080514 daily corinthian e edition

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Vol. 118, No. 184 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages 1 section Tuesday Aug. 5, 2014 50 cents Today 93 Mostly sunny Tonight 67 Index On this day in history 150 years ago “Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!” Adm. David G. Far- ragut orders an attack on Mobile Bay. He yells the immortal quote as the USS Tecumseh hits a torpedo and sinks. The last deep-water port on the Gulf of Mexico falls to the U.S. Navy. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather...... 10 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 0% chance of rain Don’t forget to vote today in ACE Power’s Board of Directors election. 10:30 a.m. — 6 p.m./ACE office/1909 S. Tate A teen remains in critical condition at The Med in Mem- phis, Tennessee, after a Sunday night wreck in a church parking lot off South Harper Road. Austin Digby, 17, suffered Wreck leaves 1 critical BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] SELMER, Tenn. — An Ad- amsville woman faces a felony rst degree murder charge in the death of a 4-year-old boy. Kyrie Marie Kyle, 26, of 337 Myrtle Road, had a murder charge added after the child died Saturday at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. Kyle, whose bond was set at $1 mil- lion is also being charged with aggravated child abuse and ag- gravated assaulted, according to 25th Judicial District Attor- ney Mike Dunavant. Kyle will make her initial court appearance Thursday, Aug. 14 in McNairy County. Anthony Dilworth, the father of the child, is being charged with child abuse. Dilworth, 39, has a bond of $500,000 and Kyle charged with murder BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Staff photo by Steve Beavers McNairy County Sher- iff Guy Buck for- mally an- nounces charges against Kyrie Kyle for the murder of a 4-year- old child. Two seats on the Alcorn County Power Association’s Board of Directors will be de- cided during the annual meet- ing and election set for today. Members will cast their votes for two of the four local men running for the open positions. Incumbents Jerry Brawner and Sam Tull will vie for the two open positions against new- comers Harrison Childs and James (Jimbo) Bryant Jr. “I’m just a county boy who has always enjoyed helping folks,” said Brawner, who has served on the board for 25 years. “I would love to get the opportunity to serve ACE cus- tomers again to ensure they get the best utility service possible.” The farmer and retired Kos- suth school principal said he’s proud of some of the new pro- grams he has helped put in place recently, including Pay- Wise. Bryant said he wants the board director job, because he loves to volunteer. “I want to volunteer my ser- vice to the community,” said the longtime homebuilder and owner of Pizza Grocery in downtown Corinth. “I’m not trying to change anything, be- cause I believe our power as- sociation is doing a wonderful job.” Bryant is seeking a board seat for the rst time. “ACE has never given back a dime to its customers,” said Childs, a former correctional ofcer. “Smith County’s power association has returned more than $50 million to its mem- bers over the years. I think it’s about time for ACE to provide the same type of thank you to its customers.” Childs is also for open elec- tions. “I think every customer should get an election card mailed to their home,” he said. “A closed election, where a person has to visit the ofce to vote, is unfair.” As current board president, Tull believes his business back- ground is needed on the board. Power play: Four vying for spots on ACE board BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] An Alcorn County jury will hear the sexual battery case against the former pastor of a local church this week. The case against Timothy Daniel Nall began Monday in Alcorn County Circuit Court with a long day of jury selec- tion. He recently resigned from Farmington Baptist Church, where he preached his nal ser- Battery case goes to trial BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] A two-vehicle wreck dis- turbed a quiet neighborhood Sunday afternoon. The wreck occurred around noon at the intersection of Lin- den Street and Jackson Street in downtown Corinth. Corinth native Thomas Gift Downtown wreck takes street sign BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Area school teachers, of- cials and concerned citizens woke up early Monday morn- ing to attend the Celebration of Excellence in Education event hosted by the Commission on the Future of Alcorn County. More than 800 people Over 800 attend education summit BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Staff photo by Zack Steen Award-winning speaker Angela Maiers presented the keynote at Monday’s Celebration of Ex- cellence in Education event at the Crossroads Arena. Staff photo by Zack Steen A two-vehi- cle wreck on Sunday resulted in two dam- aged ve- hicles and one dam- aged city street sign. Please see KYLE | 3 Please see CRITICAL | 3 Please see ACE | 3 Please see SUMMIT | 3 Please see BATTERY | 3 Please see COLLISION | 3 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: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 118, No. 184 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

TuesdayAug. 5, 2014

50 centsToday93

Mostly sunnyTonight

67

Index On this day in history 150 years ago“Damn the torpedoes! Full speed ahead!” Adm. David G. Far-

ragut orders an attack on Mobile Bay. He yells the immortal quote as the USS Tecumseh hits a torpedo and sinks. The last deep-water port on the Gulf of Mexico falls to the U.S. Navy.

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

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

0% chance of rain

Don’t forget to vote today in ACE Power’sBoard of Directors election.

10:30 a.m. — 6 p.m./ACE office/1909 S. Tate

A teen remains in critical condition at The Med in Mem-phis, Tennessee, after a Sunday night wreck in a church parking lot off South Harper Road.

Austin Digby, 17, suffered

Wreck leaves 1 critical

BY ZACK [email protected]

SELMER, Tenn. — An Ad-amsville woman faces a felony fi rst degree murder charge in the death of a 4-year-old boy.

Kyrie Marie Kyle, 26, of 337 Myrtle Road, had a murder charge added after the child died Saturday at Le Bonheur Children’s Hospital. Kyle, whose bond was set at $1 mil-lion is also being charged with

aggravated child abuse and ag-gravated assaulted, according to 25th Judicial District Attor-ney Mike Dunavant.

Kyle will make her initial court appearance Thursday, Aug. 14 in McNairy County.

Anthony Dilworth, the father of the child, is being charged with child abuse. Dilworth, 39, has a bond of $500,000 and

Kyle charged with murder

BY STEVE [email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

McNairy County Sher-iff Guy Buck for-mally an-nounces charges against Kyrie Kyle for the murder of a 4-year-old child.

Two seats on the Alcorn County Power Association’s Board of Directors will be de-cided during the annual meet-ing and election set for today.

Members will cast their votes for two of the four local men running for the open positions. Incumbents Jerry Brawner and Sam Tull will vie for the two open positions against new-comers Harrison Childs and James (Jimbo) Bryant Jr.

“I’m just a county boy who has always enjoyed helping folks,” said Brawner, who has served on the board for 25 years. “I would love to get the opportunity to serve ACE cus-tomers again to ensure they get the best utility service possible.”

The farmer and retired Kos-suth school principal said he’s proud of some of the new pro-grams he has helped put in place recently, including Pay-Wise.

Bryant said he wants the board director job, because he loves to volunteer.

“I want to volunteer my ser-

vice to the community,” said the longtime homebuilder and owner of Pizza Grocery in downtown Corinth. “I’m not trying to change anything, be-cause I believe our power as-sociation is doing a wonderful job.”

Bryant is seeking a board seat for the fi rst time.

“ACE has never given back a dime to its customers,” said Childs, a former correctional offi cer. “Smith County’s power association has returned more than $50 million to its mem-bers over the years. I think it’s about time for ACE to provide the same type of thank you to its customers.”

Childs is also for open elec-tions.

“I think every customer should get an election card mailed to their home,” he said. “A closed election, where a person has to visit the offi ce to vote, is unfair.”

As current board president, Tull believes his business back-ground is needed on the board.

Power play: Four vyingfor spots on ACE board

BY ZACK [email protected]

An Alcorn County jury will hear the sexual battery case against the former pastor of a local church this week.

The case against Timothy Daniel Nall began Monday in Alcorn County Circuit Court with a long day of jury selec-tion. He recently resigned from Farmington Baptist Church, where he preached his fi nal ser-

Battery casegoes to trial

BY JEBB [email protected]

A two-vehicle wreck dis-turbed a quiet neighborhood Sunday afternoon.

The wreck occurred around noon at the intersection of Lin-den Street and Jackson Street in downtown Corinth.

Corinth native Thomas Gift

Downtownwreck takesstreet sign

BY ZACK [email protected]

Area school teachers, offi -cials and concerned citizens

woke up early Monday morn-ing to attend the Celebration of Excellence in Education event hosted by the Commission on

the Future of Alcorn County.More than 800 people

Over 800 attend education summitBY ZACK STEEN

[email protected]

Staff photo by Zack Steen

Award-winning speaker Angela Maiers presented the keynote at Monday’s Celebration of Ex-cellence in Education event at the Crossroads Arena.

Staff photo by Zack Steen

A two-vehi-cle wreck on Sunday resulted in two dam-aged ve-hicles and one dam-aged city street sign.

Please see KYLE | 3 Please see CRITICAL | 3

Please see ACE | 3Please see SUMMIT | 3

Please see BATTERY | 3Please see COLLISION | 3

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

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Realty & Associates, LLCRealty & Associates, LLC

Page 2: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

2 • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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Page 3: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Local/State3 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Today in

history

Today is Tuesday, Au-gust 5, the 217th day of 2014. There are 148 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in History:

On August 5, 1914, what’s believed to be the first electric traf-fic light system was installed in Cleveland, Ohio, at the intersection of East 105th Street and Euclid Avenue. Mon-tenegro declared war on Austria-Hungary at the start of World War I.

On this date:

In 1864, during the Civil War, Union Adm. David G. Farragut led his fleet to victory in the Battle of Mobile Bay, Alabama.

In 1884, the corner-stone for the Statue of Liberty’s pedestal was laid on Bedloe’s Island in New York Harbor.

In 1924, the comic strip “Little Orphan Annie” by Harold Gray made its debut.

In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the National Labor Board, which was later replaced with the National Labor Relations Board.

In 1953, Operation Big Switch began as re-maining prisoners taken during the Korean War were exchanged at Pan-munjom.

In 1954, 24 boxers became the first induct-ees into the Boxing Hall of Fame, including Henry Armstrong, Gentle-man Jim Corbett, Jack Dempsey, Jack Johnson, Joe Louis and John L. Sullivan.

In 1962, actress Marilyn Monroe, 36, was found dead in her Los Angeles home; her death was ruled a prob-able suicide from “acute barbiturate poisoning.” South African anti-apart-heid activist Nelson Mandela was arrested; it was the beginning of 27 years of imprisonment.

In 1964, U.S. Navy pilot Everett Alvarez Jr. became the first Ameri-can flier to be shot down and captured by North Vietnam; he was held prisoner until February 1973.

In 1974, the White House released tran-scripts of subpoenaed tape recordings showing that President Richard Nixon and his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, had discussed a plan in June 1972 to use the CIA to thwart the FBI’s Watergate investigation; revelation of the tape sparked Nixon’s resigna-tion.

In 1994, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washing-ton chose Kenneth W. Starr to take over the Whitewater investigation from Robert Fiske.

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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To start your home delivered subscription:Call 287-6111 Monday-Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.For your convenience try our office pay plans.

Miss your paper?To report a problem or delivery change call the circulation department at 287-6111. Late, wet or missing newspaper complaints should be made before 10 a.m. to ensure redelivery to immediate Corinth area.

All other areas will be delivered the next day.

USPS 142-560The Daily Corinthian is published daily Tuesday through Sunday by PMG, LLC.

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

were in attendance at the Crossroads Arena to witness the offi cial an-nouncement by Excel By 5 Executive Director Bob Clay.

“I would like to con-gratulate Corinth and Al-corn County for becom-ing the newest Excel By 5 certifi ed community,” said Clay. “Excel By 5 was started ten years ago to help kids, ages 0 to fi ve, be better prepared when they show up for school. The Crossroads commu-nity is now the 18th cer-tifi ed Excel By 5 commu-nity in the state.”

Excel By 5 is a Missis-sippi only program.

“Most city and county school districts don’t work good together. This community, how-

ever, works together better than any other community I’ve seen in this program,” said Clay referencing the close re-lationship between the Corinth School District and the Alcorn School District.

Award winning educa-tor, author and speaker Angela Maiers presented the event’s keynote.

“I want everyone in the audience to know, you matter,” said Mai-ers. “I don’t take those two words lightly and I challenge you to not do the same. For the last 36 months, I have had the honor to see the power of these life changing words on so many lives.”

Maiers is the founder of Choose2Matter, a global movement that challeng-es and inspires students

to work collaboratively to develop innovative solu-tions to social problems.

“Rather a person lives on the streets or works on Wall Street, the need to matter is universal,” she said. “It is in our DNA. It is a human right to know that we are no-ticed.”

Maiers said we have to accept and own our ge-nius.

“Believe me, you are a genius and the world needs your contribu-tion,” said the social me-dia evangelist. “We were created for signifi cance and one of the most dan-gerous things that can happen to us is the feel-ing that we don’t matter.”

Maiers’ Choose2Mat-ter is a call to leader-ship and an accelerator to connect individuals

and communities with a conscience. It combines technology, innovation and mentorship to solve problems that matter.

“When someone be-lieves that they matter, they see the world in a different light and behave differently,” said Maiers. “They approach life and work in a manner that understands that their

actions can have a posi-tive impact on the world.”

The practice of matter-ing is very important and can be done in a matter of seconds.

“I challenge everyone to take two seconds at the beginning of each day to tell someone why they matter,” Maiers said.

(Learn more at choos-e2matter.org.)

SUMMIT

CONTINUED FROM 1

will also appear in court on Aug. 14.

Dilworth and Kyle, who is reportedly his girl-friend, both remained jailed at the McNairy County Jail.

Charges against the pair were fi led Friday after the child was transported to McNairy Regional Hos-pital with severe injuries Wednesday night.

“There was an incident where Mrs. Kyle pushed the child against a blunt object causing the injury,” said Dunavant at a press conference Monday at the McNairy County Justice Complex.

McNairy County Sheriff Guy Buck told media rep-resentatives Kyle called 911 after the child was in-jured.

“She called saying the child had a seizure,” said Buck.

The boy was brought by ambulance to the hospital with extreme head inju-ries and numerous other injuries.

“All the injuries oc-curred on one instance Wednesday night,” said Dunavant.

The sheriff’s depart-ment was contacted by the hospital because of the possible child abuse injuries.

“We immediately inter-viewed both at the emer-gency room,” said Buck.

“ T h e i n i t i a l a r r e s t w a s b a s e d on Mr. D i l -w o r t h h a v -ing an a c t i v e w a r -rant in Shelby C o u n -ty.”

I f c o n -v i c t e d on the murder charge, K y l e f a c e s life in prison without parole or death.

“I would be hard pressed to remember a case like this, especially one involving a child,” said Buck.

Whether there was another child at the resi-dence during the abuse is also being investigated by the sheriff’s depart-ment.

“Over the course there may be additional wit-nesses who come for-ward,” said the sheriff.

The biological mother of the 4-year-old child lives in Memphis and was with the child when he passed away at Le Bon-heur.

Dilworth

Kyle

KYLE

CONTINUED FROM 1

“My objective has always been to keep rates low, while ensuring our members re-main happy,” said the CEO of Tull Broth-ers, Inc. “I feel like I can continue to help customers get what they deserve.”

“I have enjoyed the years on the board and hope I can continue,” said Tull, who has served on the board for more than 40 years.

The election will take place from 10:30 a.m., to 6 p.m., in the ACE offi ce at 1909 South Tate Street in Corinth.

serious head injuries after he was partially ejected from the sunroof of a 1998 Toyota 4Runner driven by fel-low 17-year-old Jordan McDuffy. The wreck occurred around 10 p.m.

According to Corinth Police Chief David Lancaster, McDuffy was back-ing up in the Oakland Baptist Church parking lot when he over corrected and fl ipped the vehicle.

Digby was transported by EMS to Magnolia Regional Health Center and

later fl own by helicopter to The Med. McDuffy was also transported by EMS to Magnolia Regional Health Center with minor injuries.

“We don’t think speed played a fac-tor,” said Lancaster.

Both teens are members of Oakland Baptist Church.

Digby is the son of Alcorn County Baptist Association Director of Mis-sions Kenny Digby.

Shane Stegall with the Corinth Po-lice Department was the responding offi cer.

CRITICAL

CONTINUED FROM 1

and two other family members suf-fered no injuries when Gift pulled out in front of a 1968 Chevy C-10 Custom pickup truck driven by Brandy Pres-ley of Corinth. Gift was driving a 2010 Ford Expedition SUV.

Presley had two other passengers in the vehicle at the time of the wreck.

One passenger was transported by EMS to Magnolia Regional Health Center for minor injuries.

Both vehicles struck the curb in the wreck.

Presley’s vehicle struck the Linden-Jackson city street sign.

John Bobo with the Corinth Police Department was the responding offi -cer.

COLLISION

CONTINUED FROM 1

mon on July 6.A complaint of sexual battery

was fi led against Nall with the Alcorn County Sheriff’s De-partment in April 2013, and an investigation followed. In June 2013, a grand jury returned an indictment against Nall re-garding an alleged instance of sexual battery involving a child during the time period of Aug. 8, 2012, to April 28, 2013.

BATTERY

CONTINUED FROM 1

ACE

CONTINUED FROM 1

JACKSON — The tea party-backed lawmaker defeated by U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran in Missis-sippi’s Republican prima-ry said Monday that he has formally challenged the election’s outcome with the state GOP.

State Sen. Chris Mc-Daniel fi led the challenge with the Mississippi GOP state executive committee over Cochran’s June 24 runoff victory, McDaniel

attorney Mitch Tyner said during a news conference.

McDaniel will have to prove there were enough illegally cast votes to change the outcome or that the election was so sloppily handled its result is in doubt.

Mississippi voters don’t register by party, but state law makes so-called crossover voting — cast-ing a ballot in one party’s primary and another party’s runoff in the same

cycle — a misdemeanor. Tyner said the campaign had found 3,500 instanc-es of crossover votes, along with the 9,500 “ir-regular votes” and 2,275 “improperly cast” ab-sentee ballots. It was not immediately clear what made the votes irregular, or how the absentee bal-lots may have been im-properly cast.

Certifi ed results show Cochran won by 7,667 votes, or 51 percent.

“They asked us to put up or shut up, and here we are with the evidence,” McDaniel said.

McDaniel has called the June 24 runoff a “sham” and excoriated Cochran for seeking votes from “lib-eral Democrats.” While McDaniel stops short of mentioning race, Mis-sissippi is a state where Democrat is often synony-mous with black. Cochran says there’s nothing wrong with seeking support from

Democrats and indepen-dents — it’s something he’s done for decades.

While Mississippi courts have ordered some new local elections, there has been no court-or-dered do-over of a state-wide election in at least the past six decades of records reviewed by The Associated Press. Tyner has said he had found no examples of a Mississippi court ever ordering a new statewide vote.

Cochran foe challenges loss in primaryThe Associated Press

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Page 4: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Tuesday, August 5, 2014www.dailycorinthian.com

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

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Some have said that we are living in a post-industrial era, while others have said that we are living in a post-racial era. But growing evidence suggests that we are living in a post-thinking era.

Many people in Europe and the Western Hemisphere are staging angry protests against Israel’s military action in Gaza. One of the talking points

against Israel is that far more Palestinian civilians have been killed by Israeli military attacks than the number of Israeli civilians killed by the Hamas rocket attacks on Israel that started this latest military confl ict.

Are these protesters aware that vastly more German civilians were killed by American bombers attacking Nazi Germany during World War II than American civilians killed in the United States by Hitler’s forces?

Talk show host Geraldo Rivera says that there is no way Israel is winning the battle for world opinion. But Israel is trying to win the battle for survival, while surrounded by enemies. Might that not be more important?

Has any other country, in any other war, been expected to keep the enemy’s civilian casualties no higher than its own civilian ca-sualties? The idea that Israel should do so did not originate among the masses but among the educated intelligentsia.

In an age when scientists are creating arti-fi cial intelligence, too many of our education-al institutions seem to be creating artifi cial stupidity.

It is much the same story in our domestic controversies. We have gotten so intimidated by political correctness that our major media outlets dare not call people who immigrate to this country illegally “illegal immigrants.”

Geraldo Rivera has denounced the Drudge Report for carrying news stories that show some of the negative consequences and dan-gers from allowing vast numbers of young-sters to enter the country illegally and be spread across the country by the Obama ad-ministration.

Some of these youngsters are already known to be carrying lice and suffering from disease. Since there have been no thorough medical examinations of most of them, we have no way of knowing whether, or how many, are carrying deadly diseases that will spread when these unexamined young immi-grants enter schools across the country.

Back when masses of immigrants from Eu-rope were entering this country, those with dangerous diseases were turned back from Ellis Island. Nobody thought they had a legal or a moral “right” to be in America or that it was mean or racist not to want our children to catch their diseases.

Even on the less contentious issue of mini-mum wage laws, there are the same unthink-ing reactions.

Although liberals are usually gung ho for increasing the minimum wage, there was a sympathetic front page story in the July 29th San Francisco Chronicle about the plight of a local nonprofi t organization that will not be able to serve as many low-income minor-ity youths if it has to pay a higher minimum wage. They are seeking an exemption.

Does it not occur to these people that the very same thing happens when a minimum wage increase applies to profi t-based em-ployers?

This is not breaking news. This is what has been happening for generations.

One of the few countries without a mini-mum wage law is Switzerland, where the un-employment rate has been consistently less than 4 percent for years. Back in 2003, The Economist magazine reported that “Switzer-land’s unemployment neared a fi ve-year high of 3.9% in February.” The most recent issue shows the Swiss unemployment rate back to a more normal 3.2 percent.

Does anyone think that having minimum wage laws and high youth unemployment is better? In fact, does anyone think at all these days?

(Daily Corinthian columnist Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover In-stitution, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305. His website is www.tsowell.com.)

Is thinking obsolete?

Prayer for today

A verse to share

JACKSON — In a year when Mississippi fi lled its rainy-day fund to the legal limit, should it be saving even more?

That’s not exactly the recommendation from a new report from the Pew Charitable Trusts. But the report’s author says Missis-sippi should think harder about how it saves and how much it saves.

By law, Mississippi limits its Working Cash Stabiliza-tion Fund — what everyone calls the rainy-day fund — to 7.5 percent of general fund appropriations. The state fi lled the fund to its current limit of more than $400 million at the end of the last budget year, thanks to three years in a row of 5 percent revenue growth that dug Mississippi out its recessionary budget hole.

The last time Mississippi fi lled the rainy-day fund was in 2008, at the end of the revenue boom that ac-companied rebuilding from 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. And it was just in time, as state revenue fell sharply during the recession. In the following years, the state withdrew hundreds of mil-lions from that account

as well as from an ac-count where it keeps money from tobacco liti-gation pay-ments. Even then, though, there wasn’t enough saved

to stave off steep budget cuts.

This year’s decision brought some tension, es-pecially from lawmakers who wanted to spend more on schools. Mississippi con-tinues to put less than the full amount into the school funding formula, ignoring a legal requirement not to skimp.

Ultimately, though, the Legislature’s Republican majority decided to fi ll Mis-sissippi’s savings account, in part because it could give them more freedom to spend more or cut taxes during the 2015 legislative session during the run-up to state elections.

Gov. Phil Bryant and Lt. Gov. Tate Reeves have made strong public endorsements of savings.

“What this report shows is it is a prudent fi scal

course, given the volatility across the country, to have a rainy-day fund,” Reeves said last week.

Bryant spokeswoman Ni-cole Webb said the governor believes Mississippi should continue to be “extremely cautious and measured in how much we appropriate.”

The report by Pew — a nonprofi t public policy think-tank — recommends states regularly study how much they save in light of how much their revenue swings from year to year. In this light, Mississippi is fortunate. Its average year-to-year change in revenue from 1994 to 2012 was 4.1 percent. That’s below the national average of 5.1 per-cent.

The report also says states should try to save money that may not reappear the next year, and that savings should be part of writing a budget at the beginning of the year. Mississippi al-ready considers savings on the front end of the budget process.

Many states traditionally aimed to save 5 percent of their budget, but Missis-sippi has one of the higher savings limits, at 7.5 per-

cent. The Pew report says the traditional 5 percent level “has been largely dis-credited” and states should set savings targets based on revenue volatility and what they’re trying to accomplish with the money.

Though the Pew report is clearly in favor of savings, it also notes that some states have such strict rules about withdrawals that they didn’t take any money out of their rainy-day funds during the recession, despite rev-enue drops. Pew researcher Brenna Erford acknowl-edges that saving money can mean denying dollars to worthy causes.

“Every time states set aside money for the future they have to make trade-offs,” she said. But Erford said avoiding crippling cuts or tax increases is worth-while. “The savings they may build can mitigate those tough decisions they may have make during re-cessions.”

Online: Pew rainy day fund report: http://bit.ly/1toW0Jv

(Daily Corinthian colum-nist Jeff Amy is a writer for The Associated Press based in Jackson.)

Report calls for more thought on savings

Earlier this week, I was thinking of writing a col-umn about the lying and duplicity of Obamacare backers who argued that the difference between provi-sions providing subsidies in states with state-run health exchanges and providing no subsidies in states with federal exchanges resulted from inadvertence or a ty-pographical error.

Typical among them was MIT health care expert Jonathan Gruber. The folks at the Competitive Enter-prise Institute found video of him in 2012 arguing that all or most states would create their own exchanges because they wouldn’t get subsidies if they let the fed-eral government run their exchanges. That was just a “speako” (the oral equiva-lent of a typo), Gruber re-plied.

And Phil Kerpen of Amer-ican Commitment pub-lished New Republic health care maven Jonathan Cohn writing in 2010 that “a state could opt out of the ex-changes” but added that it’s “not something I’ve looked into that closely.”

Yet people like Gruber, Cohn and columnist E. J. Dionne attacked the D.C. Circuit’s Halbig v. Burwell decision, which, quoting the statute’s language, ruled

that subsi-dies can’t be paid in states with federal exchanges , as “judicial a c t i v i s m , ” based on a typo.

And White House Press S e c r e t a r y

Josh Earnest, not evidently a legal scholar, explained, Congress wanted to give lots of people lots of money, so who cares what the law says?

But on refl ection I decided that there’s something oth-er than blatant dishonesty and political hackery going on here. It’s something that discredits Obamacare in particular and big govern-ment enterprises generally more than run-of-the-mill partisan dishonesty.

Cohn in 2010 and Gruber in 2012 evidently really be-lieved that almost all states would set up their own exchanges because their residents would get more money than if the feds ran the exchange.

That’s how federal pow-ers have increased over the years. Congress can’t order states to adopt policies, but it can dangle money in front of them if they meet certain conditions.

As Cohn notes, that’s how

Medicaid, passed in 1965, worked. Forty-nine states signed on by 1972. Only Ari-zona held out until 1982.

