060314 daily corinthian e edition

16
Vol. 118, No. 130 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages 1 section Tuesday June 3, 2014 50 cents Today 88 T-storms Tonight 70 Index On this day in history 150 years ago The Battle of Cold Harbor unfolds across a seven-mile front, inundated with fortifications and interlocking fields of fire. Lee won his final open field battle, for Cold Harbor marks an end to the mobile phase of Grant’s Overland campaign to Richmond. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather...... 10 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 40% chance of storms Don’t forget! State primary election today Alcorn County is preparing to upgrade its courthouse le serv- ers and add a new backup sys- tem in a location that would be safe from tornadoes and res. Premise, Inc., presented quotes to the Board of Super- visors Monday morning for purchase, rental and lease-pur- chase options. The board is in- terested in the lease-purchase option but wants quotes from local banks before making a de- cision. The outright purchase price would be $19,717. Premise con- sultant Brian Walls presented nancing quotes from IBM of 3.54 percent on a 36-month term and 3.95 percent on a 60-month term. The county has two IBM serv- ers running at the courthouse. One would be replaced with a new server and the newer of the current servers would become the secondary server. “The other thing we’re imple- menting is a virtual backup for the IBM AS/400 server,” said Walls. “That server is kind of the backbone of the county. Right now, it is backed up with a tape drive. What this is going to do is add a supplementary backup.” That backup will occur on a server in the chancery clerk’s ofce on a nightly basis. Walls said the county could spend a larger sum of money to create an elaborate disaster- safe le system, but “at some point you have to weigh money versus risk.” In other business: The board approved a prop- erty transfer that Supervisor Jimmy Tate Waldon said will allow for work on Lone Oak Church Road, where a curve will be lessened. Supervisors gave travel authorization for DARE Of- cer David Derrick to attend the 2014 DARE State Training Conference in Biloxi on July 20-24. Supervisors went into ex- ecutive session for economic development and land acquisi- tion discussions. The board’s next meeting is set for 9 a.m. Friday, June 13. Supervisors mull upgrade to file servers BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Richard Tuner is casting his line into a different water. After 22 years in the Alcorn School District, Turner is re- tiring as director of the Alcorn Career and Technology Cen- ter. The next chapter of his life involves “lots of shing” and “traveling with his wife” once he retires June 30. “I hope the kids remem- ber me as a good teacher who helped them,” he said. “I love them all, but there are always a few who are really special.” The father of three replaced former director Billy Grifn after teaching Metal Trades for 16 years. “I was the part-time assis- tant director for two years and vocational director for four,” said Turner. After earning his degree in Trade and Industrial Educa- tion at Mississippi State Uni- versity and his master’s de- gree in Ed Leadership from the University of North Ala- bama, the director set out to make the center the best it could be. “I have always said ‘this is the best kept secret in the county,’” noted Turner of the center. While under his leadership, the center was honored in three distinct ways during his last year. The ACTC housed Mississippi’s Career and Tech- nical Student of the Year, Mis- sissippi’s Craft Instructor of the Year, and Mississippi’s ACTE Career Guidance Award recipient. “Any one of those awards would be special for any cen- ter, but to have all three in one year is absolutely phenomenal, and has not been paralleled by any other center in the state,” said center counselor Jennifer Turner tests different water following ACTC retirement BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] COLUMBUS — Austin Reid Thompson has been selected to participate in the 2014 ses- sion of the Mississippi Gover- nor’s School. The Governor’s School is a residential honors program established in 1981 by Governor William F. Winter at Mississippi University for Women. The Governor’s School is designed to provide academic, creative and leadership expe- riences for a limited number of rising high school juniors and seniors who have demon- strated exceptional ability and achievement in their studies and who have shown high in- tellectual, creative and leader- ship potential. Thompson began the session June 1 and will be a part of the school until June 20. Austin Reid Thompson, the son of Tommy and Terri Thompson of Corinth is a 2014 graduate of The Alliance Junior Leadership Alcorn Program. “The program is a leader- ship development program for sophomores and juniors to cul- tivate their leadership skills, provide a better understanding of our community and develop their interpersonal skills,” said The Alliance Community De- velopment Director Andrea Rose. He will be a senior at Corinth High School and is planning to major in Software Engineering in college. Thompson is a member of the Corinth High School Band, tennis team, Junior Leader- ship Alcorn and National Hon- or Society. His honors include, ranked second in his junior class, First Chair in the percussion section, ranked rst for AICE (Pure Math, Thinking Skills and General Paper), ranked second Honors in Algebra II, ranked third IGSCE in Ameri- can History, Math II and World History, ranked third in Spanish II, SATP Advanced for Algebra I and many other aca- demic awards. His activities include the Corinth High School Academic Team, Robotics Team, Science Club, Key Club, Environmen- tal Club and Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Thompson to attend Governor’s School For the Daily Corinthian Austin Reid Thompson Staff photo by Steve Beavers Alcorn Career and Technology Center Director Richard Turner (right) talks with current Manu- facturing Fundamentals/Metal Fabrication instructor, Jesse Potts, about his 16 years as a metal trades teacher. FARMINGTON — A 35-year-old Farmington man remains jailed at the Alcorn Justice Center following a Monday drug charge. Ofcers with the Alcorn Narcotics Unit charged Bobby Barnes, 35, of 4322 County Road 200 with sale of methamphetamine. “Ofcers went to his residence and issued a warrant on the charge,” said the unit’s Darrell Hopkins. “We are working on more charges in the area and expect more arrests in the future.” Bond for Barnes was set at $10,000. Man accused of selling meth Staff Report Barnes Del Shores, the playwright who created such memorable Southern characters as Bitsy Mae Harling, Wardell “Bubba” Owens and LaVonda DuPree, will bring his stand-up comedy show, “Del Shores: My Sordid Best!”, to Corinth Theatre-Arts at 8 p.m., Saturday, June 14. Tickets are $20 for general admission and $50 for VIP seats that include a wine-and-cheese reception with Shores after the show. Make reservations by calling CT-A at 662.287.2995 or stopping by the theatre, 303 S. Fulton Drive, 1-6 p.m. Tues- days-Thursdays. A portion of the show’s proceeds will go to the theatre. CT-A recently produced Shores’ acclaimed comedy “Sordid Lives,” and the cast will recreate some of their scenes during Shores’ show. Shores also wrote “Southern Baptist Sissies” and “Daddy’s Dyin’: Who’s Got the Will?” among other plays and screen- plays and was a writer and producer for such TV shows as “Queer as Folk,” “Dharma & Greg” and “Touched by an An- gel.” He has taken his stand-up show on three national tours for more than 200 performances. “I’m thrilled to present some standup in the north part of the state,” he said about his trip to Corinth. “Del Shores: My Sordid Best!” is a show appropriate for adult audiences, said Cris Skin- ner, CT-A artistic director. (For details, call CT-A at 662- 287-2995 or email corinth.the- atre.arts@gmail.com) Comedic playwright Shores comes to CT-A For Daily Corinthian Please see TURNER | 2 Daily Corinthian 2782 S Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com 2782 S Harper Rd. Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com Doug Jumper Michael McCreary Ann Hardin 662-286-2828 “Clients move for FREE” Realty & Associates, LLC Realty & Associates, LLC

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Page 1: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 118, No. 130 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

TuesdayJune 3, 2014

50 centsToday88

T-stormsTonight

70

Index On this day in history 150 years agoThe Battle of Cold Harbor unfolds across a seven-mile front,

inundated with fortifications and interlocking fields of fire. Lee won his final open field battle, for Cold Harbor marks an end to the mobile phase of Grant’s Overland campaign to Richmond.

Stocks........8 Classified......14 Comics........9 State........5

Weather......10 Obituaries........6 Opinion........4 Sports......12

40% chance of storms

Don’t forget! State primary election today

Alcorn County is preparing to upgrade its courthouse fi le serv-ers and add a new backup sys-tem in a location that would be safe from tornadoes and fi res.

Premise, Inc., presented quotes to the Board of Super-visors Monday morning for purchase, rental and lease-pur-chase options. The board is in-terested in the lease-purchase option but wants quotes from local banks before making a de-cision.

The outright purchase price would be $19,717. Premise con-sultant Brian Walls presented fi nancing quotes from IBM of 3.54 percent on a 36-month term and 3.95 percent on a 60-month term.

The county has two IBM serv-ers running at the courthouse. One would be replaced with a new server and the newer of the current servers would become the secondary server.

“The other thing we’re imple-menting is a virtual backup for the IBM AS/400 server,” said Walls. “That server is kind of

the backbone of the county. Right now, it is backed up with a tape drive. What this is going to do is add a supplementary backup.”

That backup will occur on a server in the chancery clerk’s offi ce on a nightly basis.

Walls said the county could spend a larger sum of money to create an elaborate disaster-safe fi le system, but “at some point you have to weigh money versus risk.”

In other business:■ The board approved a prop-

erty transfer that Supervisor Jimmy Tate Waldon said will allow for work on Lone Oak Church Road, where a curve will be lessened.

■ Supervisors gave travel authorization for DARE Of-fi cer David Derrick to attend the 2014 DARE State Training Conference in Biloxi on July 20-24.

■ Supervisors went into ex-ecutive session for economic development and land acquisi-tion discussions.

■ The board’s next meeting is set for 9 a.m. Friday, June 13.

Supervisors mull upgrade to file servers

BY JEBB [email protected]

Richard Tuner is casting his line into a different water.

After 22 years in the Alcorn School District, Turner is re-tiring as director of the Alcorn Career and Technology Cen-ter.

The next chapter of his life involves “lots of fi shing” and “traveling with his wife” once he retires June 30.

“I hope the kids remem-ber me as a good teacher who helped them,” he said. “I love them all, but there are always a few who are really special.”

The father of three replaced

former director Billy Griffi n after teaching Metal Trades for 16 years.

“I was the part-time assis-tant director for two years and vocational director for four,” said Turner.

After earning his degree in Trade and Industrial Educa-tion at Mississippi State Uni-versity and his master’s de-gree in Ed Leadership from the University of North Ala-bama, the director set out to make the center the best it could be.

“I have always said ‘this is the best kept secret in the county,’” noted Turner of the center.

While under his leadership, the center was honored in three distinct ways during his last year. The ACTC housed Mississippi’s Career and Tech-nical Student of the Year, Mis-sissippi’s Craft Instructor of the Year, and Mississippi’s ACTE Career Guidance Award recipient.

“Any one of those awards would be special for any cen-ter, but to have all three in one year is absolutely phenomenal, and has not been paralleled by any other center in the state,” said center counselor Jennifer

Turner tests different water following ACTC retirement

BY STEVE [email protected]

COLUMBUS — Austin Reid Thompson has been selected to participate in the 2014 ses-sion of the Mississippi Gover-nor’s School. The Governor’s School is a residential honors program established in 1981 by Governor William F. Winter at Mississippi University for Women.

The Governor’s School is designed to provide academic, creative and leadership expe-riences for a limited number of rising high school juniors and seniors who have demon-strated exceptional ability and achievement in their studies and who have shown high in-tellectual, creative and leader-ship potential.

Thompson began the session June 1 and will be a part of the school until June 20.

Austin Reid Thompson, the son of Tommy and Terri Thompson of Corinth is a 2014 graduate of The Alliance Junior Leadership Alcorn Program.

“The program is a leader-

ship development program for sophomores and juniors to cul-tivate their leadership skills, provide a better understanding of our community and develop their interpersonal skills,” said The Alliance Community De-velopment Director Andrea Rose.

He will be a senior at Corinth High School and is planning to major in Software Engineering in college.

Thompson is a member of the Corinth High School Band, tennis team, Junior Leader-ship Alcorn and National Hon-or Society.

His honors include, ranked second in his junior class, First Chair in the percussion section, ranked fi rst for AICE (Pure Math, Thinking Skills and General Paper), ranked second Honors in Algebra II, ranked third IGSCE in Ameri-can History, Math II and World History, ranked third in Spanish II, SATP Advanced for Algebra I and many other aca-demic awards.

His activities include the Corinth High School Academic Team, Robotics Team, Science Club, Key Club, Environmen-tal Club and Fellowship of Christian Athletes.

Thompson to attend Governor’s SchoolFor the Daily Corinthian

Austin Reid Thompson

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Alcorn Career and Technology Center Director Richard Turner (right) talks with current Manu-facturing Fundamentals/Metal Fabrication instructor, Jesse Potts, about his 16 years as a metal trades teacher.

FARMINGTON — A 35-year-old Farmington man remains jailed at the Alcorn Justice Center following a Monday drug charge.

Offi cers with the Alcorn Narcotics Unit charged Bobby Barnes, 35, of 4322 County Road 200 with sale of methamphetamine.

“Offi cers went to his residence and issued a warrant on the charge,” said the unit’s Darrell Hopkins. “We are working on more charges in the area and expect more arrests in the future.”

Bond for Barnes was set at $10,000.

Man accused of selling methStaff Report

Barnes

Del Shores, the playwright who created such memorable Southern characters as Bitsy Mae Harling, Wardell “Bubba” Owens and LaVonda DuPree, will bring his stand-up comedy show, “Del Shores: My Sordid Best!”, to Corinth Theatre-Arts at 8 p.m., Saturday, June 14.

Tickets are $20 for general admission and $50 for VIP seats that include a wine-and-cheese reception with Shores after the show. Make reservations by calling CT-A at 662.287.2995 or stopping by the theatre, 303 S. Fulton Drive, 1-6 p.m. Tues-days-Thursdays. A portion of the show’s proceeds will go to the theatre.

CT-A recently produced Shores’ acclaimed comedy “Sordid Lives,” and the cast will

recreate some of their scenes during Shores’ show.

Shores also wrote “Southern Baptist Sissies” and “Daddy’s Dyin’: Who’s Got the Will?” among other plays and screen-plays and was a writer and producer for such TV shows as “Queer as Folk,” “Dharma & Greg” and “Touched by an An-gel.” He has taken his stand-up show on three national tours for more than 200 performances.

“I’m thrilled to present some standup in the north part of the state,” he said about his trip to Corinth.

“Del Shores: My Sordid Best!” is a show appropriate for adult audiences, said Cris Skin-ner, CT-A artistic director.

(For details, call CT-A at 662-287-2995 or email [email protected])

Comedic playwrightShores comes to CT-A

For Daily Corinthian

Please see TURNER | 2

Daily Corinthian

2782 S Harper Rd. • Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com2782 S Harper Rd. • Corinth, MS 38834 • www.jumperrealty.com

DougJumper

MichaelMcCreary

AnnHardin 662-286-2828

“Clients move

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Realty & Associates, LLCRealty & Associates, LLC

Page 2: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Koon.As director, Turner

oversaw several im-provements to the cam-pus. The Graphic Arts program was converted to Digital Media Tech-nology and a state of the art lab was constructed in the summer of 2013. The shop areas were painted, the parking lot drainage issues were repaired, an additional classroom was remodeled, as well as various new pieces of technology were pur-chased.

“He really helped me make a smooth transition into teaching,” said Man-ufacturing Fundamen-tals/Metal Fabrication instructor Jesse Potts. “When I had questions, he was always there … I couldn’t ask for a better boss.”

“Mr. Turner also played a large part in the night class programs at ACTC,” added Koon.

The husband of retired educator Linda Turner,

he was an adult night class teacher for 12 years while working three nights a week as assistant director. After becoming director, he continued to work one night a week as an instructor.

“During his time as di-

rector, the adult classes averaged over 400 stu-dents each year,” said Koon.

According to the center counselor, ACTC houses the largest number of adult night classes of any center in the state.

Besides fi shing and traveling with his wife, the avid fi sherman plans to continue his private business in band instru-ment repair.

“The faculty, staff and students will greatly miss him,” said Koon.

Today’s meeting of the Corinth Board of Alder-men will include numer-ous public hearings on property cleanup.

The fi rst of two waves of properties currently targeted for cleanup are set for the 5 p.m. meeting. Another group is set for June 17.

Addresses to be con-sidered today include: Ross Street (Stone and Bryant), corner of Ross and Hawkins (Willis), Ross Street (Mid-South

Real Estate), Dunlap Street (Spence estate), Wick Street (Willis), Wick Street (Taylor), Dunlap Street (Norman), 1008 Ross (Archambault), 1002 Ross (Kozam), 1224 White (Jones), 1103 Tate (Franks), 202 Johns (Chambers), 1223 Wick (Newton), 1219 Wick (Ab-solute Auto Acceptance), 1501 Bunch (Hubbard), 1521 Jackson (Glidewell), 1007 Douglas (Dennis) and 1009 Douglas (Bai-ley)

Also on the agenda are continued hearings for

two properties — Mag-nolia Subdivision (An-derson) and 1207 Meigg Street (Stonecrest Invest-ment and Opportunity Fund)

The board will revis-it the sale of the West Corinth school property, which had to go through the bid process again be-cause of an irregularity in the bid procedure.

The agenda also in-cludes:

■ Reports of the depart-ment heads

■ Quotes for detective car for police department

■ Application for CAP loan to match EDA grant

■ Set public hearing for railroad quiet zone

■ Cook Coggin invoice on wastewater treatment plant

■ Pay request on waste-water treatment plant

■ Off-premises beer li-cense for La Jarrochita

■ West Corinth school property bids

■ Payment for new fi re truck

■ Zoning and planning matters, if any

■ Minutes of May 6 meeting

BY JEBB [email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Richard Turner is retiring after 22 years at the Alcorn Career and Technology Center. Turner’s last day is June 30.

Board of Aldermen meets today

TURNER

CONTINUED FROM 1

TRENTON, N.J. — For decades, seasonal allergy sufferers had two therapy options to ease the misery of hay fever. They could swal-low pills or squirt na-sal sprays every day for brief reprieves from the sneezing and itchy eyes. Or they could get al-lergy shots for years to gradually reduce their immune system’s over-reaction.

Now patients can try another type of therapy to train their immune system, new once-a-day tablets that dis-solve quickly under the tongue and steadily raise tolerance to grass or ragweed pollen, much like the shots.

“It’s been several de-cades since the last big breakthrough,” Cleve-land Clinic allergy spe-cialist Dr. Rachel Sze-kely said.

The downside: The pills must be started a few months before the grass or ragweed pollen season. That means it’s too late for people with grass allergies, but the time is now for ragweed allergy sufferers.

The Food and Drug Administration in April approved two tablets from Merck, Grastek for grass pollen and Ragwi-tek for ragweed, plus a grass pollen tablet called Oralair from Staller-genes.

The tablets could be-come popular with peo-ple who dislike pills that can make them drowsy or don’t provide enough relief. They’ll likely ap-

peal even more to pa-tients with severe aller-gies who fear needles or can’t make frequent trips to the allergist, key reasons that only about 5 percent of U.S. pa-tients who would benefi t from allergy shots get them.

Meanwhile, new treat-ments for other types of allergies, including to peanuts and eggs, are in various stages of testing and could turn out to be big advances.

Drugmaker Merck & Co. has a tablet for house dust mite allergies in fi -nal patient testing that could hit the market in two or three years, and it’s considering other therapies. France’s Stal-lergenes SA is testing a tablet for birch tree al-lergies and, with partner Shionogi & Co. Ltd. in Japan, tablets for aller-gies to dust mites and Japanese cedar pollen. Britain’s Circassia Ltd. has a cat allergy treat-ment in fi nal testing and six others in earlier test-ing.

A handful of compa-nies also are looking at possible new ways to administer immu-notherapy, includ-ing drops under the tongue, capsules and skin patches, said Fort Lauderdale, Florida, al-lergist Dr. Linda Cox, former president of the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology.

The new tablets are not right for everyone, particularly patients with allergies to mul-tiple substances, Szekely cautioned.

Allergy tablets are alternative to shots

LINDA A. JOHNSONThe Associated Press

The Mall at Barnes CrossingTupelo, Mississippi 38804

662.840.4653

607 Cruise St. Corinth, MS 38834

662.286.5041

Page 3: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Today in

history

Today is Tuesday, June 3, the 154th day of 2014. There are 211 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in History:

On June 3, 1989, Iran’s spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho-meini, died. Chinese army troops began their sweep of Beijing to crush student-led pro-democracy demonstra-tions.

On this date:

In 1621, the Dutch West India Co. received its charter for a trade monopoly in parts of the Americas and Af-rica.

In 1808, Confederate President Jefferson Da-vis was born in Chris-tian County, Kentucky.

In 1888, the poem “Casey at the Bat,” by Ernest Lawrence Thay-er, was first published in the San Francisco Daily Examiner.

In 1937, Edward, The Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the Brit-ish throne, married Wal-lis Warfield Simpson in a private ceremony in Monts, France.

In 1948, the 200-inch reflecting Hale Telescope at the Palo-mar Mountain Observa-tory in California was dedicated.

In 1964, South Ko-rean President Park Chung-hee declared martial law in the face of student protests.

In 1965, astronaut Edward White became the first American to “walk” in space during the flight of Gemini 4.

In 1972, Sally J. Priesand was ordained as America’s first fe-male rabbi at the He-brew Union College-Jew-ish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati, Ohio.

In 1983, Gordon Kahl, a militant tax protester wanted in the slayings of two U.S. marshals in North Dakota, was killed in a gun battle with law-en-forcement officials near Smithville, Arkansas.

In 1989, SkyDome (now called Rogers Cen-tre) opened in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Ten years ago: Presi-dent George W. Bush announced the resig-nation of CIA Director George Tenet amid a controversy over intel-ligence lapses about suspected weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and the September 11 terrorist attacks.

Five years ago: New Hampshire became the sixth state to le-galize same-sex mar-riage. The Organization of American States cleared the way for Cuba’s possible return to the group by lifting a 47-year ban on the country.

One year ago: The prosecution and de-fense presented open-ing statements in the court-martial of U.S. Army Pfc. Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning over the biggest leak of classified material in American history. (Man-ning was found guilty at Fort Meade, Mary-land, of espionage and theft but was acquitted of the most serious charge, aiding the ene-my, and was sentenced to up to 35 years in prison.)

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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at 1607 South Harper Road, Corinth, Miss.Periodicals postage paid at Corinth, MS 38834

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

Across The Region

Sewer service effort seeking funding

BOONEVILLE — Pren-tiss County Supervisors gave encouragement recently to a group of Thrasher residents work-ing to bring sewer ser-vice to their community.

The group spoke with supervisors and rep-resentatives from the Northeast Mississippi Planning and Develop-ment District about pos-sible funding options for the sewer project during last Wednesday’s regular meeting of the board of supervisors.

Attorney Gene Gifford, speaking on behalf of the group, said the lack of sewer service is a major problem for the residents and there are several areas where sew-age is often found leak-ing above ground. The residents want a public

sewer system to deal with the problems.

Gifford said they es-timate the cost of the proposed project to be around $800,000.

NEMPDD Economic and Community Develop-ment Coordinator Wanda Christian said there is not as much public grant money available for sewer projects as there has been in prior years when the federal stimu-lus program was offering a significant amount of grant funding. She said a community development block grant could be an option for a portion of the money if the project meets all the criteria. There are also several options for loans to fund some of the cost.

Chancery Clerk Bubba Pounds told the group it might also be possible to seek a special ap-propriation of funds from

congress for the effort and encouraged them to speak to the state’s legislators about that possibility. Supervisors expressed support for the effort and said they’ll help them with obtaining funds any way they can.

Tiger Camp holds monthly meeting

TIPPAH COUNTY – The Sons of the Confederate Veterans Tippah Tiger Camp 868 will hold their regular monthly meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday at the VFW. The state com-mander and other state officers will be present-ing program and bestow special awards.

Fire department to host motorcycle ride

BURNSVILLE – The Burnsville Fire Depart-ment will hold the 9th

Annual Burnsville Fire Department Motorcycle Ride on June 14.

The ride will include a poker run, door prizes, free food for all riders, prizes for best and worst hand and a chance to win $200.

All proceeds raised during the event will ben-efit the fire department.

 Schools approve lunch price increase

IUKA – The Tishomingo County School Board re-cently approved the US-DA’s school lunch price increase for all schools in the district.

The school lunch price will increase from $2.25 to $2.50 for the 2014-15 school year.

 Dinner slated for cancer survivors

BLUE MOUNTAIN –

Blue Mountain College and MMI Dining Sys-tems will honor Tippah County Cancer Survivors at a dinner at 6 p.m. on Thursday, June 5 in the Ray Dining Hall on the BMC Campus. Each cancer survivor and one caregiver are invited to participate.

Cafe to host music showcase series

IUKA – Downtown Iuka’s Cafe Memories recently announced they will host a summer showcase series of local musicians.

Lisa Lambert will per-form at a Songwriter’s Showcase at the cafe on Thursday at 6 p.m.

Other musicians join-ing Lambert will include Aaron Vance of Moorev-ille, Joel Smith of Corinth and Brian Harrison of Fulton.

Bingo winnerPatricia Burns was the first $1,000 Progressive Bingo winner at American Le-gion Post 6 in Corinth. Making the check presentation was Post Commander Tommy Watson.

JACKSON — Missis-sippi’s fi rst charter school is closer to opening.

The Charter School Authorizer Board voted Monday to accept the application of RePublic Charter Schools, which wants to open Reimagine Prep in Jackson, serving fi fth grade through eighth grade. The board denied applications for charter schools in Columbus and Natchez.

The board will now seek to negotiate a fi ve-year contract with RePublic.

ReImagine Prep “will be setting a great stan-dard for what charter schools should look like in Mississippi,” said Kar-en Elam of Oxford, the authorizer board member who shepherded the ap-plication. “In short, really top-notch.”

RePublic, which has two schools in Nashville, Tennessee, plans to open the Mississippi school in fall 2015, in a building owned by New Horizon Ministries, one of Jack-son’s largest churches

Ravi Gupta, the manag-ing partner of RePublic Schools, called being se-lected to open Mississip-pi’s fi rst charter school “a huge honor.” The school would have 440 students at full capacity.

He said two staff mem-bers would move to Jack-son and that the school would begin door-to-door recruiting in August.

The authorizer board, following recommenda-tions from an evaluation team, denied an applica-tion from the Columbus Coalition for Educational Options, which pro-posed the Inspire Charter School STEM and Arts Scholars Academy, serv-ing kindergarten through sixth grade and ninth through 12th grade. The board also denied the Phoenix Project Com-munity Development Foundation, which pro-posed the Phoenix Early College Charter School in Natchez, serving ninth through 12th grade.

A review team said the Columbus curricu-lum plan wasn’t detailed enough and didn’t ac-knowledge differences between elementary school and high school. Evaluators said they were worried about changes in proposed staffi ng. They also warned that the Rev.

Darren Leach, as the pas-tor of the church housing the school, could have a confl ict of interest as the school’s executive direc-tor.

Leach said the Colum-bus group would apply again, learning from its fi rst application.

Of the Natchez applica-tion, evaluators said there was no fi rm agreement with either Copiah-Lin-coln Community College or Alcorn State University to allow Phoenix students to enroll — the corner-stone of the early college model. Evaluators also questioned the group’s ap-parent reliance on a con-sulting fi rm to design the school, and questioned whether academically lagging students could be prepared for college courses by 11th grade.

1st charter school closer to opening

BY JEFF AMYThe Associated Press

CrossroadsMagazine

Bridal Edition

The Crossroads Magazine is a supplement to the Daily Corinthian

If you were married betweenJanuary 2013 and December 2013 we are

looking for your picture and wedding information forour upcoming Crossroads Magazine Bridal Edition.

Simply submit your wedding photo and fi ll out a simple form at the Daily Corinthian and you will be included in

our June Edition.

