Transcript
Page 1: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 118, No. 217 • Corinth, Mississippi • 24 pages • 2 sections

FridaySept. 19, 2014

50 centsToday85

Partly sunnyTonight

62

Index On this day in history 150 years agoShenandoah Valley — Gen. Early’s belief that Union Gen.

Sheridan is timid is shattered at the 3rd Battle of Winchester, a victory for the North. Though the Federals suffer more casu-alties, they push Early back 20 miles to Fisher’s Hill.

Stocks......8A Classified......4B Comics......9A State......5A

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

0% chance of rain

An Alcorn County grand jury returned a new indict-ment in the sexual battery case of former Farmington Baptist Church pastor Timothy D. Nall.

It is a two-count indictment, with count one for sexual bat-tery and count two for fondling, according to court documents. The indictment stems from the same alleged incidents involv-

ing a young girl that led to an earlier indictment in 2013.

The new indictment was re-corded Sept. 2, and Nall has since been served the indictment and posted bond of $10,000.

In the count of sexual bat-tery, the indictment states that Nall engaged in sexual penetra-tion with a fi nger of the child between the dates of April 1,

2012, and April 28, 2013. In the count of fondling, the indict-ment states that Nall handled, touched or rubbed the child be-tween the same dates.

Nall, who was the family’s pastor, recently resigned from the church.

The child involved in the case

Grand jury indictsformer pastor again

Marking the beginning of a hopeful new tradition, the Fillmore Street Block Party will make its debut to the streets of downtown Corinth on Saturday, Sept. 20.

From 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., the blocks between Foote and Cruise will be blocked off as Fillmore Street comes alive with music, food, fashion and fun.

Visitors will gain a true taste of the Crossroads as they experience the fl avors and fares of Smith., SoCo Bakery, Russell’s Beef House, Chop

House, Blazing Noodlez, JT’s Falafel and Kabobs, KC’s Espresso and Borrum’s Drug Store.

For just $5, attendees can purchase a wristband at Smith. and Andie Grace, al-lowing them to sample the of-ferings of each vendor. Wrist-bands are free for children four and under.

The free event will feature feature face painting, a fash-ion show and live music.

Participating retail vendors include: Britches and Bows, JH Artwear, All Fired Up!,

Block party makes debut Saturday

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Staff Photo by Kimberly Shelton

Grace Curtis and Julia Smith make plans for Saturday’s Fill-more Street Block Party.

Cade Parks wants to get something straight.

He isn’t a rodeo clown.The 19-year-old makes his

sole living protecting bull rid-ers, not entertaining the crowd. In other words, he is a profes-sional bullfi ghter.

“God put me here to be a bull-fi ghter and to keep riders safe,” said the Ripley man as mem-bers of Ranchey Productions visited with students at Corinth Elementary School.

Students in Pre-K through 3rd grade each received a free ticket to attend either the Fri-day or Saturday show.

Parks, a professional bull-fi ghter for two years, spends around nine months on the road. He often leaves on

Wednesday for rodeos across the country.

“Bullfi ghting is a dangerous sport,” he said. “There is not a good way to go about it … I have to do whatever it takes because the riders are depending on me.”

Parks will be doing whatever is called for Friday and Sat-urday night at the Crossroads Arena. He is part of Ranchey Productions, of Robertsdale, Ala., who is putting on the two nights of bull riding as part of the 4th Annual Alcorn County Fair.

On Thursday as he toured the CES famous with other mem-bers of the production crew, he had a painted stripe on both sides of his face along with a

Bullfighter loves his job protecting bull riders

BY STEVE [email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Professional bullfighter Cade Parks looks at the work of kindergarten student Jamarion Pruitt dur-ing Ranchey Productions visit at Corinth Elementary School.Please see PARKS | 2A

Please see FILLMORE | 2A

Putting people to work.Adam Todd, director of the

Governor’s Job Fair Network, is soon providing the opportunity locally for individuals.

Currently, Todd has 42 em-ployers committed to attending the Northeast Mississippi WIN Job Fair on Thursday, Sept. 25, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the WIN Job Center.

“Things are starting to look really good,” said Todd. “This

is not just a daydream fi eld trip. If people show up with the right attitude and the skills employ-ers are looking for, gaining em-ployment is very high at the job fair.”

Job seekers will have a chance to make face-to-face contact with employers dur-ing the fair — something which doesn’t usually happen during today’s method of online appli-cations.

“Last year immediately fol-lowing the job fair, 36 people

got a job and that’s not count-ing the hundreds who went to work weeks after the event,” said Todd.

The event is part of the Gov-ernor’s Job Fair Network – a statewide program created to aid Mississippians in fi nding safe and secure employment.

Todd was part of 22 job fairs across the state in 2013.

“Individuals must take ad-vantage of all the businesses

Event assists area job seekersBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

IUKA — Civil War enthu-siasts have an opportunity to spend the weekend immersed in history at the annual Battle of Farmington & Battle of Iuka reenactment.

“It’s coming together this year better than it ever has,” said Lee Ann Robertson, one of the organizers. “We have over 400 reenactors, and they are coming from all over the coun-try.”

And it’s shaping up to be a top-caliber event with the sanc-tioning of Cleburne’s Division.

“They are one of the biggest, most recognized and respected

reenactment groups,” said Rob-ertson. “Reenactors know if Cleburne’s puts their name be-hind it, it is a great event.”

The 153rd Battle of Iuka re-enactment is set for 1:30 p.m. Saturday, and the Battle of Farmington reenactment is set for 1 p.m. Sunday on the battle-fi eld site on County Road 244 (North Pearl Street/Chicken Run Road).

Numerous other events will fi ll the weekend. A “Meet and Greet the Generals” fundraiser at 6 p.m. today at the old court-house museum and Twin Mag-nolias will feature portrayals of U.S. Grant, Robert E. Lee, Na-than B. Forrest, William Hard-

ee, Sterling Price and Henry Little.

The event includes music by Lost Cause and a photo op for a donation benefi ting the old courthouse museum.

A grand illumination follows at 7:30 p.m. around the old courthouse museum and Min-eral Springs Park.

Saturday activities begin at 9:30 a.m.

“We are going to do a huge Civil War parade in downtown Iuka,” said Robertson. “We are asking the entire town to dress in 1862 attire. Hopefully we are going to turn the whole town

Reenactments turn back calendarBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Please see BATTLES | 3A

Please see PASTOR | 2A

Please see JOBS | 3A

Daily Corinthian

HWY 72 EASTCORINTH, MISSISSIPPILOCAL: 662-286-6006

*ALL DEALS & PAYMENTS ARE PLUS TAXES, TITLE, STATE INSPECTION STICKER, & $255. DOCUMENT PROCESSING FEE. PLEASE UNDERSTAND THESE ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OR PAYMENT LISTED. ALL DEALER DISCOUNTS, MANUFACTURES’ REBATES ALREADY APPLIED TO PURCHASE PRICE, UNLESS SPECIFIED. PRIOR DEALS EXCLUDED. FROM DEALER STOCK ONLY. NO DEALER TRANSFERS AT THESE PRICES. ACTUAL VEHICLE MAY DIFFER FROM PICTURE. DUE TO PUBLICATION DEADLINES, VEHICLE MAY BE ALREADY BE SOLD. RESIDENTIAL RESTRICTIONS MAY AFFECT REBATES ALLOWED. PAYMENTS FIGURED AT 75MO, 5.5 APR, TIER 1 CREDIT RATING, W.A.C. & T. ONLY. #INCLUDES THE NMAC CAPTIVE CASH REBATE WHICH REQUIRES YOU TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE WITH NMAC TO GET THE PRICE &/OR PAYMENT SHOWN. W.A.C. & T. ONLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR DETAILS. ^: RECENT COLLEGE GRADS SAVE ANOTHER $600 WITH THE NISSAN COLLEGE GRAD PROGRAM. CERTAIN RULES & RESTRICTIONS APPLY. SEE SALESPERSON FOR COMPLETE QUALIFYING DETAILS.

BRAND NEW 2014 NISSAN VERSA NOTEBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

*#$191 PER MONTH

INCLUDES POWER SEAT!!!

Choose From 6 @ This Price!Stk#2634N, 2636N, 2643N, 2648N, 2718N, 2531N

Model # 11454 Vin#414396 Deal#31534#Price includes 500 NMAC Finance Bonus Already Applied.

*#^$12,597 -$600. ^COLLEGE GRAD BONUS

*#^$11,997.

Page 2: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2A • Daily Corinthian Friday, September 19, 2014

Sparkle Formal Wear, Stitches and Such, Simply Southern, Baxter & Me, Andie Grace, Purple Dai-sy, Austin’s Shoes, T. Fea-zell, Down South, Clau-sel’s, J Brown’s, Honey Suckle Blu, Little’s Jew-elers, Green Door Trad-ing Co., Ann’s, Ginger’s, Today’s Dolls & Toys, Emma’s Everything, Ben-jamin James, Cottage Garden, Bittersweet and Fillmore Tattoos.