So why did 36 states refuse to create their own health exchanges? One reason is that Obamacare turned out to be massively unpopular. Another is that conserva-tive policy experts argued it would weaken the law.

Most important, setting up health exchanges is hard to do. Government doesn’t handle information tech-nology well, here or around the world.

Governors and legisla-tors had reason to fear that state health exchange IT wouldn’t work well, and they would get blamed. And blamed for being associated with an unpopular law.

All of which suggests a broader lesson. Govern-ment was reasonably good at replicating the bureau-cratic processes of large corporations in the indus-trial age. But it’s not very good -- it’s often downright incompetent -- at replicat-ing the IT processes of fi rms such as Walmart and Ama-zon.

Markets work better than government ukase in the information age. The Medi-care Part D prescription drug program, with many market components, has

produced high satisfaction and costs lower than projec-tions. Obamacare has not done as well.

Obamacare required states to expand Medicaid or lose all Medicaid funds. In June 2012, the Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that that vio-lates the Constitution. Once they had a choice, some Re-publican states chose more Medicaid money. But 21 states have said no thanks to the extra funds, and three are debating the issue. Only 54 percent of Americans are receiving Medicaid pro-grams Obamacare prom-ised to give -- or impose on -- everyone.

This is not what Obam-acare boosters like Gruber and Cohn expected. They thought Obamacare money would be too tantalizing to resist. But for many or most states it wasn’t.

The Obamacare cheer-leaders failed to understand that in this information age most Americans mistrust big government policies.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst at 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.)

Big Government worked better in the Industrial Age

Jeff AmyColumnist

Michael BaroneColumnist

“But the men marvelled, saying, What manner of man is this, that even the winds and the sea obey him!”

-- Matthew 8:27

Lord God, may I realize more my depen-dence on thee for the joys of life. I pray that as I accept thy gifts I will not neglect to take the peace and happiness which thou dost give with them. Grant that I may have the bright hope and cheerful courage that is the experi-ence of power and truth. Amen.

Thomas Sowell

Columnist

Page 5: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Across The Nation Across The State

Two new West Nilevirus cases reported

JACKSON -- The Missis-sippi State Department of Health is reporting two new human cases of West Nile virus for 2014.

The new reported cases are in Adams and Rankin counties.

So far this year, West Nile cases have been reported in Adams (1), Hinds (1), Newton (1) and Rankin (2) counties. The Department of Health 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 news cases are a re-minder of the importance of preventing mosquito exposures, particularly ahead of the active sum-mer months.

In 2012, Mississippi had 247 West Nile cases and five deaths.

 3-year-old drownsin Tombigbee River

COLUMBUS -- Lowndes County Coroner Greg Merchant says a 3-year-old boy drowned in the Tombigbee River.

The accident hap-pened just before 3 p.m. Sunday.

Merchant identified the victim as Landon Hen-son, of West Point.

Merchant told WTVA-TV the 3-year-old got into the water without the family noticing. He says the toddler was then taken to Baptist Memorial Hospital in Columbus, where he was pronounced dead.

Merchant said the

investigation is ongoing but it appears to be a tragic accident.

 Official resigns to bemagistrate judge

JACKSON -- The Missis-sippi Supreme Court says Judge John Gargiulo has resigned from the Sec-ond Circuit Court bench to become a federal mag-istrate for the Southern District of Mississippi.

Spokeswoman Bev-erly Pettigrew Kraft says Chief Justice Bill Waller Jr. appointed retired Har-rison County Court Judge Michael Ward of Gulf-port to fill the vacancy through Nov. 30. Judicial elections will be held Nov. 4.

There are four judges on the Second Circuit District, which covers Harrison, Hancock and Stone counties.

Former Gov. Hayley Barbour appointed Gar-giulo to the Circuit Court in 2009 to fill a vacancy created by retirement.

Federal district judges appoint magistrates.

Deputy, K-9 injuredin high-speed chase

PASS CHRISTIAN -- Au-thorities say a Harrison County sheriff’s deputy and his K-9 partner were hurt during a high-speed chase.

The Sun Herald re-ported 23-year-old Dillon Suddeth, of Long Beach, was arrested Sunday around 11:30 a.m.

Chief Deputy Landi Phillips said the deputy tried to stop a vehicle that was reported sto-len by the Pass Chris-tian Police Department. The driver wouldn’t stop for the officer and the driver turned into a driveway in Pass Chris-tian.

Phillips said the deputy pulled into the driveway behind him. Suddeth turned the vehicle around in the backyard and at a high rate drove between a shed and truck, hitting both, and sped toward the officer and his canine, Dago, who had gotten out of their police vehicle.

Associated Press

House approves bill for border problems

WASHINGTON -- House Republicans passed leg-islation late Friday to ad-dress the crisis on the U.S.-Mexico border by sending migrant youths back home without hear-ings, winning over con-servatives with a com-panion bill that could lead to deporting more than half a million immi-grants whom the Obama administration granted temporary work permits. President Barack Obama condemned the Republi-can action and said he’d act unilaterally, as best he could.

A day after GOP lead-ers pulled the border bill from the floor in a chaotic retreat, tea party lawmakers were enthusiastically on board with the new $694 million version and a companion mea-sure that would shut off a program created by Obama granting work permits to immigrants brought here illegally as kids. The second bill also seemed designed to prevent the more than 700,000 people who’ve already gotten work permits under the program from renewing them, ultimately making them subject to depor-tation.

The spending bill passed 223-189 late Friday, with only four Republicans voting “no” and one Democrat vot-ing “yes.” The measure ending Obama’s depor-tation relief program passed 216-192, with 11 Republican “no” votes and four Demo-crats crossing party lines to vote in favor.

Obama said he would reallocate resources where he could, while making clear his op-tions were limited with-out congressional ac-tion. The administration already has taken steps including re-ordering im-migration court dockets and boosting enforce-ment measures.

 Worker with Ebolaimproving, returning

ATLANTA -- An Ameri-can missionary with Ebola is getting better and has received the second dose of an ex-perimental treatment, according to the aid or-ganization she works for in West Africa’s Liberia.

Nancy Writebol is expected to be flown to Atlanta’s Emory Univer-sity Hospital on Tues-day, where she will join another U.S. aid worker, Dr. Kent Brantly, in a special isolation unit. Brantly, who was flown to the hospital Satur-day, also received the experimental treatment before he left Africa.

The two Americans worked at an Ebola clinic in Liberia, one of three West Africa coun-tries struggling to con-tain an outbreak of the deadly disease in West Africa. Health care work-ers are among the most vulnerable because of their close contact with patients.

Writebol, 59, has been in isolation at her home in Liberia since she was diagnosed last month. She’s now walking with assistance and has regained her appetite, said Bruce Johnson, president of SIM USA, the Charlotte, North Carolina.-based group that she works for in Africa.

Johnson was hesitant to credit the treatment for her improvement. Brantly’s condition has also improved.

The experimental treatment is made by

Mapp Biopharmaceuti-cal of San Diego, with funding from the govern-ment. The treatment is aimed at boosting the immune system’s efforts to fight off the virus. It is made from antibodies produced by lab animals exposed to parts of the Ebola virus.

It’s impossible to know what if any role the experimental treatment played in the Americans’ improve-ment— they could have improved on their own, as others who survived Ebola have done.

There is no vaccine or specific treatment for Ebola, but several are under development. Brantly, who works for the international relief group Samaritan’s Purse, also received a unit of blood from a 14-year-old boy, an Ebola survivor, who had been under his care, ac-cording to the group.

Ebola is considered one the world’s deadli-est disease, and about 60 percent of the people who have got-ten sick in the current outbreak in West Africa have died. More than 1,600 people have been stricken, killing at least 887 of them in Liberia, Guinea, Sierra Leone and Nigeria.

 Stronger Bertha not likely to land in U.S.

PROVIDENCIALES, Turks & Caicos Islands -- A strengthened Tropical Storm Ber-tha swirled northward across open sea early Monday after brushing the Turks & Caicos Is-lands and southeastern Bahamas, while fore-casters predicted the storm likely won’t make landfall as it passes along the U.S. East Coast.

The U.S. National Hur-ricane Center in Miami said the storm also was likely to miss the mid-Atlantic British territory of Bermuda while be-ginning to curve north-northeastward and stay out in the Atlantic.

The storm buffeted parts of the Baha-mas and the Turks & Caicos with rain and gusty winds Sunday, after passing over the Dominican Republic and causing temporary evacuation of dozens of families as its down-pours raised rivers out of their banks. Earlier, it dumped rain on Puerto Rico, which has been parched by unusually dry weather.

The storm’s maxi-mum sustained winds strengthened to 65 mph (100 kph) late Sun-day, and the U.S. hur-ricane center said some additional strengthening was expected over the next two days. Bertha was centered about 190 miles (305 kilome-ters) east of Eleuthera Island, with tropical storm force winds extending outward up to 160 miles (260 kilometers). It was mov-ing north-northwest at about 17 mph (28 kph).

People in the Baha-mas reported mostly sunny weather as Ber-tha’s center moved off into the Atlantic on Sun-day afternoon.

 Wildfires menace houses in West

BURNEY, Calif. -- Offi-cials hope humid condi-tions will aid firefighters battling two wildfires in Northern California that have scorched more than 100 square miles and are menacing a small town.

State fire spokes-woman Capt. Amy Head said Monday that the

worst of the two fires raging within miles of each other threatens more than 700 struc-tures.

Authorities report that eight homes have burned as a result of the blazes and resi-dents in the town of Burney face possible evacuation.

Meanwhile, a major wildfire in the Siskiyou Mountains along the Or-egon-California border has slowed as tempera-tures cooled, but it still jeopardizes 270 homes after burning six.

In Washington state, a wind-whipped blaze destroyed about a dozen structures and prompted an evacuation notice for around 80 homes.

 Obama hosts meetwith eye on legacy

WASHINGTON -- As President Barack Obama immerses him-self in talks on Africa’s regional security, de-mocracy building and business investment this week, the world’s attention — and much of his own — will be on an extraordinary ar-ray of urgent overseas crises.

Obama is gathering nearly 50 African heads of state in Washington for an unprecedented summit aimed in part at building his legacy on a continent where his commitment has been questioned.

But recent world event emphasize how hard it is for the president to focus attention on ar-eas that he chooses to promote. As the confer-ence begins Monday, a number of international events are competing for his attention.

Among them: Gaza clashes, Russia’s provo-cations in Ukraine and mounting extremism in Iraq, to name just a few. An outbreak of the deadly Ebola virus in West Africa also threat-ens to cast a shadow over the summit, with leaders from at least two affected countries canceling plans to travel to Washington and the U.S. setting up medical screenings for other officials arriving from those nations.

White House offi-cials say the American interests in Africa are immense. The continent is home to some of the world’s fastest growing economies and a rap-idly expanding middle class. The U.S. is also competing for those consumers with China, which surpassed the United States in 2009 as Africa’s largest trad-ing partner.

“The importance of this for America needs to be understood,” Obama said Friday. “Africa is growing, and you’ve got thriving mar-kets and you’ve got en-trepreneurs and extraor-dinary talent among the people there.”

From the start of his presidency, Obama has faced sky-high expec-tations from African leaders and U.S. policy-makers who hoped the son of a Kenyan would bump Africa up the White House list of for-eign policy priorities.

Obama’s first trip to sub-Saharan Africa as president — an over-night stop in Ghana in 2009 — also sug-gested that he could be an American president able to tell hard truths to the continent’s lead-ers. During a speech to parliament in Accra, he declared that Africa “doesn’t need strong-men, it needs strong institutions.”

Associated Press

Page 6: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Jimmie HolderBOONEVILLE — A celebra-

tion of life service for Jimmie Faye Davis Holder, 72, is set for 1 p.m. today at McMillan Funeral Home with burial in the Booneville Cemetery.

Visitation continues until service time today.

Mrs. Holder died Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014, at Magnolia Re-gional Health Center. Born Nov. 26, 1941, she worked at Brown Shoe, SDI, Oakview Nursing Home in Baldwyn and Corinth Health and Rehab. She was a member of Baldwyn Church of God, where she was the church clerk. She was a member of Spiritual Hearts and also the Cross Roads Gospel Singers.

Survivors include two daughters, Michele (Christina) Hall of Booneville and Pam Tanner of Baldwyn; two step-sons, Tommy Holder (Jenni-fer) and Jerry Holder (Ellen) of Lake Mohawk; one sister, Era Knight (Mike) of Rienzi; 13 grandchildren; 15 great-grand-children; and her godchildren, Eddie and Lottie Shook of Booneville.

She was preceded in death by her parents, James Henry Clyde and Mary Nancy La-vada Edge Davis; her husband, Thomas D. Holder; the father of her children, Jack Hall; one son, Randy Hall; one grand-son, Shane Hall; one son-in-law, Tony Tanner; one sister, Clarice Mason; one niece, Ash-ley Scott; and one stepdaugh-ter, Benita Walthers.

Bro. Marvin Henry and Bro. Billy Ray Adams will offi ciate the service.

For on-line condolences: mc-millanfuneralhome.com

Lois BelkMICHIE, Tenn. — Services for Lois Ev-

elyn Belk, 83, are set for 11 a.m. Wednes-day at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories. Visitation is today from 5 until 9 p.m.

Visitation is today from 5 to 9 p.m. and Wednesday from 9:30 a.m. until service time.

Ms. Belk died Satur-day, Aug. 2, 2014, at her home. Born June 2, 1931, she was a homemaker and factory worker.

Survivors include sons Daniel T. “Danny” Belk, James Belk and Bobby Belk, all of Michie, Tenn.; daughters Eve-lyn Butler (Harry), Wilma Butler (Junior), Joyce Crum (Charles) and Brenda Bing-ham (Jeff), all of Michie, Tenn.; a brother, Ansel Jones of Iuka; a sister, Martha Man-sel (James) of Corinth; 19 grandchildren; 37 great-grandchildren; and two great-great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her hus-band of 64 years, Van T. Belk; an infant son, Ralph Wayne Belk; her parents, Ezra Walker and Henry Lillian Wadkins Jones; brothers Sherman Jones, Ernest Jones, Clayton Jones and James W. “Dave” Jones; and sisters Olene Bullard, Gladys Jones and Dorothy Taylor.

Bro. Malcolm Garrett will offi ciate the service.

Carolyn DixonWALNUT — Funeral services for Caro-

lyn Mae Settlemires Dixon, 66, are set for 2 p.m. today at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Bethle-hem Baptist Church Cemetery.

Visitation continues today from 12 noon until service time.

Mrs. Dixon died Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014, at Baptist East Hospital in Memphis, Tenn. Born Jan. 28, 1948, she was a homemaker and a Christian.

Survivors include a son, Wayne Dixon

(Paula) of Walnut; three brothers, Kenneth Settlemires of Walnut, Harold Settlemires (Reba) of Corinth and J. L. Settlemires (Patsy) of Walnut; and grandchildren Rexston Dixon and Ruby-Carol Dixon.

She was preceded in death by her hus-band, Billy Ray Dixon, and her parents, Marshall Settlemires and Ruby Jones Set-tlemires.

Bro. Ronald Wilbanks and Charlie Browning will offi ciate.

Margaret MillsFuneral services for Margarette Bow-

ers Mills, 83, of Corinth, are set for 2 p.m. Wednesday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Michie Cemetery.

Visitation is Wednes-day from 12 noon until service time.

Mrs. Mills died Sat-urday, Aug. 2, 2014, at Sanctuary Hospice in Tupelo. Born Nov. 17, 1930, she was a retired waitress and a member of North Corinth Baptist Church.

Survivors include a daughter, Trema Mitchell of Jackson, Tenn.; a sister, Bobbie Smith (Dustin) of Corinth; a stepson, Mike Mills (Susan) of Corinth; a stepdaughter, Nancy Rickman of Corinth; two grand-children, Rhonda Hammond and Connie Bowers; three great-grandchildren; and fi ve great-great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by a son, Lar-ry W. Bowers; her fi rst husband, Milton DeBerry; her second husband, Sam Mills; her parents, Robert and Millie Wagoner Bowers; and a sister, Margie Littlejohn.

Dr. Leonard Pratt, Charlie Browning and Shane Casabella will offi ciate the service.

James RolandIUKA — Funeral services for James Loo-

ney Roland, 81, are set for 11 a.m. today at Patrick United Methodist Church with burial at Patrick Cemetery.

Mr. Roland died Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. He was a member of Patrick United Methodist Church and a U.S. Army veteran. He was the owner and operator of Cordova Heat-ing and Air for 20 years.

Survivors include his wife of 61 years, Maureen Roland of Iuka; two daughters, Monice Roland and Maurita Roland, both of Iuka; fi ve grandchildren, Cory Glidewell (Nikki), Christy Glidewell, Jeremy Glide-well (Misty), Andrea Roland and Joseph Roland; and seven great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents, John T. and Beatrice Roland; two sons, James Randy and John Ricky Roland; his sister, Bonnie Rice; and one great-grand-child.

The Rev. Larry Dollar will offi ciate the service under the direction of Cutshall Fu-neral Home.

Visitation was Monday evening.

James H. StewartWALNUT — Funeral services for James

Harold Stewart, 78, were held Monday at Rutherford Chapel Church with burial at the church cemetery.

Mr. Stewart died Saturday, Aug. 2, 2014, at his home. Born Dec. 5, 1935, he was a farmer and mechanic and a member of Rutherford Chapel Church.

Survivors include his wife, Nettie Jo Tate Stewart of Walnut; seven daughters, Net-tie Joyce Brock (Harold) of Falkner, Cindy Lou Kuznecoff (Michael) of St. Charles, Mo., Janet M. Godwin (Willie) of Blue Mountain, Sandra K. Alamillo (Armando) of Raymondville, Texas, Darlene Kirkend-oll and Tracy Jo Godwin, both of Corinth, and Charlotte A. Harrington of Ripley; two sons, David H. Stewart (Karin) and Thom-as P. Stewart (Tonya), both of Walnut; 30 grandchildren; 36 great-grandchildren; and fi ve great-great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents, John Thomas and Ruby Hutchinson Stew-art, and one brother, Billy Wayne Stewart.

Bro. Casey Rutherford and Bro. Ricki Parker will offi ciate the service.

Belk

Mills

JACKSON — The state Attorney General’s Offi ce has until Aug. 14 to fi le briefs in a case involving a DeSoto County woman who wants Mississippi to recognize her same-sex marriage in order to grant a divorce.

Lauren Czekala-Cha-tham has appealed a de-cision by DeSoto County Chancery Judge Mitchell Lundy Jr. that the Mis-sissippi Constitution and statutes prevented him from taking action. Cze-kala-Chatham appealed to the Mississippi Su-preme Court.

Czekala-Chatham and Dana Ann Melancon got married in San Francisco in 2008. They bought a house together in Missis-sippi the following year, but their relationship soured.

They could get a di-vorce in California, but Czekala-Chatham says she shouldn’t be treated differently than straight couples. Her lawyer has argued that Mississippi wouldn’t recognize the divorce from California, which could leave their marital property in lim-bo.

Attorney General Jim Hood had argued in a brief fi led in DeSoto County that Mississippi can’t grant a divorce in a marriage it doesn’t recog-nize. Hood said the state of Mississippi has no obli-gation to honor California laws that are contrary to Mississippi’s.

In 2004, 86 percent of Mississippi voters ap-proved an amendment placing a ban on same-sex marriage in the state con-stitution.

Same-sex divorce case faces Aug. 14 deadline

The Associated PressPORTLAND, Ore. — A

Washington state wom-an going through a di-vorce and custody battle is accused of killing her 2-year-old daughter and severely cutting her teen-age daughter at a popular inn on the northern Or-egon coast, a crime that has shocked tourists and residents.

Jessica Smith, 40, was in custody Monday on murder and other charges.

Authorities began looking for her Friday after a housekeeper at the Surfsand Resort in Cannon Beach found the body of Smith’s 2-year-old daughter in a room. The other daughter, age 13, was badly cut and

taken to a Portland hos-pital for surgery, police said. She’s expected to recover.

On Sunday, a Coast Guard helicopter spotted an SUV driven by Smith in the woods east of Can-non Beach, and authori-ties soon took her into custody.

The mother had been under a court order to turn over the children to their father at 5 p.m. Friday, the day the girls were found in the hotel room, The Oregonian re-ported.

An autopsy concluded the toddler’s death was a homicide, although it didn’t determine the pre-cise cause. Investigators were waiting for toxicol-

ogy reports.Smith faces charges

of aggravated murder, which could lead to the death penalty, and at-tempted aggravated murder. She was to be arraigned Monday via a video feed from the Clat-sop County Jail in Asto-ria, said District Attorney Josh Marquis.

Jessica Smith checked into the Cannon Beach lodging Wednesday, two days before her daugh-ters’ scheduled visit with their father, Greg Smith of Goldendale, Washing-ton.

Jessica and Greg Smith separated in April af-ter 17 years of marriage, according to news re-ports. Greg Smith fi led for divorce in June and sought shared custody of the children.

Court records show Greg Smith obtained a temporary court or-

der that prevented Jes-sica Smith from remov-ing their children from the Washington area, or the Portland-Vancouver area, The Oregonian re-ported.

Greg Smith’s attorney, Nathan Petersen, told the newspaper a judge had ordered that Greg Smith be granted re-stricted parenting rights starting Aug. 1. A parent-ing plan set out in court records shows he was to have the children from Friday evening through Sunday night every other weekend.

According to The Or-egonian, Greg Smith in July received worrisome text and voice messages from Jessica Smith and from the teenage daugh-ter. He requested that a psychologist conduct an evaluation of where the children should be placed.

Mom accused of killing toddlerThe Associated Press

Cataract Awareness Month

Cataracts are the leading cause of vision loss in the U.S. and blindness worldwide!

• Cataracts are a natural result of aging when the eye’s lens turns yellow and cloudy.

• Nearly 22 million Americans age 40 and older are affected by cataracts.

• Symptoms may include blurred vision, glare, faded colors, or needing more light for reading.

Call 662-286-6068 or go to www.shippeyeclinic.comto schedule your cataract evaluation.

3302 W. Linden St.Corinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-6068

3302 W. Linden St.Corinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-6068

Call 662-286-6068

Cataracts are the leading cause of vision loss in the U.S. and blindness worldwide!

John Shipp, M.D.

to schedule your cataract evaluation.

Northside Church of Christ3127 Harper Road - Corinth, MS - 286-6256

Minister - Lennis NowellSchedule of Services

Sunday Worship ............................................... 9:45 & 10:35 am....5 pmWednesday Worship ........................................................................ 7 pm

You are cordially invited to attend every service.

The Nails Of The Cross John tells us that Christ had “prints of the nails” in His hands. (John 20:25). Matthew tells us that the mob on the hill of Calvary challenged Christ to “come down from the cross” (Matthew 27:40). What was it that held Jesus to the cross? Our sins - Heb. 5: 8-9 Not the Nails. It was not the nails that held Him to the cross.

He had the power to remove the nails. He could have called “more than twelve legions of angels” to help and remove Him

from the cross (Matthew 26:53). He who had the power to still the storm, feed the multitude, and raise the dead could have removed

the nails. The crowd could not have killed Christ if He had not wished to do the Father’s will. “Therefore doth my Father love

me, because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. No man taketh it from me, but I lay it down of myself. (John 10:17-18a)

God’s Will Put Him There, Kept Him There The Father’s will and wish held him to the cross. Jesus prayed in the Garden and said, “My father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me: nevertheless not as I will, but as thou wilt” (Matthew 26:39). It was the will of God that his Son became the “propitiation,” that is, an atoning sacrifi ce for our sins (I John 2:2). The Saviour’s love and our sins held Christ on the tree.Heaven’s Eternal Purpose Held Him To The Cross God’s eternal purpose held Christ to the cross. Jesus died to purchase the church with His own blood (Acts 20:28). The church is the institution through which the eternal purpose of God is to be made known to the world (Ephesians 3:10) Without the death of Christ, God’s purpose for the world would have been aborted. Thus His love for God and man held Him to the cross - not the nails.

Joy Set Before Him Held Our Lord Fast The joy set before Christ held Him to the cross. In the Hebrew letter we learn that “the author and perfecter of our faith” disregarded His suffering and “for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame” (Hebrews 12:2). The mocking by the mob at the feet of the cross was ignored by Christ because of the “joy set before Him.” Neither the lack of power nor the nails held Jesus to the cross. His resignation to the will of God and His love for the souls of mankind bound Him to the tree on which He died. Our love for God and His Son should cause us to remain faithful in the kingdom of God, despite the mockings of all who would have us depart from the path of duty.

“Terrifi c Tuesdays” In August

Oakland Baptist Church1101 S. Harper - Corinth, MS - 662-287-3118

Come Worship with us each Tuesday in August - 6:30 p.m.(Nursery provided for ages three & under)

Tuesday, August 5Dr. Jerry Vines, Pastor Emeritus

First Baptist ChurchJacksonville, FL

Tuesday, August 26Dr. Steve Gaines, Pastor

Bellevue Choir & OrchestraBellevue Baptist Church

Cordova, TN

Tuesday, August 12River

Jordan Pinkston/Shannon PowersContemporary Christian Artists

Mobile, Al

Tuesday, August 19Bro. James Lewis, PastorDesoto Hills Baptist Church

Southaven, MS

Tuesday, August 12Dr. Ed Newton

Staff Evangelist/First Baptist ChurchOrlando, FL

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Page 7: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 • 7

WASHINGTON — A major trait that endeared Jim Brady to the Wash-ington press corps was his sense of humor, espe-cially when he made fun of his own boss.

When Ronald Rea-gan was campaigning for president in 1980, Reagan drew scorn from environmentalists for saying that trees were a greater source of pollu-tion than cars. Aboard the campaign plane, Brady pointed at a forest fi re in the distance and yelled, “Killer trees! Killer trees!” to the great amusement of reporters.

After the election, Rea-gan’s advisers appeared hesitant to appoint him press secretary. Nancy Reagan was said to feel the job required some-one younger and better-looking than the 40-year-old, moon-faced, balding Brady.

“I come before you to-day not as just another pretty face but out of sheer talent,” Brady told reporters. A week later, he got the job.

Brady, who died Mon-day at 73, would need humor and much more after March 30, 1981. On that day John Hinckley Jr. attempted to assassi-nate Reagan outside the Washington Hilton Ho-tel just two months into

the new president’s term. Reagan nearly died from a chest wound. Three others, including Brady, were struck by bullets from Hinckley’s hand-gun.