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OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Tuesday, June 3, 2014www.dailycorinthian.com

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STARKVILLE — The head-lines around the country have coalesced from punch and counterpunch on the Rose Cochran photo scandal to a simple statement of fact; the Mississippi Republican Sen-ate primary represents the last chance for the deep-pocketed, Tea Party-affi liated national super political action commit-

tees (PACs) to unseat an incumbent Republi-can U.S. senator.

The narratives are similar as they paint the race as a showdown between the far right and the “establishment” GOP in Mississippi. But a look at the money trail in this race, which has seen super PACS representing Club for Growth, FreedomWorks, Senate Conserva-tives Fund and others raise the ante on Mc-Daniel’s behalf, shows that this race has tak-en on a far more national sheen.

According to OpenSecrets.org, the Co-chran-McDaniel race has attracted $4.8 million in combined offi cial campaign com-mittee funding – with $3.6 million for the Cochran campaign and $1.2 million for the McDaniel campaign. Advantage, Cochran.

But it is in the arena of outside spending by PACs, super PACs or 501c groups – liter-ally a total of $7.8 million in money that was spent by third parties seeking to infl uence the outcome of the race by advocating issues and supporting or opposing the respective candi-dates – that the race may well ultimately be defi ned. Here, the advantage is McDaniel’s.

McDaniel has drawn a whopping $4.5 mil-lion in outside spending by groups seeking to elect him or to defeat Cochran. Cochran has drawn $3.2 million in outside spending by groups seeking to elect him or to defeat Mc-Daniel.

As of May 30, Club for Growth alone has spent $2.4 million trying to elect McDaniel and unseat Cochran. Senate Conservatives Fund and Senate Conservatives Action have spent $1.36 million to benefi t the McDaniel effort.

The pro-Cochran super PAC Mississippi Conservatives has spent over $1.6 million to elect Cochran and defeat McDaniel. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has spent $500,000 to help Cochran.

All that outside money pays for TV and ra-dio commercials, direct mail pieces, “robo-calls,” and other media or modern campaign technology tactics – but under the law, it’s outside the offi cial campaigns.

But the reality of Republican primaries in Mississippi is that they represent a ground game get-out-the-vote war for turnout in the state’s top 15 Republican counties: Rankin, DeSoto, Harrison, Jackson, Hinds, Madison, Lauderdale, Lamar, Pearl River, Forrest, Lee, Lowndes, Jones, Simpson and Warren coun-ties.

In a race this contentious, every vote in ev-ery county counts and will be contested. Ex-pect an organized GOTV effort in most Mis-sissippi counties by both camps. But it will be in these GOP vote-rich counties where the action will be concentrated.

Supporters of incumbent U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran are spending the fi nal days of the campaign reminding Mississippians of the litany of state, county and local elected GOP leaders across the state who are supporting Cochran – including fellow U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker, former U.S. Sen. Trent Lott, 1st Dis-trict U.S. Rep. Alan Nunnelee, 3rd District U.S. Rep. Gregg Harper, 4th District U.S. Rep. Steven Palazzo, Gov. Phil Bryant, Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves, and Secretary of State Del-bert Hosemann among others .

Supporters of state Sen. Chris McDaniel are spending the fi nal days of the campaign reminding Mississippians of the number of Tea Party-affi liated stars who have embraced McDaniel – including former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, former U.S. Sen. Rick Santo-rum, and others. Santorum led the 2012 GOP presidential primary in Mississippi with 32.8 percent of the vote.

But if the more than total $11.8 million spent so far in this campaign produced an air war that makes watching TV about as pleasant as a root canal, it is the ground assault – the GOTV effort – that will decide this race today.

(Daily Corinthian columnist Sid Salter is syndicated across the state. Contact him at 601-507-8004 or [email protected].)

Senate race comes down to GOTV success

in 15 key counties

Prayer for today

A verse to share

Last week I set out a 2016 nightmare scenario for Re-publicans – not one that seems likely, but one that can be extrapolated from current polling.

In that spirit, let me set out a 2016 nightmare scenario for Democrats – again, not likely but a plau-sible extrapolation.

It assumes, fi rst of all, that Hillary Clinton is not the Democratic nominee, or that her poll numbers have gone sharply down (they’ve declined somewhat over the last year, and could conceiv-ably fall more).

And it assumes that vot-ers’ attitude toward the Obama administration re-mains roughly where it is today, with 44 percent job approval for the president.

At which point the Dem-ocratic Party has a seri-ous problem. Like the Re-publican Party after it got crushed in 2006 and 2008, the Democratic Party, af-ter its pounding in 2010 and only partial rebound in 2012, has very few plausi-ble presidential candidates apart from Clinton.

Polling matching other Democrats against pos-sible Republican nominees is fragmentary and infre-quent. But it shows that Joe Biden, presumably well-known as incumbent vice president, runs well under Obama’s job approval and Clinton’s higher numbers.

In polls over the last six months, Biden averages 32 percent against Chris

Christie and gets 31 per-cent against Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio and 29 per-cent against Paul Ryan.

I haven’t seen polls showing oth-er Democrats

(except Clinton) running better. Possible candidates – Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, former Montana Gov. Brian Sch-weitzer – are little known nationally. The fi rst two have fashioned records suit-able to heavily Democratic states while Schweitzer’s home state has just three electoral votes.

In election years when a president is retiring, the vote for his party’s nominee almost always tends to re-fl ect the incumbent’s job ap-proval. You have to go back to 1896, when Grover Cleve-land repudiated Democratic nominee William Jennings Bryan, to fi nd an exception.

Over that period, only three incumbents saw their party’s nominee win the popular vote by a signifi cant margin – Theodore Roos-evelt, Calvin Coolidge and Ronald Reagan.

The numbers for Demo-crats now don’t look good. Pew Research Center re-ports that 65 percent would like to see the next presi-dent offer different poli-cies and programs from the

Obama administration’s, while only 30 percent want Obama’s successor to offer similar policies.

That’s only slightly bet-ter than voters’ reaction to George W. Bush’s policies at this stage in the 2008 cycle.

Pew’s numbers look eerily similar to the results of the 1920 election, the biggest repudiation of a president’s party ever. Woodrow Wil-son was president then, and his party’s nominee, James M. Cox, won only 34 per-cent of the vote. Republican Warren G. Harding won 60 percent and carried every non-Southern state.

Wilson and Obama have some things in common. Both were happy to live in university communities. Both had minimal experi-ence in high political offi ce. Both got heavily Democrat-ic Congresses to pass ma-jor legislation in their fi rst terms. Both were cheered by crowds of thousands in Europe.

Wilson led the nation to victory in World War I, but his last two years were di-sastrous. He suffered a dis-abling stroke. His Versailles Treaty was rejected by the Senate. The nation was hit by infl ation and recession, waves of strikes, race riots and terrorist bombings.

The Democrats’ collapse in 1920 was the voters’ re-sponse. It wasn’t because of a weak ticket. Cox was a three-term Ohio governor who created the Cox Com-munications empire; today

his 94-year-old daughter is worth $12 billion. His run-ning mate was Franklin D. Roosevelt.

The 2016 Democratic tick-et, though perhaps weaker, likely won’t fare as badly. Americans these days most-ly vote straight tickets. Even in 2008, 46 percent voted for John McCain.

And certainly everyone hopes the nation doesn’t suffer disasters like those of 1919 and 1920. But that election is a reminder that the bottom can fall out for a party.

Democratic nominees have received at least 48 percent of the vote in the last fi ve presidential elec-tions, going back 20 years. Obama has left them stron-ger than ever in central cit-ies and university towns.

But the party has receded elsewhere. Bill Clinton in 1996 had better percentage margins than Barack Obama in 2012 in 36 states. A ticket weaker than Obama in cen-tral cities and weaker than Clinton elsewhere might fall well below 48 percent.

I don’t think a Democratic nightmare scenario is likely. But some numbers point in that direction.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examin-er, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise In-stitute, a Fox News Chan-nel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.)

Democrats’ nightmare scenario for 2016

NEAR ZION NATIONAL PARK, Utah — “Everything is digital now,” a young clerk explains to me when I ask to buy a roll of fi lm. She speaks in a faux-patient voice, quite loudly, the way you’d talk to a Martian, or a nursing-home resident.

I stubbornly hold up my point-and-shoot fi lm cam-era purchased off eBay for $3 years ago and say, “No, not everything.” And then, rather gratuitously add, “Film was good enough for Ansel Adams.”

This day, when I should be admiring big red rocks in fi ve national parks that dominate Southern Utah, I spend far too much time stopping at combo service station and souvenir shops trying to fi nd a roll of fi lm. I’ll admit that at some point I began perversely enjoying the reaction to my quest.

Young clerks all but sneer. Older clerks usually admit that somewhere they, too, still hoard a fi lm camera. But, one says, “The pur-

chase-by date on fi lm pass-es before we can sell it.”

T h a t ’ s when I re-member Mis-ter P.C. Bur-nett and his ammunition-box story. Mister Bur-

nett was my college photo-journalism instructor – not to mention my teacher for about six other journalism classes at Auburn.

The department during my era only had two pro-fessors. Size didn’t matter. Both Mister Burnett and Mister Mickey Logue were seasoned newspaper men who recognized a news story when it bit them in the press pass, and they respected deadlines. They taught us to do the same.

Mister Burnett had a story about fi nding a roll of fi lm in a World War II am-munition box where it had been forgotten for a couple

of decades or longer. He processed it and printed the photographs as if the fi lm had been exposed the day before. He was making a point about the long shelf life of fi lm – forever, if you keep it cool.

At the national-park store I fi nally locate and buy a few rolls of fi lm. I now am free to shoot the Court of the Patriarchs, the Temple of Sinawava, The Grotto and a distant condor with my Fuji autofocus camera. The children in my life often ask to use it because it’s such an antiquated novelty. I wish they could see the twin-lens refl ex cameras we checked out for our photo journal-ism class projects.

Mister Burnett is dead now, no longer advising his students to have their wedding photographs shot in black and white so they won’t fade, or teaching greenhorns how to write an obituary – “All deaths are sudden; ‘sudden death’ is a redundancy.”

What would he think of the dearth of fi lm in stores, and the relatively new prac-tice of paying for obituar-ies that can say anything the customer wants them to say? In the 1970s we thought him old-fashioned, of course. Maybe so, but turns out he was right about those color shots that faded even quicker than the mar-riages. And most of us have seen fi rsthand by now that all deaths are sudden.

Hoodoos, spires, arches, monoliths and rocks bal-anced precariously on one another – magnifi cent scenes created by 100 mil-lion years of natural ero-sion – all lend perspective to what’s around to stay and what’s but a blip on the ra-dar, including us.

I put fi lm on a par with the Skyline Arch.

(To fi nd out more about Daily Corinthian columnist Rheta Grimsley Johnson and her books, visit www.rhetagrimsleyjohnson-books.com.)

Hoodoo we think we are

“For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God;” Romans 3:23

Loving Father, help me that I may realize the depth of thy love. If I may be discouraged over my failures, speak to me hopefully and lead me out where I may fi nd the right way to succeed. May I not be kept in sorrow, but fi nd each day the happiness that brings a thankful heart. Amen.

Rheta Johnson

Columnist

Michael BaroneColumnist

Sid SalterColumnist

Page 5: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Across The Nation Across The State

Second West Nilevirus case in state

JACKSON — The Mis-sissippi State Depart-ment of Health is report-ing the state’s second human case of West Nile virus for 2014.

The new reported case is in Newton County. In February, health officials reported a case in Hinds County.

The state health de-partment only reports laboratory-confirmed cases to the public. In 2013, Mississippi had 45 West Nile cases and five deaths.

State Epidemiologist Dr. Thomas Dobbs says the second case is a re-minder of the importance of preventing mosquito exposures, particularly ahead of the active sum-mer months.

 Freedom Summer exhibit now open

JACKSON — Longtime civil rights activist Bob Moses was to speak Monday at the open-ing of the Mississippi Department of Archives and History’s new ex-hibit “Stand Up!”: Missis-sippi Freedom Summer 1964.”

Moses, a director of the Mississippi Freedom Summer Project, was to speak at noon at Old Capitol Museum. The exhibit will be on display at the William F. Winter Archives and History Building in Jackson. It runs through October.

The exhibit draws on photographs, artifacts, documents and film foot-age of events A replica school room modeled from photographs of

Freedom Schools will give visitors an idea of the conditions volunteers and students worked under.

 Blessing of the Fleettradition continues

BILOXI – The 85th annual Blessing of the Fleet in Biloxi means shrimping season in Mis-sissippi waters is just around the corner.

Fifty-seven decorated working and pleasure boats cruised the chan-nel slowly Sunday pass-ing the Pan American Clipper to greet the 2014 Shrimp King and Queen and receive a blessing for a safe and abundant fishing season from Fa-ther Gregory Barras of St. Michael’s Catholic Church in Biloxi.

“Praying for each of them to have safety out into the water and then back and that they have a good catch and able to sustain their lives with that,” said Barras.

Crowds of spectators were thinner Sunday than in years past along the

beaches and harbor wall, but no less enthusiastic.

 Violations leadto club suspension

NATCHEZ — A four-week suspension for three violations of Mis-sissippi Alcohol and Bev-erage Control regulations resulted in Natchez’s Dimples Lounge closing until July 4.

Deidre Cox, owner of the Main Street club, tells The Natchez Demo-crat the club agreed to the suspension, instead of appealing it.

Cox said the first violation was a privately booked sexually themed party, which included a lap dance class.

The second violation was in response to a YouTube video in which there is reportedly fe-male nudity.

Dimples was written up for a third violation because Fred Marsalis, a local club promoter, told city officials at a public hearing about complaints against the club.

Associated Press

Police confiscate $3 million in shoes

RADCLIFF, Ky. — Po-lice are investigating after finding $3 million worth of missing shoes at a central Kentucky home.

Media outlets report that officers with the Radcliff Police Depart-ment confiscated thousands of pairs of Nike shoes that were scattered in front of the home.

According to a search warrant filed last week, the shoes were sup-posed to be shipped in 2009 from a Nike distribution center in Ten-nessee to another one in Texas, but never made it.

The women who were in possession of the shoes said they had purchased them from someone else and didn’t know they were stolen. They said they were selling them at a flea market.

Police are investigat-ing. No arrests have been made.

 San Francisco cable cars out of service

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco’s famed cable cars were not running Monday morn-ing and the rest of the city’s transit system was experiencing rush-hour delays after work-ers called in sick, trans-portation officials said.

The San Francisco Municipal Transporta-tion Agency was run-ning a third of its nor-mal morning service, spokesman Paul Rose said. The agency runs buses, light rail and

street cars in addition to the cable cars.

Rose said he did not know how many of the agency’s employees called in sick, but there were rumors over the weekend that a signifi-cant number of workers would not be coming in.

“We’re doing our best to balance service throughout the city and provide service on every route and line, but at this point there will be delays,” he said.

All express buses were running local ser-vice in the morning and stopping at every stop, the agency said. The Bay Area Rapid Transit Agency was honoring tickets on city transpor-tation all day from the Daly City and Balboa Park stations to down-town San Francisco, Rose said.

 Nashville tourismindustry hits high

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The tourism industry in Nashville has hit a record.

The Tennessean cited data from Henderson-ville-based Smith Travel Research in reporting that March saw the highest number of ho-tel rooms sold in one month in the city.

The 640,000 rooms sold broke the previous record in October 2013 by almost 7 percent.

Compared to other Top 25 markets for March, Nashville re-ported the second larg-est increase in rooms sold and it was in the top five for occupancy growth.

The city’s occu-pancy tax, which also

indicates how the hos-pitality industry is far-ing, also experienced growth, up 34 percent compared to March 2013.

Tourist tax collections in March rose to more than $4.75 million, which was up 33.9 per-cent from a year prior. The city has collected $31.3 million so far this year, which is more than 20 percent over the same period in last year.

 Dot-Vegas domains becoming available

LAS VEGAS — Com-panies bored with a dot-com or dot-net Web address can now spice things up with a dot-Vegas suffix.

Las Vegas-based firm Dot Vegas Inc. is opening up registration Monday for the new domains, which offer registrants a chance at a shorter, more descrip-tive URL they might not be able to find in the crowded world of more than 100 million dot-com domains.

“I think most of the good terms, most of the obvious terms have al-ready been taken,” Dot Vegas CEO Jim Trevino said about addresses with the more common suffixes. “That’s part of the dilemma that every-one faces.”

Entities registered with the Trademark Clearinghouse have first dibs on dot-Vegas domains. High-demand names will be up for auction starting Aug. 14, and addresses will be available to the general public on a first-come, first-served basis starting Sept. 15.

Associated Press

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

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Page 6: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Jean McCallaFuneral Services for Jean

Smith McCalla, 84, are set for 2 p.m. Sunday at McPeters Fu-neral Home Chapel with Terry Smith offi ci-ating. Burial will be in the Oakhill Chris-tian Church Cemetery.

V i s i t a t i o n will be 1 to 2 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Jean, a life-long resident of Corinth died Friday, May 30, 2014.

She was born August 30, 1929, in the Kendrick community to the late Walter C. and Mary A. Splann Smith. She was Presi-dent of the Corinth Chapter of United Daughters of the Confed-eracy and a longtime member of Foote St. Church of Christ. For 32 years, she was the Offi cial Cir-cuit Court Reporter for the First

judicial District of the State of Mississippi.

She is survived by her lov-ing family which includes her daughter, Mary Sue McCalla Davis (Ronnie), her sister, Joyce Smith Dyson (HD), her grandchildren, Ronald Davis Jr. (Stacey), Benjamin Davis, Jean-nie Davis, Amy Davis Brewer (Shawn) , her great grandchil-dren: Ryin Bickel, Trey Davis, Evan Davis, Tach Brewer, Isaic Wright, Jake Davis and Daniel Davis; her nieces and nephews, Richard “Dick” Atkins, Caroline Ware, Gary Dyson (Jenny), Mis-sy Barber (Roger), Larry Dyson (Kristen); as well as several great nieces and nephews

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her sis-ters, Caroline Smith and Doro-thy Smith; and her nephew, Neal Atkins.

Her grandsons will serve as Pallbearers.

Online condolences may be made at www.mcpetersfunerals-directors.com

Honnell HallHonnell Hall died Monday,

June 2, 2014, at Northeast Georgia Medical Center.

Arrangements are pend-ing with Memorial Funeral Home.

  Opal SpencerFuneral services for Opal

Spencer, 85, of Corinth are set for 2 p.m. Wednesday at Mag-nolia Fu-neral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Brush Creek Cem-etery.

M s . S p e n c e r died May 31, 2014, at her resi-dence.

She was born Feb. 19, 1929, and was a factory worker and seamstress at Corinth Manu-facturing.

Ms. Spencer was of the Baptist faith. She was a mem-ber of Brush Creek Baptist Church and attended servic-es at North Corinth Baptist Church.

Survivors include her son, Gilbert Shaw of Corinth; her daughters, Linda Shaw, Peggy Burrows and Patricia Wood all of Corinth, Katha Comeaux (Jerry) of Olive Branch and Diane Clem-ent (Carl) of Counce, Tenn.; eleven grandchildren, Penny Powell (Revelle), Richie Shaw (Crystal), Nickie Shaw (Amy), Mikie Shaw, Stephen Bur-rows, Michelle Wooley (Rob-ert), Cory Salter (Stacy), Scott Salter (Sherry), Cheri Holmes (Steve), Ashley Parvin, Bran-dy Hershberger (Jerry); 21 great-grandchildren; and one great-great-granddaughter.

She was preceded in death by her husband of 51 years, RJ Spencer; her parents, Will Ed and Roxie Jones Markle, one great-grandson; and her

brother, Wiburn Markle.Bro. Warren Jones will of-fi ciate and Ashley Parvin will do the eulogy.

Visitation is from noon un-til service time.

  Jake WilsonFuneral services for James

Edward “Jake” Wilson, 91, of Burnsville are set for 1 p.m. today at Cutshall Funeral Home Chapel in Iuka with burial in Sardis Cemetery.

Mr. Wilson died Saturday, May 31, 2014, at Tishomingo Manor Nursing Home.

He attended Berea Church of Christ and was a retired logger.

Survivors include one son, David Wilson (Debra of Iuka), four grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his wife, Hester Lovelace Wilson and a son, Edward Wilson.

Bro. Franky Smith will of-fi ciate.

McCalla

Spencer

Although I grew up in nearby Guys, Tennessee, I have always felt ties to Corinth because of my parents’ connection to the city.

My father was a Corinth High School alumnus from 1947, and I loved hearing him recount sto-ries about the illustrious Johnny Schudi riding his bicycle around town, as he hawked copies of The Daily Corinthian on the street, a stubby cigar dangling from his mouth. A year after my father graduated, my parents married at the courthouse in Corinth, the “marriage capital of the South” at the time, drawing eager young couples from sur-rounding areas because of the lack of a waiting period, blood test, or resi-dency requirement in or-der to participate in the matrimonial ceremony.

As a teenager, my mother saw Gone With the Wind at the Pickwick Theater on Cruise Street. Her sister, two years her

junior, had to walk back home to Wick Street, as she was too young to be granted a d m i s -sion due to Clark Gable’s use of the word

“damn.” My siblings and I have since joked that Aunt Jeannie, now de-ceased, may well have ut-tered worse expletives on the walk home those few blocks from the theater.

My decision to move to downtown Corinth last summer was excit-ing. The apartment may have needed a little work, but it possessed what I call “character.” I liked the layout, reminiscent of a New York loft, with an open front area that would become my living room, dining room, and home offi ce, fl anked by two bedrooms and bath-rooms in the back.

I now had a balcony overlooking the area where the two annual festivals, the Slugburger Festival and Hog Wild, are held. I loved listening to the trebly train whistle wail a block away into the dark night. I was also within walking distance of Pizza Grocery, Corner Slice, the newly opened Smith Restaurant, and Dilworth’s Tamales – a treat my father shared with me on many occa-sions at the end of a Sat-urday visit to Corinth.

It was not long after I moved into the apartment in June, however, that I began hearing accounts of crimes in or around downtown Corinth. An acquaintance of a friend of mine had been accosted at Trailhead Park while jogging; one of my former high school students was robbed of the only $20 he had in his possession in the downtown area. In the meantime, an assault hap-pened at the City Park, not downtown but certainly

not that far away.With time, the down-

town incidents I had heard about seemed more like petty mischief, and the culprit connected with the crime at the park had been apprehended. I felt somewhat safe downtown.

Until this week.I never rode in the cab

of 66-year-old Cleo Hen-derson who worked at Liberty Cabs on Taylor Street for nearly 44 years, but I sure remember that sign being there for as long as I can recall. On several occasions, as I headed to Dilworth’s Ta-males or Corner Slice or just walked down to the newly renovated SoCo district on Wick Street, I noticed the sign under the overhang of the brick building, advertising the two phone numbers of the cab service, with its bench underneath,.

Early May 25, around 3 a.m., apparently, Hen-derson was found dead on the sidewalk outside the cab stand. At fi rst,

James Willis, the co-own-er, thought he had simply fallen, and his death had been an accident. How-ever, Corinth Police later revealed he had been shot in an apparent robbery attempt and left lying on the sidewalk with a gun-shot wound. The ultimate irony is that the railroad money bag in his posses-sion contained no money but instead carried his diabetic medicine.

The comments I saw posted on social media in the aftermath of Hender-son’s death were heart-felt. I could tell that he was apparently a kind, gentle man who would go out of his way to help anyone and never in any way deserved the action that ultimately brought his demise.

However, that’s the way of life: there are no guar-antees, and those who live by gentle means don’t always come to a gentle end. As frustrating and disheartening as the truth may be, it changes noth-

ing. There are no succint platitudes we can devise that will protect us from the brutality and insensi-tivity of the world.

On the other hand, we cannot let ourselves live in fear of the world. The men-tality of fear imprisons.

Those who knew Hen-derson should remember him as the gentle, help-ful person that he was—and foster the idea that this is not our Corinth. It involves everyone mak-ing it a point to regularly patronize downtown stores and restaurants in Corinth; it requires all of us deciding that we will not fall prey to fear in the aftermath of violence.

It is still the Corinth I love and will continue to love.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Stacy Jones teach-es English at McNairy Central High School and UT Martin and serves on the board of directors at Corinth Theatre-Arts. She loves being a down-town Corinth resident.)

Tragedy should not taint love of downtown

Stacy Jones

Southern Drawl

BEDFORD, Mass. — An airport employee watched as the Gulfstream jet raced past the end of a runway, plunged down an embankment and erupted in fl ames.

The witness account of the Saturday night crash that killed all seven people aboard, including Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz, pro-vided some of the fi rst clues as investigators be-gan piecing together what went wrong during the attempted takeoff from a runway surrounded by woods outside Boston.

They were looking for the plane’s cockpit voice recorder and fl ight data recorder and would re-view the pilots’ experi-ence and the aircraft’s maintenance history, Luke Schiada, a National Transportation Safety Board investigator, said Sunday. He said inves-tigators also are looking for surveillance video that

may have captured the crash at Hanscom Field.

“We’re at the very be-ginning of the investiga-tion,” Schiada said.

The National Trans-portation Safety Board planned a media tour of the crash site Monday af-ternoon and, later in the day, a briefi ng on the sta-tus of its investigation.

The plane was carry-ing four passengers, two pilots and a cabin atten-dant, according to the NTSB.

Katz was returning to New Jersey from a gather-ing at the home of histori-an Doris Kearns Goodwin. Also killed was a next-door neighbor of Katz’s, Anne Leeds, a 74-year-old re-tired preschool teacher he had invited to accompany him, and Marcella Dalsey, the director of Katz’s son’s foundation. The fourth passenger, Susan Asbell, 67, was the wife of former Camden County, New Jer-sey, prosecutor Sam As-bell.

The identities of the other victims weren’t

immediately released. Nancy Phillips, Katz’s longtime partner and city editor at the Inquirer, was not aboard.

A public memorial ser-vice is planned Wednes-day at Temple University for Katz, a 1963 graduate of the university and a major donor.

Katz, who was 72, made his fortune investing in parking lots and the New York Yankees’ cable net-work. He once owned the NBA’s New Jersey Nets and the NHL’s New Jer-sey Devils and in 2012 be-came a minority investor in the Inquirer.

Less than a week before the crash, Katz and Har-old H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest struck a deal to gain full control of the Inquirer as well as the Philadelphia Daily News and Philly.com by buying out their co-owners for $88 million. Lenfest said Sunday that the deal will be delayed but will continue. Katz’s son, Drew, will take his fa-ther’s seat on the board of directors, Lenfest said.

Clues sought in fatal jet crashBY RODRIQUE NGOWI

AND MARYCLAIRE DALEThe Associated Press

CHICAGO — Two years ago, Arrica Wal-lace was riddled with tu-mors from widely spread cervical cancer that the strongest chemotherapy and radiation could not beat back. Today, the Kansas mother shows no signs of the disease, and it was her own immune system that made it go away.

The experimental ap-proach that helped her is one of the newest frontiers in the rapidly advancing fi eld of cancer immunotherapy, which boosts the body’s natu-ral ways of attacking tu-mors.

At a conference in Chi-cago on Monday, doctors also reported extend-ing gains recently made with immune therapies against leukemia and the skin cancer melanoma to bladder, lung and other

tumor types.The cervical cancer

experiment was the fi rst time an immune therapy has worked so dramatically against a cancer caused by a virus — HPV. In a pilot study by the National Cancer Institute, the tumors of two out of nine women completely disappeared and those women re-main cancer-free more than a year later. That’s far better than any other treatment has achieved in such cases.