The fashion show will begin at 1 p.m. Contribu-tors are Britches and Bows, Simply Southern, Andie Grace, Purple

Daisy, J Brown’s, Honey Suckle Blu, Down South and Ginger’s.

Music will be provided by Cary Hudson, George McConnell and Highway 1.

McConnell and Hud-son will headline the event from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., followed by High-way 1 from 1 to 3 p.m.

“We’ve had a great response to it so far. Ev-eryone has been so excit-ed and we want to keep that vibe going,” said Julia Smith co-owner of Smith. restaurant. “So come on out and see what all Corinth has to offer.”

FILLMORE

CONTINUED FROM 1A

cross painted on his chin.Most modern bullfi ghters no lon-

ger dress as clowns, though they still wear bright, loose-fi tting cloth-ing.

“I’m not a clown, but I like to stay true to the sport and do what the old bullfi ghters did,” he said of the painted face. “I am the bodyguard for the bull riders … I make myself a target to keep them safe.”

Parks does a lot of work for the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Asso-ciation. He worked his fi rst fi nals as a 17-year-old.

Injuries are part of the job in bull-fi ghting. Last year, a bull hit Parks under the jaw, breaking both sides and requiring it to be wired shut.

“I missed about two weeks,” he

said with a smile.Tonight the young bullfi ghter will

be doing something he loves doing when the fi rst bull is turned loose.

“This is my calling,” he said. “I dug deep in my Bible and found out this is what God wants me doing.”

There will be some professional bull riders glad to know that when they climb aboard this weekend.

Admission to the fair is $5 tonight with the schedule including:

• Livestock Registration, noon-9 p.m.

• Crescent City Carnival, 5 p.m.-until

• Petting Zoo, 5 p.m.-until• Arts & Quilts exhibits, 5-10 p.m.• Canned goods display, 5-10 p.m.• Baked goods display, 5-10 p.m.• Mid-South Talent Show, 6 p.m.• Bull riding, 7 p.m.

PARKS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

is currently eight years old. She tes-tifi ed during the trial, as did Nall.

An Alcorn County jury could not reach a verdict in Nall’s re-cent trial on his prior indictment, resulting in the judge declaring a mistrial on Aug. 8. Although a new indictment is now on record, the prior case remains open.

The activity allegedly occurred as Nall sat at a small kitchen ta-ble with the child in his lap at the County Road 105 home of Thom-as and Marcia Mauney, the child’s grandparents.

After the trial, the jury foreman told the Daily Corinthian that the jury panel split 6-6 on the case, with some feeling the prosecu-tion’s case lacked evidence.

PASTOR

CONTINUED FROM 1A

STEAK • CHICKEN

Southern American & Cajun Cuisine

“Get

a tast

e of y

our l

ocal fa

vorite

s”

Am

oca

Perfection

516 Waldron St. • Corinth, MS286-5597

Hours Wednesday- Saturday 7am-1pm

Downtown bakery specializing in fresh, made-from-scratch items.

Serving Breakfast & Dessert103 Taylor Street

Corinth, Mississippi • 662-665-9084

SoCoBake Shop

Owner: Jeannie BlackwelderOwner: Jeannie Blackwelder410 E. Waldron St. • Downtown Corinth • 662-287-2770410 E. Waldron St. • Downtown Corinth • 662-287-2770

ClothingAccessories

Home Decor

THE L RENZO COLLECTIONO

C LORE SGO

607 Cruise St • Historic Downtown Corinth • 662.286.5041

Little’s JewelersLittle’s Jewelers

E

417 E. Waldron St. Corinth, MS 38834662-396-1727662-396-1727

MIA SHOES

413 Filmore St. • Corinth 662.287.8624

20%OFFone regular priced item

Valid Only 9/20/14 • Coupon must be present

Fillmore StFillmore St

413 Fillmore St. • Downtown Corinth 662.2868624

PARTYPARTYBLOCKBLOCK

DOWNTOWNDOWNTOWNCORINTHCORINTH

JOIN US FOR THE

SATURDAY11AM-3PM11AM-3PMSEPTSEPT 20TH20TH

ADMISSIONFREE

LIVE

MUSIC FASHI

ON

SHOW

FOOD

SAMPLINGVENDORS

FILLMORE ST.

John Mabry, Executive Chef 662-287-4760 3303 Shiloh Ridge Road • Corinth, MS

Page 3: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Local/RegionDaily Corinthian • 3AFriday, September 19, 2014

Today in

History

Today is Friday, Sep-tember 19, the 262nd day of 2014. There are 103 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlightin History:

On September 19, 1777, the first Battle of Saratoga was fought during the Revolutionary War; although British forc-es succeeded in driving out the American troops, the Americans prevailed in a second battle the fol-lowing month.

On this date:

In 1796, President George Washington’s farewell address was published.

In 1881, the 20th president of the United States, James A. Gar-field, died 2½ months af-ter being shot by Charles Guiteau; Chester Alan Ar-thur became president.

In 1934, Bruno Haupt-mann was arrested in New York and charged with the kidnap-murder of Charles A. Lindbergh Jr.

In 1959, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev, visit-ing Los Angeles, reacted angrily upon being told that, for security rea-sons, he wouldn’t get to visit Disneyland.

In 1960, Cuban leader Fidel Castro, in New York to visit the United Nations, checked out of the Shel-burne Hotel in a dispute with the management.

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

Home Delivery52 weeks - - - - - - - $139.8524 weeks - - - - - - - - $73.8512weeks - - - - - - - - - $38.85

Mail Rates52 weeks - - - - - - -$198.9024 weeks - - - - - - - $101.6012 weeks - - - - - - - - $53.45

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

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

All other areas will be delivered the next day.

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

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

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

In an unexpected twist, Zaxby’s of Corinth has decided to take the “Big Chicken” under its wing.

The upscale chicken restaurant expected to open on Oct. 6 has do-nated mini footballs to be given away at Saturday’s parade.

Featuring the Zaxby’s logo, the mascot on the footballs bears an uncan-ny resemblance to Sandy Childs’ “Big Chicken”.

Co-owner Chad Martin said he was excited when

he fi rst learned of the feathered fowl and has

kept up with its progress.Gaining notoriety, the

“Big Chicken” fi rst made headlines after a group of friends and even strang-ers rallied together to adopt the rooster and rescue it from its perch at Mid-South Ornamental Concrete where it stood watch for close to a de-cade.

“I think its fantastic,” said Martin. “I spoke with Ms. Childs and told her that we would love to have it sitting in our front parking lot.”

New details have

emerged as hundreds plan to attend Saturday’s homecoming parade which is set to take place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

In addition to State Representative Nick Bain of Corinth and President of the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors Lowell Hinton, other noted guests who will be in the parade include Mississippi Senator Rita Parks, Alcorn County Sheriff Charles Rinehart and Miss Mississippi TaNechi Temple.

According to Keith

“Hoffa” Jones, it has been quite sometime since the Gift Community has hosted a gathering of this magnitude.

“I don’t know that there has been this big of a parade in ‘The Bottom’ since Major General Earl Van Dorn and his band of confederates got tired of playing with the Union boys in Corinth and de-cided to decided to go on down to Ripley for some refreshments,” he said. “I can’t wait to see everyone and wouldn’t want any-one to miss it.”

Zaxby’s joins ‘Big Chicken’ HomecomingBY KIMBERLY [email protected]

“Big Chicken”

In conjunction with the fes-tivites on Fillmore, Dot Cour-son will conduct a free painting demonstration from noon un-til 3 p.m. at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery.

The award-winning artist primarily paints the Southern landscape in oils.

The granddaughter of share croppers, her work is often re-muniscent of the Mississippi Delta.

Using the landscape as her muse, Courson often features delta cotton and other symbols – fueled by memories of childhood summers spent in the region.

Located on Fillmore Street across from Dodd Eye Clinic, the gallery features all kinds of art produced by local artists, in-cluding paintings, photography, pottery and wood.

Artist conductspainting forum

back to 1862.”Historic trolley tours will de-

part from the old courthouse at 11 a.m., noon and 1 p.m. for a 45-minute tour of Iuka’s his-toric neighborhoods.

Saturday wraps up with the grand ball at 7 p.m. at the Kitchens barn at 251 County

Road 242.Sunday morning opens with

a memorial service at Shady Grove Cemetery with roll call and a time of remembrance.

A tribute to the 175th anni-versary of the Trail of Tears fol-lows at 10:30 a.m., when a cou-ple of cannons will be moved to Eastport for fi ring after a mo-ment of silence.

The church service begins at 11 a.m. at the battlefi eld site.

More than 1,000 students were expected to be on hand for this morning’s education day activities.

Now in its third year, the an-nual event is held in Iuka on even-numbered years and in Farmington on odd-numbered years.

BATTLES

CONTINUED FROM 1A

and employers under the same roof in Corinth,” said the direc-tor.

Those attending are urged to come with a positive attitude and dress as they would for an interview.

Job seekers are also advised to bring a resume, make ar-

rangements for child care be-fore the job fair and to be there when the doors open at 9 a.m.

“The fi rst impression is a lasting impression,” added Todd.

Todd encourages job seekers to bring multiple copies of their resume to the free admission fair.