Shot in the head, Brady lived through hours of delicate surgery and then many more operations over the years. But he never recovered the nor-mal use of his limbs and was often in a wheelchair. Besides partial paraly-sis from brain damage, he suffered short-term memory impairment, slurred speech and con-stant pain.

Still, along with his wife, Sarah, he went on to become the face and as much as possible the voice of the gun-control movement in the Unit-ed States. A federal law requiring background checks for handgun buy-ers bears his name.

Mrs. Reagan, the for-mer fi rst lady, said Mon-day she was “deeply sad-dened to learn of Jim Brady’s passing today. Thinking of him brings back so many memories — happy and sad — of a time in all of our lives when we learned what it means to ‘play the hand we’re dealt.’”

The lasting public im-age of Brady came from the worst day of his life. A news clip of the 1981

shooting, replayed often on television and in docu-mentaries, showed him sprawled on the sidewalk after several Secret Ser-vice agents had hustled the wounded president into his limousine and others had pounced on Hinckley.

Although Brady re-turned to the White House only briefl y, a year after the shooting, he was allowed to keep the title of presidential press sec-retary — and the $89,500 annual salary as assistant to the president for press relations — until Reagan left offi ce.

The TV replays did take a toll on Brady. He told The Associated Press years later that he relived the moment each time.

“I want to take every bit of (that) fi lm ... and put them in a cement incinerator, slosh them with gasoline and throw a lighted cigarette in,” he said.

Offi cials at St. Eliza-beths Hospital in Wash-ington, where Hinckley is a patient, have said that the mental illness that led him to shoot Reagan in an effort to impress actress Jodie Foster has been in remission for de-cades. Hinckley has been allowed to leave the hos-pital to visit his mother’s home in Williamsburg, Virginia.

Brady was a strong Re-publican from an early age. As a boy of 12 in Centralia, Illinois, where he was born on Aug. 29, 1940, he distributed elec-tion literature for Dwight D. Eisenhower.

In a long string of politi-cal jobs, Brady worked for Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, Sen. William V. Roth Jr. of Delaware and John Connally, the for-mer Texas governor who ran for president in 1979. When Connally dropped out, Brady joined Rea-gan’s campaign as direc-tor of public affairs and research.

Previously, he had worked in the administra-tions of Presidents Rich-ard Nixon and Gerald Ford: as special assistant to the secretary of Hous-ing and Urban Develop-ment, as special assistant to the director of the Of-fi ce of Management and Budget, and as an assis-tant to the defense secre-tary.

He was divorced from the former Sue Beh when, in 1973, he courted Sarah Jane Kemp, the daughter of an FBI agent who was working with him in a congressional offi ce.

Sarah Brady became involved in gun-control efforts in 1985, and later chaired Handgun Con-trol Inc., but Brady took a few more years to join

her, and Reagan did not endorse their efforts un-til 10 years after he was shot. Reagan’s surprise endorsement — he was a longtime National Rifl e Association member and an opponent of gun con-trol laws — helped turn the tide in Congress.

“They’re not going to accuse him of being some bed-wetting liberal, no way can they do that,” said Brady, who had be-come an active lobbyist for the bill.

The Brady law required a fi ve-day wait and back-ground check before a handgun can be sold. In November 1993, as Presi-dent Bill Clinton signed the bill into law, Brady said: “Every once in a while, you need to wake up and smell the propane. I needed to be hit in the head before I started hit-ting the bricks.”

At the time of the 30th anniversary of the shoot-ing, the Bradys told NPR they were no lon-ger Republicans. “Times change,” Sarah Brady said.

Josh Earnest, President Barack Obama’s press secretary, said Monday that Brady “showed his patriotism and commit-ment to the country by being very outspoken on an issue that was impor-tant to him and that he felt very strongly about.”

Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, said in a statement that because of Brady’s work on gun control “there are few Americans in his-tory who are as directly responsible for saving as many lives as Jim.” In its own statement, the Na-tional Rifl e Association said it extended “heartfelt condolences” to Brady’s family.

Clinton awarded Brady the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1996. In 2000, the press briefi ng room at the White House was renamed in his hon-or. The following year, Handgun Control Inc., was renamed the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.

Brady also served as vice chair of the National Organization on Disabil-ity and co-chair of the Na-tional Head Injury Foun-dation.

Survivors include his wife; a son, Scott, and a daughter, Melissa.

“We are heartbroken to share the news that our beloved Jim “Bear” Brady has passed away after a series of health is-sues,” Brady’s family said in a statement. It said they were “so thankful to have had the opportunity to say their farewells” but did not say where he was when he died.

Brady, Reagan aide, gun control advocate, diesThe Associated Press

Associated PressWASHINGTON — No

one on the Supreme Court objected publicly when the justices voted to let Arizona proceed with the execution of Jo-seph Wood, who unsuc-cessfully sought informa-tion about the drugs that would be used to kill him.

Inmates in Florida and Missouri went to their deaths by lethal injection in the preceding weeks af-ter the high court refused to block their executions. Again, no justice said the executions should be stopped.

Even as the number of executions annually has dropped by more than half over the past 15 years and the court has barred states from killing juve-niles and the mentally disabled, no justice has emerged as a principled opponent of the death penalty.

This court differs from some of its predecessors. Justices William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall dissented every time their colleagues ruled against death row inmates, and Justices Harry Blackmun and John Paul Stevens, near the end of their long

careers, came to view capital punishment as un-constitutional.

“They’re all voting to kill them, every so often. They do it in a very work-manlike, technocratic fashion,” Stephen Bright, a veteran death penalty lawyer in Georgia, said of the current court.

Wood’s execution on July 23 was the 26th in the United States this year and the third in which prisoners took much longer than usual to die. Wood, convicted of killing his estranged girlfriend and her father, was pro-nounced dead nearly two hours after his execution began, and an Associated Press reporter was among witnesses who said Wood appeared to gasp repeat-edly, hundreds of times in all, before he died.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said she and her colleagues are aware of what happened in Arizo-na, though she declined to say how the court would rule on a plea to stop the next scheduled execution — of Michael Worthing-ton on Wednesday in Missouri.

“Your crystal ball is as good as mine,” she said

last week in an inter-view with The Associated Press.

The court’s rejection of Wood’s claim that he was entitled to learn more about Arizona’s proce-dures and the source of the execution drugs came at the end of protracted legal wrangling. A federal judge in Arizona initially denied Wood’s claim. The federal appeals court in San Francisco then grant-ed a reprieve. But the jus-tices reversed that ruling in a brief order. The court said the judge who initially ruled against Wood “did not abuse his discretion.”

In death cases, the court often is the last stop for inmates seeking a last-minute reprieve. They rarely succeed, a function of the need for fi ve votes on the nine-justice court and the reluctance of ap-pellate judges to disturb lower court rulings unless they are demonstrably wrong.

The substance of capital punishment issues usually fi nds its way in front of the justices when there is no time pressure. In January, the court heard arguments in a case over a Florida law that used a rigid threshold

in intelligence test scores in cases of borderline mental disability.

In late May, a fi ve-justice majority led by Anthony Kennedy struck down the law because it “contravenes our nation’s commitment to dignity.”

The soaring language that Kennedy often fa-vors in his opinions has led some death penalty experts to believe that he eventually will provide the fi fth vote, along with those of the court’s four liberal justices, to end or severely restrict the use of the death penalty.

“It is impossible to rec-oncile that language with the secrecy surrounding lethal injections,” said Sherrilyn Ifi ll, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. “My assumption is quite a lot is happening behind the scenes.”

Ginsburg cautioned not to read too much into the absence of public dissent when the court rejects 11th-hour appeals to stop executions. “When a stay is denied, it doesn’t mean we are in fact unani-mous,” she said.

Still, Ifi ll said the

court’s unwillingness so far to deal with states’ re-luctance to reveal much about the provenance of lethal injection drugs is troubling.

“I’m disappointed after all the revelations that at least some justices weren’t prepared to say something pretty strong,” she said.

In 1972, the court struck down existing death penalty laws across the country but did not declare capital punish-ment unconstitutional. Four years later, the jus-tices approved several rewritten state laws, and executions soon resumed.

Since then, 1,385 in-mates have been executed in 34 states. But more than a third of those were in Texas alone, and in recent years, only a handful of other states have carried out executions on a some-what regular basis, among them Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, Ohio and Oklahoma.

The number of death penalty prosecutions also has been dropping, in large part because of the availability of lifetime prison sentences with no possibility of parole.

With the number of ex-ecutions below 50 each year beginning in 2010, the chances of being put to death for killing some-one is akin to being struck by lightning, said Uni-versity of North Carolina political scientist Frank Baumgartner.

“It is hard to argue that the death penalty is much of a deterrent when we’re having 15,000 to 20,000 homicides a year and 30 to 40 executions. The likelihood of being exe-cuted is so low that it calls into question the purpose of it,” Baumgartner said.

So far, however, the Su-preme Court continues to allow death sentences to be carried out despite problems with execution drugs and a rising number of exonerations through the use of DNA evidence.

And no one on the court is leading the charge against capital punish-ment the way Justice Arthur Goldberg did in 1963, said Evan Mandery, whose book “Wild Jus-tice” chronicled the ef-fort to abolish the death penalty, its near success in 1972 and the reinstate-ment of capital punish-ment four years later.

Supreme Court remains silent over execution drug secrecy

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Page 8: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, August 5, 2014

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

17,151.56 14,719.43 Dow Industrials 16,569.28 +75.91 +.46 -.04 +6.138,515.04 6,237.14 Dow Transportation 8,149.08 +28.22 +.35 +10.11 +23.46

576.98 467.93 Dow Utilities 538.66 -2.03 -.38 +9.80 +6.7711,334.65 9,246.89 NYSE Composite 10,766.68 +74.52 +.70 +3.52 +11.324,485.93 3,573.57 Nasdaq Composite 4,383.89 +31.25 +.72 +4.96 +18.711,991.39 1,627.47 S&P 500 1,938.99 +13.84 +.72 +4.90 +13.581,452.01 1,170.62 S&P MidCap 1,374.95 +7.75 +.57 +2.41 +9.70

21,108.12 17,305.21 Wilshire 5000 20,501.20 +155.19 +.76 +4.04 +13.011,213.55 1,009.00 Russell 2000 1,124.82 +9.96 +.89 -3.34 +5.81

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.48 9 59.03 -.09 -11.6AT&T Inc 1.84 11 35.46 +.13 +.9AirProd 3.08 28 135.32 +2.20 +21.1AlliantEgy 2.04 16 56.52 -.33 +9.5AEP 2.00 14 51.40 -.91 +10.0AmeriBrgn .94 71 77.79 +.49 +10.6ATMOS 1.48 17 47.79 -.37 +5.2BB&T Cp .96 15 36.84 +.14 -1.3BP PLC 2.34f 7 49.33 +.33 +1.5BcpSouth .30f 18 20.54 -.04 -19.2Caterpillar 2.80f 17 101.81 +1.29 +12.1Chevron 4.28 12 128.17 +.27 +2.6CocaCola 1.22 21 39.40 +.11 -4.6Comcast .90 19 53.85 +.46 +3.6CrackerB 4.00f 18 97.75 +1.09 -11.2Deere 2.40f 9 85.27 +.31 -6.6Dillards .24 17 122.34 +1.85 +25.9Dover 1.50 18 86.19 +1.17 +7.6EnPro ... 61 64.91 -.34 +12.6FordM .50 11 17.02 +.21 +10.3FredsInc .24 28 15.93 +.12 -13.8FullerHB .48 20 45.14 +.78 -13.3GenCorp ... 13 18.17 +.18 +.8GenElec .88 18 25.27 -.08 -9.8Goodyear .24f 12 24.65 +.07 +3.4HonwllIntl 1.80 18 91.36 -.21 ...Intel .90 17 34.05 +.31 +31.2Jabil .32 11 20.22 +.17 +15.9KimbClk 3.36 19 105.23 +.33 +.7Kroger .66 17 49.36 +.11 +24.9Lowes .92f 21 47.91 +.32 -3.3McDnlds 3.24 17 94.31 +.01 -2.8

MeadWvco 1.00a 9 42.28 +.06 +14.5

OldNBcp .44 15 13.23 -.04 -13.9

Penney ... ... 9.24 -.39 +1.0

PennyMac 2.36 9 21.23 -.25 -7.5

PepsiCo 2.62 21 89.69 +1.58 +8.1

PilgrimsP ... 13 28.95 +.13 +78.2

RadioShk ... ... .55 -.03 -78.8

RegionsFn .20 13 9.94 -.05 +.5

SbdCp 3.00 17 2849.99 +4.99 +2.0

SearsHldgs ... ... 37.69 +.42 -5.1

Sherwin 2.20 26 208.38 +3.62 +13.6

SiriusXM ... 56 3.34 +.03 -4.3

SouthnCo 2.10 15 43.10 -.22 +4.8

SPDR Fncl .35e ... 22.40 +.18 +2.5

Torchmrk s .51 14 53.30 +.61 +2.3

Total SA 3.25e ... 65.48 +.78 +6.9

USEC Inc ... ... 4.86 +.02 -26.6

US Bancrp .98f 14 41.64 +.31 +3.1

WalMart 1.92 15 73.54 ... -6.5

WellsFargo 1.40 13 50.99 +.64 +12.3

Wendys Co .20 37 8.12 +.03 -6.9

WestlkCh s .50 19 89.27 +1.53 +46.3

Weyerhsr .88 25 31.61 +.38 +.1

Xerox .25 14 13.13 +.09 +7.9

YRC Wwde ... ... 22.41 +.69 +29.0

Yahoo ... 31 36.54 +.92 -9.7

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DACE Ltd 10 100.10 -.11AES Corp 21 14.81 +.11AK Steel dd 9.38 +.25AbbottLab 26 42.39 +.36AbbVie 21 53.29 +.81Abraxas 39 5.09 +.13Actavis ... 215.77 -1.12ActivsBliz 24 22.61 +.17AdobeSy cc 68.77 -.17AMD 40 4.00 +.03AecomTch 14 34.43 +.34AlcatelLuc ... 3.42 +.05Alcoa 40 16.71 +.27Alere dd 34.75 -5.20AlldNevG 33 2.95 -.15Allstate 12 58.96 +.82AlphaNRs dd 3.44 +.07AlpAlerMLP q 18.66 +.27Altria 19 40.73 +.23Amazon cc 313.65 +6.59Ambev n ... 6.88 -.02Ameren 18 38.35 -.27AMovilL 19 23.69 +.24AmAirl n dd 38.14 -1.29AmAxle 9 17.99 +.47ACapAgy dd 23.13 -.13AEagleOut 18 10.42 +.06AmExp 17 86.93 +.46AmIntlGrp 9 52.66 +.61ARltCapPr dd 13.32 +.12Amgen 20 128.65 +3.10Anadarko dd 110.73 +5.11Annaly 4 11.21 +.02Apache 33 102.29 +1.97Apple Inc s 15 95.59 -.54ApldMatl 30 21.13 +.04ArcelorMit dd 14.50 +.19ArchCoal dd 3.07 +.12ArchDan 22 46.95 +.38ArenaPhm dd 4.28 -.18AriadP dd 5.65 +.04ArmourRsd dd 4.18 -.02Arris 47 30.47 +1.17AstraZen 45 73.69 +1.10AthlonEn 42 45.84 +1.54Atmel cc 8.39 +.01AvanirPhm dd 5.24 -.03Avon dd 13.24 +.01Baidu 43 218.90 +6.52BakrHu 23 68.95 +.45BallyTech 19 77.70BcoBrad pf ... 15.57 +.14BcoSantSA ... 9.94 +.04BcoSBrasil ... 6.83 +.06BkofAm 18 15.05 +.07BkNYMel 18 39.20 +.47B iPVix rs q 31.55 -1.47BarrickG 23 18.05 -.16Baxter 21 74.92 -.05BedBath 13 61.70 +.09BerkH B 15 129.72 +3.89BestBuy 10 29.70 +.53BBarrett dd 22.48 +1.42Biocryst dd 13.22 +.68BlackBerry dd 9.15 -.15Blackstone 13 32.81 +.39BdwlkPpl 19 19.65 +.85Boeing 18 119.93 -.45BostonSci 71 12.81 +.22BrMySq 31 49.98 +.17Broadcom 34 38.07 -.12BrcdeCm 17 9.21 +.14Brookdale dd 34.35 +.18CBRE Grp 21 31.00 +.05CBS B 19 57.68 +.65CH Robins 25 68.46 +.76CMS Eng 15 28.87 -.14CSX 16 29.72 +.13CVS Care 20 77.37 +.88CblvsnNY 9 19.45 +.28CabotOG s 40 33.58 +.83Cadence 38 17.25 +.17Caesars dd 14.05 -1.26Calpine 30 22.45 -.19CdnNRs gs ... 42.45 +.41CapOne 11 80.22 +.73CpstnTurb dd 1.37 +.01CardnlHlth 65 70.28 -2.09Carlisle 21 80.91 +.80Carnival 27 36.31 -.13Catamaran 22 43.41 -1.48Celgene s 50 87.46 +.81Cemex ... 12.51 +.01Cemig pf s ... 8.64 +.30CenterPnt 30 24.45 -.04CntryLink dd 39.46 +.40ChesEng 22 26.83 +.76Chimera ... 3.21 +.03Cisco 17 25.17 +.17Citigroup 11 48.34 +.24Civeo n ... 25.69 +.09CliffsNRs 9 17.35Coach 10 34.31 +.61CobaltIEn dd 15.97 +.23CognizTc s 23 50.04 +.75ColgPalm 27 63.76 -.19CmtyHlt dd 47.69 +.45CmtyHlt rt ... .03 -.00ConAgra 42 30.63 +.24ConocoPhil 13 81.98 +1.28ConEd 13 55.73 -.36CorinthC h dd .18 -.02Corning 21 20.05 +.17Covidien 25 88.02 +1.09CSVInvNG q 4.58 -.16CSVelIVST q 39.29 +1.54CSVxSht rs q 3.43 -.37DCT Indl dd 7.88 +.01DR Horton 14 20.58 +.17DanaHldg dd 22.64 +.48Danaher 20 74.00 +.66Darden 22 47.86 +1.20DarlingIng 47 18.73 -.19DeanFds rs dd 15.68 +.37DeltaAir 3 37.28 -.30DenburyR 16 17.23 +.35DeutschBk ... 33.79 -.15DevonE 19 76.81 +1.72DiaOffs 14 47.10 +.66DigitalRlt 33 64.35 +.26DirecTV 16 85.58 -.54DirSPBr rs q 26.51 -.61DxGldBll rs q 42.63 -1.18DrxFnBear q 18.30 -.39DrxSCBear q 16.35 -.43DirGMBear q 11.44 +.97DirGMnBull q 22.93 -2.49DrxEMBull q 33.43 +.98DirDGdBr s q 16.81 +.47DrxSCBull q 67.61 +1.54Disney 22 87.24 +1.86DollarGen 17 55.91 +.14DollarTree 20 55.97 +1.27DomRescs 20 67.03 -.56DonlleyRR 20 16.84 -.15DowChm 18 51.68 +.71DryShips dd 2.71 -.03DuPont 20 64.63 +.42DukeEngy 18 72.20 -.74DukeRlty 31 18.19 +.19

E-F-G-HE-CDang cc 14.34 +.77eBay dd 53.06 +.53EMC Cp 23 29.57 +.51EOG Res s 26 111.81 +3.77Eaton 19 67.68 +.50EdisonInt 12 55.83 -.11ElPLoco n ... 38.40 -2.80EldorGld g 51 7.62 -.29ElectArts cc 34.18 +.47EmersonEl 18 63.99 +.59EmpDist 15 24.56 -.17EnCana g 15 21.47 +.36ENSCO 8 50.53 -.40Entergy 13 72.43 -.56Ericsson ... 12.37 -.03Evercore 31 49.52 -.61ExcoRes 50 4.50 -.11Exelis 12 16.99 -.30Exelixis dd 4.11 -.08Exelon 15 31.36 -.18Expedia 34 85.04 +.58ExpScripts 32 71.01 +.84ExxonMbl 13 100.13 +1.33Facebook 79 73.51 +1.15FedExCp 22 148.83 +2.08FifthThird 11 19.97 -.03FireEye n ... 34.22 +1.34FstNiagara 11 8.40 -.02FstSolar 12 63.14 +1.11

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 814652 193.89 +1.39B iPVix rs 515010 31.55 -1.47BkofAm 492858 15.05 +.07Groupon 458907 7.02 +.56iShEMkts 398259 44.47 +.41Apple Inc s 388953 95.59 -.54iShR2K 330992 111.66 +.98Microsoft 330083 43.37 +.51PwShs QQQ 308378 95.32 +.65SP Util 299223 41.19 -.23

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,942Declined 1,175Unchanged 104

Total issues 3,221New Highs 29New Lows 71

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,686Declined 1,006Unchanged 122

Total issues 2,814New Highs 25New Lows 97

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

Pike Corp 11.83 +3.87 +48.6HutchT 3.69 +.81 +28.1CallularBio 28.49 +5.50 +23.9SynergyRs 12.22 +1.92 +18.6DurataTh 15.17 +2.37 +18.5ERBA Diag 2.86 +.41 +16.7Quotinet wt 2.65 +.36 +15.7Dataram h 3.56 +.47 +15.2Trex s 33.00 +4.33 +15.1PlanarSy 3.66 +.47 +14.7

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

ITT Ed 7.72 -6.59 -46.1Insmed 12.66 -4.59 -26.6CBD En n 3.09 -.71 -18.6Altisrce n 88.65 -15.18 -14.6Alere 34.75 -5.20 -13.0Sypris 4.24 -.59 -12.2GreenHntr 2.12 -.28 -11.7ClearSign 6.98 -.91 -11.5NF EngS h 2.16 -.27 -11.1US Cellular 33.61 -3.88 -10.3

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.35 +0.10 +3.4YkmFcsSvc d 26.00 +0.12 +3.5AQRMaFtStrI 9.95 +0.01 -6.0American BeaconLgCpVlIs 30.52 +0.22 +6.2American CenturyEqIncInv 9.00 +0.02 +6.2InvGrInv 34.11 +0.32 +4.4UltraInv 35.26 +0.32 +3.2ValueInv 8.75 +0.05 +7.1American FundsAMCAPA m 28.42 +0.21 +7.3BalA m 25.06 +0.12 +3.5BondA m 12.76 +0.01 +4.3CapIncBuA m 60.14 +0.22 +5.2CapWldBdA m20.92 +0.03 +4.8CpWldGrIA m 46.61 +0.23 +4.2EurPacGrA m 49.60 +0.12 +1.1FnInvA m 53.07 +0.36 +3.6GrthAmA m 44.97 +0.36 +4.6HiIncA m 11.29 +0.01 +2.9IncAmerA m 21.46 +0.07 +5.6IntBdAmA m 13.56 ... +1.8IntlGrInA m 35.63 +0.12 +4.0InvCoAmA m 38.95 +0.27 +6.9MutualA m 36.04 +0.20 +4.5NewEconA m 39.20 +0.24 +2.6NewPerspA m 38.15 +0.16 +1.6NwWrldA m 60.83 +0.34 +3.5SmCpWldA m 49.34 +0.24 +0.4TaxEBdAmA m12.92 ... +6.6WAMutInvA m 40.82 +0.23 +4.4AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.76 ... +4.5ArtisanIntl d 30.57 +0.02 +0.3IntlVal d 37.80 +0.13 +2.8MdCpVal 27.49 +0.16 +1.8MidCap 47.18 +0.49 -0.9BBHCoreSelN d 22.12 +0.19 +3.4BlackRockEngy&ResA m35.61 +0.55 +8.2EqDivA m 24.66 +0.11 +2.4EqDivI 24.72 +0.11 +2.6GlLSCrI 10.93 ... +1.9GlobAlcA m 21.76 +0.07 +2.7GlobAlcC m 20.14 +0.07 +2.3GlobAlcI 21.87 +0.07 +2.9HiYldBdIs 8.28 +0.01 +4.3StrIncIns 10.32 ... +3.3CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.06 -0.01 -0.7Cohen & SteersRealty 72.48 +0.46 +17.4ColumbiaAcornIntZ 47.94 +0.18 +3.8AcornZ 35.71 +0.33 -2.3DivIncZ 19.01 +0.11 +4.9Credit SuisseComStrInstl 7.35 +0.05 +1.7DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.22YrGlbFII 10.00 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 11.00 +0.01 +2.1EmMkCrEqI 21.23 +0.26 +9.6EmMktValI 30.20 +0.30 +9.6EmMtSmCpI 22.45 +0.25 +12.0IntCorEqI 12.95 +0.04 +2.9IntSmCapI 21.10 +0.07 +4.1IntlSCoI 19.69 +0.03 +3.1IntlValuI 19.73 +0.10 +2.7RelEstScI 30.40 +0.18 +18.7TAUSCrE2I 13.84 +0.10 +4.0USCorEq1I 17.17 +0.12 +4.5USCorEq2I 16.91 +0.12 +3.9USLgCo 15.31 +0.10 +6.0USLgValI 33.57 +0.28 +7.0USMicroI 19.26 +0.18 -4.0USSmValI 34.98 +0.26 -1.1USSmallI 30.07 +0.23 -2.7USTgtValInst 22.86 +0.17 +0.7DWS-ScudderGrIncS 24.19 +0.21 +4.5DavisNYVentA m 39.53 +0.36 +3.5NYVentY 40.06 +0.37 +3.7Dodge & CoxBal 102.32 +0.56 +5.9GlbStock 12.49 +0.10 +8.8Income 13.88 +0.01 +4.5IntlStk 46.14 +0.30 +7.2Stock 177.80 +1.41 +6.5DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.97 ... +4.6DreyfusAppreciaInv 54.35 +0.32 +4.6DriehausActiveInc 10.69 -0.01 +0.4Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.11 ... +1.3FMILgCap 22.28 +0.16 +6.8FPACres d 34.16 +0.15 +4.5NewInc d 10.23 +0.01 +1.2Fairholme FundsFairhome d 41.61 +0.22 +6.1FederatedStrValI 6.13 +0.03 +9.0FidelityAstMgr20 13.61 +0.02 +3.0AstMgr50 18.07 +0.06 +3.9Bal 23.70 +0.11 +5.0Bal K 23.70 +0.12 +5.1BlChGrow 67.08 +0.55 +5.9CapApr 37.61 +0.28 +4.0CapInc d 10.02 +0.02 +5.5Contra 98.74 +1.02 +3.8ContraK 98.73 +1.02 +3.8DivGrow 37.44 +0.25 +5.8DivrIntl d 37.04 +0.08 +0.4DivrIntlK d 37.00 +0.08 +0.4EqInc 61.36 +0.35 +6.3EqInc II 25.43 +0.13 +4.8FF2015 12.71 +0.04 +3.4FF2035 13.35 +0.08 +3.5FF2040 9.41 +0.05 +3.5Fidelity 44.59 +0.34 +4.5FltRtHiIn d 9.93 ... +1.6FrdmK2015 13.74 +0.05 +3.5FrdmK2020 14.37 +0.05 +3.5FrdmK2025 14.95 +0.07 +3.7FrdmK2030 15.27 +0.08 +3.7FrdmK2035 15.70 +0.09 +3.6FrdmK2040 15.75 +0.09 +3.7FrdmK2045 16.15 +0.09 +3.7Free2010 15.54 +0.05 +3.3Free2020 15.49 +0.07 +3.5Free2025 13.24 +0.06 +3.6Free2030 16.25 +0.09 +3.6GNMA 11.53 +0.01 +4.3GrowCo 124.24 +1.09 +4.2GrowInc 29.05 +0.15 +5.2GrthCmpK 124.16 +1.10 +4.3HiInc d 9.28 +0.01 +2.2IntlDisc d 39.86 +0.06 -1.6InvGrdBd 7.88 ... +4.2LatinAm d 33.36 +0.29 +6.8LowPrStkK d 51.12 +0.31 +3.4LowPriStk d 51.13 +0.31 +3.4Magellan 91.58 +0.72 +5.7MidCap d 38.02 +0.20 +3.6MuniInc d 13.31 +0.01 +7.3NewMktIn d 16.67 ... +10.0OTC 81.73 +0.94 +5.6Puritan 22.20 +0.11 +5.4PuritanK 22.19 +0.11 +5.5SASEqF 14.54 +0.09 +5.3SInvGrBdF 11.40 ... +4.3STMIdxF d 56.81 +0.40 +5.3SesAl-SctrEqt 14.54 +0.09 +5.3SesInmGrdBd 11.39 ... +4.2ShTmBond 8.60 ... +0.8SmCapDisc d 29.53 +0.17 -1.2StratInc 11.14 +0.01 +5.0Tel&Util 23.70 +0.11 +10.1TotalBd 10.70 ... +4.2USBdIdx 11.64 ... +4.0USBdIdxInv 11.64 ... +3.9Value 110.16 +0.69 +6.4Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 27.45 +0.28 +4.6NewInsI 27.96 +0.29 +4.8Fidelity SelectBiotech d 194.86 +2.21 +7.2HealtCar d 207.35 +0.71 +16.3Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 68.84 +0.49 +6.1500IdxInstl 68.84 +0.49 +6.1500IdxInv 68.84 +0.50 +6.1ExtMktIdAg d 53.57 +0.37 +1.9