Doctors are trying it now against throat, anal and other cancers caused by HPV, the human pap-illomavirus, and think it holds promise for can-cers caused by other vi-ruses, too.

This is “very, very ex-citing,” said Dr. Don Dizon of Massachusetts General Hospital, a women’s cancer special-ist with no role in the study.

Wallace lives in Man-hattan, Kansas, west of Topeka, and was 35 when her cervical cancer was discovered. It spread widely, and one tumor was so large it blocked half of her windpipe. Doctors said she had less than a year to live, but with sons aged 8 and 12, “I couldn’t give up,” she said.

She enrolled in the study, and researchers removed one of her tu-mors, isolated special immune system cells that were attacking it, multiplied them in the lab and gave billions of them back to her in a one-time infusion. They also gave her drugs to boost her immune re-sponse — “like Gatorade for the cells,” she said.

“It’s been 22 months since treatment and 17 months of completely clean scans” showing no sign of cancer, Wallace said.

Doctors use immune therapy as cervical cancer treatment

BY MARILYNN MARCHIONE

The Associated Press

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Page 7: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 • 7

Assistance

Free YogaWeekly chair yoga

classes taught by Cer-tified Yoga Instructor Karen Beth Martin are held every Thursday at 10 a.m., in the St. Paul’s Episcopal Church fellow-ship hall. Each class is 40-45 minutes in length and are tailored to the abilities and limitations of those attending with the goal of improving strength, flexibility and balance. The class, geared toward seniors, is open to the public. Class is donation-based. For questions, contact the church office at 662-286-2922.

Retiree breakfastThe Caterpillar Retiree

Breakfast is held the first Monday of each month at 7:30 a.m. at Martha’s Menu in Corinth.

 Mississippi Youth Challenge

Mississippi Youth Chal-lenge Academy features a structured environ-ment with a focus on job training, social skills and self-discipline. Other academic opportunities include high school di-ploma, college classes through a local university and nationally certified construction skills. The academy is designed to meet the needs of today’s “at risk” youth. Both males and females, 16-18 years old, can ap-ply.

Applicants can earn their GEDs. Tuition is free. For more informa-tion, call 1-800-507-6253 or visit www.ngycp.org/state/ms.

Volunteers needed• Hospice Advantage

in Corinth is looking for volunteers in the sur-rounding area: Corinth, Tippah, Tishomingo and Prentiss County. Volun-teering is a wonderful way to give back to your community and lend a helping hand to the el-derly.

For more information, call Carla Nelson, vol-unteer coordinator with Hospice Advantage on becoming a volunteer at 662-665-9185 or 662-279-0435. The website is hospiceadvantage.com.

• Magnolia Regional Hospice is currently seeking individuals or groups to be trained as volunteers. Hospice is a program of caring for in-dividuals who are termi-nally ill and choose to re-main at home with family or a caregiver. Some of the ministry opportuni-ties for volunteers are sitting with the patient in their homes to allow the caregiver a break, gro-cery shopping, reading to a patient, craft opportu-nities, bereavement/grief support and in-office work.

For more information, contact Lila Wade, vol-unteer coordinator at 662-293-1405 or 1-800-843-7553.

• Legacy Hospice is looking for volunteers. Legacy needs special people with special hearts and volunteers who are wanting to help others. Their duties will be helping with the sup-port of patients and care-givers, writing letters, making phone calls, and community activities. There is a training period involved at no cost. If in-terested, contact Lanell Coln, volunteer coordina-tor at Legacy Hospice, 301 East Waldron St, Corinth or call 662-286-5333.

Senior activitiesThe First Presbyterian

Senior Adult Ministry has two fitness classes avail-able to senior adults. Judy Smelzer leads a stretching/toning class on Mondays at 9 a.m. in the fellowship hall. There is no charge.

FPC is also hosting a Wii sports class for senior adults on Tues-days at 9 a.m. There is no cost to participate. Call the church office at 286-6638 to register or Kimberly Grantham at 284-7498. 

Al Anon MeetingAl-Anon meetings are

held monday nights at 7 p.m. at First Baptist Church in Corinth. Enter on the courtyard side. The meetings are for all those affected by alco-hol. For more information call 662-462-4404 or 662-287-4819.

Red CrossThe Northeast Mis-

sissippi Chapter of the Red Cross offers a wide variety of assistance and services, including disas-ter relief.

The Northeast Missis-sippi Chapter includes 16 counties. It is head-quartered in Tupelo, with offices in Tishomingo, New Albany, Starkville and Columbus. Although Red Cross no longer has a Corinth office, the organization wants to stress it continues to offer services in Alcorn County.

People seeking disas-ter assistance in North-east Mississippi can call the Tupelo headquarters during office hours at 662-842-6101. The toll-free after hours phone line is 1-855-891-7325.

The Red Cross’ service line for the armed forces is 877-272-7337. They also offer health and safety training, including first aid, baby-sitting and CPR, as well as disaster training for businesses.

To learn more about the Red Cross health and safety training call 1-800-733-2767.

Friendship classThe Friendship Class

meets weekly on Thurs-day at 6:30 p.m. in the fellowship hall of the First Presbyterian Church on Shiloh Road. This group of mentally chal-lenged adults and men-tors enjoy sharing time together, games, crafts, singing and refresh-ments. For more infor-mation, call the church office at 286-6638.

 Alcoholics Anonymous

The Corinth Downtown Group of Alcoholics Anonymous meets every Tuesday at 7 p.m. and Sunday at 8 p.m. at First Baptist Church at 501 Main Street, Corinth.

Story HourPre-school Story Hour

is held each Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Corinth Library. Year-round art exhibits are also on display and educational non-profit groups meet in the auditorium monthly.

The Corinth Friends of the Library hold their ongoing book sale inside the library. Hardback, paperback and audio books, and VHS and DVD donations to the library are always appreciated.

For more information, call 287-2441.

Quilt Guild meetsThe Cross City Piece-

makers Quilt Guild meets on the third Thursday of each month at the Homemakers Extension Office (beside the arena) at 1 p.m. Anyone inter-ested in quilting (learning or collecting) is invited to attend. For more infor-mation, contact Sharon at 287-0987.

Marine Corps LeagueThe Corinth Marine

Corps League meets the first Tuesday of ev-ery month at Martha’s Menu, downtown Corinth, at 6 p.m.

GED version to expireGED test-takers who

need to finish the cur-rent version of GED need

to do so by the end of 2013. The GED test contains five parts that can be taken separately, but must all be passed to receive a high school credential. GED test-takers who have started the 2002 Series GED Test, but not finished and passed every sec-tion, have until the end of 2013 to do so. Oth-erwise, their scores will expire, and will have to start over again with the new 2014 GED test.

Test-takers can find out more information by visiting the local adult education or GED class. In the Corinth area, con-tact the adult education instructor at 662-696-2314 or visit 1259 South Harper Rd. in Corinth.

 Children with disabilities

The Alcorn and Corinth School Districts are par-ticipating in an ongoing statewide effort to iden-tify, locate and evaluate children birth through the age of 21 who have a physical, mental, com-municative and/or emo-tional disability. Early identification of children in need of special edu-cational experiences is important to each child. The information gath-ered from contacts with parents other agencies will also be used to help determine present and future program needs as progress is made toward the goal of providing a free, appropriate public education to all children with a disability.

Contact Stephanie Clausel at the Alcorn School District or Linda Phillips at the Corinth School District with infor-mation on any children who may have a disabil-ity by calling or writing to: Alcorn School Dis-trict, Special Services, 31 County Road 401, Corinth, MS 38834, 662-286-7734 or Corinth School District Special Services, 1204 North Harper Road, Corinth, MS 38834, 662-287-2425.

Genealogy societyThe Alcorn County

Genealogical Society is located at the southeast corner of the Alcorn County Courthouse base-ment in the old veterans’ services office. It is open Tuesday-Friday from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. The So-ciety can be contacted at 662-286-0075 or email [email protected].

Support groups• The Crossroads

Group of Narcotics Anon-ymous meets Monday, Wednesday and Friday at noon, and at 7 p.m., seven days a week, at 506 Cruise Street in Corinth. All meetings are non-smoking.

The Northeast Missis-sippi area of Narcotics Anonymous Hotline is 662-841-9998.

• A Narcotics Anony-mous meeting is held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. at the Johnson-Ford-Mitchrell Commu-nity Center, 707 Spring Street in Iuka. Call 662-279-6435 for directions.

• The “Downtown Corinth” of AA meets Sundays at 8 p.m. for speaker meetings and Tuesdays at 7 p.m. for closed topic discussion meetings at the First Baptist Church (side pavilion) at 501 N. Main Street, Corinth.

For more information for all area AA groups, please call 662-212-2235.

• An Alcoholics Anony-mous meeting is held in Iuka at the old Chevy dealership building off old Hwy. 25 each Wednesday at 7 p.m. and Friday at 7:30 p.m.

Alcoholics Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women whose com-mon welfare is to stay sober and help others

achieve sobriety. The Iuka meeting is an open meeting, anyone who has a problem with alco-hol or other substances is welcome to attend.

For more information, call 662-660-3150.

• The Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group in Corinth is partnered with the Alzheimer’s As-sociation Mississippi Chapter. Keri Roaten is the facilitator. The group meets every first Thurs-day of each month at the Corinth Public Library, from 6-7 p.m.

The group discusses the hardships of those caring for people effect-ed by the disease and offer several different resources as well. For more information, con-tact [email protected] or 662-594-5526.

• The “Good Grief” ministry of the Hopewell-Indian Springs United Methodist Charge is a collaborative effort of both churches and meets every Wednes-day afternoon at 3 p.m. in the dining room of the Arby’s Restaurant, 706 Highway 72 East, Corinth.

The ministry was es-tablished to support those who have experi-enced a devastating life event such as the death of a loved one, diagnosis of a terminal illness or condition, the loss of a spouse or parent through divorce, even the loss of a job or home. The minis-try is non-denominational and open to all.

There is no cost to at-tend and no obligation to continue. For more in-formation, call Bro. Rick Wells, pastor of Hopewell and Indian Springs Unit-ed Methodist Charge and facilitator at 662-587-9602.

• Al-Anon is a support group and fellowship of relatives and friends of alcoholics. The group meets at 7 p.m. on Mondays at 1st Baptist Church in Corinth. For more information, call 462-4404.

• Mended Hearts is a support group open to all heart patients, their fami-lies and others impacted by heart disease. Its pur-pose is to inspire hope in heart disease patients and their families through visits and sharing experi-ences of recovery and returning to an active life. Healthcare professionals join in the mission by pro-viding their expertise and support.

Mended Hearts meets the second Monday of every month at 10 a.m. at the Magnolia Com-munity Service Complex in the Cardiac Rehab Conference Room, 1001 South Harper Road in Corinth.

• Finding Hope Minis-tries, a ministry of Fair-view Community Church is offering a depression support group. The ses-

sions will be held in the fellowship hall of Fairview Community Church, 125 CR 356, Iuka -- just off Hwy. 350. The support group meets from 10-11 a.m. Friday mornings and 6-7 p.m. Friday evenings.

For more information, call Debra Smith at 662-808-6997.

• A grief support group for anyone who has lost a loved one or may have a sick family member and needs someone who will understand what your going through is meeting at Real Life Church, (next to Fred’s in Corinth), every Monday from 6-7 p.m.

For one on one meet-ings, contact Sherry Scott at 662-415-7173.

• C.A.U.S.E. (Corinth, Autism, Understanding, Support, Education) sup-port group, “Just love them for who they are,” meets every first Monday of the month at 6 p.m. There is help for parents of a child with autism. Meet other parents, share experiences, ask questions, get advice, help others, vent or just read. For more informa-tion, call 662-415-1340.

• Corinth “Crossroads” Multiple Sclerosis Group invites anyone with mul-tiple sclerosis to come meet with them on the third Wednesday of each month at 11:30 a.m. at the Mississippi State/Alcorn County Exten-sion Office, 2200 Levee Road, located behind the Crossroads Arena. Contact Joy Forsyth at 662-462-7325 for more information.

Sharing HeartsSharing Heart is an

adult care program offer-ing a one day a week day care for adults suffering from Alzheimer’s or any other form of disease related dementia. Volun-teers and participants meet each Tuesday from 10-3 at First Bap-tist Church located at 501 Main Street. The program is designed to offer caregivers a day of rest and their family members a day of caring supervision along with music, games, lunch, exercise and crafts all designed to entertain and provide social inter-action.

For more information, please call Melinda Grady at 662-808-2206.

Shiloh museumA museum dedicated

to the Battle of Shiloh and area veterans is open next to Shiloh Na-tional Military Park. It is located at the intersec-tion of state Route 22 and Route 142 in Shiloh.

The Shiloh Battlefield & World War II Museum is the home of Honor Our Veterans Inc., a non-prof-it organization dedicated to raising money for projects to benefit area veterans. The museum

features items Larry De-Berry has amassed over a lifetime of collecting Shiloh-related artifacts, as well as artifacts from the Korean War, World War II, the Vietnam War — all the way up to the war in Afghanistan.

The Shiloh Battlefield & World War II Museum is open Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. For more informa-tion call Larry DeBerry at 731-926-0360.

 Marines helping Marines

“The Few and the Proud — Marines Help-ing Marines” — a United States Marine Corps League is a visitation program for senior inac-tive Marines. When a senior inactive Marine is housebound or in a nurs-ing home or hospice, the Corinth detachment will visit fellow Marines — because once a Marine always a Marine.

For more information, call 662-287-3233.

Thrift stores• The Lighthouse Fam-

ily Thrift Store is located in the Harper Square Mall at 1801 South Harper Road in Corinth. One hundred percent of the revenue goes back into the community in helping the Lighthouse Foundation. The store is open Tuesday through Saturday from 9:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m.

• Those wanting to do-nate items to the Salva-tion Army, 2200 Lackey Dr., whether it be cloth-ing or furniture can call 287-6979. The Salvation Army hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Saturday. The social service part of the agency is open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. A senior citizen discount day is held on Wednesday.

Post 6 meetsPerry Johns Post No.

6, American Legion will hold its regular monthly meeting every second Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Legion Hall on South Tate St., Corinth, along with the Ladies’ Auxil-iary and Sons of Legion Squadron No. 6.

Food ministryBread of Life Ministries

is an outreach of the Alcorn Baptist Associa-tion Food Pantry -- every Thursday from 10-10:30 a.m. at Tate Baptist Church on Harper Road.

Announcements and devotionals by various pastors and others are followed by personal at-tention as well as food distribution. Food dona-tions and volunteers are welcome. For more information, call 731-645-2806.

 Call for HelpA service of United

Care at the Cottage

Page 8: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

16,735.51 14,551.27 Dow Industrials 16,743.63 +26.46 +.16 +1.01 +9.778,113.49 5,952.18 Dow Transportation 8,148.37 +43.80 +.54 +10.10 +29.58

558.29 462.66 Dow Utilities 545.44 +.48 +.09 +11.18 +13.0011,334.65 8,814.76 NYSE Composite 10,772.00 +15.68 +.15 +3.57 +15.124,371.71 3,294.95 Nasdaq Composite 4,237.20 -5.42 -.13 +1.45 +22.271,924.03 1,560.33 S&P 500 1,924.97 +1.40 +.07 +4.14 +17.351,398.91 1,114.04 S&P MidCap 1,381.89 +3.91 +.28 +2.93 +17.03

20,353.95 16,442.14 Wilshire 5000 20,361.03 +12.68 +.06 +3.32 +17.741,212.82 942.79 Russell 2000 1,128.90 -5.60 -.49 -2.99 +13.97

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.48 10 61.47 +.24 -8.0AT&T Inc 1.84 11 35.44 -.03 +.8AirProd 3.08 26 121.83 +1.86 +9.0AlliantEgy 2.04 16 58.21 -.09 +12.8AEP 2.00 16 53.48 +.13 +14.4AmeriBrgn .94 39 73.21 +.03 +4.1ATMOS 1.48 18 50.57 +.47 +11.3BB&T Cp .96f 15 38.08 +.16 +2.0BP PLC 2.28 12 50.58 +.13 +4.1BcpSouth .20 22 23.84 +.34 -6.2Caterpillar 2.40 18 103.76 +1.53 +14.3Chevron 4.28f 12 122.21 -.58 -2.2CocaCola 1.22f 22 40.86 -.05 -1.1Comcast .90 19 52.56 +.36 +1.1CrackerB 4.00f 19 100.57 +.02 -8.6Deere 2.40f 10 91.18 +.01 -.2Dillards .24 16 112.36 -.39 +15.6Dover 1.50 16 87.55 +.37 +9.3EnPro ... 67 72.86 -.53 +26.4FordM .50 10 16.44 ... +6.5FredsInc .24 26 15.01 -.26 -18.8FullerHB .48f 23 47.55 -.28 -8.6GenCorp ... 9 18.64 +.03 +3.4GenElec .88 20 26.83 +.04 -4.3Goodyear .20 14 26.44 +.07 +10.9HonwllIntl 1.80 19 93.41 +.26 +2.2Intel .90 15 27.26 -.06 +5.0Jabil .32 15 18.75 -.07 +7.5KimbClk 3.36 20 112.08 -.27 +7.3Kroger .66 16 47.51 -.23 +20.2Lowes .92f 21 47.01 -.07 -5.1McDnlds 3.24 19 102.03 +.60 +5.2

MeadWvco 1.00a 9 42.96 +2.38 +16.3

OldNBcp .44 14 13.73 +.20 -10.7

Penney ... ... 8.68 -.31 -5.1

PennyMac 2.36 9 20.96 -.16 -8.7

PepsiCo 2.62f 20 87.87 -.46 +5.9

PilgrimsP ... 12 25.92 +.48 +59.5

RadioShk ... ... 1.43 -.07 -45.0

RegionsFn .20f 14 10.34 +.15 +4.6

SbdCp 3.00 18 2884.69+189.84 +3.2

SearsHldgs ... ... 39.36 -2.70 -.9

Sherwin 2.20 27 203.57 -1.04 +10.9

SiriusXM ... 55 3.28 ... -6.0

SouthnCo 2.10f 18 43.67 -.11 +6.2

SPDR Fncl .34e ... 22.35 +.06 +2.2

Torchmark .76f 14 81.55 +.62 +4.4

Total SA 3.19e ... 70.06 +.61 +14.3

USEC rs ... ... 3.47 +.16 -47.6

US Bancrp .92 14 42.18 -.01 +4.4

WalMart 1.92f 16 76.76 -.01 -2.5

WellsFargo 1.40f 13 51.09 +.31 +12.5

Wendys Co .20 38 8.32 +.12 -4.6

WestlkCh s .50 17 81.10 +.25 +32.9

Weyerhsr .88 27 31.45 +.03 -.4

Xerox .25 13 12.41 +.06 +2.0

YRC Wwde ... ... 22.26 -.13 +28.2

Yahoo ... 29 34.87 +.22 -13.8

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DABB Ltd ... 23.48 -.26AES Corp 20 14.10AK Steel dd 6.08 -.04AbbottLab 24 39.80 -.21AbbVie 21 54.15 -.18ActivsBliz 22 20.62 -.16AMD 79 3.97 -.03Aeropostl dd 3.59 -.32Aetna 14 77.86 +.31AlcatelLuc ... 3.91 -.10Alcoa 45 13.83 +.22Allergan 41 172.25 +4.79AlliantTch 12 129.62 +3.33AllyFin n ... 23.52 -.04AlphaNRs dd 3.24 -.14AlpAlerMLP q 18.33 +.09AlteraCp lf 24 33.11 -.02Altria 18 41.25 -.31AmTrstFin 10 42.32 -.38Amazon cc 308.84 -3.71Ambev n ... 7.09 +.05AMovilL 11 19.53 +.20AmAirl n dd 41.22 +1.06ACapAgy 8 23.71 -.02AEagleOut 18 10.62 -.11AmExp 18 91.89 +.39AHm4Rnt n ... 17.79 +.17AmIntlGrp 9 54.26 +.19ARCapH n ... 10.91 +.96ARltCapPr dd 12.37 -.04AmTower 61 88.39 -1.24Amgen 19 116.45 +.46AmkorTch 20 10.32 +.21Annaly 4 11.76 -.03ApolloInv 6 8.35 -.03Apple Inc 15 628.65 -4.35ApldMatl 29 20.52 +.33ArcelorMit dd 15.15ArchCoal dd 3.45 -.11ArchDan 21 44.85 -.09ArenaPhm dd 6.06 -.09AriadP dd 6.94 +.48ArmourRsd dd 4.35ArrayBio dd 4.12 -.08Arris cc 32.83 -.28ArubaNet dd 17.99 -.53AscenaRtl 19 16.53 -.17AstraZen 16 73.37 +1.17Atmel cc 8.30 -.08AvagoTch 32 71.64 +.97AvanirPhm dd 5.04 -.24Avon dd 14.46 +.17BRF SA ... 21.56 -.02Baidu 33 167.25 +1.44BakrHu 26 70.60 +.08BallardPw dd 3.82 +.01BcoBrad pf ... 13.78 -.17BcoSantSA ... 10.19 -.03BcoSBrasil ... 6.79 +.03BkofAm 20 15.26 +.12BkNYMel 15 34.65 +.09B iPVix rs q 33.38 -.14BarrickG dd 15.90 -.21Baxter 20 74.23 -.18BebeStrs dd 3.39 -.68BerkH B 16 127.88 -.46BestBuy 9 27.46 -.20BlackBerry dd 7.40 -.20Blackstone 15 31.21 +.13Boeing 23 135.90 +.65BostonSci 22 12.88 +.05BrMySq 28 49.09 -.65Broadcom 48 34.84 +2.97BrcdeCm 17 9.31 +.19CA Inc 14 28.69CBS B 19 60.32 +.71CMS Eng 16 29.72 -.03CSX 16 29.55 +.15CVS Care 20 78.30 -.02CYS Invest dd 9.16 -.08CblvsnNY 8 17.63CabotOG s 43 35.92 -.32Cadence 41 16.57 -.12Calpine 87 23.47 +.15CdnSolar 32 25.60 -.15CapOne 11 78.63 -.26CpstnTurb dd 1.55 +.04Carlisle 29 84.90 +.04CelldexTh dd 13.69 -.92Cemex ... 12.89 +.02Cemig pf s ... 7.07 +.05CntryLink dd 37.62 -.05Cerner s 47 54.20 +.15CheniereEn dd 68.50 +.39ChesEng 24 29.31 +.59Chimera ... 3.14 -.01ChiMYWnd dd 3.50 +.16CienaCorp dd 18.65 -.75Cisco 17 24.78 +.16Citigroup 11 47.76 +.19CitrixSys 34 61.40 -.57CleanEngy dd 10.50 -.58CliffsNRs 5 15.61 -.07ClovisOnc dd 47.75 -3.46Coach 12 40.44 -.27CobaltIEn dd 18.09 -.40CocaCE 17 45.66 +.02CognizTc s 22 48.35 -.26ColgPalm 29 68.21 -.19CommScp n ... 24.90 -1.54ConAgra 17 32.13 -.17ConocoPhil 13 79.48 -.46Corning 17 21.30Cosan Ltd ... 12.66 +.16CSVInvNG q 2.91 -.10CSVelIVST q 39.19 +.24CSVxSht rs q 4.15 -.06CrwnCstle cc 76.29 -.44CumMed 23 6.32CypSemi 23 10.25DCT Indl ... 7.91 -.01DR Horton 15 23.74 +.06DSW Inc s 15 25.24 +.19DeanFds rs dd 17.06 -.32DeltaAir 3 40.77 +.86DenburyR 16 16.70 -.19Dndreon dd 2.02 -.14DevonE 18 73.69 -.21DicksSptg 16 44.58 +.13DirecTV 16 82.60 +.16DxGldBll rs q 28.28 -.74DrxFnBear q 18.91 -.20DrxSCBear q 16.71 +.25DrxSCBull q 68.84 -1.10DishNetw h 39 59.10 +.44Disney 22 84.27 +.26DollarGen 17 54.30 +.52DomRescs 21 69.60 +.64DoralFn rs dd 3.56 -.37DowChm 14 52.51 +.39DryShips dd 2.96 -.05DukeEngy 17 70.85 -.23

E-F-G-HE-Trade 41 20.46 +.09eBay dd 50.49 -.24EMC Cp 21 26.61 +.05EdisonInt 22 55.67 +.53EldorGld g 36 5.77 +.02ElectArts dd 34.56 -.57EmeraldO dd 6.08 -.42EmersonEl 19 67.17 +.44EmpDist 14 23.81 -.20EnLinkLP dd 30.85 +.38EnCana g 15 23.31EngyXXI 11 20.76 -.69EnteroMed dd 2.03 -.09Ericsson ... 12.26 -.19EveryWare dd 1.74 +.64ExcoRes 32 5.12 -.14Exelixis dd 3.26 -.05Exelon 17 36.60 -.23Express 12 13.01 +.40ExpScripts 31 70.04 -1.43ExtrmNet dd 3.85 -.13ExxonMbl 11 99.94 -.59Facebook 83 63.08 -.22FedExCp 27 144.25 +.09FifthThird 11 20.95 +.26Finisar 28 23.58 -.17FireEye n ... 31.77 -1.10FstSolar 12 62.70 +.92FT Japan q 46.21 +.71FirstEngy 18 33.55 -.27Flextrn 23 10.29 +.12ForestLab cc 95.53 +.75ForestOil 20 2.38 -.08Fortress 10 7.23 +.13FrSeas rs ... .98 -.14FMCG 12 34.12 +.07FrontierCm 48 5.72 -.07

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 556407 192.90 +.22BkofAm 450381 15.26 +.12ARCapH n 411456 10.91 +.96iShJapan 400795 11.72 +.14iShR2K 373722 112.25 -.61Facebook 356219 63.08 -.22Groupon 338004 5.50 -.38SiriusXM 316389 3.28Broadcom 301555 34.84 +2.97iShEMkts 297455 42.68 +.13

52-Week Net YTD 52-wkHigh Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,477Declined 1,610Unchanged 130

Total issues 3,217New Highs 233New Lows 26

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 995Declined 1,616Unchanged 130

Total issues 2,741New Highs 78New Lows 28

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

GigaTr h 2.90 +1.69 +139.7AppGnTc n 19.74 +6.04 +44.1Lentuo 3.82 +1.12 +41.5Thervnc wi 28.00 +7.07 +33.8GtPlns pfD 114.25 +24.99 +28.0Coupons n 30.17 +4.35 +16.8AlderBio n 12.26 +1.52 +14.2ADDvtgT h 3.00 +.37 +14.1ReconTech 3.90 +.48 +14.0ChiAutL rsh 2.37 +.27 +12.9

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)Name Last Chg %Chg

PumaBiotc 57.06 -19.37 -25.3PacBkrM g 4.23 -.89 -17.4BebeStrs 3.39 -.68 -16.7Aastrom rs 4.37 -.68 -13.5FedNatHld 20.83 -2.61 -11.1Neonode 3.14 -.39 -11.0Mastec 32.06 -3.94 -10.9HimaxTch 5.94 -.69 -10.4TOP Shp rs 3.25 -.37 -10.2SemierSc n 4.30 -.49 -10.2

