daily corinthian e-edition 101912

20
Vol. 116, No. 252 Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages Two sections Friday Oct. 19, 2012 50 cents Today 67 Mostly sunny Tonight 43 Index On this day in history 150 years ago Bragg’s Army of Tennessee, still in retreat following the Battle of Perryville, arrives at Cumberland Gap and begins to move into Tennessee. Union Gen. Don Carlos Buell is widely criticized for allowing Bragg to leave the state unmolested. Stocks...... 7A Classified...... 5B Comics...... 4B Wisdom...... 3B Weather...... 5A Obituaries...... 3A Opinion...... 4A Sports...... 8A 0% chance rain The Alcorn County Board of Supervisors awarded a con- tract Thursday morning for the Manpower Road and South Harper Road improvements project for the new Caterpillar facility. The board accepted the low bid of $486,482.51 submitted by TLSL of Walnut. Six con- tractors submitted bids. The project could begin with- in a few weeks, and the con- tract allows 90 calendar days to complete the job. Intersec- tions on Manpower Road will be widened, and an accelera- tion lane will be added parallel to Harper so that trucks exiting the facility can merge into the trafc as they head toward U.S. 45. County engineer Kent Geno of Cook Coggin said the bids were favorable, with several be- low the estimate of $520,000. A Development Infra- structure Program Grant of $500,000 was approved for the project in August, and the county and city will also con- tribute. The other bids: Parson’s Earthworks of Iuka - $490,603.81 Pittman Construction of Corinth - $497,061.31 Rogers Group of Lawrence- burg, Tenn. - $515,840.03 Buddy Ayers Construction of Corinth - $533,603.30 Rutledge Contractors of Tupelo - $576,493.56 Supervisors award road improvement contract BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] ’50s Day Staff photo by Steve Beavers Biggersville Elementary celebrated the 50th day of school with ’50s Day on Thursday. Second- graders William Godwin and Lilly Haynie dressed the part as the students also took part in a sock hop in the gym. The longtime Corinth funeral director and manager severely injured in an accidental re will have a long road to normalcy, but family members remain optimistic about chances for a full recovery. Bill McPeters, 89, of Polk Street in Corinth, underwent his rst surgery Thursday after- noon at Crossgates River Oaks Hospital Burn Unit in Brandon, according to a spokesperson at McPeters Funeral Directors, where McPeters served as man- ager and showed up for work McPeters undergoes surgery; recovery will be lengthy BY MARK BOEHLER editor@dailycorinthian Alcorn County's innova- tive programs in agriculture and forestry will be on display Monday. The Alliance 2012 Agricul- ture & Forestry Tour is sched- uled for 2 p.m. The annual awards banquet will follow at 6 p.m. at the Mississippi State Extension Service. “We like to showcase our programs in agriculture, forestry along with soil and water conser- vation practices during the tour,” said Sandy Mitchell with the Al- corn County Soil and Water Con- servation District. “We try to nd new things every year, whether it be equipment or harvesting/ planting crops and timber.” The tour is open to the pub- lic and will begin at the exten- Ag tour showcases innovative programs BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] The Crossroads Arena may soon have an addition to its multi-purpose facility. Discussion about an ATM machine continued for a sec- ond straight meeting by the board on Wednesday. “I don’t think it will be an insurance issue, but I would like to know,” said board at- torney William “Bill” Odom. The board agreed to wait on an insurance response before preceding with the project. According to board mem- ber Joe Franks, the installa- tion could be done by a com- pany or by the arena staff. If the machine did over 100 transactions, there would be no monthly fee. A $25 charge would be made if there were less than 100 transactions. The board agreed to start Arena ponders adding an ATM machine BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Some intellectually gifted students at Kossuth Elemen- tary are ready to cast a ballot. The students will get their chance to vote their conscience in a mock presidential elec- tion between President Barack Obama and Republican candi- date Mitt Romney on Oct.29. The mock election is part of the Promote to Vote education project sponsored by the Mis- sissippi Secretary of State's Of- ce. “Lots of them have been really into this,” said gifted teacher Sandy Blackard. “They have listened to their parents and have grasped what a piv- otal time we are in today … you can tell it's important to them.” Jeremy Martin, North Mis- sissippi Service Coordinator with the Secretary of State's Ofce, spoke with the gifted students in grades 2-4 on Tuesday. “I get excited about talking to students,” said the former teacher. “They are the future leaders.” Martin covered what the kids might see on election night. He talked about the three dif- ferent ways used to vote in the Kossuth Elementary students learn about presidential election process BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Please see MCPETERS | 2A Please see TOUR | 2A Please see ATM | 2A Please see ELECTION | 2A Staff photo by Steve Beavers Jeremy Martin, North Mississippi service coordinator with the Secretary of State’s Office, talks with Kossuth Elementary stu- dents as part of the Promote to Vote campaign. Daily Corinthian Call Donna or Brandi for complete details and rates! 286.6006 BROSE HWY 72 E • Corinth MS www.broseautoplex.com Now Renting 2012 Nissans!

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Page 1: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Vol. 116, No. 252 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

FridayOct. 19, 2012

50 centsToday67

Mostly sunnyTonight

43

Index On this day in history 150 years agoBragg’s Army of Tennessee, still in retreat following the

Battle of Perryville, arrives at Cumberland Gap and begins to move into Tennessee. Union Gen. Don Carlos Buell is widely criticized for allowing Bragg to leave the state unmolested.

Stocks......7A Classified......5B Comics......4B Wisdom......3B

Weather......5A Obituaries......3A Opinion......4A Sports......8A

0% chance rain

The Alcorn County Board of Supervisors awarded a con-tract Thursday morning for the Manpower Road and South Harper Road improvements project for the new Caterpillar facility.

The board accepted the low bid of $486,482.51 submitted by TLSL of Walnut. Six con-tractors submitted bids.

The project could begin with-in a few weeks, and the con-tract allows 90 calendar days to complete the job. Intersec-tions on Manpower Road will

be widened, and an accelera-tion lane will be added parallel to Harper so that trucks exiting the facility can merge into the traffi c as they head toward U.S. 45.

County engineer Kent Geno of Cook Coggin said the bids were favorable, with several be-

low the estimate of $520,000.A Development Infra-

structure Program Grant of $500,000 was approved for the project in August, and the county and city will also con-tribute.

The other bids:■ Parson’s Earthworks of

Iuka - $490,603.81■ Pittman Construction of

Corinth - $497,061.31■ Rogers Group of Lawrence-

burg, Tenn. - $515,840.03■ Buddy Ayers Construction

of Corinth - $533,603.30■ Rutledge Contractors of

Tupelo - $576,493.56

Supervisors award road improvement contractBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

’50s Day

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Biggersville Elementary celebrated the 50th day of school with ’50s Day on Thursday. Second- graders William Godwin and Lilly Haynie dressed the part as the students also took part in a sock hop in the gym.

The longtime Corinth funeral director and manager severely injured in an accidental fi re will have a long road to normalcy, but family members remain optimistic about chances for a full recovery.

Bill McPeters, 89, of Polk

Street in Corinth, underwent his fi rst surgery Thursday after-noon at Crossgates River Oaks Hospital Burn Unit in Brandon, according to a spokesperson at McPeters Funeral Directors, where McPeters served as man-ager and showed up for work

McPeters undergoes surgery; recovery will be lengthy

BY MARK BOEHLEReditor@dailycorinthian

Alcorn County's innova-tive programs in agriculture and forestry will be on display Monday.

The Alliance 2012 Agricul-ture & Forestry Tour is sched-uled for 2 p.m. The annual awards banquet will follow at 6 p.m. at the Mississippi State Extension Service.

“We like to showcase our

programs in agriculture, forestry along with soil and water conser-vation practices during the tour,” said Sandy Mitchell with the Al-corn County Soil and Water Con-servation District. “We try to fi nd new things every year, whether it be equipment or harvesting/planting crops and timber.”

The tour is open to the pub-lic and will begin at the exten-

Ag tour showcasesinnovative programs

BY STEVE [email protected]

The Crossroads Arena may soon have an addition to its multi-purpose facility.

Discussion about an ATM machine continued for a sec-ond straight meeting by the board on Wednesday.

“I don’t think it will be an insurance issue, but I would like to know,” said board at-torney William “Bill” Odom.

The board agreed to wait on

an insurance response before preceding with the project.

According to board mem-ber Joe Franks, the installa-tion could be done by a com-pany or by the arena staff. If the machine did over 100 transactions, there would be no monthly fee. A $25 charge would be made if there were less than 100 transactions.

The board agreed to start

Arena ponders adding an ATM machine

BY STEVE [email protected]

Some intellectually gifted students at Kossuth Elemen-tary are ready to cast a ballot.

The students will get their chance to vote their conscience in a mock presidential elec-tion between President Barack Obama and Republican candi-date Mitt Romney on Oct.29.

The mock election is part of the Promote to Vote education

project sponsored by the Mis-sissippi Secretary of State's Of-fi ce.

“Lots of them have been really into this,” said gifted teacher Sandy Blackard. “They have listened to their parents and have grasped what a piv-otal time we are in today … you can tell it's important to them.”

Jeremy Martin, North Mis-sissippi Service Coordinator with the Secretary of State's

Offi ce, spoke with the gifted students in grades 2-4 on Tuesday.

“I get excited about talking to students,” said the former teacher. “They are the future leaders.”

Martin covered what the kids might see on election night. He talked about the three dif-ferent ways used to vote in the

Kossuth Elementary students learn about presidential election process

BY STEVE [email protected]

Please see MCPETERS | 2A

Please see TOUR | 2A

Please see ATM | 2A

Please see ELECTION | 2A

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Jeremy Martin, North Mississippi service coordinator with the Secretary of State’s Office, talks with Kossuth Elementary stu-dents as part of the Promote to Vote campaign.

Daily Corinthian

Call Donna or Brandi for complete details and rates!

286.6006BROSE HWY 72 E • Corinth MS

www.broseautoplex.com

Now Renting 2012 Nissans!

Page 2: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

sion service behind the Crossroads Arena. A bus will transport individuals to three stops on the tour with the trip taking over three hours.

The fi rst stop on the tour will be Timber Products. Keith Coleman's farm in Wenasoga will be stop two.

“He has a new cotton

picker that has a roller on the back,” said Mitchell.

Leamon Talley's farm in the Gift Community is slated for the fi nal tour stop. Talley's farm features a new water trough and heavy-use area for live-stock grazing systems.

“I think this will be a really good tour,” added Mitchell.

Cindy Hyde Smith, the

Commissioner of Agricul-ture, will be the keynote speaker at the banquet. The John Vaughn Award and Ag Stewardship Award will be among the honors presented at the banquet that is being ca-tered by the Rollin' Rumps BBQ Team.

Those interested in tak-ing the tour should call the Alliance at 287-5269.

every day despite his age.McPeters suffered third-

degree burns from the waist down and will re-main hospitalized for sev-eral weeks, according to the spokesperson, as the patient's condition was still listed as stable.

The benevolent and

fl amboyant town charac-ter known for his humor, gift giving and fl ashy dress code was airlifted via Air Evac to the Brandon hos-pital Wednesday morning after the fi re.

Family sent word they appreciate all the prayers and acts of kindness and encouragement from Bill's many friends.

McPeters Funeral Di-rectors encouraged any-one to leave thoughts and messages for Bill at jandc-graphix.com/bill web site.

Those wishing to send well wishes via mail can do so to Bill McPeters, c/o Crossgates River Oaks Hospital, 350 Crossgates Blvd., Brandon, Miss. 39042.

Local/Region2A • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Service from the ’50sBiggersville Elementary School teacher Andrea Coleman serves Jalynn Hearn and Drew Rowsey a Coke float during ’50s Day activities at the school on Thurs-day.

MCPETERS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

TOUR

CONTINUED FROM 1A

next week lining up pro-gram sponsors for the Alcorn County Tour-nament in January. A meeting with the four head coaches in the county will be scheduled soon.

Board members are in the process of taking a look at possible contract changes of the facility.

“Let’s all take a contract home and come back with pos-sible changes at the next meeting,” said vice

chairman Alva Dalton.The arena’s Cindy

Davis announced to the board that ticket sales for the Newsboys’ “God’s Not Dead” concert is up to 440 as of Wednes-day. The concert, which includes Building 429, Luminate and Grace Campbell, will be held 7 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $17 for the General Ad-mission show.

In other board busi-ness:

■ agreed to allow Blitz 2012 be held at the are-na at the non-profi t rate.

■ voted to pay the Oc-tober bills.

■ discussed a pro-posed contract with Dewitt Auction for the Farm Show on Jan.16-19.

■ heard an update on the Monster Truck Show.

As of Oct. 17, the arena has an operating account of $43,045.78 and a ticket account of $15,997.37.

Chairman Dr. Hard-wick Kay and board member Phyllis Keith-Young did not attend the meeting.

ATM

CONTINUED FROM 1A

state along with how the presidential winner will be determined.

“I want you to see what it is going to look like on election night,” he said to a group of fourth graders. “There is a perfect number in the Electoral College and if either candidate gets that magic number they win.”

The number of elec-toral votes needed to be the next president is 270.

“People with both candidates are pulling out their hair trying to fi gure how to get that number,” said Martin. “It is impossible for both of them to get 270,

but it's very possible for both to get 269.”

Should both Obama and Romney each re-ceive 269 votes, the U.S. House of Representa-tives would determine the winner.

Promote the Vote -- done for every major election -- is designed to teach the fundamentals of democracy to K-12 students and encour-ages civic responsibility. The program helps stu-dents improve their po-litical decision-making abilities and increase their interests in current issues.

“They are very ex-cited to get the chance to vote,” said Blackard. “Things like this will have a lasting impres-

sion on them.”Promote the Vote cur-

riculum contains voter education lesson plans and activities appropri-ate and unique to each grade level. The mock election gives students the experience voting for offi cial statewide candidates in a simulat-ed election prior to the actual General Election.

Ballots are provided online by the Missis-sippi Secretary of State’s Offi ce, and election results are tallied, an-nounced statewide and posted on the PTV Web page, www.sos.ms.gov/ptv.

“I think it will really hit home for them when they see the results on-line,” said Blackard.

ELECTION

CONTINUED FROM 1A

A benefi t fundraiser for Doug Mullins, warden for the Alcorn County Jail, is set for 2 p.m. Saturday at the L.C. Follin Christian Life Center in Kossuth.

The occasion is to help with Mullins' medical expenses. It will include food, auction, cake walk, music and a drawing for a gun, king quilt, gasoline

and other items for which chances have been sold.

The location is at High-way 2 and County Road 604.

Benefit set for Doug Mullins

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Page 3: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Local3A • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

Deaths

Sarah IronsCOUNCE, Tenn. — Fu-

neral services for Sarah Louise Irons, 54, are set for 1 p.m. Saturday at Saulters Chapel CME

Church w i t h b u r i a l in St. R e s t C e m -etery.

M r s . I r o n s d i e d T u e s -d a y , October

16, 2012 at Regional Hos-pital.

Born December 20, 1957, she was a gradu-ate of Pickwick Southside High School. She was a housewife and member of Saulters Chapel CME Church.

She was preceded in death by her father, Golden Irons; her grand-parents, Felix and Irene Chappell, and Cornelius and Zelphia Irons; and two brothers, Larry Irons and Charles Irons.

Survivors include four children, Christina (Dom-inic) Woods, Shon Irons, Tammicca Irons and Willie Irons; her mother, Ethel Irons; fi ve siblings, Carolyn (Melvin) Wilson, Geneva (Jacola) Scurry, Mae Jewel Gillard, Clar-ence Irons and Rob-ert Earl (Teresa) Irons; and six grandchildren, Darious Atkins, Desmon Walker, Ontalasia Woods, Amiya Irons, Jamal Stiger and Mary Jay Jeanty.

Rev. Will Luster will of-fi ciate.

Visitation is 6-8 p.m. tonight.

Irons

BOONEVILLE — The 21st annual Booneville Fall Festival continues through Saturday night with music, carnival rides, arts and crafts, food and much more.

The PBJ Happee Day Shows Carnival has ar-rived in Booneville. The carnival staff will be sell-ing armbands each night, October 19-20 for $15 each. The carnival will be open October 19 from 6-10 p.m. and on Octo-ber 20 from 9 a.m. until 10 p.m.

The Opening Cer-emony will be Friday night, Oct. 19 at 6 p.m. followed immediately by the Battle of the Bands. The winner of the Battle of the Bands contest will perform on Saturday night, October 20 at the Prentiss County Agri-Center at the concert featuring The Kentucky Headhunters. There will be food vendors selling food during the Battle of

the Bands competition, so everyone is encour-aged to make plans to eat during the contest.

The Saturday, Oct. 20 activities will be kicked off with the BMH 5K Run/Walk. The Run will begin at 8:20 a.m. for wheelchair participants and at 8:30 a.m. for the runners/walkers.

The BMH 5K Run Awards Presentation will be held at the stage, around the old Boonev-ille Hardware building, at 10 a.m. This will be immediately followed by the Decorating Contest Awards Presentation.

The Lions Club Soap-box Derby will also begin at 10 a.m. in front of the Prentiss County Chan-cery Clerk offi ce.

Mike Timbes will be on hand at the Pickle Can-ning Contest, which will begin at 11 a.m. on the front lawn of the Prentiss County Courthouse. Any pickled item is eligible to compete in the contest.

Tommy Cadle will once again host the In-

ternational Turnip Green Cook-Off. This event will be held on the Prentiss County Courthouse lawn at noon.

Debra Lindley will be coordinating the action-packed Hula Hoop Con-test at the Triangle area from 1:15 – 2 p.m.

The Singing Conven-tion with June Walden will begin at 2 p.m. up-stairs in the Prentiss County Courthouse.

There will be live en-tertainment at the Stage area from 10 a.m. until 6 p.m. with the Hobo High-steppers, Zumba, Bran-don & Rebecca Elliott, the Hula Hoop Contest, Northeast Mississippi’s Got Talent Contest, and the Way of Life Band.

Food and arts & crafts vendors will be set up in the downtown streets of Boon-eville all day long on Oct. 20. Vendors selling home-made crafts and doing art demonstrations will be set up inside the old Boonev-ille Hardware building.

There will also be a Ben-efi t Car Show for Amber

Peeks in the Parking Lot beside the Prentiss County Superintendent’s offi ce/Daniel Tucker’s offi ce.

The concert featuring The Kentucky Headhunt-ers will begin at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Prentiss County Agri-Center. The Kentucky Headhunters will take the stage at 8 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the Booneville & Pren-tiss County Main Street offi ce at 100 West Church Street, at BancorpSouth Bank – Main Branch, and at Booneville Community Pharmacy. You may also purchase tickets at the festival at the Booneville & Prentiss County Main Street booth, close to the stage area, or at the Pren-tiss County Agri-Center the day of the concert af-ter 1 p.m.

The Fall Fest Choir will be held at the Grace Unit-ed Methodist Church on Sunday, October 21, be-ginning at 2 p.m.

For more information about the Fall Festival you may phone 662-728-4130.

Festival features rides, music, craftsBY TRUDY

FEATHERSTONSpecial to the Daily Corinthian

Community Events

Sacred music concert

The Corinth Music Club is sponsoring a Sacred Music Concert at the First United Methodist Church Sanctuary on Thursday, Oct. 25 at 11 a.m. The 30 minute concert will be free and open to the public. For more information contact Donna Janzen, 462-7388.

Bean luncheon

The annual 4-H Bean Luncheon will be held Thursday, Oct. 25 at the Alcorn County Extension Service. Tickets are $5 each and include choice of white beans or pinto beans, with slaw, corn-bread, onion, dessert and tea.  The meals will be available for dine in or carry out.  Proceeds will benefit the Alcorn County 4-H Achievement Scholarship fund.  

Contact the 4-H office at 286-7756 if you would like more information.

Blood drive

United Blood Services is having the following lo-cal blood drive: Thursday, Oct. 25 -- 12 p.m. to 5 p.m., Corinth Coke/Re-

freshments, Bloodmobile.

Festivals held

■ The 2012 Glendale Elementary Fall Festival is being held Saturday, Oct. 20 from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. A yard sale begins at 7 a.m. There will be inflatables, games with prizes, live music, cotton candy and lots of other foods, and a dunking booth. There will also be a talent contest for students from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. Arm bands will be sold for $10 each which gives child unlimited ac-cess to the inflatables and most of the games. If child brings a friend who is not a Glen student, he or she and their friend will get an armband for $5. The prizes for the scarecrow contest will also be announced at the fall festival — the winner must be present to win. Bring a lawn chair.

■ The Crossroads Mu-seum is hosting the 17th Annual Heritage Festival at Historic Corinth Depot in downtown Corinth on Friday, Oct. 26 and Sat-urday, Oct. 27 from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Participants can learn about the people and traditions that shaped the Crossroads area of

yesterday from reenactors, period musicians, dem-onstrators, artisans and craftsman.

Entry is free and both days are open to the pub-lic. The museum is located at 221 North Fillmore Street in downtown Corinth (across from Joe’s Shoes).

For vendor sign up and more information, call 662-287-3120 or email [email protected]. Visit the Crossroads Museum web site at www.crossroadsmuseum.com.

Class of ‘82

The KHS Class of 1982 is celebrating their 30-year class reunion on Fri-day, Oct. 26. Anyone who wants to attend, contact Maria Allen Nelms at 665-5282 or Sarry Walters Swindle at 415-5285. For dinner, RSVP ASAP.

Crossroads Poetry Project

Anyone who loves poet-ry and would like to help promote a deeper ap-preciation of poetry, can come and listen or bring two favorite poems to read at the fifth season’s 3rd Crossroads Poetry

Project Halloween poetry reading, Friday, Oct. 26 from 6-7 p.m. at KC’s Espresso Coffee Shop in Corinth. This Friday only, there will be some scary stories and scary poetry.

For more information, call Milton Wallis at 662-415-2446.

BBQ political rally

A BBQ-Political Rally sponsored by the Alcorn County Democratic Ex-ecutive Committee is be-ing held Saturday, Oct. 20 from 5-7 p.m. at the American Legion Build-ing. Everyone can come out and enjoy a free barbecue dinner and hear Brad Morris, candi-date for Mississippi U.S. House, District 1.

Today in History

Today is Friday, Oct. 19, the 293rd day of 2012. There are 73 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On Oct. 19, 1987, the stock market crashed as the Dow Jones Indus-trial Average plunged 508 points, or 22.6 percent in value, to close at 1,738.74.

On this date:

In 1765, the Stamp Act Congress, meeting in New York, drew up a declara-tion of rights and liberties.

In 1781, British troops under Gen. Lord Cornwal-lis surrendered at York-town, Va., as the Ameri-can Revolution neared its end.

In 1812, French forces under Napoleon Bonapar-te began their retreat from Moscow.

In 1864, Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early at-tacked Union forces at Ce-dar Creek, Va.; the Union troops were able to rally and defeat the Confeder-ates.

In 1936, H.R. Ekins of the New York World-Telegram beat out Dorothy Kilgallen of the New York Journal and Leo Kieran of The New York Times in a round-the-world race on commercial flights that lasted 18½ days.

In 1944, the play “I Re-member Mama,” by John van Druten, opened at the Music Box Theater on Broadway.

In 1951, President Harry S. Truman signed an act formally ending the state of war with Ger-many.

In 1960, the United States began a limited embargo against Cuba covering all commodities except medical supplies and certain food products.

In 1967, the U.S. space probe Mariner 5 flew past Venus.

In 1977, the supersonic Concorde made its first landing in New York City.

In 1982, automaker John Z. DeLorean was ar-rested by federal agents in Los Angeles, accused of conspiring to sell $24 million of cocaine to sal-vage his business. (De-Lorean was acquitted at trial on grounds of entrap-ment.)

In 1994, 22 people were killed as a terrorist bomb shattered a bus in the heart of Tel Aviv’s shopping district. Enter-tainer Martha Raye died in Los Angeles at age 78.