Name P/E Last Chg

2,981,637,716Volume 1,626,652,827Volume

15,000

15,500

16,000

16,500

17,000

17,500

F M A M J J

16,400

16,780

17,160Dow Jones industrialsClose: 16,569.28Change: 75.91 (0.5%)

10 DAYS

IntlIdxAdg d 41.17 +0.06 +1.9TotMktIdAg d 56.81 +0.41 +5.3Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF11.03+0.10 +4.3First EagleGlbA m 56.20 +0.20 +4.8OverseasA m 24.30 +0.04 +5.1FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.29 ... +7.6FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.33 ... +8.7GrowthA m 68.96 +0.38 +5.8HY TF A m 10.36 +0.01 +9.1Income C m 2.54 +0.01 +6.7IncomeA m 2.51 +0.01 +7.1IncomeAdv 2.49 ... +6.9RisDvA m 49.56 +0.40 +2.7StrIncA m 10.55 +0.01 +3.3FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 35.22 +0.14 +4.4DiscovA m 34.65 +0.14 +4.2Shares Z 30.07 +0.13 +6.1SharesA m 29.78 +0.13 +5.9FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 8.47 +0.02 +1.9GlBond C m 13.30 +0.02 +2.7GlBondA m 13.27 +0.02 +2.9GlBondAdv 13.23 +0.02 +3.1GrowthA m 25.59 +0.06 +2.5WorldA m 19.81 +0.07 +2.1GES&SUSEq 58.85 +0.50 +7.5GMOEmgMktsVI d 11.45 +0.14 +6.3IntItVlIV 26.07 +0.15 +3.8QuIII 23.53 +0.13 +5.0USEqAllcVI 17.47 +0.14 +4.2Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 47.34 +0.27 +6.5HarborBond 12.23 ... +3.2CapApInst 58.90 +0.47 +3.9IntlInstl 71.14 ... +0.2IntlInv b 70.30 ...HartfordCapAprA m 48.13 +0.34 +3.2CpApHLSIA 61.64 +0.43 +3.3INVESCOCharterA m 23.26 +0.16 +6.4ComstockA m 24.97 +0.17 +5.6EqIncomeA m 11.12 +0.04 +5.2GrowIncA m 28.31 +0.17 +5.3HiYldMuA m 9.70 ... +10.9IVAWorldwideI d 18.74 +0.09 +5.2IvyAssetStrA m 31.57 +0.14 -1.4AssetStrC m 30.57 +0.13 -1.8AsstStrgI 31.86 +0.14 -1.3JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.72 +0.01 +3.7CoreBondA m 11.71 ... +3.4CoreBondSelect11.70 ... +3.5HighYldSel 7.99 +0.01 +3.4LgCapGrA m 32.69 +0.24 +2.9LgCapGrSelect32.73 +0.24 +3.0MidCpValI 36.90 +0.18 +5.1ShDurBndSel 10.91 ... +0.6USLCpCrPS 29.51 +0.20 +6.4JanusGlbLfScT 49.37 +0.34 +14.8John HancockDisValMdCpI 19.12 +0.11 +5.4DiscValI 18.77 +0.15 +4.3LifBa1 b 15.86 +0.13 +4.4LifGr1 b 16.69 +0.12 +4.1LazardEmgMkEqInst d20.79 +0.22 +11.4Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m202.01+1.49+11.4Longleaf PartnersLongPart 35.26 +0.21 +4.5Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.78 +0.02 +6.4BdR b 15.71 +0.02 +6.3Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.19 +0.08 +5.1BondDebA m 8.19 +0.02 +3.9ShDurIncA m 4.54 ... +2.0ShDurIncC m 4.56 ... +1.4ShDurIncF b 4.53 ... +1.8MFSIntlValA m 34.61 +0.01 +2.6IsIntlEq 22.38 +0.03 -0.2TotRetA m 18.14 +0.07 +4.5ValueA m 33.77 +0.20 +2.9ValueI 33.94 +0.20 +3.0MainStayMktfield 17.53 +0.10 -5.3Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.14 +0.03 +1.0Matthews AsianChina d 22.66 +0.25 -0.8India d 22.78 +0.04 +39.9MergerInvCl b 16.42 +0.02 +2.6Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.83 ... +4.2TotRtBd b 10.83 ... +4.0Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 44.40 +0.41 -2.0NatixisLSInvBdY 12.31 +0.02 +6.0LSStratIncA m 17.04 +0.03 +6.2LSStratIncC m17.15 +0.04 +5.7Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 59.24 +0.32 -4.3NorthernHYFixInc d 7.53 -0.01 +4.0IntlIndex d 12.56 +0.04 +1.8StkIdx 24.03 +0.17 +6.0OakmarkEqIncI 33.75 +0.18 +3.4Intl I 25.83 -0.06 -1.9Oakmark I 67.45 +0.47 +6.0Select I 44.61 +0.35 +11.4OberweisChinaOpp m 16.96 +0.23 +0.8Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.17 +0.01 +3.4GlbSmMdCp 16.97 +0.06 +1.1LgCpStr 12.92 +0.06 +3.6OppenheimerDevMktA m 40.53 +0.45 +6.6DevMktY 40.11 +0.45 +6.8GlobA m 80.02 +0.26 +1.6IntlGrY 37.27 -0.01 -2.3IntlGrowA m 37.40 -0.01 -2.5MainStrA m 50.88 +0.35 +5.0SrFltRatA m 8.39 ... +2.1StrIncA m 4.17 ... +3.7Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 14.95 ... +8.8OsterweisOsterStrInc 11.90 ... +2.6PIMCOAllAssetI 12.67 +0.02 +6.2AllAuthIn 10.31 +0.01 +5.6ComRlRStI 5.70 ... +3.8EMFdIdPLARSTIns10.75+0.08 +11.1EMktCurI 10.25 +0.01 +2.3EmgLclBdI 9.55 -0.01 +5.4ForBdInstl 10.96 +0.01 +5.7HiYldIs 9.55 +0.02 +2.8Income P 12.66 ... +6.5IncomeA m 12.66 ... +6.3IncomeD b 12.66 ... +6.4IncomeInl 12.66 ... +6.6LgDrTRtnI 11.54 ... +12.6LgTmCrdIn 12.71 ... +12.6LowDrIs 10.34 ... +1.0RERRStgC m 4.18 +0.02 +28.1RealRet 11.62 ... +6.9ShtTermIs 9.89 ... +1.0StkPlARShStrIn 2.58 -0.02 -4.8TotRetA m 10.94 +0.01 +3.4TotRetAdm b 10.94 +0.01 +3.5TotRetC m 10.94 +0.01 +3.0TotRetIs 10.94 +0.01 +3.7TotRetrnD b 10.94 +0.01 +3.5TotlRetnP 10.94 +0.01 +3.6UnconstrBdIns 11.26 ... +2.3PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 31.44 +0.19 +6.0ParnassusCoreEqInv 38.61 +0.18 +5.8PermanentPortfolio 45.05 +0.10 +4.6PioneerPioneerA m 40.83 +0.28 +4.7PrincipalDivIntI 12.17 ... +2.2L/T2020I 14.69 ... +3.5LCGrIInst 12.91 ... +1.8Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 40.81 +0.23 +0.8

PutnamGrowIncA m 20.84 ... +5.5NewOpp 83.91 +0.65 +5.3RoycePremierInv d 22.58 +0.18 +2.1Schwab1000Inv d 51.43 +0.36 +5.6S&P500Sel d 30.59 +0.22 +6.0ScoutInterntl 36.73 +0.12 -0.4SequoiaSequoia 215.52 +1.06 -2.2T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 66.96 +0.58 +3.7CapApprec 27.13 +0.08 +5.7EmMktBd d 13.06 -0.02 +8.2EmMktStk d 35.26 +0.48 +9.4EqIndex d 52.31 +0.37 +5.9EqtyInc 33.72 +0.17 +3.8GrowStk 53.96 +0.43 +2.6HealthSci 64.78 +0.25 +12.1HiYield d 7.16 -0.01 +3.8InsLgCpGr 28.01 +0.20 +2.8IntlBnd d 9.78 +0.01 +4.4IntlGrInc d 16.16 +0.05 +3.8IntlStk d 16.92 +0.07 +3.8LatinAm d 32.70 +0.44 +9.0MidCapVa 32.14 +0.18 +7.0MidCpGr 75.62 +0.55 +3.9NewEra 49.29 +0.65 +11.0NewHoriz 45.73 +0.43 -1.2NewIncome 9.54 ... +4.3OrseaStk d 10.29 +0.03 +1.4R2015 14.97 +0.06 +4.5R2025 16.09 +0.07 +4.6R2035 17.03 +0.09 +4.6Rtmt2010 18.62 +0.06 +4.5Rtmt2020 21.33 +0.09 +4.6Rtmt2030 23.66 +0.12 +4.7Rtmt2040 24.50 +0.14 +4.7Rtmt2045 16.33 +0.09 +4.6ShTmBond 4.79 ... +0.9SmCpStk 43.74 +0.35 -1.8SmCpVal d 48.61 +0.37 -3.5SpecInc 13.05 ... +4.4Value 36.02 +0.17 +6.7TCWTotRetBdI 10.28 ... +4.1TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.81 ... +3.9EqIx 14.87 +0.11 +5.3IntlE d 19.61 +0.06 +2.0TempletonInFEqSeS 22.83 ... +0.5ThornburgIncBldA m 21.77 +0.03 +7.0IncBldC m 21.76 +0.03 +6.6IntlValI 30.34 -0.05 -4.7Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.29 -0.05 +2.5Vanguard500Adml 179.10 +1.28 +6.1500Inv 179.08 +1.27 +6.0500Sgnl 147.94 +1.05 +6.1BalIdxAdm 28.58 +0.12 +4.8BalIdxIns 28.59 +0.13 +4.9BdMktInstPls 10.81 ... +4.0CAITAdml 11.68 ... +5.6CapOpAdml 115.50 +0.80 +8.3DevMktIdxAdm13.33 +0.04 +2.1DevMktIdxInstl 13.35 +0.05 +2.1DivGr 21.75 +0.09 +3.0EmMktIAdm 36.90 +0.48 +10.0EnergyAdm 138.00 +1.93 +9.6EqInc 30.83 +0.13 +5.0EqIncAdml 64.63 +0.29 +5.1ExplAdml 93.60 +0.85 -2.7Explr 100.56 +0.91 -2.7ExtdIdAdm 63.93 +0.44 +1.9ExtdIdIst 63.93 +0.44 +1.9ExtdMktIdxIP 157.79 +1.09 +1.9FAWeUSIns 101.51 +0.53 +4.1GNMA 10.70 ... +4.3GNMAAdml 10.70 ... +4.4GlbEq 24.63 +0.18 +4.9GrthIdAdm 50.34 +0.39 +5.8GrthIstId 50.34 +0.39 +5.8HYCorAdml 6.03 ... +3.4HltCrAdml 87.03 +0.57 +15.0HlthCare 206.27 +1.34 +15.0ITBondAdm 11.46 ... +5.2ITGradeAd 9.93 ... +4.8InfPrtAdm 26.78 -0.03 +6.1InfPrtI 10.91 -0.01 +6.2InflaPro 13.64 -0.02 +6.0InstIdxI 177.94 +1.26 +6.1InstPlus 177.96 +1.27 +6.1InstTStPl 44.23 +0.32 +5.4IntlGr 23.55 +0.15 +0.9IntlGrAdm 74.93 +0.48 +1.0IntlStkIdxAdm 28.67 +0.15 +4.3IntlStkIdxI 114.66 +0.61 +4.3IntlStkIdxIPls 114.68 +0.60 +4.3IntlVal 38.48 +0.20 +2.9LTGradeAd 10.47 -0.03 +11.7LifeCon 18.68 +0.05 +4.6LifeGro 28.65 +0.15 +4.8LifeMod 23.95 +0.09 +4.7MidCapIdxIP 156.84 +1.09 +5.7MidCp 31.70 +0.22 +5.6MidCpAdml 143.94 +1.00 +5.7MidCpIst 31.80 +0.22 +5.7MidCpSgl 45.42 +0.31 +5.7Morg 26.45 +0.20 +3.3MorgAdml 82.01 +0.61 +3.4MuHYAdml 11.06 +0.01 +7.9MuIntAdml 14.13 ... +5.0MuLTAdml 11.56 +0.01 +7.5MuLtdAdml 11.07 ... +1.5MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.6PrecMtls 11.70 -0.01 +13.2Prmcp 100.77 +0.63 +9.1PrmcpAdml 104.54 +0.66 +9.2PrmcpCorI 21.19 +0.14 +9.0REITIdxAd 106.62 +0.66 +18.3REITIdxInst 16.50 +0.10 +18.2STBondAdm 10.52 ... +1.0STBondSgl 10.52 ... +1.0STCor 10.75 +0.01 +1.7STGradeAd 10.75 +0.01 +1.7STIGradeI 10.75 +0.01 +1.7STsryAdml 10.70 ... +0.6SelValu 29.40 +0.14 +4.3SmCapIdx 53.48 +0.38 +1.5SmCapIdxIP 154.61 +1.11 +1.6SmCpGrIdxAdm42.64 +0.40 -0.8SmCpIdAdm 53.56 +0.39 +1.6SmCpIdIst 53.56 +0.39 +1.6SmCpIndxSgnl 48.25 +0.34 +1.6SmCpValIdxAdm43.32 +0.22 +3.6Star 24.84 +0.10 +4.8StratgcEq 32.00 +0.20 +6.7TgtRe2010 26.68 +0.06 +4.2TgtRe2015 15.44 +0.05 +4.5TgtRe2020 28.39 +0.12 +4.7TgtRe2030 28.97 +0.14 +4.8TgtRe2035 17.81 +0.10 +4.9TgtRe2040 29.70 +0.17 +4.9TgtRe2045 18.63 +0.11 +4.9TgtRe2050 29.57 +0.18 +4.9TgtRetInc 12.90 +0.03 +4.0Tgtet2025 16.50 +0.07 +4.8TlIntlBdIdxInst 30.94 +0.01 +5.1TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.31 ... +5.0TotBdAdml 10.81 ... +4.0TotBdInst 10.81 ... +4.0TotBdMkInv 10.81 ... +3.9TotBdMkSig 10.81 ... +4.0TotIntl 17.14 +0.09 +4.2TotStIAdm 48.76 +0.35 +5.3TotStIIns 48.77 +0.35 +5.3TotStISig 47.06 +0.33 +5.3TotStIdx 48.74 +0.35 +5.3TxMCapAdm 99.16 +0.69 +5.8ValIdxAdm 31.30 +0.20 +6.3ValIdxIns 31.30 +0.21 +6.3WellsI 25.68 +0.03 +5.0WellsIAdm 62.22 +0.08 +5.0Welltn 39.58 +0.15 +5.6WelltnAdm 68.36 +0.26 +5.6WndsIIAdm 68.11 +0.43 +5.6Wndsr 21.51 +0.15 +6.4WndsrAdml 72.58 +0.54 +6.5WndsrII 38.38 +0.24 +5.6VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.53 +0.09 +11.6Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.51 +0.08 +5.6SciTechA m 16.18 +0.15 +0.8

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FT ConDis q 32.56 +.38FT Utils q 22.30 -.29FirstEngy 17 31.06 -.07Flextrn 18 10.50 +.21FBHmSec 23 38.45 +.63FrptMcM 15 37.24 +.46Freescale 67 19.50 -.11FrontierCm 55 6.54 +.06FuelCellE dd 2.35 -.01GATX 14 62.20 +.70GT AdvTc dd 14.13 +.18Gafisa SA ... 2.87 -.07GameStop 13 41.69 +.47Gannett 17 34.32 +1.44Gap 15 40.12 +.09GenDynam 18 117.23 -.15GenGrPrp cc 23.35 +.18GenMills 18 51.29 +.36GenMotors 28 33.61 +.17Genworth 10 12.98 -.09Gerdau ... 5.90 +.06GeronCp dd 2.47 +.14GileadSci 21 92.18 +.68GlaxoSKln ... 48.53 +.50Globalstar dd 3.94 +.04GluMobile dd 5.42 -.30GoldFLtd ... 4.05 +.07Goldcrp g dd 27.45 -.27GoPro n cc 38.53 -2.44GraphPkg 20 12.11 +.08GtPlainEn 15 24.61 -.15Groupon dd 7.02 +.56HCA Hldg 17 65.83 +.34HalconRes dd 5.51 +.09Hallibrtn 22 70.09 +1.37HarleyD 16 62.31 +.33HartfdFn 11 34.33 +.30HeclaM dd 3.12 +.03Herbalife 11 51.30 -1.27HercOffsh dd 3.35 -.04Hertz ... 28.10 +.34HewlettP 12 35.33 +.14Hilton n 54 24.18 -.11HimaxTch 34 6.41 +.18HomeDp 20 80.03 +.28HopFedBc 30 11.85 -.10HostHotls 17 21.96 +.33HovnanE 65 3.92 +.06HuntBncsh 13 9.70 -.01Huntsmn 19 27.01 +.49HutchT dd 3.69 +.81

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 3.54 -.20iShBrazil q 49.11 +.36iShEMU q 39.65 +.24iShGerm q 28.76 +.09iSh HK q 22.05 +.07iShItaly q 16.43 +.19iShJapan q 12.01 +.02iSh SKor q 66.61 +.01iSTaiwn q 15.94 +.13iShSilver q 19.40 -.12iShChinaLC q 41.07 +.35iShEMkts q 44.47 +.41iSh20 yrT q 114.26 -.30iS Eafe q 66.44 +.31iShiBxHYB q 92.60 +.56iShR2K q 111.66 +.98iShUtils q 103.26 -.63iShREst q 72.00 +.43iShHmCnst q 22.36 +.22ITT Ed ... 7.72 -6.59IdenixPh dd 24.45 +.01IngrmM 17 28.23 -.28Insmed dd 12.66 -4.59IntgDv 20 14.73 +.19IntlGame 18 16.86 +.08IntPap 14 47.85 +.40Interpublic 26 19.78 +.24Invesco 16 38.27 +.45ItauUnibH ... 15.70 +.28JD.com n ... 27.79 -.15JPMorgCh 15 56.65 +.17JetBlue 10 10.86 +.05JohnJn 18 100.16 +.26JohnsnCtl 21 47.76 +1.09JnprNtwk 20 23.20 -.07KandiTech dd 17.80 +.86Kellogg 12 62.06 +.62KeyEngy dd 6.30 +.17Keycorp 12 13.23 -.12KindMorg 31 36.25 +.76Kinross g dd 3.89 -.09KiteRlty dd 6.03 -.03KodiakO g 32 15.45 +.73Kohls 13 53.74 +.18KraftFGp 14 54.65 -.07LKQ Corp 22 26.46 +.89LVSands 22 73.50 +.78LennarA 16 36.49 +.33Level3 65 42.50 -.70LibtyIntA ... 28.20 +.32LillyEli 20 61.63 +.95LinearTch 23 43.90 -.34LinkedIn dd 202.50 +.72LiveNatn dd 21.57 -.03LockhdM 17 168.29 +1.17LaPac 21 13.82 +.34LyonBas A 16 108.64 +2.09

M-N-O-PMGIC Inv 24 7.39 +.03MGM Rsts dd 26.45 +.19Macys 15 58.58 +.69MagHRes dd 6.32 -.05MannKd dd 8.31 +.24MarathnO 11 39.22 +.61MarathPet 13 84.47 +.90MVJrGold q 40.68 -1.47MktVGold q 25.95 -.25MV OilSvc q 54.64 +.73MktVRus q 24.33 +.26MarIntA 29 65.99 +1.11MartMM 40 126.75 +1.00MarvellT 20 13.31 -.08Masco 21 21.32 +.11MasterCd s 27 75.68 +.70Mattel 15 35.24 -.01McDrmInt 28 7.26 +.07Medtrnic 21 62.47 +.99MelcoCrwn 27 32.52 +.17Merck 30 57.06 +.26MetLife 13 52.38 +.25MKors 24 77.01 -4.82MicronT 10 31.69 +.60Microsoft 16 43.37 +.51Mobileye n ... 36.65 -.35Molycorp dd 2.15 +.07Mondelez 18 36.45 +.12Monsanto 23 114.91 +1.32MorgStan 17 31.83 +.23Mosaic 27 46.94 +.90MotrlaSolu 16 64.11 +.29Mylan 31 49.10 -.13NQ Mobile dd 7.00 +.45NRG Egy dd 31.03 +.30NXP Semi ... 62.73 +.33Nabors 53 27.38 +.57NBGreece ... 3.12 -.02NOilVarco 14 82.87 +1.78NetApp 22 38.76 +.22NewOriEd 25 19.12 -.15Newcastle 13 4.51 +.02NewellRub 18 33.19 +.74NewfldExp 29 40.25 +.92NewmtM 15 25.63 +.43NewsCpA ... 17.83 +.06NextEraEn 20 94.05 +.23NiSource 21 37.38 +.14NikeB 26 77.16 +.38NobleCorp 8 27.00 -.15NobleEngy 26 70.23 +3.48NokiaCp ... 7.85 +.05NA Pall g ... .26NoestUt 18 43.19 -.60NorthropG 14 123.36 -.56NStarRlt dd 16.14 -.14NovaGld g dd 3.48 -.22Novavax dd 4.40 +.13NuanceCm 61 18.18 +.35Nvidia 21 17.65 -.04OcciPet 13 100.75 +2.86OcwenFn 12 26.98 -.70OfficeDpt dd 5.11 +.09Oi SA ... .63 +.01OnSmcnd 16 8.53 -.26Oracle 17 40.10 +.49Orexigen dd 4.99 +.02PBF Engy 14 25.59 -1.02PDC Engy cc 60.34 +6.63PDL Bio 5 9.16 -.01PG&E Cp 24 44.48 -.42PPG 25 200.62 +2.23PPL Corp 14 33.04 -.10

Pandora dd 25.30 +.76ParagOff n ... 11.00 -.78PattUTI 28 34.47 +.32Paychex 24 40.86 -.16PeabdyE cc 15.48 +.35PennVa dd 13.14 +.55Pentair 21 65.08 +1.43PeopUtdF 19 14.41 +.09PepcoHold 22 26.79 -.22PetrbrsA ... 17.14 +.27Petrobras ... 16.09 +.27Pfizer 16 28.75 -.11PhilipMor 16 82.13 +.23Phillips66 16 81.88 +1.34Pike Corp 37 11.83 +3.87PimcoHiI q 12.40 -.32PiperJaf 12 51.96 +.77PlugPowr h dd 5.41 +.03Potash 22 35.11 +.14PS SrLoan ... 24.56PwShs QQQ q 95.32 +.65ProShtS&P q 23.55 -.18ProUltSP q 113.34 +1.56ProShtR2K q 16.94 -.13PrUPQQQ s q 77.73 +1.56PUVixST rs q 31.54 -3.19ProctGam 20 79.22 -.43ProgsvCp 12 23.42 +.20ProUShSP q 25.84 -.37PUShQQQ rs q 48.20 -.69ProUShL20 q 59.05 +.32PUSR2K rs q 47.95 -.83PShtQQQ rs q 40.78 -.86PUShSPX rs q 48.66 -1.05ProspctCap ... 10.66 +.07Prudentl 36 86.09 +.24PSEG 14 35.30 -.19PulteGrp 3 17.77 +.13