“If they do not have a resume,

they can go by the WIN Job Center and they will help them create one,” he said.

(For additional information or help with a resume, call the WIN Job Center at 662-696-2336. A list of registered em-ployers for the event is avail-able on the jobfairs.ms.gov. website.)

JOBS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Page 4: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Friday, September 19, 2014www.dailycorinthian.com

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.

E-mail:[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

To Sound Off:email :

[email protected] 287-6111

Classified Adv. 287-6147

Mark Boehlereditor

[email protected]

Mark Boehler, editor

STARKVILLE — Former Gov. Ronnie Musgrove wants Mississippi to sue its way to so-called “full funding” of the Mississippi Adequate Educa-tion Program (MAEP), while other well-intentioned pub-lic education advocates want voters to approve a ballot referendum that purports to mandate education funding.

Musgrove has fi led a lawsuit seeking to force the state to pay millions to 19 state school districts that the former governor claims the state has underfunded based on the MAEP formula.

Another group, called Better Schools, Better Jobs, is pushing a ballot initiative to amend Section 201 of the Mississippi Consti-tution to require that the state provide and the Legislature fund an “adequate and effi -cient” public school system.

But both approaches represent signifi -cantly fl awed approaches to an otherwise noble goal of improving public education in the state by funding a formula that at incep-tion in 1997 was intended to equalize public education funding between the state’s poorer and more affl uent school districts.

MAEP was created in 1997 in reaction to lawsuits nationally from education advocacy groups which were successfully suing states on grounds that it was unconstitutional that students living in poorer school district were being denied the same public education ad-vantages being afforded to students in more affl uent districts. But in political reality, Mis-sissippi has only “fully funded” MAEP twice and both times were in election years.

Musgrove’s lawsuit is suspect based on the prospect of a windfall for the trial lawyers involved, including Musgrove. The former governor’s case is likewise weakened based on his performance while in a leadership role in state government, a period in which he only succeeded once in getting full fund-ing for MAEP while actively taking part in the budgetary give-and-take with the Legislature that set those budgets.

Voters who read the fi ne print will realize that the constitutional amendment push is one that places a virtual blank political and budgetary check in the hands of the Hinds County Chancery Court to set K-12 education funding policy for the entire state – both in terms of how much money is to be spent and how the money is spent. In other words, the Hinds County Chancery Court can determine both the price tag for and the composition of what determines an “adequate and effi cient” public school system for a district on the Gulf Coast or along the Tennessee state line.

Perhaps the worst aspect of these ap-proaches is that it plays into the “rob Peter to pay Paul” political shell game of pitting one of the state’s three major educational compo-nents – K-12, community colleges and uni-versities – against the others in terms of the division of limited resources.

Instead elected representatives and sena-tors making those judgments in the Legisla-ture, Musgrove’s lawsuit and the proposed ballot initiative would place those decisions in the hands of judges, effectively usurping the legislative process and bringing the very real threat of signifi cant tax increases to local governments as well.

What both Musgrove and the constitution-al amendment backers are discounting is the fact that the Legislature has in recent years exhibited the willingness to do something that once sent lawmakers scurrying for politi-cal cover in the 1980s – school consolidation in failing or deeply troubled school districts.

The notion that lawmakers and the legis-lative leadership will be easily backed into a corner over education funding stunts and le-gal challenges is one that engenders no small risk the status quo in public education in terms of protecting existing districts.

Constitutional amendment strategists thought election year politics would give them the upper hand, but the national battle over Common Core spilling into Mississippi politics may well have turned that theory on its political ear.

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

Fine print raises doubts of both approaches

to MAEP ‘full funding’

Prayer for today

A verse to share

We have as close to a na-tional consensus as possible in the war against ISIS.

Polls show the public wants strong measures. Practically everyone on the political spectrum says the terror group should be destroyed, even Elizabeth Warren and Rand Paul. President Barack Obama has given a prime-time speech committing the country to a yearslong war.

And yet Congress can’t bring itself to vote to au-thorize military action. President Obama doesn’t want to ask for an autho-rization, and Congress doesn’t want to be asked. Who says that no one can get along in Washington? When it comes to evading democratic accountability, the consensus is broad and deep.

The advantages of an au-thorization are obvious. It would be an unmistakable statement of national will. It would communicate to our allies our seriousness. It would put everyone on record, so if the war goes badly it is harder for fi nger-in-the-wind members of Congress to bail out.

Even more obvious is the alliance of convenience between President Obama and Congress to avoid a

vote (ex-cept on the more lim-ited mission of arming and train-ing Syrian rebels). The p r e s i d e n t doesn’t want to be both-ered, espe-cially after

his ill-fated quest for a vote to authorize bombing Syria last year (the effort seemed doomed before he pulled the plug). And Congress doesn’t want to bother, not with an election looming and not when a vote would require taking needless re-sponsibility.

So the president rummag-es around his desk drawers searching for a legal basis for his war, while Congress mumbles and looks at its shoes. Such are the exer-tions of the nation’s politi-cal branches as they embark on a long fi ght against an enemy of the United States.

Even if it is unauthorized, the war against ISIS is not illegal. The president has the inherent authority as commander in chief to act against a threat to the Unit-ed States, and Americans have been killed by ISIS.

But Harvard Law School

professor Jack Goldsmith points out the problem for the administration in as-serting this view. Under the War Powers Resolution – a fetish of the left – Congress must authorize military ac-tion 60 days after it is un-dertaken. So, unless the administration wants to openly defy the resolution – as it did during the Libya War when it argued that the monthslong bombing cam-paign against Moammar Gadhafi didn’t constitute “hostilities” – it would still need congressional autho-rization.

It prefers, then, to argue that the war has already been authorized. It is rely-ing primarily on the 2001 authorization against those who “planned, authorized, committed, or aided” the Sept. 11 attacks, or “har-bored” those who did. This has been taken as a broad mandate to hit al-Qaida or al-Qaida-allied groups.

Its application to ISIS is dubious, though. ISIS didn’t commit 9/11, and it is fi ghting al-Qaida rather than being allied with it.

As backup, the admin-istration says the 2002 authorization for the Iraq War still applies. This, too, is tenuous. The 2002 legislation authorized the

president “to defend the na-tional security of the United States against the continu-ing threat posed by Iraq.” The regime that constituted that threat is long gone, and President Obama declared the war over years ago.

It wasn’t long ago that President Obama was a scold about how important it was for Congress to au-thorize military interven-tions. It wasn’t long ago that his administration considered the 2001 and 2002 authorizations dated and overly broad, and talk-ed of their repeal. Now, he is happy to sidestep Con-gress by any legalistic pars-ing necessary.

Just because the presi-dent doesn’t want to push for an authorization doesn’t mean Congress has to stand by the sidelines. Yet that is where it is happy to be. The fi ght against ISIS will be accompanied by fi ery de-nunciations of the group’s barbarism and ringing statements of resolve. It will include everything, it seems, but a congressional vote of authorization. How pathetic.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Rich Lowry can be reached via e-mail: [email protected].)

On ISIS, Congress should vote

JACKSON — Gov. Phil Bryant’s distrust of Presi-dent Barack Obama is fl ar-ing again.

The Republican is once more citing something he fears Washington will do in his decision for Missis-sippi to stop accepting new entrants to the Unaccom-panied Refugee Minor pro-gram.

That program brings refu-gees younger than 21 to the United States legally and resettles them, providing safe haven for children who might otherwise be ma-rooned in refugee camps.

Mississippi has long par-ticipated in the program. But Bryant says he believes Obama will take children who have been apprehend-ed crossing the border ille-gally and try to cram them into the smaller refugee program, resettling some in Mississippi against Bryant’s will.

The governor is incensed that the federal govern-ment released more than 200 children who crossed the border illegally to live with sponsors in Missis-sippi without telling him fi rst, and now won’t tell him where they are.

“We don’t know if any of the dis-eases or any of the prob-lems that occurred in these coun-tries are be-ing brought into the

United States, brought into our school systems,” Bryant said Wednesday in an in-terview with the Supertalk radio network.

So he has ordered the state Department of Hu-man Services to stop ac-cepting new entrants into the refugee program, run by Catholic Charities of the Di-ocese of Jackson, although the program will continue to care for the 27 refugees already here.

It’s not the fi rst time that Bryant has cited fear of possible future federal ac-tions. In a decision that af-fects as many as 140,000 Mississippians, Bryant has steadfastly refused to have Mississippi expand its Med-icaid program as envisioned under Obama’s health over-haul. One of Bryant’s big-gest fears was that the state could be stuck with a huge

bill if the federal govern-ment were to at some point cut funding.

Bryant even fought Mis-sissippi Insurance Commis-sioner Mike Chaney’s plan to set up a state-run ex-change. The governor said in 2013 he believed some low-level employees or vol-unteers could somehow unilaterally force the state to expand Medicaid. When asked how that could hap-pen, he told an Associated Press reporter: “I have got-ten no assurances that that would not be the case.”

Similarly, on the refugee program, he has called for federal assurances against his fears of something that no federal authority has ac-tually proposed.