Ten years ago:

A 37-year-old man was seriously wounded outside a steakhouse in Ashland, Va., in the latest Washington-area sniper shooting.

How to reach us -- extensions:Newsroom.....................317Circulation....................301Advertising...................339Classifieds....................302Bookkeeping.................333

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

Willie Walkercirculation manager

[email protected]

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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OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Friday, October 19, 2012www.dailycorinthian.com

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Please include your full signature, home address and telephone number on the letter for verifi cation. All let-ters are subject to editing before pub-lication, especially those beyond 300 words in length. Send to: Letters to the editor, Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, Miss. 38835. Letters may also be e-mailed to: letters@daily corinthi-an.com. Email is the preferred method.

Personal, guest and commentary col-umns on the Opinion page are the views of the writer. “Other views” are editori-als reprinted from other newspapers. None of these refl ect the views of this newspaper.

As they drill for quick corporate prof-its deep inside our Earth, ExxonMobil, Halliburton, and other titans of the natural gas hydraulic fracturing indus-try are harming people’s health, the en-vironment, and local economies across the country. They’re also fracking some-thing essential to a properly functioning democratic society: the truth.

They’re hailing themselves both as ex-emplars of free-market success and as the “virtuous ones” in our society — the producers and makers, as contrasted to the mass of Americans that the far-right corporatists are now openly calling “moochers” and “takers.”

Fracking companies and political front groups are selling the public a self-serving narrative. They claim the cur-rent natural gas boom is a victory over those wimpy and undeserving produc-ers of wind and solar power who are de-pendent on government subsidies to get up and running.

The shale gas boom, wrote the oil-and-gas-funded American Enterprise Institute this year, has occurred “away from the greedy grasp of Washington.” AEI’s laissez-faire fabulists snidely added that “surely Washington would have done something to slow it down, tax it more, or stop it altogether” had the bureaucrats realized that the private enterprise was making such progress. Indeed, crowed an industry PR group, “The free market has worked its magic.”

Sheesh — their bull goes deeper than their gas wells. For three decades, the federal government has pumped more than $100 million into research for the frackers, fi nding ways to make the tech-nique work. And, since 1980, the big bad government they now badmouth has paid frackers more than $10 bil-lion in a subsidy written specifi cally for them. These oil giants are liars, fracking away at their own integrity.

(OtherWords and Daily Corinthian columnist Jim Hightower is a ra-dio commentator, writer and public speaker. He’s also editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown.)

Natural gasindustry titans

‘fracking’ the truth

Letters Policy

Prayer for today

A verse to share

On Sept. 11, scores of men with automatic weapons and RPGs launched a night as-sault on the U.S. compound in Benghazi, killed Ambas-sador Chris Stevens and set the building ablaze. Using mortars, they launched a col-lateral attack on a safe house, killing two more Americans, as other U.S. agents fl ed to the airport.

On Sept. 14, White House press secretary Jay Carney said the attack came out of a spontaneous protest caused by an anti-Muslim video on YouTube.

On Sept. 16, U.N. Ambas-sador Susan Rice told the en-tire nation the attack had not been premeditated or pre-planned but emanated from a spontaneous protest of the nasty video.

On Sept. 25, Obama at the United Nations mentioned the video six times.

But when they were push-ing this tale, what did the White House actually know?

For we have now learned that the assault was observed in near real time by the State Department’s Charlene Lamb, who was in contact with the security section at the Benghazi compound.

The next day, Sept. 12, Fox News and Eli Lake of The Daily Beast reported that U.S. intelligence had concluded it was terrorism. Within 24 hours of the attack, U.S. intelligence had identi-

fi ed some of the terrorists as members of an al-Qaida af-fi liate.

Thus either administration h i g h e r - u p s were igno-rant for more than a week of what their own

agents knew, and are thus manifestly incompetent, or they colluded in a cover-up and orchestrated deception.

As the facts are revealed, the weight of evidence tilts toward the latter conclusion.

Why? Because we now know there never was any protest at the Benghazi compound — not against an anti-Muslim video or anything else.

And if there was no pro-test, who sent Carney out to blame the attack on the pro-test? And if there was no pro-test, who programmed Rice and put her on fi ve separate Sunday talk shows to attri-bute the massacre to a pro-test that never happened?

If real-time intelligence and U.S. agents at the scene knew it was premeditated, preplanned terrorism by Sept. 12, who told Rice to deny specifi cally on Sept. 16 that the attack was premedi-tated or preplanned?

Indeed, why was Rice sent out at all? She is not in the chain of command. Why she accepted the assignment is

obvious. She wants to be Hill-ary Clinton’s successor as sec-retary of state. But who put her up to this? Who pushed her out front to mislead us?

The CIA’s David Petraeus or Director of National In-telligence James Clapper should have been sent out to say what we knew, fi ve days after the massacre. As Chris Stevens reported to the sec-retary of state and President Obama, why was Hillary or National Security Adviser Tom Donilon not sent out to explain what had happened to Stevens and the others?

Looking back, Carney and Rice appear to have been used by their superiors.

Carney would never have gone out to speculate on his own about what happened in Benghazi. His line on Sept. 14 had to have been fed to him by the White House chief of staff, Donilon, Obama or all of them.

As for Rice, someone con-tacted those fi ve TV networks to put her on. And the party line she delivered — the op-posite of the truth — had to have been fed to her, almost word for word — by Donilon or the chief of staff.

Could Donilon or Hillary have been in the dark about what Rice was going to say? Could they have still been in the dark about what had happened fi ve days before in Benghazi, when Hillary’s own deputy Charlene Lamb

had followed the terrorist at-tack in near real time?

Was the president told by the NSC that we were get-ting real-time intel and video from Benghazi, and would he like to see?

There is an even more fun-damental question:

Why did the White House persist with the phony story of a protest against a video being the cause of Ambassador Ste-vens’ death, when they had to know there was no protest?

The most plausible expla-nation is that the truth — we were being hit with the worst terror attack since 9/11 in a city we saved — would have exposed Obama’s boasting about his Libya triumph and al-Qaida being “on the run” and “on the path to defeat” as absurd propaganda.

Al-Qaida is now in Libya, Mali, Yemen, Syria, Iraq and Pakistan. And the epidemic of anti-American riots across the Muslim world, with Arab Spring elections bringing to power Islamist regimes, testify to the real truth. Af-ter four years of Obama, it is America that is on the run in the Middle East.

But we can’t let folks fi nd that out until after Nov. 6.

Hence the Benghazi cover-up.

(Daily Corinthian colum-nist Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of “Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?”)

What’s behind the Benghazi cover-up

An interesting story from last winter: An email friend who lives in an affl uent sub-urb far from Washington, a staunch Republican, was watching one of the Repub-lican debates with his wife, a staunch Democrat.

He was surprised by her response to Mitt Romney. “He’s a grown-up. He’s someone who is reliable,” he told me she said. “People will feel safe if he is in charge.”

I’ve been thinking about that email in the wake of the fi rst presidential debate on Oct. 3 and the vice presiden-tial debate last week. (This is written on deadline before the Oct. 16 debate.)

There’s obviously been a surge toward Romney. He was trailing in just about every na-tional poll conducted before Oct. 3. He has been leading in most conducted since.

Fascinatingly, it appears that he’s made greater gains among women than men. The USA Today/Gallup poll has him running even with Barack Obama among wom-en, 48 to 48 percent. Pew Re-search Center’s post-debate poll has women at 47 to 47.

That’s a huge difference from 2008, when the exit poll showed Barack Obama leading John McCain among women by 56 to 43 percent. Men favored Obama by only 1 point.

All the evidence suggests that the fi rst debate made the difference. “In every poll we’ve seen a major surge in favorability for Romney,” Democratic pollster Celinda Lake told USA Today’s Su-san Page. “Women went into the debate actively dislik-ing Romney,” she went on, “and they came out thinking he might understand their lives and might be able to get something done for them.”

Obama campaign strate-gists are pooh-poohing the notion that Romney could be making gains with women.

Why, he’s against “access to contraception,” they thun-der. That was something we heard a lot about at the Dem-ocratic National Convention.

But it’s code language. “Ac-cess to contraception” turns out not to mean access to contraception. No one any-where in the country is pro-posing to ban contraceptives. The Supreme Court ruled in

1965 -- 47 years ago! — that states can’t do that.

The code language refers to the Obamacare require-ment that employers’ health insurance pay for contracep-tion. So “access” means you won’t have to pay the $9 a month contraceptives cost at Wal-Mart.

Maybe it’s just possible that women voters are more concerned about an economy where 23 million people are out of work or quit looking.

Or about a president who the day after the murder of a U.S. ambassador fl ew off to a fundraiser and for two weeks kept blaming it on a sponta-neous response to a video, contrary to what his State De-partment knew on day one.

Joe Biden tried to appeal to women by predicting that a Supreme Court with more Republican appointees might overturn Roe v. Wade and make abortion illegal.

Once upon a time, abortion was a defi ning issue for many voters. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, partisan pref-erences on both sides were linked to strong religious and moral beliefs. Voters didn’t switch parties much.

In the last half a dozen years, voters have responded more to events, emerging is-sues, and leaders’ strengths and weaknesses. Many switched parties to vote for Obama. Some, many of them women, are switching now to vote for Romney.

Women tend to be more risk-averse than men, and the gender gap grew when Reagan Republicans were depicted as scaling back wel-fare state protections.

The debates may have shifted the perception of risk. The downcast Obama and the cackling Biden may have sounded dangerously risky. Many women may have felt, as my email friend’s wife said last winter, they would feel safe if Romney were in charge.

Readers who watched Tuesday’s debate can judge whether that still holds.

(Daily Corinthian columnist Michael Barone, senior po-litical analyst for The Wash-ington Examiner, www.washingtonexaminer.com, is a resident fellow at the Ameri-can Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Alma-nac of American Politics.)

More women think Romney is safer choiceEffective immediately, the Daily Co-rinthian Sound Off policy will be the same as its Letter to the Editor Policy.

Sounds Offs need to be submitted with a name, address, contact phone number and if possible, e-mail address, for author verifi cation. The author’s name and city of residence will be published with the Sound Off. Sound Offs will only accept-ed from those who wish to have their names published with their opinion.

Sound Off Policy

BY JIM HIGHTOWER

Pat Buchanan

Columnist

BY MICHAEL BARONE

Father, come alongside your people, remind them of your eternal pres-ence and give them your comfort and strength. Amen.

As in one body we have many mem-bers, and not all members have the same function, so we, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another

— Romans 12:4-5 (NRSV)

Page 5: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 19, 2012 • 5A

State Briefs

Naval maritime museum in works

PASCAGOULA — Orga-nizers of the Mississippi Maritime and Warship Mu-seum are planning to use the math/science building and the band hall at the old Pascagoula High School for a temporary site.

“Once we have owner-ship, we can get very seri-ous about seeking grant money and restore the building,” museum group president Pat Keene told Jackson County supervi-sors this week.

Once that is done, Keene said organizers will begin locating and restoring the artifacts and memorabilia that will fill the interim museum, which is Phase One of the group’s

plan.“We meet people all the

time that said, ‘Oh, I was working this ship or that ship.’ That just thrills us because we will be able to honor all these people,” Maritime Museum group member Delores Early said.

Group member Jack Hoover said Wednesday that the two high school buildings have also been added to the National Register of Historic Places, which is “a milestone in our development.”

The designation means the nonprofit will not have to raze the old school buildings, which are in the flood zone.

Woman charged for plot to kill husband

JACKSON — Authori-

ties say a 35-year-old Mississippi woman has been charged with plot-ting to kill her husband.

Mississippi Depart-ment of Public Safety spokesman Warren Strain says in a news release that Mary Eliza-beth Newman of Bel-mont hired a man to kill her husband.

The news release says Newman was arrested Wednesday after a week-long investigation by the Mississippi Bureau of In-vestigation. She’s been charged with conspiracy to commit murder and is being held in the Lee County Detention center on $1 million bond.

It wasn’t immediately clear if Newman had a lawyer. Nobody imme-diately responded to a message at a phone list-

ing for Newman.

Fungus in tainted steroids match patients

NEW YORK — The fungus found in tainted steroid shots matches the one blamed in the national meningitis out-break that has killed 20 people, federal health of-ficials said Thursday.

Officials had previ-ously said more than 50 unopened vials were con-taminated with fungus, but they were doing more tests to determine the kind of fungus.

With Thursday’s an-nouncement, officials say they have confirmed the link between the outbreak and the maker of the steroids, New England Compounding

Center of Framingham, Mass.

The specialty phar-macy has been at the center of a national investigation into more than 250 fungal menin-gitis cases, including at least 20 deaths.

The victims in the out-break had all received steroid shots made by the company, mostly to treat back pain. The com-pany last month recalled three lots of the steroid made since May.

 DeSoto County schools add 400-plus students

HERNANDO — DeSoto County Schools grew by 400-plus students this year, helping the district maintain its status as Mississippi’s largest

public school district.The 2012-13 K-12

enrollment climbed to 32,759 students, up from 32,311 students last year.

Superintendent Milton Kuykendall tells The Commercial Appeal the district hired 47 new teachers, mainly to fill position in middle schools. Of the 47 teachers, 15 were hired to keep up with the district’s growing enroll-ment.

Of the district’s 42 schools, DeSoto Cen-tral High in Southaven saw the biggest gain, 75 students, for a total of 1,595. It was closely followed by Lake Cormo-rant Middle with 74 new students for a total of 801.

Associated Press

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Page 6: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

6A • Friday, October 19, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Nation Briefs

Rhetoric heats upas emotions run high

NEW YORK — Vice President Joe Biden on Thursday compared his rival’s policies to a gun pointed at Americans, and the GOP nominee’s son said he’s tempted to “take a swing” at President Barack Obama as emotions run high in the closely fought White House race.

The barbs are being delivered with a smile, but their sharpness is a reflection of just how tight the race is 19 days out. Democrats are pushing the accusa-tion that Mitt Romney is being dishonest, with Obama’s refrain since Tuesday’s debate that the GOP nominee is of-fering “a sketchy deal.”

“I don’t think they were just sketchy,” Biden said at a rally in Las Vegas. “I think they were Etch-a-Sketchy.”

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid warmed up the crowd in Nevada by saying Romney is “giv-ing used car salesmen a bad name.” Reid then introduced Biden as a man “who has shown us his tax returns” — a con-trast to Romney’s refusal to release more than the past two years. His red-meat offering whipped the partisan crowd into whoops and applause as Biden took the stage.

Biden accused GOP vice presidential nomi-nee Paul Ryan of sharing a cynical vision of Ameri-cans with Romney.

“Ryan has written a book called the ‘Young Guns’ with two other members of the House,” Biden said. “Unfortunate-ly, the bullets are aimed at you.”

Official proposes bullet tax to curb crime

CHICAGO — As Chi-cago struggles to quell gang violence that has contributed to a jump in homicides, a top elected official wants to tax the sale of every bullet and firearm — an effort that has national gun-rights advocates already consid-ering a legal challenge.

Cook County Board President Toni Preck-winkle submitted a proposed budget on

Thursday that would im-pose a tax of a nickel for each bullet and $25 for each firearm sold in the nation’s second-largest county, which encom-passes Chicago.

Preckwinkle’s office estimates the tax will generate about $1 mil-lion a year, money that would be used for vari-ous county services in-cluding medical care for gunshot victims. Law en-forcement officials would not have to pay the tax, but the office said it would apply to 40 feder-ally licensed gun dealers in the county.

Through last week, the city reported 409 homi-cides this year compared to 324 during the same period in 2011. Although the violence still doesn’t approach the nearly 900 homicides a year Chicago averaged in the 1990s, officials say gang activity was largely to blame for a rash of shootings earlier this year.

Preckwinkle insists the ordinance is far more about addressing gun vio-lence than raising money for a county that faces a budget shortfall of more than $260 million.

 Man convicted of aiding terror group

MINNEAPOLIS — A Minneapolis man ac-cused of helping send young men through a ter-rorist pipeline from Min-nesota to Somalia was convicted Thursday on all five terrorism-related charges he faced, includ-ing one that could land him in prison for life.

The jury returned its verdict against Mahamud Said Omar after delib-erating for about eight hours over two days. Chief U.S. District Judge Michael Davis did not set a sentencing date.

Omar, 46, nodded quietly as an interpreter gave him the bad news. As he was being led from the courtroom, he held up his hands and smiled at his brothers and other supporters of his in the courtroom gallery.

One of his defense at-torneys, Jon Hopeman, said outside of court afterward that Omar will appeal the verdict. He said he plans to scruti-nize secretly recorded wiretaps of conversa-

tions involving Omar that weren’t made available to the defense team.

Omar, a mosque jani-tor, was the first man to stand trial in the govern-ment’s investigation into what it says was the recruitment of more than 20 men who have left Minnesota since 2007 to join al-Shabab, a U.S.-designated terrorist group linked to al-Qaida that’s blamed for much of the violence that has plagued the East African country.

 Newsweek going out of print, ends an era

NEW YORK — There was a time when the newsweeklies set the agenda for the nation’s conversation — when Time and Newsweek would digest the events of the week and Ameri-cans would wait by their mailboxes to see what was on the covers.

Those days have passed, and come the end of the year, the print edition of Newsweek will pass, too. Cause of death: The march of time.

“The tempo of the news and the Web have completely overtaken the news magazines,” said Stephen G. Smith, editor of the Washington Examiner and the holder of an unprecedented newsweekly triple crown — nation editor at Time, editor of U.S. News and World Report, and execu-tive editor of Newsweek from 1986 to 1991.

Where once readers were content to sit back and wait for tempered accounts of domestic and foreign events, they now can find much of what they need almost instantaneously, on their smartphones. Where once advertisers had limited places to spend their dollars to reach national audiences, they now have seemingly un-limited alternatives.

So on Thursday, when Newsweek’s current owners announced they intended to halt print publication and expand the magazine’s Web presence, there was little surprise. But there was a good deal of nos-talgia for what Smith called “the shared con-versation that the nation used to have,” when the networks, the newsweek-lies and a few national newspapers reigned.

Before Newsweek, there was Time — the brainchild of Henry Luce and Briton Hadden. The first issue of the first newsweekly came out in 1923, and the formula, from the first, was to wrap up the week’s news and tie it with a bow, telling it with a singular voice.

Newsweek — or as it was originally called, News-week — came along in 1933. The founding editor was Thomas Martyn. The first foreign editor of Time, he was British-born and had a single leg, having lost the other in World War I. His magazine sold for 10 cents and was advertised as “an indis-pensable complement to newspaper reading.

Associated Press

PETOSKEY, Mich. — A northern Michigan man charged with obstructing the police while dressed as Batman has pleaded not guilty.

State troopers arrested 33-year-old Mark Wayne

Williams on Sept. 29 be-cause he wouldn’t leave them alone while they searched for a driver who had fl ed an accident. Wil-liams was charged with resisting and obstructing police in an investiga-tion.

The Petoskey News-Review reports that Wil-liams pleaded not guilty Thursday in District Court in Petoskey. He’s due back in court Nov. 21.

Williams has said he had good intentions.

‘Batman’ says not guilty of obstructing copsAssociated Press

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Say Yes: ATL

Secret Princes

FOOD H Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Mystery Diners

Mystery Diners

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

INSP I The Waltons The Waltons Little House/Prairie Medicine Woman The Big Valley

LIFE J =Prank My Mom

Prank My Mom

Prank My Mom

Prank My Mom

My Life Is a Lifetime Movie

Project Runway “Finale, Part I”

Prank My Mom

Prank My Mom

TBN M Behind Lindsey Harvest P. Stone Praise the Lord Ever In Israel:

AMC N 0} › Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday (93) Jon D. LeMay, Kari Keegan.

The Walking Dead “Seed”

Comic Men } ››› Scary Movie (00, Comedy) Shawn Wayans.

FAM O <(6:00) } ›› The Ad-dams Family (91)

} ›› Addams Family Values (93, Comedy) Anjelica Huston, Raul Julia.

The 700 Club Fresh Prince

Fresh Prince

TCM P } ››› A Face in the Crowd (57, Drama) Andy Griffith, Patricia Neal.

(:15) } ››› The Glass Key (42) Brian Donlevy, Alan Ladd.

(:45) } ››› Flamingo Road (49) Joan Crawford.

TNT Q A} ››› Drumline (02) Nick Cannon. Rivalry between two drum-mers threatens a college band.

} ›› Stomp the Yard (07, Drama) A troubled dancer enrolls in college.

} Drum-line (02)

TBS R *Better Worse

Better Worse

Better Worse

Better Worse

} ›› Tyler Perry’s Madea Goes to Jail (09) Madea raises hell behind bars.

(:15) } ›› Why Did I Get Married?

GAME S Pyramid Pyramid Pyramid Pyramid Minute to Win It FamFeud FamFeud Baggage Baggage TOON T Cartoon Planet King/Hill King/Hill American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Cosby Cosby Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King SPEED Z SP Cen ARCA RE/MAX Series Racing: Kansas. Road Champ. Trackside At... ARCA

FX Æ ;(6:00) } ›› The Twilight Saga: New Moon (09, Romance) Kristen Stewart.

The Ultimate Fighter (N) } ›› Underworld: Evolution (06, Horror) Kate Beckinsale, Scott Speedman.

OUT Ø L.L. Fear No Outfitter Sas Driven Savage Wild Jimmy Hunting Bone NBCS ∞ (6:30) Action Sports (N) CFL Football: Edmonton Eskimos at BC Lions. (N) (Live) OWN ± Police Women Police Women Police Women Police Women Police Women FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor Hannity (N) Greta Van Susteren The O’Reilly Factor Hannity APL ≥ Monsters Inside Me Monsters Inside Me Fatal Attractions Monsters Inside Me Monsters Inside Me

HALL ∂ G} ››› Honeymoon for One (11, Romance) Nicol-lette Sheridan, Greg Wise.

Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LMake Your Mark: Shake It Up Dance-Off 2012 (N)

Shake It Up!

A.N.T. Farm Gravity Falls

Jessie Jessie Jessie Shake It Up!

SYFY EWWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Haven “Double Jeop-

ardy” (N)Alphas “Need to Know” Haven “Double Jeopardy”

Hog Wild T-Shirts!Adults- $15

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If you missed the opportunity to purchase your 2012 Hog Wild Shirt

Main Street will be taking pre-paid T-Shirt orders, thru Fri. October 29th at 4:00.