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 85 94.16 +3.64Qualcom 17 73.26 +.71QksilvRes 2 1.78 -.02Quiksilvr dd 2.83 -.01RF MicD 40 11.47 +.08Rackspace 51 30.20 +.45RadianGrp 18 12.45 -.11Realogy 10 37.57 +1.47ReynAmer 19 56.14 +.39RiteAid 39 6.63 -.13RiverbedT cc 18.20 +.38RymanHP 38 48.47 +1.01SLM Cp 5 8.90 -.03SpdrDJIA q 165.33 +.76SpdrGold q 123.99 -.39SP Mid q 250.15 +1.29S&P500ETF q 193.89 +1.39SpdrHome q 29.77 +.26SpdrLehHY q 40.54 +.27SpdrS&P RB q 37.79 -.07SpdrOGEx q 75.80 +2.04Salesforce dd 54.90 +1.42SanDisk 19 94.07 +1.31SandRdge dd 5.99 +.17Schlmbrg 22 109.67 +1.72Schwab 31 27.69 +.24SciGames dd 8.89 +.11SeadrillLtd 3 35.95 -.23ServiceCp 28 21.27 +.16SiderurNac ... 5.24 +.06SilvWhtn g 29 26.04 -.04SiriusXM 56 3.34 +.03SkywksSol 27 52.12 +.05SolarCity dd 70.06 +.25Sonus dd 3.65 +.09SouFun s 16 11.33 +.03SwstAirl 18 28.43SwstnEngy 18 40.68 +.25SpectraEn 23 40.87 +.32SpiritAero 12 36.96 +.12Sprint dd 7.37 -.08SP Matls q 49.27 +.58SP HlthC q 61.22 +.26SP CnSt q 43.61 +.14SP Consum q 66.29 +.64SP Engy q 97.46 +1.61SP Inds q 51.96 +.18SP Tech q 39.07 +.28SP Util q 41.19 -.23StdPac 14 7.69 +.09Staples 14 11.56 +.12Starbucks 30 77.53 +.55StlDynam 23 21.65 +.73Stryker 40 80.58 +.58Suncor g 12 40.61 +.88SunEdison dd 19.33 -.14SunPower 24 33.98 -.38SunTrst 13 37.50 -.02Supvalu 18 9.48 +.42Symantec 19 23.56 +.39Synchrny n ... 23.00SynergyRs 49 12.22 +1.92T-MobileUS cc 33.69 +.27TECO 17 17.28 -.20TJX 18 53.71 +.59TaiwSemi ... 20.51 +.31TalismE g 39 10.47 +.10Target 21 60.70 +.85Tekmira g dd 13.26 -1.00TenetHlth dd 53.30 +.96Teradyn 22 18.54 +.27TeslaMot dd 238.52 +5.25Tesoro 19 61.20 +1.35TevaPhrm 33 52.80 -1.22TexInst 22 46.39 +.153D Sys cc 47.27 -.663M Co 20 140.75 +.64TibcoSft 40 19.17 -.12TimeWarn 19 85.53 +1.73Transocn 9 39.49 -.95Trex s 45 33.00 +4.33TriangPet 18 11.08 +.86TrimbleN 39 31.37 +.71TrinaSolar 43 10.70 -.06Trinity s 12 43.83 -.10TriQuint cc 18.63 +.26Tsakos ... 6.62 -.2821stCFoxA 19 31.52 -.4221stCFoxB 19 31.37 -.50Twitter n ... 43.47 -.66Tyson 13 37.24 +.19

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 17.20 +.02UltraPt g 12 23.25 +.15UnionPac s 19 98.29 +.38UtdContl 22 45.50 -1.23UPS B 21 97.18 +.15US NGas q 21.19 +.27USSteel dd 34.00 +.56UtdTech 17 105.05 +.30UtdhlthGp 15 82.27 +.78UnumGrp 10 34.29 +.49Vale SA ... 14.15 +.14Vale SA pf ... 12.67 +.09ValeroE 9 50.42 -.02VangTotBd q 82.03 +.11VangTSM q 100.17 +.68VangREIT q 75.24 +.52VangEmg q 44.48 +.50VangEur q 57.22 +.36VangFTSE q 41.49 +.14Verisign 13 54.55 +1.35VerizonCm 11 50.21 +.38ViacomB 15 82.39 +.14Vodafone ... 33.18 +.32VulcanM 61 63.27 -.07WPX Engy dd 21.13 +.63Walgrn 25 72.11 +1.58WalterEn dd 5.85 +.18WeathfIntl dd 22.43 +.36Web.com dd 19.85 -.27WellPoint 15 111.60 +.60WDigital 15 102.10 +1.80WstnUnion 12 17.02 +.24WhitingPet 18 88.03 +3.63WholeFood 25 37.95 +.09WmsCos 73 56.17 +.62Windstrm 29 11.49 +.05WiscEngy 16 43.56 -.45WisdomTr 20 10.35 -.62WT India q 22.11 +.26XL Grp 10 32.37 -.15XcelEngy 16 30.73 -.25Xilinx 18 41.32 +.26Yamana g cc 8.50 -.16Yandex ... 30.52 +.24Yelp dd 68.57 +2.26YoukuTud dd 18.94 +.05YumBrnds 27 70.18 -.28ZionsBcp 16 28.13 -.23Zoetis 32 33.24 +.50Zynga dd 2.84 -.04

Today

Cap’ boost?

Wall Street anticipates that Disney’s latest quarterly earnings improved from a year ago.

The media giant, due to report fiscal third-quarter financial results today, is expected to have received a boost from its film studio division. In April, the studio released “Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” which has gone on to gross more than $700 million worldwide.

Spotlight on CVS

Growth in generic drug use helped lift CVS Caremark’s earnings in the first three months of this year.

Generics, which are cheaper than brand-name drugs, provide a wider margin between the cost for the pharmacy to purchase the drugs and the reimbursement it receives. Did the trend continue in the April-June quarter? Find out today, when the nation’s second-largest drugstore chain reports second-quarter financial results.

Manufacturing bellwether

The Commerce Department reports it latest data on U.S. factory orders today.

Economists expect that factory orders rebounded in June after declining in May due partly to falling demand for military and transportation equipment. With the exception of May, U.S. factories have been registering monthly gains in orders most of this year, reflecting an expansion in manufacturing that hit its 13th straight month in June. Source: FactSet

Price-earnings ratio: 20based on trailing 12 month results

Dividend: $1.10 Div. yield: 1.4%

2Q ’13

Operating EPS

2Q ’14

$0.97est.

$1.10

50

60

70

$80CVS $77.37

$62.17

’14

Source: FactSet

Factory ordersseasonally adjusted percent change

-2

-1

0

1

2%

JMAMFJ

est.0.7

2014

1.5

-1.6

1.7

0.8

-0.5

Sources: Morningstar, MSCI *annualized ^based on estimated earnings

Investors are casting a wider net in their search for big growth from small companies.

They’re increasingly looking outside the United States, attracted by the cheaper price tags of European and Asian stocks. Through the first half of the year, investors plugged $5 billion into foreign small- and mid-cap stock mutual funds, according to Morningstar. That's nearly five times as much as they put into their U.S. counterparts.

The returns have also been better for foreign small-cap stocks: 5.5 percent through July, versus a loss of 3.1 percent for U.S. small-cap stocks in the Russell 2000 index.

Foreign stocks generally offer richer dividend yields, but foreign small-cap stocks carry their own risks.

European small-cap stocks are cheap because of doubts about the European economy, for example. Inflation is low, and economists worry that

when prices barely budge, the economy could fall into a trap in which shoppers cut back on spending in anticipation of cheaper prices, which would only further weaken the economy.

Shifting currency values can also erode the returns of foreign small-cap stocks, which can be more volatile than either U.S. stocks or large-cap foreign stocks.

Stan Choe; J. Paschke • AP

Low-cost funds These foreign small- and mid-cap stock mutual funds have expense ratios below 1.42 percent — the average for foreign stock funds — and 4-star ratings from Morningstar.

A cheaper buy Foreign small-cap stocks trade for less than their U.S. counterparts

Columbia Acorn International (ACINX) 16.2% 13.4% 12.0% $2,000 0.93% 1.4%

Columbia Acorn International Select (ACFFX) 17.9 13.7 11.2 2,000 1.19 1.5

T. Rowe Price International Discovery (PRIDX) 16.6 14.1 11.4 2,500 1.23 1.1

Touchstone International Small Cap (TNSYX) 16.4 15.5 8.3 2,500 1.24 1.4

Foreign small-cap stocks 15

U.S. small-cap stocks 21

MIN. INITIALINVESTMENT

TOTAL RETURN1-YR 5-YR* 10-YR* YIELD

EXPENSERATIO

P/E RATIO^

Looking abroad

Data through July 31

Data through June 30

S M i t MSM CI *

A csmthe

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: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, August 5, 2014

ACROSS1 Passport

endorsement6 Field protector

10 From __: slightprogress

14 Dramatic solos15 Jai __16 Head, to Henri17 Job for a CPA18 It’s in front of a

catcher20 Oft-pickled

veggie21 Excavation hole22 Noisy ruckus23 Captivated25 Game with

checks26 “CSI” workplace30 Clic Stic or

InkJoy33 Pieces by pundits34 Old Roman coins35 Worldwide

workers’ gp.36 Clears (of)37 Nincompoop39 Unrefined

deposits40 __-de-sac41 Soon, to Pope42 Pancakes

sometimesserved withcaviar

43 Expressive rockgenre

44 Instrument usedin Hawaiianmusic

47 “Psycho” motel49 Being aired50 Venus, to Serena52 Duke Univ.

conference53 High-ranking

Muslim57 Place to make a

splash59 Freak out60 Historical periods61 Gawk at62 Traffic cone63 Fortified red wine64 Ill-gotten gains65 Wall Street

decline, orsomething thatmight beassociated with18-, 26-, 44- or57-Across

DOWN1 Swedish

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Gauguin7 Loads8 Aries symbol9 Annual report

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24 Q&A part: Abbr.25 Ad award26 Strong-arm27 Poppy extract28 “Sea Food

Differently” chain29 “Crazy” singer

Patsy31 Justice Kagan32 Military denial37 Worldwide

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38 Deer daughters39 For whom

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41 Fall bloomer42 “On the other

hand ...”45 Pendant with a

picture46 Health

supplements co.48 ’50s nuclear

experiment

50 Give and take?51 “Othello”

antagonist52 Musical

Guthrie54 Landlocked

African country55 Apple player56 Thinker

Descartes58 Before today59 Some family

docs

By Ron Toth and C.C. Burnikel(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 08/05/14

08/05/14

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: My mother has always had a rocky re-lationship with her sister, “Josie,” for many reasons. The fi nal straw came after Josie stole money from my mother seven years ago. They haven’t spoken to each other since.

I understand that my aunt hurt my mother badly and what she did was unforgivable. I know Josie doesn’t deserve an-other chance, but I wish my mother would give her one anyway. Josie has changed her ways over the past sev-en years and now lives a very stable life. I don’t think she’s the same person.

No one in my family (in-cluding me) will ever trust Josie because of the things she’s done. But I wish my mother would call her sister and say that she loves and forgives her. My siblings and I have talked to Mom about this, but she always brushes us off. I know this is between the two of them, but they aren’t getting any younger, and they don’t have an eternity to recon-cile. I don’t want my mother or Josie to have any regrets. Is there anything we can do? — Worried Daughter and Niece

Dear Daughter: You are kind, forgiving and understanding to want your mother to rec-oncile with her sister before it’s too late. Un-fortunately, until your mother reaches the

same conclusion, there is little you can do. You say Josie has changed, but at the same time, you will never trust her. It’s diffi cult to for-give someone who has repeatedly broken your trust and hurt you, and not all reconciliations are benefi cial if the be-havior continues.

But you can ask your mother what Josie would need to do to get back in her good graces and then see whether Josie is up to the task. Beyond that, please let your mother decide how much pain she is willing to risk to have her sister back in her life.

Dear Annie: I read your columns about babies cry-ing in church. I have a dif-ferent issue. What about parents who completely ignore what their children do in church?

Last Sunday, there were two children, a boy and a girl, about 7 or 8, who spent the entire service crawling under the pews, lifting up the kneeler, playing catch, kicking and shoving each other and completely destroying my ability to concentrate on

the Mass. The parents did absolutely nothing. The father fell asleep, and the mother never looked at her kids, not even when they bumped against her.

Right before commu-nion, they started pinch-ing each other and whim-pering in pain. By then I couldn’t take it anymore. I told them to knock it off. They stopped and put their heads on their parents’ shoulders. The parents glanced at me with aston-ishment. Meanwhile, in the row behind me was a single mom with four kids who left twice with the baby for 10 minutes and left the rest of her little kids alone.

Parents seem to think that their children have the right to do anything they want whenever they want. — Fed-Up Grandma in Chicago

Dear Grandma: Par-ents often don’t realize that discipline makes children feel secure and loved. When kids are allowed to run wild, they don’t know what the boundar-ies are, and they keep pushing until they do. But we also under-stand that parents of young children can be exhausted. We admire those who are kind enough to engage the children in some quiet activity and give the parents a break.

Daughter wants mom to give aunt second chanceAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

10 • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

TUESDAY EVENING AUGUST 5, 2014 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night to Rock (N) Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #NCIS An explosion oc-curs on an oil rig.

NCIS: Los Angeles “Al-legiance”

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

Ferguson

QVC $ . Computer Shop Tues. Beauty Anything Goes with Rick & Shawn Mcrwv Ckware

WCBI $NCIS An explosion oc-curs on an oil rig.

NCIS: Los Angeles “Al-legiance”

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

Ferguson

WMC % %Food Fighters “Annie Smith” (N)

America’s Got Talent “Quarter Finals 2” Twelve acts perform live. (N) (L)

News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers

WLMT & >Arrow “Suicide Squad” Supernatural “Thinman” CW30 News at 9 (N) The Arsenio Hall Show House of

PayneMeet the Browns

WBBJ _ _CMA Music Festival: Country’s Night to Rock (N) News at

10pm(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )Food Fighters “Annie Smith” (N)

America’s Got Talent “Quarter Finals 2” Twelve acts perform live. (N) (L)

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

WKNO * Mark Twain Finances force Clemens to lecture. Frontline “Generation

Like” Manor Born Waiting for

GodTavis Smiley

Newsline

WGN-A + ((6:30) } ››› Kill Bill: Vol. 2 (04, Action) Uma Thurman, David Carradine.

Manhattan (:10) Manhattan Frank’s attempt to save his team.

Parks/Rec-reat

WMAE , ,Mark Twain Finances force Clemens to lecture. Frontline “Generation

Like” Tavis Smiley

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `Family Guy Brooklyn

NineNew Girl Mindy

ProjectFox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13

NewsTMZ (N) Dish Nation

(N)Access Hollyw’d

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

WPIX :Arrow “Suicide Squad” Supernatural “Thinman” PIX11 News at Ten (N) Seinfeld The Arsenio Hall Show Seinfeld

MAX 0 3(6:15) } ››› The Patriot (00, War) Mel Gibson, Heath Ledger.

} › Identity Thief (13) Jason Bateman. A victim of identity theft fights back.

Topless Prophet

} The Rock (96)

SHOW 2 Masters of Sex “Dirty Jobs”

Ray Donovan Abby makes a new friend.

Masters of Sex “Dirty Jobs”

Ray Donovan Abby makes a new friend.

} ›› Soul Plane (04) Kevin Hart.

HBO 4 1(5:15) } The Dark Knight Rises (12)

The Leftovers “Guest” Hard Knocks: Training Camp

The Leftovers “Guest” True Blood “May Be the Last Time”

MTV 5 2 Girl Code Girl Code Finding Carter Finding Carter (N) Virgin Territory } ›› Beastly

ESPN 7 ?2014 World Series of Poker

2014 World Series of Poker

Baseball Tonight (N) (Live)

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

SPIKE 8 5} ›› Shooter (07, Suspense) Mark Wahlberg. A wounded sniper plots re-venge against those who betrayed him.

} ›› The Losers (10) Elite commandos hunt the man who betrayed them.

USA : 8Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

Royal Pains “Oh, M. G.” (N)

(:01) Covert Affairs (N) Modern Family

Modern Family

(:02) Royal Pains “Oh, M. G.”

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

DISC < DDeadliest Catch: The Bait (N)

Deadliest Catch An arctic hurricane strikes the fleet. (N)

(:04) Deadliest Catch An arctic hurricane strikes the fleet.

A&E > Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Shipping Wars (N)

Shipping Wars (N)

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

FSSO ? 4Bull Riding: Champi-onship.

West Coast Customs Auto Racing Cycling: Tour of Utah. (N)

Bull Riding: Champi-onship.

BET @ F (6:00) } ›› Just Wright (10) Common Apollo Live (N) Apollo Live Wendy Williams

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

HuntersHunters Int’l

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

E! D Botched Botched RichKids RichKids Chelsea E! News Chelsea

HIST E BCounting Cars

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Counting Cars (N)

Dark Horse Dark Horse (:03) Biker Battleground Phoenix (N)

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Counting Cars

ESPN2 F @ Little League Baseball NFL Live (N) Olbermann (N) Olbermann

TLC G Next Great Baker Next Great Baker (N) Buddy’s Bakery Res-

cue (N) Next Great Baker Buddy’s Bakery Rescue

FOOD H Chopped “Good Chop, Bad Chop?”

Chopped “Ambitious Amateurs”

Chopped (N) Chopped “Circus Spec-tacular”

Chopped “Ambitious Amateurs”

INSP I The Waltons JAG “Secrets” Matlock Matlock Medicine Woman

LIFE J =Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms “Kiss or

Get off the Pot”Raising Asia (N)

Raising Asia (N)

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

AMC N 0} ›› Jaws 2 (78) Roy Scheider. Tourist town and police chief dread huge white shark at beach.

} ›› Jaws 2 (78) Roy Scheider. Tourist town and police chief dread huge white shark at beach.

FAM O <Pretty Little Liars “March of Crimes”

Chasing Life (N) Pretty Little Liars “March of Crimes”

The 700 Club Chasing Life

TCM P } ››› Ball of Fire A nightclub singer helps a scholar research American slang.

} ››› Night Nurse (31) Barbara Stanwyck, Ben Lyon.

} ›› There’s Always Tomorrow Barbara Stanwyck.

TNT Q ARizzoli & Isles “Boston Keltic”

Rizzoli & Isles “Lost & Found” (N)

(:01) Perception “Pro-logue” (N)

(:02) Rizzoli & Isles “Lost & Found”

(:03) Perception “Pro-logue”

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Sullivan & Son

Big Bang Theory

Conan (N) Sullivan & Son

Conan

GAME S The Chase (N) The Chase FamFeud FamFeud The Chase Baggage Baggage TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Andy Griffith Show King King King King Cleve Jen. Love-Raymond FS1 Z Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge MLB Whiparound FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N)

FX Æ ;(6:30) } ›› Safe House (12, Action) Denzel Washington, Ryan Reynolds.

Tyrant “Preventative Medicine” (N)

(:06) Tyrant “Preventative Medicine”

(:11) The Bridge “The Acorn”

OUT Ø Hit List Nugent Hunting Driven Thirteen Journey Hunting MRA Hunting Thirteen NBCS ∞ WSOF 11 World Series of Fighting 10 World Series of Fighting 9 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 ≥ Shark Feeding Bear Feeding Feeding Frenzy Shark Feeding Bear Feeding

HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The House”

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LAustin & Ally

Girl Meets Lemonade Mouth Bridgit Mendler. Five high-school students form a music group.

Jessie Dog With a Blog

Good-Charlie

Good-Charlie

SYFY EFace Off “American Gangster”

Face Off “Ancient Aliens” (N)

Wil Whea-ton

Wil Whea-ton

Face Off “Ancient Aliens” Wil Whea-ton

Wil Whea-ton

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

The Daily Corinthian family of quality magazines continues with the presentation of Crossroads

Magazine Homes on Aug. 30.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Healthy rest is the order of the day. Often you don’t give yourself permission to rest as much as you really need to, but make the commitment. Go to bed early.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). It’s easier to over-deliver if you under-promise. That’s your ticket to impressing the powers that be in your life -- suggesting that something small is coming up and then delivering some-thing big.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You have some strong feel-ings locked inside you -- and that’s an excellent place for them today. Work it through on your own fi rst, as you’ll regret revealing too much.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). The only thing you should try to be better than is the most recent self that you were. Your colleagues and competitors don’t matter now. Don’t look sideways; look within.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). The

way you can help another per-son is not clear now, but you can love that person and love will fi nd the way, or perhaps love will be the way. Open your heart and pour your love.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’re likelier to believe the one searching for the answer than you are to believe the one who proclaims he has found it. Anyway, you want to do your own research and will feel good about only the conclusions you come to on your own.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Your style is changing as you allow yourself to be infl uenced by what you see in magazines, in store windows and on people in the streets. You’ll be a trend-setter among your friends.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). If only you could unfollow peo-ple without unfriending them as you can on a Facebook feed. Alas, you’ll get too much infor-mation about certain people or hear news you care little about.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-

Dec. 21). Working on or out of your home will take up much of the day. Once you’re in the groove, you’ll notice what needs to be moved, cleaned up or reorganized to create an even more effi cient experi-ence.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). One small but important success will seem to pay for a hundred failures. This is real growth, and it’s all yours; it’s something that no one can take from you.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You may feel as though life is purposely knocking you off your center of gravity, but you are an expert at adjust-ing. You’ll fi nd a new way to stay up, move freely and even make a dance of this.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). When it’s time to decide, you will, and it will be settled. You won’t vacillate or worry. You won’t regret. You’ll have the strength of your convictions, and that’s that.

D E A R ABBY: What is the proto-col for nam-ing a baby after a de-ceased per-son?

If the name you want to use is a de-ceased fam-ily member’s name, do

we ask his next of kin for ap-proval?

Do we say nothing? Is it as-sumed that people who wish to use someone’s name when naming their child should seek permission (whether the per-son is living or dead)?

Obviously, some people will use the name regardless of being granted a blessing or not, but I’m wondering what is appropriate in this situation. -- PREGNANT IN ILLINOIS

DEAR PREGNANT: In the Jewish faith, it is traditional for a baby to be named for a de-ceased parent or grandparent -- or at least given a name with the same fi rst initial.

However, if the person who died was a child of a close rela-tive, I can see how that could be very painful for the parents who lost their child.

The appropriate thing to do would be to fi rst have a con-versation with the surviving

family member(s) to be sure it will be considered the honor it is intended to be and not open fresh wounds.

If it would cause pain, per-haps the expectant parents should consider making the name of the deceased their baby’s middle name instead of fi rst name.

DEAR ABBY: During my teens, I was diagnosed with depression and institutional-ized following a suicide at-tempt. Depression is some-thing I live with daily.

Unfortunately, my parents and siblings have a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy when it comes to anything that may stir up emotions.

I feel that it’s detrimental to my well-being.

My doctor has suggested cutting my family out of my life. Dealing with them gives me great anxiety.

My mother is a master ma-nipulator who denies my sui-cide attempt ever happened, and I’m afraid she will tell my extended family members (many of whom I have relation-ships with) that I have “aban-doned the family.”

No one outside my immedi-ate family knows about my depression or suicide attempt, and I feel I may be forced to reveal that very private part of my life in order to defend my

actions. I don’t know what to do. --

RELUCTANT TO REVEALDEAR RELUCTANT TO RE-

VEAL: I think you should follow your doctor’s advice and not be intimidated.

You have an illness -- de-pression -- that, according to the Centers for Disease Con-trol and Prevention, is shared by about 9 percent of our population. It is nothing to be ashamed of.

Because you’re afraid of what your mother will say, ex-plain to those relatives you feel close to what you need to do and the reasons for it.

I can’t guarantee that some of them won’t take sides, but I’m sure not all of them will.

Sadly, not all families are functional.

Not all parents are good par-ents, and some of them are toxic.

P.S. Because your struggle with depression is ongoing, I hope you are still under the care of a psychotherapist.

If you’re not, please consider it.

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

Tread carefully when naming baby after deceased relative

Page 11: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Whitfield NursiNg home, iNc

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301 Hwy. 72 East - Burnsville, MSPh. 427-8408

TIRE & EXHAUST & ALIGNMENT

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Dr. Joselp L. PrattDr. Amy B. DavisCayce Redding F.N.PCarla Bray F.N.P.121 Pratt Drive Suite 1ACorinth, Mississippi 38834Phone: 662-286-0088 Fax: 662-286-0067

1000 S. Harper Rd • Corinth, MS 662-286-5800

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916 Hwy. 45 SouthCorinth, MS 38834

REBECCA COLEMAN PHIPPS

Attorney & Counselor at Law605 Taylor St • P.O. Box 992

Corinth, MS 38835-992662-286-9211 • Fax 662-286-7003

www.corinthlawyer.com“Supporting Education”

1105 S. Cass StCorinth,

MS284-9500

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 • 11

Funeral Directors1313 3rd St • Corinth

662-286-6000

PO Box 1891 Corinth, MS662-286-3127 Fax 662-286-8111

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William W. Odom, [email protected]

404 Waldron St • 662-286-9311PO Box 1393 • Corinth, MS 38835-1393

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attOrneys at law

SMC RECYCLING2760 S. Harper • CorinthMon. - Fri. 8 am - 4 pm

Sat. 8 am - 11 amCall us for scrap pick-up.

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B & B CAMPER SALES604 Hwy 365 S - Burnsville MS

Sales • Service • PartsTues - Fri 8am - 4:30pm

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Certified Public AccountantsVICKI J. GANN, CPA

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Corinth, MS 38834Tel. (662) 286-7082 Fax (662) 286-3365

MORRIS CRUMTIRE CENTER

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Page 12: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Shorts

CMS Football

Any incoming seventh and eighth graders at Corinth Middle School that wish to play football need to turn in their physicals and receive equipment. Available dates are today and Wednesday from 4-6 p.m. at the fieldhouse. Practice will start Aug. 7. For more information call Ben Cow-art at 286-1000 or email [email protected]

 Softball Tryouts

The 8U softball travel team -- Sweet Heat --will be hosting tryouts on Aug. 9 at 10 a.m. on Field 1 at Crossroads Regional Park. Must not turn 9 before Dec. 31, 2014. For more info, contact Cory Holley (415-2149) or Teddy Mask (284-5600).

 Bowling League Meeting

The Ladies Tuesday Night Bowling League will meet on Tuesday, August 12 at 6:30 p.m. at Plaza Bowling Lanes to organize the fall league. League will begin on Tuesday, August 19. If you would like to bowl on a league, please come join us. If you need other information, please con-tact Plaza Lanes at 286-8105.

 HRAY Soccer

Registration for HRAY soccer it now open. Parent meeting will be Aug. 19 at 6:30 p.m. at the Middleton (Tenn.) Community Center. For more informa-tion contact Robert Browder at 731-212-0578.