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.46 +0.01 +3.9YkmFcsSvc d 26.19 ... +4.1AQRMaFtStrI 9.93 -0.01 -6.2American BeaconLgCpVlIs 30.36 +0.04 +5.6American CenturyEqIncInv 9.08 +0.01 +6.3InvGrInv 34.07 +0.04 +4.3UltraInv 34.65 +0.01 +1.4ValueInv 8.68 +0.01 +5.7American FundsAMCAPA m 29.05 +0.03 +6.3BalA m 25.20 +0.01 +3.7BondA m 12.75 -0.03 +3.8CapIncBuA m 61.08 +0.01 +6.0CapWldBdA m20.95 -0.06 +4.6CpWldGrIA m 47.60 +0.04 +5.4EurPacGrA m 50.49 +0.16 +2.9FnInvA m 53.12 +0.08 +3.5GrthAmA m 44.51 +0.06 +3.5HiIncA m 11.54 +0.01 +4.1IncAmerA m 21.70 +0.02 +5.9IntBdAmA m 13.57 -0.02 +1.7IntlGrInA m 36.74 +0.05 +6.2InvCoAmA m 38.95 +0.06 +6.5MutualA m 36.35 +0.04 +4.9NewEconA m 39.28 +0.06 +2.8NewPerspA m 38.44 +0.07 +2.3NwWrldA m 61.28 +0.14 +4.3SmCpWldA m 49.51 +0.06 +0.7TaxEBdAmA m12.97 -0.01 +6.4WAMutInvA m 41.21 +0.06 +5.0AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.77 -0.01 +4.0ArtisanIntl d 30.88 +0.12 +1.3IntlVal d 38.44 +0.07 +4.5MdCpVal 27.49 +0.02 +1.8MidCap 46.87 +0.07 -1.6BBHTaxEffEq d 22.23 -0.02 +3.9BaronGrowth b 70.45 +0.25 -2.7BlackRockEngy&ResA m36.29 -0.03 +10.3EqDivA m 24.99 +0.06 +3.4EqDivI 25.05 +0.05 +3.5GlobAlcA m 21.83 +0.02 +2.3GlobAlcC m 20.17 +0.02 +2.0GlobAlcI 21.95 +0.01 +2.4HiYldBdIs 8.40 +0.01 +4.8HiYldInvA m 8.40 +0.01 +4.6StrIncIns 10.35 +0.01 +2.9CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.56 +0.03 +2.4Cohen & SteersRealty 72.66 +0.17 +16.3ColumbiaAcornIntZ 48.48 +0.08 +3.9AcornZ 36.71 +0.01 -1.6DivIncZ 19.07 +0.04 +4.6Credit SuisseComStrInstl 7.65 +0.01 +5.8DFA1YrFixInI 10.33 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 10.02 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 11.02 -0.02 +1.9EmMkCrEqI 20.41 +0.04 +4.9EmMktValI 28.82 +0.10 +4.4IntCorEqI 13.34 +0.03 +4.6IntSmCapI 21.75 +0.08 +6.9IntlSCoI 20.23 +0.07 +5.3IntlValuI 20.30 +0.02 +4.0RelEstScI 30.29 +0.09 +17.3TAUSCrE2I 13.81 +0.01 +3.4USCorEq1I 17.13 +0.01 +3.8USCorEq2I 16.88 +0.02 +3.4USLgCo 15.24 +0.02 +5.0USLgValI 32.99 +0.06 +4.7USMicroI 19.43 -0.12 -3.4USSmValI 35.38 -0.06 -0.1USSmallI 30.39 -0.09 -1.9USTgtValInst 23.04 -0.01 +1.2DWS-ScudderGrIncS 23.89 +0.01 +3.1DavisNYVentA m 42.53 -0.01 +2.7NYVentY 43.08 -0.01 +2.8Dodge & CoxBal 101.19 +0.02 +4.1GlbStock 12.27 ... +6.9Income 13.93 -0.02 +4.1IntlStk 46.01 +0.03 +6.9Stock 174.59 +0.18 +4.1DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.01 ... +4.2DreyfusAppreciaInv 54.87 +0.01 +5.2DriehausActiveInc 10.78 +0.01 +0.7Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.14 ... +0.9FMILgCap 21.95 -0.03 +5.2FPACres d 34.20 +0.03 +3.8NewInc d 10.30 ... +1.1Fairholme FundsFairhome d 41.92 -0.10 +6.9FederatedStrValI 6.25 -0.01 +10.4FidelityAstMgr20 13.64 -0.01 +2.9AstMgr50 18.13 -0.01 +3.8Bal 23.55 -0.01 +4.0Bal K 23.55 -0.01 +4.1BlChGrow 65.71 +0.02 +3.7CapApr 36.72 +0.06 +1.5CapInc d 10.23 +0.02 +5.7Contra 96.95 -0.05 +1.9ContraK 96.92 -0.05 +1.9DivGrow 36.88 +0.05 +4.2DivrIntl d 37.65 +0.08 +2.0DivrIntlK d 37.60 +0.07 +2.1EqInc 61.11 +0.09 +4.9EqInc II 25.46 +0.03 +4.4FF2015 12.68 ... +3.1FF2035 13.30 +0.02 +3.2FF2040 9.38 +0.02 +3.2Fidelity 44.18 +0.09 +3.6FltRtHiIn d 9.97 ... +1.5FrdmK2015 13.70 ... +3.2FrdmK2020 14.33 ... +3.2FrdmK2025 14.90 +0.01 +3.3FrdmK2030 15.21 +0.01 +3.3FrdmK2035 15.64 +0.02 +3.2FrdmK2040 15.69 +0.02 +3.3FrdmK2045 16.08 +0.01 +3.2Free2010 15.50 ... +3.1Free2020 15.44 ... +3.2Free2025 13.20 +0.01 +3.3Free2030 16.19 +0.02 +3.2GNMA 11.53 -0.03 +3.9GrowCo 122.58 -0.08 +2.8GrowInc 28.86 +0.02 +4.0GrthCmpK 122.47 -0.07 +2.9HiInc d 9.50 +0.01 +3.7IntlDisc d 40.68 +0.12 +0.4InvGrdBd 7.90 -0.02 +4.0LatinAm d 31.64 -0.16 +1.2LowPrStkK d 50.60 +0.07 +2.4LowPriStk d 50.62 +0.07 +2.3Magellan 90.14 +0.02 +4.0MidCap d 40.94 +0.01 +3.6MuniInc d 13.32 -0.01 +6.7NewMktIn d 16.64 ... +8.9OTC 78.43 -0.63 +1.3Puritan 22.02 ... +4.2PuritanK 22.01 ... +4.2SASEqF 14.45 +0.01 +4.7SInvGrBdF 11.42 -0.03 +4.0STMIdxF d 56.33 +0.04 +4.4SesAl-SctrEqt 14.46 +0.02 +4.7SesInmGrdBd 11.41 -0.03 +3.9ShTmBond 8.61 -0.01 +0.8SmCapDisc d 31.40 +0.06 +0.4StratInc 11.21 -0.01 +5.0Tel&Util 24.14 +0.03 +11.6TotalBd 10.73 -0.02 +4.0USBdIdx 11.65 -0.03 +3.7USBdIdxInv 11.65 -0.03 +3.6Value 109.56 +0.28 +5.8Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 27.10 +0.03 +3.3NewInsI 27.59 +0.03 +3.4Fidelity SelectBiotech d 185.29 -1.18 +2.0HealtCar d 196.23 -0.23 +10.1Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 68.48 +0.06 +5.0500IdxInstl 68.48 +0.06 +5.0500IdxInv 68.47 +0.06 +5.0

Name P/E Last Chg

2,460,988,871Volume 1,559,979,931Volume

15,200

15,600

16,000

16,400

16,800

D J F M A M

16,320

16,540

16,760Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,743.63Change: 26.46 (0.2%)

10 DAYS

ExtMktIdAg d 53.43 ... +1.7IntlIdxAdg d 42.06 +0.09 +4.1TotMktIdAg d 56.33 +0.04 +4.4Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF10.87 -0.01 +2.7First EagleGlbA m 55.80 +0.11 +4.1OverseasA m 24.32 +0.08 +5.2FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A x 12.34 -0.04 +7.3FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A x 7.37 -0.03 +8.6GrowthA m 68.77 +0.16 +5.5HY TF A m 10.46 ... +9.3Income C x 2.56 -0.01 +6.8IncomeA x 2.53 -0.01 +7.1IncomeAdv x 2.51 -0.01 +6.8RisDvA x 49.78 -0.07 +3.2StrIncA m 10.66 ... +3.6FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 35.49 +0.01 +5.2DiscovA m 34.93 +0.01 +5.1Shares Z 30.07 +0.04 +6.1SharesA m 29.76 ... +5.8FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 8.58 +0.01 +3.2GlBond C m 13.34 -0.01 +2.6GlBondA m 13.31 -0.01 +2.7GlBondAdv 13.27 -0.01 +2.9GrowthA m 26.21 +0.05 +5.0WorldA m 20.15 +0.03 +3.8GES&SUSEq 57.39 +0.10 +4.9GMOEmgMktsVI d 11.00 +0.03 +2.1IntItVlIV 27.43 +0.05 +7.4QuIII 26.21 -0.04 +5.2USCorEqVI 17.95 -0.03 +4.4Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 47.19 +0.22 +6.2HarborBond 12.25 -0.03 +3.0CapApInst 57.12 -0.03 +0.8IntlInstl 73.99 +0.01 +4.2IntlInv b 73.17 +0.01 +4.0HartfordCapAprA m 47.95 +0.11 +2.7CpApHLSIA 61.58 +0.11 +3.2INVESCOCharterA m 23.05 +0.03 +5.4ComstockA m 24.71 +0.04 +4.3EqIncomeA m 11.05 +0.02 +4.1GrowIncA m 28.05 +0.10 +4.1IVAWorldwideI d 18.64 +0.03 +4.6IvyAssetStrA m 31.49 +0.08 -1.7AssetStrC m 30.54 +0.08 -1.9AsstStrgI 31.77 +0.08 -1.6JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.72 -0.03 +3.2CoreBondA m 11.71 -0.04 +3.0CoreBondSelect11.71 -0.03 +3.1HighYldSel 8.14 ... +4.3LgCapGrA m 32.11 +0.06 +1.0LgCapGrSelect32.14 +0.06 +1.1MidCpValI 37.07 +0.10 +5.6ShDurBndSel 10.92 -0.01 +0.5USLCpCrPS 29.02 +0.07 +4.6JanusGlbLfScT 46.43 -0.07 +8.0John HancockLifBa1 b 15.78 ... +3.5LifGr1 b 16.57 +0.01 +3.4LazardEmgMkEqInst d19.75 +0.05 +5.8Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m195.76+0.72 +7.9Longleaf PartnersLongPart 35.49 +0.11 +5.2Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.68 -0.04 +5.1BdR b 15.61 -0.04 +5.0Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.21 +0.02 +4.7BondDebA m 8.33 -0.01 +4.3ShDurIncA m 4.56 ... +1.8ShDurIncC m 4.59 ... +1.5ShDurIncF b 4.56 ... +1.8MFSIntlValA m 35.39 +0.06 +5.0IsIntlEq 23.14 +0.07 +3.2TotRetA m 18.12 -0.02 +4.0ValueA m 34.03 +0.02 +3.2ValueI 34.21 +0.03 +3.3MainStayMktfield 17.66 +0.05 -4.6Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.40 -0.03 +3.9Matthews AsianChina d 21.09 +0.07 -7.7India d 21.40 +0.28 +31.4MergerInvCl b 16.36 +0.02 +2.2Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.82 -0.03 +3.6TotRtBd b 10.82 -0.03 +3.5Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 42.43 -0.20 -6.4NatixisLSInvBdY x 12.32 -0.08 +5.3LSStratIncA m 17.00 -0.03 +5.4LSStratIncC m 17.11 -0.03 +5.0Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 59.64 ... -3.7NorthernHYFixInc d 7.67 ... +4.9IntlIndex d 12.81 ... +3.8StkIdx 23.90 +0.02 +5.0OakmarkEqIncI 33.83 +0.06 +3.6Intl I 27.08 -0.04 +2.9Oakmark I 66.67 +0.02 +4.8Select I 43.35 ... +8.2OberweisChinaOpp m 15.80 +0.01 -6.1Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.16 ... +3.3GlbSmMdCp 17.50 +0.02 +1.9LgCpStr 12.88 +0.02 +3.3OppenheimerDevMktA m 39.01 +0.08 +2.6DevMktY 38.59 +0.08 +2.7GlobA m 81.17 +0.01 +3.0IntlGrY 39.24 +0.02 +2.8IntlGrowA m 39.39 +0.02 +2.7MainStrA m 50.30 +0.03 +3.8SrFltRatA m 8.41 +0.01 +1.6StrIncA m 4.21 ... +3.9Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.39 -0.01 +10.7OsterweisOsterStrInc d 12.07 ... +2.8PIMCOAllAssetI 12.67 ... +5.5AllAuthIn 10.35 ... +5.2ComRlRStI 5.98 ... +8.9DivIncInst 11.90 ... +5.7EMktCurI 10.34 ... +2.7EmMktsIns 11.25 ... +7.4EmgLclBdI 9.64 ... +5.4ForBdInstl 10.82 +0.01 +4.0HiYldIs 9.76 ... +4.0Income P 12.69 ... +5.8IncomeA m 12.69 ... +5.7IncomeD b 12.69 ... +5.7IncomeInl 12.69 ... +5.8LgDrTRtnI 11.52 ... +11.7LgTmCrdIn 12.74 ... +11.8LowDrIs 10.38 -0.01 +1.1RERRStgC m 4.15 ... +25.5RealRet 11.59 ... +6.2ShtTermIs 9.89 ... +0.8StkPlARShStrIn 2.62 ... -3.5TotRetA m 10.93 -0.02 +3.0TotRetAdm b 10.93 -0.02 +3.0TotRetC m 10.93 -0.02 +2.7TotRetIs 10.93 -0.02 +3.1TotRetrnD b 10.93 -0.02 +3.0TotlRetnP 10.93 -0.02 +3.1UnconstrBdIns 11.29 -0.01 +2.3PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 30.45 -0.05 +2.7ParnassusCoreEqInv 38.93 +0.11 +6.4PermanentPortfolio 44.08 -0.03 +2.4PioneerPioneerA m 40.74 +0.04 +4.2PrincipalDivIntI 12.22 ... +2.6L/T2020I 14.70 ... +3.5LCGrIInst 12.80 ... +0.9Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 40.83 ... +0.8

PutnamGrowIncA m 20.88 ... +5.4NewOpp 82.72 +0.09 +3.9RoycePAMutInv d 14.39 -0.05 -2.3PremierInv d 22.61 +0.01 +2.3Schwab1000Inv d 50.98 +0.05 +4.7S&P500Sel d 30.29 +0.02 +5.0ScoutInterntl 37.85 +0.06 +1.6SequoiaSequoia 227.01 +1.30 +1.8T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 65.52 +0.12 +1.4CapApprec 27.13 +0.02 +5.7EmMktStk d 33.62 +0.01 +4.3EqIndex d 52.04 +0.04 +4.9EqtyInc 33.93 +0.04 +4.0GrowStk 52.89 +0.03 +0.6HealthSci 61.80 -0.04 +6.9HiYield d 7.30 ... +4.7InsLgCpGr 27.66 +0.03 +1.5IntlBnd d 9.78 -0.04 +3.9IntlGrInc d 16.39 +0.04 +5.3IntlStk d 17.12 +0.04 +5.0LatinAm d 30.73 -0.18 +2.4MidCapVa 32.02 +0.08 +6.6MidCpGr 74.75 +0.08 +2.7NewEra 48.59 +0.04 +9.4NewHoriz 44.60 -0.13 -3.6NewIncome 9.56 -0.01 +4.0OrseaStk d 10.49 +0.02 +3.3R2015 14.90 ... +4.1R2025 16.00 ... +4.0R2035 16.93 ... +4.0Rtmt2010 18.55 ... +4.1Rtmt2020 21.22 ... +4.1Rtmt2030 23.51 ... +4.0Rtmt2040 24.33 ... +3.9Rtmt2045 16.22 ... +3.9ShTmBond 4.80 ... +0.8SmCpStk 43.87 -0.10 -1.5SmCpVal d 49.56 -0.16 -1.6SpecInc 13.14 ... +4.5Value 36.10 +0.10 +6.9TCWTotRetBdI 10.25 -0.02 +3.4TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.81 -0.04 +3.5EqIx 14.74 +0.01 +4.4IntlE d 20.00 +0.03 +4.1TempletonInFEqSeS 23.63 +0.04 +4.0ThornburgIncBldA m 21.78 -0.01 +6.1IncBldC m 21.78 ... +5.9IntlValI 30.99 +0.10 -3.3Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.98 +0.02 +5.1Vanguard500Adml 178.12 +0.15 +5.0500Inv 178.09 +0.15 +5.0500Sgnl 147.13 +0.12 +5.0BalIdxAdm 28.51 -0.01 +4.1BalIdxIns 28.51 -0.01 +4.1BdMktInstPls 10.82 -0.02 +3.6CAITAdml 11.71 ... +5.3CapOpAdml 113.26 +0.07 +6.2DevMktIdxAdm13.72 +0.03 +3.9DevMktIdxInstl 13.74 +0.03 +3.9DivGr 22.10 +0.03 +3.7EmMktIAdm 35.29 +0.10 +4.2EnergyAdm 137.92 +0.04 +9.5EnergyInv 73.47 +0.02 +9.5EqInc 31.20 +0.03 +5.6EqIncAdml 65.40 +0.05 +5.7ExplAdml 94.00 ... -2.2Explr 101.02 ... -2.3ExtdIdAdm 63.76 +0.01 +1.6ExtdIdIst 63.76 +0.01 +1.6ExtdMktIdxIP 157.35 +0.02 +1.6FAWeUSIns 102.63 +0.21 +4.1GNMA 10.70 -0.02 +3.9GNMAAdml 10.70 -0.02 +3.9GlbEq 24.60 +0.05 +4.8GrthIdAdm 49.88 +0.02 +4.5GrthIstId 49.88 +0.02 +4.5HYCorAdml 6.15 ... +4.4HltCrAdml 83.96 +0.18 +11.0HlthCare 199.01 +0.43 +10.9ITBondAdm 11.46 -0.04 +4.7ITGradeAd 9.93 -0.03 +4.2InfPrtAdm 26.74 -0.11 +5.1InfPrtI 10.89 -0.05 +5.1InflaPro 13.62 -0.05 +5.0InstIdxI 176.96 +0.15 +5.0InstPlus 176.98 +0.15 +5.1InstTStPl 44.00 +0.03 +4.4IntlGr 23.64 +0.03 +1.3IntlGrAdm 75.22 +0.11 +1.3IntlStkIdxAdm 29.00 +0.06 +4.3IntlStkIdxI 115.96 +0.24 +4.3IntlStkIdxIPls 115.98 +0.24 +4.3IntlStkIdxISgn 34.78 +0.07 +4.3IntlVal 38.64 +0.10 +3.4LTGradeAd 10.43 -0.06 +10.4LifeCon 18.67 -0.01 +4.0LifeGro 28.78 +0.02 +4.2LifeMod 24.05 ... +4.1MidCapIdxIP 155.81 +0.37 +5.0MidCp 31.50 +0.07 +4.9MidCpAdml 143.01 +0.35 +5.0MidCpIst 31.59 +0.07 +5.0MidCpSgl 45.13 +0.11 +5.0Morg 26.16 +0.03 +2.1MorgAdml 81.10 +0.09 +2.2MuHYAdml 11.11 -0.01 +7.6MuIntAdml 14.18 -0.01 +4.8MuLTAdml 11.60 -0.01 +7.2MuLtdAdml 11.08 -0.01 +1.3MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.5PrecMtls 10.83 -0.02 +4.7Prmcp 99.09 +0.05 +7.3PrmcpAdml 102.78 +0.05 +7.4PrmcpCorI 20.94 +0.03 +7.7REITIdxAd 106.19 +0.33 +16.7REITIdxInst 16.44 +0.06 +16.7STBondAdm 10.54 -0.01 +1.0STBondSgl 10.54 -0.01 +1.0STCor 10.77 -0.01 +1.5STGradeAd 10.77 -0.01 +1.5STIGradeI 10.77 -0.01 +1.6STsryAdml 10.71 ... +0.5SelValu 29.41 +0.10 +4.3SmCapIdx 53.38 -0.02 +1.3SmCapIdxIP 154.27 -0.03 +1.4SmCpGrIdxAdm42.24 -0.08 -1.7SmCpIdAdm 53.44 -0.01 +1.4SmCpIdIst 53.44 -0.01 +1.4SmCpIndxSgnl 48.15 -0.01 +1.4SmCpValIdxAdm43.49 +0.05 +4.0Star 24.93 ... +4.4StratgcEq 31.80 +0.05 +6.0TgtRe2010 26.53 -0.01 +3.6TgtRe2015 15.35 ... +3.9TgtRe2020 28.22 +0.01 +4.1TgtRe2030 28.80 +0.02 +4.2TgtRe2035 17.70 +0.01 +4.2TgtRe2040 29.53 +0.03 +4.3TgtRe2045 18.52 +0.02 +4.3TgtRe2050 29.39 +0.02 +4.3TgtRetInc 12.88 -0.01 +3.4Tgtet2025 16.40 ... +4.1TlIntlBdIdxInst 30.61 -0.02 +3.7TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.20 -0.01 +3.6TotBdAdml 10.82 -0.02 +3.6TotBdInst 10.82 -0.02 +3.6TotBdMkInv 10.82 -0.02 +3.6TotBdMkSig 10.82 -0.02 +3.6TotIntl 17.34 +0.04 +4.3TotStIAdm 48.53 +0.04 +4.4TotStIIns 48.53 +0.03 +4.4TotStISig 46.83 +0.03 +4.4TotStIdx 48.50 +0.03 +4.3TxMCapAdm 98.43 +0.15 +5.1ValIdxAdm 31.20 +0.04 +5.4ValIdxIns 31.20 +0.04 +5.4WellsI 25.86 -0.03 +5.0WellsIAdm 62.66 -0.07 +5.0Welltn 39.59 +0.01 +5.0WelltnAdm 68.39 +0.03 +5.0WndsIIAdm 69.01 +0.06 +5.8Wndsr 21.57 +0.05 +6.0WndsrAdml 72.80 +0.18 +6.1WndsrII 38.88 +0.04 +5.7VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.16 ... +6.4Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.39 +0.06 +4.5SciTechA m 15.91 -0.02 -0.9

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FuelCellE dd 2.41 +.07Fusion-io dd 8.09 +.10GATX 17 66.78 +.93GT AdvTc dd 16.68 -.18GTx Inc dd 1.42 -.24GameStop 12 36.56 -.96Gannett 19 28.89 +1.10Gap 16 41.51 +.28GenDynam 17 118.02 -.10GenGrPrp 65 23.98 +.15GenMotors 14 34.86 +.28Genworth 14 17.31 +.32Gerdau ... 5.92 -.02GigaTr h dd 2.90 +1.69GileadSci 30 81.55 +.34Globalstar dd 3.52 +.06GluMobile dd 3.60 -.04GolLinhas ... 5.62 -.29Goldcrp g dd 22.90 -.47GoldmanS 11 160.03 +.22GoodrPet dd 27.43 -1.57GramrcyP dd 6.00 +.13GraphPkg 20 11.10 +.11Groupon dd 5.50 -.38HCA Hldg 15 52.99HCP Inc 19 42.04 +.29HalconRes dd 6.10 -.14Hallibrtn 22 65.01 +.52HartfdFn 10 34.89 +.24HltCrREIT cc 63.47 +.24HlthcreTr 49 12.35 +.25HeclaM dd 2.75 -.02HercOffsh dd 4.43 -.11Hertz 38 29.82 +.30HewlettP 12 33.43 -.07Hillshire 32 53.57 +.29Hilton n 51 22.78 +.16HimaxTch 30 5.94 -.69HomeDp 21 80.84 +.61HopFedBc 27 11.39 +.04HostHotls 38 22.13 +.06HuntBncsh 13 9.36 +.09

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 3.03 -.02iShGSCI q 32.97 -.16iShBrazil q 46.00 -.49iShEMU q 43.43 +.02iShJapan q 11.72 +.14iShSing q 13.82 -.04iSTaiwn q 15.17 +.06iSh UK q 21.74 +.01iShSilver q 18.02 -.06iShTIPS q 114.47 -1.12iShChinaLC q 37.12 +.27iShCorTBd q 109.13 -.54iShEMkts q 42.68 +.13iShiBoxIG q 118.59 -1.00iSEafeSC q 52.85 +.24iShEMBd q 115.24 -.39iSh20 yrT q 112.96 -1.14iSh7-10yTB q 103.33 -.65iS Eafe q 69.55 +.14iShiBxHYB q 94.32 -.73iSR1KVal q 98.92 +.17iShR2K q 112.25 -.61iShREst q 71.80 +.13iShHmCnst q 24.06 +.03ImmunoCll dd 1.15 -.19Incyte dd 48.89 -.66Infoblox dd 12.48 -.48IngrmM 15 27.96 +.19InovioPhm dd 2.14 -.11IBM 12 185.69 +1.33IntlGame 14 12.46 -.09IntPap 16 47.14 -.49Interpublic 28 19.24 +.12Invesco 17 36.81 +.11InvBncp s 27 10.83 +.03Isis dd 28.53 -.69ItauUnibH ... 15.36 -.13JD.com n ... 24.60 -.40JDS Uniph 26 10.75 -.22JPMorgCh 14 55.35 -.22JanusCap 19 11.79 +.11JetBlue 21 9.82 +.16JohnJn 19 102.17 +.71JohnsnCtl 17 48.65 +.29JnprNtwk 27 24.50 +.04KKR 10 22.90 +.17KeyEngy dd 8.05Keycorp 13 13.79 +.10KindMorg 29 33.72 +.33Kinross g dd 3.77 -.01KodiakO g 22 12.53 -.20Kohls 14 54.28 -.16KraftFGp 13 58.97 -.49Lannett 29 42.16 +.38LVSands 28 77.43 +.91LibGlobC s ... 43.53 +.73LibtyIntA ... 28.93 -.20LillyEli 16 59.49 -.37LincNat 10 49.50 +1.54LinkedIn dd 155.44 -4.65LionsGt g 26 26.38 +.25LockhdM 17 164.11 +.46Lorillard 19 60.53 -1.64LaPac 22 14.32 +.12lululemn gs 23 43.49 -1.14LyonBas A 14 100.20 +.63

M-N-O-PMBIA 7 11.89 +.13MGIC Inv 37 8.46 -.02MGM Rsts dd 26.13 +.38Macys 15 60.05 +.16MagneGas dd 1.72 +.23MagHRes dd 7.74 +.08MannKd dd 9.03 +.13MarathnO 10 36.44 -.22MVJrGld rs q 33.37 -.74MktVGold q 22.29 -.21MV OilSvc q 53.18 +.06MktVRus q 25.32 +.22MktV Agri q 55.03 -.08MarIntA 29 61.54 -.08MarshM 20 50.51 +.24MartMM 47 122.68 -.12MarvellT 24 15.92 +.35Masco 28 21.37 +.07Mastec 20 32.06 -3.94MasterCd s 29 77.05 +.60Mattel 15 38.64 -.19McDrmInt 27 7.12 -.14MelcoCrwn 57 35.60 +1.13Merck 38 57.93 +.07MetLife 15 51.79 +.86MKors 42 94.45 +.07MicronT 12 28.66 +.07Microsoft 15 40.79 -.15MobileTele ... 18.74 +.25Molycorp dd 2.69 -.08Mondelez 19 37.77 +.15Monsanto 24 122.39 +.54MorgStan 18 30.90 +.04Mylan 32 49.98 +.14NII Hldg dd .46 -.04NPS Phm dd 32.60 +1.47NQ Mobile dd 7.69 +.10NRG Egy dd 35.63 -.01Nabors 56 26.16 -.07NBGreece ... 3.58 -.07NOilVarco 13 74.19 +.41Navient n ... 15.81 +.01Neonode dd 3.14 -.39NetApp 22 37.51 +.50Netflix cc 422.06 +4.23NwGold g 60 5.37 +.09NewLead rs ... .95 -.44NewmtM dd 22.58 -.31NewsCpA n ... 17.26 +.20NobleCorp 9 31.25 -.21NokiaCp ... 8.10 -.03Nordion g 3 12.74 +.79NA Pall g ... .28 -.00NorthropG 14 121.96 +.41NStarRlt dd 16.32 -.23Novavax dd 4.72 +.01NOW Inc n ... 35.50 +3.15NuanceCm 54 16.29 +.11Nvidia 22 18.94 -.06OcciPet 14 99.76 +.07OfficeDpt dd 5.13 +.01Oi SA ... .86 +.01OmniVisn 13 22.36 -.12OnSmcnd 20 8.66 -.03Oracle 18 41.97 -.05Orexigen dd 6.26 -.20PDL Bio 5 9.35 -.02PG&E Cp 23 45.87PHH Corp 57 25.25 -.22PPG 27 202.33 +.72PPL Corp 13 34.78 -.31PaloAltNet dd 73.69 -1.22Pandora dd 24.37 -.16