The Alliance 810 Tate Street

Page 7: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

13,661.72 11,231.56 Dow Industrials 13,548.94 -8.06 -.06 +10.90 +17.395,390.11 4,531.79 Dow Transportation 5,156.54 +7.84 +.15 +2.73 +9.49

499.82 422.90 Dow Utilities 487.36 +1.51 +.31 +4.88 +9.458,515.60 6,898.12 NYSE Composite 8,442.81 -3.71 -.04 +12.92 +16.072,509.57 2,102.29 NYSE MKT 2,434.26 -29.33 -1.19 +6.84 +12.473,196.93 2,441.48 Nasdaq Composite 3,072.87 -31.25 -1.01 +17.95 +18.251,474.51 1,158.66 S&P 500 1,457.34 -3.57 -.24 +15.88 +19.91

15,432.54 12,158.90 Wilshire 5000 15,208.58 -43.22 -.28 +15.30 +19.44868.50 666.16 Russell 2000 837.12 -5.40 -.64 +12.98 +20.20

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.32 9 50.11 -.17 +15.8AT&T Inc 1.76 48 36.02 +.30 +19.1AirProd 2.56 15 85.35 +.40 +.2AlliantEgy 1.80 18 45.30 +.07 +2.7AEP 1.88 11 45.27 +.25 +9.6AmeriBrgn .52 15 40.68 +.15 +9.4ATMOS 1.38 15 36.53 -.33 +9.5BB&T Cp .80 12 29.98 -2.29 +19.1BP PLC 1.92 6 43.53 -.01 +1.8BcpSouth .04 18 14.04 -.15 +27.4Caterpillar 2.08 10 86.62 +.51 -4.4Chevron 3.60 9 114.66 -.53 +7.8CocaCola s 1.02 20 37.84 +.10 +8.2Comcast .65 21 37.29 +.17 +57.3CrackerB 2.00f 15 66.98 -.22 +32.9Deere 1.84 12 86.86 +1.05 +12.3Dell Inc .32 6 9.80 -.05 -33.0Dillards .20 8 78.48 -.03 +74.9Dover 1.40f 11 57.94 +1.93 -.2EnPro ... 17 36.68 -.37 +11.2FordM .20 9 10.43 +.02 -3.1FredsInc .24 14 13.77 +.01 -5.6FullerHB .34 22 31.39 +.17 +35.8GenCorp ... ... 9.17 -.18 +72.4GenElec .68 19 22.81 -.10 +27.4Goodyear ... 14 12.73 -.06 -10.2HonwllIntl 1.49 21 61.42 -.47 +13.0Intel .90 9 21.67 -.12 -10.6Jabil .32 9 17.26 -.46 -12.2KimbClk 2.96 19 87.68 +.24 +19.2Kroger .60f 23 25.20 +.19 +4.0Lowes .64 21 32.57 -.22 +28.3

McDnlds 3.08f 17 92.86 -.82 -7.4MeadWvco 1.00 23 30.89 +.22 +15.8OldNBcp .36 13 13.08 -.17 +12.3Penney ... ... 26.82 +.24 -23.7PennyMac 2.20 9 25.23 -.21 +51.8PepsiCo 2.15 19 70.76 +.66 +6.6PilgrimsP ... ... 4.44 +.03 -22.9RadioShk ... ... 2.41 -.03 -75.2RegionsFn .04 17 7.22 +.04 +67.8SbdCp ... 11 2269.31 -39.69 +11.5SearsHldgs .33t ... 61.01 -.46 +92.0Sherwin 1.56 31 153.03 -1.18 +71.4SiriusXM ... 5 2.94 +.11 +61.5SouthnCo 1.96 19 46.80 +.26 +1.1SprintNex ... ... 5.78 +.05 +147.0SPDR Fncl .25e ... 16.33 +.04 +25.6StratIBM12 .76 ... 25.02 ... -1.0TecumsehB ... 12 5.22 -.05 +17.3TecumsehA ... ... 5.06 +.03 +7.7Torchmark .60 11 51.94 -.15 +19.7Total SA 2.90e ... 51.99 -.30 +1.7USEC ... ... .65 -.02 -43.0US Bancrp .78 12 34.40 +.20 +27.2WalMart 1.59 16 76.56 -.47 +28.1WellsFargo .88 11 34.57 +.10 +25.4Wendys Co .08 ... 4.31 +.02 -19.6WestlkChm .75f 17 77.50 -.16 +92.6Weyerhsr .68f 44 28.46 +.46 +52.4Xerox .17 8 7.36 +.04 -7.5YRC rs ... ... 6.76 -.36 -32.2Yahoo ... 18 16.00 -.09 -.8

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DACE Ltd 14 81.70 +2.41ADT Cp n ... 38.56 -.26AES Corp 15 11.15 +.05AK Steel dd 5.79 +.07ASML Hld ... 51.34 +1.26AbtLab 14 66.64 -2.40Accenture 18 68.90 -.85ActivsBliz 16 11.30 -.01AdobeSy 21 33.48 +.04AMD dd 2.62 -.15Aegerion dd 20.94 +1.79Aeropostl 17 12.99 +.30Aetna 9 44.30 +.77Agilent 13 36.64 -1.42Albemarle 12 55.72 +1.44AlcatelLuc ... 1.12 +.05Alcoa 58 9.21 +.03AlignTech 25 28.18 -7.23Allergan 28 94.85 -.41AllscriptH 23 13.67 +.07Allstate 10 42.62 +.75AlphaNRs dd 9.15 -.11AlteraCp lf 18 33.20 -.19Altria 16 33.09 -.41Amarin ... 11.77 +.48Amazon cc 244.85 -2.64AMovilL 27 26.54 +.35ACapAgy 8 33.00 +.48AmCapLtd 3 12.06 +.16AEagleOut 24 22.89 +.44AmExp 13 57.61 -1.76AmIntlGrp 3 37.21 +.35Amgen 19 89.79 +.59AnacorPh dd 6.01 -.45AnglogldA ... 32.57 -2.37Annaly 64 16.10 +.11vjA123 dd .08 +.02Apache 11 88.72 +.16ApolloGrp 6 21.17 -.23Apple Inc 15 632.64 -11.97ApldMatl 13 11.19 +.03ArcelorMit cc 16.55 +.27ArchCoal dd 8.35 +.22ArchDan 16 29.07 -.03ArenaPhm dd 9.55 -.45ArmourRsd 90 7.16 +.02ArubaNet dd 19.76 -.68Atmel 13 4.84 -.13AuRico g 11 8.14 -.09Autodesk 25 31.59 -.61Avon 30 17.16 -.13BHP BillLt ... 71.86 +.69Baidu 29 113.18 -1.67BakrHu 12 47.10 +.38BcoBrad pf ... 15.99 +.18BcoSantSA ... 7.82 -.15BcoSBrasil ... 7.34 -.01BkofAm 25 9.47 +.03BkNYMel 14 24.98 +.12Barclay ... 15.46 -.32BariPVix rs q 32.88 -.11BarrickG 9 38.92 -1.02Baxter 16 62.74 +.82BerkH B 17 90.62 +.12BestBuy dd 17.49 -.10BioMedR cc 19.56 +.18Blackstone dd 15.71 +.67Boeing 13 74.26 +.63BostonSci 13 5.40 -.22BrMySq 16 34.29 -.09Broadcom 25 34.57 -.02BrcdeCm 20 5.60 -.08CBRE Grp 19 19.58 +.27CBS B 15 34.06 -.36CSX 12 21.36 +.17CVS Care 17 46.59 +.10CYS Invest 4 13.38 +.10CblvsnNY 21 18.52 +.77Calpine 54 18.41 -.19CapOne 10 57.30 -.73CareFusion 20 27.43 -.65CaribouC 23 11.85 -.47Carlisle 14 53.31 -.57Carnival 24 38.81 +.25Cemex ... 9.22 +.10Cemig pf s ... 12.16 -.35CenElBras ... 5.89 +.20CntryLink 43 39.35 +.02ChkPoint 15 41.42 +.27CheniereEn dd 16.04 +.22ChesEng 7 21.58 +.49Chimera ... 2.71 +.07Chubb 14 81.19 +2.32CienaCorp dd 12.62 -.41CinciBell 33 5.63 -.02Cisco 12 18.61 -.10Citigroup 12 38.42 -.01CitrixSys 34 64.91 -.14Clearwire dd 2.03 -.23CliffsNRs 5 45.79 +.17Coach 16 57.37 +.94CognizTech 22 69.37 -.17Comc spcl 21 36.31 +.19Comerica 12 29.65 -.65ConAgra 20 28.76 +.24ConocPhil s 7 58.27 +.15ConsolEngy 16 36.08 +.25Corning 10 13.74 -.09Costco 25 96.33 -.45CSVS2xVxS q 1.28 -.02CSVelIVSt q 18.42 +.04CredSuiss ... 24.24 +.16Cree Inc 71 28.98 +.06Ctrip.com 22 19.86 +1.19Cummins 9 93.12 +.71Cymer 43 74.13 +2.68CypSemi 10 10.07 -.90CytRx rs dd 2.50 -.61DCT Indl dd 6.60 +.04DR Horton 8 21.55 +.01Danaher 17 53.45 -2.65DeVry 10 21.86 -.32DeanFds dd 17.94 +.98DeltaAir 6 10.21 +.02DenburyR 10 16.60 -.14Dndreon dd 4.31 +.07DevonE 10 62.65 -.16DiaOffs 13 71.41 +1.64DiamRk dd 8.86 +.01DirecTV 13 52.07 +.39DxFnBull rs q 118.11 +.69DirSCBear q 14.75 +.24DirFnBear q 16.07 -.10DirDGldBll q 15.50 -1.50DrxEnBear q 7.12 -.01DirxSCBull q 61.51 -1.16Discover 9 40.43 -.37DishNetwk 13 35.74 +1.62Disney 17 52.42 +.13DollarGen 18 47.29 -.95DollarTh 14 85.11 -1.70DollarTr s 18 39.36 -1.02DomRescs 18 53.58 +.23DonlleyRR 5 10.76 -.10DowChm 19 30.22 -.02DryShips dd 2.43 +.05DuPont 14 50.42 +.57DukeEn rs 17 65.60 +.33Dynavax dd 4.55 -.15

E-F-G-HE-Trade 25 9.42 -.12eBay 17 50.83 +2.63EMC Cp 21 25.00 -.60EstWstBcp 12 21.53 +1.27Eaton 12 46.51 -.23Elan 14 11.20 -.02EldorGld g 27 14.19 -.63ElectArts dd 13.83 -.04EmersonEl 15 49.60 +.29EmpDist 17 21.93 -.06EnCana g 27 23.98 +.72ENSCO 13 59.29 +1.15Ericsson ... 9.17 +.18EthanAl 17 28.06 +4.50ExcoRes dd 8.93 +.02Exelon 14 37.48 +.37Expedia s 32 54.28 -.05ExpdIntl 21 35.54 -.01Express 7 11.75ExpScripts 32 63.79 -.75ExxonMbl 12 93.48 +.09Facebook n ... 18.98 -.91FairchldS 21 12.35 -.11FedExCp 15 93.49 +.54FifthThird 10 15.12 -.01Finisar 21 12.19 -.54FstHorizon dd 9.68 +.01FstNiagara 17 8.28 +.08FstSolar dd 25.14 -.03Flextrn 9 6.12 -.16

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

SiriusXM 1711080 2.94 +.11BkofAm 1469449 9.47 +.03S&P500ETF 1302153 145.82 -.38SprintNex 1282397 5.78 +.05NokiaCp 1039038 2.80 -.14PwShs QQQ 550749 67.29 -.79Clearwire 546806 2.03 -.23Microsoft 531102 29.50 -.10Facebook n 513091 18.98 -.91SPDR Fncl 510517 16.33 +.04

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,479Declined 1,539Unchanged 119

Total issues 3,137New Highs 227New Lows 11

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 787Declined 1,655Unchanged 109

Total issues 2,551New Highs 98New Lows 36

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

CybexIntl 2.45 +1.10 +81.5Broadwd rs 2.75 +.58 +26.7OrientEH 11.05 +2.03 +22.5NovaCpp n 2.45 +.43 +21.3EthanAl 28.06 +4.50 +19.1GivenIm 18.19 +2.92 +19.1DixieGrp 4.25 +.63 +17.4IntegElec 5.80 +.82 +16.5Wesco Intl 65.11 +7.94 +13.9HovnEn pf A10.48 +1.11 +11.8

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

Mellanox 77.99 -20.16 -20.5AlignTech 28.18 -7.23 -20.4CytRx rs 2.50 -.61 -19.6FtSecG rsh 2.43 -.48 -16.5B Comm 7.03 -1.25 -15.1ImmunoCll 2.07 -.34 -14.1PLX Tch 4.51 -.73 -13.8ClearSign n 6.19 -.94 -13.2NetElem n 6.59 -.91 -12.2UnivFor 37.40 -4.85 -11.5

AllianzNFJDvVlIs 13.11 +0.01 +16.9American BeaconLgCpVlInv 21.04 +0.02 +19.3LgCpVlIs 22.21 +0.01 +19.5American CentEqIncInv 8.09 +0.02 +13.3GrowthInv 28.40 -0.21 +15.6InfAdjI 13.36 +0.01 +5.8UltraInv 26.51 -0.30 +15.7ValueInv 6.47 +0.01 +15.7American FundsAMCAPA m 21.54 -0.06 +14.9BalA m 20.51 -0.01 +14.3BondA m 12.93 -0.01 +5.2CapIncBuA m 53.46 -0.20 +11.7CapWldBdA m21.60 -0.03 +7.3CpWldGrIA m 36.80 -0.08 +17.0EurPacGrA m 40.55 +0.02 +15.3FnInvA m 40.89 -0.05 +16.7GrthAmA m 34.21 -0.15 +19.1HiIncA m 11.31 ... +12.4IncAmerA m 18.29 +0.02 +12.2IntBdAmA m 13.76 ... +2.4InvCoAmA m 31.13 -0.08 +16.4MutualA m 28.92 +0.06 +13.7NewEconA m 28.70 -0.12 +20.7NewPerspA m 30.91 -0.13 +18.2NwWrldA m 53.31 -0.07 +15.6SmCpWldA m 39.79 -0.16 +19.9TaxEBdAmA m13.14 ... +8.0USGovSecA m14.54 -0.01 +1.8WAMutInvA m 31.95 +0.05 +14.3AquilaChTxFKYA m 11.03 ... +4.5ArtisanIntl d 23.99 -0.09 +21.0IntlVal d 29.41 -0.03 +17.2MdCpVal 21.68 +0.07 +10.1MidCap 38.41 -0.27 +16.6BaronGrowth b 58.27 -0.09 +14.2BernsteinDiversMui 14.90 ... +2.9IntDur 14.22 ... +4.9TxMIntl 13.77 -0.05 +10.3BlackRockEngy&ResA m30.05 +0.07 -6.8EqDivA x 20.39 -0.08 +14.0EqDivI x 20.44 -0.08 +14.2GlobAlcA m 19.75 -0.04 +9.5GlobAlcC m 18.36 -0.03 +8.8GlobAlcI 19.85 -0.04 +9.7HiYldBdIs 8.04 +0.01 +14.5HiYldInvA m 8.04 +0.01 +14.2CalamosGrowA m 51.56 -0.58 +11.1Cohen & SteersRealty 69.01 +0.87 +15.2ColumbiaAcornIntZ 40.48 -0.14 +18.6AcornZ 31.29 -0.07 +14.9DivIncZ 15.24 -0.01 +14.1StLgCpGrZ 13.85 -0.14 +15.2TaxEA m 14.30 ... +8.2DFA1YrFixInI 10.35 ... +0.92YrGlbFII 10.13 ... +0.95YrGlbFII 11.25 ... +4.2EmMkCrEqI 19.41 -0.02 +14.1EmMktValI 29.08 -0.02 +13.4IntSmCapI 15.36 -0.03 +15.0RelEstScI 26.47 +0.27 +16.5USCorEq1I 12.46 -0.02 +17.1USCorEq2I 12.31 -0.02 +17.5USLgCo 11.51 -0.02 +17.8USLgValI 23.08 +0.04 +22.1USMicroI 15.11 -0.15 +14.9USSmValI 27.25 -0.16 +18.2USSmallI 23.52 -0.14 +15.4DWS-ScudderGrIncS 18.42 -0.01 +15.6DavisNYVentA m 36.83 -0.22 +13.3NYVentY 37.28 -0.22 +13.6Delaware InvestDiverIncA m 9.45 ... +6.2Dimensional InvestmeIntCorEqI 10.29 -0.03 +13.7IntlSCoI 15.47 -0.05 +13.7IntlValuI 16.13 -0.02 +12.3Dodge & CoxBal 78.21 +0.06 +18.0Income 13.91 +0.01 +7.5IntlStk 33.89 +0.03 +15.9Stock 122.29 +0.12 +22.0DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.38 ... +8.0DreyfusApprecia 45.57 -0.30 +13.8Eaton VanceLrgCpValA m 19.99 ... +18.1FMILgCap 17.61 -0.06 +15.5FPACres d 29.00 -0.10 +9.2NewInc m 10.61 ... +1.9Fairholme FundsFairhome d 32.48 +0.11 +40.3FederatedStrValI 5.22 ... +10.7ToRetIs 11.60 -0.01 +5.8FidelityAstMgr20 13.39 -0.01 +6.4AstMgr50 16.46 -0.02 +10.9Bal 20.36 -0.05 +13.4BlChGrow 50.21 -0.56 +18.4CapApr 30.27 -0.11 +22.9CapInc d 9.46 ... +14.1Contra 79.32 -0.75 +17.6DiscEq 25.00 -0.07 +16.2DivGrow 30.54 -0.12 +18.9DivrIntl d 29.57 -0.09 +15.9EqInc 48.15 +0.05 +18.9EqInc II 20.10 +0.02 +17.5FF2015 12.06 -0.02 +10.6FF2035 12.08 -0.02 +14.7FF2040 8.43 -0.02 +14.7Fidelity 36.60 -0.18 +18.2FltRtHiIn d 9.96 +0.01 +6.0Free2010 14.42 -0.02 +10.4Free2020 14.62 -0.03 +11.7Free2025 12.21 -0.02 +13.2Free2030 14.55 -0.03 +13.6GNMA 11.80 ... +2.8GovtInc 10.59 -0.01 +2.3GrowCo 97.72 -1.16 +20.8GrowInc 21.61 -0.07 +20.1HiInc d 9.35 +0.01 +13.2IntBond 11.12 -0.01 +4.3IntMuniInc d 10.66 ... +4.4IntlDisc d 32.45 -0.07 +17.5InvGrdBd 7.98 -0.01 +5.6LatinAm d 50.54 +0.11 +3.4LowPriStk d 39.60 -0.01 +16.0Magellan 75.17 -0.42 +19.6MidCap d 30.05 -0.11 +15.0MuniInc d 13.54 ... +6.9NewMktIn d 17.87 +0.01 +17.5OTC 60.61 -0.92 +10.8Puritan 19.73 -0.06 +14.4RealInv d 32.15 +0.32 +17.3Series100Idx 10.50 -0.05 +19.0ShIntMu d 10.88 -0.01 +2.1ShTmBond 8.59 ... +2.1StratInc 11.45 ... +9.4Tel&Util 19.37 +0.11 +13.6TotalBd 11.00 -0.01 +5.8USBdIdx 11.91 ... +3.8USBdIdxInv 11.91 ... +3.7Value 75.73 +0.02 +19.3Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 23.12 -0.22 +17.2NewInsI 23.45 -0.22 +17.5StratIncA m 12.78 -0.01 +9.1Fidelity SelectGold d 41.54 -1.04 -1.6Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 51.68 -0.13 +17.9500IdxInstl 51.68 -0.13 +17.9500IdxInv 51.68 -0.12 +17.9ExtMktIdAg d 40.63 -0.10 +15.9IntlIdxAdg d 33.93 -0.04 +14.1TotMktIdAg d 42.33 -0.10 +17.6First EagleGlbA m 50.09 +0.02 +11.0OverseasA m 22.55 +0.03 +10.8ForumAbStratI 11.23 +0.01 +1.6FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.74 ... +8.0FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.53 ... +9.3

Name P/E Last Chg

3,749,419,096Volume 1,971,546,855Volume

12,000

12,400

12,800

13,200

13,600

14,000

A OM J J A S

13,240

13,480

13,720Dow Jones industrialsClose: 13,548.94Change: -8.06 (-0.1%)

10 DAYS

Growth A m 50.37 -0.21 +12.8HY TF A m 10.93 ... +10.1HighIncA m 2.08 ... +13.8Income A m 2.27 ... +14.0Income C m 2.29 ... +13.4IncomeAdv 2.26 +0.01 +14.8NY TF A m 12.16 ... +6.0RisDv A m 38.16 +0.04 +9.7StrInc A m 10.74 ... +10.6US Gov A m 6.83 -0.01 +1.3FrankTemp-MutualDiscov A m 30.41 +0.03 +13.8Discov Z 30.85 +0.02 +14.0QuestZ 18.05 +0.02 +12.8Shares A m 22.79 +0.02 +15.8Shares Z 23.01 +0.02 +16.1FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 6.76 +0.01 +14.2GlBond A m 13.53 +0.02 +13.1GlBond C m 13.55 +0.01 +12.7GlBondAdv 13.48 +0.01 +13.3Growth A m 19.40 +0.04 +19.1World A m 16.12 +0.02 +17.3Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 11.32 +0.03 +16.4GES&SUSEq 45.99 -0.07 +18.7GMOEmgMktsVI 11.50 ... +11.5IntItVlIV 20.75 -0.10 +11.0QuIII 23.88 -0.21 +14.5QuVI 23.89 -0.21 +14.5Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.39 ... +13.5MidCpVaIs 39.29 +0.14 +17.0HarborBond 12.98 ... +8.2CapApInst 43.06 -0.40 +16.7IntlInstl d 60.35 -0.23 +15.1IntlInv m 59.65 -0.23 +14.7HartfordCapAprA m 33.61 +0.02 +16.6CpApHLSIA 43.16 -0.03 +16.1DvGrHLSIA 22.32 +0.06 +15.5TRBdHLSIA 11.85 ... +6.2HussmanStratGrth d 10.88 +0.04 -12.5INVESCOCharterA m 18.26 +0.01 +13.8ComstockA m 18.06 +0.09 +20.1EqIncomeA m 9.39 +0.01 +14.4GrowIncA m 21.58 +0.04 +17.3HiYldMuA m 10.09 ... +12.3IvyAssetStrA m 25.49 -0.10 +14.5AssetStrC m 24.63 -0.09 +13.9JPMorganCoreBdUlt 12.09 -0.01 +4.5CoreBondA m 12.09 -0.01 +4.2CoreBondSelect12.08 -0.01 +4.4HighYldSel 8.19 +0.01 +12.8IntmdTFSl 11.40 -0.01 +3.3LgCapGrSelect24.44 -0.24 +13.9MidCpValI 28.58 +0.09 +20.3ShDurBndSel 11.01 ... +1.5ShtDurBdU 11.01 ... +1.7USEquit 11.64 -0.02 +18.5USLCpCrPS 23.59 +0.01 +19.5JanusBalT 27.31 -0.01 +13.2GlbLfScT d 31.32 -0.21 +25.8PerkinsMCVT 22.34 -0.01 +10.6TwentyT 62.95 -0.06 +23.2John HancockLifAg1 b 12.95 -0.04 +15.2LifBa1 b 13.65 -0.02 +13.1LifGr1 b 13.63 -0.04 +14.4LazardEmgMkEqtI d 19.61 -0.04 +16.7Legg Mason/WesternCrPlBdIns 11.66 ... +7.7Longleaf PartnersLongPart 31.87 +0.11 +19.6SmCap 30.78 +0.05 +22.0Loomis SaylesBondI 15.16 -0.02 +13.0BondR b 15.10 -0.01 +12.7Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 12.21 +0.01 +17.2BondDebA m 8.12 ... +11.6ShDurIncA m 4.65 ... +5.8ShDurIncC m 4.68 ... +5.2MFSIsIntlEq 18.62 -0.05 +17.0TotRetA m 15.36 -0.01 +11.5ValueA m 25.95 -0.03 +17.3ValueI 26.07 -0.03 +17.6MainStayHiYldCorA m 6.12 ... +11.3Manning & NapierWrldOppA 7.62 -0.02 +15.0Matthews AsianChina d 22.65 +0.03 +5.3India d 18.00 +0.02 +32.5MergerMerger b 15.95 -0.03 +2.3Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 11.03 ... +9.9TotRtBd b 11.03 ... +9.8Morgan Stanley InstlMdCpGrI 35.24 -0.12 +7.0NatixisInvBndY 12.84 -0.01 +11.3StratIncA m 15.53 -0.02 +11.9StratIncC m 15.62 -0.01 +11.3Neuberger BermanGenesisIs 50.49 -0.08 +8.7NorthernHYFixInc d 7.51 ... +12.9StkIdx 18.14 ... +18.1NuveenHiYldMunI 17.00 -0.01 +18.7OakmarkEqIncI 29.51 -0.01 +9.1Intl I d 19.73 +0.08 +19.2Oakmark I 50.26 -0.04 +20.6OberweisChinaOpp m 10.39 +0.05 +19.4Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 14.81 -0.02 +11.9LgCpStr 9.96 -0.01 +13.6OppenheimerDevMktA m 34.63 -0.16 +18.1DevMktY 34.31 -0.15 +18.4GlobA m 62.83 +0.04 +16.3IntlBondA m 6.60 ... +9.6IntlBondY 6.59 -0.01 +9.9IntlGrY 30.04 -0.07 +17.7LtdTmNY m 3.40 ... +5.7MainStrA m 38.11 -0.19 +18.5RocMuniA m 16.95 ... +11.3RochNtlMu m 7.57 +0.01 +16.6StrIncA m 4.33 ... +11.4PIMCOAAstAAutP 11.27 ... +15.0AllAssetI 12.79 ... +13.3AllAuthA m 11.22 +0.01 +14.8AllAuthIn 11.28 ... +15.1ComRlRStI 7.08 +0.04 +10.8DivIncInst 12.28 ... +13.0EMktCurI 10.57 -0.02 +7.8EmMktsIns 12.46 +0.01 +14.7FloatIncI 8.95 -0.01 +11.8ForBdIs 11.28 -0.01 +9.0ForBondI 11.57 -0.05 +8.4HiYldIs 9.61 +0.01 +12.4InvGrdIns 11.31 -0.01 +13.1LowDrA m 10.63 ... +5.1LowDrIs 10.63 ... +5.4RERRStgC m 4.85 +0.06 +24.9RealRet 12.52 +0.01 +7.9RealRtnA m 12.52 +0.01 +7.5ShtTermIs 9.87 ... +2.8ToRtIIIIs 10.17 ... +8.7TotRetA m 11.55 ... +8.6TotRetAdm b 11.55 ... +8.8TotRetC m 11.55 ... +8.0TotRetIs 11.55 ... +9.0TotRetrnD b 11.55 ... +8.7TotlRetnP 11.55 ... +8.9ParnassusEqIncInv 30.10 -0.17 +15.3PermanentPortfolio 49.68 -0.02 +7.8PioneerPioneerA m 42.59 -0.03 +11.2PrincipalL/T2020I 12.82 -0.02 +13.9L/T2030I 12.68 -0.03 +14.8LCGrIInst 10.39 -0.09 +17.0PutnamGrowIncA m 14.99 +0.03 +19.2NewOpp 58.45 -0.31 +16.0RoycePAMutInv d 11.91 -0.03 +10.7

