assume the assets and obligations of Ray King Building Maintenance, Inc. under the 0955 Legals terms of said documents.
Subject to any federal tax liens recorded prior to or subsequent to the date of this 0955 Legals notice.
executed by JAMES C. GREENE, JR. (a/k/a Jimmy Green), as President of Greeneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Vinyl Products, Inc. Legals 0955 as Grantor to Carl L. Gorday, Trustee for AmSouth Bank (predecessor-in-interest to First American National Bank) which deed of trust is recorded in the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Instrument Number 200603463;
I affirm posting a Notice of Sale for the same time at the customary place of posting in Alcorn County, Mississippi, that being the Alcorn County Subject to delinquent prop- Courthouse. erty taxes, if any, owed to Alcorn County, Mississippi, or I will convey only such title as WHEREAS, Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harany city, subdivision or mu- is vested in me as Substitute ris-Leech was appointed SubTrustee. nicipality thereof. stitute Trustee for the above-referenced deed of Subject to any federal tax liens recorded prior to or WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, trust by instrument dated subsequent to the date of this this the 30th day of August, June 20, 2011, and recorded on June 29, 2011, in Instrunotice. 2011. ment Number 201102649 in the Office of the Chancery Subject to any and all ease- I affirm posting a Notice of ments, restrictions, covenants Sale for the same time at the s/Christe' Harris-Leech Clerk of Alcorn County, MisAuto/Truck Parts & Accessories 0848 and mineral reservations of customary place of posting in CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH sissippi; and Substitute Trustee record. Alcorn County, Mississippi, WHEREAS, default having that being the Alcorn County been made in the payment of Subject to delinquent prop- Courthouse. the indebtedness secured by Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harris-Leech erty taxes, if any, owed to Alsaid deed of trust and the corn County, Mississippi, or I will convey only such title as Substitute Trustee holder of the note and deed any city, subdivision or mu- is vested in me as Substitute P.O. Box 71 of trust having requested the Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 nicipality thereof. Trustee. undersigned Substitute TrusPUBLISH: September 9, 16, tee so to do, I will on the 3rd Subject to any federal tax day of October, 2011, offer liens recorded prior to or WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, 23 and 30, 2011 for sale at public outcry and subsequent to the date of this this the 30th day of August, 13380 sell during legal hours, benotice. 2011. tween the hours of 11:00 a.m. STATE OF MISSISSIPPI and 4:00 p.m. at the South I affirm posting a Notice of COUNTY OF ALCORN front door of the Alcorn Sale for the same time at the s/Christe' Harris-Leech County Courthouse in Alcorn customary place of posting in CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH County, Mississippi, for cash Alcorn County, Mississippi, Substitute Trustee SUBSTITUTE to the that being the Alcorn County TRUSTEEâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;S highest and best bidder, the Courthouse. NOTICE OF SALE following described property Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harris-Leech and land lying and being situI will convey only such title as Substitute Trustee WHEREAS, on May 30, ated in Alcorn County, Misis vested in me as Substitute P.O. Box 71 2006, a deed of trust was sissippi, being more particuTrustee. Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 executed by JAMES C. larly described as follows, to GREENE, JR. (a/k/a Jimmy PUBLISH: September 9, 16, wit: Green), as President of WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, 23 and 30, 2011 Greeneâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Vinyl Products, Inc. Lying and being in the Souththis the 30th day of August, 13380 as Grantor to Carl L. Gorday, east Quarter of Section 12, 2011. Trustee for AmSouth Bank Township 2 South, Range 7 (predecessor-in-interest to East, Alcorn County, MissisFirst American National Bank) sippi, more particularly des/Christe' Harris-Leech 0868 Cars for Sale which deed of trust is re- scribed as follows: CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH corded in the Office of the Substitute Trustee Chancery Clerk of Alcorn Commencing at the point of County, Mississippi, in Instru- intersection of the West line tronic Registration Systems, ment Number 200603463; of the Southeast Quarter of Subject to any and all ease- Inc., which deed of trust is of Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harris-Leech Section 12, Township 2 ments, restrictions, covenants Substitute Trustee WHEREAS, Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Har- South, Range 7 East, Alcorn and mineral reservations of record in the office of the P.O. Box 71 Chancery Clerk of Alcorn ris-Leech was appointed SubCounty, Mississippi, with the record. Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 County, State of Mississippi as stitute Trustee for the South right-of-way line of U.S. 0515 Computer Instrument No. 200903108; above-referenced deed of Highway No. 72; thence run Subject to delinquent prop- and PUBLISH: September 9, 16, trust by instrument dated South 58 degrees 11 minutes erty taxes, if any, owed to Al23 and 30, 2011 June 20, 2011, and recorded East 1569.05 feet along said corn County, Mississippi, or 13380 WHEREAS, said Deed of on June 29, 2011, in Instru- South right-of-way to the in- any city, subdivision or muTrust was subsequently asment Number 201102649 in tersection with the West nicipality thereof. signed to Regions Bank d/b/a the Office of the Chancery right-of-way line of Johns Regions Mortgage by instruClerk of Alcorn County, Mis- Street; thence run South 00 Subject to any federal tax ment dated November 12, sissippi; and degrees 28 minutes 30 sec- liens recorded prior to or 2010 and recorded as Instruonds West 160 feet along the subsequent to the date of this ment No. 201005704 of the WHEREAS, default having West right-of-way line of notice. aforesaid Chancery Clerk's been made in the payment of Johns Street to an iron pin as the indebtedness secured by found and the point of begin- I affirm posting a Notice of office; and said deed of trust and the ning; thence run South 00 de- Sale for the same time at the WHEREAS, Regions Bank holder of the note and deed grees 28 minutes 30 seconds customary place of posting in of trust having requested the West 65 feet along the West Alcorn County, Mississippi, DBA Regions Mortgage has substituted J. Gary undersigned Substitute Trus- right-of-way line of Johns that being the Alcorn County heretofore Trustee Massey by instru as tee so to do, I will on the 3rd Street; thence leaving said Courthouse. ment dated November 12, day of October, 2011, offer road run West 150 feet; in the ! " 2010 and recorded for sale at public outcry and thence run North 142.98 I will convey only such title as aforesaid Chancery Clerk's sell during legal hours, be- feet; thence run South 62 de- is vested in me as Substitute # Office in Instrument No. ! tween the hours of 11:00 a.m. grees 36 minutes 55 seconds Trustee. 201005705; and and 4:00 p.m. at the South East 169.54 feet to the point See Gene Sanders d front door of the Alcorn of beginning, containing 0.359 WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, #
WHEREAS, default having $ County Courthouse in Alcorn acre, more or less. this the 30th day of August, been made in the terms and County, Mississippi, for cash 2011. conditions of said deed of to the 108 Cardinal Drive just East of Caterpillar - Corinth, MS Subject to an easement for trust and the entire debt sehighest and best bidder, the egress and ingress along part /s/ Christe' Harris-Leech cured thereby having been 662-287-2254 or 665-2462 or 415-6485 following described property of an existing drive and deCHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH declared to be due and payand land lying and being situ- scribed as follows: ComSubstitute Trustee able in accordance with the ated in Alcorn County, Mis- mencing at the Northeast terms of said deed of trust, sissippi, being more particu- Corner of the above de- Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harris-Leech 0848 Auto/Truck Parts & Accessories Regions Bank DBA Regions larly described as follows, to scribed 0.359 acre tract, said Substitute Trustee Mortgage, the legal holder of wit: point being on the West P.O. Box 71 said indebtedness, having reright-of-way line of Johns Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 quested the undersigned SubLying and being in the South- Street, thence leaving said stituted Trustee to execute east Quarter of Section 12, street run North 62 degrees PUBLISH: September 9, 16, the trust and sell said land Township 2 South, Range 7 36 minutes 55 seconds West 23 and 30, 2011 and property in accordance East, Alcorn County, Missis- 