 Whitehurst Memorial Tournament

The 14th Owen B. Whitehurst Memorial Golf Tournament is set for Aug. 30 at Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club. Cost is $60 for the four-person scramble, with proceeds awarded to area charities. Golf package includes tournament comfort color T-shirt and tote bag; 18 holes of golf with cart in-cluded, lunch and awards ceremony. Event begins with 9 a.m. shotgun start.

For more information call Mike Whitehurst 662-415-5514 or Winners Circle 662-287-7678.

 Mississippi Record Book

The 19th annual Mississippi Base-ball Record Book is now available for purchase by mail. The book includes records of public schools and four-year colleges. The book is published by Diamonds By Smillie. Coach John Smillie has worked hard to publish a comprehensive record book to pro-mote the baseball history of public high schools and four-year colleges.

If you would to buy a copy of the book, you can send a $12 check to: Ms. Baseball Record Book; Diamonds By Smillie; 3159 Kendrick Road; Corinth, MS. 38834. For more informa-tion call 662-808-0013.

BY ADAM GORELetsGoICC.com

FULTON — After 10 years at ICC, Will Kollmeyer announced on Monday that he would be stepping down from his duties as Director of Sports Infor-mation and Media Relations to join the SEC Network as a broadcaster for Ole Miss athletics.

“I’ve enjoyed my 10 years at ICC, but this has been a lifelong dream of mine to do play-by-play at the Division I lev-el,” said Kollmeyer.

“It’s been a great 10 years working with Will and you couldn’t ask for a better person to work with,” said ICC Athletic Director Carrie Ball-William-son. “We really, really appreciate the excellent work he’s done over those years.” The Madison, Wisconsin na-tive came to ICC after 20-plus years as Sports Director at WTVA and WCBI and has broadcast nearly 700 games while at Itawamba Community Col-lege.

“I appreciate the opportunity the SEC Network and Ole Miss is giving me to pursue my dreams,” said Koll-meyer. “I equally appreciate all the friendships and camaraderie I’ve made at ICC and throughout the MACJC.”

Kollmeyer was only 17 when he broadcast his fi rst college football game on the radio. His career high-lights include an internship with CNN Sports in Atlanta, halftime reports for the JP SEC Game of the Week, former Heisman and Wooden Award voter, and in 20 of his 21 years in broadcast-ing he received an AP award in an-choring and/or reporting.

Kollmeyerleaving ICC forSEC Network

The Associated PressThe Southeastern Confer-

ence fi nally got knocked off the mountaintop.

Now, Alabama and other aspiring national contenders are trying to begin the climb back in a league that suddenly has a fresh feel.

Gone are marquee names like Jadeveon Clowney and Johnny Manziel and Heis-man Trophy fi nalists AJ Mc-Carron and Tre Mason.

Presumed top contenders like Alabama, South Carolina, Georgia and LSU are break-ing in new quarterbacks. Those factors — and the wild, unpredictable 2013 season — are giving other teams around the league hope.

After all, who could have predicted Missouri and Au-burn’s surprising runs to di-vision titles, Florida’s injury-fueled struggles or the SEC

West and Iron Bowl being settled on Auburn’s fi nal-play, 109-yard return of a missed fi eld goal?

“Auburn came back and was competing for a national

championship,” Florida cor-nerback Vernon Hargreaves III said. “You never know who’s going to be the best, and that’s why the SEC is the best conference in college football.”

But the best team belonged to Florida State, which ended the SEC’s seven-year nation-al title streak with a 34-31 win over Auburn at the Rose Bowl.

For all the SEC’s player turnover, there is stability on the sidelines. The only new coach is Vanderbilt’s Derek Mason.

Still, maybe it’s the year for Mississippi to break through or Florida to make a dramatic rebound like Auburn did a year ago after an 0-8 SEC sea-son. Or maybe Alabama, with three national titles in fi ve seasons, returns to the top.

It certainly wouldn’t be a

big surprise for Steve Spurrier to lead South Carolina to its fi rst SEC championship. The Gamecocks have posted three straight 11-2 records and are coming off a No. 4 fi nal rank-ing.

“Nobody picked Missouri and Auburn to win the divi-sions last year,” Spurrier said. “That’s why we play the game. We don’t know who’s going to win ‘em.”

Here are 5 things to watch during the upcoming SEC season:

CHANGING QBS: Seven of the top eight passers from last season are gone, including Texas A&M’s Manziel, Ala-bama’s McCarron and Geor-gia’s Aaron Murray. Only six teams have returning starters and one of those, Tennessee, carried over the competition

No Manziel? No Clowney? No problem

Please see SEC | 13

 BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

What’s being billed as an awesome racing month got underway Saturday at North Mississippi Motor Park Speedway.

Justin Glissen became a hometown winner and earned his fi rst feature win by winning the eight-strong Mod Street event at the fast-est high bank track in North Mississippi.

Thirty-three cars took part in a combined fi ve events. Vacations, anniversaries and competition in the TNR big race keep a lot of limited late model racers out of Satur-

day’s event.Other Saturday night win-

ners included: Greg Thomas in Outlaw, Roy Bedwell in Pure Street, Hunter Burcham in 602/Stock Late Model and Joe Reaves in Limited Late Model.

The eventful August sched-ule continues Saturday with a $500 Pure Street event. The rest of the month will feature a Powder Puff Race on Aug. 16, the $2,000 Limited Late Model/604 competition on Aug. 23 and the 602/Stock Late Model race on Aug. 30, which will see the winner earn $1,000.

Saturday’s results included:

 North Mississippi Motor Park Speedway

The Associated PressEAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.

— New York Giants running back David Wilson’s NFL ca-reer is over after two seasons because of a neck injury.

The 23-year-old Wilson was told by doctors Monday that he risked more serious problems if he kept playing.

He underwent fusion sur-gery to repair vertebrae and a herniated disk in his neck in January. Then at practice last Tuesday, Wilson caught

a pass and ran with his head down into the back of an of-fensive lineman, a hit that caused numbness in his hands and lower extremities.

He missed the fi nal 11 games last season after being diagnosed with spinal steno-sis, a narrowing of the spinal cord.

“I don’t want anybody to feel sorry for me, or pity me,” he said in a statement re-leased by the team.

“I lived my dream. A lot of

people only get to dream their dream. I lived that dream. Now I have a chance to dream another dream and live that, too.”

Wilson was drafted in the fi rst round, 32nd overall, out of Virginia Tech in 2012. As a rookie, he rushed for 358 yards and scored four touch-downs while making his mark as a kick returner.

Wilson led the NFL with 1,533 kickoff return yards, a team record.

But he got off to a slow start last season before the injury.

Wilson’s condition is not expected to require additional surgery or therapy.

Wilson met Monday morn-ing with Dr. Russell Warren, the team’s physician, and Dr. Frank Cammisa, the chief of spine service at New York’s Hospital for Special Surgery. Cammisa performed the spi-nal fusion surgery on Wilson.

They told him he needed to stop playing football.

Giants’ RB Wilson’s career ends due to neck injury

The Associated PressTUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Lane

Kiffi n’s job description these days is much more about the playbook than the podium.

The sometimes outspoken former Southern California head coach is working mostly behind the scenes as Nick Saban’s offensive coordina-tor at Alabama, where there’s zero question about who’s in

charge. It lets Kiffi n focus on football and fi nding a starting quarterback, but he did get a little reminder from his new boss before speaking to Ala-bama reporters Sunday for the fi rst time at the Crimson Tide’s media day.

“To me, there would be no other option to come in and not try to learn everything that you can from Nick Sa-

ban,” Kiffi n said. “I’m sitting here every day learning stuff from him. We already met this morning so he made sure I didn’t say anything to get on the (TV news) ticker.”

He steered clear of any controversy, talking about studying “the process” from a coach who’s won four na-tional titles, the prospect of being a head coach again and

returning to Tennessee for the Oct. 25 game.

Kiffi n is only 39, after all. He’s putting another entry on a resume that already includes being head coach at USC, the NFL’s Oakland Raiders and Tide rival Ten-nessee for the 2009 season. The Tide visits the Volunteers

Kiffin enjoying behind-the-scenes work

Please see KIFFIN | 13

Predicted order of finish:

EAST 1. South Carolina 2. Georgia 3. Florida 4. Missouri 5. Tennessee 6. Vanderbilt 7. Kentucky

WEST

1. Alabama 2. Auburn 3. LSU 4. Mississippi 5. Mississippi State 6. Texas A&M 7. Arkansas

Title game winner: Alabama

Photo by Treassa Wilbanks

Justin Glissen picked up his first feature win by outlasting and outdistancing seven other cars in Saturday’s Mod Street race. 

Mod Street 8 cars

1. 3 Justin Glissen2. T27 Trina Nelms3. 88 Billy Miller4. 74 Nick Stoop5. 28 Joey Bain6. 77 Brandon Whitley7. 67 Bronson Ganger8. 313 Woody Woodruff

 

602/Stock Late Model 8 cars

1. 22 Hunter Burcham2. 34 Jonathan Pridmore3. 7 Todd Talley4. 12 Joey Maxwell5. 19 Hunter Whaley6. B1jr Travis Bobo7. 33 Steve Sircy8. 26 Brandon Briggs

Outlaw 7 cars

1. 88 Greg Thomas2. 77 Billy Thompson3. 7D Todd Robinson4. 1 Ricky Voyles5. 1 Jonathan Pridmore6. 78 Mike Jones dnf7. J77 John Tigner, DNS

 Pure Street 7 cars

1. C8 Roy Bedwell2. 4B Nathan Bedwell3. 34 Wesley Bedwell4. 62 Scott Glissen5. M5 Tadpole Matlock6. 79 Colton Bain7. 299 Larry Duncan

  Limited Late Model/604 3 cars

1. 12 Joe Reaves2. 58 Creighton Nelms3. 55m Ben Morrow

Page 13: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

ScoreboardBaseball

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBBaltimore 62 48 .564 —Toronto 60 53 .531 3½New York 57 53 .518 5Tampa Bay 54 57 .486 8½Boston 49 62 .441 13½

Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 61 47 .565 —Kansas City 57 53 .518 5Cleveland 56 55 .505 6½Chicago 54 58 .482 9Minnesota 50 60 .455 12

West Division W L Pct GBOakland 67 43 .609 —Los Angeles 66 44 .600 1Seattle 57 54 .514 10½Houston 47 65 .420 21Texas 43 68 .387 24½

Sunday’s GamesCleveland 4, Texas 3, 12 inningsDetroit 4, Colorado 0Baltimore 1, Seattle 0L.A. Angels 7, Tampa Bay 5Minnesota 16, Chicago White Sox 3Houston 6, Toronto 1Kansas City 4, Oakland 2N.Y. Yankees 8, Boston 7

Monday’s GamesBaltimore at Washington, Cleveland 7, Cincinnati 1 Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, Texas at Chicago White Sox, Tampa Bay at Oakland,L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers,

Today’s GamesCincinnati (Cueto 12-6) at Cleveland

(Tomlin 5-7), 7:05 p.m.Detroit (Price 11-8) at N.Y. Yankees (Ku-

roda 7-7), 7:05 p.m.Houston (Keuchel 10-7) at Philadelphia

(K.Kendrick 5-11), 7:05 p.m.Baltimore (B.Norris 8-7) at Toronto

(Buehrle 11-7), 7:07 p.m.San Diego (Hahn 7-2) at Minnesota

(P.Hughes 10-8), 8:10 p.m.Texas (Lewis 7-8) at Chicago White Sox

(Joh.Danks 9-6), 8:10 p.m.Boston (R.De La Rosa 3-4) at St. Louis

(Lynn 11-8), 8:15 p.m.Kansas City (D.Duffy 5-10) at Arizona

(Miley 7-7), 9:40 p.m.Tampa Bay (Smyly 6-9) at Oakland

(Hammel 0-4), 10:05 p.m.Atlanta (A.Wood 7-8) at Seattle

(F.Hernandez 11-3), 10:10 p.m.L.A. Angels (H.Santiago 3-7) at L.A.

Dodgers (Kershaw 13-2), 10:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games

San Diego at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.Texas at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m.Tampa Bay at Oakland, 3:35 p.m.Atlanta at Seattle, 3:40 p.m.Detroit at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.Houston at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.Baltimore at Toronto, 7:07 p.m.Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.Boston at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.Kansas City at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:05 p.m.

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBWashington 60 49 .550 —Atlanta 58 54 .518 3½Miami 54 57 .486 7New York 53 59 .473 8½Philadelphia 49 63 .438 12½

Central Division W L Pct GBMilwaukee 61 51 .545 —St. Louis 59 51 .536 1

Pittsburgh 59 52 .532 1½Cincinnati 56 55 .505 4½Chicago 47 63 .427 13

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 63 49 .563 —San Francisco 61 51 .545 2San Diego 51 60 .459 11½Arizona 49 63 .438 14Colorado 44 67 .396 18½

Sunday’s GamesDetroit 4, Colorado 0Cincinnati 7, Miami 3San Francisco 9, N.Y. Mets 0Washington 4, Philadelphia 0St. Louis 3, Milwaukee 2San Diego 4, Atlanta 3, 10 inningsChicago Cubs 7, L.A. Dodgers 3Arizona 3, Pittsburgh 2, 10 innings

Monday’s GamesSan Francisco 4, N.Y. Mets 3Baltimore at Washington, Cincinnati at Cleveland,L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers,

Today’s GamesCincinnati (Cueto 12-6) at Cleveland

(Tomlin 5-7), 7:05 p.m.Houston (Keuchel 10-7) at Philadelphia

(K.Kendrick 5-11), 7:05 p.m.Miami (Hand 2-3) at Pittsburgh (Morton

5-10), 7:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Za.Wheeler 6-8) at Washing-

ton (G.Gonzalez 6-7), 7:05 p.m.San Diego (Hahn 7-2) at Minnesota

(P.Hughes 10-8), 8:10 p.m.San Francisco (Lincecum 9-7) at Mil-

waukee (J.Nelson 1-2), 8:10 p.m.Boston (R.De La Rosa 3-4) at St. Louis

(Lynn 11-8), 8:15 p.m.Chicago Cubs (T.Wood 7-9) at Colorado

(B.Anderson 1-3), 8:40 p.m.Kansas City (D.Duffy 5-10) at Arizona

(Miley 7-7), 9:40 p.m.Atlanta (A.Wood 7-8) at Seattle

(F.Hernandez 11-3), 10:10 p.m.L.A. Angels (H.Santiago 3-7) at L.A.

Dodgers (Kershaw 13-2), 10:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games

San Diego at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.Atlanta at Seattle, 3:40 p.m.Houston at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.Miami at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Washington, 7:05 p.m.Cleveland at Cincinnati, 7:10 p.m.San Francisco at Milwaukee, 8:10 p.m.Boston at St. Louis, 8:15 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.Kansas City at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 10:05

p.m.

Football

AMERICAN CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAMiami 0 0 0 .000 0 0New England 0 0 0 .000 0 0N.Y. Jets 0 0 0 .000 0 0Buffalo 0 1 0 .000 13 17

South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 0 0 0 .000 0 0Indianapolis 0 0 0 .000 0 0Jacksonville 0 0 0 .000 0 0Tennessee 0 0 0 .000 0 0

North W L T Pct PF PABaltimore 0 0 0 .000 0 0Cincinnati 0 0 0 .000 0 0Cleveland 0 0 0 .000 0 0Pittsburgh 0 0 0 .000 0 0

West W L T Pct PF PADenver 0 0 0 .000 0 0Kansas City 0 0 0 .000 0 0Oakland 0 0 0 .000 0 0San Diego 0 0 0 .000 0 0

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAN.Y. Giants 1 0 0 1.000 17 13Dallas 0 0 0 .000 0 0Philadelphia 0 0 0 .000 0 0Washington 0 0 0 .000 0 0

South W L T Pct PF PAAtlanta 0 0 0 .000 0 0Carolina 0 0 0 .000 0 0New Orleans 0 0 0 .000 0 0Tampa Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0

North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 0 0 0 .000 0 0Detroit 0 0 0 .000 0 0Green Bay 0 0 0 .000 0 0Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 0 0

West W L T Pct PF PAArizona 0 0 0 .000 0 0San Francisco 0 0 0 .000 0 0Seattle 0 0 0 .000 0 0St. Louis 0 0 0 .000 0 0

NFL Preseason ScheduleSunday, Aug. 3

N.Y. Giants 17, Buffalo 13WEEK 1

Thursday, Aug. 7Indianapolis at NY Jets, 6 p.m.San Francisco at Baltimore, 6:30 p.m.New England at Washington, 6:30 p.m.Cincinnati at Kansas City, 7 p.m.Seattle at Denver, 8 p.m.Dallas at San Diego, 9 p.m.

Friday, Aug. 8Miami at Atlanta, 6 p.m.Buffalo at Carolina, 6:30 p.m.Tampa Bay at Jacksonville, 6:30 p.m.Philadelphia at Chicago, 7 p.m.Oakland at Minnesota, 7 p.m.New Orleans at St. Louis, 7 p.m.

Saturday, Aug. 9Cleveland at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.Pittsburgh at NY Giants, 6:30 p.m.Houston at Arizona, 6:30 p.m.Green Bay at Tennessee, 7 p.m.

WEEK 2Thursday, Aug. 14

Jacksonville at Chicago, 7 p.m. (ESPN)Friday, Aug. 15

Philadelphia at New England, 6:30 p.m.

Tennessee at New Orleans, 7 p.m.Detroit at Oakland, 9 p.m.San Diego at Seattle, 9 p.m.

Saturday, Aug. 16Green Bay at St. Louis, 3 p.m.NY Jets at Cincinnati, 6 p.m.Baltimore at Dallas, 6 p.m.NY Giants at Indianapolis, 6 p.m.Buffalo at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.Miami at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m.Atlanta at Houston, 7 p.m.Arizona at Minnesota, 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Aug. 17Denver at San Francisco, 3 p.m.Kansas City at Carolina, 7 p.m. (FOX)Monday, Aug. 18Cleveland at Washington, 7 p.m.

(ESPN)WEEK 3

Thursday, Aug. 21Pittsburgh at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m.

Friday, Aug. 22Oakland at Green Bay, 7 p.m. (CBS)Jacksonville at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.Carolina at New England, 6:30 p.m.NY Giants at NY Jets, 6:30 p.m.Chicago at Seattle, 9 p.m.

Saturday, Aug. 23Tampa Bay at Buffalo, 3:30 p.m.Dallas at Miami, 6 p.m.Tennessee at Atlanta, 6 p.m.Washington at Baltimore, 6:30 p.m.New Orleans at Indianapolis, 7 p.m.

(CBS)

St. Louis at Cleveland, 7 p.m.Minnesota at Kansas City, 7 p.m.Houston at Denver, 8 p.m.

Sunday, Aug. 24San Diego at San Francisco, 3 p.m.

(FOX)Cincinnati at Arizona, 7 p.m. (NBC)

WEEK 4Thursday, Aug. 28

Atlanta at Jacksonville, 5 p.m.Detroit at Buffalo, 6 p.m.Indianapolis at Cincinnati, 6 p.m.Kansas City at Green Bay, 6 p.m.St. Louis at Miami, 6 p.m.NY Jets at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.New England at NY Giants, 6:30 p.m.Carolina at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m.Washington at Tampa Bay, 6:30 p.m.Chicago at Cleveland, 7 p.m.Denver at Dallas, 7 p.m.San Francisco at Houston, 7 p.m.Baltimore at New Orleans, 7 p.m.Minnesota at Tennessee, 7 p.m.Seattle at Oakland, 9 p.m.Arizona at San Diego, 9 p.m.

Transactions

Monday’s Deals

BASEBALLAmerican League

BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned RHP Ryan Webb to Norfolk (IL). Sent RHP Ub-aldo Jimenez to Norfolk for a rehab as-signment.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Optioned RHP Taylor Thompson to Charlotte (IL). Se-lected the contract of RHP Maikel Cleto from Charlotte.

CLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned RHP Zach McAllister to Columbus (IL).

HOUSTON ASTROS — Sent OF George Springer to Quad Cities (MWL) for a rehab assignment.

KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Assigned C Brett Hayes outright to Omaha (PCL).

MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned LHP Logan Darnell to Rochester (IL). Claimed OF Jordan Schafer off waivers from At-lanta.

TAMPA BAY RAYS — Released LHP Erik Bedard and RHP Juan Carlos Oviedo. Sent 2B Tim Beckham to Charlotte (IL) for a rehab assignment.

TEXAS RANGERS — Sent LHP Derek Holland to Round Rock (PCL) for a rehab assignment. Placed C Chris Gimenez on paternity leave.

TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Assigned OF Cole Gillespie outright to Buffalo (IL).

National LeagueARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Sent OF

A.J. Pollock to Reno (PCL) for a rehab as-signment.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Sent LHP Wei-Chung Wang to the AZL Brewers for a rehab assignment.

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Sent INF Nick Noonan outright to Fresno (PCL).

WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Placed OF Nate McLouth on the 15-day DL, ret-roactive to Saturday. Recalled OF Steven Souza Jr. from Syracuse (IL).

American AssociationAMARILLO SOX — Signed LHP Ryan

Rogers and INF Christian Figueroa. Re-leased LHP Seth Lintz.

FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Signed LHP Shawn O’Neill.

GRAND PRAIRIE AIRHOGS — Signed LHP Thomas Keeling.

KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Released LHP Rick Zagone.

LINCOLN SALTDOGS — Released INF Kevin Howard.

WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Released RHP Chandler Barnard.

13 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, August 5, 2014

SEC

KIFFIN

The Associated PressLOUISVILLE, Ky. — Joe

LaCava walked nearly ev-ery blade of grass on the 18th green at Valhalla Golf Club, jotting notes in his yardage book after step-ping off the distances from every edge of the green to every possible pin posi-tion. It was just like any other Monday at a major.

The caddie just didn’t know whether any of this information would be use-ful in the PGA Champion-ship. LaCava was awaiting word on whether his boss — Tiger Woods — would be healthy enough to play the fi nal major of the year.

“I’m optimistic,” LaCa-va said after he fi nished charting the entire golf course. “I’m hoping he plays.

So I’m just doing what-ever work I would normal-ly do.”

The caddie was at Val-halla. So was his car, a sil-ver SUV parked in the spot assigned to the four-time major champion.

As for Woods?Stay tuned. His agent,

Mark Steinberg at Excel Sports Management, said in an email that Monday would be too early for doctors to decide wheth-er Woods could or even should try to play this week after another back injury.

The PGA of America said that Woods would not have his previously scheduled news confer-ence Tuesday morning. It did not provide additional details.

Woods took another turn toward an uncertain future when he withdrew after eight holes and one fi nal shot Sunday at the Bridgestone Invitational. Before leaving Firestone, he said he jarred his back when he hopped into a deep bunker after playing a shot on the par-5 second hole from an awkward lie off the slope above the sand.

“It’s just the whole lower back,” Woods said. “I don’t know what happened.”

Making the picture look even bleaker was the tim-ing. Woods had back sur-gery March 31 to alleviate the pain from a pinched nerve.

The Bridgestone Invita-tional was only his third tournament since return-

ing from a three-month absence. And there he went again, riding off the golf course in a cart, strug-gling to even remove his shoes before LaCava drove him to the airport for a fl ight back to Florida for evaluation.

“Obviously, I feel bad for him,” Rory McIlroy told the BBC on Monday. “The game of golf really needs Tiger. He’s had a few withdrawals the past couple of years. I think the fi rst thing is just to get fi t and 100 percent healthy, even if that means taking the year off and coming back next year ready to play golf.”

If he doesn’t play the PGA Championship, his season indeed would be over.

Tiger watch on for final major of the year

into preseason camp. Freshmen are in the mix at Texas A&M, Kentucky and LSU, and Florida State transfer Jacob Coker is the odds-on fa-vorite to win the Crim-son Tide’s starting job. Plus, Auburn will start Jeremy Johnson in the opener against Arkansas after Nick Marshall’s off-season citation for mari-juana possession.

SPLASHY HIRES: Despite the lack of head coaching turnover, Georgia and Alabama made big splashes hiring coordinators. Alabama landed former Tennes-see, Southern California and Oakland Raiders head coach Lane Kiffi n to run an offense that’s loaded at running back and wide receiver. Geor-gia lured Jeremy Pruitt away from national champion Florida State to improve a defense that was middle of the pack. The Bulldogs also have replaced the other three defensive assistants.

FLORIDA’S HOPES: Coach Will Muschamp acknowledged at SEC media days that “there will be a lot of chatter about hot seat business” after Florida’s fi rst los-ing season since 1979. Chances are there won’t be a repeat of the injury-plagued 2013 season,

though. And quarter-back Jeff Driskel returns from a broken leg with a new offensive coordina-tor in Kurt Roper, who came over from Duke. The Gators could be the SEC’s most likely can-didate for a big turn-around a la Auburn.

FRESH FACES: All those early departures for the NFL gives more freshmen shots at mak-ing early impacts. LSU tailback Leonard Four-nette was the nation’s consensus top prospect, and fi gures to carve a signifi cant role in the backfi eld. Top quarter-back prospect Kyle Al-len could claim Texas A&M’s starting job. At Alabama, Cam Robin-son is the front-runner to start at left tackle and Tony Brown is compet-ing for one of the corner-back spots.

EARLY SHOW-DOWNS: Opening week could give a pretty fair idea of where teams stand. Texas A&M and South Carolina get the SEC season started on Aug. 28 in what gives the SEC Network a splashy debut. They’ve never played each other before. Alabama opens against West Virginia two days later, when Georgia also faces Clem-son, LSU plays Wiscon-sin and Mississippi goes against Boise State.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

on Oct. 25.“Took a long time for

the Knoxville question,” Kiffi n said, adding that his year there was great and “the people were phenomenal.”

Kiffi n was fi red fi ve games into last season at USC, where he was 28-15 in three-plus sea-sons. He said he’d talked to NFL teams about be-coming an assistant but jumped at the chance to work under Saban in January, with a three-year, $2.074 million contract.

Kiffi n spent eight days in Tuscaloosa during Sugar Bowl preparation visiting with the Ala-bama staff and observ-ing the offense. The job opened up when Doug Nussmeier left for the same position at Michi-gan.

Kiffi n said the decision was an easy one.

“I just wanted a job

where I can be learn-ing and growing and I can’t imagine a bet-ter place in the NFL or college to go and learn from someone who has been so successful and someone that teaches his coaches,” Kiffi n said. “It’s one thing to go to a successful head coach who doesn’t have a lot of meetings and just kind of runs his own deal.

“Coach Saban teaches his coaches every single day about what he wants and the way he expects things to be done and how you can improve and helps his coaches grow, which is why he’s had so many assistant coaches go on to be so successful.”