PremierInv d 20.04 -0.03 +8.2RussellStratBdS 11.47 ... +7.3Schwab1000Inv d 41.49 -0.08 +17.3S&P500Sel d 23.06 -0.06 +17.8ScoutInterntl d 32.28 -0.05 +16.3SelectedAmerican D 44.69 -0.25 +13.3SequoiaSequoia 164.71 -0.79 +13.2T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 46.03 -0.48 +19.1CapApprec 23.41 -0.10 +13.5EmMktBd d 14.24 +0.02 +17.3EmMktStk d 32.75 +0.02 +14.9EqIndex d 39.30 -0.10 +17.7EqtyInc 26.84 +0.05 +18.3GrowStk 37.99 -0.42 +19.4HealthSci 44.18 -0.30 +35.5HiYield d 6.94 ... +13.0InsLgCpGr d 18.91 -0.22 +17.3IntlBnd d 10.20 -0.04 +6.7IntlGrInc d 12.89 +0.03 +11.9IntlStk d 14.14 -0.03 +15.1LatinAm d 41.55 +0.10 +7.0MidCapVa 25.68 +0.01 +20.1MidCpGr 58.92 -0.37 +11.7NewAsia d 16.44 +0.01 +18.2NewEra 45.17 -0.06 +7.4NewHoriz 35.91 -0.27 +15.7NewIncome 9.94 -0.01 +5.3OrseaStk d 8.42 ... +15.0R2015 13.11 -0.02 +13.2R2025 13.34 -0.03 +15.2R2035 13.58 -0.03 +16.5Real d 21.19 +0.20 +17.2Rtmt2010 16.82 -0.02 +12.0Rtmt2020 18.19 -0.04 +14.3Rtmt2030 19.19 -0.04 +16.0Rtmt2040 19.33 -0.05 +16.7ShTmBond 4.86 ... +2.7SmCpStk 36.21 -0.16 +15.9SmCpVal d 39.39 -0.09 +14.2SpecInc 13.05 -0.01 +9.4Value 27.04 +0.04 +20.0TCWEmgIncI 9.38 ... +18.8TotRetBdI 10.26 ... +11.5TempletonInFEqSeS 19.46 +0.02 +14.4ThornburgIncBldC m 19.17 ... +11.2IntlValA m 26.75 ... +12.4IntlValI d 27.34 -0.01 +12.8Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 25.20 -0.11 +15.3USAAIncome 13.52 ... +6.0VALIC Co IStockIdx 27.44 -0.07 +17.6Vanguard500Adml 134.51 -0.33 +17.9500Inv 134.51 -0.32 +17.8BalIdxAdm 24.01 -0.04 +11.9BalIdxIns 24.01 -0.04 +11.9CAITAdml 11.75 ... +6.1CapOpAdml 78.53 -0.41 +15.2DivGr 17.24 +0.03 +13.1EmMktIAdm 35.27 -0.04 +12.8EnergyAdm 118.43 -0.09 +7.0EnergyInv 63.06 -0.05 +7.0EqInc 24.80 +0.03 +15.7EqIncAdml 51.98 +0.05 +15.7ExplAdml 74.46 -0.27 +12.0Explr 79.94 -0.30 +11.9ExtdIdAdm 45.62 -0.12 +16.0ExtdIdIst 45.62 -0.12 +16.0ExtdMktIdxIP 112.60 -0.30 +16.0FAWeUSIns 86.81 -0.29 +13.7GNMA 11.01 ... +1.9GNMAAdml 11.01 ... +2.0GlbEq 18.63 -0.03 +17.1GrthIdAdm 37.27 -0.25 +18.3GrthIstId 37.27 -0.24 +18.3GrthIstSg 34.51 -0.23 +18.3HYCor 6.08 +0.01 +12.4HYCorAdml 6.08 +0.01 +12.5HltCrAdml 63.78 +0.04 +17.6HlthCare 151.13 +0.10 +17.5ITBondAdm 12.13 -0.01 +6.1ITGradeAd 10.47 ... +8.5ITIGrade 10.47 ... +8.4ITrsyAdml 11.72 -0.01 +2.0InfPrtAdm 29.07 +0.02 +5.9InfPrtI 11.84 +0.01 +5.9InflaPro 14.80 +0.01 +5.8InstIdxI 133.62 -0.32 +17.9InstPlus 133.63 -0.32 +17.9InstTStPl 32.84 -0.07 +17.7IntlGr 18.86 -0.07 +15.4IntlGrAdm 60.02 -0.26 +15.4IntlStkIdxAdm 24.40 -0.08 +13.6IntlStkIdxI 97.57 -0.33 +13.6IntlStkIdxIPls 97.59 -0.33 +13.6IntlStkIdxISgn 29.26 -0.10 +13.6IntlVal 30.44 -0.06 +14.3LTGradeAd 10.99 -0.02 +11.3LTInvGr 10.99 -0.02 +11.2LifeCon 17.34 -0.02 +8.6LifeGro 23.83 -0.05 +13.8LifeMod 21.13 -0.04 +11.2MidCapIdxIP 111.21 -0.01 +14.5MidCp 22.47 ... +14.4MidCpAdml 102.06 ... +14.5MidCpIst 22.55 ... +14.5MidCpSgl 32.21 ... +14.5Morg 20.23 -0.13 +15.8MorgAdml 62.78 -0.39 +15.9MuHYAdml 11.27 ... +8.4MuInt 14.40 ... +5.2MuIntAdml 14.40 ... +5.3MuLTAdml 11.80 ... +7.4MuLtdAdml 11.19 ... +1.8MuShtAdml 15.93 -0.01 +1.0PrecMtls 17.73 -0.28 -5.7Prmcp 70.83 -0.33 +14.7PrmcpAdml 73.53 -0.34 +14.8PrmcpCorI 15.36 -0.05 +13.9REITIdxAd 93.61 +0.95 +16.7STBondAdm 10.65 ... +1.7STBondSgl 10.65 ... +1.7STCor 10.88 ... +4.2STFedAdml 10.87 ... +1.2STGradeAd 10.88 ... +4.2STIGradeI 10.88 ... +4.3STsryAdml 10.78 ... +0.6SelValu 21.34 +0.01 +14.8SmCapIdx 38.57 -0.16 +15.6SmCpIdAdm 38.63 -0.16 +15.7SmCpIdIst 38.63 -0.16 +15.7SmCpIndxSgnl 34.80 -0.15 +15.7Star 20.89 -0.04 +12.5TgtRe2010 24.56 -0.04 +9.5TgtRe2015 13.63 -0.02 +10.8TgtRe2020 24.25 -0.04 +11.8TgtRe2030 23.78 -0.06 +13.7TgtRe2035 14.34 -0.03 +14.6TgtRe2040 23.58 -0.05 +15.0TgtRe2045 14.81 -0.03 +15.1TgtRe2050 23.47 -0.06 +15.0TgtRetInc 12.26 -0.01 +7.7Tgtet2025 13.83 -0.03 +12.7TotBdAdml 11.14 -0.01 +3.6TotBdInst 11.14 -0.01 +3.6TotBdMkInv 11.14 -0.01 +3.5TotBdMkSig 11.14 -0.01 +3.6TotIntl 14.58 -0.05 +13.5TotStIAdm 36.28 -0.08 +17.6TotStIIns 36.28 -0.09 +17.6TotStISig 35.01 -0.09 +17.5TotStIdx 36.27 -0.08 +17.5TxMCapAdm 73.38 -0.15 +17.7ValIdxAdm 23.50 +0.05 +17.1ValIdxIns 23.50 +0.05 +17.1WellsI 24.67 ... +10.2WellsIAdm 59.76 -0.01 +10.2Welltn 34.78 +0.04 +13.3WelltnAdm 60.08 +0.08 +13.4WndsIIAdm 53.22 -0.12 +17.7Wndsr 15.04 +0.01 +18.9WndsrAdml 50.75 +0.03 +19.0WndsrII 29.98 -0.07 +17.6VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.04 -0.02 +16.2Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 8.36 -0.05 +13.7SciTechA m 11.05 -0.05 +24.0Western AssetMgdMuniA m 17.23 ... +9.3YacktmanFocused d 20.89 +0.05 +11.8Yacktman d 19.46 +0.05 +12.6

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

ForestOil 13 8.70 -.02Fortinet 53 19.53 -.61FMCG 13 42.43 +.12FrontierCm 31 4.88 +.04Fusion-io dd 27.78 -1.44GATX 18 44.80 -.06GalenaBio dd 2.01 -.08Gannett 10 18.62 -.08Gap 21 37.18 +.39GenDynam 10 68.58 +.92GenGrPrp dd 19.74GenMills 16 40.50 +.43GenMotors 9 25.56 +.50GenOn En dd 2.77 -.03GenuPrt 16 61.87 -.19Genworth 11 5.81 +.02Gerdau ... 9.34 -.18GileadSci 21 68.29 -1.27GlaxoSKln ... 45.74 -.40GluMobile dd 3.45 -.14GoldFLtd ... 11.76 -.74Goldcrp g 25 42.81 -1.44GoldmanS 12 125.15 +.23Google 21 695.00 -60.49GrafTech 10 10.69 +.44GreenMtC 11 24.83 +1.17Groupon n ... 4.91 -.17GpFSnMx n ... 14.19 -.06HCP Inc 31 45.43 +.74Hallibrtn 11 35.65 +.33HarleyD 15 44.53 +.53HartfdFn 10 22.52 +.43HltMgmt 9 7.58 -.01Heckmann dd 4.35 -.02HeclaM 22 6.49 -.13HercOffsh dd 5.10 +.05Hertz 15 14.73 -.08Hess 15 55.32 -.30HewlettP 5 14.80 +.08HomeDp 22 61.80 +.41HopFedBc 21 8.14 -.01HostHotls cc 15.68 -.01HovnanE dd 4.31 +.18HudsCity dd 8.75 +.19HuntBncsh 12 6.61 -.44

I-J-K-LIAMGld g 14 15.46 -.75ING ... 9.21 +.02iShGold q 16.95 -.08iSAstla q 24.82 -.07iShBraz q 55.12 -.06iShEMU q 31.83 -.13iShGer q 23.55 -.03iSh HK q 18.49 -.04iShJapn q 9.26 +.06iShMex q 68.67 -.05iSTaiwn q 13.10 -.13iShSilver q 31.73 -.39iShS&P100 q 67.02 -.26iShChina25 q 37.45 +.10iSCorSP500 q 146.47 -.31iShEMkts q 42.16 -.12iShB20 T q 120.11 -.74iS Eafe q 54.88 -.21iShR2K q 83.54 -.46iShUSPfd q 40.22 +.09iShREst q 65.39 +.61iShDJHm q 20.88 +.25iSMsciV q 47.35 +.04ITW 15 60.75 +.57ImmunoCll dd 2.07 -.34IngerRd 19 45.66 -.04IngrmM 9 15.43 +.03IntgDv 19 6.01InterMune dd 9.82 +.55IBM 13 194.96 -5.67IntPap 14 38.15 +.64Interpublic 11 11.10 +.09Invesco 15 25.19 -.11ItauUnibH ... 14.76 -.05JA Solar dd .71 -.07JDS Uniph dd 10.48 -.34JPMorgCh 9 43.01 -.31JamesRiv dd 4.85 +.30JetBlue 12 5.31 +.05JohnJn 24 72.52 +1.52JohnsnCtl 11 26.75 +.42JoyGlbl 9 62.94 +1.12JnprNtwk 28 18.20 +.89KB Home dd 16.73 -.03KLA Tnc 10 46.57 +.84KeyEngy 7 7.39 +.27Keycorp 9 8.78 +.37Kimco 61 20.85 +.24KindMorg 53 35.87 +.10Kinross g dd 10.12 -.31KodiakO g 37 9.90Kohls 13 53.62 +.81KraftFGp n ... 46.40 -.25LSI Corp 35 6.57 -.16LabCp 15 88.81 -1.40LamResrch 45 36.01 +2.43LVSands 20 46.05 -.09LaSalleH 58 24.40 -1.06LennarA 14 38.68 +.55LexiPhrm dd 2.26 -.24LibtyIntA 19 20.17 -.12LillyEli 15 53.81 +.14LincNat 40 25.74 +.11LinearTch 17 31.60 -.62LinkedIn cc 108.87 -.55LockhdM 11 94.32 +.74LaPac dd 15.71 +.26LyonBas A 16 55.23 -.51

M-N-O-PMEMC dd 2.50 +.01MFA Fncl 10 8.16 -.08MGIC dd 2.02 -.08MGM Rsts dd 11.17 +.25Macys 13 40.46 -.38MagHRes dd 4.55 -.03MannKd dd 1.97 -.63Manulife g ... 12.72 +.06MarathnO 9 31.23 -.10MarathPet 8 54.79 -.96MktVGold q 51.52 -1.59MV OilSv s q 41.55 +.43MktVRus q 29.41 -.04MarshM 18 34.98 +.06MartMM 45 85.31 -.71MarvellT 11 8.83 -.17Masco dd 15.16 +.19Mattel 16 37.79 +.39McDrmInt 20 11.30 -.02McMoRn dd 12.76 +.27Mechel ... 7.28 +.10Medtrnic 12 43.18 -.11MelcoCrwn 27 14.16 -.27Mellanox 60 77.99 -20.16Merck 22 47.96 +.57MetLife 10 37.11 +.03MetroPCS 12 11.15 +.20MKors n ... 56.47 +.40Microchp 19 31.72 -.80MicronT dd 5.65 -.13Microsoft 15 29.50 -.10MobileTele 30 17.29 -.26MolsCoorB 15 44.60 -.58Molycorp ... 11.62 +.24Mondelez ... 27.42 -.03MorgStan 14 17.79 -.70Mosaic 13 54.69 -.30MurphO 14 63.21 +.51Mylan 16 24.13 -.16NII Hldg dd 7.61 -.20NRG Egy dd 23.27 -.17Nabors cc 15.40 +.08NOilVarco 15 82.03 +.82Navistar dd 20.54 -.62NetApp 22 30.27 +.37Netflix 35 67.36 -1.16NewFrnt dd 1.98 -.01NY CmtyB 13 14.40 -.10NewmtM 15 54.97 -1.09NewsCpA 58 25.42 +.22NewsCpB 59 25.84 +.20Nexen g ... 25.78 -.08NobleCorp 18 39.48 +1.79NokiaCp ... 2.80 -.14NorflkSo 11 66.70 -.51NthnO&G 27 16.74 -.62NorthropG 9 71.13 +.53NuanceCm 29 22.53 -.93Nucor 22 41.00 +.59Nvidia 17 12.86 -.20OCZ Tech dd 1.38 -.11OReillyAu 18 79.92 -.52OcciPet 11 85.52 +.92OfficeDpt 10 2.43 +.10Oi SA s ... 4.11 -.04OldRepub dd 10.71 +.17OnSmcnd dd 6.26 -.01OpkoHlth dd 4.69 +.14

Oracle 15 31.12 -.12OrientEH dd 11.05 +2.03OvShip dd 3.54 +.14PDL Bio 6 8.22 -.15PG&E Cp 24 43.21 -.22PLX Tch dd 4.51 -.73PMC Sra cc 5.05 -.17PNC 12 59.84 +.07PPG 16 119.09 +.12PPL Corp 11 30.15 +.29Paccar 12 40.84 -.07PacEthan h 7 .39 +.01PaloANet n ... 61.90 -3.60Pandora dd 9.37 +.02ParkerHan 11 85.07 +.96PattUTI 8 17.81 -.01PeabdyE 8 27.44 +.59PeopUtdF 18 12.04 +.06PepcoHold 17 19.90 +.31PeregrinP dd .78 -.10PetrbrsA ... 22.13 -.08Petrobras ... 23.01 -.08Pfizer 16 26.04 +.20PhilipMor 17 88.00 -3.85Phillips66 n ... 45.56 -1.09PiperJaf dd 27.31 -1.15PitnyBw 4 14.49 +.39PlainsEx 34 38.67 +.38Polaris 24 88.35 +3.07Potash 14 41.27 -.71Power-One 5 4.44 -.39PS SrLoan ... 24.95PwShs QQQ q 67.29 -.79PrecDrill ... 8.33 -.13PrUltQQQ s q 58.49 -1.37PrUShQQQ q 28.58 +.67ProUltSP q 62.79 -.30PrUltSP500 q 93.77 -.69PrUVxST rs q 25.63 -.17ProctGam 18 69.47ProgsvCp 15 23.08 +.08PrUShSP rs q 53.05 +.21PrUShL20 rs q 66.11 +.82PUSSP500 rs q 36.86 +.27PUShQQQ rs q 38.66 +1.24Prudentl 8 59.89 +.96PulteGrp 77 17.65 +.21

Q-R-S-TQualcom 18 59.96 -1.02QuantaSvc 22 24.14 -.10Questcor 12 25.76 +.46RF MicD dd 3.63 -.06RadianGrp dd 4.87 -.26Realogy n ... 36.20 -1.29RedHat 71 52.25 +.04RschMotn 4 7.84 -.15RioTinto ... 52.09 +.13RiteAid dd 1.17 -.01RiverbedT 54 20.69 -.59Rowan 25 34.60 +.79RymanHP cc 39.55 -.68SLM Cp 8 16.96 -.21SpdrDJIA q 135.36 -.07SpdrGold q 168.79 -.75S&P500ETF q 145.82 -.38SpdrHome q 26.17 +.29SpdrRetl q 63.31 +.13SpdrOGEx q 57.23 -.14SpdrMetM q 46.82 +.23Safeway 8 16.52 +.19StJude 13 39.74 -1.11SanDisk 16 42.86 -1.48SandRdge dd 7.29 -.09Satcon rsh dd .12 +.04Schlmbrg 19 74.80 +.25Schwab 21 13.64 +.02SeagateT 4 27.97 -.41SelCmfrt 21 30.50 -2.13Sequenom dd 3.51 +.02SiderurNac ... 5.78 +.08SilvWhtn g 25 39.22 -.67SkywksSol 21 22.55 -.60SwstAirl 30 8.98 +.03SwstnEngy dd 35.99 -.11SP Matls q 37.88 +.01SP HlthC q 41.34 +.01SP CnSt q 36.14 -.20SP Consum q 47.43 +.03SP Engy q 75.01 -.01SP Inds q 37.42 +.11SP Tech q 29.97 -.36SP Util q 37.41 +.17StdPac 64 7.65 +.06StanBlkDk 15 70.19 +1.07Staples 9 11.55 -.05Starbucks 26 47.41 -.98StateStr 11 44.93 +.24StlDynam 18 13.00 +.38StemCells dd 2.21 -.12StratHotels dd 5.97Stryker 14 53.61 +.79Suncor gs 9 34.32 -.01SunTrst 18 28.99 -.37SupEnrgy 10 21.66 +.49Supvalu dd 2.14 +.10Symantec 11 17.77 -.09Synovus dd 2.40 -.01Sysco 17 31.69 +.03TD Ameritr 15 16.17 -.27TJX s 19 43.23 +.18TaiwSemi ... 15.55 -.05TalismE g ... 13.38 +.06Target 14 62.94 -.10TeckRes g ... 32.50 +.42Tenaris ... 40.18 -.79Teradyn 11 14.25 +.09Tesoro 8 38.57 -.05TevaPhrm 13 41.41 +.61TexInst 20 28.76 +.29Textron 18 25.75 +.80ThermoFis 21 59.00 -1.53ThomCrk g 3 2.98 +.133M Co 15 94.74 -.07TibcoSft 37 26.89 -.01TimeWarn 17 45.88 +.22Transocn dd 48.35 +1.05Travelers 12 73.94 +2.56TripAdv n ... 30.57 -.52TwoHrbInv 9 11.76 -.03TycoIntl s ... 27.84Tyson 12 16.62 +.13

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 13.40 -.17US Airwy 6 11.72 +.10USG dd 24.67 +1.94UltraPt g dd 23.86 +.67UnilevNV ... 37.24 -.11UnionPac 16 125.34 +1.61UtdContl 23 20.59 -.03UtdMicro 6 1.98 -.02UPS B 18 73.61 +.32UtdRentals 19 39.94 +.72US NGs rs q 22.96 +.59US OilFd q 34.07 -.03USSteel dd 22.86 +.03UtdTech 14 79.23 +.69UtdhlthGp 11 56.01 +.02Vale SA ... 18.45 -.14Vale SA pf ... 17.76 -.15ValeroE 7 29.64 -.39VangEmg q 42.47 -.12VerizonCm 46 45.78 +1.06VertxPh 28 52.63 -1.33VirgnMda h ... 32.82 +.31Visa 24 141.88 -.68VishayInt 9 9.02 -.20Vivus dd 21.06 -1.24VMware 49 85.56 -1.73Vodafone ... 28.38 +.13Vornado 42 82.33 +2.19Vringo dd 4.15 -.07VulcanM dd 48.80 -.58Walgrn 15 36.11 +.28WalterEn 11 40.14 +1.07WalterInv dd 42.51 -.14WarnerCh 11 12.75 -.09WeathfIntl 37 12.51 +.03WellPoint 9 62.93 +1.19Wesco Intl 15 65.11 +7.94WDigital 5 35.55 -.69WstnRefin 9 26.19 +.83WstnUnion 9 18.32 -.08WmsCos 21 35.51 -.64Windstrm 36 10.11 -.06WT India q 18.74 -.15XL Grp dd 25.76 +.30Xilinx 18 33.67 -.29Yamana g 20 19.24 -.51YumBrnds 21 72.09 +.74ZionBcp 21 21.48 -.58Zynga n ... 2.51 -.04

Today

GE’s earnings

General Electric has been looking to cut costs and focus on its roots as a manufacturer.

The company, which reports third-quarter earnings today, has spent billions buying industrial companies such as those that help oil and gas companies find and produce fossil fuels, and manufacturers that make engines and turbines to burn those fuels. A world economy that is growing slower than hoped also is forcing GE to cut costs fast to protect profits.

Slower growth for McDonald’s?After outperforming rivals for years, is McDonald’s entering a period of slower growth?