40.51 feet to the point of be- 13381 with the terms of said deed of sippi, more particularly de- ginning; thence run North 62 trust and for the purpose of scribed as follows: degrees 36 minutes 55 secraising the sums due thereunonds West 129.03 feet to the der, together with attorney's Commencing at the point of Northwest corner of the fees, trustee's fees and exintersection of the West line above described 0.359 acre pense of sale. of the Southeast Quarter of tract; thence run South 20.00 Section 12, Township 2 feet; thence run South 68 deNOW, THEREFORE, I, J. South, Range 7 East, Alcorn grees 35 minutes 51 seconds Gary Massey, Substituted County, Mississippi, with the East 98.44 feet; thence run Trustee in said deed of trust, South right-of-way line of U.S. South 81 degrees 30 minutes will on October 5, 2011 offer Highway No. 72; thence run 10 seconds East 23.17 feet to for sale at public outcry and South 58 degrees 11 minutes the point of beginning. sell within legal hours (being East 1569.05 feet along said between the hours of 11:00 South right-of-way to the in- Subject to any and all easea.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the tersection with the West ments, restrictions, covenants South Main Door of the right-of-way line of Johns and mineral reservations #16771of #16993 County Courthouse of AlStreet; thence run South 00 record. corn County, located at Cordegrees 28 minutes 30 secinth, Mississippi, to the highonds West 160 feet along the Subject to delinquent propest and best bidder for cash West right-of-way line of erty taxes, if any, owed to Althe following described propJohns Street to an iron pin as corn County, Mississippi, or erty situated in Alcorn found and the point of begin- any city, subdivision or muCounty, State of Mississippi, ning; thence run South 00 de- nicipality thereof. to-wit: grees 28 minutes 30 seconds West 65 feet along the West Subject to any federal tax Situated in the City of Corright-of-way line of Johns liens recorded prior to or inth, County of Alcorn, State Street; thence leaving said subsequent to the date of this of Mississippi, to-wit: road run West 150 feet; notice. thence run North 142.98 A part of Block 578 of feet; thence run South 62 de- I affirm posting a Notice of Walker's Addition to the City #17000 grees 36 minutes 55 seconds Sale for the same #16981 time at the of Corinth, in Alcorn County, East 169.54 feet to the point customary place of posting in Mississippi, described as folof beginning, containing 0.359 Alcorn County, Mississippi, lows: acre, more or less. that being the Alcorn County Courthouse. Beginning on the North Subject to an easement for boundary line of said Block at egress and ingress along part I will convey only such title as a point 250 feet East of the of an existing drive and de- is vested in me as Substitute Northwest corner thereof, scribed as follows: Com- Trustee. and run thence South parallel mencing at the Northeast with the West line of said Corner of the above de- WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, Block 150 feet; thence East scribed 0.359 acre tract, said this the 30th day of August, parallel with North line of point being on the West 2011. said Block 75 feet; thence right-of-way line of Johns North parallel with the West Street, thence leaving said /s/ Christe' Harris-Leech line of said Block 150 feet to #16974 #16975 street run North 62 degrees CHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH the North line thereof; 36 minutes 55 seconds West Substitute Trustee thence West with said North 40.51 feet to the point of beline of said Block 75 feet to ginning; thence run North 62 Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harris-Leech the point of beginning. degrees 36 minutes 55 sec- Substitute Trustee onds West 129.03 feet to the P.O. Box 71 I WILL CONVEY only Northwest corner of the Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 equipment such title as vested in me as above described 0.359 acre leather, sunroof, Substituted Trustee. tract; thence run South 20.00 PUBLISH: September 9, 16, alloy wheels, xm radio feet; thence run South 68 de- 23 and 30, 2011 WITNESS MY SIGNAstock# h11-076 grees 35 minutes 51 seconds 13381 TURE on this 8th day of SepEast 98.44 feet; thence run tember, 2011. South 81 degrees 30 minutes 10 seconds East 23.17 feet to J. Gary Massey the point of beginning. #16979 #16983 SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE Subject to any and all easements, restrictions, covenants and mineral reservations of record.