“But from this point on, I’m done, unless I can get some certainty that the president is not going to add another 200, another 400, unless I can make cer-tain that this is not a gate-way,” Bryant said Wednes-day.

Bryant is far from the fi rst Mississippi governor to cite his fear of an overreaching federal government. That thread runs back at least as far as Fielding Wright,

Mississippi’s governor from 1946 to 1952. He ran for vice president on the ticket of the States’ Rights Democratic Party, along-side fellow Dixiecrat Strom Thumond, then governor of South Carolina.

One of Mississippi’s pio-neering Republicans was Rubel Phillips, who in the wake of the federally en-forced integration of the University of Mississippi in 1962 ran for governor with the slogan “K.O. the Ken-nedys.”

Maybe Bryant won’t run on the slogan of “K.O. Obama” when he seeks re-election next year. But in a state where Obama appears deeply unpopular among many voters, Bryant de-scribes the president as an enemy to be resisted.

“Well, you see what’s going to happen is when President Obama says ‘I’m going to make all of them refugees,’ then they will be here legally, if the president indeed has that authority,” Bryant said. “I don’t believe that he does.”

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

Bryant emphasizes distrust of refugee program

“He answered them, I have told you al-ready, and ye did not hear: wherefore would ye hear it again? will ye also be his disciples?” John 9:27

Tender Father, may I pause this morning to look at that which I keep uppermost in my life; and if it may not be worthy of thy esteem, may I be bold enough to revise my ideals. With thy compassion may I free my heart and mind of all unworthiness, and be given en-durance to restore the empty places. Amen.

Sid SalterColumnist

Jeff AmyColumnist

Rich LowryNational

Review

Page 5: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

State/NationDaily Corinthian • 5AFriday, September 19, 2014

Across the Nation Across the State

Officers searchingfor 4 missing girls

JACKSON — Missis-sippi authorities were searching Thursday for four young girls last seen with their mother and stepfather who are charged with mistreating the children.

The girls had been put into state protective custody, but Canton As-sistant Police Chief Juan Cloy said investigators believe the mother and stepfather took them af-ter the couple got out of jail on bond. The family was last seen Sept. 7 at a home in Canton.

“We have every reason to believe the children are in danger,” Cloy told The Associated Press in a phone interview.

He said law enforce-ment officers believe the children might face harm from their stepfather, Fernando Coria-Pelay, 24, who was charged with felony child abuse in May.

Cloy said the girls’ mother, Sonia Elisabeth Coronado, 28, was charged with felony child neglect.

Panel urges removal of justice court judge

TUPELO — The Missis-sippi Supreme Court will consider whether to re-move a Lee County justice court judge from office.

The state Commission on Judicial Performance filed a document with the high court Wednes-day, recommending the removal of Judge Rickey Thompson.

Thompson could not immediately be reached Thursday. Attorneys in the case have one month to file papers supporting or opposing Thompson’s removal.

The commission said Thompson used his of-fice to advance private interests of others, de-nied a person the right to use an attorney of her choice, kept drug court participants in the pro-gram for more than two years in violation of state law, incarcerated drug court participants for long periods without due

process and enrolled participants from other court systems in the drug court in violation of state law.

Commission Director Darlene Ballard said the board considered two prior instances where the Supreme Court rep-rimanded Thompson in 2008 and 2012. In the 2012 reprimand, the court also suspended him for 30 days without pay and ordered him to pay a $2,000 fine.

Thompson was sched-uled to appear before the commission in De-cember 2013. The hear-ing was delayed when he agreed to end his misde-meanor drug court opera-tions and stop hearing Lee County cases until a decision was made.

Associated Press

Senate will support Obama on rebel aid

WASHINGTON — Eager to adjourn for midterm elections, the Senate steamed toward final congressional ap-proval Thursday of Pres-ident Barack Obama’s request to train Syrian rebels for a war against Islamic state militants in the Middle East.

The legislation also provides funding for the government after the end of the budget year on Sept. 30, eliminating any threat of a shut-down in the run-up to November elections for a new House and con-trol of the Senate. The House approved the bill on Wednesday.

Leaders in both po-litical parties swung behind the legislation in the Senate. But the measure split their rank and file, Republicans and Democrats alike, and likely created new fault lines for this fall’s elections as well as the 2016 race for the White House.

“Intervention that destabilizes the Middle East is a mistake. And yet, here we are again, wading into a civil war,” said Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. laying down a marker for Republican presidential primaries still more than a year distant.

Sen. Mark Begich, an Alaska Democrat in a difficult re-election campaign, said, “I disagree with my presi-dent” on the wisdom of having the U.S. military become more involved. “It is time for the Arab countries to step up get over their regional dif-ferences” and be more aggressive in the fight against terrorists,’ he said.

 Border Patrol starts body camera tests

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Border Patrol will begin testing body-worn cameras on agents next month, the head of its parent agency said Thursday, a step toward seeing if the technology should be used in the field as the government seeks to blunt criticism about agents’ use of force.

R. Gil Kerlikowske, Customs and Border Protection commission-er since March, said a variety of cameras will be tested beginning Oct. 1 at the Border Pa-trol’s training academy in Artesia, New Mexico.

He didn’t say when or even if cameras will be introduced to the roughly 21,000 agents in the field.

“Putting these into place, as you know, is not only complicated, it’s also expensive,” Kerlikowske said at a news conference. “We want to make sure that we do this right.”

Kerlikowske, a former Seattle police chief, has moved more aggressive-ly than his predeces-sors to address com-plaints that Customs and Border Protection is slow to investigate in-cidents of deadly force and alleged abuses by agents and inspectors, and that it lacks trans-

parency.Department of Home-

land Security Secre-tary Jeh Johnson said Thursday that he gave Customs and Border Protection authority to investigate possible criminal misconduct by its agents and inspec-tors. Previously, another agency within Homeland Security — Immigration and Customs Enforce-ment — investigated such complaints before Customs and Border Protection could.

Kerlikowske said the new authority was “a great step forward” and would result in a more timely and transparent process.

 North Korea ignores offer of U.S. envoy

WASHINGTON — North Korea is not ac-cepting American offers to send a high-level en-voy to seek the release of three detained Ameri-cans, a senior U.S. offi-cial said Wednesday.

Robert King, the U.S. special envoy for North Korean human rights issues, told The Associ-ated Press that freeing the detainees could provide a diplomatic opening between the nations, also snared by Pyongyang’s de-velopment of nuclear weapons. But he said Washington would not give into attempts to

“extort” political gain from the detentions.

North Korea this week sentenced 24-year-old Matthew Miller of Ba-kersfield, California, to six years hard labor, deepening U.S. concern over the cases. Miller, who according to the court tore up his visa on arrival in Pyongyang in April, was convicted of entering the country illegally to commit espio-nage. Another trial is ex-pected soon for Jeffrey Fowle, of Miamisburg, Ohio, who was arrested in May for leaving a Bible at a sailor’s club.

The Obama adminis-tration has previously offered to send King, initially to seek a par-don for Kenneth Bae, a Korean-American mis-sionary from Lynwood, Washington, who is serving out a 15-year sentence for alleged “hostile acts.” Pyong-yang has rejected that.

King would not speci-fy whom the administra-tion was now willing to send. But Scott Snyder, senior fellow for Korea Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said he has been told by the admin-istration that it has of-fered in recent weeks to send Glyn Davies, who leads U.S. diplomacy on North Korea’s nuclear weapons program, and Pyongyang has not re-sponded favorably.

Associated Press

(LISTINGS FOR FRI 9/19-SUN 9/21/2014)CALL THEATRE OR GO TO MALCO.COM FOR SHOW TIMES

662-594-3011

*THE MAZE RUNNER (PG13) 4:20 7:20 9:55

*A WALK AMONG THE TOMBSTONES (R) 4:40 7:30 10:00

*THIS IS WHERE I LEAVE YOU (R) 4:10 7:10 9:35*DOLPHIN TALE 2 (PG) 4:00 7:00 9:30

*NO GOOD DEED (PG13) 4:35 7:40 9:45 WHEN THE GAME STANDS TALL (PG) 4:05 7:05 9:40IF I STAY (PG13) 4:20 7:20 9:50LET’S BE COPS (R) 4:30 7:30 9:55TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (NON 3-D) (PG13) 4:15 7:15 9:35*GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY (NON 3-D) (PG13) 4:30 7:25 10:05

FARMINGTON & IUKA

Tennessee

Mississippi Alabama

MEMPHIS

HUNTSVILLE

TUPELO

$250 CANNON BOUNTY FOR THE FIRST 20 CANNONS

$25 BOUNTY FOR HORSESBOUNTY FOR PERIOD BUGGIES & WAGONS

FOR MORE INFORMATION:HAROLD LOMENICK 662-423-1231

DALE FORTENBERRY 662-603-2148

http://battleoffarmington.comwww.battleofiuka.com

military command--cleburn’s division

located halfway between memphis and huntsville just off u. s. highway 72

civil war re-enactment farmington-iuka, mississippi

september 19-20-21, 2014

the battle of farmington and the battle of iuka are joining forces to create a truly spectacular event

even years in iuka and odd years in farmingtonjoin us on the iuka battlefield this year for the battle of iuka and battle of farm-ington. lots of cannons, horses, buggies, wagons, sutlers, and re-enactors. all re-enactors will need to be registered by september 5th in order to qualify for the meal bounty. meal will be served on saturday, september 20, 2014, at the battlefield site. registration fee is $10.00. plans include a military parade, education day, historical presentations, and a grand ball.