The restaurant chain reported in the second quarter that sales at restaurants open at least a year rose 3.7 percent, marking the most modest increase since the end of 2009. McDonald’s reports its third-quarter results today, and investors will have their eye on the key measure of restaurant sales.

Homes sales dip?

Economists expect that sales of previously occupied homes fell in September.

The consensus forecast calls for the National Association of Realtors to report today that sales slowed to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.74 mil-lion after soaring the previous month to 4.82 million, the highest since May 2010. Despite the forecast, recent housing data indicate the housing recovery is gaining momentum. Source: FactSet

Existing home salesSeasonally adjusted annual rate, in millions

4.2

4.5

4.8

SAJJMA

4.6 4.6

4.4

4.5

est.4.7

4.8

Source: FactSet

Price-earnings ratio: 18 based on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: $3.08 Div yield: 3.3%

Operating EPS

3Q ’11 3Q ’12

est.$1.45 $1.48

82

92

$102MCD $92.86

’12$88.66

Lower earners(less than $200K/year for individuals or $250K/year families)

Daniel Wagner, Jenni Sohn • APSOURCE: Obama Campaign; Romney Campaign

Whatever the outcome on Election Day, the tax rates on investment income are almost certain to change.

Under the current system, individuals pay 15 percent on most dividends and capital gains, the profits from selling investments. The two presidential candidates would change that.

But the Election will not be the final word. That’s because both houses of Congress would have to approve any changes. Lawmakers have been deadlocked for years on taxes and spending, so any changes would likely be part of a broader bargain to postpone or avoid the “fiscal cliff” – the automatic spending cuts that would take effect if lawmakers can’t agree before the end of the year.

If no deal is

reached, tax rates will return to the higher levels in effect before tax cuts made during the Bush administration.

The proposals of President Obama and Mitt Romney would affect high-income earners differently than those who make less. Obama would raise rates for high earners and leave everyone else’s unchanged. Romney would keep the current rates for high earners

and eliminate taxes on dividends and capital gains for those who make less money.

Democrats say wealthier people should pay a larger

share of the nation’s expenses. Republicans

generally believe that lower rates will encourage more people to invest, juicing the listless economy.

Tax consequences

Capital Gains Dividends Capital Gains Dividends

Now 15% 15% 15% 15%

After Jan. 1 if... 20% up to 20%

Obama plan 20% 15% 15%

Romney plan 15% eliminate tax eliminate tax

up to 43.4%, includes ACA tax

taxed as ordinary income; highest rate

for that taxpayer

15%, would repeal ACA

High earners (more than $200K/year for individuals or $250K/year families)

Tax ratesThe candidates have contrasting proposals on investment income.

up to 39.6%, plus 3.8% tax under

Affordable Care Act

Business7A • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

www.edwardjones.com�

������������ ���������������������

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

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

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Page 8: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Sports8A • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

BLUE MOUNTAIN — Kelsea Hendrix and Austin Epting of Blue Mountain Col-lege were recently named Runners of the

Week in the TranSouth Athletic Conference for the second time this season following their performances in the Choctaw Invitational at Mississippi College in Clinton.

Hendrix, a sopho-more from Alcorn Central, fi nished sec-ond among 118 run-ners and led BMC to a fourth-place fi nish in the 15-team fi eld in the

5k race.Epting, a three-time All-TSAC runner

from East Union, was second among 102 runners to lead BMC to a second-place fi n-ish among 15 teams in the 8k race.

“This is another big honor for Kelsea and Austin,” said Phillip Laney, BMC cross country coach. “Not only are they having outstanding seasons, but their leadership is really making our teams stronger. It’s especially important this time of year with the conference meet less than two weeks away.”

BMC travels to Jackson, Tenn., on Oct. 27 to compete in the TranSouth Athletic Conference Championships.

■ The pair also claimed the honor follow-ing their performances in the Rhodes Col-lege Invitational at Shelby Farms in Mem-phis, Tenn.

Hendrix fi nished fourth among 141 run-ners and led BMC to a seventh-place fi n-ish in the 16-team fi eld of NAIA and NCAA Division I, II and III runners in the 5k race.

Epting was sixth among 150 runners to

Hendrix, Eptingearn TSAC honors

Staff ReportsCorinth High School is looking to

take another step to the Class 4A play-offs.

After opening Division 1-4A play with resounding losses to Itawamba AHS and Amory, Doug Jones’ club garnered its fi rst league win of the sea-son with a 61-19 romp of Tishomingo County.

The Warriors, who opened the sea-son with fi ve straight wins, set a school record for total offense with 605 yards in the Homecoming win.

Corinth will entertain another na-tive team this week, facing former 1-3A rival Pontotoc at Warrior Stadium II. The other Warriors enter play at 4-5 overall and 1-2 in league warfare.

Corinth, Pontotoc and Shannon are vying for the fi nal two playoff spots. The No. 3 and No. 4 seed will travel for

the fi rst round of the state playoffs.Amory (8-1, 3-0) and Itawamba AHS

(8-0, 3-0) will decide the top two seeds tonight. Corinth (6-2, 1-2) travels to Shannon (2-6, 1-2) next week to wrap up the regular-season.

Pontotoc, which won last season’s meeting 20-7, has taken 11 of the last 14 meetings since 1986. Corinth ended a nine-game slide in the series and won its second Division 1-3A title with a 31-0 decision in 2000.

Pontotoc has dropped three of four after opening the season at 3-2. The Warriors have lost to Shannon (36-20) and Itawamba (42-13) and rallied from a 20-point defi cit to beat Tishomingo County 36-29 in their league games.

Corinth got back on track last week after being outscored 89-20 by the di-vision’s elite. The Warriors bested the previous offense mark of 582 against Ripley in 2009 after managing a com-

bined 401 yards against Itawamba and Amory.

Pontotoc is averaging 22.8 points and 287 yards per game. PHS has rushed for 1,658 yards and passed for another 924.

Senior Deonte Dilworth leads the rushing attack with 1,042 yards and seven scores. Marcus Reed has thrown for 924 yards with nine TDs and eight interceptions.

Corinth is averaging 32 points per game, having outscored its opponents by 88 digits. The Warriors are getting nearly 338 yards per night, including 238 on the ground.

Kendrick Williams leads the rush-ing attack with 761 yards -- 8.7 per tote -- and 10 TDs. Robert White has 690 yards and six scores on a team-high 142 carries.

Warrior clubs seek playoff spotBY H. LEE SMITH II

[email protected]

TodayFootballPontotoc @ Corinth, 7 (WXRZ)Kossuth @ Central, 7Shannon @ Tish Co., 7Belmont @ Holly Springs, 7Walnut @ Baldwyn, 7Fayette-Ware @ McNairy, 7Open: Biggersville 

SaturdayFootballItawamba @ Northeast, 3SoftballClass 4A Championship(Best-of-3)Corinth-Newton County, 12:30Cross CountryKossuth, Corinth, AC @ Tupelo

Local Schedule

Shorts

Golf Tournaments■ Shiloh Ridge is hosting a 3 person

scramble on Saturday, Oct. 20. The event is open to the public with an entry fee of $30 for members and $40 for oth-ers. Fee includes 18 holes of golf and cart. For more info call 286-8000.

■ The Ralph Thomas Memorial Golf Tournament will be held at the Shiloh Falls Golf Course on Oct. 26 at 1 p.m.. The tournament is a 2-Person Scramble at $120 per team. Price of the tourna-ment includes a free golf club for each player via FreeTeePrize.com, range balls, and lunch. Participants can win prizes for each flight and enter the putting contest. There are 5 additional prizes for Hole in One golfers. Registration closes on Oct.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The Southeast-ern Conference’s 2013 football schedule doesn’t feature as many changes as previ-ously anticipated.

The SEC released a 2013 slate Thursday that it referred to as a “bridge” schedule not based on any previous or future scheduling formats.

For instance, at the SEC spring meetings, new member Missouri was paired with Arkansas and newcomer Texas A&M was matched with South Carolina as permanent cross-division rivals. Yet the 2013 schedule doesn’t have Missouri playing Arkansas or South Carolina facing Texas A&M.

One quirk in the 2013 schedule is that three annual games will be played at the same venue as in 2012: Ole Miss at Ala-bama, Texas A&M at Ole Miss and Georgia at Auburn.

The 2013 season will last 14 weekends, meaning each school gets two open dates.

SEC releases2013 schedule

The Associated Press

Associated PressDETROIT — Prince Fielder

waved his arms franticly, gleefully calling off his team-mates before catching the fi -nal out.

From the moment Fielder signed his massive contract in January, an entire city had been waiting for a moment like this.

Max Scherzer capped a stupendous stretch for De-troit’s starting rotation, and the Tigers advanced to the World Series for the second time in seven years by beat-ing the New York Yankees 8-1 Thursday for a four-game sweep of the AL champion-ship series.

Miguel Cabrera and Jhon-ny Peralta hit two-run hom-ers in a four-run fourth in-ning against CC Sabathia, who was unable to prevent

the Yankees from getting swept in a postseason series for the fi rst time in 32 years.

“Yeah, we did it,” Cabrera said. “It’s an unbelievable feeling. ... Four more wins, guys. Four more wins.”

Scherzer took a no-hit bid into the sixth against a New York starting lineup that was again without Alex Rodri-guez, who fl ied out with two on in the sixth as a pinch hit-ter.

Austin Jackson added a solo shot in the seventh for Detroit, and Peralta hit an-other homer an inning later.

The game ended with Fielder, Detroit’s $214 mil-lion acquisition, catching Jayson Nix’s popup. The Ti-gers spilled onto the fi eld for a celebration that began near second base and eventually moved closer to the third-

base line.General manager Dave

Dombrowski hugged man-ager Jim Leyland — who is in the fi nal year of his con-tract — while owner Mike Ilitch rubbed Leyland’s right shoulder.

“I’ve got a great bunch,” Il-itch said. “We don’t have one hot dog in the bunch. They’re all great guys. ... The Tigers are something special.”

Detroit won its 11th Amer-ican League pennant and fi rst since 2006. The Tigers have fi ve days off before the World Series starts Wednes-day at defending champion St. Louis or 2010 winner San Francisco.

After scoring in just three of 39 innings during the se-ries, New York heads home to face unpleasant questions about its future following a

postseason of awful hitting, benched stars and veterans showing the wear and tear of age. Rodriguez, the $275 million third baseman, was out of the starting lineup for the third time in the playoffs. Derek Jeter and Mariano Ri-vera could only watch follow-ing season-ending injuries.

The Yankees hit .188 in the postseason — a record low for a team that played at least seven games — and .157 in the LCS. New York went qui-etly in the ninth inning, with the Comerica Park crowd chanting “Sweep!” while the last three batters made out in order.

Detroit outhit New York 16-2 in the fi nale and 46-22 in the series. The Tigers’ starters are 4-1 with a 1.02

Tigers complete 4-game ALCS sweep

Associated PressEASTON, Pa. — An ac-

cidental heroin overdose killed Garrett Reid, the son of Philadelphia Eagles coach Andy Reid, a coro-ner said Thursday.

Northampton County Coroner Zachary Lysek

said a toxicology test con-fi rmed the presence of her-oin in Garrett Reid’s body.

Investigators revealed they found a used syringe and spoon in his room, along with a gym bag fi lled with dozens of syringes and needles, many of them

unopened.“We are confi dent today

that Mr. Reid’s death was the result of a self-injected lethal dose of heroin,” Dis-trict Attorney John Mor-ganelli said at a news con-ference in Easton.

Reid was found dead in

his dorm room early on Aug. 5 at Lehigh Univer-sity in Bethlehem, where he was assisting the team’s strength and condition-ing coach during training camp.

Coroner: Reid died from accidental heroin overdose

Please see SHORTS | 9A

Please see WARRIOR | 9A

Please see REID | 9A

Photo by Jeff Allen

Bulldog balancing actMalcolm Johnson leaps for a touchdown pass from Tyler Russell in the final seconds of Mississippi State’s 41-31 vic-tory against the Tennessee Volunteers last week. The Bulldogs will take the field against Middle Tennessee State Uni-versity on Saturday at Davis Wade Stadium.

Please see TIGERS | 9A

Kelsea Hendrix

Please see HENDRIX | 9A

Page 9: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

lead BMC to a ninth-place fi nish among 18 NAIA and NCAA Division, I, II and III teams in the 8k race.

“We’re really proud of Kelsea and Austin,” said Laney. “They both have worked extremely hard in the preseason and this fall, and now we’re seeing the results. They’re both strong runners and they’ll con-tinue to get better, which will make us a stronger pro-gram.”

ERA in this postseason.Without a World Series

title since 1984, Detroit lost to Texas in last year’s ALCS, lost slugger Victor Martinez to a season-end-ing injury in the January and quickly replaced of-fense by signing Fielder. The excitement of that bold acquisition subsid-ed a bit when the Tigers struggled to a 26-32 start in the AL Central, but they overtook the Chicago White Sox in the fi nal 10 days of the regular season and won the division with an 88-74 record, match-ing the Cardinals for the fewest wins among the 10 playoff teams.

“I just reminded every-body when we took our punches all year, ‘You know what? Let’s just wait till the end, and then if we have underachieved, I will be the fi rst one to admit it,”’ Leyland said.

“But let us play out the schedule to see if we

underachieve. So hope-fully we’ve quieted some doubters now. The guys just stepped it up when we had to. We caught a cou-ple breaks when the White Sox couldn’t win a couple of games they needed to win.”

He was a recover-ing drug addict who had seemingly turned his life around.

His father, Andy Reid, had indicated that his 29-year-old son may have had a relapse.

In a statement released through the Eagles, the Reid family said Garrett Reid’s smile, laugh and energy will be missed.

“These results sadly confi rmed what we had expected all along,” the family’s statement said.

Brady Allen passed for a career-high 269 yards and three scores last week, up-ping his season total to 797 and nine. The senior is av-eraging 30.1 yards on his 26 completions.

Brice Spence leads the re-ceiving corps with 15 catches for 538 yards and six scores. The junior hauled in two touchdowns last week en route to a career-high 160-yard night.

Corinth has found success when protecting the ball. The Warriors have eight turnovers in their six wins, compared to six in their two setbacks.

Scoreboard Daily Corinthian • 9AFriday, October 19, 2012

Baseball

Postseason scheduleLEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES

(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)American League

All games televised by TBSDetroit 4, New York 0

Saturday, Oct. 13: Detroit 6, New York 4, 12 innings

Sunday, Oct. 14: Detroit 3, New York 0

Tuesday, Oct. 16: Detroit 2, New York 1

Wednesday, Oct. 17: New York at De-troit, ppd., rain

Thursday, Oct. 18: Detroit 8, New York 1.

National LeagueAll games televised by Fox

St. Louis 2, San Francisco 1Sunday, Oct. 14: St. Louis 6, San

Francisco 4Monday, Oct. 15: San Francisco 7,

St. Louis 1Wednesday, Oct. 17: St. Louis 3,

San Francisco 1Thursday, Oct. 18: San Francisco

(Lincecum 10-15) at St. Louis (Wain-wright 14-13), 7:07 p.m.

Friday, Oct. 19: San Francisco (Zito 15-8) at St. Louis (Lynn 18-7), 7:07 p.m.

x-Sunday, Oct. 21: St. Louis at San Francisco, 3:45 p.m.

x-Monday, Oct. 22: St. Louis at San Francisco, 7:07 p.m.

WORLD SERIES(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)All games televised by Fox

Wednesday, Oct. 24: at National League (n)

Thursday, Oct. 25: at National League (n)

Saturday, Oct. 27: at American League (n)

Sunday, Oct. 28: at American League (n)

x-Monday, Oct. 29: at American League (n)

x-Wednesday, Oct. 31: at National League (n)

x-Thursday, Nov. 1: at National League (n)

Football

NFL standings, scheduleAMERICAN CONFERENCE

East W L T Pct PF PAN.Y. Jets 3 3 0 .500 133 141New England 3 3 0 .500 188 137Miami 3 3 0 .500 120 117Buffalo 3 3 0 .500 137 192

South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 5 1 0 .833 173 115Indianapolis 2 3 0 .400 100 145Tennessee 2 4 0 .333 114 204Jacksonville 1 4 0 .200 65 138

North W L T Pct PF PABaltimore 5 1 0 .833 161 118Cincinnati 3 3 0 .500 149 163Pittsburgh 2 3 0 .400 116 115Cleveland 1 5 0 .167 134 163

West W L T Pct PF PADenver 3 3 0 .500 170 138San Diego 3 3 0 .500 148 137Oakland 1 4 0 .200 87 148Kansas City 1 5 0 .167 104 183

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAN.Y. Giants 4 2 0 .667 178 114Philadelphia 3 3 0 .500 103 125Washington 3 3 0 .500 178 173Dallas 2 3 0 .400 94 119

South W L T Pct PF PAAtlanta 6 0 0 1.000 171 113Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 120 101Carolina 1 4 0 .200 92 125New Orleans 1 4 0 .200 141 154

North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 4 1 0 .800 149 71Minnesota 4 2 0 .667 146 117Green Bay 3 3 0 .500 154 135

Detroit 2 3 0 .400 126 137West

W L T Pct PF PAArizona 4 2 0 .667 110 97San Francisco 4 2 0 .667 152 94Seattle 4 2 0 .667 110 93St. Louis 3 3 0 .500 110 111

–––Sunday’s Games

Atlanta 23, Oakland 20Tampa Bay 38, Kansas City 10N.Y. Jets 35, Indianapolis 9Cleveland 34, Cincinnati 24Detroit 26, Philadelphia 23, OTMiami 17, St. Louis 14Baltimore 31, Dallas 29Buffalo 19, Arizona 16, OTSeattle 24, New England 23N.Y. Giants 26, San Francisco 3Washington 38, Minnesota 26Green Bay 42, Houston 24Open: Carolina, Chicago, Jackson-

ville, New OrleansMonday’s Game

Denver 35, San Diego 24Thursday, Oct. 18

Seattle at San Francisco, 7:20 p.m.Sunday, Oct. 21

Arizona at Minnesota, NoonGreen Bay at St. Louis, NoonBaltimore at Houston, NoonWashington at N.Y. Giants, NoonDallas at Carolina, NoonNew Orleans at Tampa Bay, NoonCleveland at Indianapolis, NoonTennessee at Buffalo, NoonJacksonville at Oakland, 3:25 p.m.N.Y. Jets at New England, 3:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:20 p.m.Open: Atlanta, Denver, Kansas City,

Miami, Philadelphia, San DiegoMonday, Oct. 22

Detroit at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.

Top 25 ScheduleThursday

No. 2 Oregon at Arizona State, 8 p.m.Saturday

No. 1 Alabama at Tennessee, 6 p.m.No. 3 Florida vs. No. 9 South Caro-

lina, 2:30 p.m.No. 4 Kansas State at No. 17 West

Virginia, 6 p.m.No. 5 Notre Dame vs. BYU, 2:30

p.m.No. 6 LSU at No. 20 Texas A&M, 11

a.m.No. 7 Ohio State vs. Purdue, 11 a.m.No. 8 Oregon State vs. Utah, 9:30

p.m.No. 10 Oklahoma vs. Kansas, 6 p.m.No. 11 Southern Cal vs. Colorado,

65p.m.No. 12 Florida State at Miami, 7 p.m.No. 13 Georgia at Kentucky, 6 p.m.No. 14 Clemson vs. Virginia Tech,

11 a.m.No. 15 Mississippi State vs. Middle

Tennessee, 6 p.m.No. 16 Louisville vs. USF, 2:30 p.m.No. 18 Texas Tech at TCU, 2:30 p.m.No. 19 Rutgers at Temple, 11 a.m.No. 21 Cincinnati at Toledo, 6 p.m.No. 22 Stanford at California, 2 p.m.No. 23 Michigan vs. Michigan State,

2:30 p.m.No. 24 Boise State vs. UNLV, 2:30

p.m.

College scheduleFridayEAST

UConn (3-4) at Syracuse (2-4), 7 p.m.___

SaturdayEAST

New Hampshire (5-2) at Maine (2-4), 11 a.m.

Rutgers (6-0) at Temple (3-2), 11 a.m.

Sacred Heart (2-4) at Duquesne (4-2), 11 a.m.

CCSU (1-5) at Robert Morris (1-5), 11 a.m.

Wagner (3-3) at St. Francis (Pa.) (3-4), 11 a.m.

Bowling Green (4-3) at UMass (0-6), 11 a.m.

Penn (2-3) at Yale (1-4), 11 a.m.Cornell (3-2) at Brown (3-2), 11:30

a.m.Bucknell (1-5) at Lehigh (7-0), 11:30

a.m.Georgetown (3-4) at Colgate (3-3),

Noon

Holy Cross (1-5) at Lafayette (4-2), Noon

Bryant (1-6) at Monmouth (NJ) (3-3), Noon

Harvard (5-0) at Princeton (3-2), NoonDartmouth (3-2) at Columbia (1-4),

12:30 p.m.Pittsburgh (2-4) at Buffalo (1-5), 2:30

p.m.Rhode Island (0-6) at Delaware (4-2),

2:30 p.m.Indiana (2-4) at Navy (3-3), 2:30 p.m.Gardner-Webb (1-5) at Stony Brook

(6-1), 3 p.m.Old Dominion (5-1) at Towson (3-3),

6 p.m.Kansas St. (6-0) at West Virginia (5-

1), 6 p.m.SOUTH

Tennessee St. (7-0) at Jacksonville St. (3-3), 11 a.m.

Virginia Tech (4-3) at Clemson (5-1), 11 a.m.

Auburn (1-5) at Vanderbilt (2-4), 11:20 a.m.

Wake Forest (3-3) at Virginia (2-5), 11:30 a.m.

Morgan St. (3-3) at Howard (4-2), Noon

San Diego (3-3) at Jacksonville (6-1), Noon

FIU (1-6) at Troy (3-3), NoonPresbyterian (2-5) at Charleston

Southern (2-4), 12:30 p.m.NC A&T (3-3) at Delaware St. (3-3),

12:30 p.m.Georgia Southern (5-1) at Furman (2-

5), 12:30 p.m.Coastal Carolina (2-4) at VMI (2-4),

12:30 p.m.Edward Waters (1-3) at Savannah St.

(0-6), 1 p.m.W. Carolina (1-6) at Elon (2-4), 2 p.m.Boston College (1-5) at Georgia Tech

(2-4), 2 p.m.Va. Lynchburg (1-5) at Grambling St.

(0-6), 2 p.m.Wofford (5-1) at Appalachian St. (5-

2), 2:30 p.m.South Carolina (6-1) at Florida (6-0),

2:30 p.m.Villanova (5-2) at Georgia St. (1-6),

2:30 p.m.Concord (4-3) at Liberty (2-4), 2:30

p.m.South Florida (2-4) at Louisville (6-0),

2:30 p.m.NC State (4-2) at Maryland (4-2),

2:30 p.m.James Madison (5-1) at Richmond

(4-3), 2:30 p.m.FAU (1-5) at South Alabama (1-5),

2:30 p.m.Norfolk St. (2-5) at Bethune-Cook-

man (4-2), 3 p.m.MVSU (2-4) at Jackson St. (3-4), 3

p.m.Louisiana-Monroe (4-2) at W. Ken-

tucky (5-1), 3 p.m.Davidson (0-6) at Campbell (1-5), 5

p.m.Samford (4-2) at Chattanooga (3-3),

5 p.m.SC State (2-5) at Florida A&M (3-4),

5 p.m.North Carolina (5-2) at Duke (5-2),

6 p.m.Georgia (5-1) at Kentucky (1-6), 6

p.m.Idaho (1-6) at Louisiana Tech (5-1),

6 p.m.Middle Tennessee (4-2) at Missis-

sippi St. (6-0), 6 p.m.Marshall (2-4) at Southern Miss. (0-

6), 6 p.m.Ark.-Pine Bluff (4-2) at Southern U.