PeabdyE 81 16.14 -.02PennVa dd 14.14 -1.04PetSmart 14 57.50 +.03PetrbrsA ... 14.63 -.30Petrobras ... 13.85 -.25Pfizer 16 29.71 +.08Pharmacyc 52 91.21 +2.38PhilipMor 17 88.32 -.22Phillips66 16 85.24 +.45PinnaclFds 35 31.75 +.44PiperJaf 15 44.52 +.49PitnyBw 48 27.99 +.36PlugPowr h dd 4.38 +.03Potash 20 35.76 -.56PwshDB q 26.00 -.03PS SrLoan ... 24.81 -.02PSIndia q 21.22 +.66PwShs QQQ q 91.22 -.09PrecDrill 19 13.08 +.12ProUltSP q 111.58 +.27PrUPQQQ s q 68.16 -.17PUVixST rs q 36.98 -.37ProctGam 21 80.36 -.43PrognicsPh dd 3.87 -.19ProgsvCp 13 24.91 -.12ProUShSP q 26.47 -.08PUShQQQ rs q 53.32 +.09ProUShL20 q 61.53 +.84PUShSPX rs q 50.53 -.18ProspctCap ... 9.87 -.07ProtLife 12 58.51 +6.21Prudentl 35 84.02 +1.86PSEG 15 39.11 +.15PulteGrp 3 19.65 +.09PumaBiotc dd 57.06 -19.37

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 79 87.85 -3.98Qualcom 20 80.48 +.45QuantaSvc 19 33.43 -.52QksilvRes 3 2.36 -.05Quiksilvr dd 5.79 -.15RF MicD 55 9.40 -.01Rackspace 61 36.06 -.43RadianGrp 20 14.33 -.09ReneSola dd 2.38 -.16Rentech dd 2.26 -.07ReynAmer 20 58.91 -.72RioTinto ... 52.54 +1.16RiteAid 38 8.30 -.06RymanHP 36 46.24 +.11SLM Cp 3 8.71 +.10SpdrDJIA q 167.20 +.27SpdrGold q 119.70 -.73S&P500ETF q 192.90 +.22SpdrLehHY q 41.31 -.22SpdrS&P RB q 38.73 +.44SpdrOGEx q 76.17 -.87Salesforce dd 52.38 -.25SanchezEn dd 33.05 -1.38SanDisk 20 97.15 +.52SandRdge dd 6.61 -.06SantCUSA n ... 19.66 +.01Schlmbrg 19 103.91 +.27Schwab 31 25.37 +.16SeadrillLtd 17 38.44 +.44SenHous 24 23.98Sequenom dd 3.04 -.03ServcNow dd 50.26 -2.05SiderurNac ... 3.85 -.03SilvWhtn g 23 20.52 -.02SiriusXM 55 3.28SkywksSol 26 43.07 -.24SolarCity dd 51.27 -1.23SouFun s 16 11.77 -.20SwstAirl 25 26.71 +.32SwstnEngy 80 45.73 +.26Spansion dd 19.80 +.75SpectraEn 24 41.29 +.71Spherix dd 1.81 -.12SpiritRC n dd 11.36 +.07Splunk dd 41.97 +.11Sprint n dd 9.71 +.16SP Matls q 49.28 +.20SP HlthC q 59.87 +.08SP CnSt q 44.93 -.11SP Consum q 65.90 +.22SP Engy q 95.19 -.12SP Inds q 54.28 +.23SP Tech q 37.76 -.06SP Util q 42.73 -.01Staples 13 11.17 -.08Starbucks 30 73.85 +.61StlDynam 22 17.18 -.09StratHotels 11 10.97 +.07Stryker 34 84.83 +.34Suncor gs 12 38.59 +.27SunEdison dd 19.58 -.11SunTrst 14 38.87 +.55Supvalu 10 7.24 -.23Symantec 17 21.86 -.13Synovus rs 21 23.48 +.42Sysco 23 37.64 +.11T-MobileUS dd 34.55 +.22TD Ameritr 22 30.44 +.10TJX 18 54.13 -.32TaiwSemi ... 20.66 +.10TakeTwo 9 19.51 -1.12TalismE g ... 10.21 -.11Target 19 56.49 -.27TataMotors ... 37.52 +.28TeslaMot dd 204.70 -3.07TevaPhrm cc 51.95 +1.46TexInst 25 46.99 +.013D Sys cc 51.82 +1.173M Co 21 142.32 -.23TibcoSft 40 21.01 -.50TimeWarn 16 70.75 +.92TollBros 26 36.20 -.02TotalSys 23 30.54 +.28TowerGp lf dd 2.08 -.07Transocn cc 41.62 -.87TrinaSolar 54 13.41 -.26TriQuint dd 15.60 +.0421stCFoxA 22 35.54 +.1321stCFoxB 12 34.62 +.16Twitter n ... 31.75 -.69TwoHrbInv 11 10.41 -.12TycoIntl dd 43.74 +.10Tyson 16 43.40 +.94

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUndArmr s 66 51.47 +.68UtdContl 45 46.70 +2.33UPS B 23 104.08 +.20US NGas q 25.52 +.32US OilFd q 37.53 -.15USSteel dd 22.75 -.29UtdTech 19 117.40 +1.18UtdhlthGp 15 79.47 -.16UraniumEn dd 1.63 -.12UrbanOut 18 33.49 -.03Vale SA ... 12.84 +.09Vale SA pf ... 11.54 +.06ValeantPh dd 134.17 +2.96ValeroE 10 56.51 +.46VangTSM q 99.70 +.12VangREIT q 74.92 +.23VangEmg q 42.42 +.21VangEur q 60.94 -.04VangFTSE q 42.73 +.07Ventas 41 64.93 -1.87VerizonCm 11 50.05 +.09VimpelCm dd 8.48 +.11Vodafone ... 34.89 -.12Vonage 39 3.55 -.25Vringo dd 3.11 -.18VulcanM 59 61.27 +.30WPX Engy dd 20.96 -.22Walgrn 25 72.01 +.10WalterEn dd 4.56 -.32WashPrm n ... 19.80 -.09WeathfIntl dd 21.68 -.01WellPoint 14 108.35 -.01WellsF pfQ ... 26.00 -.02WstnUnion 11 16.02 -.15WholeFood 25 37.76 -.48WmsCos 57 46.91 -.05Windstrm 25 9.57WisdomTr 20 10.90 +.51WTJpHedg q 48.59 +.77WT India q 22.13 +.65Workday dd 75.43 -2.94Xilinx 21 46.37 -.59Yamana g 37 7.47 +.11Yandex ... 31.67 +.53Yelp dd 64.61 -1.54YingliGrn dd 3.14 -.24YoukuTud dd 19.07 -.43Zillow dd 117.98 -.04Zoetis 30 30.92 +.22Zogenix dd 2.08 -.22Zynga dd 3.39 -.06

Today

Auto sales

U.S. auto sales have been rising in recent months after getting off to a sluggish start this year due to the harsh winter.

Sales dropped 3 percent in January and were flat in February. March started slowly, but finished with a flourish, while sales rebounded strongly in April. Automakers report May sales figures today. J.D. Power and LMC Automotive predict U.S. sales of cars and trucks accelerated to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 16.1 million last month, up from 15.4 million a year earlier.

Manufacturing bellwether

The Commerce Department reports data on April factory orders today.

Orders to U.S. factories advanced strongly in March for a second month in a row. Those gains followed two months of declines in December and January. The reversal suggests what many economists have been saying: Rising demand should boost factory production as the economy emerges from a slowdown during a harsh winter.

Better quarter?

Wall Street anticipates that Dollar General’s earnings and revenue improved in its first fiscal quarter.

Financial analysts will be listening today for an update on how the discount retailer sees customer demand shaping up this year. In March, the company issued a weaker-than-expected outlook for the year, citing tough competition and ongoing uncertainty about consumer spending. Source: FactSet

48

58

$68DG $54.30

$53.67

’14

Price-earnings ratio: 17 based on trailing 12 month results

Dividend: none

1Q ’13

Operating EPS

1Q ’14

$0.71est.

$0.73

Source: FactSet

Factory orders percent change, seasonally adjusted

-2

-1

0

1

2

3%

AMFJDN

0.2

2.3

-1.7 -1.6

1.7

0.9

’13 ’14

Food fightHillshire Brands is in demand.The maker of Jimmy Dean sausages and Ball

Park hot dogs received a $5.58 billion takeover bid from Pilgrim’s Pride on May 27. Such a deal would enable Pilgrim’s Pride to expand its business beyond fresh and frozen chicken.

But Tyson Foods, the largest meat processor in

the country, wanted in. Two days later, it made a $6.2 billion offer for Hillshire Brands.

Pilgrim's Pride has said it is considering its options and will “update the markets in due course.”

As Wall Street waits to learn what’s next, here’s a look at the players in this acquisition battle.

Trevor Delaney; J. Paschke • APSource: FactSet Data as of June 2 *last 12 month results

Key products: Fresh andfrozen Tyson chicken,

beef and pork

Market value: $15.1 bil.

Key brands: Hillshire Farm, Jimmy Dean sausages,

Ball Park hot dogs

Market value: $6.6 bil.

Key products:Fresh and frozen

chicken

Market value: $6.7 bil.

Sell Hold Buy Sell Hold Buy Sell Hold Buy

Tyson Foods total return:

(TSN) 1-yr: 75.0% P/E*: 16

Hillshire Brands total return:

(HSH) 1-yr: 57.6% P/E*: 30

Pilgrim’s Pride total return:

(PPC) 1-yr: 116.7% P/E*: 11

Avg. broker rating: (10 analysts)Avg. broker rating: (9 analysts) Avg. broker rating: (4 analysts)

How will you pay for retirement? Let’s talk.

Member SIPC

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

1500 Harper Road Suite 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

www.edwardjones.com

Page 9: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

ACROSS1 A Swiss Army

knife has manyof them

5 Halley’s __10 Crow calls14 Peel in a cocktail15 Stylish16 Nueve preceder17 “Please let me

get my beautyrest”

20 Half of a 4521 Title for a

superior22 Loosens, as

restrictions23 Place for a

massage25 Hymn finale27 Kitchen amts.30 “Too much

noise”36 Need to remit37 Shopping aid38 “My __ Amour”:

Stevie Wonderhit

39 __ toast41 Warning that

often precedes17-, 30-, 49- and65-Across

43 Remove from theboard

44 Bistro, e.g.46 Ages and ages48 Joe and Rose

Kennedy’syoungest

49 “No one canknow”

51 Exceedingly52 Burn a lot ... or

slightly53 Pink or purple55 Wyoming

neighbor58 Altar agreement61 Make a case65 “Junior needs his

nap time”68 Fashion designer

Marc69 “Super!”70 U.S. native71 Like the ground

after a campfire72 Climbing rope

material73 Bard’s instrument

DOWN1 Israeli guns2 Truck stop rig

3 Storefront signabbr.

4 Emotional strain5 Long-running TV

crime drama6 Possesses7 O. Henry’s “The

Gift of the __”8 Lure into a crime9 Ref’s decision

10 Lettuce-washingaid

11 Poker “bullets”12 Sledding shout13 Soaks (up)18 Run off at the

mouth19 Does a slow burn24 Wanted poster

initials26 Audio jack label27 Marisa of “The

Wrestler”28 Workout output29 Trapper’s goods31 “This can’t wait”

hosp. areas32 Bygone

anesthetic33 Speak with

pomp34 More sage35 Down-and-out37 Where models

stand by models

40 Plastic shovel, forone

42 Soil chopper45 Supporting vote47 Ultimate degree50 “Holy moly!”51 Spoken54 Seven-member

Mideast fed.55 Overhead

exclamationpoint, in comics

56 HMO staffers

57 Egyptian royalcross

59 Businessagreement

60 “Beetle Bailey”bulldog

62 Like wild boarmeat

63 Over, in Germany64 Brontë’s Jane66 Cape NNW of

Cod67 Dearie

By Greg Johnson(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 06/03/14

06/03/14

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: My wife of nearly 55 years has had a negative attitude for a long time, but it has got-ten worse in the past few years. She has become very critical. For instance, she doesn’t care for a lo-cal hospital, and in social settings, she proceeds to warn everyone about a long list of grievances she has heard from a sec-ondhand source. She ig-nores the fact that those to whom she is speaking are not interested in the information.

She endlessly criticizes all family members about everything they do, and not in a constructive way. Every communication in-cludes her high-handed disapproval of their ac-tivities to the dismay of everyone within earshot. How can I stop these cri-tiques of everyone and everything? — Tired of Listening

Dear Tired: Some people, as they get older, become more negative and critical. Often, they don’t re-alize it’s happening. We suggest you gen-tly tell your wife that she is coming across as a bitter person and surely she wouldn’t want others to think ill of her. Perhaps you could work out a si-lent signal to let her know when her con-versation is sliding

into the dark side, so she can control it.

Dear Annie: If you want one of the most excruciat-ing pains you’ll ever have, keep smoking. I did for 63 years. I led a physi-cally active life and never thought I’d suffer such horrible ill effects.

Then one day out of the blue, doctors had to do emergency surgery on my right leg due to massive blood clots. After nine days of wondering wheth-er I would ever walk again, I was released. My right foot and thigh are still partially numb, and walking is uncomfortable. Mind you, before that, I led an active, physical life. I’ve had multiple stents put in and an angioplasty. There are better things to do in life than lie in a hospital bed where the nurses come in at 4 a.m. to draw blood.

After my last bout with my leg, I fi nally kicked the butt habit. It’s been six months, and the smell of cigarette smoke now nau-seates me. I never real-ized how bad it smelled to others. I burned up many thousands of dollars on cigarettes over the years.

I was addicted, but thank-fully I can live without cigarettes now, although I still get the urge — but all I need is the reminder of the pain in my leg and the fear of having it ampu-tated. Friends and family had urged me to stop for years, but I didn’t listen. It took an event of terrible pain to make me pay at-tention.

If you’re young, don’t start. If you’re already a smoker, save yourself the inevitable and quit. — Pt. Charlotte, Fla.

Dear Florida: The addiction to nicotine is tough to break, which is why giving up cigarettes can be so diffi cult.

There are plenty of programs to help (try the National Cancer Institute at smoke-free.gov or the Ameri-can Cancer Society at cancer.org). We are glad you fi nally quit, and we hope others won’t wait until they are in the hospital — or worse.

Annie’s Mailbox is writ-ten by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Land-ers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

Critical woman alienates everyoneAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

10 • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

TUESDAY EVENING JUNE 3, 2014 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

Extreme Weight Loss “Kathie and Josh” A mother and son have turned to food.

Celebrity Wife Swap (N) Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #NCIS “Homesick” A mys-terious illness.

NCIS: Los Angeles “Un-written Rule”

(:01) Person of Interest News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

QVC $ . Haier Home Tues. Beauty Anything Goes with Rick & Shawn Genius Kitchen

WCBI $NCIS “Homesick” A mys-terious illness.

NCIS: Los Angeles “Un-written Rule”

(:01) Person of Interest News Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

WMC % %America’s Got Talent “Audition” Hopefuls audition for the judges. (N)

(:01) The Night Shift “Second Chances”

News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers

WLMT & >Famous in 12 “Are We Famous Yet?”

Supernatural “Devil May Care”

CW30 News at 9 (N) The Arsenio Hall Show House of Payne

Meet the Browns

WBBJ _ _Extreme Weight Loss “Kathie and Josh” A mother and son have turned to food.

Celebrity Wife Swap (N) News at 10pm

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )America’s Got Talent “Audition” Hopefuls audition for the judges. (N)

(:01) The Night Shift “Second Chances”

News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers

WKNO * Great Performances Special: Mi-chael Bublé

Tommy Emmanuel: Center Stage The Café Waiting for God

Tavis Smiley

Newsline

WGN-A + (America’s Funniest Home Videos

America’s Funniest Home Videos

MLB Baseball: Chicago White Sox at Los Angeles Dodgers. From Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. (N) (Live)

WMAE , ,The Big Band Years (My Music) Bee Gees: One Night Only Joe Bonamassa: Tour de Force

- Live in London

WHBQ ` `Riot “Tom Green and Andy Dick” (N)

I Wanna Marry Harry (N) Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 News

TMZ (N) Dish Nation (N)

Access Hollyw’d

WPXX / Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The Listener (N) The Listener (N)

WPIX :Famous in 12 “Are We Famous Yet?”

Supernatural “Devil May Care”

PIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld The Arsenio Hall Show Seinfeld

MAX 0 3(6:00) } ›› Die Another Day (02) Pierce Brosnan.

(:20) } › Blue Streak (99) Martin Lawrence, Luke Wilson.

Banshee “The Rave” Topless Prophet

} Enemy

SHOW 2 } ›› Diary of a Mad Black Woman (05) Kimberly Elise, Steve Harris.

Penny Dreadful “Demi-monde”

Nurse Jackie

Californica-tion

Penny Dreadful “Demi-monde”

HBO 4 1(6:00) } ›› Red 2 (13) Bruce Willis.

Game of Thrones Silicon Valley

Veep “De-bate”

Game of Thrones 24/7 Cotto Veep “De-bate”

MTV 5 2 Girl Code Girl Code Awk Awk Awk Faking It Awk Faking It Faking It Faking It

ESPN 7 ?College Softball: NCAA World Series Championship, Game 2: Teams TBA. From Oklahoma City. (N)

SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5(6:30) } ›› Ninja Assassin (09, Action) Rain, Naomie Harris.

} ›› Godzilla (98) Matthew Broderick, Jean Reno. Nuclear testing in the South Pacific produces a giant mutated lizard.

USA : 8Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Playing House

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Playing House

Playing House

NICK ; C Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends (:12) Friends

DISC < DDeadliest Catch: On Deck (N)

Deadliest Catch “Lost at Sea” (N)

(:02) Siberian Cut “Rus-sian Roulette”

(:09) Deadliest Catch (:11) Siberian Cut “Rus-sian Roulette”

A&E > Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars (N)

Storage Wars (N)

Shipping Wars (N)

Shipping Wars (N)

Shipping Wars

Shipping Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

FSSO ? 4Bull Riding: Champi-onship.

The Panel The Panel West Coast Customs World Poker Tour: Season 12

Tennis

BET @ F } I Can Do Bad All By Myself To Be Announced Wendy Williams

H&G C HFlip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop

(N)Flip or Flop House

HuntersHunters Int’l

Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop

E! D Giuliana & Bill (N) E! News Total Divas Chelsea E! News Chelsea

HIST E BPawn Stars Pawn Stars Top Gear Mountain Men “Winter’s Wrath” Tom Omar faces a

life-changing decision. Pawn Stars Pawn Stars

ESPN2 F @ WNBA Basketball Inside Soccer Olbermann (N) Baseball

TLC G 19 Kids and Counting 19 Kids and Counting

“The Proposal”The Little Couple

The Little Couple

19 Kids and Counting “The Proposal”

The Little Couple

The Little Couple

FOOD H Chopped An entree cooked with cactus.

Chopped “Take Heart” Chopped (N) Chopped “Unsung Heroes”

Chopped “Take Heart”

INSP I The Waltons JAG Matlock Matlock Medicine Woman

LIFE J =True Tori (N) Little Women: LA (N) True Tori (:01) Little Women: LA (:02) True Tori

TBN M Behind J. Meyer Prince S. Fur Praise the Lord (N) (Live) Clement Blessed

AMC N 0(6:30) } ››› 300 Badly outnumbered Spartan warriors battle the Persian army.

Freakshow (N)

Freakshow (N)

Small Town Freakshow Freakshow Small Town

FAM O <(6:00) } ›› Miss Con-geniality (00)

} ›› 17 Again (09) A 37-year-old man miracu-lously transforms into a teenager.

The 700 Club Fresh Prince

Fresh Prince

TCM P } ›››› 2001: A Space Odyssey (68) Keir Dullea. Stanley Kubrick’s groundbreaking space saga.

(:45) } ›››› Alien Tom Skerritt. A merciless horror stalks the crew of a deep-space freighter.

TNT Q ARizzoli & Isles (:01) Rizzoli & Isles (:02) Rizzoli & Isles (:03) The Mentalist Jane

is kidnapped.(:03) Cold Justice

TBS R *Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang

TheoryBig Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Conan (N) Pete Hol-mes

Conan

GAME S Minute to Win It The Chase FamFeud FamFeud Minute to Win It Baggage Baggage TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends (:12) Friends FS1 Z MLB 162 Shop Pecos Pecos MLB Whiparound FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N)

FX Æ ;(6:30) } ›› Iron Man 2 (10, Action) Robert Downey Jr., Gwyneth Paltrow.

Fargo “The Heap” (N) Fargo “The Heap” Fargo Malvo seeks answers.

OUT Ø Wanted Nugent Hunting Driven Wardens Wardens Hunting Stories Hunting Hunting NBCS ∞ Shark Hunters Shark Hunters Shark Hunters Shark Hunters Shark Hunters OWN ± The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ Mini Monsters Monster Croc Mini Monsters

HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The Yearning”

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ L} ›› Frenemies (12, Drama) Bella Thorne, Zendaya.

Good-Charlie

Austin & Ally

A.N.T. Farm Dog With a Blog

Jessie Good-Charlie

Good-Charlie

SYFY EHeroes of Cosplay Heroes of Cosplay “Ot-

tawa Pop Expo”Wil Whea-ton

Wil Whea-ton

Heroes of Cosplay “Ot-tawa Pop Expo”

Wil Whea-ton

Wil Whea-ton

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Watch for the Daily Corinthian 2014-15 Corinth Visitors Guide coming out on June 21.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You don’t like to be led down thought paths, and when you feel like someone is trying too hard to infl uence you, you resist. You’ll get the facts you need to reason out a problem for yourself.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You are on fi re with the mystical forces, the same ones that made the stars and wild horses and Ferris wheels. Your sense that anything is possible is absolutely true.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You do not want to do as your friend tells you. You feel you know bet-ter, even though you may have no practical experience in the matter. Your resistance is there for a reason on this one.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Think of your thoughts as a kind of worship, and every time you think of something, you are paying a kind of homage to that thing. So what are you worship-ping that you don’t mean to be?

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’re

inhabiting this thing you think is your personality, when really, if you take a step back from it, it is just a series of decisions you made. You can agree to them or change them at any point.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). As long as you’re doing this busi-ness of imagining what your life could be, you may as well imagine immensities. The people you admire certainly have! Look where it got them. You can do this, too.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The object of your attention and af-fection will run. Don’t chase. This requires the utmost discipline, but if you can manage to stand still until the other person comes back around, you’ll both be in a better place.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’re entitled to change lanes when it’s safe for you to do so. You may get a few looks -- peo-ple don’t like change; it makes them nervous. No matter, you’re allowed and should claim your

new direction.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). If you make a goal of prov-ing yourself, you’ll have to do it over and over endlessly. In-stead, make a goal of growing. That may also be endless, but you’ll unquestioningly be better for it.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You are privileged in some way, and because of this privi-lege, you are obligated to those who are less so. Start as early as you can in this endeavor so you have longer to work on it.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’re quite simply not do-ing what you love often enough. How could you get in more of it? Could you cut back on another activity -- one that doesn’t make you nearly as happy?

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Ignore the defi nitions others give you, and don’t defi ne your-self, either. As for your potential, act on the premise that it is un-known and unknowable.

D E A R ABBY: I suffered a serious acci-dent at work and have endured nu-merous sur-geries, with another on the horizon. Because the injuries are in the cervical

and lumbar areas, they are not visible.

Last week, I parked my car in a handicapped spot in the su-permarket parking lot. Having a proper tag on my license plate, I didn’t think twice about it. As I entered the store, a woman who had parked nearby started shouting at me, saying I shouldn’t have parked where I did. I indi-cated she should read my plate, to which she then replied that I was “phony” for taking advan-tage of the system. I imagine she thought this because I was walk-ing unaided that day.

Abby, please inform your read-ers that not all injuries are visible and not to assume that someone is taking advantage because he or she doesn’t meet your expec-tations of how a disabled person “should” appear. -- HURTING IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

DEAR HURTING: Gladly. This subject has appeared in my col-umn before. You are correct that

not all disabilities are visible. One that comes to mind would be a heart problem that prevents a patient from walking long dis-tances. Another would be mul-tiple sclerosis.

Readers, if you are concerned that someone is gaming the system, rather than confront the person, write down the license number of the car with the handicap plate and inform the Department of Motor Vehicles. If you are correct, the authorities will be interested in that infor-mation. And if you are not, you won’t have caused someone who already has problems ad-ditional distress.

DEAR ABBY: I have been married to “Gilbert” for more than 30 years. We have always managed to resolve our differ-ences in a relatively short time, but this time I’m not too sure.

Our son was married last weekend, and because we’re of Celtic heritage, I chose to wear a beautiful dress from Ireland. Because it has short sleeves I brought a shawl to keep warm. When I asked my husband why he never said I looked nice, he replied he didn’t know whether I looked nice because he “couldn’t see me under that damned blanket!”

I was stunned. I wore the shawl only when I was near the door because it was cold there. I danced with him and several

others many times and didn’t have it on then. I must have told Gil at least 20 times how hand-some he looked, and so did everyone else. The shawl may have been a little big on me be-cause I am only 5 feet tall and weigh 95 pounds. But I didn’t think I looked hideous.

I’m hurt over his remark, and we haven’t really spoken for several days. What can I do to get past this awful feeling that we’re going in opposite direc-tions? -- OFFENDED IN THE EAST

DEAR OFFENDED: A good beginning would be to ask your husband why he made such a mean-spirited remark. He owes you an apology for his tactless-ness. If he really hadn’t thought you were dressed appropri-ately for your son’s wedding, he should have mentioned it BEFORE you left the house so you could change if you wished. Slamming you afterward wasn’t helpful, and your hurt feelings are understandable. But unless you have other reasons for wor-rying that you might be headed “in opposite directions,” don’t let this be blown out of proportion.

Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Think twice before confronting drivers in handicapped spots

Page 11: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Whitfield NursiNg home, iNc

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Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 • 11

Funeral Directors1313 3rd St • Corinth

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Page 12: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Shorts

Basketball CampsBlue Mountain College has re-

leased its summer basketball camp schedule.

The first camp will be June 9-12 and is open to boys in grades 3rd-5th.