The Trojans averaged 49.1 points and 579.8 yards per game when he was offensive coordina-tor from 2005-06.

Now, he’s presiding over a quarterback com-petition between Blake Sims and Florida State transfer Jacob Coker.

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 12

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

to Law Professionals

Odom and Allred, P.A.Attorneys at Law

404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS _________________________________________

662-286-9311William W. Odom, Jr. Rhonda N. AllredAttorney at Law Attorney at [email protected] [email protected]___________________________________________

(Payment Plans available)

Serving NortheastMississippi’s legal needs...

John O. WindsorAttorney at Law

Call for an Appointment:662-872-0121 (local)

401 E. Waldron St.Corinth, MS

• Bankruptcy• Criminal Defense• Personal Injury• Wills & Estates• Real Estate

ContactSkylar

McCrimonat

662-287-6111to advertise

yourLaw Firm

on thispage.

Page 14: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

14 • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

HOMES FOR SALE0710

2 Story Brick3 or 4 Bedroom,

2.5 BathLiving Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Den,

Equipment Building, 2 car garage

Michie, Melvin Qualls Road 7 Miles from

Corinth, 19 Miles from Pickwick

$185,000Call: 662-286-7046

CHOOSE YOUR LIFESTYLE.....

IN TOWN: Live on Pine Road

4 Bed, 3 Bath, $139,900

Call Joyce 662-279-3679

IN THE COUNTRY: Bring your horse & move

to CR700.

3 Bed, 2 Bath,

4+ Acres $129,900.

Call Joyce 662-279-3679

3BR 2 Bath

7+ Acres & Pond

$84,900

Call Wesley 662279-2490

RESORT LIVING:Live where you play at Shiloh Ridge.

Several lots to choose from.

Call April 662-279-2490

$24,500.2002

Doublewide80' X 28'

2200 sq. ft.4 BR, 2 Bath,

FireplaceVery Nice, Must

be Moved.

Located at 12, CR 1451

Booneville

Family Financial Srvc.662-665-7976

409 CR 3063BR/2BA, 1548 sqft,

Vaulted & Tray Ceilings,Large open living space,2 car carport, plenty of

storage,Privacy fenced

backyard, Quiet and peaceful cul-de-sac,

Fresh paint, very clean, stainless steel

appliances$95,000

662-643-3467 or 662-415-1611

REDUCED

3000 Square Ft. Metal Building

Approx. 3 Acres1500 sq. ft. Shop with Bath

plus1500 sq. ft. 2 Story Apt.3 BR, 2 Bath, Kit, Dining,

LR & Utility Rm.

CR 700$95,000.Call 662-396-2114

or 415-0084

438 CR 127 Tishomingo NLY 5 year old custom built

beautiful 3 bed room 2 full bath home has central heat and air, heated and cooled double car

garage, 12x24 storage building, open fl oor plan, large master bed room, kitchen with lots of cabinets, sitting on 6.78 acres, 6 miles from Iuka, and close to

three parks.$145,000

162 Hwy 356 Priced to sale! 3 Bedroom 2 Bath brick home with 1 acre, located on HWY 356 in Rienzi

MS. This home has 1190 square foot with carport with new paint inside. This home is currently rented and would make a perfect investment

property or a nice home for a price that is cheaper than rent.

$56,000

711 Sara Lane Lake Front brick home with

Great location offering 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths

located on a dead end street a minute from Wall Mart. The back yard has Lake Frontage

on Lake Lindon, rod iron fence, concrete walk to lake, storage building with electric and air

conditioning, and located minutes from all the amenities

that the wonderful city of Corinth offers,dinning, shopping

$179,000

Lyle Murphy 2 CR 783, • Corinth, MS 38834

662-212-3796662-287-7707

United Country River City [email protected]://www.soldoncorinth.comRobert Hicks Principal Broker

REDUCED PRICES

Contact: Lyle Murphy Affi liate Broker/ Sales Specialist for

IMMEDIATE assistance on these properties and Many more!

Interested in selling? Don’t settle for ordinary, CALL LYLE MURPHY

NOW FOR EXTRAORDINARY!!!

308 Nelson Street, Corinth, MS

2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Very nice Lot with

Storm Shelter. Great Rent House or 1st

time buyer.$15,000

Family Financial Services

662-665-7976

Beautiful, quiet country setting! Large tri-level home

on 2 acres. Apprx. 3600 sqft heated. 4-5 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal living and

dining room, and large fi nished shop. 2 Miles off HWY 45 S at Biggersville. 8 CR 522. Biggersville or

Kossuth schools. (8 Miles to Corinth Walmart, 12 Miles to Booneville). There is an

additional 5 acres that can be purchased with the adjoining

property. Asking $150,000. OFFERS WANTED!!

Call 662-284-5379 for an appointment.

Lake house for saleon the beautiful

Tennessee River, 14 miles west of Florence. 100ft

waterfront, open fl oorplan,2 bedrooms, 1 bath, boat ramp & pier. $249,900615 Sunset Beach Road

Florence, AL, 35630.

256-764-6943

For more information callBailey Williams Realty at

662-286-2255 or visitwww.corinthhomes.com

Open House Sunday, August 3

1 to 3 p.m.2209 Willow Road2211 Hickory Road

2108 Oak Lane

OPEN HOUSES

SOLD

LEGALS0955

TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OFSALE

WHEREAS, on April25, 2002, Gladys Hamp-ton & Efrem Hamptonexecuted a Deed ofTrust to T. Harris CollierIII, as Trustee for Trust-mark National Bank, Be-neficiary, which is re-corded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, MS, inBook 588 at Page 78;

WHEREAS, on June11, 2014, Trustmark Na-tional Bank substitutedJames Eldred Renfroeas Trustee in the afore-mentioned deed oftrust with this recor-ded as Instrument No.201402518;

WHEREAS, therebeing a default in theterms and conditions ofthe Deed of Trust andentire debt securedhaving been declared tobe due and payable inaccordance with itsterms, Trustmark Na-tional Bank, the holderof the debt has reques-ted the Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sellsaid land and propertypursuant to its terms inorder to raise the sumsdue, with attorney'sand trustee's fees, andexpenses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I,James Eldred Renfroe,Trustee for said Deed ofTrust, will on August 20,2014, offer for sale atpublic outcry, and sellwithin legal hours (be-ing between the hoursof 11:00 a.m., and 4:00p.m.) at the south maindoor of the AlcornCounty Courthouse inCorinth, MS, to thehighest and best bid-der for cash, the follow-ing described propertys i t u a t e d i n A l c o r nCounty, MS, to-wit ;

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to-wit: Begin-ning at the Northwestcorner of the Northw-est Quarter of Section10, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi ;thence run East 93 rods;thence run South 713feet to the Point of Be-ginning; Thence runSouth 73 degrees 17minutes East 299 feetalong a fence to theNorthwest corner ofthe A.C. Nelms prop-erty; Thence run Southalong a ROW of PineTrees 230 feet to an ironpin; thence run alongthe North side of OldHighway #72 North 88degrees 40 minutesWest 286.7 feet; Thencerun North along a fence310 feet to the Point ofBeginning, containing1.85 acres, more or less.

I will convey onlysuch title as is vested inme as Trustee, with nowarranties.

WITNESS my signa-ture this 21st day of Ju-ly, 2014.

JAMES ELDRED REN-FROE, Trustee

James Eldred Renfroe,648 Lakeland East Dr,Ste AFlowood, MS 39232601-932-1011

tc 4

7/29, 8/5, 8/12, 8/1914800

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

GULFCO OF MISSISSIPPI,LLC D/B/ATOWER LOAN OF COR-INTHPLAINTIFF

VS.

CITIFINANCIAL REAL ES-TATE SERVICES, INC;C I T I M O R T G A G E , I N C ;CITIFINANCIAL MORT-GAGE INC; AND ALL PER-SONS OR PARTIES, REALOR CORPORATE, HAVINGOR CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,PART OF THE SE 1/4 OFSECTION 30, TOWNSHIP2, RANGE 7, ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPIPARCEL #080930-0020and 080930-00201DEFENDANTS

CIVIL ACTION NO.2014-0363-02-L

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: ANY AND ALL PER-SONS OR PARTIES, REALOR CORPORATE, HAVINGOR CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,TITLE OR INTEREST INAND TO LAND LYING INPART OF THE SE 1/4 OFSECTION 30, TOWNSHIP2, RANGE 7, ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI,further known as PAR-CEL #080930-0020 and080930-00201. You havebeen made a Defend-ant in the suit filed int h i s C o u r t b y t h ePlaint i ff seeking toquiet title to the sub-ject property.

You are required tomail or hand deliver awritten response to theComplaint filed againstyou in this action toBRAD D. WILKINSON, At-torney for the Plaintiffwhose address is 511Keywood Circle, Flo-wood, MS 39232.

YOUR RESPONSEMUST BE MAILED OR DE-L IVERED NOT LATERTHAN THIRTY (30) DAYSAFTER THE 22ND DAY OFJULY, 2014, WHICH IS THEDATE OF PUBLICATIONOF THIS SUMMONS. IFYOUR RESPONSE IS NOTS O M A I L E D O R D E -LIVERED, A JUDGMENTBY DEFAULT WILL BEENTERED AGAINST YOUFOR THE MONEY OROTHER RELIEF DEMAN-DED IN THE COMPLAINT.

You must also filethe original of your re-sponse with the Clerkof this Court within areasonable time after-ward.

Issued under myhand and the Seal ofsaid Court, this the 26day of June, 2014.

CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPI

BY: KAREN DUNCAN, DC

3tc7/22, 7/29 & 8/5/2014

Brad Wilkinson, Esq.Wilkinson Law Firm511 Keywood CircleFlowood, MS 39232601-355-0005MSB# 10285

14799

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: ESTATE OFJERRY L. COPLAND,DECEASED

NO: 2014-0184-02

AMENDED NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters of Administrationhaving been granted on the 16day of June, 2014, by theChancery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to theundersigned upon the estateof Jerry L. Copeland, de-ceased, notice is hereby giv-en to all persons having claimsagainst said estate to presentthe same to the Clerk of thesaid Court for probate andregistration, according to law,within ninety (90) days fromthe date of first publication orthey will be forever barred.

This the 16 day of June,2014

PAUL COPELANDAdministrator

Greg E. Beard, P. A.Attorney at Law101 West College StreetP. O. Box 285Booneville, MS 38829662-720-8340

4tc7/15, 7/22, 7/29, 8/5/2014

14784

TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OFSALE

WHEREAS, on April25, 2002, Gladys Hamp-ton & Efrem Hamptonexecuted a Deed ofTrust to T. Harris CollierIII, as Trustee for Trust-mark National Bank, Be-neficiary, which is re-corded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, MS, inBook 588 at Page 78;

WHEREAS, on June11, 2014, Trustmark Na-tional Bank substitutedJames Eldred Renfroeas Trustee in the afore-mentioned deed oftrust with this recor-ded as Instrument No.201402518;

WHEREAS, therebeing a default in theterms and conditions ofthe Deed of Trust andentire debt securedhaving been declared tobe due and payable inaccordance with itsterms, Trustmark Na-tional Bank, the holderof the debt has reques-ted the Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sellsaid land and propertypursuant to its terms inorder to raise the sumsdue, with attorney'sand trustee's fees, andexpenses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I,James Eldred Renfroe,Trustee for said Deed ofTrust, will on August 20,2014, offer for sale atpublic outcry, and sellwithin legal hours (be-ing between the hoursof 11:00 a.m., and 4:00p.m.) at the south maindoor of the AlcornCounty Courthouse inCorinth, MS, to thehighest and best bid-der for cash, the follow-ing described propertys i t u a t e d i n A l c o r nCounty, MS, to-wit ;

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to-wit: Begin-ning at the Northwestcorner of the Northw-est Quarter of Section10, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi ;thence run East 93 rods;thence run South 713feet to the Point of Be-ginning; Thence runSouth 73 degrees 17minutes East 299 feetalong a fence to theNorthwest corner ofthe A.C. Nelms prop-erty; Thence run Southalong a ROW of PineTrees 230 feet to an ironpin; thence run alongthe North side of OldHighway #72 North 88degrees 40 minutesWest 286.7 feet; Thencerun North along a fence310 feet to the Point ofBeginning, containing1.85 acres, more or less.

I will convey onlysuch title as is vested inme as Trustee, with nowarranties.

WITNESS my signa-ture this 21st day of Ju-ly, 2014.

JAMES ELDRED REN-FROE, Trustee

James Eldred Renfroe,648 Lakeland East Dr,Ste AFlowood, MS 39232601-932-1011

tc 4

7/29, 8/5, 8/12, 8/1914800

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: ESTATE OF JERRYL. COPELAND, DECEASED

CAUSE NO.2014-0184-02-M

NOTICE TO UNKNOWNHEIRS

Notice is hereby giv-en to all unknown heirsat law of Jerry L. Cope-land that a Petition forLetters Administrationwas filed on April 4,2014, Amended DecreeAppointing Administrat-or was signed on June10, 2014 and filed onJune 13, 2014, and Let-ters of Administrationwere issued on June 16,2014.

You are not requiredto respond to this No-tice but may do so, toshow cause, if any youcan, in Cause No.: 2014-0184-02, wherein youare a Respondent, whyJohn Copeland andJerry Copeland shouldnot be declared thesole heirs-at- law ofJerry L. Copeland, de-ceased, pursuant toSection 91-1-27 of theMississippi Code, andwhy such other relief asprayed for should notbe granted. Said re-sponse should be sentto Greg E Beard, the at-torney for the Adminis-trator, whose address is101 West College Street,P . O . B o x 2 8 5 ,Booneville, MS 38829

You are summonedto appear and defendagainst the Petition,which was filed on April4, 2014, on the 25th dayof August, 2014, at 9:00o'clock a.m. at the Pren-tiss County Courthouse,Booneville, MS. In caseof your failure to reply ajudgment by defaultwill be entered againstyou finding that JohnCopeland and Jerry L.Copeland are the soleheirs-at law of Jerry L.Copeland, deceased.

You must also filethe original of your re-sponse with the Clerkof this Court within areasonable time after-ward.

PAUL COPELAND, AD-MINISTRATOR

4tc7 / 1 5 , 7 / 2 2 , 7 / 2 9 &8 / 5 / 2 0 1 4

#14785

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

GULFCO OF MISSISSIPPI,LLC D/B/ATOWER LOAN OF COR-INTHPLAINTIFF

VS.

CITIFINANCIAL REAL ES-TATE SERVICES, INC;C I T I M O R T G A G E , I N C ;CITIFINANCIAL MORT-GAGE INC; AND ALL PER-SONS OR PARTIES, REALOR CORPORATE, HAVINGOR CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,PART OF THE SE 1/4 OFSECTION 30, TOWNSHIP2, RANGE 7, ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPIPARCEL #080930-0020and 080930-00201DEFENDANTS

CIVIL ACTION NO.2014-0363-02-L

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: ANY AND ALL PER-SONS OR PARTIES, REALOR CORPORATE, HAVINGOR CLAIMING ANY RIGHT,TITLE OR INTEREST INAND TO LAND LYING INPART OF THE SE 1/4 OFSECTION 30, TOWNSHIP2, RANGE 7, ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI,further known as PAR-CEL #080930-0020 and080930-00201. You havebeen made a Defend-ant in the suit filed int h i s C o u r t b y t h ePlaint i ff seeking toquiet title to the sub-ject property.

You are required tomail or hand deliver awritten response to theComplaint filed againstyou in this action toBRAD D. WILKINSON, At-torney for the Plaintiffwhose address is 511Keywood Circle, Flo-wood, MS 39232.

YOUR RESPONSEMUST BE MAILED OR DE-L IVERED NOT LATERTHAN THIRTY (30) DAYSAFTER THE 22ND DAY OFJULY, 2014, WHICH IS THEDATE OF PUBLICATIONOF THIS SUMMONS. IFYOUR RESPONSE IS NOTS O M A I L E D O R D E -LIVERED, A JUDGMENTBY DEFAULT WILL BEENTERED AGAINST YOUFOR THE MONEY OROTHER RELIEF DEMAN-DED IN THE COMPLAINT.

You must also filethe original of your re-sponse with the Clerkof this Court within areasonable time after-ward.

Issued under myhand and the Seal ofsaid Court, this the 26day of June, 2014.

CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPI

BY: KAREN DUNCAN, DC

3tc7/22, 7/29 & 8/5/2014

Brad Wilkinson, Esq.Wilkinson Law Firm511 Keywood CircleFlowood, MS 39232601-355-0005MSB# 10285

14799

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

FLEETWOOD 16 x 80,Vaulted Ceil, 3/BR, 2/BA,new paint, carpet. Mustbe moved. 662-287-1757

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

MOBILE HOMES Whole-sale to the public, over50 units available, Single& Double wides, fromfixer uppers to move inready!! Call 662-401-1093

TRANSPORTATION

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: ESTATE OF JERRYL. COPELAND, DECEASED

CAUSE NO.2014-0184-02-M

NOTICE TO UNKNOWNHEIRS

Notice is hereby giv-en to all unknown heirsat law of Jerry L. Cope-land that a Petition forLetters Administrationwas filed on April 4,2014, Amended DecreeAppointing Administrat-or was signed on June10, 2014 and filed onJune 13, 2014, and Let-ters of Administrationwere issued on June 16,2014.

You are not requiredto respond to this No-tice but may do so, toshow cause, if any youcan, in Cause No.: 2014-0184-02, wherein youare a Respondent, whyJohn Copeland andJerry Copeland shouldnot be declared thesole heirs-at- law ofJerry L. Copeland, de-ceased, pursuant toSection 91-1-27 of theMississippi Code, andwhy such other relief asprayed for should notbe granted. Said re-sponse should be sentto Greg E Beard, the at-torney for the Adminis-trator, whose address is101 West College Street,P . O . B o x 2 8 5 ,Booneville, MS 38829

You are summonedto appear and defendagainst the Petition,which was filed on April4, 2014, on the 25th dayof August, 2014, at 9:00o'clock a.m. at the Pren-tiss County Courthouse,Booneville, MS. In caseof your failure to reply ajudgment by defaultwill be entered againstyou finding that JohnCopeland and Jerry L.Copeland are the soleheirs-at law of Jerry L.Copeland, deceased.

You must also filethe original of your re-sponse with the Clerkof this Court within areasonable time after-ward.

PAUL COPELAND, AD-MINISTRATOR

4tc7 / 1 5 , 7 / 2 2 , 7 / 2 9 &8 / 5 / 2 0 1 4

#14785

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

3 BD, 2BA, Liddon LakeRd, behind Jackson He-witt, newly remodeled-all new. $78,500. Call662-255-2626

*REDUCED*4005 IVY LANE

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.

Corinth School District

Call 662-808-0339

$134,500

This property is NOTfor rent or rent to

own

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.

PARTIALLY FURNISHEDhouse. CR 982, Iuka.Turn Pike Rd. 3 BR ce-dar. New gutters, C.A.,roof & crpt. 424-2133

DUPLEX/APTS07205 1 2 A W A L D R O N S t .DOWNTOWN LOFT APT.$700. Mo. 287-5557

MUSICAL MERCHANDISE0512

KAWAI FS 690 KEY-BOARD WITH STAND AND100 RHYTHM LIBRARY$50. 662-287-2357

ROWE JUKE BOX. $1800.CALL 662-415-0811

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT0521

BOLENS PUSH Mower,gave $200. Asking $100.Only been used 15 hrs.662-287-3632

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

2 WOODEN Rock ingChairs- $75.00 Each- 286-0128

ANTIQUE DOLL Buggy-$75.00- 286-0128

GOLDFISH POND PLANTS.$5. EACH. CALL 662-286-5216

MENS BLACK Converseall star hightop shoes,sz 13, like new, $30.00-286-5216

MENS BOWLING shoes,size 11, like new, $15.286-5216

PAIR OF Sony XplodCar/Truck Speakers, 4way 6x9, 270 Watts,Used very little, $30.00-287-9739

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.SINGER SEWING Ma-chine- 286-0128- $100.00

STATIONARY BIKE GREATCONDITION. $100. CALL662-397-1982

STEPHEN KING hardbackbooks, 9 total. Very nicecondition. Some 1ts edi-tions. $25- 287-9739

WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.

WHITE K ITCHENAIDEDishwasher, $100 Call662-287-8456

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

LOFT APT. 1 BR, $150 wk.util. incl. Corinth Area.Call 662-594-1860

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375/ $400 sec. de-posit + util, 284-7433.

HOMES FOR RENT0620

3329 CR100, 3 BR, 2 BAHome w/nice lot & 2 cargar. $800 mo. 287-5557

SALES0208PARTTIME SALESPERSON,Apply in Person.Nophone calls. Wroten'sHardware, 532 S Tate St.

ACCOUNTING0228CORINTH BUSINESS insearch of full time CPA.Experienced in corpor-ate taxation audits, fin-ancial planning, federal& state financial andlegal compliance, etc.Will serve as an adviserto management regard-ing tax and legal implic-ations of business de-cisions.Reply to Box 453c/o Daily Corinthian,P.O. Box 1800, CorinthMS 38835

GENERAL HELP0232CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.

TRUCKING0244DRIVER TRAINEE NEEDEDNOW! Learn to drive forWerner Enterprises.Earn $800 per week! Noexperience needed! CDL& job ready in 15 days!APPLY TODAY. 1-800-350-7364

OFFICE HELP0248H & R BLOCK

Learn to prepare taxesw i t h t h e n a t i o n ' slargest tax preparationservice. Potential forgreat seasonal income.Tax courses start soon.Call Corinth 662-287-0114, Ripley 662-837-9972, Savannah 731-925-2980 and Selmer 731-645-4348.

PETS

FARM

LIVESTOCK0450BLACK OR Blue Sumat-ras. rooster & hens. 662-415-4322 or 284-6770.

MERCHANDISE

ANTIQUES/ART05061929 SMALL Green andTan Antique cook stove-$950 FIRM 286-0128

GAS & OIL Signs, SodaPop Memorabilia, & 2lighted clocks- $10 orless per sign and $50.00each on the clocks- 662-287-5803

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107

BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-t ion, f loor level ing,bricks cracking, rottenw o o d , b a s e m e n t s ,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. FREE ESTIM-ATES. 731-239-8945 or662-284-6146.

PERSONALS0135*ADOPTION* ADORING

Financially SecureFamily, LOVE, Laughter,

Art, Music awaits 1stbaby. Expenses paidRose *1-800-561-9323*

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

(Deadline is 3 p.m. daybefore ad is to run!)

(Exception-Sun. dead-line is 3 pm Fri.)

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUSTBE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

INSTRUCTION0180AIRLINE JOBS STARTHERE-Get trained as FAAcertified Aviation Tech-nician. Financial Aid forqualified students. Jobplacement assistance.Call AIM 888-242-3193

EMPLOYMENT

Page 15: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, August 5, 2014 •15

AUTO REPAIR0844

We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse

Let our certifi ed technicians quickly restore your vehicle to pre-accident condition with a satisfaction guarantee.

State-of-the-Art Frame StraighteningDents, Dings & Scratches RemovedCustom Color Matching Service

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance CompanyNo up-front payments.

No hassle. No paperwork.

Free Estimates

25 Years professional service experience

Rental cars available

Corinth Collision Center810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

HAPPY ADS0114

2X3 Birthday

Ad(with or without

picture.)Only $30.

Deadline Noon 2 days before publication.

662-594-6502

MEDICAL/DENTAL0220

MS CARE CENTERis looking for

Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts.

Sign-On Bonus.Please apply in person.

3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30

E.O.E.

SERVICES

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community ProfilesFOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(Daily Corinthian Only $165)

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDERUN YOUR ADON THIS PAGE

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR GRISHAM INSURANCE

(662)415-2363

Final Expense Life Insurance

Long Term Care Medicare Supplements

Part D Prescription Plan

Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?

Call me for a free quote.

“ I will always try to help you”1801 South Harper Road

Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

FiFin lal EExpense

CHRIS GRISHAM

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Structure demolition & RemovalCrushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

“Let us help with your project” “Large or Small”

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

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000GUNS

SEWER DRAIN

SOLUTIONS

Specializing in Clogged Sewers

& Drains662-415-3676

Licensed and Bonded

Water JettingCamera

Inspections

New Construction, Home Remodeling

& Repair.

Licensed & Insured

SHANE PRICE BUILDING, INC.

662-808-2380

We Haul:

We also do Dozer, Back-Hoe, &

Track-Hoe Work!Let us clear your land!

662-286-9158or 662-287-2296

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

• Lime Rock• Iuka Gravel• Masonry Sand • Top Soil• Rip-Rap

Advertising Pays

with the Daily

Corinthian

• Brakes • Tune-ups• A/C• Oil Changes

Open 8-5Monday - FridayCall for extended

hours185 B CR 509,

Corinth(In Front of K&W Body Shop on

Hwy 45)

Towning Available

662-396-2222

CorinthAutomotive

Center

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYTRUSTEE

WHEREAS, NATHAN H.RHOADS AND PAMELA J.RHOADS, made, executedand delivered to W. JETTWILSON, ATTORNEY, asTrustee for the benefit ofSOUTHBANK, a certa inDeed of Trust dated Febru-ary 19, 2010, recorded as In-strument No. 201000754;

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Deed ofTrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, SOUTHBANK,having requested the under-signed Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deed ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Trustee's fees, and expense ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, NO-TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thatI, the undersigned Trustee, onthe 27th day of August, 2014,at the South door of the Al-corn County Courthouse, inthe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, withinthe legal hours for such sales(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), willoffer for sale and sell, at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash, the followingproperty conveyed to me bysaid Deed of Trust describedas follows:

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

LOT 18

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST1008 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 18 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 02degrees 00 minutes EAST 244feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 115 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 30 minutes WEST 240feet, more or less; thence runEAST 117 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.64 acre,more or less and being Lot 18of South Central Subdivision.

ALSO LOT19

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST 878feet to the Southeast cornerof Lot 19 of the above saidSouth Central Subdivision andthe POINT OF BEGINNINGfor this description; thencerun NORTH 02 degrees 00minutes EAST 249 feet, moreor less to the South Right-of-way of Alcorn County Road#249; thence run SOUTH 88degrees 00 minutes WEST130 feet, more or less, alongsaid R.O.W.; thence, leavingsaid R.O.W., run SOUTH 02degrees 00 minutes WEST244 feet, more or less; thencerun EAST 130 feet, more orless to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 0.73acre, more or less and beingLot 19 of South Central Sub-division.