(3-3), 6 p.m.Alabama (6-0) at Tennessee (3-3), 6

p.m.East Carolina (4-3) at UAB (1-5), 6

p.m.UCF (4-2) at Memphis (1-5), 7 p.m.Florida St. (6-1) at Miami (4-3), 7

p.m.E. Kentucky (5-2) at Tennessee Tech

(2-4), 7 p.m.MIDWEST

N. Illinois (6-1) at Akron (1-6), 11 a.m.

Purdue (3-3) at Ohio St. (7-0), 11 a.m.

Minnesota (4-2) at Wisconsin (5-2), 11 a.m.

Valparaiso (0-6) at Dayton (3-4), Noon

Army (1-5) at E. Michigan (0-6), NoonMarist (2-4) at Drake (5-2), 1 p.m.Missouri St. (1-6) at Illinois St. (6-1),

1 p.m.UT-Martin (5-2) at SE Missouri (2-4),

1 p.m.Ball St. (4-3) at Cent. Michigan (2-4),

2:30 p.m.W. Michigan (3-4) at Kent St. (5-1),

2:30 p.m.Michigan St. (4-3) at Michigan (4-2),

2:30 p.m.Nebraska (4-2) at Northwestern (6-

1), 2:30 p.m.BYU (4-3) at Notre Dame (6-0), 2:30

p.m.Montana (3-4) at North Dakota (3-4),

2:40 p.m.S. Illinois (4-3) at Youngstown St. (4-

2), 3 p.m.S. Dakota St. (5-1) at N. Iowa (1-5),

4 p.m.Morehead St. (1-5) at Butler (5-2), 5

p.m.N. Dakota St. (5-1) at South Dakota

(1-5), 6 p.m.Cincinnati (5-0) at Toledo (6-1), 6

p.m.Indiana St. (5-2) at W. Illinois (3-3),

6 p.m.Penn St. (4-2) at Iowa (4-2), 7 p.m.

SOUTHWESTIowa St. (4-2) at Oklahoma St. (3-2),

11 a.m.LSU (6-1) at Texas A&M (5-1), 11

a.m.San Jose St. (4-2) at UTSA (5-1), 1

p.m.Alcorn St. (3-4) at Prairie View (1-5),

2 p.m.Nicholls St. (1-4) at Stephen F. Austin

(2-4), 2 p.m.Texas Tech (5-1) at TCU (5-1), 2:30

p.m.Rice (2-5) at Tulsa (6-1), 2:30 p.m.Lamar (3-4) at Cent. Arkansas (5-2),

6 p.m.Kansas (1-5) at Oklahoma (4-1), 6

p.m.McNeese St. (4-2) at Sam Houston

St. (4-2), 7 p.m.Baylor (3-2) at Texas (4-2), 7 p.m.Tulane (1-5) at UTEP (1-6), 7 p.m.

FAR WESTStanford (4-2) at California (3-4), 2

p.m.Weber St. (0-7) at S. Utah (3-4), 2

p.m.New Mexico St. (1-5) at Utah St. (5-

2), 2 p.m.UNLV (1-6) at Boise St. (5-1), 2:30

p.m.Idaho St. (1-5) at N. Colorado (1-5),

2:35 p.m.Colorado (1-5) at Southern Cal (5-1),

5 p.m.New Mexico (4-3) at Air Force (3-3),

6 p.m.Sacramento St. (5-2) at E. Washing-

ton (5-1), 6:05 p.m.UC Davis (3-4) at N. Arizona (5-1),

6:05 p.m.Portland St. (2-4) at Cal Poly (6-0),

8:05 p.m.Washington (3-3) at Arizona (3-3), 9

p.m.Wyoming (1-5) at Fresno St. (4-3),

9:30 p.m.Utah (2-4) at Oregon St. (5-0), 9:30

p.m.San Diego St. (4-3) at Nevada (6-1),

9:35 p.m.

Golf

PGA: McGladrey ClassicThursday at Sea Island Resort, Sea-

side Course, St. Simons Island, Ga. Purse: $4 million Yardage: 7,005; Par: 70 (35-35)

First RoundBud Cauley 33-29—62 -8Marco Dawson 32-30—62 -8Greg Owen 31-33—64 -6Boo Weekley 32-32—64 -6Rod Pampling 34-30—64 -6Zach Johnson 31-34—65 -5Davis Love III 35-30—65 -5David Toms 32-33—65 -5Danny Lee 30-35—65 -5Joe Durant 33-32—65 -5Michael Thompson 33-32—65 -5Brian Gay 33-32—65 -5

Camilo Villegas 32-33—65 -5Martin Flores 32-33—65 -5Jim Furyk 33-33—66 -4David Hearn 33-33—66 -4Billy Hurley III 33-33—66 -4Vijay Singh 35-31—66 -4Charles Howell III 31-35—66 -4Cameron Beckman 32-34—66 -4D.J. Trahan 32-34—66 -4Brendon de Jonge 34-32—66 -4Chad Campbell 31-35—66 -4J.J. Killeen 34-32—66 -4Charlie Beljan 32-34—66 -4

Pro Basketball

WNBA playoffsFINALS

(Best-of-5)Indiana 1, Minnesota 1

Sunday, Oct. 14: Indiana 76, Minne-sota 70

Wednesday, Oct. 17: Minnesota 83, Indiana 71

Friday, Oct. 19: Minnesota at Indiana, 8 p.m.

x-Sunday, Oct. 21: Minnesota at In-diana, 7 p.m.

x-Wednesday, Oct. 24: Indiana at Minnesota, 7 p.m.

NBA preseasonEASTERN CONFERENCE

Atlantic Division W L Pct GBBrooklyn 3 0 1.000 —New York 2 0 1.000 ½Philadelphia 3 1 .750 ½Toronto 2 1 .667 1Boston 0 3 .000 3

Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 1 2 .333 —Atlanta 1 3 .250 ½Charlotte 1 3 .250 ½Washington 1 4 .200 1Orlando 0 4 .000 1½

Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 2 1 .667 —Milwaukee 2 1 .667 —Chicago 2 2 .500 ½Detroit 2 2 .500 ½Cleveland 2 3 .400 1

WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division

W L Pct GBNew Orleans 3 1 .750 —San Antonio 2 1 .667 ½Houston 3 2 .600 ½Dallas 1 1 .500 1Memphis 1 2 .333 1½

Northwest Division W L Pct GBDenver 3 1 .750 —Minnesota 2 1 .667 ½Utah 3 2 .600 ½Portland 2 2 .500 1Oklahoma City 1 2 .333 1½

Pacifi c Division W L Pct GBGolden State 3 1 .750 —Phoenix 2 1 .667 ½Sacramento 2 1 .667 ½L.A. Clippers 2 2 .500 1L.A. Lakers 0 4 .000 3

___Wednesday’s Games

Toronto 104, Washington 101Philadelphia 113, Cleveland 99Houston 109, Memphis 102Phoenix 100, Dallas 94Golden State 98, Sacramento 88Portland 97, Denver 80L.A. Clippers 96, Utah 94

Thursday’s GamesNew Orleans at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m.Detroit at Miami, 6:30 p.m.Memphis vs. Milwaukee at La

Crosse, WI, 7 p.m.Boston at Brooklyn, 7 p.m.

Friday’s GamesNew York vs. Toronto at Montreal,

Quebec, 6 p.m.Indiana at Orlando, 6 p.m.Philadelphia at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m.Minnesota at Chicago, 7 p.m.Phoenix vs. Oklahoma City at Tulsa,

OK, 7 p.m.Sacramento vs. L.A. Lakers at Las

Vegas, NV, 9 p.m.

22. For more infor-mation visit Marcus Anderson at Central Bank in Pickwick, TN or call (731) 689-5043.

 Baseball Tryouts

■ The West Tennes-see Wildcats, a 7U travel baseball team, will be holding tryouts for the 2013 season. If interested call Chad at 731-646-0426.

■ The Jackson Ath-letics, a 13U majors travel team, will be holding tryouts for the fall and 2013 season. If interested call Jason at 901-487-6875.

 Corinth KIX

Soccer

A few spots are available on the Corinth KIX soccer team, a club that trav-els to tournaments in Northeast Mississippi and Southern Ten-nessee. Age limit is 10-13, depending on birthday. Minimal cost required. For more in-formation on a tryout call Brian (415-3215) and leave a message.

 Baseball Record

Book

The 2012 Missis-sippi Baseball Record Book, which includes public schools and four-year state col-leges, is out and can be purchased for $10. The book can be or-dered by mailing pay-ment to: Mississippi Baseball Record Book, Diamonds By Smillie, 3159 Kendrick Road Corinth, MS 38334.

SHORTS

CONTINUED FROM 8A

TIGERS

CONTINUED FROM 8A

WARRIOR

REID

CONTINUED FROM 8A

CONTINUED FROM 8A

HENDRIX

CONTINUED FROM 8A

Bowling * Billiards * Bowling * Billiards * Gameroom * RestaurantGameroom * Restaurant

Plaza Plaza Bowling LanesBowling Lanes“Find out why 70 million Americans “Find out why 70 million Americans

have made bowling the #1 participation sport!” have made bowling the #1 participation sport!” 2001 Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS • 662-286-8105 2001 Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS • 662-286-8105

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announces open sign ups for the upcoming basketball season. Cost is $35 for each player (includes jersey). Ages are from 4 years to 15 years old. Practices will begin on December 10. Season starts January 5, 2013 lasting 8 weeks. Mandatory player evaluations will be on December 3-4 from 6-8 pm at Tate Baptist Church.

Call Tate Baptist Church at 286-2935 or Call Tate Baptist Church at 286-2935 or Dr. Mike Weeden’s offi ce at 286-8860 for Dr. Mike Weeden’s offi ce at 286-8860 for

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Page 10: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

10A • Friday, October 19, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

606 Cass St.Corinth, MS

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Page 11: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 19, 2012 • 1B

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Page 12: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Religion2B • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

Special speakerDr. Ron Reilly will be

preaching at Grace Bible Baptist Church, Oct. 21-24. Bro. Reilly has spo-ken in churches, city-wide revivals, Bible conferenc-es, high schools and col-leges across the nation. He was a youth director in Jacksonville, Fla. where he founded Ambassadors for Christ Youth Minis-try. He is the author of “Building Youth is Better Than Mending Men,” and wrote for the “Teen Talk” column for the Sword of the Lord for a number of years. He was made an honorary sheriff by the Jacksonville, Fla. police department for his cap-ture of an armed robber at a convenience store.

Grace Bible Baptist is located at 2109 N. Polk Street in Corinth. Servic-es will be 10 a.m, 11:00 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 21 and 7 p.m. Mon-day through Wednesday, Oct. 22-24.

Homecoming■ Greater Life United

Pentecostal Church in Biggersville, across from Hwy. 45 Truck Stop, is having its Homecoming services, tSunday, Oct. 21. Services will be at 10 a.m. with lunch served at noon and afternoon ser-vice at 1:30 p.m.   Spe-cial speaker will be the Rev. and Mrs. Jack Lewis from Arkansas.

■ Saulter’s Chapel

C.M.E. Church of Acton, Tenn., Hamburg Rd., Michie, Tenn. is celebrat-ing Homecoming, Sun-day, Oct. 21 at 2:30 p.m. Guest speaker will be the Rev. Richard Wade, along with the 5th St. Church family.

■ Friends and former members of Harper Road Christian Church are invited to celebrate Homecoming, Sunday, Oct. 28. This will be a time of worship, renew-ing old friendships and enjoying fellowship with fellow Christians. Service starts at 10:45 a.m. with worship and praise and special music. At the close of this service, the time capsule that was placed in the cornerstone of the building in 1961 by founding members will be opened. Following the opening of the time cap-sule, lunch will be served.

Harper Road Chris-tian Church is located at 4175 North Harper Rd. in Corinth. For more

information, call Gerald at 731-610-6051 or 662-287-1367.

In revivalThe Danville Christian

Methodist Episcopal Church family invites area church families to attend its two-night fall revival, Sunday and Monday, Oct. 28-29. Services will be held at 6 p.m., Sunday and 7 p.m., Monday. Guest speaker will be the Rev. Charles Shack of Beckley Christian Meth-odist Episcopal Church.

Appreciation dayNew Covenant Baptist

Church, 1402 East 4th St., Corinth, is celebrat-ing Pastor and First Lady Appreciation Day for Pastor David Harris and Sis. Rosie Harris on Sunday, Oct. 21 at 2:30 p.m. The guest speaker will be Pastor Ray Hall of Marietta Baptist Church. Music will be provided by the Danville C.M.E. Church Choir. Lunch will be served after the morn-ing service.

Usher DaySt. Mark Missionary

Baptist Church, 1000 Scott St., Corinth is hav-ing its annual Usher Day, Sunday, Oct. 21 at 3 p.m. The guest speaker will be Pastor Wynn of Cypress Creek Church, Selmer, Tenn. Musical selections will be provided by St. Mark  Cypress Creek

Church choirs.

Musical being presented

Mason St. Luke M.B. Church is having its Gos-pel Choir Musical on Sun-day, Oct. 28 at 3 p.m. All choirs, groups, soloists, praise teams and dance teams are encouraged to come and participate. For more information, contact Min. Timothy Rogers, 662-212-3766.

Homecoming/revivalShiloh Cumberland

Presbyterian Church is having its Homecoming with dinner and Revival at 5 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 21. Revival will continue Monday and Tuesday, Oct. 22-23 at 7 p.m. with the Rev. Jody Hill.

SingingThe Old Church Opry

House in Ripley is pre-senting country music night, Saturday, Oct. 20 from 6:30-9:30 p.m., featuring the Main Street Musicians from Ripley and Danny Lyles & Hwy. 32 West from Tupelo. The Old Church Opry House is located at the corner of Cooper and Jackson St. in Ripley. For more infor-mation, call Bobby Hodg-es at 5662-587-9885.

Men/Women DayCentral Grove is hav-

ing its annual Men’s and Women’s Day program on

Sunday, Oct. 21 at 2:30 p.m. Guest speaker will be the Rev. Chris Tray-lor, pastor of Little Zion M.B. Church of Corinth. He will be joined by the Little Zion choir and other church family.

Church anniversaries■ The Oak Grove CME

in Biggersville is celebrat-ing its historic 119th church anniversary on Sunday, Oct. 21 at 3 p.m. The preached word will be spoken by the Rev. Charles Young and songs of praise will be sung by his church choir. Dinner will be serviced immedi-ately after morning wor-ship. For more informa-tion, contact any member of the church.

■ Pleasant Grove Mis-sionary Baptist Church, Inc. 1572 Wenasoga Rd., Corinth, is celebrating its 123rd Church Anni-versary on Sunday, Oct. 28 at 3 p.m. The theme is “With God all things are possible,” Matthew 19:26. The guest preach-er will be the Rev. Clester Davis, pastor of New Zion Missionary Baptist Church of Plantersville. He will be accompanied by his church family and choir.

Judgement HouseFirst Baptist Church,

Selmer is presenting Judgement House “Unex-pected” Wednesday, Oct. 24; Saturday and Sunday,

Oct. 27, 28 and Wednes-day, Oct. 31. The “Unex-pected” story line shows how fast tragedy can hap-pen while texting and driv-ing. Area youth groups as well as families and indi-viduals are encouraged to attend. Reservations are preferred for groups. The drama is free to attend.  

Call the church of-fice at 731-645-5326 to schedule a time. The church is located in downtown Selmer, Tenn. on West Court Avenue.

AWANA■ Tishomingo Chapel

Baptist Church, CR 634, has started AWANA classes to be held each Wednesday night from 6:30-8:30 p.m. for kin-dergarten through 6th grade. There will also be classes for youth.

AWANA helps young people develop spiritually. For more information, call 415-9384.

■ St. Mark Baptist Church is offering AWANA on Wednesday nights from 6-7:30 p.m. AWANA is a well respected bible curriculum. The evening format will include bible drill competitions and game time. There is also adult prayer and bible study from 6-7:15 p.m. If interested in this pro-gram, contact Pastor Kim Ratliff, 662-287-6718. If there is no answer leave a brief message with con-tact information.

Worship Call

Dr. Ron Reilly

In thinking about my column for this week, my mind was consumed by all the tragedies and hurts we’ve heard about or experienced during the last two weeks. So ... I turned my thoughts away to something that might make us smile and found some quotes about children.

Be mindful of how much we love our chil-dren and grandchildren, but we have to laugh at the times they show us a new way to do things and teach us not to get set in our ways -- they will cer-tainly change them!

The following famous characters passed along some truths worth pon-dering -- and I think they did it with a smile on their faces:

Author unknown: “A characteristic of the nor-mal child is he doesn’t act

that way very of-ten.”

D. Haim G i n o t t : “ C h i l -dren are like wet c e m e n t -- what-ever falls on them

makes an impression.”Rita Rudner: “My hus-

band and I are either go-ing to buy a dog or have a child. We can’t decide whether to ruin our car-pet or ruin our lives.”

Christopher Morley: “We’ve had bad luck with our kids -- they’ve all grown up.”

Harry S. Truman: “I have found the best way to give advice to your children is to fi nd out what they want and then advise them to do it.”

Henry Fielding: “When children are doing noth-ing, they are doing mis-chief.”

Bill Cosby: “Sex educa-tion may be a good idea in the schools, but I don’t believe the kids should be given homework.”

Unknown: “A child can ask questions that a wise man cannot answer.”

Bill Cosby: “My child-hood should have taught me lessons for my own parenthood, but it didn’t because parenting can be learned only by people who have no children.”

Pablo Picasso: “Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain

an artist once we grow up.”

Clarence Darrow: “The fi rst half of our lives is ru-ined by our parents, and the second half by our children.”

Morley Safer: “Parents like the idea of kids, they just don’t like their kids.”

Monta Crane: “There are three ways to get something done: do it yourself, employ some-one, or forbid your chil-dren to do it.”

Groucho Marx: “My mother loved children -- she would have given anything if I had been one.”

Franklin P. Jones: “Children are unpredict-able. You never know what inconsistency they’re going to catch you in next.”

Dick Cavett: “If your parents never had chil-dren, chances are you won’t either.”

Edgar W. Howe: “If there were no schools to take the children away from home part of the time, the insane asy-lums would be fi lled with mothers.”

Phyllis Diller: “We spend the fi rst 12 months of our children’s lives teaching them to walk and talk and the next 12 telling them to sit down and shut up.”

Ray Merritt: “Old men can make war, but it is children who will make history.”

… And I love the good news for the day: Rabin-dranath Tagore says, “Ev-ery child comes with the message that God is not yet discouraged of man!”

How blessed are those who have children -- and also those who don’t; those who do have them need all the good help they can get from those who don’t have biological offspring. Hillary Clinton had it right; it really does take a village to raise a child.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Lora Ann Huff is a Wenasoga resident. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)

Thoughts on kids who might make you smile

In the light of the recent election debates there are many conservative Chris-tians concerned in which direction our country will now go. The unknown is one of the greatest fears that mankind can have.

Remember God’s man Job. The Lord allowed Satan to strip Job of all his early possessions and wealth, destroy his fam-ily, and answer his friends and wife that wanted him to curse God and die.

Job was God’s man. He would not deny God and resisted all temptation Satan could throw at him.

It seems that all of us are uncertain of the future and all we have to do is remain committed to God for guidance and leadership. It was said in my Sunday school class the other day it doesn’t matter which

candidate wins as long as we have Jesus in our heart and allow Him to control our t h o u g h t s and our lives.

There is an old saying that if God brings us to it, He will see us through it. How true this is. All we have to do is believe in Him and acknowledge all things through Him.

Proverbs 18:10 says “the name of the Lord is a strong tower: the righ-teous runneth into it, and is safe.”

God’s protection is all around His children. Even when times seem to look its bleakest, we need to

remember that the Lord is in charge. 1 Peter 3:13 tells us “and who is he that will harm you, if ye be follow-ers of that which is good?”

When we expect the worst we will often get it because our faith is wa-vering. Always expect the best and you will most likely receive it.

Prayer: Father, thank you for the assurance that you are in control. I pray that those that do not know you personally will come to know your saving grace and mercy. For only you can give the comfort that we need in any situ-ation. Amen.

(Corinth native and Daily Corinthian colum-nist Gary Andrews is now retired. The Yazoo City resident spent 35 years in the newspaper and mag-azine business. A dea-con and Sunday School teacher in his church, many of Andrews’ family are residents in Alcorn County. He can be con-tacted at [email protected].)

God’s protection surrounds you

Gary AndrewsDevotionals

Lora Ann Huff

Back Porch

Iuka423-6600

Corinth286-2274

Booneville728-3070

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CASH ADVANCESCar Title • Personal Check

Locally Owned and Operated !Locally Owned and Operated !In Business 20 Years!In Business 20 Years!

Grisham Insurance“Call me for your insurance needs”

(662)286-9835Final Expense • Life Insurance • Long Term Care

Medicare Supplements • Part D Prescription Plan

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• A Fiscal Conservative• A Believer in Religious Freedom• A staunch defender of individual rights & liberties• Believe our current administration has behaved irresponsibly.•Willing to travel to make a diff erence.

Benefit forAaron Rogers

Saturday • October 27th • 11-6:30Kossuth Methodist Blue Building

BBQ Provided byRollin’ Rumps BBQ

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To pre-order call286-1763 or 603-3084

Silent Auction 11-4Entertainment by the

Hobo Highstepper and Many Others*All proceeds go to help with medical expenses*

Page 13: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Wisdom3B • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

DEAR ABBY: I have recently developed what I consider to be a very healthy lifestyle. I exer-cise, eat lots of fruits and vegetables and mostly whole foods.

My problem is I think I may be becoming ob-sessed. It has become harder and harder to eat away from home. I con-stantly plan what I’m go-ing to eat next. I’m still happy, but too much of my time is being spent on this.

Apparently, there’s a disorder similar to anorexia known as or-thorexia. It’s the psycho-logical obsession with eat-ing healthy. I don’t think I could be classifi ed as an extreme case, but what should I do before I be-

come one? -- OB-S E S S E D IN BOS-TON

D E A R O B -SESSED: As with any ob-s e s s i v e disorder,

the fi rst step is realizing and admitting you may have one. Then discuss it with your physician and ask for a referral to a psy-chologist who specializes in eating disorders.

This is not to say that you have a disorder -- but because more and more of your time is being de-voted to thoughts of food, it would be a good idea to check. Too much of a

good thing can be harm-ful if it is taken too far.

DEAR ABBY: I am 23 and have one child. I have been married for three years, and my hus-band has recently become physically abusive. He was prosecuted for his ac-tions and pleaded guilty, but he still blames me entirely for the scenario and refuses to accept any responsibility.

I fear for the safety of myself and my daugh-ter every day, and I want to leave him for good. Many of the shelters I have called require that I quit my job, which is something I feel is coun-terintuitive to establish-ing a life on my own, so I refuse. That said, I don’t make much money, and

the money I do make goes toward paying the fi ne my husband incurred for harming me.

Am I aiming too high? I feel the only way to break free from him entirely is to quit my job, but I don’t want to have to resort to this. What would you ad-vise? -- CONFLICTED OUT WEST

DEAR CONFLICTED: I would advise you to take your child and get out of there before the next epi-sode of domestic violence. And, if you truly want to break free entirely from your abuser, that you follow to the letter the instructions you receive from the people at the domestic violence shelter. And one more thing: Let the person who incurred

the fi ne pay it himself!DEAR ABBY: I have a

question about offi ce mi-crowave etiquette. I work in a building with one kitchen for 40 people. Of-ten there is a wait to use the microwave around lunchtime.

Recently I needed to use it and found a warm packaged meal in there, and no owner around. I waited fi ve minutes and came back. It was still there as if it had been for-gotten.

I decided to place it on the counter with a napkin covering it so I could use the microwave. When I was fi nished, no one ap-peared to claim it, so I put it back in and went on my way.

Did I do the right thing?

There was no way to know whose meal it was. What’s proper in this situation? Should I have just waited? -- HUNGRY IN ITHACA, N.Y.