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SUPERVISOR 2ND DISTRICT Billy Paul Burcham (Ind.) Dal Nelms Jon Newcomb (R)
SUPERVISOR 3RD DISTRICT Keith Hughes Tim Mitchell
South 81 degrees 30 minutes 10 seconds East 23.17 feet to Commencing at the point of the point of beginning. intersection of the West line Legals Quarter of Subject 0955 0955 Legals to any and all easeof the Southeast Section 12, Township 2 ments, restrictions, covenants South, Range 7 East, Alcorn and mineral reservations of County, Mississippi, with the record. South right-of-way line of U.S. Highway No. 72; thence run Subject to delinquent propSouth 58 degrees 11 minutes erty taxes, if any, owed to AlEast 1569.05 feet along said corn County, Mississippi, or South right-of-way to the in- any city, subdivision or mutersection with the West nicipality thereof. right-of-way line of Johns Street; thence run South 00 Subject to any federal tax degrees 28 minutes 30 sec- liens recorded prior to or onds West 160 feet along the subsequent to the date of this West right-of-way line of notice. Johns Street to an iron pin as found and the point of begin- I affirm posting a Notice of ning; thence run South 00 de- Sale for the same time at the grees 28 minutes 30 seconds customary place of posting in West 65 feet along the West Alcorn County, Mississippi, right-of-way line of Johns that being the Alcorn County Street; thence leaving said Courthouse. road run West 150 feet; thence run North 142.98 I will convey only such title as feet; thence run South 62 de- is vested in me as Substitute grees 36 minutes 55 seconds Trustee. East 169.54 feet to the point of beginning, containing 0.359 WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, acre, more or less. this the 30th day of August, 2011. Subject to an easement for egress and ingress along part /s/ Christe' Harris-Leech of an existing drive and deCHRISTE' HARRIS-LEECH scribed as follows: ComSubstitute Trustee mencing at the Northeast Corner of the above de- Christeâ&#x20AC;&#x2122; Harris-Leech scribed 0.359 acre tract, said Substitute Trustee point being on the West P.O. Box 71 right-of-way line of Johns Tupelo, MS 38802-0071 Street, thence leaving said street run North 62 degrees PUBLISH: September 9, 16, 36 minutes 55 seconds West 23 and 30, 2011 40.51 feet to the point of be- 13381 ginning; thence run North 62 degrees 36 minutes 55 secSUBSTITUTED onds West 129.03 feet to the TRUSTEE'S Northwest corner of the NOTICE OF SALE above described 0.359 acre tract; thence run South 20.00 WHEREAS, on June 19, feet; thence run South 68 de- 2009, Robbie G. Isbell, an ungrees 35 minutes 51 seconds married woman, executed a East 98.44 feet; thence run certain deed of trust to South 81 degrees 30 minutes Emmett James House or Bill 10 seconds East 23.17 feet to R. McLaughlin, Trustee for the point of beginning. the benefit of Mortgage Elecscribed as follows:
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Shapiro & Massey, L.L.C. 1910 Lakeland Drive Suite B, Jackson, MS 39216 (601)981-9299 1202 East 6th Street Corinth, MS 38834 10-001532 GW
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I affirm posting a Notice of Sale for the same time at the customary place of posting in Alcorn County, Mississippi, that being the Alcorn County Courthouse. *Above *Ab ove prices pri price ices d do o nnot ott inc iinclude incl nclud de ttaxe taxes, axess, tit axe titl title le fee le fee or $129 $1 $129.00 29.00 29 00 Doc Doc Fee Fee Fe
APPLY ONLINE TODAY!! AT WWW WWW.KINGKARS.NET KINGKARS NET
I will convey only such title as is vested662-287-8773 in me as Substitute Trustee. 916 Hwy. 45 South
Corinth, MS 38834
WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,
Salesman - Jeff Williams Salesman - Mike Doran Salesman - Michael Lambert Salesman Dennis Williamson
662-842-5277 966 S. Gloster Tupelo, MS 38804