Page 6: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

6A • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Essie Pearl RickmanFuneral services for Essie Pearl Rick-

man, 92, of Corinth are set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Pleasant Hill Pentecostal Church with burial in Farmington Bap-tist Church Cemetery.

Visitation is from 5 to 8 p.m. today and from from noon until service time Saturday.

Mrs. Rickman died Thursday, Sept. 18, 2014, at her residence.

She was born Sept. 1, 1922 and was a re-tired factory worker. She was a member of Pleasant Hill Pente-costal Church.

Survivors include her daughter, Alice Faye Newcomb of Corinth; her step-daughter, Donna Pankey (Paul) of Port Orange, Fla.; her stepdaughter-in-law, Linda Rickman Tracy of Grand Rapids, Mich.; her stepsons, Danny Rickman of Grand Rapids, Mich., and Tony Rickman (Debbie) of Corinth; her brother, Jimmy Davis (Jane) of Corinth; two grandchil-dren, Mike Follin and Tracy Morelock (Greg); three great-grandchildren, Brad-

ley Morelock (Amber), Wesley Morelock (Kayla) and Cody Follin; four great-great-grandchildren, Laikin Hodum, Ryder Morelock, Griffin Morelock and Adilyn Morelock; five step-grandchildren, Tif-fany Page (Steve), Karen Sandry (Dale), Benji Rickman (Crystal), Nathan Rick-man (Rachelle), Keith Pankey (Kristin); eight step great-grandchildren; other relatives and a host of friends.

She was preceded in death by her fa-ther, Brevard Davis; her mother, Katie Pearl Davis; her husband, George Rick-man; her daughter, Mary Jane Melvin; her brothers, Nathan Davis and Noah Davis; and her sisters, Mary White and Margie Laughlin.

Pallbearers are Greg Morelock, Brad-ley Morelock, Wesley Morelock, Cody Follin, Richard Davis and Ernie Mitchell.

The Rev. Dewayne Kirk and Bro. Tony Kirk will officiate.

Magnolia Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements.

Online condolences can be left at www.magnoliafuneralhome.net.

Sherlie WaddellSherlie Lee Latch Waddell, 73, died

Sept. 11, 2014.She was born on Aug. 10 1941, to the

late Garvin and Etta Latch.Survivors include her three daughters,

Sherry Landrum (Larry) of Huntsville, Ala., Vicky Goolsby (Jerry) of Canton and Pamela Peeks (Billy) of Booneville; her grandchildren, Brittany Quillen (Skye)of Corinth, Tiffany Rob-inson of Walnut, Tyler Goolsby of Canton, Ryan Goolsby of Can-ton, Chase Landrum of Huntsville, Ala. and Haylee Morris of St. Petersburg, Fla.; her great-grandchildren, Emma Quillen, Lydia Wilkins, JonHinter Wilkins, Lukas Rob-inson and Chloe Rob-inson; her brothers, Jerry Latch (Valerie), Orlander Latch (Jean) and Roger Latch, all of Corinth; her sisters, Patsy Johnson of Corinth and Marilyn Simpson of Iuka; and a host of nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her par-ents and the father of her children, Ken-neth Ray Waddell.

A memorial service will be held at Church of the Crossroads at 2 p.m. on Sept. 21, 2014.

RickmanWaddell

Elnor MitchellIUKA — Funeral services for El-

nor C. Mitchell, 78, of Iuka are set for 1 p.m. Sunday at Cutshall Fu-neral Home Chapel in Iuka with burial in Pleasant Ridge Cem-etery.

Visitation is from 5 to 9 p.m. to-day.

Ms. Mitchell died Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2014, at Baldwyn Nurs-ing Facility.

She was a member of Iuka Bap-tist Church and was a Sunday School teacher for many years.

Survivors include her husband of 64 years, Hubert Mitchell of Iuka; three sons, Tommy Mitch-ell (Sherry) of Chesterton, Ind., David Mitchell of Valpo, Ind. and Timothy Mitchell (Kathleen) of Dalonga, Ga.; two daughters, Sha-ron Bell (Tony) of Southaven, Ind. and Regina Arnold (Stanley) of Booneville; one sister, Ruby Bull-ock of Columbia; 16 grandchil-dren and 11 great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Elmer and Grace Cook; her daughter, Laura Mitch-ell; and five brothers and sisters.

WALNUT — Excitement continues to grow as Wal-nut residents await the construction of their new Walmart Neighborhood

Market.Adding to the buzz over

the highly anticipated grand opening, Walmart has announced they are now hiring associates to about 30 new positions.

Slated to open its doors this winter, the neigh-borhood market is still a work in progress.

Potential employees can apply at a tempo-rary hiring kiosk that has been set up in the Corinth Walmart Supercenter at 2301 S. Harper Road.

Walmart is currently accepting applications 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Those who are inter-ested in applying may do so online at http://www.careers.walmart.com.

Honoring their inten-tion to employ veterans through their Veterans Welcome Home Com-mitment, the company has pledged to offer a job to any qualified veteran who has been honorably discharged within the past 12 months and meets

Walmart’s standard hir-ing criteria. Interested veterans can learn more by visiting http://www.walmartcareerswithamis-sion.com.

“We will be hiring both full-time and part-time associates,” said Store Manager Donna Box. “This store will not only provide a new shopping option to Walnut, but will also provide approxi-mately 30 jobs for the community.

Eligible full and part-time employees are pro-vided with a benefits pro-gram by the company.

In addition to health-care options, Walmart also offers to match 401 (k) contributions of up to six percent for employ-ees, gives them discounts on general merchandise and provides an Associate Stock Purchase Program and company-paid life in-surance.

Additionally, a quar-terly incentive based on store performance is giv-en to eligible associates.

In order to help them acclimate to their new jobs and to prepare the store for its grand open-ing, most new associates are set to begin work in October.

New Walmart hiring associates for 30 jobsBY KIMBERLY [email protected]

JACKSON — A defeat-ed Senate candidate ar-gues a Mississippi judge was wrong to dismiss his lawsuit that sought to overturn his Repub-lican primary loss to in-cumbent Thad Cochran.

Attorneys for the tea party-backed candidate, Chris McDaniel, filed legal arguments late Thursday with the Mis-sissippi Supreme Court.

The arguments mir-ror what attorneys had said before Judge Hol-lis McGehee dismissed McDaniel’s lawsuit last month. McDaniel says current state law does not specify a deadline for a candidate to chal-lenge a primary loss.

McGehee had agreed with Cochran’s attor-neys in saying state law sets a timeline and Mc-Daniel waited too long to challenge results of

the June 24 Republican primary runoff.

Cochran’s attorneys must file legal briefs to the state Supreme Court by Sept. 24, and the two sides make oral argu-ments Oct. 3.

Mississippi election officials already have prepared a Nov. 4 gen-eral election ballot that lists Cochran as the Republican nominee, former U.S. Rep. Travis Childers as the Demo-cratic nominee and Shawn O’Hara as the Reform Party candidate.

McDaniel, a state senator from Ellisville, received significant fi-nancial support from out-of-state groups try-ing to unseat longtime Republican senators they consider insuffi-ciently conservative.

Cochran campaign spokesman Jordan Rus-sell has called McDan-iel’s lawsuit “baseless.”

McDaniel led a three-person Republican pri-mary on June 3. Turn-out jumped significantly when Cochran won the runoff three weeks later, including in predomi-nantly African-Ameri-can precincts where Co-chran fared well.

Certified results show Cochran won by 7,667 votes.

Primary loser files appeal arguments

BY EMILYWAGSTER PETTUS

Associated PressDR. ROBERT SHAPPLEY

LET US ASSIST YOU WITH YOUR SCHOLAR’S EYE CARE NEEDS

286-6171

804 Childs Street • Corinth(Behind Corinth Dry Cleaners)

WE SEE KIDS:

Pre Plan withMAGNOLIA FUNERAL HOME

Bill FloydLicensed Funeral Director

2024 A Hwy. 72 E. Annex (Located at Magnolia Funeral Home) Corinth, MS

Billy N. Floyd - Independent Agent 38 Years Insurance Experience

Final Expenses • Life Insurance • Medicare Supplements Annuities 3.20% 5yrs

(Guaranteed Issued Life Insurance)Dental/Vision/Hearing

*Monthly Payment Available

www.FloydInsuranceServices.com662-665-7970 or 662-286-9500

Dedicated to giving you

fi nancial peace of mind. Pre-plan while you can.

We need your favorite Christmas

Recipes for our upcoming magazines

and publications!

The Daily CorinthianP.O. Box 1800

Corinth, MS 38835Attn: Fallon Coln

OR

email them to:[email protected]

Please include your name and Phone Number.