The camp is set for 9:30-11:30 a.m. Cost is $60 by June 4 and $70 after the deadline. An afternoon camp for boys in grades 6th-9th is also slated for June 9-12 from 1:30-4 p.m. Cost is $70 and $80 after June 4. A camp for kindergarten through 2nd grade boys is scheduled for June 14 from 1-5 p.m. Cost is $25 and $35 after June 11.

All camps will be held at Tyler Gymnasium on the BMC campus. For more information contact BMC coach J.D. Parker at 479-422-4542 or at [email protected].

 Bishop Park Softball

The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks and Recreation Department is con-ducting youth co-ed softball registra-tion through June 17. League is open to ages 6-12 with birth date cutoff of August 31.

Players must fill out form, bring birth certificate and pay $10 regis-tration fee. Season begins July 8. League is also in need of coaches and volunteers.

For more information contact the park office at 286-3067. Office hours are 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. Monday-Friday.

 NE Hoop Camps

BOONEVILLE – The Northeast Mis-sissippi Community College men’s basketball program is giving local athletes a chance increase their knowledge of the sport with a pair of summer camps.

The Tigers have announced that their annual Tiger Pride camp will run from June 2-5 inside legendary Bonner Arnold Coliseum. In addi-tion, Northeast is set to host a Skills Camp from July 21-24 also on the Booneville campus.

The four-day sessions are open to any boy in the fifth-through-twelfth grades. Several experienced area coaches and players will aid North-east head coach Cord Wright in pro-viding instruction during the camp.

In addition, members of 2013-14 Tiger hoops squad are slated to be in attendance as well as new players for the 2014-15 team to help direct the different drills and tasks.

Athletes who are present will learn the fundamentals of basketball while establishing the mental aspect of the game through sportsmanship, leader-ship and citizenship.

Boys will also have time to work on ball handling, dribbling, shooting, passing, defense and other essential techniques while participating in a fun and relaxing environment.

Northeast’s Tiger Pride camp is open to both day and overnight campers.

Those who stay on campus will be housed in Murphy Hall and are subject to constant supervision at all occasions.

Each participant is expected to bring their own gear, which includes but is not limited to athletic apparel, tennis shoes, t-shirts and swimwear for time at the Gaye Roden Carr Aquatic Center.

Overnight campers should also pack extra amenities, including one set of single sheets, a pillow, pil-lowcase, laundry bag, towels and toiletries.

Registration is available at a cost of $110 for day campers and $130 for those spending the night in Boon-eville during the Tiger Pride camp.

All athletes must submit a non-refundable deposit of $30 with their forms.

To register, go to www.nemccathlet-ics.com and completely fill out the brochure that is available to print. Make checks payable to Northeast Mississippi Community College and send by mail to Cord Wright, Men’s Basketball, 101 Cunningham Blvd., Booneville, Miss., 38829.

For more information about the 2014 Northeast Tiger Basketball Camps, contact Wright at 662-720-7241 or by email at [email protected].

Adult results from the 35th Annual Candy Classic Memorial Tennis Tour-nament played at Corinth High School.

Men’s Open Singles

Brad McDonald def. William Clausel 6-0, 6-0.

Noah Wright def. Tayton Smith 6-0, 6-1.

Adam Holley def. Hunter Glidewell 6-1, 6-0.

Terrance Tye def. Zach Shawl 7-5, 1-6, 1-0.

Semifi nals

Tye def. Adam Holley 7-5, 6-1.Wright def. McDonald 6-7, 7-6, 1-0.

ConsolationSmith def. Clausel 6-0, 6-0.

FinalsWright def. Tye 6-1, 7-6.

Women’s Open SinglesAnnie Tumbleson def. Allie Hughes

6-2, 6-1.Megan Joyce def. Allie Hughes 6-0,

6-1.Tumbleson def. Megan Joyce 6-1, 6-1.

Women’s Open Doubles

Madison Mayhall/Taylor Heavener def. Amanda Blair/Peyton Eldridge 6-0, 6-1.

Mayhall/Heavener def. Blair/Eldridge 6-2, 6-0.

NTRP Men’s 4.0 Doubles

Phil Little/Ron Rice def. Charles Ar-nold/Robert Perry 6-0, 6-0.

Robert Hand/Mike Pittman def. Alex Klyuyenko/Johnny Purvis 6-3, 3-6, 1-0.

Klyuyenko/Purvis def. Arnold/Perry 6-1, 6-3.

Little/Rice def. Hand/Pittman 7-5, 1-6, 1-0.

Klyuyenko/Purvis def. Little/Rice 6-3, 6-4.

Hand/Pittman def. Arnold/Perry 7-5, 6-1.

NTRP Women’s 2.5 Doubles

Nancy Lambert/Katie Purvis def. Prentiss Butler/Claire Windsor 6-4, 6-3.

Lambert/Purvis def. Butler/Windsor 6-0, 6-3.

NTRP Women’s 3.5 Doubles

Dalisa Neal/Kelli Smith def. Kim Hug-

gins/Kathryn Kay 6-1, 6-4.Neal/Smith def. Hulene King/Marga-

ret Orr 6-0, 6-4.Huggins/Kay def. King/Orr 6-1, 6-2.

NTRP Women’s 4.0 DoublesMelissa Ewing/Maggie Hamilton def.

Rebecca Nelms/Peggy Parvin 4-6, 6-1, 1-0.

Ewing/Hamilton def. Nelms/Parvin 6-4, 6-3.

NTRP Combined Mixed

9.0 DoublesMegan Joyce/Ron Rice def. Jeff

Caldwell/Lindsey Collins 6-0, 6-0.Suzy Bowman/Bo Bowman def. Joyce/

Rice 6-3, 7-5.Bowman/Bowman def. Caldwell/Col-

lins 6-0, 6-0.

NTRP Combined Mixed Open Doubles

Zakary Harbin/Taylor Heavener def. Meredith Murphy/Tayton Smith 6-2, 6-4.

Harbin/Heavener def. Stephanie Jones/Brandon Nhek 7-6, 6-4, 1-0.

Jones/Nhek def. Murphy/Smith 5-7, 7-5, 1-0.

35th Annual Candy Classic Tourney

BY TERESA M. WALKERAP Sports Writer

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Jur-rell Casey was worried when he fi rst heard the Titans would be switching away from the only defensive scheme he’s ever played. Now that he’s gotten a good look at what coordinator Ray Horton has planned, the tackle couldn’t be happier.

For good reason too.His position coach believes

Casey can do even better than last year when he had a ca-reer-best 10 ½ sacks.

“That’s outstanding, but it’s not like his career year in my opinion,” Titans defen-

sive line coach Giff Smith said Monday. “That’s a start. It’s a benchmark, and it’s a heck of a benchmark. But we can get higher than that by fi ne-tun-ing some techniques and put-ting him in more one-on-one situations because he does have the ability to win.”

Casey was concerned be-cause the 6-foot-1, 305-pound tackle has played in a 4-3 de-fense with four down linemen and three linebackers going back to college at Southern California and to high school. But Horton also plans to mix in some 3-4 schemes with three linemen putting their hands on the ground and four

linebackers. Traditionally, tackles are required to grab a couple blockers and let line-backers make the big plays.

Smith already was very fa-miliar with Casey even be-fore new Titans coach Ken Whisenhunt hired him to coach the defensive line in Tennessee. Smith previously coached in Buffalo working with Kyle Williams, who also had 10 ½ sacks in 2013.

When Casey got his fi rst chance to visit with Smith, that’s when the assistant coach dispelled the concerns that the tackle wouldn’t be allowed to sack quarterbacks anymore.

“I’ve coached 3-4 and 4-3, and I was able to explain to him that believe it or not, he’s going to have more one-one-one situations out of our spacing than he did in a 4-3,” Smith said.

That’s good for Casey, who is going into the fi nal season of his rookie contract.

“It’s a great scheme,” Casey said. “It’s something I’m look-ing forward to going out there and lighting it up against another team already to put it to use. On my behalf, the scheme that we got going in is putting me in great situations to go out there and win one-on-one battles.

BY TIM BUCKLEYAssociated Press

LAFAYETTE, La. — Ryan Wilson and Matt Plitt com-bined on a six-hitter and Louisiana-Lafayette beat Mississippi State 5-3 on Monday night to advance

to the NCAA super region-als for the fi rst time since its last and only College World Series appearance in 2000.

Wilson (6-0) allowed four hits and three runs and 6 2-3 innings and Plitt al-lowed only two hits over a

scoreless fi nal 2 1-3 innings for his fi fth save for ULL (57-8).

Louisiana-Lafayette ad-vances to play Mississippi, winner of the Oxford region-al, at a best-of-three super regional in Lafayette.

Mississippi State (39-24) got to within a run with RBI singles by C.T. Bradford and Brett Pirtle to make it 4-3 in the seventh.

ULL added an insurance run in the ninth on Blake Trahan’s RBI single.

Associated PressOXFORD — Sikes Orvis

hit a run-scoring triple in the top of the 10th inning to push Mississippi past Washington for a 3-2 victory in the cham-pionship game of the NCAA

tournament’s Oxford Region-al. Ole Miss (44-18) will either travel to Louisiana-Lafayette or host Mississippi State in the Super Regional round this weekend.

Washington (41-17-1) threw

fi ve pitchers in the game. Alex Nesbitt (0-1) took the loss.

Ole Miss scored fi rst when freshman Colby Bortles hit a solo homer in the second. Washington responded with a run on Branden Berry’s single

in the third and then pulled ahead 2-1 on Brian Wolfe’s sacrifi ce fl y in the fi fth.

Bortles doubled home a run in the sixth to tie the game 2-2. Scott Weathersby (2-1) earned the win for Ole Miss.

Titans defensive tackle happy with Horton’s scheme

La-Lafayette advances to NCAA super regional

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Rebecca Nelms sends a shot back over the net in the Women’s 4.0 Doubles division of the Candy Classic.

Rookies give boost to Braves

ATLANTA (AP) — The Braves re-ceived a needed boost from two players recalled from the minors last week.

Now Tommy La Stella and Shae Simmons are set for their home de-buts.

Atlanta opens a two-game series with Seattle on Tuesday night. The starting second baseman is expected to be La Stella, who had back-to-back

Mississippi edges Washington to win

Please see BRIEFS | 13

Page 13: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

ScoreboardBaseball

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBToronto 34 24 .586 —New York 29 27 .518 4Baltimore 28 27 .509 4½Boston 27 30 .474 6½Tampa Bay 23 35 .397 11

Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 31 22 .585 —Chicago 29 29 .500 4½Cleveland 28 30 .483 5½Minnesota 26 29 .473 6Kansas City 26 30 .464 6½

West Division W L Pct GBOakland 35 22 .614 —Los Angeles 30 26 .536 4½Seattle 29 28 .509 6Texas 29 28 .509 6Houston 24 34 .414 11½

___Sunday’s Games

Cleveland 6, Colorado 4Minnesota 7, N.Y. Yankees 2Toronto 4, Kansas City 0Boston 4, Tampa Bay 0Texas 2, Washington 0Baltimore 9, Houston 4Chicago White Sox 4, San Diego 1Oakland 6, L.A. Angels 3Seattle 4, Detroit 0

Monday’s GamesCleveland 3, Boston 2Seattle 10, N.Y. Yankees 2Miami 3, Tampa Bay 1Milwaukee 6, Minnesota 2Kansas City at St. Louis, (n)Chicago White Sox at L.A. Dodgers, (n)

Today’s GamesBoston (Peavy 1-2) at Cleveland (House

0-1), 7:05 p.m.Oakland (Kazmir 6-2) at N.Y. Yankees

(Kuroda 4-3), 7:05 p.m.Toronto (Hutchison 4-3) at Detroit

(A.Sanchez 2-2), 7:08 p.m.Seattle (E.Ramirez 1-4) at Atlanta

(Floyd 0-2), 7:10 p.m.Tampa Bay (Archer 3-2) at Miami

(H.Alvarez 2-3), 7:10 p.m.Kansas City (Shields 6-3) at St. Louis

(J.Garcia 1-0), 7:15 p.m.Baltimore (U.Jimenez 2-6) at Texas

(J.Saunders 0-1), 8:05 p.m.L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 6-4) at Houston

(McHugh 3-3), 8:10 p.m.Minnesota (Deduno 1-3) at Milwaukee

(Gallardo 3-3), 8:10 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Noesi 0-4) at L.A.

Dodgers (Haren 5-3), 10:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games

Seattle at Atlanta, 12:10 p.m.Boston at Cleveland, 7:05 p.m.Oakland at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.Toronto at Detroit, 7:08 p.m.Miami at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.Baltimore at Texas, 8:05 p.m.L.A. Angels at Houston, 8:10 p.m.Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.St. Louis at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.Chicago White Sox at L.A. Dodgers,

10:10 p.m.

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBAtlanta 31 25 .554 —Miami 29 28 .509 2½New York 28 29 .491 3½Washington 27 28 .491 3½Philadelphia 24 31 .436 6½

Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 35 23 .603 —St. Louis 30 27 .526 4½Cincinnati 26 29 .473 7½Pittsburgh 26 30 .464 8Chicago 20 34 .370 13

West Division W L Pct GBSan Francisco 37 20 .649 —Los Angeles 30 28 .517 7½Colorado 28 28 .500 8½San Diego 26 31 .456 11Arizona 23 36 .390 15

___Sunday’s Games

Cleveland 6, Colorado 4Atlanta 4, Miami 2N.Y. Mets 4, Philadelphia 3, 11 inningsTexas 2, Washington 0Milwaukee 9, Chicago Cubs 0Chicago White Sox 4, San Diego 1San Francisco 8, St. Louis 0Cincinnati 4, Arizona 3Pittsburgh 5, L.A. Dodgers 3

Monday’s GamesN.Y. Mets 11, Philadelphia 2Miami 3, Tampa Bay 1Milwaukee 6, Minnesota 2Kansas City at St. Louis (n)Chicago White Sox at L.A. Dodgers, (n)Pittsburgh at San Diego, (n)

Today’s GamesPhiladelphia (Buchanan 1-1) at Wash-

ington (Zimmermann 3-2), 7:05 p.m.San Francisco (Lincecum 4-3) at Cincin-

nati (Bailey 5-3), 7:10 p.m.Seattle (E.Ramirez 1-4) at Atlanta

(Floyd 0-2), 7:10 p.m.Tampa Bay (Archer 3-2) at Miami

(H.Alvarez 2-3), 7:10 p.m.Kansas City (Shields 6-3) at St. Louis

(J.Garcia 1-0), 7:15 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Z.Wheeler 2-5) at Chicago

Cubs (Arrieta 1-1), 8:05 p.m.Minnesota (Deduno 1-3) at Milwaukee

(Gallardo 3-3), 8:10 p.m.Arizona (C.Anderson 3-0) at Colorado

(J.De La Rosa 6-3), 8:40 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Noesi 0-4) at L.A.

Dodgers (Haren 5-3), 10:10 p.m.Pittsburgh (Cole 5-3) at San Diego

(Hahn 0-0), 10:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games

Seattle at Atlanta, 12:10 p.m.Pittsburgh at San Diego, 6:40 p.m.Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05 p.m.Miami at Tampa Bay, 7:10 p.m.San Francisco at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Chicago Cubs, 8:05 p.m.Milwaukee at Minnesota, 8:10 p.m.St. Louis at Kansas City, 8:10 p.m.Arizona at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.Chicago White Sox at L.A. Dodgers,

10:10 p.m.

BasketballNBA Playoffs

CONFERENCE FINALS(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)

EASTERN CONFERENCEMiami 4, Indiana 2Sunday, May 18: Indiana 107, Miami

96Tuesday, May 20: Miami 87, Indiana 83Saturday, May 24: Miami 99, Indiana

87Monday, May 26: Miami 102, Indiana

90Wednesday, May 28: Indiana 93, Miami

90Friday, May 30: Miami 117, Indiana 92

WESTERN CONFERENCE

San Antonio 4, Oklahoma City 2Monday, May 19: San Antonio 122,

Oklahoma City 105Wednesday, May 21: San Antonio 112,

Oklahoma City 77Sunday, May 25: Oklahoma City 106,

San Antonio 97Tuesday, May 27: Oklahoma City 105,

San Antonio 92Thursday, May 29: San Antonio 117,

Oklahoma City 89Saturday, May 31: San Antonio 112,

Oklahoma City 107, OTFINALS

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)Thursday, June 5: Miami at San Anto-

nio, 8 p.m.Sunday, June 8: Miami at San Antonio,

7 p.m.Tuesday, June 10: San Antonio at Mi-

ami, 8 p.m.Thursday, June 12: San Antonio at Mi-

ami, 8 p.m.x-Sunday, June 15: Miami at San Anto-

nio, 7 p.m.x-Tuesday, June 17: San Antonio at Mi-

ami, 8 p.m.x-Friday, June 20: Miami at San Anto-

nio, 8 p.m.

French OpenResults

MondayAt Stade Roland Garros

ParisPurse: $34.12 million (Grand Slam)Surface: Clay-Outdoor

Singles MenFourth Round

David Ferrer (5), Spain, def. Kevin An-derson (19), South Africa, 6-3, 6-3, 6-7 (5), 6-1.

Rafael Nadal (1), Spain, def. Dusan La-jovic, Serbia, 6-1, 6-2, 6-1.

Gael Monfi ls (23), France, def. Guill-ermo Garcia-Lopez, Spain, 6-0, 6-2, 7-5.

Andy Murray (7), Britain, def. Fernando Verdasco (24), Spain, 6-4, 7-5, 7-6 (3).

WomenFourth Round

Andrea Petkovic (28), Germany, def. Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 1-6, 6-2, 7-5.

Sara Errani (10), Italy, def. Jelena Jankovic (6), Serbia, 7-6 (5), 6-2.

Simona Halep (4), Romania, def. Sloane Stephens (15), United States, 6-4, 6-3.

Svetlana Kuznetsova (27), Russia, def. Lucie Safarova (23), Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-4.

Doubles MenQuarterfi nals

Marin Draganja, Croatia, and Florin Mergea, Romania, def. Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Nenad Zimonjic (3), Serbia, 6-7 (2), 6-3, 7-6 (5).

Marcel Granollers and Marc Lopez (12), Spain, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, 6-4, 6-2.

WomenThird Round

Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua (7), Australia, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France, and Flavia Pennetta (12), Italy, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1.

Marina Erakovic, New Zealand, and Arantxa Parra Santonja (16), Spain, def. Julie Coin and Pauline Parmentier, France, 6-2, 6-3.

Garbine Muguruza and Carla Suarez Navarro, Spain, def. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania, and Karin Knapp, Italy, 6-4, 7-6 (4).

Kveta Peschke, Czech Republic, and

Katarina Srebotnik (4), Slovenia, def. Kaia Kanepi, Estonia, and Alexandra Panova, Russia, 6-3, 6-1.

MixedQuarterfi nals

Timea Babos, Hungary, and Eric Bu-torac, United States, def. Alize Cornet and Jonathan Eysseric, France, 6-4, 6-3.

Junior Singles BoysFirst Round

Petros Chrysochos, Cyprus, def. Theo Fournerie, France, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4.

Lee Duckhee (10), South Korea, def. Corentin Moutet, France, 6-1, 6-3.

Andrey Rublev (4), Russia, def. Bogdan Ionut Apostol, Romania, 5-7, 6-1, 7-5.

Omar Jasika, Australia, def. Thomas Brechemier, France, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2.

Martin Blasko, Slovakia, def. Ken Oni-shi, Japan, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3.

Nino Serdarusic (15), Croatia, def. Nicolas Alvarez, Peru, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5.

Henrik Wiersholm, United States, def. Joao Menezes, Brazil, 3-6, 6-2, 6-4.

Marcelo Zormann (14), Brazil, def. Dju-rabeck Karimov, Uzbekistan, 6-1, 6-2.

Second RoundHong Seong-chan, South Korea, def.

Jumpei Yamasaki (13), Japan, 6-2, 2-6, 6-0.

Johan Sebastien Tatlot (9), France, def. Francisco Bahamonde, Argentina, 6-4, 6-4.

Naoki Nakagawa (8), Japan, def. Chung Yunseong, South Korea, 7-6 (3), 6-0.

Orlando Luz (2), Brazil, def. Taylor Harry Fritz, United States, 6-4, 6-0.

Jan Choinski, Germany, def. Francis Tia-foe (1), United States, 3-6, 6-2, 6-3.

Quentin Halys (5), France, def. Noah Rubin, United States, 6-3, 6-3.

Lucas Miedler, Austria, def. Kamil Maj-chrzak (12), Poland, 6-2, 6-1.

Daniil Medvedev (16), Russia, def. Jan Zielinski, Poland, 6-3, 6-4.

GirlsFirst Round

Fanny Stollar, Hungary, def. Sandra Samir (15), Egypt, 6-2, 6-3.

Katie Boulter, Britain, def. Raveena Kingsley, United States, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3.

Iryna Shymanovich (16), Belarus, def. Viktoria Kuzmova, Slovakia, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2.

Ivana Jorovic (1), Serbia, def. Jaqueline Adina Cristian, Romania, 6-2, 6-2.

Victoria Muntean, France, def. Domeni-ca Gonzalez, Ecuador, 6-4, 7-5.

Julia Grabher, Austria, def. Helen Plosk-ina, Ukraine, 7-6 (4), 6-4.

Francoise Abanda (10), Canada, def. Jelena Ostapenko, Latvia, 7-6 (5), 6-4.

Aliona Bolsova (4), Spain, def. Anasta-siya Komardina, Russia, 6-2, 6-2.

Second RoundMargot Yerolymos, France, def. Kata-

rina Jokic, Serbia, 2-6, 7-5, 6-4.Rebecca Sramkova, Slovakia, def. Jil

Belen Teichmann (5), Switzerland, 6-3, 6-1.

Catherine Cartan Bellis (2), United States, def. Emmanuelle Salas, France, 6-1, 6-3.

Marketa Vondrousova, Czech Republic, def. Jana Fett, Croatia, 6-3, 6-2.

Kristina Schmiedlova (11), Slovakia, def. Luisa Stefani, Brazil, 1-6, 7-6 (9), 8-6.

Natalia Vikhlyantseva, Russia, def. Si-mona Heinova, Czech Republic, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4.

Junior Doubles BoysFirst Round

Boris Pokotilov, Russia, and Nino Serdarusic, Croatia, def. Peter Bertran, Dominican Republic, and Djurabeck Kari-mov, Uzbekistan, 6-4, 6-4.

Pedro Martinez Portero and Jaume

Antoni Munar (8), Spain, def. Daniel Ap-pelgren, Sweden, and Zheng Wei Qiang, China, 6-4, 6-2.

Stefan Kozlov, United States, and An-drey Rublev (1), Russia, def. Maxime Janvier and Alexandre Muller, France, 6-4, 6-1.

Francisco Bahamonde, Argentina, and Jan Choinski, Germany, def. Geoffrey Blancaneaux and Thomas Brechemier, France, 6-3, 6-4.

Orlando Luz and Joao Menezes (5), Brazil, def. Ryotaro Matsumura and Ken Onishi, Japan, 6-4, 6-2.

Petros Chrysochos, Cyprus, and Juan Jose Rosas, Peru, def. Petar Conkic, Serbia, and Hubert Hurkacz, Poland, 2-6, 6-3, 10-4.

Martin Blasko and Alex Molcan, Slova-kia, def. Chung Yunseong and Oh Chan-yeong, South Korea, 3-6, 7-6 (6), 10-8.

Bogdan Ionut Apostol and Nicolae Frunza, Romania, def. Michael Mmoh and Francis Tiafoe (2), United States, 6-4, 7-5.

GirlsFirst Round

Ioana Ducu and Ioana Loredana Rosca, Romania, def. Sofi a Kenin and Kaitlyn McCarthy, United States, 4-6, 6-4, 10-5.

Priscilla Hon, Australia, and Jil Belen Teichmann (2), Switzerland, def. Sandra Samir, Egypt, and Isabelle Wallace, Brit-ain, 7-6 (4), 6-4.

Naiktha Bains, Australia, and Tornado Alicia Black (4), United States, def. Lucie Wargnier and Margot Yerolymos, France, 6-2, 6-3.

Katarina Jokic, Serbia, and Helen Ploskina, Ukraine, def. Maria Fernanda Herazo, Colombia, and Leticia Garcia Vi-dal, Brazil, 6-4, 2-6, 10-8.

Tereza Mihalikova and Rebecca Sram-kova, Slovakia, def. Anna Kalinskaya and Evgeniya Levashova, Russia, 6-1, 3-6, 11-9.

Anna Bondar and Fanny Stollar (6), Hungary, def. Alice Rame and Vinciane Remy, France, 6-4, 6-4.

Sun Ziyue and You Xiao-Di (5), China, def. Estelle Cascino, France, and Domen-ica Gonzalez, Ecuador, 6-3, 6-3.

Elena Gabriela Ruse, Romania, and Iryna Shymanovich, Belarus, def. Usue Maitane Arconada, United States, and Kamonwan Buayam, Thailand, 6-3, 6-3.

Catherine Cartan Bellis, United States, and Marketa Vondrousova (7), Czech Re-public, def. Viktoria Kuzmova and Kristina Schmiedlova, Slovakia, 6-1, 6-2.

Paula Badosa and Aliona Bolsova, Spain, def. Julia Grabher, Austria, and Natalia Vikhlyantseva, Russia, 6-2, 6-4.

Television

COLLEGE SOFTBALL8 p.m.— ESPN World Series, fi nals,

game 2, Florida vs. Alabama, at Okla-homa City

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL7 p.m.— MLB Regional coverage,

Oakland at N.Y. Yankees or Boston at Cleveland

10 p.m.—WGN Chicago White Sox at L.A. Dodgers

SOCCER9:30 p.m.—ESPN2 Men’s national

teams, exhibition, Mexico vs. Bosnia-Herzegovina, at Chicago

TENNIS1 p.m.—ESPN2 French Open, men’s

and women’s quarterfi nals, at Paris (same-day tape)

WNBA BASKETBALL

7 p.m.—ESPN2 Los Angeles at Atlanta

TransactionsMonday’s Deals

BASEBALLAmerican League

BALTIMORE ORIOLES — selected the contract of LHP Johan Santana from Nor-folk (IL) and placed him on the 15-day DL.

BOSTON RED SOX — Recalled SS Stephen Drew and OF Daniel Nava from Pawtucket (IL). Placed 1B-OF Mike Carp on the 15-day DL, retroactive to June 1.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Reinstated 1B Jose Abreu from the 15-day DL.

CLEVELAND INDIANS — Recalled LHP Nick Hagadone from AAA Columbus (IL). Optioned RHP Mark Lowe to Columbus.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Claimed RHP Blake Wood off waivers from Cleveland and assigned him to Omaha (PCL). Trans-ferred RHP Luke Hochevar to the 60-day DL. Selected the contract of RHP Wilking Rodriguez from Omaha. Optioned RHP Louis Coleman to Omaha. Designated LHP Justin Marks for assignment.

LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Optioned RHP Jarrett Grube to Salt Lake (PCL).

TEXAS RANGERS — Named Rick Down hitting coach and Salomon Manriquez coach for Spokane (NWL).

TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Optioned RHP Bobby Korecky to Buffalo (IL).

National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Placed

OF A.J. Pollock on the 15-day DL. Se-lected the contract of OF David Peralta from Mobile (SL). Transferred LHP Matt Reynolds to the 60-day DL.

NEW YORK METS — Recalled OF Matt den Dekker from Las Vegas (PCL). Placed OF Juan Lagares on the 15-day DL.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Designated LHP Jeremy Horst for assignment.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned RHP Wirfi n Obispo to Indianapolis (IL). Sent RHP Stolmy Pimental to Bradenton (FSL) for a rehab assignment.