Emmett James House or Bill R. McLaughlin, Trustee for the benefit of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, 0955 Legals Inc., which deed of trust is of record in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, State of Mississippi as Instrument No. 200903108; and
WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was subsequently assigned to Regions Bank d/b/a Regions Mortgage by instrument dated November 12, 2010 and recorded as Instrument No. 201005704 of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk's office; and
WHEREAS, Regions Bank DBA Regions Mortgage has heretofore substituted J. Gary Massey as Trustee by instrument dated November 12, 2010 and recorded in the aforesaid Chancery Clerk's Office in Instrument No. 201005705; and
WHEREAS, default having been made in the terms and conditions of said deed of trust and the entire debt secured thereby having been declared to be due and payable in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust, Regions Bank DBA Regions Mortgage, the legal holder of said indebtedness, having requested the undersigned Substituted Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said deed of trust and for the purpose of raising the sums due thereunder, together with attorney's fees, trustee's fees and expense of sale.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, J. Gary Massey, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, will on October 5, 2011 offer for sale at public outcry and sell within legal hours (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the South Main Door of the County Courthouse of Alcorn County, located at Corinth, Mississippi, to the highest and best bidder for cash the following described property situated in Alcorn County, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the City of Corinth, County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
A part of Block 578 of Walker's Addition to the City of Corinth, in Alcorn County, Mississippi, described as follows:
Beginning on the North boundary line of said Block at a point 250 feet East of the Northwest corner thereof, and run thence South parallel with the West line of said Block 150 feet; thence East parallel with North line of said Block 75 feet; thence North parallel with the West line of said Block 150 feet to the North line thereof; thence West with said North line of said Block 75 feet to the point of beginning.
North parallel with the West line of said Block 150 feet to the North line thereof; thence West with said North 0955 Legals line of said Block 75 feet to the point of beginning.
Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 9, 2011 • 9B
0955 Legals
PUBLIC NOTICE I WILL CONVEY only Pursuant to resolution of such title as vested in me as the Alcorn County Board of Substituted Trustee. Supervisors adopted on September 6, 2011, at a regular WITNESS MY SIGNA- meeting thereof, Alcorn TURE on this 8th day of Sep- County, Mississippi, does hereby give notice of its intember, 2011. tention to borrow the sum of $85,000.00 to be evidenced J. Gary Massey by negotiable notes of Alcorn SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE County, Mississippi, secured by the full faith, credit, and resources of Alcorn County, Shapiro & Massey, L.L.C. Mississippi, with a final matur1910 Lakeland Drive Suite B, ing date of one year from Jackson, MS 39216 execution date and the option (601)981-9299 to prepay without penalty. All 1202 East 6th Street entities desiring to submit a Corinth, MS 38834 bid for purchase of said negotiable notes shall submit a written, sealed bid therefor at the office of the Chancery 10-001532 GW Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in the Chancery Publication Dates: Building thereof on the corSeptember 14, 21, 28, 2011 ner of Fillmore and Waldron 13390 Streets in the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, by 9:00 A.M. on the 3rd day of PUBLIC HEARING October, 2011. The Town of Rienzi will hold a public hearing on its proposed budget for fiscal year 2011-2012 on September, 4th, 2011 at 10:00 a.m. for the next fiscal year. The Town of Rienzi plans no increase in AD Valorem Tax Millage rate of 47.06 to remain the same in the Budget. Any citizen of Rienzi is invited to attend this public hearing at the Rienzi Town Hall. 2t 9/9, 9/10/11 13389 NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Alcorn County, Mississippi, intends to accept the lowest rate of interest or the bid that represents the lowest net cost to Alcorn County, Mississippi, but Alcorn County, Mississippi, reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