Send them to:

Page 7: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 19, 2014 • 7A

Southern women are lively, interesting charac-ters. A couple of friends reminded me of that fact

this past week.

First, the Miss Amer-ica pageant apparently got some S o u t h e r n w o m e n “riled up” M o n d a y n i g h t . One of my

friends gave her running pageant commentary on Facebook with more fi -nesse than most sports-casters detail the play-by-play for a football game.

Critical of the win-ner, Miss New York, who played a song using a Red Solo cup for the talent portion, my friend Misti asked, “Where is Suzanne Sugarbaker when you need her?” She then called up the scene on the tele-vision show “Designing

Women” when Suzanne’s sister Julia defended her honor to an opponent by describing the talent por-tion of a pageant where Suzanne spectacularly twirled a baton into a power line, which spewed fi re, and then caught it. That was, as Julia said in that memorable scene, “the night the lights went out in Georgia.”

Another friend, Stacie, sent me a video link Tues-day night to a series about Southern women’s say-ings. Some of them are so ingrained in our everyday lexicon that it took me a moment to consider their idiomatic Southern ori-gins. It was also humorous to hear that truly distinct Southern accent emerg-ing from the mouths of fellow Southern women, as we tend so often to take it for granted.

In the video, there are some abiding elements: sorority membership, church attendance, fried

okra, a few mild exple-tives, slight alcohol con-sumption, casserole dishes, regional idioms, handguns, and Southern terms of endearment. Watching it emphasizes a truism that most people affi liated with Southern women know well: we can be brutally catty some-times — or brutally hon-est with each other, de-pending on the mood and the situation.

Sometimes I think that in the midst of our “global village” of Internet and television, we tend to lose some our Southern femi-nine eccentricities. Our ac-cents sometimes become fl atter, and we neglect those idioms that make us distinctly Southern.

I think back to my ma-ternal grandmother, who lived next door to my family. She was a quint-essential Southern lady. I don’t remember her ex-tremely well, as she died when I was small, but in

all of her photographs, she was dressed impecca-bly. She wore nice dress-es, with a purse draped over her arm, always with well-applied lipstick.

However, she was no weak woman. She was au-tonomous, doing what she wanted, when she wanted — as long as it was within her means. For instance, if she desired to visit her oldest daughter, my Aunt Lessie, who lived in Tex-as, she simply packed her suitcase and proceeded out to the highway to wait for the Greyhound bus and made the long trip by herself.

After all, she had lived quite some time on her own, after having fi nished raising eight children when her husband was killed. At the time, my mother had been 4 years old, and her little sister, the youngest, was only 2.

Regarding those afore-mentioned expletives, my grandmother also

didn’t mince words. As my brother Greg, our un-offi cial family “historian,” recounts, Granny had her own way of procuring the telephone, a party line at the time, whenever she wanted.

Whenever she’d pick up the phone and fi nd to her dismay that someone had opted to use the line to gossip, or a pair of teens had chosen to chat about their social lives, in order to obtain the line, she’d simply utter a few choice words into the receiver, the specifi cs of which can-not be divulged within the confi nes of a family-oriented newspaper. As my memory of her re-mains elusive, I envision her doing so wearing that nicely-pressed dress and that well-applied ring of lipstick that immortalizes her in the photographs my mother still possesses in family photo albums.

I think that’s one as-pect that makes Southern

women Southern: the jux-taposition of those soft, ef-feminate qualities, along with that tough, hard-as-nails, no-holds barred approach, when neces-sary. Southern playwright Tennessee Williams, who created some of the most memorable South-ern female characters in American literature, often talks about that contrast in interviews. In the style of Williams’ women, I’d like to think most of all us possess those same qualities: that mix of wit, vulnerability, heartbreak, and raw strength. And for that reason, I feel fortu-nate to be included in that eclectic group known as “Southern women.”

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

Southern women remain an eclectic, distinct group

Stacy Jones

The Dowtowner

WASHINGTON — A doctor who fi rst exposed serious problems at the troubled Phoenix Veter-ans Affairs hospital said this week that a report on patient deaths there is a “whitewash” that mini-mizes life-threatening conduct by senior leaders at the hospital.

Dr. Samuel Foote, a for-mer clinic director for the VA in Phoenix, said a re-port by the department’s inspector general appears designed to “minimize the scandal and protect its perpetrators rather than to provide the truth.”

At best, “this report is a whitewash,” Foote told the House Veterans Af-fairs Committee. “At its worst, it is a feeble at-tempt at a cover-up. The report deliberately uses confusing language and math, invents new unre-alistic standards of proof ... and makes misleading statements.”

The Aug. 26 report said workers at a Phoenix VA hospital falsifi ed waiting lists while their super-

visors looked the other way or even directed it, resulting in chronic de-lays for veterans seeking care. The inspector gen-eral’s offi ce identifi ed 40 patients who died while awaiting appointments in Phoenix, but the report said offi cials could not “conclusively assert” that delays in care caused the deaths.

Acting Inspector Gen-eral Richard Griffi n denied that the report sugarcoated any informa-tion about the Phoenix hospital or the VA, and he disputed suggestions by several Republicans that the report was altered at the request of the VA.

The sentence declaring that investigators could not “conclusively assert” that delays in care caused any patient deaths was not included in a draft re-port, and some lawmak-ers have suggested that Griffi n’s offi ce added the language in an attempt to soften an explosive alle-gation that helped launch the scandal in the spring — that delays in care may have resulted in patient

deaths.Griffi n rejected that

idea out of hand.“This sentence was in-

serted for clarity to sum-marize the results of our clinical case reviews,” he said, adding that the change was by his offi ce on its own initiative.

“Neither the language nor the concept was sug-gested by anyone at VA to any of my people,” Griffi n said.

It is common practice for an inspector gen-eral to send a copy of its fi ndings to the agency in question to elicit an of-fi cial response, which is then included in the fi nal report. Griffi n said his of-fi ce has a policy of making no substantial changes to reports after allowing the VA to inspect and com-ment.

Rep. David Jolly, R-Fla., said language used in the report obscured the fact that delays in care likely contributed to the deaths of veterans.

“We can play with se-mantics all we want,” Jolly told Griffi n, “but right here at this table it

was acknowledged that the (lengthy) wait list contributed to the deaths. That should be the head-line,” Jolly said.

Jolly was referring to testimony by Dr. John Daigh, assistant inspector general for health-care in-spections, who said under questioning from Jolly that delays in care con-tributed to some patient deaths.

Daigh stopped short of saying delays “caused” the deaths, saying such a determination should be made by the judicial sys-tem.

Griffi n disagreed with his subordinate, saying delays “may have contrib-uted” to patient deaths. “I think in our report a care-

ful reading shows they might have lived longer or could have had a bet-ter quality of life” without the delays in care, Griffi n said.

Veterans Affairs Sec-retary Robert McDonald has called the IG’s report troubling and said the agency has begun work-ing on remedies recom-mended by the report.

Foote, who is now re-tired, started sending letters to the VA’s Offi ce of Inspector General last year, complaining about systematic problems with delays in care. He told in-vestigators that up to 40 veterans may have died while awaiting treatment at the Phoenix hospital and that staff, at the in-

struction of administra-tors, kept a secret list of patients waiting for ap-pointments to hide delays in care.

Foote later took his claims to the media and to Republican Rep. Jeff Mill-er, chairman of the House Veterans’ Affairs Commit-tee, who announced the al-legations at an April hear-ing. The resulting scandal led to the ouster of former VA Secretary Eric Shinseki and a new law overhauling the agency and granting veterans easier access to treatment outside the VA.

Three high-ranking of-fi cials at the Phoenix fa-cility have been placed on leave while they appeal a department decision to fi re them.

Former VA doctor calls Phoenix deaths report a ‘whitewash’BY MATTHEW DALY

Associated Press

Associated PressJACKSON — It’s un-

clear which standard-ized tests Mississippi’s 490,000 public school students will take this spring after the state De-partment of Education withdrew its request for a contract with Pearson PLC.

The $8.4 million con-tract was to pay for the fi rst year of Mississippi’s

participation in a multi-state testing group called the Partnership for As-sessment of Readiness for College and Careers, or PARCC.

The Personal Service Contract Review Board must approve the con-tract, but the Department of Education withdrew it before the contract board met Tuesday.

The move could encour-

age opponents of Missis-sippi’s participation in the Common Core State Stan-dards. The PARCC tests are supposed to measure students using those stan-dards.

The rejection is also likely to encourage su-perintendents who want Mississippi to adopt tests from the ACT or-ganization instead of PARCC.

State standardized testing unclear following withdrawal of contract

ScruggsScruggsFarm, Lawn & Garden Home Improvement Warehouse

We’ve Got What You Want For Less!

George StraitJeans

$1599

Boys 20X ShirtsStarting at$1699

Girls 20X TShirtsStarting at$1299

Girls CowboyCut JeansOriginal FitStarting at

$1699

BJ4005A

GWK176Q

14MWJPW

13JGSHD

Back To School Blowout Pricing!

The Perfect Gift - A Scruggs Gift Card!