DEAR HUNGRY: You handled the situation ap-propriately. However, had it been me, I would have left the item on the counter so it wouldn’t be touched by the other 38 hungry people in your of-fi ce who also needed to use the microwave.

(Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was found-ed by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

Healthy eating habits may have taken unhealthy turn

Horoscopes

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You may find your-self in a constant state of management, with an endless to-do list that absorbs your time. Could you reassign some of your tasks to someone else? Delegation equals freedom.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Cool down and re-lax. There is nothing to be gained from rushing around. Besides, you look more confident and in control when you move slowly. The world will wait for you.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll be inexpli-cably drawn to an odd adventure. This road may seem potentially un-pleasant and downright difficult, but no matter. It’s the kind of thing you

do just so you never have to do it again.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’re an excellent driver, so try to steer the action where you want it to go. The same goes for conversation. Oth-erwise, you’ll tune out and get lost in your own thoughts, alienating the speaker.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Status matters. The per-ceived authority of the people involved in a deal will affect how it goes down today. Whether in business or your person-al life, do all you can to build your good name.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Trying to do a task perfectly robs you of the wonderful floating feel-ing of engagement in the same way that watching the clock prevents you

from enjoying the mo-ments.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’re an expert politician, partly because you realize that politics doesn’t only pertain to large organizations. Politics is alive in every transaction between hu-man beings. You’ll play the game well today.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). It takes maturity to understand that much that happens in a day depends on what a per-son did the night before. Every action sets up the next action. Tonight’s agenda changes as you use this principle as your guide.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). There’s much to be gained in the process of leaving. When you say goodbye to

a situation, you are also saying goodbye to the person you were inside that situation.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’ll have an opportunity to publicize your cause, make your request widely known or send a message to more people than you’ve ever been able to reach before.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Sometimes all it takes is a little push to send you flying. This is usually true when you’ve already tested your wings and have them fully extended, just waiting for someone to dare you.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You are not a con-trarian. For you to play devil’s advocate, or to adopt any conflicting

point of view, you have to have an excellent reason -- for instance, it’s really what you believe.

(If you would like to

write to Holiday Mathis, please go to www.cre-ators.com and click on “Write the Author” on the Holiday Mathis page.)

BY HOLIDAY MATHIS

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...

ContactLaura Holloway

at662-287-6111ext. 308

to advertiseyour

Law Firmon this page.

Robert G. “Bob” Moore, Jr.Attorney At Law

662-286-9505514 Waldron St.

Corinth, MS

Areas of Practice• Personal Injury, Auto Accidents

• Wrongful Death

• DUI, Criminal Defense

• DivorcePlease call to set up your free initial consultation.* Listing of areas of practice does not indicate any certifi cation or expertise therein.

Free background information available upon request.

Nicholas R. BainAttorney at Law

Nick BainAttorney at Law

LAW OFFICES OF CHARLES E. HODUMAnnounces the

Re-establishment of Offices at601 Main Street, Walnut, Mississippi 38683

Tippah CountyHours by appointmentOffice 1-662-223-6895

AndNashville area office:

9005 Overlook Blvd. •Brentwood, Tennessee 37027Hours by appointment

Office 1-615-242-0150 • Fax 1-615-274-4948

For information e-mail: [email protected] location:

Collierville, Tennessee 38017Office 1-901-853-8110 • Fax 1-901-853-0473

Continuing to serve West and Middle Tennessee and Northern and Middle Mississippi with representation in:

Family Law – Criminal Defense – Contract andCorporate – Personal Injury – Entertainment Law

Web site: Hodumlaw.com

ContactLaura Holloway

at662-287-6111ext. 308

to advertiseyour

Law Firmon this page.

BLALOCKLAW FIRMAttorneys of Amory, PLLC

“Help for Those in Needfrom Those That Care”

212 No MainAmory, MS 38821Tel. 662-257-2007Fax 662-257-2005

Brad J. Blalock, Attorney

WILLS/ESTATES - DIVORCE - CHILD CUSTODY -CONTEMPT - ADOPTIONS - DEEDS -

CONSERVATORSHIPS - GUARDIANSHIPS - PERSONAL INJURY - SOCIAL SECURITY - CONTRACTS -

COLLECTION - CRIMINAL DEFENSE - CIVIL DEFENSE

LISTING OF THESE PREVIOUSLY MENTIONED AREAS OF PRACTICE DOES NOT INDICATE

ANY CERTIFICATION OF EXPERTISE THEREIN

Bain & MossAttorneys At Law

662-287-1620

Criminal Law: Federal StateDrug Offenses • Assault & Battery • DUI Defense •

Burglary • Theft • Violent Crimes • Murder • All

Felonies & MisdemeanorsPersonal Injury

www.corinthlaw.net

516 Fillmore St. • Corinth, MSBackground Information Available Upon RequestListing Of These Previously Mentioned Area(s) Of Practice Does Not Indicate Any Certifi cation Of Expertise Therein.

Nick Bain • Tyler Moss

Page 14: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

ACROSS1 Kool Moe Dee’s

genre4 Response to a

drought ending10 Spot that many

avoid14 Words of

attribution15 Inspiration for

jambalaya16 Jaunty greeting17 *Components of

39-Across20 Yao-like21 Gummy22 *Components of

39-Across28 Lightsaber

wielders29 Get ready for a

drive30 Elem. school

staple33 Some

emoticons37 Barbera d’__:

Italian wine38 Sushi topper39 Symbolic sum of

17-, 22- and 50-Across

41 Key for getting outof a jam

42 Humble reply topraise

44 Visit45 __ Cabos,

Mexico46 Chowderhead48 Gaseous: Pref.50 *Components of

39-Across56 Signal to try to

score57 They’re often

bruised59 Classic manual,

with “The,” andwhat the starredanswers’components arevis-à-vis 39-Across

64 Greg’s love on“House”

65 Hard pieces66 Flicks67 Pup without

papers68 Writer de

Beauvoir69 Miss Pym’s

creator

DOWN1 Lake floater2 Burka wearer’s

deity3 Comedian Shore4 CPA’s busy time5 Mai __6 “Dancing with the

Stars” judge7 Bayer painkiller8 Knocked off9 Tibia neighbors

10 “Why, I never!”11 “Fast Five” star12 Sushi tuna13 One of a toon

septet18 Cutlass maker19 Many a St.

Andrews golfer23 Jazz lick24 Others, abroad25 Spirit26 Bats27 Books that require

a commitment30 Tops31 It might make you

forget your lines32 Ex-Laker

silhouetted in theNBA logo

34 Detective’spronoun

35 Go after, puppy-style

36 Serious40 “Eli’s Coming”

songwriter43 Support for a

downward-facingdog

47 Campbell of “WildThings”

49 “Is this what __ for...?”

51 Tampico tots

52 Gangster Frank53 Briefly54 Abu Simbel’s land55 “Honest!”58 Steamy59 Sunblock of a sort60 Sch. with a

Riverheadcampus

61 Prefix with meter62 Marshland63 Lubbock-to-

Laredo dir.

By Jeff Chen(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 10/19/12

10/19/12

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

y y

[email protected]

Boyfriend’s adult daughter a constantsource of emotional, financial turmoil

Ask Annie

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

Variety4B • Daily Corinthian Friday, October 19, 2012

Page 15: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

ServiceS

JIMCOROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BIDALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

$1,000,000 LIABILITY

INSURANCE• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975• LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY

(NO SECONDS)• METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE,

SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST

WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS& DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

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

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Corinth, MS 38834Crushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

1311 Foote Street,Corinth, MS

FOR SALE BY OWNER3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Floor Furnace,

Carport

GOOD RENTAL PROPERTY“OWNER WILL FINANCE”

662-286-8475

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

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

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

Smith Discount Home Center

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

Fax 287-2523

Don’t Waste Your Money ... Shop With Us!

1X4X8 Pine ........................................$200¢

1x4x10 Pine ........................................$250

1x4x12 Pine ........................................$300

1X6 or 1X8 White Pine 500m

Paneling ...$1195

to$1695

Crossties ........$695

while supplies last

5/8-T-1-11 Siding = ..........$1595

3/8-T-1-11 Siding = ..........$1395

1x4x14 PIne ......................................$399

1x4x16 PIne ...................................... $505

7/8 plywood ..............................$1595

3/4 presswood veneer ....$499

25 Year 3 tab shingle ....$5495

35 year architectural

Shingle .............................................$6295

Laminate Floor From

.................................................39¢ - $109

Round Commodes ............. $4995

Turf ....................................................$100 yd

RUN YOUR AD IN THE DAILY CORINTHIAN

& COMMUNITY PROFILES ON THIS

PAGE FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIANONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147FOR DETAILS.

RUN YOUR AD IN THE DAILY CORINTHIAN

& COMMUNITY PROFILES ON THIS

PAGE FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIANONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147FOR DETAILS.

RUN YOUR AD IN THE DAILY CORINTHIAN

& COMMUNITY PROFILES ON THIS

PAGE FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIANONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147FOR DETAILS.

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

Licensed & Bonded

• Bucket Truck Service • Backhoe

662-396-1023JASON ROACH-OWNER

1159 B CR 400Corinth, MS 38834

MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHEN OR BATH FAST AND VERY INEXPENSIVE

NEW COUNTERTOPSOne of North Mississippi’s

Largest SelectionsNo Long Wait...Best Prices...

Expert Preparation...All Modern Equipment...Precision Cutting.

Trained Personnel to Assist You.Free Quotes

VISIT OUR SHOWROOMMONDAY-FRIDAY, 7AM-5PM

Smith Cabinet Shop1505 Fulton Dr., Corinth, MS

662-287-2151

B & B FENCE CO.205 Cardinal Dr. • 662-287-4667

(Next to Cat.) • bandbfence@gmail. com

• Chain-link galv. black green–brown • Wood-ornamental iron- alum. • Decorative Estate gate• Auto. gates & entry systems• Vinyl-privacy-picket-rail

Financing Available

We sell materials fordo-it-yourselfers!

R

FOR SALE:

ANTIQUE BRICK & OLD

LUMBER.

Circa 1869 Corinth Machinery Bldg.

287-1464

Houses For Sale

3502 Bluebird Land (The Oaks)Reduced. $259,900 is a Deal! 4BR, 3.5BA, gran-ite, HW, tile & great fl oor plan. Over 3800 sq. ft.,

2209 Willow Road.Reduced to $194,900 with over 3300 sq. ft., 5 BR, 3BA, all HW fl oors, new int. paint, updated

kit, new appls.

REDUCED $25,000

662-286-2255

House for Sale

2 CR 214 (Farmington Rd.) Hardwood fl oors, new stainless steel appliances, 4-car garage.

$84,900.

662-279-3902

BUDDYAYERSConstruction

& Crane Rental287-2296

We haul:-Top Soil-Fill Sand

-Lime Stone-Washed Gravel

Dozer & Excavator Service

Masonry Sand& Concrete Work

FREE ESTIMATES

DIVORCESALE!

2002 HIGHLAND DR.4BR, 2 BA, CORNER LOT,

$140,000 APPRAISED VALUE. WILL SELL FOR PAYOFF,

APPROX. $87,000.

662-808-5225

www.secureportablebuildings.com

10x16 w/ Metal Roof Barn

$15000 Deposit plus 1st Month

Payment of $14835 & you are approved.

No Hidden Fees

662- 415-8180You are approved

with ID

Hwy 45S(Next to Hwy 45

Truck Stop)

SOLD

SOLD

FOR SALE BY OWNER

64 CR 238. 3 BR, 2 BA on 1 acre. New carpet

in BR's, huge back yard, large deck built in 2011,

C/H/A. Can email pictures. $79,900

662-212-4730

HOLIDAY GIFTSHOLIDAY MARKET PLACEInside Harper Square Mall26th Annual Craft Sale

Thurs., Nov. 1st, 2-6 pmFri., Nov. 2nd, 10am-6pmSat., Nov. 3rd, 10am-3pm

All items handmade or refurbished

35 Craftsmen participatingBring your friends to this unique

Christmas shopping event!

SOLD IN 3 DAYS

033-CR 250- Excellent opportunity for duck hunters with open water hunting or hunting in standing timber. One of the better duck holes on the Hatchie

River in Alcorn and Tippah County. Also, excellent bass and stripe fi shing in the 30 plus acre spring fed lake. Massive white tails and wild hogs. De-verse

Eco system with low hunting pressure equals trophies. 533+- acres

Acreage ponds, creek, pastures, 33 year old timber, only $1300 per acre in south

Alcorn County. Need to sell. Call Lyle with United Country River City Realty at 662-212-3796 or for auction service

MS lic # 1333.

LAND FOR SALE

Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 19, 2012 • 5B

CARD OF THANKSFOSTER FAMILY

Th e family of Vergie Wooten Foster-Butler wants to thank our relatives, neighbors, and friends

for their kindness and prayers over the years that our mom has been through a great ordeal.

We appreciate all the cards and food and loving support of the community

with special thanks to Reverend Frank Bell and Brother Richard Doyle and the pastor

of Butler’s Chapel Church, Tommy Leatherwood, and to the good friends who were the pallbearers.

We are deeply thankful for the loving care of the West Clinic of Corinth, Selmer Regional Hospital,

and at the end, Caris Hospice of Somerville and the Memorial Funeral Home of Corinth.

Th ere is more we would like to say, but no way to put it in words.

God bless you all.

Card of ThanksThe family of Susie Nash

wants to thank everyone who sent fl owers and food. We

greatly appreciate the thoughts & prayers for our family at

this time.

A special thanks to Bro. Charles Stephenson, Bro.

Charlie Cooper and the ladies of Rienzi Baptist Church.

$449. Laptop-Acer Aspire$119. LCD Acer Monitor 20” LED

$129. Microsoft Offi ce University 2010 Plus a large selection of used PC’s Starting at $99.

BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS

Page 16: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

6B • Friday, October 19, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

carS for Sale0868

• 100,000 Mile Warranty• 150-Point InspectionCertified Honda

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2008-2010 HONDA

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1607 South Harper RoadCorinth MS 38834

662-287-6111

Daily Corinthian

Sporting goodS0527

ARNOLD PALMER ArniesOwn II oversize 3 & 5Fairway Woods, $25. Call662-603-1382.

COMPOUND BOW, HoytXT-2000, Magnatec, fullyloaded. $260. 662-665-5472

E X E R C I S E B I K E ,Welsprow, has all amen-i t i e s ( s p e e d , f a n ,mileage). $100. 284-0102.

H&R 20 gauge singleshot, $125. 662-720-6855.

KING COBRA pitchingwedge, $5. Call 662-603-1382.

MCKEE'S GUN SHOPBuy, sell, trade, repair

Hand gun safety classesavailable for Tn.

residents.731-239-5635

NEW SET of Dunlap golfclubs, bag, full set irons,4 drivers, walking cart,$40 firm. Call 662-212-2616

REMINGTON 30-06 semi-automatic model 742,$250. 662-720-6855.

REMINGTON 870 ExpressM a g n u m , 1 2 - g a u g epump, $240. 662-720-6855.SPRINGFIELD 410 youthsingle shot, $125. 662-720-6855.

furniture05335-PIECE Lazy Boy sec-tional, green/blue/tanplaid, $175. 662-284-6642.

ANTIQUE TABLE, 6 chairs,leaf. $495. 662-808-9313or 662-415-5071.

COUCH, BLUE, no rips ortorn places, 3 cushions,$125. 662-665-1587 or662-396-1854.

GLIDER ROCKER w/footstool, $80. 284-0102.

GLIDER ROCKER , l iken e w , b r a n d n a m eBerkley. $100. 284-0102.

GUN CABINET , madefrom pine with lockingammo storage, $50 firm.662-665-0209.

HON WOODEN desk, 5' x30", 3 file drawers, 2smaller drawers, greatcond., med. coloredwood, $200. 731-610-0441.

HON WOODEN desk, 6' x24", 4 file drawers, greatcond., med. coloredwood, $200. 731-610-0441.

METAL & GLASS patio-dining table with 4chairs, will e-mail pics.$150. 662-462-7599.

ROUND OAK dining ta-ble & 4 chairs, $150. 286-6590.SOLID WOOD rocker,dark color, $75. 284-0102.

WHITE OAK desk , 2drawers, shelf, slide-outfor computer, very nice,$75. 662-665-1587 or 662-396-1854.

W O O D E N P R I N T E Rstand, 29" wide x 24"deep, 1 large file draw-er, 2 smaller drawers,light colored wood, $75.731-610-0441.

firewood0539OAK FIREWOOD, $100c o r d . , d e l i v e r e d &stacked. 662-603-9057 or662-212-4908.

Building MaterialS0542

KITCHEN ISLAND, $150,286-9660.

LAMINATE FLOORING ,$100. 286-9660.

STORM DOOR, $75. 286-9660.WINDOWS, $100 ea. 286-9660.

Machinery & toolS0545

10" X 18" Grizzly benchtop wood lathe, boughtnew from Grizzly Indus-trial, (1 set of lathe toolsincluded). $150. 662-284-5071.

CRAFTSMAN 10" RADIALarm saw, 2 1/2 HP, $250.662-415-8984.

Store/office equipMent0551

COPIER, XEROX 5614, hasmetal bottom compart-ment, cream/beige col-or, has storage com-partment, $100. 662-665-1587 or 662-396-1854.

CREDIT CARD machine, 6mos. old, $200. 662-665-1837.

wanted to rent/Buy/trade0554

LOOKING FOR used res-taurant equipment. Call662-284-6848.

M&M. CASH for junk cars& trucks. We pick up.6 6 2 - 4 1 5 - 5 4 3 5 o r731-239-4114.

MiSc. iteMS for Sale0563

(4) BRAND new 9/16 im-pact sockets, $4 each or$10 for all four. Call 662-603-1382.

(6) WHEAT pennies & (6)old Jefferson nickels, allfor $10 obo. 662-603-1382.

8-PIECE blue cut glassset, $15. 286-5116.

B A S K E T B A L L G O A Lw/stand, $25. 286-9660.

B I G B O Y C h r i s t m a slights, $3.00. 286-5116.

BOX OF men's 3XL-5XLclothes, jeans & shirts,$20. 731-610-0441.

CLEAR GLASS punchbowl set, $15. 286-5116.

EMPLOYMENT

Medical/dental0220

PHYSICIAN'S OFFICE MANAGER

Must be able to takedictation, do off icebilling & coding, ExcelQuick Books bookkeep-ing, payroll, insurance,workmen's comp, acci-d e n t c l a i m s ,Medicare/Blue Cross &develop office proto-cols. Send resume to:Box 326, c/o Daily Cor-inthian, P.O. Box 1800,Corinth, MS 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 TRAINEES

NEEDED NOW!Learn to drive for

US Xpress!Earn $800 per week!

No Experience Needed!CDL Trained and

Job Ready in 15 days!1-888-540-7364

TEAM DRIVERS - OliveBranch, Miss iss ippi .Good Miles/Pay/Super:Benefits/Equip/TouchFree Freight, QuarterlyBonus, Pet Friendly!CDL-A, 2 yrs.OTR exp.,Clean Criminal Back-ground, call HR 800-789-8451. www.longistics.com

people Seeking eMployMent0272

WILL SIT with elderly fullor part time, all shifts.Belinda @ 662-808-3909.

PETS

catS/dogS/petS0320AKC REG . Rottweilerpuppies, 7 wks. old, 1male, 1 female, $350each. 662-643-3008 or662-416-3763.

GREY GAME roosters$20; 3 mountain curpups, 8 wks, 1st shots,$50 ea. 427-8375, 279-3013.

FARM

MERCHANDISE

houSehold goodS0509

( 2 ) POL ISHED b rasschandeliers, 10 lights,etched glass & acrylic,will email pics. $75 ea.or $120 for both. 662-462-7599

(4) LAMPS, one antique,$5-$25. 662-665-1587 or662-396-1854.

EXTERIOR METAL doors,$200 ea. 286-9660.

GE PROFILE refrigerator,22 cu. ft., ince maker,good cond., $200. 286-6590.

H A N D I C A P P E DTUB/SHOWER, $1200. 286-9660.

PROPANE FIREPLACE in-sert w/logs, 14" deep,27" wide, will fit open-ing of 44"x32", elect.starter , thermostatcontrolled, w/blowerfan, $150 obo. 731-434-8475.

RIVAL WAFFLE maker,for cookies, sundaes,ice cream cones, etc.,$10. 662-665-1587 or 662-396-1854.

STAINLESS WAFFLE ironwith grill plates, $10. 286-5116.

VINTAGE 1979 Coca ColaTray, 85th Anniversaryof Coke in Vicksburg,Ms, $10. Call (662)603-1382.

VINTAGE FIESTA Ware,Cobalt in color, lg.serving bowl, $10. Call(662)603-1382

VINTAGE FIESTA Ware,pink in color, lg. servingbowl, $10. 662-603-1382.

VINTAGE FIESTA Ware,white in color, lg. ovalplatter, $15. Call (662)603-1382

coMputer0515(4) COMPUTER monitors,$25 each. 662-665-1587or 662-396-1854.

electronicS051827 INCH TV, works good,$25. 286-9512.

HP PRINTER 1000 deskjetNIB missing the ink .$10. Call (662)603-1382

RCA EXECUTIVE series 4-line speaker phone, exc.cond., $35. 731-610-0441.

lawn & garden equipMent0521

ZERO TURN Cub Cadetmower, 50" cut, 22 Kaw.mtr., runs but needswork, $275. 662-223-0865.

garage/eState SaleS0151

3 FAMILIES, Fri & Sat 7'ti l , baby/kids clths,toys, h/h, furn, LOTS.329 S Liberty, Michie

ESTATE SALE. Thurs, Fri,Sat., Oct. 18-20., 9-5. 139CR 248 of f Centra lSchool Rd .

FRI. & SAT., 8:00. Acrossfrom Dollar GeneralStore on Hwy 22 atMichie. Several fams. As-sortment of items.

FRI/SAT. Wheeler GroveRd. (CR 523). Clothes,jewelry, scarves, DVDs,TV, tools, toys, h/hitems, holiday decor.

GARAGE SALE. Fri., 7 'til.4257 CR 200 (Farm. Rd.)Kid's & baby clothes,lots of misc.

GIGANTIC YARD SALE.Sat. only, 6-3. Tons ofnew stuff, golf carts,appliances, TVs, heaters,etc. 2008 Oak Lane.

GUITARS AT Tina's Treas-ures Flea MKT Booth236. OVER 50 TO CHOOSEFROM $60-$110. ALSO,20% off at Booth 222.

HUGE 1ST SALE. Fri/Sat.Cnt. Sch. Rd across fromHoney Creek. Furn, litdcurio cab, tools, 2"bl inds, n/brd clths.

LARGE YARD SALE. 2202N. Madison. Thurs., Fri.,Sat. ('til noon). TV, table,cookware, etc.

MONA L ISA ' S Thr i f tS t o r e . 5 0 % o f f a l lclothes. Wed-Sat. 1007Hwy 72 E. across fromPizza Hut. 662-603-5870.

MOVING SALE. Thurs.,Fri., Sat., STARTS 9 a.m.(NO EARLY BIRDS!). 1107B u n c h S t . L o t s o fe v e r y t h i n g !

SALE. 15 CR 223, Farm-ington. Thurs.-Fri. Patiofurn., men's stuff, antq.furn. , odds & ends,adult & baby clothes.

SAT., 7-12. 505 WrotenRd. (Mathis Sub.) Lots ofchildren's clothes &toys, misc. items.

SAT., 7A. 1306 Garden Ln.GOLF CLUBS, sh irts ,bags, acc., Christmasdecor, shoes, wm clths,pics, jewelry, h/h items.

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

HUGE SALE!!

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

YARD SALE. 213 BunchSt. Fri. & Sat. Treadmill,clothes, paintings, misc.items.

YARD SALE. Fri. & Sat.700 Hwy 356, Rienzi.(Stella Rinehart) Lots ofmisc. items.

YARD SALE. Fri. only. 105Chambers St. Boys 12-24mo., toys, men, womenclothes, shoes.