ALSO LOT 20

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theNorth half of the Southwestquarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,being the Southeast corner ofthe above said unrecordedsubdivision; thence run WEST760 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 20 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 01degrees 30 minutes EAST 253feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 116 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 00 minutes WEST 249feet, more or less; thence runEAST 118 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.67 acre,more or less and being Lot 20of South Central Subdivision.

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 asTrustee.

SIGNED, POSTED ANDPUBLISHED on this the 5thday of August, 2014.

/s/ W. Jett Wilson

W. JETT WILSON MSB#7316

TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257

Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc August 5, August 12, Au-gust 19, August 26, 201414819

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYTRUSTEE

WHEREAS, NATHAN H.RHOADS AND PAMELA J.RHOADS, made, executedand delivered to W. JETTWILSON, ATTORNEY, asTrustee for the benefit ofSOUTHBANK, a certa inDeed of Trust dated Febru-ary 19, 2010, recorded as In-strument No. 201000754;

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Deed ofTrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, SOUTHBANK,having requested the under-signed Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deed ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Trustee's fees, and expense ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, NO-TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thatI, the undersigned Trustee, onthe 27th day of August, 2014,at the South door of the Al-corn County Courthouse, inthe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, withinthe legal hours for such sales(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), willoffer for sale and sell, at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash, the followingproperty conveyed to me bysaid Deed of Trust describedas follows:

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

LOT 18

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST1008 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 18 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 02degrees 00 minutes EAST 244feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 115 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 30 minutes WEST 240feet, more or less; thence runEAST 117 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.64 acre,more or less and being Lot 18of South Central Subdivision.

ALSO LOT19

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST 878feet to the Southeast cornerof Lot 19 of the above saidSouth Central Subdivision andthe POINT OF BEGINNINGfor this description; thencerun NORTH 02 degrees 00minutes EAST 249 feet, moreor less to the South Right-of-way of Alcorn County Road#249; thence run SOUTH 88degrees 00 minutes WEST130 feet, more or less, alongsaid R.O.W.; thence, leavingsaid R.O.W., run SOUTH 02degrees 00 minutes WEST244 feet, more or less; thencerun EAST 130 feet, more orless to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 0.73acre, more or less and beingLot 19 of South Central Sub-division.

ALSO LOT 20

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theNorth half of the Southwestquarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,being the Southeast corner ofthe above said unrecordedsubdivision; thence run WEST760 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 20 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 01degrees 30 minutes EAST 253feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 116 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 00 minutes WEST 249feet, more or less; thence runEAST 118 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.67 acre,more or less and being Lot 20of South Central Subdivision.

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 asTrustee.

SIGNED, POSTED ANDPUBLISHED on this the 5thday of August, 2014.

/s/ W. Jett Wilson

W. JETT WILSON MSB#7316

TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257

Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc August 5, August 12, Au-gust 19, August 26, 201414819

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYTRUSTEE

WHEREAS, NATHAN H.RHOADS AND PAMELA J.RHOADS, made, executedand delivered to W. JETTWILSON, ATTORNEY, asTrustee for the benefit ofSOUTHBANK, a certa inDeed of Trust dated Febru-ary 19, 2010, recorded as In-strument No. 201000754;

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Deed ofTrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, SOUTHBANK,having requested the under-signed Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deed ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Trustee's fees, and expense ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, NO-TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thatI, the undersigned Trustee, onthe 27th day of August, 2014,at the South door of the Al-corn County Courthouse, inthe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, withinthe legal hours for such sales(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), willoffer for sale and sell, at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash, the followingproperty conveyed to me bysaid Deed of Trust describedas follows:

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

LOT 18

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST1008 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 18 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 02degrees 00 minutes EAST 244feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 115 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 30 minutes WEST 240feet, more or less; thence runEAST 117 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.64 acre,more or less and being Lot 18of South Central Subdivision.

ALSO LOT19

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST 878feet to the Southeast cornerof Lot 19 of the above saidSouth Central Subdivision andthe POINT OF BEGINNINGfor this description; thencerun NORTH 02 degrees 00minutes EAST 249 feet, moreor less to the South Right-of-way of Alcorn County Road#249; thence run SOUTH 88degrees 00 minutes WEST130 feet, more or less, alongsaid R.O.W.; thence, leavingsaid R.O.W., run SOUTH 02degrees 00 minutes WEST244 feet, more or less; thencerun EAST 130 feet, more orless to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 0.73acre, more or less and beingLot 19 of South Central Sub-division.

ALSO LOT 20

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theNorth half of the Southwestquarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,being the Southeast corner ofthe above said unrecordedsubdivision; thence run WEST760 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 20 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 01degrees 30 minutes EAST 253feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 116 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 00 minutes WEST 249feet, more or less; thence runEAST 118 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.67 acre,more or less and being Lot 20of South Central Subdivision.

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 asTrustee.

SIGNED, POSTED ANDPUBLISHED on this the 5thday of August, 2014.

/s/ W. Jett Wilson

W. JETT WILSON MSB#7316

TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257

Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc August 5, August 12, Au-gust 19, August 26, 201414819

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYTRUSTEE

WHEREAS, NATHAN H.RHOADS AND PAMELA J.RHOADS, made, executedand delivered to W. JETTWILSON, ATTORNEY, asTrustee for the benefit ofSOUTHBANK, a certa inDeed of Trust dated Febru-ary 19, 2010, recorded as In-strument No. 201000754;

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Deed ofTrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, SOUTHBANK,having requested the under-signed Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deed ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Trustee's fees, and expense ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, NO-TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thatI, the undersigned Trustee, onthe 27th day of August, 2014,at the South door of the Al-corn County Courthouse, inthe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, withinthe legal hours for such sales(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), willoffer for sale and sell, at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash, the followingproperty conveyed to me bysaid Deed of Trust describedas follows:

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

LOT 18

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST1008 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 18 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 02degrees 00 minutes EAST 244feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 115 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 30 minutes WEST 240feet, more or less; thence runEAST 117 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.64 acre,more or less and being Lot 18of South Central Subdivision.

ALSO LOT19

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST 878feet to the Southeast cornerof Lot 19 of the above saidSouth Central Subdivision andthe POINT OF BEGINNINGfor this description; thencerun NORTH 02 degrees 00minutes EAST 249 feet, moreor less to the South Right-of-way of Alcorn County Road#249; thence run SOUTH 88degrees 00 minutes WEST130 feet, more or less, alongsaid R.O.W.; thence, leavingsaid R.O.W., run SOUTH 02degrees 00 minutes WEST244 feet, more or less; thencerun EAST 130 feet, more orless to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 0.73acre, more or less and beingLot 19 of South Central Sub-division.

ALSO LOT 20

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theNorth half of the Southwestquarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,being the Southeast corner ofthe above said unrecordedsubdivision; thence run WEST760 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 20 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 01degrees 30 minutes EAST 253feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 116 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 00 minutes WEST 249feet, more or less; thence runEAST 118 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.67 acre,more or less and being Lot 20of South Central Subdivision.

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 asTrustee.

SIGNED, POSTED ANDPUBLISHED on this the 5thday of August, 2014.

/s/ W. Jett Wilson

W. JETT WILSON MSB#7316

TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257

Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc August 5, August 12, Au-gust 19, August 26, 201414819

LEGALS0955

NOTICE OF SALE BYTRUSTEE

WHEREAS, NATHAN H.RHOADS AND PAMELA J.RHOADS, made, executedand delivered to W. JETTWILSON, ATTORNEY, asTrustee for the benefit ofSOUTHBANK, a certa inDeed of Trust dated Febru-ary 19, 2010, recorded as In-strument No. 201000754;

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Deed ofTrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, SOUTHBANK,having requested the under-signed Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deed ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Trustee's fees, and expense ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, NO-TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thatI, the undersigned Trustee, onthe 27th day of August, 2014,at the South door of the Al-corn County Courthouse, inthe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, withinthe legal hours for such sales(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), willoffer for sale and sell, at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash, the followingproperty conveyed to me bysaid Deed of Trust describedas follows:

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

LOT 18

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST1008 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 18 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 02degrees 00 minutes EAST 244feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 115 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 30 minutes WEST 240feet, more or less; thence runEAST 117 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.64 acre,more or less and being Lot 18of South Central Subdivision.

ALSO LOT19

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST 878feet to the Southeast cornerof Lot 19 of the above saidSouth Central Subdivision andthe POINT OF BEGINNINGfor this description; thencerun NORTH 02 degrees 00minutes EAST 249 feet, moreor less to the South Right-of-way of Alcorn County Road#249; thence run SOUTH 88degrees 00 minutes WEST130 feet, more or less, alongsaid R.O.W.; thence, leavingsaid R.O.W., run SOUTH 02degrees 00 minutes WEST244 feet, more or less; thencerun EAST 130 feet, more orless to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 0.73acre, more or less and beingLot 19 of South Central Sub-division.

ALSO LOT 20

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theNorth half of the Southwestquarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,being the Southeast corner ofthe above said unrecordedsubdivision; thence run WEST760 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 20 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 01degrees 30 minutes EAST 253feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 116 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 00 minutes WEST 249feet, more or less; thence runEAST 118 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.67 acre,more or less and being Lot 20of South Central Subdivision.

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 asTrustee.

SIGNED, POSTED ANDPUBLISHED on this the 5thday of August, 2014.

/s/ W. Jett Wilson

W. JETT WILSON MSB#7316

TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257

Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc August 5, August 12, Au-gust 19, August 26, 201414819

LEGALS0955

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pursuant to resolu-t ion of the A lcornCounty Board of Super-visors adopted on Au-gust 4, 2014, at a regu-lar meeting thereof, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi, does hereby givenotice of its intentionto borrow the sum of$125,000.00 to be evid-enced by negotiablenote of Alcorn County,Mississippi, secured bythe full faith, credit, andresources of AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi ,with a final maturingdate of one year fromexecution date and theo p t i o n t o p r e p a ywithout penalty. All en-tities desiring to sub-mit a bid for purchaseof said negotiable noteshall submit a written,sealed bid therefor atthe office of the AlcornCounty Board of Super-visors Office Complex,305 South Fulton Drivein the City of Corinth,Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, by 9:00 A.M. onthe 18th day of August,2014.

Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, intends to ac-cept the lowest rate ofinterest or the bid thatrepresents the lowestnet cost to A lcornCounty, Mississippi, butAlcorn County, Missis-sippi, reserves the rightto reject any and allbids.

The rate of interestto be quoted by inter-ested bidders shall notexceed that authorizedin Section 75-17-101,Miss iss ippi Code of1972. Said promissorynote shall mature withthe principal and all ac-crued interest due andpayable one year fromdate of execution. TheCounty shall reserve theright to prepay in wholeor in part at any timewithout penalty.

This 4th day of August2014

ALCORN COUNTY BOARDOF SUPERVISORS

BY:LOWELL HINTON,President

1tc8/5/14

14817

I N T H E C H A N C E R YC O U R T O F A L C O R NC O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I

IN THE MATTER OF THELAST WILL AND TESTA-M E N T O F J O Y C E D .WHEELER, DECEASED

NO. 2014-0377-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Letters of Testa-mentary having beengranted on the 24 dayof July, 2014, by theChancery Court of Al-corn County, Missis-sippi to the under-signed upon the Estateof Joyce D. Wheeler, De-ceased, notice is herebygiven to all personshaving claims againstsaid Estate to presentthe same to the Clerk ofthe Chancery Court ofAlcorn County, Missis-sippi for probate andregistration accordingto law within ninety (90)days from the date offirst publication of thisNotice to Creditors, orthey will be foreverbarred.

This the 24 day of Ju-ly, 2014

EDWARD JONES TRUSTCOMPANY,EXECUTOR OF THEESTATE OFJOYCE D. WHEELER,DECEASED

BY:JEREMIAH BORAGE,TRUST OFFICER

BOBBY MAROLT, CLERKRENEE S. WALL, DC

Phelps Dunbar LLPP. O. Box 1220Tupelo, MS 38802-1220(662)842-7907

Attorneys for Estate

4tc7 / 2 9 , 8 / 5 , 8 / 1 2 ,8 / 1 9 / 2 0 1 4

14806

NOTICE OF SALE BYTRUSTEE

WHEREAS, NATHAN H.RHOADS AND PAMELA J.RHOADS, made, executedand delivered to W. JETTWILSON, ATTORNEY, asTrustee for the benefit ofSOUTHBANK, a certa inDeed of Trust dated Febru-ary 19, 2010, recorded as In-strument No. 201000754;

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Deed ofTrust and the entire debt se-cured thereby, having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, SOUTHBANK,having requested the under-signed Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land andproperty in accordance withthe terms of said Deed ofTrust for the purpose of rais-ing the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees,Trustee's fees, and expense ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, NO-TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thatI, the undersigned Trustee, onthe 27th day of August, 2014,at the South door of the Al-corn County Courthouse, inthe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, withinthe legal hours for such sales(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), willoffer for sale and sell, at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash, the followingproperty conveyed to me bysaid Deed of Trust describedas follows:

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

LOT 18

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST1008 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 18 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 02degrees 00 minutes EAST 244feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 115 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 30 minutes WEST 240feet, more or less; thence runEAST 117 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.64 acre,more or less and being Lot 18of South Central Subdivision.

ALSO LOT19

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at the South-east corner of the North halfof the Southwest quarter ofSect ion 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, being theSoutheast corner of theabove said unrecorded subdi-vision; thence run WEST 878feet to the Southeast cornerof Lot 19 of the above saidSouth Central Subdivision andthe POINT OF BEGINNINGfor this description; thencerun NORTH 02 degrees 00minutes EAST 249 feet, moreor less to the South Right-of-way of Alcorn County Road#249; thence run SOUTH 88degrees 00 minutes WEST130 feet, more or less, alongsaid R.O.W.; thence, leavingsaid R.O.W., run SOUTH 02degrees 00 minutes WEST244 feet, more or less; thencerun EAST 130 feet, more orless to the POINT OF BE-GINNING, containing 0.73acre, more or less and beingLot 19 of South Central Sub-division.

ALSO LOT 20

Lying and being in the Northhalf of the Southwest quarterof Section 23, Township 2South, Range 8 East, in a sub-division identified as SouthCentral Subdiv is ion, butwhich has an unrecorded plat,and being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theNorth half of the Southwestquarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,being the Southeast corner ofthe above said unrecordedsubdivision; thence run WEST760 feet to the Southeastcorner of Lot 20 of the abovesaid South Central Subdivi-sion and the POINT OF BE-GINNING for this descrip-tion; thence run NORTH 01degrees 30 minutes EAST 253feet, more or less to theSouth Right-of-way of AlcornCounty Road #249; thencerun SOUTH 88 degrees 00minutes WEST 116 feet,more or less, along saidR.O.W.; thence, leaving saidR.O.W., run SOUTH 02 de-grees 00 minutes WEST 249feet, more or less; thence runEAST 118 feet, more or lessto the POINT OF BEGIN-NING, containing 0.67 acre,more or less and being Lot 20of South Central Subdivision.

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 asTrustee.

SIGNED, POSTED ANDPUBLISHED on this the 5thday of August, 2014.

/s/ W. Jett Wilson

W. JETT WILSON MSB#7316

TRUSTEE

WILSON & HINTON, P.A.Post Office Box 1257

Corinth, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

4tc August 5, August 12, Au-gust 19, August 26, 201414819

LEGALS0955

The MississippiDepartment of

Human Services is inviting public commentson its administration of theSocial Services Block GrantProgram. The deadline forsubmitting comments is Au-gust 31, 2014. Mississippianswishing to offer input on is-sues and concerns regardingsocial services provided bythe Mississippi Department ofHuman Services of Aging andAdult Services, Division ofFamily and Children’s Services,and the Division of YouthServices, may sent writtencomments to: Office of SocialServices Block Grant, Missis-sippi Department of HumanServices, 750 North StateStreet, Jackson, MS 39202. Allpublic comments and sugges-tions will be included in theState Plan which will be for-warded to the Governor’s of-fice. To obtain a draft copy ofthe FY 2015 State Plan, con-tact Joy Dart at (601) 359-4 6 5 8 o r e m a i [email protected]. Con-tact: Leigh Washington, (601)3 5 9 - 4 4 1 6 ,[email protected].

7 tc 7/31, 8/1, 8/5, 8/6, 8/7,8/8, 8/12#14809

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pursuant to resolu-t ion of the A lcornCounty Board of Super-visors adopted on Au-gust 4, 2014, at a regu-lar meeting thereof, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi, does hereby givenotice of its intentionto borrow the sum of$125,000.00 to be evid-enced by negotiablenote of Alcorn County,Mississippi, secured bythe full faith, credit, andresources of AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi ,with a final maturingdate of one year fromexecution date and theo p t i o n t o p r e p a ywithout penalty. All en-tities desiring to sub-mit a bid for purchaseof said negotiable noteshall submit a written,sealed bid therefor atthe office of the AlcornCounty Board of Super-visors Office Complex,305 South Fulton Drivein the City of Corinth,Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, by 9:00 A.M. onthe 18th day of August,2014.

Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, intends to ac-cept the lowest rate ofinterest or the bid thatrepresents the lowestnet cost to A lcornCounty, Mississippi, butAlcorn County, Missis-sippi, reserves the rightto reject any and allbids.

The rate of interestto be quoted by inter-ested bidders shall notexceed that authorizedin Section 75-17-101,Miss iss ippi Code of1972. Said promissorynote shall mature withthe principal and all ac-crued interest due andpayable one year fromdate of execution. TheCounty shall reserve theright to prepay in wholeor in part at any timewithout penalty.

This 4th day of August2014

ALCORN COUNTY BOARDOF SUPERVISORS

BY:LOWELL HINTON,President

1tc8/5/14

14817

LEGALS0955

TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OFSALE

WHEREAS, on April25, 2002, Gladys Hamp-ton & Efrem Hamptonexecuted a Deed ofTrust to T. Harris CollierIII, as Trustee for Trust-mark National Bank, Be-neficiary, which is re-corded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, MS, inBook 588 at Page 78;

WHEREAS, on June11, 2014, Trustmark Na-tional Bank substitutedJames Eldred Renfroeas Trustee in the afore-mentioned deed oftrust with this recor-ded as Instrument No.201402518;

WHEREAS, therebeing a default in theterms and conditions ofthe Deed of Trust andentire debt securedhaving been declared tobe due and payable inaccordance with itsterms, Trustmark Na-tional Bank, the holderof the debt has reques-ted the Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sellsaid land and propertypursuant to its terms inorder to raise the sumsdue, with attorney'sand trustee's fees, andexpenses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I,James Eldred Renfroe,Trustee for said Deed ofTrust, will on August 20,2014, offer for sale atpublic outcry, and sellwithin legal hours (be-ing between the hoursof 11:00 a.m., and 4:00p.m.) at the south maindoor of the AlcornCounty Courthouse inCorinth, MS, to thehighest and best bid-der for cash, the follow-ing described propertys i t u a t e d i n A l c o r nCounty, MS, to-wit ;

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to-wit: Begin-ning at the Northwestcorner of the Northw-est Quarter of Section10, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Miss iss ippi ;thence run East 93 rods;thence run South 713feet to the Point of Be-ginning; Thence runSouth 73 degrees 17minutes East 299 feetalong a fence to theNorthwest corner ofthe A.C. Nelms prop-erty; Thence run Southalong a ROW of PineTrees 230 feet to an ironpin; thence run alongthe North side of OldHighway #72 North 88degrees 40 minutesWest 286.7 feet; Thencerun North along a fence310 feet to the Point ofBeginning, containing1.85 acres, more or less.

I will convey onlysuch title as is vested inme as Trustee, with nowarranties.

WITNESS my signa-ture this 21st day of Ju-ly, 2014.

JAMES ELDRED REN-FROE, Trustee

James Eldred Renfroe,648 Lakeland East Dr,Ste AFlowood, MS 39232601-932-1011

tc 4

7/29, 8/5, 8/12, 8/1914800

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

IN RE: ESTATE OF LOIS W.ROBINSON

NO. 2014-0399-02

Letters Testament-ary having been gran-ted on the 24 day of Ju-ly, 2014, by the Chan-cery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, tothe undersigned uponthe estate of Lois W.Robinson, deceased,notice is hereby givento all persons havingclaims against said es-tate to present thesame to the Clerk of thesaid Court for probateand registration, ac-cording to law, withinninety (90) days fromthe date of first publica-tion or they will beforever barred.

This the 24 day of Ju-ly, 2014.

BOBBY MAROLT, CLERKWILLIE JUSTICE, D.C.

THURMAN LEEROBINSONEXECUTOR

GIFFORD & TENNISONSOLICITORS FOREXECUTORP. O. Box 59Booneville, MS 38829662-728-9453

4 tc

7 / 2 9 , 8 / 5 , 8 / 1 2 ,8 / 1 9 / 2 0 1 4

14808

The MississippiDepartment of

Human Services is inviting public commentson its administration of theSocial Services Block GrantProgram. The deadline forsubmitting comments is Au-gust 31, 2014. Mississippianswishing to offer input on is-sues and concerns regardingsocial services provided bythe Mississippi Department ofHuman Services of Aging andAdult Services, Division ofFamily and Children’s Services,and the Division of YouthServices, may sent writtencomments to: Office of SocialServices Block Grant, Missis-sippi Department of HumanServices, 750 North StateStreet, Jackson, MS 39202. Allpublic comments and sugges-tions will be included in theState Plan which will be for-warded to the Governor’s of-fice. To obtain a draft copy ofthe FY 2015 State Plan, con-tact Joy Dart at (601) 359-4 6 5 8 o r e m a i [email protected]. Con-tact: Leigh Washington, (601)3 5 9 - 4 4 1 6 ,[email protected].

7 tc 7/31, 8/1, 8/5, 8/6, 8/7,8/8, 8/12#14809

Page 16: 080514 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Tuesday, August 5, 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

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2001 Chevy Silverado Z71

Off Road4wd, Shortbed,

Step-side, Extended Cab, Loaded, Runs Great, New Tires &

Step Rails, Regularly Maintained

$5000.00Call:

662-415-2657

2013 NissanFrontier

Desert Runner2x4

4 door, Silver1350 Miles

$26,000662-415-8881

1997 F150 Ford

Extended Cab XLT

Good Condition

$4950.

662-643-5845

2000 GMC Jimmy

4x4 • 150Kleather, sunroof,

4.3 vortecgood tires

$2,550.00 OBO662-319-7145

REDUCED

$2150 OBO

1994 DODGE 250 VANWHITE w/ V8, 318

ENGINE, AC, RUNS GOOD,

DOES NOT USE OIL.

Great Work or Utility Van.

$1800662-284-6146

2007 CHEVY SILVERADO LT

EXTENDED CAB4.8

One of a kind46,000 mi.

garage kept.$20,000

CALL662-643-3565

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1996 VW CabrioConvertible

178,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee

283,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

662-396-1182

2005 Dodge Ram 1500V-6 Automatic,

77,000 MilesCold AC, Looks

& Runs Excellent!$6300

662-665-1995

2001 Nissan XterraFOR SALE

Needs a little work.Good Bargain!

Call:662-643-3084

1984 DODGE RAM CLASSIC

CUSTOMIZED

CALL FOR DETAILS

731-239-8803

2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bike

w/removable (three bolts) trike kit.

6400 miles, excellent condition.

$8500.00662-808-9662 or

662-286-9662

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

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

FOR SALE

Call:287-1552

2000 ChryslerTown & Country

$2,70000

2009 Nissan Murano

LE Sport 4 DR, AWD, 27000 mi., V6 3.5,

Leather Seats,AM/FM stereoCD Multi Disc.

$18,750.662-284-7110

FOR SALE:2001 Dodge

CaravanAppx: 176K milesEXTRA CLEAN

$2600.00

Call: 287-9254

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

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

17’ 1991 Evinrude40 h.p.Bass

Tracker$2500.00

Call:

662-287-0991

or

662-665-2020

Bass Boat2005 Nitro 882

18’+ w/ 150 HP Mercuryupgraded electronics,

low hoursNice condition$14,000 OBO

665-0958 Leave a message

REDUCED

17ft. Fisher Marsh Hawk75hp Force- M/Guide

Hummingbird Fish FinderGalv. Trailer, totally

accessorized!$6500

662-808-0287 or 662-808-0285

$5500 OBORecently Serviced

1996 CROWNLINE CUDY23’ on trailer

& cover5.7 liter engine

runs & works great.

$10,000

731-607-3172$9,000

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

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

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2005 Yamaha V-star 1100 Silverado

Loaded with Chrome, 32,000 Miles, factory

cover with extras

$3,500662-396-1098

804BOATS

1979 OLDSMOBILE

OMEGA6 CYLINDER

RUNS GREAT!38,000 ORIGINAL MILES

$5,000CALL PICO:

662-643-3565

868AUTOMOBILES

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

2011 Malibu LSFully LoadedRemote Entry

In the Pickwick/ Counce Area

$10,900

256-412-3257

1964 1/2 Mustang Coupe

351 Windsor w/ 3 speed

transmission, good interior,Needs Paint.

$6500.00 OBO662-664-0357

$10,400 256-577-1349

Iuka

1994 Crown Victoria2nd Owner/Been

driving since 1997RUNS, DRIVES,

STOPSGOOD BODYNEW TIRES

$1500 FIRM662-415-1516

$5500.00 OBO

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

1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor

1400 Hours

$8500.00731-926-0006

1993 John Deere 5300

Tractorw/ John Deere

loader.2900 Hours

$10,500731-926-0006

2000 John Deere 5410

Tractorw/ Loader

950 Hours

$16,500

731-926-0006

JOHN DEERE1938 OR 1939B TRACTOR

WHEEL DRIVENMANURE

SPREADER

CALL AFTER 4PM

662-415-1225

804BOATS

2004

662-287-2703 or662-415-3133

F & F17.5 ft.

Custom Built Crappie Boat w/ 50hp Honda Motor, Tilt & Trim, completely loaded.$8500.00

FIRM

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some

work.$1500

662-664-3958

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2007 White Toyota Tundra

double cab, 5.7 V8 SR5, Aluminum wheels, 64,135

miles, lots of extras, $19,000.

Call 662-603-9304

$1,500.00662-462-5669

BED ONLY Fully Enclosed Utility Truck

8' Long BedAll tool trays and Boxes have locks

2000 Chevy Express RV

Handicap Van w/ Extra Heavy DutyWheelchair Lift101,538 Miles

$ ,000 OBO

662-287-7403

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat25 HP Motor

$2700.00Ask for Brad:

284-4826

804BOATS