Mon. - Sat. 7:00 am - 9:00 pm • Sunday 7:00 am - 6:00 pm3575 Tom Watson Drive • Tupelo • 662-620-6165

The Perfect Gift - A Scruggs Gift Card!

Mon. - Sat. 7:00 am - 9:00 pm • Sunday 7:00 am - 6:00 pm3575 Tom Watson Drive • Tupelo • 662-620-6165

MARSHALL

RYEGRASS

50 lbs.

SUPREMEBRANDWILD

GAME MIX50 lbs.

$$19199595

WILD GAME

6-WAYMIX50 lbs.

$$23239595

SUPREME BRAND

WILDGAME

MIX PLUS50 lbs.

$$22229595

WILD GAME

MIXMISS.

BLEND50 lbs.

$$29299595

QUALITY

SEED PRODUCTS

FFOOOODD PPLLOOTTSSAALLEE

www.scruggsfarm.com

$$25255050TRIPLE 13

50 lbs.$$10106565

“For Everything That Sparkles”1749 Virginia Lane • Corinth, MS

662.286.0133 • www.corinthjewelers.com

Page 8: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Business8A • Daily Corinthian Friday, September 19, 2014

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

17,221.11 14,719.43 Dow Industrials 17,265.99 +109.14 +.64 +4.16 +10.428,695.41 6,401.51 Dow Transportation 8,676.19 +24.19 +.28 +17.24 +28.98

576.98 476.05 Dow Utilities 552.80 -3.92 -.70 +12.69 +12.2011,334.65 9,441.66 NYSE Composite 11,024.06 +50.32 +.46 +6.00 +11.874,610.14 3,650.03 Nasdaq Composite 4,593.43 +31.24 +.68 +9.98 +21.222,011.17 1,646.47 S&P 500 2,011.36 +9.79 +.49 +8.82 +16.781,452.01 1,216.78 S&P MidCap 1,427.61 +4.07 +.29 +6.34 +13.79

21,319.71 17,563.18 Wilshire 5000 21,254.01 +93.29 +.44 +7.86 +15.901,213.55 1,037.86 Russell 2000 1,159.27 +5.38 +.47 -.38 +7.81

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.48 9 58.69 +.36 -12.1AT&T Inc 1.84 10 35.16 +.14 ...AirProd 3.08 28 133.04 +2.12 +19.0AlliantEgy 2.04 16 57.03 -.48 +10.5AEP 2.00 15 52.74 -.58 +12.8AmeriBrgn .94 71 77.13 +.60 +9.7ATMOS 1.48 17 49.39 -.47 +8.7BB&T Cp .96 16 38.63 +.38 +3.5BP PLC 2.34f 7 46.42 +.19 -4.5BcpSouth .30f 19 21.70 +.55 -14.6Caterpillar 2.80f 18 104.34 +.35 +14.9Chevron 4.28 12 124.14 -.58 -.6CocaCola 1.22 23 41.79 +.18 +1.2Comcast .90 20 56.85 -.24 +9.4CrackerB 4.00f 19 103.85 +2.78 -5.7Deere 2.40 9 84.15 +.58 -7.9Dillards .24 16 116.41 +.90 +19.8Dover 1.60f 17 85.40 +.68 +6.6EnPro ... 61 65.01 -.09 +12.8FordM .50 10 16.58 +.05 +7.5FredsInc .24 ... 14.89 +.09 -19.4FullerHB .48 20 44.57 +.52 -14.4GenCorp ... 12 16.89 -.25 -6.3GenElec .88 19 26.21 +.16 -6.5Goodyear .24f 12 24.51 -.10 +2.8HonwllIntl 1.80 19 96.39 +.85 +5.5Intel .90 17 35.17 +.19 +35.5Jabil .32 11 21.60 -.04 +23.9KimbClk 3.36 19 106.72 ... +2.2Kroger .74f 17 52.49 +.19 +32.8Lowes .92 22 54.15 +.29 +9.3McDnlds 3.40f 17 93.48 -.05 -3.7

MeadWvco 1.00a 9 42.44 +.26 +14.9

OldNBcp .44 15 13.62 +.20 -11.4

Penney ... ... 10.77 -.21 +17.7

PennyMac 2.44f 9 21.75 ... -5.3

PepsiCo 2.62 21 93.37 +.52 +12.6

PilgrimsP ... 14 32.27 +.88 +98.6

RadioShk ... ... .96 -.01 -63.1

RegionsFn .20 13 10.54 +.16 +6.6

SbdCp 3.00 13 2765.00 -6.00 -1.1

SearsHldgs ... ... 28.00 -1.56 -29.5

Sherwin 2.20 28 219.86 +2.77 +19.8

SiriusXM ... 61 3.64 +.01 +4.2

SouthnCo 2.10 16 43.28 -.29 +5.3

SPDR Fncl .35e ... 23.81 +.23 +8.9

Torchmrk s .51 14 53.83 +.24 +3.3

Total SA 3.25e ... 64.09 +.19 +4.6

USEC Inc ... ... 1.99 -.56 -69.9

US Bancrp .98 14 43.03 +.34 +6.5

WalMart 1.92 16 76.22 -.02 -3.1

WellsFargo 1.40 13 53.24 +.73 +17.3

Wendys Co .20 30 8.36 +.18 -4.1

WestlkCh s .66f 19 94.52 +.64 +54.9

Weyerhsr 1.16f 26 32.63 -.26 +3.4

Xerox .25 15 13.88 -.02 +14.1

YRC Wwde ... ... 21.84 -1.52 +25.7

Yahoo ... 36 42.09 -.51 +4.1

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 25 14.47AK Steel dd 9.74 -.52AOL 49 43.66 +1.40AbbottLab 27 43.69 +.31AbbVie 23 59.45 -.17AberFitc 62 40.49 -.82Accenture 18 80.46 +.78Achillion dd 11.95ActivsBliz 23 21.77 +.33AdobeSy cc 67.91 +.61AMD 39 3.88 +.06Agilent 22 58.40 -.49Agnico g 23 32.48 -1.39AkamaiT 38 64.35 +2.04AlcatelLuc ... 3.32 -.01Alcoa 39 16.20 -.08AlldNevG 42 3.78 +.10AllyFin n ... 23.65 -.27AlphaNRs dd 3.14 -.24AlpAlerMLP q 19.18 +.07AlteraCp lf 30 37.07 +.40Altria 21 44.74 +.13Amazon cc 325.00 +1.00Ambarella 43 40.26 +2.71Ambev n ... 6.82 +.05AMovilL 19 26.38 +.02AmAirl n dd 38.05 +.59AmApparel dd .83 -.04ACapAgy dd 22.13 -.41AmCapLtd 31 14.99 -.09AEagleOut 28 14.43 +.41AmExp 17 90.10 +1.03AmIntlGrp 9 56.33 +.48ARltCapPr dd 12.37 -.25Anadarko dd 105.80 -.84Annaly 18 11.24 -.16Apple Inc s 16 101.79 +.21ApldMatl 28 22.60 +.16ArcelorMit dd 15.03 +.22ArchCoal dd 2.65 -.15ArchDan 20 52.06 +.86ArenaPhm dd 4.27 +.37AresCap 9 16.45 -.05AriadP dd 5.76 -.15ArmourRsd dd 4.07 -.05ArrowRsh dd 15.71 -.36AtlPwr g dd 2.45 +.20Atmel cc 8.75 +.10Autodesk 76 55.73 +.84Auxilium dd 31.12 -.06AvanirPhm dd 11.68 -.81Avon dd 13.24 -.04Baidu 41 228.45 +9.37BakrHu 23 67.90 +.31BcoBrad pf ... 16.42 -.29BcoSantSA ... 9.96 +.09BcoSBrasil ... 6.91 +.09BkofAm 20 17.04 +.27BkNYMel 19 40.25 -.01Barclay ... 15.53 +.31B iPVix rs q 27.20 -.43BarrickG 20 16.00 -.25Baxter 21 73.10 +.45BedBath 13 63.99 -.70BerkH B 16 141.28 +1.67BestBuy 13 34.96 +.44BlackBerry dd 10.75 -.26Blackstone 13 33.15 +.42Boeing 19 128.58 +.82BostonSci 69 12.42 +.20BrMySq 32 51.12 +.24Broadcom 37 41.44 +.51BrcdeCm 22 10.54 +.21CBL Asc 31 18.35 -.33CBS B 18 56.50 -.34CME Grp 29 82.96 +2.27CMS Eng 16 29.43 -.34CSX 18 32.39 +.05CVS Health 20 81.18 -1.06CYS Invest 7 8.96 -.10CabotO&G 37 33.20 -.56Calpine 30 22.50 -.04CAMAC s dd .48 +.01CdnNRs gs ... 41.19 -.04CdnSolar 20 39.71 -.58CapOne 11 83.67 +.79CpstnTurb dd 1.14Carlisle 21 83.28 +.08Carnival 29 40.11 +.40Celgene s 54 93.27 +1.01Cemex ... 13.32 +.04Cemig pf s ... 6.68 -.07CenterPnt 19 24.22 -.14CntryLink dd 40.52 +.17ChesEng 28 24.77 -.58Chimera ... 3.18 -.03ChiFnOnl dd 7.11 +.12ChiRecyEn 5 1.40 +.24Cisco 17 25.22 +.01Citigp pfN ... 26.95 +.01Citigroup 12 53.66 +1.27CliffsNRs 7 14.87 -.23Coach 13 37.33 +.31CobaltIEn dd 14.83 +.01CognizTc s 20 45.31 +.53ColgPalm 27 65.31 +.07Compuwre 31 10.68 +.02ConAgra 46 33.48 +1.47ConocoPhil 13 79.97 -.67ConsolEngy 11 37.98 -.89ContlRes s 41 70.05 -5.77Conversant 21 34.40 +.14CorinthC h dd .11 +.02Corning 22 20.75 +.04Covidien 28 91.60 +.45CSVInvNG q 4.08 +.26CSVLgNGs q 14.66 -1.09CSVelIVST q 44.49 +.65CSVixSht q 2.57 -.07CrwnCstle cc 80.18 +.46CumMed 20 4.35 +.04CypSemi 24 10.86 +.41DCT Indl dd 7.53 -.07DDR Corp cc 16.78 -.20DR Horton 15 22.16 -.07Danaher 22 79.36 +.63DarlingIng 50 18.90 +.30DeanFoods dd 14.77 -.42DelphiAuto 20 65.89 -.68DeltaAir 3 39.44 +.50DenburyR 16 15.70 -.30DevonE 18 71.56 -.01DxGldBull q 29.38 -1.19DrxFnBear q 15.54 -.42DrxSCBear q 14.61 -.26DirGMBear q 12.95 -.07DirGMnBull q 17.04 -.01DirDGldBr q 22.52 +.86DrxSCBull q 74.18 +1.23Discover 13 65.59 +.93DiscCmA s 12 39.97 +.02Disney 22 90.34 +.01DollarGen 19 63.00 -.60DollarTree 20 57.11 +.92DomRescs 20 68.52 -.53DowChm 19 53.59 -.56DresserR 44 73.03 +.22DryShips dd 2.98 -.11DuPont 22 71.20 +1.95DukeEngy 23 73.48 -.82Dunkin 33 45.64 -1.14