NO. 2011-0457-02 Letters Testamentary having been granted on the 1st day of September 2011, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, to the undersigned upon the estate of James R. Leatherwood, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to the Clerk of the said Court for probate and registration, according to law, within ninety (90) days from the date of first publication or they will be forever barred. This the 1st day of September, 2011. JAMES LARRY LEATHERWOOD EXECUTOR
STARTING SEPTEMBER, 2011
HANDY-MAN REPAIR Spec. Lic. & Bonded, plumbing, electrical, floors, woodrot, carpentry, sheetrock. Res./com. Remodeling & repairs. 662-286-5978. SHANE PRICE Building Inc. New construction, home remodeling & repair. Lic. 662-808-2380. Fair & following Jesus "The Carpenter"
HERE’S MY
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Lawn/Landscape/ Tree Svc FAST EDDIE'S Lawn Service. Cell 662-603-3929, office 662-664-2206.
Tree Service
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287-1024
(Minimum of 4 wks. commitment).
MORRIS CRUM Mini-Stor. ALCORN COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS 72 W. 3 diff. locations, unloading docks, rental BY: Gary Ross, President truck avail, 286-3826. ATTEST: Bobby Marolt, Chancery Clerk 1t Sept. 9, 2011 13388
HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY
Home Improvement & Repair A MCKEE CONSTRUCTION Floor leveling, water rot, termite damage, new joist, seals, beams, piers installed, vinyl siding, metal roofs. 46 yrs. exp. Licensed. 662-415-5448.
GIFFORD & TENNISON SOLICITORS FOR BUTLER, DOUG: FoundaEXECUTOR tion, floor leveling, bricks cracking, rotten PUBLISH FOUR TIMES: wood, basements, shower floor. Over 35 9/2/11, 9/9/11, 9/16/11 yrs. exp. Free est. and 9/23/11 731-239-8945 or 13383 662-284-6146.
I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested in me as Substituted Trustee.
GENERAL HOUSE & Yard Maintenance: Carpentry, flooring, all types painting. No job too small. Guar. quality work at the lowest price! Call for estimate, 662-284-6848.
STUMP BUSTERS. Stump grinding & tree trimFree est. The rate of interest to be m i n g . or quoted by interested bidders 6 6 2 - 6 0 3 - 9 4 1 7 shall not exceed that author- 212-2618. ized in Section 75-17-101, Mississippi Code of 1972. Said Storage, Indoor/ promissory notes shall mature with the principal and all Outdoor accrued interest due and payAMERICAN able one year from date of execution. The County shall MINI STORAGE 2058 S Tate reserve the right to prepay in whole or in part at any time Across from without penalty. World Color This 6th day of September, 2011.
IN RE: ESTATE OF JAMES R. LEATHERWOOD
Home Improvement & Repair
U.S. Savings Bonds are gifts with a future.
Will run every Thursday in the Classified Section. To run on this page, please contact the Classified Department at 662-287-6147. Deadline to start on the following Thursday is Monday before 5 p.m.
FERRELL’S
WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 8th day of September, 2011.
J. Gary Massey SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE
40TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
Shapiro & Massey, L.L.C. 1910 Lakeland Drive Suite B, Jackson, MS 39216 (601)981-9299 1202 East 6th Street Corinth, MS 38834 10-001532 GW
Publication Dates: September 14, 21, 28, 2011 13390
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807 SOUTH PARKWAY • 1607 SOUTH HARPER RD • CORINTH, MS 38834 • 662-287-2165