SAN DIEGO PADRES — Agreed to terms with 1B Cody Overbeck on a minor league contract.

American AssociationAMARILLO SOX — Released LHP Kevin

Rogers.GRAND PRAIRIE AIRHOGS — Sold the

contract of RHP Caesar Lopez to Atlanta (NL).FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Re-

leased RHP Luis Sanz.ST. PAUL SAINTS — Released LHP

Ryan Bollinger.Atlantic League

SUGAR LAND SKEETERS — Acquired OF Brian Barton from Southern Maryland for future considerations.

Frontier LeagueEVANSVILLE OTTERS — Sent 1B Nick

Schwaner to Kansas City (AA) to com-plete a previous trade and for a player to be named.

FRONTIER GREYS — Released RHP Pat Lowery.

JOLIET SLAMMERS — Released OF C.J. Epperson and OF Tre-Von Johnson.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association

NBA — Fined New York president Phil Jackson $25,000 for a tampering violation involving Oklahoma City G Derek Fisher.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

BUFFALO BILLS — Signed C Macky MacPherson.

13 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, June 3, 2014

BY TIM REYNOLDSAP Basketball Writer

MIAMI — For the Miami Heat, it’s all about June.

July can wait.Four years ago, when LeB-

ron James uttered that now-infamous phrase — “not two, not three, not four, not fi ve ...” — about how many champion-ships he hoped to win with the Heat, it was almost immediately turned into a punch line. It rings prophetic in some ways now, with the Heat back in the NBA Finals for a fourth consecutive season.

How the Heat fare against in their NBA Finals rematch with the San Antonio Spurs might dictate what happens in July, when James, Chris Bosh and Dwyane Wade can become free agents if they choose. A looming offseason of decisions has been

a taboo subject for the Heat “Big 3” this season, and Wade insist-ed Monday that Miami’s stars have not said a word to each other about what may or may not happen.

“I’m not lying,” Wade said.Still, as long as Miami keeps

winning, it seems logical the “Big 3” will stay together.

“I want to come back. That’s OK to say, I think,” Bosh said Monday after the Heat fi nished their fi rst workout in prepara-tion for the NBA Finals, which begin Thursday in San Antonio. “I can’t speak for anything else and I don’t want to take away from the subject at hand, but I like it here. It’s Miami. Enough said. People are dying to get here.”

Regardless of the outcome of this Heat-Spurs series, there will be changes to the Heat,

which is an annual rite for just about every team. James, Wade and Bosh can all opt out of their current deals. Shane Battier is retiring, Ray Allen may think about doing the same, while Mario Chalmers, James Jones and Rashard Lewis are notable free-agents-in-waiting.

It’s not just the “Big 3” who aren’t thinking too far ahead, yet.

Allen said no one in the room is looking past anything but this series — especially with the Spurs’ Tim Duncan saying San Antonio will get it done this year after falling short against the Heat last season. But as James noted, both teams have their own motivation.

“That’s the great thing about having veterans,” Allen said. “Nobody worries about what’s not here yet.”

Winning a third straight title could make some of those stay-or-go decisions pretty simple. And Wade believes Miami’s leg-acy has been secured.

“Whenever it’s all said and done, the legacy of this team, it’s going to be a great team,” Wade said. “It’s going to go down in history as an unbelievable team not only in South Florida but in NBA history.”

Given that, it’s easy to see why so much attention gets paid to how long this team can stay to-gether.

Bosh, Wade and James all made it very clear in Septem-ber that they were not going to let the summer of 2014 turn into the circus that the summer of 2010 was, when all three be-came free agents and decided to bring their talents together.

Entering the season, James

said that his teammates “un-derstand where I stand” regard-ing the future. And on Monday, James said he wasn’t going to let himself be distracted by think-ing about what impact the result of these NBA Finals will have on the legacy the Heat have created over the last four seasons.

“No, because I live in the mo-ment,” James said. “It’s almost the same with my individual accomplishments. I never re-ally understand them. The only time I’ll be able to appreciate it is when I’m done playing the game. I’m in the moment. I don’t even think about it.”

Bosh was the last player off the practice fl oor Monday. And when the conversation turned to what happens after these fi -nals, he was reluctant, he said, to think about anything beyond Game 1 on Thursday night.

Heat locking in on Finals, not what summer brings

BRIEFS

two-hit games in the Braves’ weekend sweep at Miami.

The Braves also have a new power arm in their bullpen. Simmons, fresh from Double-A Missis-sippi, recorded a key out on Saturday.

The right-hander then earned his first save on Sunday when closer Craig Kimbrel needed a rest.

General manager Frank Wren said Sim-mons, 23, filled a void left with right-hander

Jordan Walden on the 15-day disabled list with a hamstring injury. Walden “was exceptional in April,” Wren told The Associated Press on Monday.

“He gives us that solid end of the game guy, to be able to bridge to Kimbrel, and we were missing that. We think Simmons can do some of that.”

Simmons left Miami with two game balls and valuable experience.

He survived two hits and a walk to earn the save in Sunday’s 4-2 win

over the Marlins.

Saints waive G. Golic Jr., LB Hadley

METAIRIE, La. (AP) — The New Orleans Saints waived guard Mike Golic Jr. and line-backer Hadley Spencer.

The transactions, which were posted on the NFL’s waiver wire on Monday evening, come as the Saints enter their second three-day set of voluntary, non-contact offseason prac-tices, which run Tuesday through Thursday this

week.Golic, a former Notre

Dame lineman who turned pro in 2013 and initially signed with Pitts-burgh as an undrafted free agent last summer, signed with the Saints after last month’s NFL draft.

Spencer, a rookie out of Brigham Young, signed with New Orleans last month as an un-drafted free agent.

Police: Stiviano reports attack

NEW YORK (AP) —

The woman Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling was talking to when he made racist remarks says she was assaulted by two men outside a New York City hotel.

Police say V. Stiviano spoke to detectives on Monday and told them the assault happened outside the Gansevoort Hotel in Manhattan’s Meatpacking District on Sunday night.

Police say Stiviano said there was an ex-change of words and she was punched in the

side of the face. Police say they’re in-

vestigating the possibil-ity the unidentified men used racial slurs during the attack.

Stiviano is of black and Mexican descent.

Messages seeking comment from Sti-viano’s lawyer haven’t been returned.

Stiviano’s audio re-cording of the Clippers owner led to his being banned from the NBA. Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has agreed to buy the Clip-pers for $2 billion.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

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Page 14: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

14 • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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Page 15: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 •15

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LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE

WHEREAS, JAMES G.NORMAN, JR. and LEA ANNNORMAN, made, executeda n d d e l i v e r e d t o J .PATRICK CALDWELLas Trustee for the benefit ofB A N C O R P S O U T HBANK, each of the follow-ing Deeds of Trust:

A) Dated August 14, 2009,recorded as Instrument No.200903985;

B) Dated July 23, 2013, re-corded as Instrument No.201303131;

WHEREAS, BAN-CORPSOUTH BANK ,legal holder and owner of saidDeeds of Trust and the in-debtedness secured thereby,s ub s t i t u t ed W. JETTWILSON as Subst i tuteTrustee, by instrument datedApril 17, 2014, and recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201401552;

WHEREAS, default hav-ing been made in the termsand conditions of said Deedsof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deeds of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, BANCORP-SOUTH BANK, having re-quested the undersigned Sub-stitute Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deeds ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Substitute Trustee's fees, andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that I, the under-signed Substitute Trustee, onthe 18th day of June, 2014, atthe South front door of theAlcorn County Courthouse,in the City of Corinth, Al-corn County, Mississippi,within the legal hours forsuch sales (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m.), will offer for sale andsell, at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, thefollowing property conveyedto me by said Deed of Trustdescribed as follows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West along theNorth boundary line of saidSoutheast Quarter 1569.6feet to the Southeast right-of-way line of a public road;thence run South 48 degrees13 minutes West 305.23 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run South 27 degrees42 minutes East 461.7 feet toa pine tree; thence run South42 degrees 20 minutes East82.11 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 77 degrees09 minutes East 115.61 feetto a large tree; thence runSouth 37 degrees 15 minutesEast 331.63 feet to a pinetree; thence run North 36degrees 28 minutes East411.6 feet; thence run South32 degrees 47 minutes East105.95 feet; thence run North68 degrees 52 minutes East946 feet; thence run North303.4 feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 22.5 acres.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described tract:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet to an iron rebar set andthe point of beginning for thisdescription; thence run South79 degrees 38 minutes 32seconds West 170.33 feet toan iron rebar set; thence runSouth 37 degrees 38 minutes16 seconds East 302.31 feet,passing an iron rebar set at273.00 feet on the Northw-est shore l ine of a lake;thence run North 57 degrees50 minutes 48 seconds East214.23 feet; thence run North51 degrees 47 minutes 50seconds West 252.90 feet,passing an iron rebar set at21.85 feet on the Northwestshore of a lake, to the pointof beginning, containing 1.11acres, more or less.

Together with a perpetualnon-exclusive easement andright of way for the followingpurposes, namely: the rightto enter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad and to install and main-tain public utilities incident tothe use of the property de-scribed above, together withthe perpetual right to use saidroad and said utility ease-ments all over, upon, across,and under the following de-scribed property:

7.50 feet on each side of theline described as follows:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet; thence run South 79 de-grees 38 minutes 32 secondsWest 170.33 feet to an ironrebar set; thence run South37 degrees 38 minutes 16seconds East 16.33 feet to thepoint of beginning for thisEasement; thence run the fol-lowing calls: South 75 de-grees 38 minutes 53 secondsWest 191.15 feet; North 87degrees 17 minutes 11seconds West 91.87 feet;North 38 degrees 30 minutes18 seconds West 198.00 feetto the Southeasterly right-of-way of Alcorn County RoadNo. 257, and the end of thisEasement.

Although the title to saidproperty is believed to begood, I will sell and conveyonly such title in said prop-erty as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

S I G N E D , P O S T E DAND PUBLISHED on thisthe 27th day of May, 2014.

W. JETT WILSON MSB# 7316

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc 5/27, 06/3, 06/10, &06/17/201414736

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE

WHEREAS, JAMES G.NORMAN, JR. and LEA ANNNORMAN, made, executeda n d d e l i v e r e d t o J .PATRICK CALDWELLas Trustee for the benefit ofB A N C O R P S O U T HBANK, each of the follow-ing Deeds of Trust:

A) Dated August 14, 2009,recorded as Instrument No.200903985;

B) Dated July 23, 2013, re-corded as Instrument No.201303131;

WHEREAS, BAN-CORPSOUTH BANK ,legal holder and owner of saidDeeds of Trust and the in-debtedness secured thereby,s ub s t i t u t ed W. JETTWILSON as Subst i tuteTrustee, by instrument datedApril 17, 2014, and recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201401552;

WHEREAS, default hav-ing been made in the termsand conditions of said Deedsof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deeds of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, BANCORP-SOUTH BANK, having re-quested the undersigned Sub-stitute Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deeds ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Substitute Trustee's fees, andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that I, the under-signed Substitute Trustee, onthe 18th day of June, 2014, atthe South front door of theAlcorn County Courthouse,in the City of Corinth, Al-corn County, Mississippi,within the legal hours forsuch sales (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m.), will offer for sale andsell, at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, thefollowing property conveyedto me by said Deed of Trustdescribed as follows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West along theNorth boundary line of saidSoutheast Quarter 1569.6feet to the Southeast right-of-way line of a public road;thence run South 48 degrees13 minutes West 305.23 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run South 27 degrees42 minutes East 461.7 feet toa pine tree; thence run South42 degrees 20 minutes East82.11 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 77 degrees09 minutes East 115.61 feetto a large tree; thence runSouth 37 degrees 15 minutesEast 331.63 feet to a pinetree; thence run North 36degrees 28 minutes East411.6 feet; thence run South32 degrees 47 minutes East105.95 feet; thence run North68 degrees 52 minutes East946 feet; thence run North303.4 feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 22.5 acres.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described tract:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet to an iron rebar set andthe point of beginning for thisdescription; thence run South79 degrees 38 minutes 32seconds West 170.33 feet toan iron rebar set; thence runSouth 37 degrees 38 minutes16 seconds East 302.31 feet,passing an iron rebar set at273.00 feet on the Northw-est shore l ine of a lake;thence run North 57 degrees50 minutes 48 seconds East214.23 feet; thence run North51 degrees 47 minutes 50seconds West 252.90 feet,passing an iron rebar set at21.85 feet on the Northwestshore of a lake, to the pointof beginning, containing 1.11acres, more or less.

Together with a perpetualnon-exclusive easement andright of way for the followingpurposes, namely: the rightto enter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad and to install and main-tain public utilities incident tothe use of the property de-scribed above, together withthe perpetual right to use saidroad and said utility ease-ments all over, upon, across,and under the following de-scribed property:

7.50 feet on each side of theline described as follows:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet; thence run South 79 de-grees 38 minutes 32 secondsWest 170.33 feet to an ironrebar set; thence run South37 degrees 38 minutes 16seconds East 16.33 feet to thepoint of beginning for thisEasement; thence run the fol-lowing calls: South 75 de-grees 38 minutes 53 secondsWest 191.15 feet; North 87degrees 17 minutes 11seconds West 91.87 feet;North 38 degrees 30 minutes18 seconds West 198.00 feetto the Southeasterly right-of-way of Alcorn County RoadNo. 257, and the end of thisEasement.

Although the tit le to saidproperty is believed to begood, I will sell and conveyonly such title in said prop-erty as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

S I G N E D , P O S T E DAND PUBLISHED on thisthe 27th day of May, 2014.

W. JETT WILSON MSB# 7316

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc 5/27, 06/3, 06/10, &06/17/201414736

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE

WHEREAS, JAMES G.NORMAN, JR. and LEA ANNNORMAN, made, executeda n d d e l i v e r e d t o J .PATRICK CALDWELLas Trustee for the benefit ofB A N C O R P S O U T HBANK, each of the follow-ing Deeds of Trust:

A) Dated August 14, 2009,recorded as Instrument No.200903985;

B) Dated July 23, 2013, re-corded as Instrument No.201303131;

WHEREAS, BAN-CORPSOUTH BANK ,legal holder and owner of saidDeeds of Trust and the in-debtedness secured thereby,s ub s t i t u t ed W. JETTWILSON as Subst i tuteTrustee, by instrument datedApril 17, 2014, and recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201401552;

WHEREAS, default hav-ing been made in the termsand conditions of said Deedsof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deeds of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, BANCORP-SOUTH BANK, having re-quested the undersigned Sub-stitute Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deeds ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Substitute Trustee's fees, andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that I, the under-signed Substitute Trustee, onthe 18th day of June, 2014, atthe South front door of theAlcorn County Courthouse,in the City of Corinth, Al-corn County, Mississippi,within the legal hours forsuch sales (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m.), will offer for sale andsell, at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, thefollowing property conveyedto me by said Deed of Trustdescribed as follows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West along theNorth boundary line of saidSoutheast Quarter 1569.6feet to the Southeast right-of-way line of a public road;thence run South 48 degrees13 minutes West 305.23 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run South 27 degrees42 minutes East 461.7 feet toa pine tree; thence run South42 degrees 20 minutes East82.11 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 77 degrees09 minutes East 115.61 feetto a large tree; thence runSouth 37 degrees 15 minutesEast 331.63 feet to a pinetree; thence run North 36degrees 28 minutes East411.6 feet; thence run South32 degrees 47 minutes East105.95 feet; thence run North68 degrees 52 minutes East946 feet; thence run North303.4 feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 22.5 acres.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described tract:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet to an iron rebar set andthe point of beginning for thisdescription; thence run South79 degrees 38 minutes 32seconds West 170.33 feet toan iron rebar set; thence runSouth 37 degrees 38 minutes16 seconds East 302.31 feet,passing an iron rebar set at273.00 feet on the Northw-est shore l ine of a lake;thence run North 57 degrees50 minutes 48 seconds East214.23 feet; thence run North51 degrees 47 minutes 50seconds West 252.90 feet,passing an iron rebar set at21.85 feet on the Northwestshore of a lake, to the pointof beginning, containing 1.11acres, more or less.

Together with a perpetualnon-exclusive easement andright of way for the followingpurposes, namely: the rightto enter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad and to install and main-tain public utilities incident tothe use of the property de-scribed above, together withthe perpetual right to use saidroad and said utility ease-ments all over, upon, across,and under the following de-scribed property:

7.50 feet on each side of theline described as follows:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet; thence run South 79 de-grees 38 minutes 32 secondsWest 170.33 feet to an ironrebar set; thence run South37 degrees 38 minutes 16seconds East 16.33 feet to thepoint of beginning for thisEasement; thence run the fol-lowing calls: South 75 de-grees 38 minutes 53 secondsWest 191.15 feet; North 87degrees 17 minutes 11seconds West 91.87 feet;North 38 degrees 30 minutes18 seconds West 198.00 feetto the Southeasterly right-of-way of Alcorn County RoadNo. 257, and the end of thisEasement.

Although the title to saidproperty is believed to begood, I will sell and conveyonly such title in said prop-erty as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

S I G N E D , P O S T E DAND PUBLISHED on thisthe 27th day of May, 2014.

W. JETT WILSON MSB# 7316

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc 5/27, 06/3, 06/10, &06/17/201414736

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955NOTICE OF

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE SALE

WHEREAS, on October24, 2008, Patricia Vanderfordexecuted and delivered toKeith Frazier, as trustee, adeed of trust on the prop-erty hereinafter described tosecure payment of an in-debtedness therein men-tioned owing to Family Finan-cial Services, Inc., Corinth,Mississippi, beneficiary, whichdeed of trust is recorded inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi. as Instrument Num-ber 200806622; and

WHEREAS, Family Finan-cial Services, Inc., legal holderand owner of said deed oftrust and the indebtedness se-cured thereby substitutedWilliam H. Davis, Jr as trust-ee by instrument dated Au-gust 31, 2012, and recordedas Instrument Number201204041, of the land re-cords of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi; and

WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid, and in default, theprovisions of said deed oftrust have been broken bysaid grantor and have notbeen cured and the said bene-ficiary, the present holder ofsaid indebtedness, has reques-ted the undersigned to fore-close said deed of trust pur-suant to the provisions there-of to enforce payment of saiddebt;

NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theundersigned substituted trust-ee, on June 18, 2014, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

50 feet North and South by100 feet East and West offthe South side of the North-west Quarter (NW 1/4) ofBlock 2, Nelson's survey ofWest Corinth, in the North-east Quarter (NE 1/4) of Sec-tion 2, Township 2 South,Range 7 East in AlcornCounty, Mississippi.

I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.

Signed, posted and pub-lished this 27th day of May,2014.

WILLIAM H. DAVIS, JRSUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

4tc 05/27, 06/03, 06/10, &06/17/201414735

NOTICE OF SALE BYSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE

WHEREAS, JAMES G.NORMAN, JR. and LEA ANNNORMAN, made, executeda n d d e l i v e r e d t o J .PATRICK CALDWELLas Trustee for the benefit ofB A N C O R P S O U T HBANK, each of the follow-ing Deeds of Trust:

A) Dated August 14, 2009,recorded as Instrument No.200903985;

B) Dated July 23, 2013, re-corded as Instrument No.201303131;

WHEREAS, BAN-CORPSOUTH BANK ,legal holder and owner of saidDeeds of Trust and the in-debtedness secured thereby,s ub s t i t u t ed W. JETTWILSON as Subst i tuteTrustee, by instrument datedApril 17, 2014, and recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201401552;

WHEREAS, default hav-ing been made in the termsand conditions of said Deedsof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deeds of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, BANCORP-SOUTH BANK, having re-quested the undersigned Sub-stitute Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deeds ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Substitute Trustee's fees, andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that I, the under-signed Substitute Trustee, onthe 18th day of June, 2014, atthe South front door of theAlcorn County Courthouse,in the City of Corinth, Al-corn County, Mississippi,within the legal hours forsuch sales (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m.), will offer for sale andsell, at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, thefollowing property conveyedto me by said Deed of Trustdescribed as follows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West along theNorth boundary line of saidSoutheast Quarter 1569.6feet to the Southeast right-of-way line of a public road;thence run South 48 degrees13 minutes West 305.23 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run South 27 degrees42 minutes East 461.7 feet toa pine tree; thence run South42 degrees 20 minutes East82.11 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 77 degrees09 minutes East 115.61 feetto a large tree; thence runSouth 37 degrees 15 minutesEast 331.63 feet to a pinetree; thence run North 36degrees 28 minutes East411.6 feet; thence run South32 degrees 47 minutes East105.95 feet; thence run North68 degrees 52 minutes East946 feet; thence run North303.4 feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 22.5 acres.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described tract:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet to an iron rebar set andthe point of beginning for thisdescription; thence run South79 degrees 38 minutes 32seconds West 170.33 feet toan iron rebar set; thence runSouth 37 degrees 38 minutes16 seconds East 302.31 feet,passing an iron rebar set at273.00 feet on the Northw-est shore l ine of a lake;thence run North 57 degrees50 minutes 48 seconds East214.23 feet; thence run North51 degrees 47 minutes 50seconds West 252.90 feet,passing an iron rebar set at21.85 feet on the Northwestshore of a lake, to the pointof beginning, containing 1.11acres, more or less.

Together with a perpetualnon-exclusive easement andright of way for the followingpurposes, namely: the rightto enter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad and to install and main-tain public utilities incident tothe use of the property de-scribed above, together withthe perpetual right to use saidroad and said utility ease-ments all over, upon, across,and under the following de-scribed property:

7.50 feet on each side of theline described as follows:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet; thence run South 79 de-grees 38 minutes 32 secondsWest 170.33 feet to an ironrebar set; thence run South37 degrees 38 minutes 16seconds East 16.33 feet to thepoint of beginning for thisEasement; thence run the fol-lowing calls: South 75 de-grees 38 minutes 53 secondsWest 191.15 feet; North 87degrees 17 minutes 11seconds West 91.87 feet;North 38 degrees 30 minutes18 seconds West 198.00 feetto the Southeasterly right-of-way of Alcorn County RoadNo. 257, and the end of thisEasement.

Although the title to saidproperty is believed to begood, I will sell and conveyonly such title in said prop-erty as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

S I G N E D , P O S T E DAND PUBLISHED on thisthe 27th day of May, 2014.

W. JETT WILSON MSB# 7316

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc 5/27, 06/3, 06/10, &06/17/201414736

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

4005 IVY LANECORINTH SCHOOL

DISTRICT

3BR, 2 Bath Brick/VinylHome in Nice, QuietNeighborhood, Ap-prox. 1500 sq. ft. Incl.L a r g e K i t c h e nw/Breakfast Bar, Hard-wood & Tile Floors,Marble Vanities, Re-cent ly Remodeled,N e w P a i n tThroughout, AttachedDbl. Garage, Shed andFenced Backyard.

Call 662-808-0339$135,000.

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

I PAY TOP DOLLAR FORUSED MOBILE HOMES,CALL 662-296-5923

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

2005 16X 80 Clayton,Beautiful Home. ThisHome is in GREAT condi-tion and had an awe-some floorplan. Bigwalk-in shower, separ-ate tub, tons of cabin-ets. Delivery and set upon your property for$26,000. 662-397-9339

NICE PALM Harbor 3BR/2BA Double Wide forSale. Appl iances in-cluded, will deliver andset up on your prop-erty for $21,900. Call662-760-2120

TRANSPORTATION

BOATS FOR SALE080414 FT. SHALLOW FLATBOTTOM BOAT & TRAIL-ER. $500 O/B/O. 662-643-5741

AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES

0848

96' FORD Ranger 2.3 Ltr.Motor, W/ exhaust, fan,radiator, intake,& 5 sp.manual trans. $700.00OBO 731-610-2492

DANA 60 For FORD 3/4ton 410 geared POSI-$300.00- 662-396-1098

GRILL FOR 94" 4-Runner,$40.00 662-396-1098

RECEIVER HITCH for 94'4-Runner, $50.00- 662-396-1098

RECEIVER HITCH for 94'Dakota- $50.00. 662-396-1098

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

(2 PAIR) Designer boots,Bought at Austins, sizes6 & 7, $75.00 OBO Call662-415-9098.

DIAMOND CLAD tool boxf o r a s m a l l t r u c k -$ 1 0 0 . 0 0 - 2 8 6 - 2 6 5 5

FRONTLINE PLUS, 89-132lb dogs, 3 dose packs.$25.00 662-212-2492

GAS STOVE, GE, light Al-mond, 30", Works Good.$125- 415-8180

JUNIOR JEANS , somenew, some s l ight lyworn, sizes 3-7, $5 pair,Call 662-415-9098.

M A R O O N R E C L I N E R -ROCKER, GOOD CONDI-TION. $50. 662-287-3398

MODEL 6012 Singer Sew-ing Machine w/attach-ments in maple cabinet.Good Condition $50.287-2357

NEW BOYS 22" bicycle.Still have papers. Cost$80. Take $40. Call 287-7875

NEW ERNIE Ball VP Juni-or Volume Pedal Pass-ive KC $35. 287-2357

OVER 90 DVD's, LikeNew, asking $125.00FIRM, 662-415-6542

PETUNIAS, ASSORTEDColors, .30 cents each.662-212-4450

REALISTIC SCT-74 stereohigh speed dual-dub-bing cassette deckw/Dolby B/C NR system.$40. 287-2357

REAR GLASS for latemodel Toyota pickupw/sliding glass. $25. Call662-415-8431

REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.SONY RCD-W500C com-pact Disc Recorder w/5Disc Changer KC w/re-mote. $150. 287-2357

VERY LARGE assort-m e n t o f B r o k e n &Chipped arrowheads,scrappers, drills, birdpoints, etc from all overthe US. Beautiful colorsi n c l u d i n g p e t r i f i e dwood. Call to set up anappt. to view- $350.00-286-8257

VINTAGE LIBBY'S RoastBeef wooden shippingbox, product of Brazil-$25.00- 286-8257

WALL OVEN, BLACK, 30",GOOD CONDITION $150.662-287-3398

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

WATER PAID. 2BR 1BA,Stv.& Frg. furn. $425m,$300d Call 603-4127

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375/ $400 sec. de-posit + util, 284-7433.