YARD SALE. Fri., Sat.,Sun., 8-5. DR table, TVstand, chair, nic-nacs,misc. 26 CR 474.

YARD SALE. Sat. SalemRd., CR 400 (Old HilltopStore). Guns, old glass,etc.YARD SALE. Sat., 7am 'til.1203 Orchard Lane .Books, CDs, furn., TV,much more.

YARD SALE. Sev. fams.Fri/Sat. In front of Fab-ric Warehouse, 2682-B S.Harper next door toNew Life Christian Sup.

YARD SALE. Thurs., Fri.,Sat. 3803 CR 100. Sheets,quilts, dishes, pottery,jars, pet carriers, chairs,clothes, misc.

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 MUST BE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

inStruction0180MEDICAL CAREERS beginhere - Train ONLINE forAllied Health and Medi-cal Management. Jobplacement assistance.Computer available. Fi-nancial Aid if qualified.SCHEV certified. Call877-206-5185. www.Cen-turaOnline.com

WORK ON JET ENGINES -Train for hands on Avia-tion Career. FAA ap-proved program. Finan-cial aid if qualified - Jobplacement assistance.CALL Aviation Instituteo f M a i n t e n a n c e .866-455-4317.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Special notice0107CLASSIFIED

ADVERTISERSWhen Placing Ads

1. Make sure your adreads the way you wantit! Make sure our AdConsultants reads thead back to you.2. Make sure your ad isin the proper classifica-tion.3. After our deadline at3 p.m., the ad cannot becorrected, changed orstopped until the nextday.4. Check your ad the 1stday for errors. If errorhas been made, we willbe happy to correct it,but you must call be-fore deadline (3 p.m.) toget that done for thenext day.Please call 662-287-6147if you cannot find your

ad or need to makechanges!

loSt0142LOST SAT . , 10/13 atBelks: Ladies' watch,purple face & purpleband. Special gift fromson. 287-5470.

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

garage/eState SaleS0151

1704 PINECREST. Sat, 7'til. Kid's-wm's sm-plussz clths, PJ's, coats,h o m e d e c , d i s h e s ,s h e e t s , t o y s .

CARPORT SALE. Mon-Satall this month. 1 mile off72 E. (24 CR 406). Anyreasonable price will beaccepted.

ESTATE SALE. Fri. & Sat.28 CR 102 (Box ChapelRd.) Everything mustgo! Furn., appl., clothes,what-nots.

U.S. Savings Bonds

are gifts with a

future.

Page 17: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 19, 2012 • 7B

auto/truck partS & acceSSorieS0848

HWY 72 EAST • CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI LOCAL: 662-286-6006 • TOLL FREE: 1-888-286-6006

DIDYOUHEAR?

DON’T

KEEP

YOUR

BUSINESS

A

SECRET.

CALL

US!

DailyCorinthian

287-6111

auto/truck partS & acceSSorieS0848

We Rent OnlyLate Models Vehicles!

7 & 15 Passenger Vans Available

287-8773

King’s Rental

916 Hwy 45 South

ServiceS

D I V O R C E W I T H o rwithout children $99.Includes name changeand property settle-ment agreement. SAVEhundreds. Fast andeasy. Cal l 1-888-733-7165. 24/7.

EXTRA! EXTRA! Still Run-ning! Drop-off LaundryService. Call Jessica at662-603-5904. Pick-up &Deliver.

SOCIAL SECURITY DISAB-ILITY BENEFITS. WIN orPay Nothing! Start YourApplication In Under 60Seconds. Call Today!C o n t a c t D i s a b i l i t yGroup, Inc. Licensed At-torneys & BBB Accred-ited. Call 888-460-3130.

Storage, indoor/outdoorAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUM MINI-

STOR.,72w., 3 locs.

Unloading docks/Rental trucks,

286-3826.

profeSSional Service directory

alterationS

SEW MUCH FUN! Mono-gram & EmbroideryBack-To-School itemsor just about anything.Laura Holloway, 284-5379 after 5 or leavemsg.

legalS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE MATTEROF THE ESTATE OFKENNETH WAYNEBUTLER,DECEASED

MARY E. BUTLER,PETITIONER

CAUSE NO. 2012-0540-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters Testamentaryhaving been granted on the16th day of October, 2012, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, tothe undersigned Executrix ofthe Estate of Kenneth WayneButler, deceased, notice ishereby given to all personshaving claims against the Es-tate to present the same tothe Clerk of this Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law, within ninety(90) days from the first pub-lication of this notice, or theywill be forever barred.

This the 16th day of Octo-ber, 2012.

MARY E. BUTLERExecutrix of the Estate of

Kenneth Wayne Butler,Deceased

MATTHEW Y. HARRISAttorney at LawPost Office Box 29New Albany, MS 38652(662) 534-6421MS STATE BAR NO. 99595

3t 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/1213937

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

handyMan

JT'S Handyman. Pres-sure wash ing , car -pentry, painting. I do itall! 284-6848.

hoMe iMproveMent & repair

BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-tion, floor leveling,bricks cracking, rottenwood, basements,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. Free est.7 3 1 - 2 3 9 - 8 9 4 5 o r662-284-6146.

legalS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: THE LAST WILLAND TESTAMENT OFRETHIE MAE KEMP,DECEASED

NO. 2012-0588-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby given thatLetters Testamentary havebeen on this day granted tothe undersigned, HENRY L.KEMP, on the Estate of Reth-ie Mae Kemp, deceased, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, andall persons having claimsagainst said estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theClerk of said Court withinninety (90) days from the dateof the first publication of thisnotice or the same shall beforever barred. The first dayof the publication of this no-tice is the 12th day of Octo-ber, 2012.

WITNESS my signature onthis the 10 day of October,2012.

HENRY L. KEMP,Executor of the

Estate ofRethie Mae Kemp

3t 10/12, 10/19, 10/26/1213928

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE MATTEROF THE ESTATE OFKENNETH WAYNEBUTLER,DECEASED

MARY E. BUTLER,PETITIONER

CAUSE NO. 2012-0540-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters Testamentaryhaving been granted on the16th day of October, 2012, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, tothe undersigned Executrix ofthe Estate of Kenneth WayneButler, deceased, notice ishereby given to all personshaving claims against the Es-tate to present the same tothe Clerk of this Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law, within ninety(90) days from the first pub-lication of this notice, or theywill be forever barred.

This the 16th day of Octo-ber, 2012.

MARY E. BUTLERExecutrix of the Estate of

Kenneth Wayne Butler,Deceased

MATTHEW Y. HARRISAttorney at LawPost Office Box 29New Albany, MS 38652(662) 534-6421MS STATE BAR NO. 99595

3t 10/19, 10/26, 11/2/1213937

TRANSPORTATION

Motor hoMeS0824(2) MTR. homes, oldertruck, tow truck & (4)race cars. 662-808-9313or 662-415-5071.

auto/truck partS & acceSSorieS

0848

300 GALLON diesel tankwith pump, on skids,$150. 731-610-2492.

FORD F150 bed cover,tri-fold, black, fits 2009-current models, $300.662-665-1837.

carS for Sale08682007 BUICK Lucerne, justturned 100k mile, leath-er, 3.8 eng., good cond.$12,000. Loc. at 7 GeislerLn. 662-212-0818.

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

legalS0955IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: THE LAST WILLAND TESTAMENT OFRETHIE MAE KEMP,DECEASED

NO. 2012-0588-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby given thatLetters Testamentary havebeen on this day granted tothe undersigned, HENRY L.KEMP, on the Estate of Reth-ie Mae Kemp, deceased, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, andall persons having claimsagainst said estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theClerk of said Court withinninety (90) days from the dateof the first publication of thisnotice or the same shall beforever barred. The first dayof the publication of this no-tice is the 12th day of Octo-ber, 2012.

WITNESS my signature onthis the 10 day of October,2012.

HENRY L. KEMP,Executor of the

Estate ofRethie Mae Kemp

3t 10/12, 10/19, 10/26/1213928

hoMeS for Sale0710

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

lotS & acreage073440 ACRES, Burnsville.$2000 cash per acre. 662-808-9313 or 415-5071.

MoBile hoMeS for Sale0741

VOTED BEST OF SHOWSpacious 4 BR, 2 BA,$44,500.00.All homes delivered &set up on your prop-erty. Limited time onthis home

CLAYTON HOMESSUPERCENTEROF CORINTH

HWY 72 WEST1/4 mile west of hospital

Manufactured hoMeS for Sale0747

SUMMER SIZZLERNew 3 Bedroom

2 BathEnergy Star Home

Vinyl Siding/Shingle Roof,

2"x6" Wall StudsThermo pane windowsHeat Pump, Appliances

Underpinning,Delivered & Setup

Only $28,995WINDHAM HOMES

287-6991

hoMeS for rent0620

111 E . 4th St. 3 BR,C/H/A, 662-872-0221.

3 BR, 2 BA, 2030 Hwy 72next to Magnolia Funer-al Home. $650 mo., $650dep. 662-279-9024.

3 BR, 2 BA, ideal forcouple or elderly, incounty. 662-415-1221.

MoBile hoMeS for rent0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

hoMeS for Sale0710

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.

MiSc. iteMS for Sale0563

LIBERTY BLUES - BlueJean Sport Coat, 4XL,new with tags, $20. 731-610-0441.

NAME BRAND make-up:Foundation & mascara,$15.00. Lip gloss, $14.00;Lip stick, $13.00. 662-415-3583.

VICKS HUMIDIFIERS, newin box, $10. 662-665-1587or 662-396-1854.

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

unfurniShed apartMentS0610

MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR,stove, refrig., water.$365. 286-2256.

FREE MOVE IN (WAC): 2BR, 1 BA, stove & refrig.,W&D hookup, CR 735,Section 8 apvd. $400mo. 287-0105.

NICE APT. on PickwickLake w/lake view. 662-423-9933.

hoMeS for rent0620

2 BR, 1 BA, in AlcornCent. Sch. Dist., $475mo., $475 dep. Ref's.req'd. No TVRHA; Also, 3BR, 1 BA, city limits, $500m o . , $ 5 0 0 d e p . N oTVRHA. 662-415-1838.

MiSc. iteMS for Sale0563

COLCRAFT BABY stroller,blue, like new, $10. 662-665-1587 or 662-396-1854.

DESERT BOWL with 6serving bowls fromMexico, $15. 286-5116.

FREE ADVERTISINGAdvertise one item val-ued at $500 or less forfree. Price must be inad & will run for 5 daysin Daily Corinthian, 1day in Reporter & 1 dayin Banner Independent.

Ads may be up to ap-prox. 20 words includ-ing phone number. Theads must be for privateparty or personal mdse.& cannot include pets &supplies, livestock (incl.chickens, ducks, cattle,goats, etc) & supplies,garage sales, hay, fire-wood, & automobiles.

Email ad to: freeads

@dailycorinthian.comor

[email protected]

Or mail ad to Free Ads,P.O. Box 1800, Corinth,MS 38835, fax ad to 662-287-3525 or bring ad to1607 S. Harper Rd., Cor-inth.

* N O P H O N E C A L L SPLEASE. INCLUDE NAME& ADDRESS FOR OUR RE-CORDS.

HAIR DRYER with hood,$10. 286-5116

KING SIZE brand coatwith removable hood,4XL, exc. cond., $25. 731-610-0441.

Page 18: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

8B • Friday, October 19, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

auto ServiceS0840

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 Sales470

FARM/LAWN/GARDEN EQUIP.

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

1998 Chevy S-10 LS,

extended cab, 3rd door, low rider,

5-spd., 2.2 ltr., 4 cyl., runs great,

$1800 obo662-415-6262.

2006 Wildcat 30 ft. 5th wheel camper, 2 slides, fi berglass ext., awning, holding tanks, full sofa

sleeper, refrig., mi-cro., glass shower, recliner, sleeps 6,

$18,500662-223-0056.

‘10 Nissan Pathfi nder

very low mi-29,140, 3rd row seat, black

w/gray int, very nice & below Kelly Blue

Book value. $17,950. Call Gina Brown at

731-439-2363 Tow. pkg. incl, great gas mi. for lg. SUV.

’04 HONDA SHADOW

750$3900

662-603-4407

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2004 KAWASAKIMULE

3010 Model #KAF650E, 1854 hrs., bench seat,

tilt bed, 4 WD & windshield, well

maintained. Great for farm or hunting. $6500.

731-212-9659731-212-9661.

1991 Ford Econoline

Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one

owner, serious interest. $6500

287-5206.

2001 HONDA REBEL 250 WITH EXTRAS,

BLUE, LESS THAN 1500 MILES,

$1850662-287-2659

GUARANTEED

1999 CHEROKEE SPORT 4X4,

6 cyl., all works good except for

A/C$4000.

662-665-1143.

2008 NISSAN ROGUE S

Black, 42K miles, new tires, excel.

cond.$14,200

662-287-6613leave message

or text

‘98 FAT BOY,New factory EVOE engine w/warranty, 80 cu. in., 1300 mi. new wheels/tires,

pipes & paint. Divorce Sale. Over $13,000

invested.

$8000 obo662-665-1781

2005 HONDA ATV TRX 250 EX

“New” Condition$1995

215-666-1374662-665-0209

2006 GMC YUKONExc. cond. inside & out,

106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front

& rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded

$13,995662-286-1732

REDUCED

804BOATS

2000 DODGE

CARAVAN, $1500.

731-645-0157 AFTER 4 P.M.

2000 Dodge Ram 1500 Van, too many

extras to list, good travel or work van, will trade or sell.

Reduced to$2,300

662-287-1834.

868AUTOMOBILES

ALUMA CRAFT 14’ BOAT, 40 H.P.

JOHNSON, TROLLING MTR., GOOD COND., INCLUDES TRAILER,

$1200 OBO OR WILL TRADE. 731-610-8901 OR EMAIL FOR

PICS TO

[email protected]

804BOATS

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER,

RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP,

24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW

BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER

LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$7,900. 662-808-0113.

16’ Aqua bass boat 70 HP Mercury, 4 seats, trolling

motor,

$4,000662-287-5413.

1959 Ford diesel

tractor

$4000662-750-0607

3000 series, new rear tires

& tubes

2002 Chevrolet Z-71,4-dr.,

4W.D., Am.Fm cass./CD, pewter in color, $6200.

662-643-5908 or662-643-5020

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr.,

exc. drive train, 215k miles, great

work truck. $8400.

662-664-3538.

BUSH HOG 61” ZERO TURN, COM-MERCIAL, 28 HP KOE-HLER, 45 HOURS, NEW

$7900662-728-3193

2000 Custom Harley

Davidson Mtr. & Trans.,

New Tires, Must See

$12,000 662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

$10,500

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

Cruisemaster Motorhome by

Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000

miles with white Oak interior. $19,500. 662-808-7777 or

662-415-9020

1967 CHEVYNeeds paint &

body work$4000.

504-952-1230

1996 LINCOLN TOWN CARExc. cond.,

1-family owned, 138,350 miles.

$3900.662-415-8682

Luxury V-8 Lone Star Dodge P/U, 19.5 mpg w/low

miles, 52k, 2x4 2005 Model Quad Cab, SLT w/PS, PL, AC, CD. A great Buy @

$12,980. Call 731-239-9226.

2003 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC

looks & rides real good!

$3000662-603-4786

2004 32 ft

Forest River Camper,

C/H/A, sleeps 5, full bedroom,

full bath, new carpet,

& hardwood, fridg, stove, microwave.

$3500.00662-665-6000

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

4-dr., 41,000 miles, dark blue ext. & gray int., 4 cyl. auto., CD/

XM radio, 36 mpg. payoff is

$11,054731-610-7241

1996 FORD F150 4X4

stick, camoufl age,

186,200 miles (mostly interstate

driving), runs good.

$3000 obo. 662-607-9401

662-287-5413or cell 284-8678

$3,500 $9,500

2007 Franklin pull

camper, 36’, 20’ awning, 2 slide outs,

full kitchen, W&D, tub/shower, 32” Sony TV, fully air-conditioned & lots

more! $11,500. 662-643-3565 or 415-8549

REDUCEDREDUCED

2000 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LSLoaded, exc. cond.,

gold color, all leather interior.

$3800286-6781

or 643-0211

1985 1/2 TON SILVERADO

305 ENG., AUTO., PS, PB, AC, NEEDS PAINT, READY TO RESTORE,

DRIVEN DAILY. $3,500

call Iuka.287-1213 AFTER

4 P.M.

1992 FORDF-250

rebuilt trans., tool box, wired for elect.

brake trailer$1,950

662-462-8391

‘96 Challenger Radical One Pro Bass Boat,

130 HP Johnson, 24v motorguide trol mtr., on-board charger for all 3

batteries, Hummingbird Fish fi nder, good trailer w/new tires, looks good

for ‘96 model & runs good. $4500 obo.

662-286-6972or 415-1383.

2000 Saab,

9-3 Convertible.123,000mi.

GREAT FUN CAR.

$2850 OBO.662-396-1333

2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER

fi berglass, 18 ft. bunkhouse launch, wt.

2,750 lbs, 26 gallon freshwater tank, cargo carrying capacity-895 lbs, gray & black water

tanks, cable ready.

$11,500662-396-1390.

2006Yamaha Bruin 4 WD, automatic,

like new,$2800

662-279-1568OR 287-5598.

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

‘65 FORD GALAXIE 500, 4dr sedan, 390 Eng., 4 bbl. carb, no broken glass, good paint, good tires, cast alum. wheels, new brake sys., everything works exc. clock, fuel gauge & inst. lights,

$3000 FIRM. 731-439-1968. See

car at 306 McMahan, Eastview.

2006 Chevy Monte Carlo LT blue, fully equipped............................ $6,500

2004 Pontiac Grand Prix burgundy, auto, nice .......................... $5,000

2008 Chevy Impala LS automatic, air .................................... $7,500

2004 Honda Santa Fe 4x4, gold, air ...................................... $5,500

2006 Kia Sportage lxgreen air, fully equipped ..................... $7,500

2004 Honda Santa Fe4x4, auto air, nice, blue ...................... $5,500

2006 Malibufully equipped .................................... $5,700

2007 Chevrolet Equinox auto, air, clean ................................... $7,500

2004 Mazda MPV Vangreat family van, white....................... $5,800

QUALITY CARS FOR LESS...BUY WHERE YOU SAVE MORE!

See Gene Sanders

Corinth Motor Sales108 Cardinal Drive

just East of Caterpillar - Corinth, MS662-287-2254 or 665-2462 or 415-6485

2002 Pontiac Grand Am GT.......................................................... $2,800

SOLD

SOLD

Medical/dental0220

TISHOMINGO MANORStaff Nurse

3 p.m. - 11 p.m.Monday - Friday

Staff Nurse11:00 p.m. - 7:00 a.m.

SIGN ON BONUS AVAILABLE

Also accepting CNA applicationsfor all shifts.

Apply in Person230 Kaki Street

Iuka, MS(on the hill)

SALUTE OR PAY TRIBUTE TO YOUR SPECIAL VETERAN IN OUR SPECIAL VETERAN’S

DAY ISSUE COMINGSUNDAY,

NOVEMBER 11, 2012

SAMUEL D. SMITH

U.S. Army1967-1970

As part of our specialVeteran’s Day Issue, we will

publish photos of local Veterans living and deceased.

$10.00 PER PHOTO

one person per photo. All photos must be submitted by 5 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 2, 2012.

I give my permission to publish the enclosed information in the Daily Corinthian Veteran’s Day issue. Signature________________________Phone___________________

Relationship to person in picture:______________________________

Veteran’s Name___________________________________________

Branch of Service__________________________________________

Years of Service, ex. 1967-1970_______________________________

Credit/debit card #_________________________________________

Exp. date___________Name & Address associated w/ card_______________

________________________________________________________

Cash_____________________Check#_________________________

Mail to Veterans Picture, c/o The Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835, bring by 1607 S. Harper Rd. 38834. You may

email picture & info to: [email protected]

Page 19: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

Daily Corinthian • Friday, October 19, 2012 • 9B

662-842-5277966 S. Gloster

Tupelo, MS 38804

662-287-8773916 Hwy. 45 SouthCorinth, MS 38834

Salesman - Jeff WilliamsSalesman - Mike Doran

Salesman - Brandon MaxedonOwner - Ricky King

VISIT OUR WEBSITEWWW.KINGKARS.NET

WWW.KINGKARS.NET

ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEED

CREDIT APPROVAL PROGRAM!

FALL SALE

STK 174202012 CHEVY CRUZE LT

CARFAX 1 OWNER

$17888

STK 173382006 CHRYSLER TOWN &

COUNTRYTOURINGSTOW N GO / QUAD

SEATING / POWER DOORS

$5995

STK 17294

2012 DODGE CHALLENGER SXT

CUSTOM STRIPES / LIKE NEW/CARFAX 1 OWNER

$24588

STK 172232010 CHEVY EQUINOX LS

SHARP/MUST SEE

$18488

STK 174952008 NISSAN ARMADA SE 2WD

CARFAX 1 OWNER / LOADED

$19788

STK 173442008 DODGE RAM 15OO

QUAD CAB SLTCARFAX 1 OWNER/ LOADED

$16585

STK 17451

2009 HONDA CIVIC EXCARFAX 1 OWNER

$14888

STK 172912010 DODGE RAM 1500

QUAD CAB 1500 SLTLOCAL TRADE / CLEAN / EXTRAS

$17900

STK 174862009 FORD TAURUS X

LOCAL TRADE/ REDUCED TO SELL FAST

$8900

STK 174392011 KIA SOUL PLUS

CARFAX 1 OWNER / GREAT FIRST CAR

$15788

STK 175062011 HONDA CR V EX L 2WD

CARFAX 1 OWNER / VERY NICE

$23888

STK 174672012 HYUNDAI SONATA LTD.

CARFAX 1 OWNER / NEED TO DRIVE

$17488

STK 173492007 JEEP PATRIOT

LTD 2WDLOTS OF EXTRAS

$10888

STK 17480

2011 TOYOTA CAMRY LECARFAX 1 OWNER / EXTRA CLEAN

$16888

STK 174902011 NISSAN PATHFINDER SV

LOADED/ CARFAX 1 OWNER

$23888

STK 172712011 NISSAN JUKE

CARFAX 1 OWNER / LOW MILES/ MUST SEE

$17888

STK 173522006 CHEVY SILVERADO CREW

CAB LT 2WDREDUCED/PRICED TO MOVE

$12888

STK 172502011 FORD MUSTANG V6

COUPEREDUCED / CARFAX 1

OWNER/ SHARP

$17900

Page 20: Daily Corinthian E-Edition 101912

10B • Friday, October 19, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

auto/truck partS & acceSSorieS0848

Building MaterialS0542

Smith Discount Home Center

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

Don’t Waste Your Money... Shop With Us!

5 x 8 Laminate Sheets ......................$595

40 Gal Water Heater .....$25995

5/8-T1-11 siding .....................$1595

3/8 -T-1-11 Siding ..............$1395

White Beaded paneling...$1295

3/4 Birch Plywood ................$2495

Exterior Astro Turf .............$100

sq. yd.

Vinyl Floor Remnants ...............$100

2X4 Studs ................................................$225

1 x 6 x 10 yellow pine ..............$225

1 x 6 x 12 yellow pine ............$270

1 x 6 x 14 yellow pine ............$315

1 x 6 x 16 yellow pine ............$360

3/4 Presswood Veneer ............$499

25 Year 3 Tab Shingle ......$5495

35 Year Architectural

Shingle ................................................$6295

Laminate Floor From .........39¢-$109

Pad for Laminate Floor ............$500-$1000

Round Commodes ................................$4995

4 x 6 Cement Board 5/16” ............$995

U.S. Savings Bonds

are gifts with a

future.

See www.dailycorinthian.com to fi nd a job at the intersection of both.

Wouldn’t you like a job where you can build something, including a better future? With Monster’s new fi ltering

tools, you can quickly hone in on the job that’s right for you. So visit www.dailycorinthian.com and you might fi nd

yourself in the middle of the best of both worlds.

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