HOMES FOR RENT0620

3 BEDROOM, 1.5 BathBrick home on KendrickRd. No Smokers, $800mo/ $800 Deposit- 731-926-0229

3BR/ 2BA House forrent. Ref. and Depositrequired, 662-210-2472

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

KOHLER DECO S i lverMedicine Cabinets (Newin the Box) 20x 26 x 53/8, K-CB-CLW202655,was $158.00 ea, sell for$75 ea or both for $100.286-8257

BEAUTIFUL, RARE 1/4sawn oak f i replace,d o u b l e m a n t l e w /beveled mirror, 72x56, asteal @ $400. 286-8257

15 NEW Corning glassblock terrariums per-fect for making gifts orfor beta fish bowls, ovalopening in the top. Paid$150, asking $50 for all.286-8257

RED REPLACEMENT glassglobe from railroad lan-tern, DiETZ # 40, perfectshape- $20.00- 286-8257

VERY OLD 100+ years, 3d r a w e r d r e s s e r w /beveled mirror androsette trim, $150. 286-8257

VERY OLD 100+ years, 3d r a w e r d r e s s e r w /beveled mirror androsette trim, $150. 286-8257

2 VERY Large 5' x 5'shop fans with 220 V 3Phase motors, weighsabout 300lbs each. $100ea. 286-8257

VERY OLD, 100+ years, 1drawer & 1 door w/beveled mirror, rosettetrim, gossip bench ornight stand, $100- 286-8257

OLD, SINGLE handledcrock for churning but-ter. Complete with lidand hole with woodenchurn. 18" x 11", $50.286-8257

21 BUNDLES, 70 SQUAREO W E N S C O R N I N GOakridge Twilight Blackl ifetime guaranteedshingles. Enough for ashop, garage, or largeshed. $300. 286-8257

OLD WOOD hand carvedspira l and diamonddesign walking cane w/round ball on the top,all one piece. 36.5" tall-$20.00- 286-8257

LARGE 58" x 58" Bronzedouble pane fixed win-d o w w i t h g r i d sbetween the glass, veryheavy, $25.00- 286-8257

OLD MILK or cream can,one handle w/ woodencork. 15.5 T x 8" w, has as m a l l b r a s s p l a t esoldered that says "fillto this point" $25.00-286-8257

ELVIS PRESLEY Belt andBuckle made by VonWest Ft. Collins, CO,USA. Elvis on a 29 centpostage stamp, no. 166of 500, about 30 yearsold. $50. 286-8287

SMALL HEAVY Duty Trail-er with new tires to pullbehind riding mower or4 wheeler, perfect forgrandkids, firewood,hay, deer corn, or coondogs. $150 286-8257

8 UNOPENED Bundles ofTamko Elite glass-seal,terra-cotta (red)3 tabshingles, all for $100.00-286-8257

OLD ANTIQUE Potato Binabout 2' tal l and 2'deep, 4 ' wide on 4square legs- $30.00- 286-8257

GIANT ANTIQUE band-saw blade from the oldC o r i n t h M a c h i n e r ybuilding. 10" tall, apprx38ft long w/ 8 teeth perfoot, very heavy. $100.286-8257

ALESIS SR 16 Drum Ma-chine EC with Off & ONfoot switch. $100. 287-2357

ALUMINUM CHECKERPLATE TOOL BOX FORMEDIUM SIZE PICKUP.$75. 731-239-8668

BAG CONTAINING 34teeth, 19 bear and 15shark. $40.00- 286-8257

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

VERY OLD, 2 man cross-cut saw. 71" x 5.5" with2 8.5" wooden handles.Beaut i fu l ly pa intedlandscape scene withbarns, houses, trees &gristmill, $100. 286-8257

4 USED, all aluminum,complete whirley birdsoff remodel job. DarkGrey, good condition,all 4 for $40.00- 286-8257

NICE TREADMILL, Sports-craft TX335, Folds flatfor storage, $100. 286-8257

2 BRAND new rolls ofGalvanized flashing. Earoll is 20" x 50ft. boughtat Lowes, was $53.45 ea,will sell for $35 ea. or$50 for both, FIRM- 286-8257

10 OLD rough sawn oakboards from very oldbarn, average 8' long 7"wide, all for $50. 286-8257

3 NEW Boxes of PasloadS t a p l e s w i t h 1 5 / 1 6crown and 1" length. All3 for $50.00 FIRM- 286-8257

MENS HUFFY S toneMountain bike, needsnew tires fixed, $20.00-286-8257

OLD WOODEN Keg w/ 4metal bands, 23" tall x18" w - $25.00- 286-5257

FOLD OUT Murphy Bed,custom built (one of akind) solid oak withstained glass doors,complete with mat-tress. Heirloom qualitypiece, 65 x 16x 32, $350.286-8257

KOBALT ROLLER roof re-mover tools, was $54.00ea, get them both for$40.00-286-8257

HANSEN TEXAS CottonScales, model # 8916, upto 160lbs, $40.00, 286-8257

3 TIER Wall Mirror 65"wx42"h with 2 goldcandle holders and 2gold wall fern planters$80.00- 287-2357

BAG OF 123 pieces: cuff-links, lapel pins, tieclasps, earrings, medal-lions, and pins, $25.00.286-8257

BAG OF costume jew-elry, 60pc. Rings, neck-l a c e s , b r o a c h e s , &bracelets. $30.00- 286-8257

22 BOXES of Para SleeveMasonry anchors, 20 perbox, 5/16x2.5 completew/ washer and nut,$50.00- 286-8257

8 JIM Beam collectione d i t i o n d e c a n t e rbottles, great condi-tion, all for $25- 286-8257

3/8" ALL thread, 4 Foot& 10 Foot pcs, .50 centsper foot, 286-8257

GIANT PAIR of 29" long,heavy duty snips. Weigh12lbs and has an an-chor symbol stampedinto both sides, maybeused by blacksmith orSailor. Perfect for cut-ting vinyl siding. $35.00286-8257

EXPLODED AND SplitOpen length ways, shellcasing from WWII, thickcasing, 13" long, 4-5"across, weighs 28lbs.$20.00- 286-8257

2 EXPENSIVE Textured,oriental look, lamps, co-balt blue & light blue w/white flower pattern-$40.00 for both- 286-8257

4 X 8 Tilt Trailer, $400.00-286-2655

MAZDA P/U Bed com-plete with bumper,lights, chrome, bed-liner, rearend, shocks,springs, frame, and alu-minum wheels & Tires.No Dents, would make anice trailer. $350 OBO-286-8257

Page 16: 060314 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Tuesday, June 3, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

SERVICES

Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and

price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. Auto Sales

GUARANTEED

868AUTOMOBILES

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

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

$85,000662-415-0590

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some

work.$1500

662-664-3958

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a

High Five stainless prop,

for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in Counce, TN for

details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr.,

new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS

AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO731-453-5031

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

2013 KUBOTA3800 SERIES

TRACTOR16’ TRAILER, DOUBLE

AXEL, BUSH HOG, BACKHOE,

FRONT LOADER$25,000

WILL TRADE662-643-3565

REDUCED

1991 Mariah 20’ ski boat, 5.7 ltr.

engine, new tires, $6700.

662-287-5893, leave msg. & will

return call.

804BOATS

1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC

19’6” LONGFIBERGLAS

INCLUDES TRAILERTHIS BOAT IS

KEPT INSIDE AND IS IN EXCELLENT

CONDITIONNEW 4 CYL MOTOR

PRICE IS NEGOTIABLECALL 662-660-3433

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LT

EXTENDED CAB4.8

One of a kind46,000 mi.

garage kept.$20,000

CALL662-643-3565

REDUCED

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc.

drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical

condition”. $7400.

662-664-3538

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $2600 obo.

662-664-1957.

1984 CORVETTE383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum.

heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt

w/new paint job (silver fl eck paint). $9777.77

Call Keith662-415-0017.

REDUCED

868AUTOMOBILES

1979 OLDSMOBILE

OMEGA6 CYLINDER

RUNS GREAT!38,000 ORIGINAL MILES

$5,000CALL PICO:

662-643-3565

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2001 CAMERO CONVERTIBLE

NEW TOPV6

30+ MPGZ28 APPEARANCE

PACKAGEALL POWER

$4900662-415-9121

NEWREDUCED

Suzuki DR 200

Dual Sport

2,147 miles

LIKE NEW!

$1,950

231-667-4280

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1996 VW CabrioConvertible

178,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee

283,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

662-396-1182

FOR SALE

Call:287-1552

2000 ChryslerTown & Country

$2,70000

2007 White Toyota Tundra

double cab, 5.7 V8 SR5, Aluminum wheels, 64,135

miles, lots of extras, $19,000.

Call 662-603-9304

Loweline Boat

14’ fl at bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor

and all. Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503

2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer

Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube

$19,300662-427-9063

2004 Volvo S80

113,000 Miles, 1 Owner

4 New tires, New Battery

$5900287-7424

OMC Cobra out drive4.3 Chevy V6, runs great

New Tires on trailer$ 00

662-287-2935 or 901-489-9413

9 Four Winds18ft. Ski Boat -

Model 180 Freedom

2000Town CarApproximately: 114,000 miles

Needs air conditioning

work.

287-635717’ 1991 Evinrude40 h.p.Bass

Tracker$2500.00

Call: 662-287-0991

or662-665-2020

Suzuki DR 2002007 Dual Sport

With Helmet2,147 milesLIKE NEW!$1,550 OBO

231-677-4280

2008 Ford Ranger XL

Regular Cab

4CYL- 2.3 Liter

Automatic 5 Speed

w/ overdrive

2wd, ABS (4wheel),

Power Steering

AM/FM radio, White

68,500 Miles

$8,279.00Call:

662-286-8866

YAMAHAGOLF CART

2012 LIMITED EDITIONLOW USAGE,

MINT CONDITIONBALL AND CLUB WASHER

SAND BOTTLE KITSSPEED KIT

LOW USAGE, MINT CONDITIONBALL AND CLUB WASHER

SAND BOTTLE KITS, SPEED KITS662-286-9909

2000 Chevy Express RV

Handicap Van w/ Extra Heavy DutyWheelchair Lift101,538 Miles

$ ,000 OBO

662-287-7403

2006 ChryslerSebring

New Tires, CD Player,Cold Air

Call 662-319-7145

$2,575.00 OBO

FOR SALE1988 Dodge

15 Passenger VanLow Miles $750.00

662-287-7807

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

$1,500.00662-462-5669

BED ONLY Fully Enclosed Utility Truck

8' Long BedAll tool trays and Boxes have locks

$7975.00

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL AND TESTA-MENT OF SUE STEWART,DECEASED

NO. 2014-0279-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters Testamentaryhave been on this day gran-ted to the undersigned, Ron-nie Stewart, on the estate ofSue Stewart, deceased, by theChancery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, and allpersons having claims againstsaid estate are required tohave the same probated andregistered by the Clerk ofsaid Court within ninety (90)days after the date of the firstpublication of this notice orthe same shall be foreverbarred, The first day of pub-lication of this notice is the20th day of May, 2014.

WITNESS my signature onthis 15th day of May, 2014.

RONNIE STEWART,EXECUTOR OF THE

ESTATE OF SUE STEWART,DECEASED

3TC 05/20, 05/27, 06/03/201414729

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOORAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: CONSERVATORSHIPOF PEGGY SUE ESSARY

CAUSE NO.2009-0493-02-M

SUMMONS

THE STATE OFMISSISSIPPI

TO: All Heirs-at-Law of PeggySue Essary

You have been made a De-fendant in the suit filed in thisCourt by Bobby Marolt, Con-servator of the person PeggySue Essary, seeking to ceaseand determine conservator-ship and for discharge of con-servator. Defendants otherthan you in this action areRenae Martin.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 O'Clock A.M. on the28th day of July, 2014, in thecourtroom of the PrentissCounty Courthouse atBooneville, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defend a judgement willbe entered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the complaint orpetition.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing but you may do so if youdesire.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the27th day of May, 2014.

BOBBY MAROLTCLERK OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

BY: KAREN DUNCAN, D.C.

3tc 06/03, 06/10, &06/17/2014

14747

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THEESTATE OF RUTH JOHN-SON MCDOUGALL, DE-CEASED

CAUSE NO. 2014-0244-02

NOTICE TO KNOWNCREDITORS

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE,pursuant to Section 91-7-145(1) of the Missis-sippi Code of 1972 An-notated, as amended,that I have this day for-warded to the DailyCorinthian for publica-tion, a Notice to Credit-ors, a copy of which isattached for your in-formation. If you are acreditor of the the es-tate referenced above,and you fail to haveyour claim against theestate probated and re-gistered by the Chan-cery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippiwithin ninety (90) daysafter the first publica-tion of the enclosedNotice, such will baryour claim as providedin Section 91-7-151 ofthe Mississippi Code of1972 Annotated, asamended.

THIS the 22nd day ofMay, 2014.

JOE DWYER

3tc 05/27, 06/03, &06/10/201414740

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE:LAST WILL &TESTAMENT OFHELEN MARIE DERRY-BERRY

CAUSE NO.:2014-0283-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Notice is given that LettersTestamentary have been onthis day granted the under-signed, Carol DerryberryWorley, Kathy Lynn Derry-berry Putman and Stephen F.Worley, on the Estate ofHelen Marie Derryberry, de-ceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe clerk of said court withinninety (90) days after the dateof the first publication of thisnotice (June 3, 2014), or thesame shall be forever barred.

WITNESS OUR SIGNA-TURES on this the 27th day ofMay, 2014.

C A R O L D E R R Y B E R R YW O R L E Y

KATHEY LYNN DERRY-BERRY PUTMAN

STEPHEN F. WORLEY

3TC 06/3, 06/10, 06/17/2014

14743

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPP

RE: LAST WILL AND TEST-AMENT OF KENNETH R.FAIRCHILD, DECEASED

NO. 2014-0278-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters Testamentaryhave been on this day gran-ted to the undersigned, NellyFairchild, on the estate ofKenneth R. Fairchild, de-ceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days after thedate of the first publication ofthis notice or the same shallbe forever barred. The firstday of the publication of thisnotice is the 27th day of May,2014.

WITNESS my signature onthis 22nd day of May, 2014.

NELLY FAIRCHILD, EXEC-UTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF

KENNETH R. FAIRCHILD,DECEASED

3tc 05/2706/03, & 06/10/201414739

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THEESTATE OF RUTH JOHN-SON MCDOUGALL, DE-CEASED

CAUSE NO. 2014-0244-02

NOTICE TO KNOWNCREDITORS

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE,pursuant to Section 91-7-145(1) of the Missis-sippi Code of 1972 An-notated, as amended,that I have this day for-warded to the DailyCorinthian for publica-tion, a Notice to Credit-ors, a copy of which isattached for your in-formation. If you are acreditor of the the es-tate referenced above,and you fail to haveyour claim against theestate probated and re-gistered by the Chan-cery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippiwithin ninety (90) daysafter the first publica-tion of the enclosedNotice, such will baryour claim as providedin Section 91-7-151 ofthe Mississippi Code of1972 Annotated, asamended.

THIS the 22nd day ofMay, 2014.

JOE DWYER

3tc 05/27, 06/03, &06/10/201414740

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S SALE

NOTICE

WHEREAS, on the 13thday of August, 2010, N & HInvestments, LLC, ex-ecuted and delivered adeed of trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee, for thebenefit of BancorpSouthBank, which deed of trust isrecorded in InstrumentNumber: 201004005 in theOffice of the ChanceryClerk of the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Bancorp-South Bank, has hereto-fore substituted James W.Bingham, as Trustee by in-strument dated May 15,2014, and recorded in theaforesaid Chancery Clerk’sOffice in Docket Number:201402041; and

WHEREAS, default hasbeen made in the paymentof the indebtedness se-cured by said deed of trust,which default continues,and BancorpSouth Bank,the legal holder of the Notesecured by said deed oftrust, having requested theundersigned to sell theproperty described herein-after for the purpose of sat-isfying the indebtednessand costs of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,notice is hereby given thatI, the undersigned substi-tute trustee, will on the 18thday of June, 2014, at theSouth steps of the AlcornCounty Courthouse in Cor-inth, Mississippi, within leg-al hours, offer for sale, atpublic outcry, to the highestbidder for cash, the follow-ing described property inAlcorn County, Mississippi,to-wit:

802 Main St.A part of the Northwest

Quarter of Block 513 ofWalker’s Addition to theCity of Cor inth in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, described asfollows:

Beginning at the Northw-est corner of said Block513, run East along theNorth boundary of saidblock 75 feet; thence Southparal le l wi th the Westboundary of said block 100feet; thence West parallelwith the North boundary ofsaid block 75 feet to theWest boundary of saidblock; thence North alongthe West boundary of saidblock 100 feet to the begin-ning. The lot hereby con-veyed is 75 feet East andWest by 100 feet North andSouth and lies in the North-west corner of Block 513 ofWalker’s Addition to theCity of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi.

Such title will be conveyedas is vested in me as sub-stitute trustee aforesaid.

This the 21st day of May,2014.

JAMES W. BINGHAM,SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

4tc 5/27, 6/3, 6/10, &6/17/201414737

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPP

RE: LAST WILL AND TEST-AMENT OF KENNETH R.FAIRCHILD, DECEASED

NO. 2014-0278-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters Testamentaryhave been on this day gran-ted to the undersigned, NellyFairchild, on the estate ofKenneth R. Fairchild, de-ceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days after thedate of the first publication ofthis notice or the same shallbe forever barred. The firstday of the publication of thisnotice is the 27th day of May,2014.

WITNESS my signature onthis 22nd day of May, 2014.

NELLY FAIRCHILD, EXEC-UTRIX OF THE ESTATE OF

KENNETH R. FAIRCHILD,DECEASED

3tc 05/2706/03, & 06/10/201414739

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S SALE

NOTICE

WHEREAS, on the 13thday of August, 2010, N & HInvestments, LLC, ex-ecuted and delivered adeed of trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee, for thebenefit of BancorpSouthBank, which deed of trust isrecorded in InstrumentNumber: 201004005 in theOffice of the ChanceryClerk of the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Bancorp-South Bank, has hereto-fore substituted James W.Bingham, as Trustee by in-strument dated May 15,2014, and recorded in theaforesaid Chancery Clerk’sOffice in Docket Number:201402041; and

WHEREAS, default hasbeen made in the paymentof the indebtedness se-cured by said deed of trust,which default continues,and BancorpSouth Bank,the legal holder of the Notesecured by said deed oftrust, having requested theundersigned to sell theproperty described herein-after for the purpose of sat-isfying the indebtednessand costs of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,notice is hereby given thatI, the undersigned substi-tute trustee, will on the 18thday of June, 2014, at theSouth steps of the AlcornCounty Courthouse in Cor-inth, Mississippi, within leg-al hours, offer for sale, atpublic outcry, to the highestbidder for cash, the follow-ing described property inAlcorn County, Mississippi,to-wit:

802 Main St.A part of the Northwest

Quarter of Block 513 ofWalker’s Addition to theCity of Cor inth in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, described asfollows:

Beginning at the Northw-est corner of said Block513, run East along theNorth boundary of saidblock 75 feet; thence Southparal le l wi th the Westboundary of said block 100feet; thence West parallelwith the North boundary ofsaid block 75 feet to theWest boundary of saidblock; thence North alongthe West boundary of saidblock 100 feet to the begin-ning. The lot hereby con-veyed is 75 feet East andWest by 100 feet North andSouth and lies in the North-west corner of Block 513 ofWalker’s Addition to theCity of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi.

Such title will be conveyedas is vested in me as sub-stitute trustee aforesaid.

This the 21st day of May,2014.

JAMES W. BINGHAM,SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

4tc 5/27, 6/3, 6/10, &6/17/201414737

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE

WHEREAS, JAMES G.NORMAN, JR. and LEA ANNNORMAN, made, executeda n d d e l i v e r e d t o J .PATRICK CALDWELLas Trustee for the benefit ofB A N C O R P S O U T HBANK, each of the follow-ing Deeds of Trust:

A) Dated August 14, 2009,recorded as Instrument No.200903985;

B) Dated July 23, 2013, re-corded as Instrument No.201303131;

WHEREAS, BAN-CORPSOUTH BANK ,legal holder and owner of saidDeeds of Trust and the in-debtedness secured thereby,s ub s t i t u t ed W. JETTWILSON as Subst i tuteTrustee, by instrument datedApril 17, 2014, and recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201401552;

WHEREAS, default hav-ing been made in the termsand conditions of said Deedsof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deeds of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, BANCORP-SOUTH BANK, having re-quested the undersigned Sub-stitute Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deeds ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Substitute Trustee's fees, andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that I, the under-signed Substitute Trustee, onthe 18th day of June, 2014, atthe South front door of theAlcorn County Courthouse,in the City of Corinth, Al-corn County, Mississippi,within the legal hours forsuch sales (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m.), will offer for sale andsell, at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, thefollowing property conveyedto me by said Deed of Trustdescribed as follows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West along theNorth boundary line of saidSoutheast Quarter 1569.6feet to the Southeast right-of-way line of a public road;thence run South 48 degrees13 minutes West 305.23 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run South 27 degrees42 minutes East 461.7 feet toa pine tree; thence run South42 degrees 20 minutes East82.11 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 77 degrees09 minutes East 115.61 feetto a large tree; thence runSouth 37 degrees 15 minutesEast 331.63 feet to a pinetree; thence run North 36degrees 28 minutes East411.6 feet; thence run South32 degrees 47 minutes East105.95 feet; thence run North68 degrees 52 minutes East946 feet; thence run North303.4 feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 22.5 acres.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described tract:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet to an iron rebar set andthe point of beginning for thisdescription; thence run South79 degrees 38 minutes 32seconds West 170.33 feet toan iron rebar set; thence runSouth 37 degrees 38 minutes16 seconds East 302.31 feet,passing an iron rebar set at273.00 feet on the Northw-est shore l ine of a lake;thence run North 57 degrees50 minutes 48 seconds East214.23 feet; thence run North51 degrees 47 minutes 50seconds West 252.90 feet,passing an iron rebar set at21.85 feet on the Northwestshore of a lake, to the pointof beginning, containing 1.11acres, more or less.

Together with a perpetualnon-exclusive easement andright of way for the followingpurposes, namely: the rightto enter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad and to install and main-tain public utilities incident tothe use of the property de-scribed above, together withthe perpetual right to use saidroad and said utility ease-ments all over, upon, across,and under the following de-scribed property:

7.50 feet on each side of theline described as follows:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet; thence run South 79 de-grees 38 minutes 32 secondsWest 170.33 feet to an ironrebar set; thence run South37 degrees 38 minutes 16seconds East 16.33 feet to thepoint of beginning for thisEasement; thence run the fol-lowing calls: South 75 de-grees 38 minutes 53 secondsWest 191.15 feet; North 87degrees 17 minutes 11seconds West 91.87 feet;North 38 degrees 30 minutes18 seconds West 198.00 feetto the Southeasterly right-of-way of Alcorn County RoadNo. 257, and the end of thisEasement.

Although the title to saidproperty is believed to begood, I will sell and conveyonly such title in said prop-erty as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

S I G N E D , P O S T E DAND PUBLISHED on thisthe 27th day of May, 2014.

W. JETT WILSON MSB# 7316

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc 5/27, 06/3, 06/10, &06/17/201414736

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S SALE

NOTICE

WHEREAS, on the 13thday of August, 2010, N & HInvestments, LLC, ex-ecuted and delivered adeed of trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee, for thebenefit of BancorpSouthBank, which deed of trust isrecorded in InstrumentNumber: 201004005 in theOffice of the ChanceryClerk of the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Bancorp-South Bank, has hereto-fore substituted James W.Bingham, as Trustee by in-strument dated May 15,2014, and recorded in theaforesaid Chancery Clerk’sOffice in Docket Number:201402041; and

WHEREAS, default hasbeen made in the paymentof the indebtedness se-cured by said deed of trust,which default continues,and BancorpSouth Bank,the legal holder of the Notesecured by said deed oftrust, having requested theundersigned to sell theproperty described herein-after for the purpose of sat-isfying the indebtednessand costs of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,notice is hereby given thatI, the undersigned substi-tute trustee, will on the 18thday of June, 2014, at theSouth steps of the AlcornCounty Courthouse in Cor-inth, Mississippi, within leg-al hours, offer for sale, atpublic outcry, to the highestbidder for cash, the follow-ing described property inAlcorn County, Mississippi,to-wit:

802 Main St.A part of the Northwest

Quarter of Block 513 ofWalker’s Addition to theCity of Cor inth in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, described asfollows:

Beginning at the Northw-est corner of said Block513, run East along theNorth boundary of saidblock 75 feet; thence Southparal le l wi th the Westboundary of said block 100feet; thence West parallelwith the North boundary ofsaid block 75 feet to theWest boundary of saidblock; thence North alongthe West boundary of saidblock 100 feet to the begin-ning. The lot hereby con-veyed is 75 feet East andWest by 100 feet North andSouth and lies in the North-west corner of Block 513 ofWalker’s Addition to theCity of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi.

Such title will be conveyedas is vested in me as sub-stitute trustee aforesaid.

This the 21st day of May,2014.

JAMES W. BINGHAM,SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

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LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYSUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE

WHEREAS, JAMES G.NORMAN, JR. and LEA ANNNORMAN, made, executeda n d d e l i v e r e d t o J .PATRICK CALDWELLas Trustee for the benefit ofB A N C O R P S O U T HBANK, each of the follow-ing Deeds of Trust:

A) Dated August 14, 2009,recorded as Instrument No.200903985;

B) Dated July 23, 2013, re-corded as Instrument No.201303131;

WHEREAS, BAN-CORPSOUTH BANK ,legal holder and owner of saidDeeds of Trust and the in-debtedness secured thereby,s ub s t i t u t ed W. JETTWILSON as Subst i tuteTrustee, by instrument datedApril 17, 2014, and recordedin the Office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.201401552;

WHEREAS, default hav-ing been made in the termsand conditions of said Deedsof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deeds of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, BANCORP-SOUTH BANK, having re-quested the undersigned Sub-stitute Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deeds ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Substitute Trustee's fees, andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE,NOTICE IS HEREBYGIVEN that I, the under-signed Substitute Trustee, onthe 18th day of June, 2014, atthe South front door of theAlcorn County Courthouse,in the City of Corinth, Al-corn County, Mississippi,within the legal hours forsuch sales (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m.), will offer for sale andsell, at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, thefollowing property conveyedto me by said Deed of Trustdescribed as follows:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West along theNorth boundary line of saidSoutheast Quarter 1569.6feet to the Southeast right-of-way line of a public road;thence run South 48 degrees13 minutes West 305.23 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run South 27 degrees42 minutes East 461.7 feet toa pine tree; thence run South42 degrees 20 minutes East82.11 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 77 degrees09 minutes East 115.61 feetto a large tree; thence runSouth 37 degrees 15 minutesEast 331.63 feet to a pinetree; thence run North 36degrees 28 minutes East411.6 feet; thence run South32 degrees 47 minutes East105.95 feet; thence run North68 degrees 52 minutes East946 feet; thence run North303.4 feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 22.5 acres.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described tract:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet to an iron rebar set andthe point of beginning for thisdescription; thence run South79 degrees 38 minutes 32seconds West 170.33 feet toan iron rebar set; thence runSouth 37 degrees 38 minutes16 seconds East 302.31 feet,passing an iron rebar set at273.00 feet on the Northw-est shore l ine of a lake;thence run North 57 degrees50 minutes 48 seconds East214.23 feet; thence run North51 degrees 47 minutes 50seconds West 252.90 feet,passing an iron rebar set at21.85 feet on the Northwestshore of a lake, to the pointof beginning, containing 1.11acres, more or less.

Together with a perpetualnon-exclusive easement andright of way for the followingpurposes, namely: the rightto enter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad and to install and main-tain public utilities incident tothe use of the property de-scribed above, together withthe perpetual right to use saidroad and said utility ease-ments all over, upon, across,and under the following de-scribed property:

7.50 feet on each side of theline described as follows:

Commencing at the North-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 1159.98feet; thence run South 200.77feet; thence run South 79 de-grees 38 minutes 32 secondsWest 170.33 feet to an ironrebar set; thence run South37 degrees 38 minutes 16seconds East 16.33 feet to thepoint of beginning for thisEasement; thence run the fol-lowing calls: South 75 de-grees 38 minutes 53 secondsWest 191.15 feet; North 87degrees 17 minutes 11seconds West 91.87 feet;North 38 degrees 30 minutes18 seconds West 198.00 feetto the Southeasterly right-of-way of Alcorn County RoadNo. 257, and the end of thisEasement.

Although the title to saidproperty is believed to begood, I will sell and conveyonly such title in said prop-erty as is vested in me as Sub-stitute Trustee.

S I G N E D , P O S T E DAND PUBLISHED on thisthe 27th day of May, 2014.

W. JETT WILSON MSB# 7316

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

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