E-F-G-HE-Trade 26 24.13 +.26eBay dd 52.70 +.75EMC Cp 24 29.72 +.27EOG Res s 24 104.98 -.21EPR Prop 16 52.28 -2.35Eaton 19 66.56 +.20EdisonInt 13 57.71 -.36EldorGld g 48 7.26 -.24Emcore dd 5.37 +1.08EmersonEl 18 64.74 +.21EmpDist 15 24.70 -.16EnbrdgEPt ... 39.25 +1.32EnCana g 15 22.29 -.20Endo Intl 20 66.94 -1.31EngyTsfr cc 60.22 +.98EngyXXI 22 13.96 -.61ENSCO dd 44.90 -.41EntPrdPt s 28 40.55 +.30EqtyRsd 33 61.40 -.39Ericsson ... 13.24 +.59ExcoRes 52 4.72 -.03Exelon 16 33.78 +.10ExpScripts 33 74.60 +.67ExxonMbl 12 96.61 -.47FMC Corp 19 60.87 -.43Facebook 83 77.00 +.57FedExCp 22 158.93 -.78FifthThird 12 21.01 +.27

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

BkofAm 1080909 17.04 +.27RiteAid 1023464 5.41 -1.23Yahoo 884071 42.09 -.51S&P500ETF 826922 201.82 +1.07SPDR Fncl 482254 23.81 +.23iShEMkts 480330 43.79 +.06Apple Inc s 359021 101.79 +.21Microsoft 346510 46.68 +.16MktVGold 319656 23.13 -.30GenElec 310926 26.21 +.16

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,915Declined 1,214Unchanged 109

Total issues 3,238New Highs 114New Lows 75

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,617Declined 1,079Unchanged 133

Total issues 2,829New Highs 88New Lows 69

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

Emcore 5.37 +1.08 +25.2Misonix 10.50 +1.35 +14.8Vimicro h 9.35 +1.12 +13.6ImmuCell 5.05 +.56 +12.522ndCentry 2.89 +.32 +12.5Vivus 4.36 +.48 +12.4ZionB wt18 3.57 +.32 +9.8ArenaPhm 4.27 +.37 +9.5AndateeCh 3.48 +.30 +9.4AtlPwr g 2.45 +.20 +8.9

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

MarchxB 4.07 -3.43 -45.7SwedLC22 20.50 -12.70 -38.3Lipocine n 5.09 -2.41 -32.1VirnetX 5.37 -2.25 -29.5SinoCoking 4.34 -1.78 -29.1ReprosTh 10.09 -2.79 -21.7Alco Strs 6.52 -1.62 -19.9SinoGlob 2.27 -.55 -19.5Pier 1 12.66 -2.88 -18.5RiteAid 5.41 -1.23 -18.5

AMGYacktmanSvc d25.11 +0.08 +6.7YkmFcsSvc d 26.75 +0.07 +6.5AQRMaFtStrI 10.42 +0.04 -1.6American BeaconLgCpVlIs 31.74 +0.23 +10.4American CenturyEqIncInv 9.21 +0.02 +9.3InvGrInv 35.28 +0.23 +8.0UltraInv 36.57 +0.25 +7.0ValueInv 9.04 +0.04 +11.1American FundsAMCAPA m 29.31 +0.17 +10.7AmBalA m 25.77 +0.10 +6.9BondA m 12.65 -0.01 +3.6CapIncBuA m 60.99 +0.24 +6.7CapWldBdA m20.61 -0.01 +3.3CpWldGrIA m 47.69 +0.34 +6.6EurPacGrA m 50.17 +0.49 +2.2FnInvA m 55.23 +0.34 +8.1GrthAmA m 46.71 +0.30 +8.6HiIncA m 11.25 ... +3.3IncAmerA m 21.95 +0.08 +8.0IntBdAmA m 13.47 -0.01 +1.3IntlGrInA m 35.42 +0.27 +3.9InvCoAmA m 40.60 +0.26 +11.5MutualA m 37.47 +0.15 +8.7NewEconA m 40.12 +0.27 +5.0NewPerspA m 39.15 +0.38 +4.2NwWrldA m 60.66 +0.32 +3.3SmCpWldA m 50.00 +0.21 +1.7TaxEBdAmA m12.99 ... +7.7WAMutInvA m 42.78 +0.23 +9.5ArtisanIntl d 30.97 +0.38 +1.6IntlVal d 37.81 +0.26 +2.8MdCpVal 28.01 +0.06 +3.7MidCap 49.12 +0.17 +3.1BBHCoreSelN d 22.81 +0.10 +6.6BlackRockEngy&ResA m34.41 -0.25 +4.6EqDivA m 25.75 +0.15 +7.0EqDivI 25.82 +0.15 +7.2GlLSCrI 10.94 +0.01 +2.0GlobAlcA m 22.01 +0.04 +3.9GlobAlcC m 20.35 +0.04 +3.4GlobAlcI 22.13 +0.05 +4.1HiYldBdIs 8.34 +0.02 +5.7StrIncIns 10.31 ... +3.5CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.34 +0.12 +1.1Cohen & SteersRealty 71.19 -0.58 +15.3ColumbiaAcornIntZ 46.67 +0.20 +1.1AcornZ 36.87 +0.17 +0.9DivIncZ 19.88 +0.10 +9.7Credit SuisseComStrInstl 6.93 -0.09 -4.1DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 10.00 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 10.96 ... +1.7EmMkCrEqI 20.93 -0.04 +8.9EmMktValI 29.57 -0.08 +7.3EmMtSmCpI 22.34 -0.03 +12.1IntCorEqI 12.77 +0.10 +1.9IntSmCapI 20.76 +0.16 +2.7IntlSCoI 19.28 +0.14 +1.3IntlValuI 19.51 +0.16 +2.0RelEstScI 29.62 -0.27 +15.9TAUSCrE2I 14.31 +0.07 +7.9USCorEq1I 17.78 +0.09 +8.6USCorEq2I 17.49 +0.09 +7.9USLgCo 15.86 +0.08 +10.3USLgValI 34.53 +0.12 +10.5USMicroI 19.85 +0.13 -0.9USSmValI 36.26 +0.17 +2.7USSmallI 31.13 +0.19 +0.9USTgtValInst 23.70 +0.10 +4.6DavisNYVentA m 40.60 +0.27 +6.3NYVentY 41.15 +0.27 +6.5Dodge & CoxBal 105.27 +0.48 +8.9GlbStock 12.87 +0.10 +12.1Income 13.86 ... +4.3IntlStk 46.97 +0.52 +9.1Stock 185.34 +1.22 +11.0DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.94 ... +4.7DreyfusAppreciaInv 56.25 +0.19 +8.3Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.07 ... +1.3FMILgCap 22.72 +0.13 +8.9FPACres d 34.62 +0.14 +5.9NewInc d 10.23 ... +1.2Fairholme FundsFairhome d 42.10 +0.19 +7.4FederatedStrValI 6.20 +0.01 +10.5FidelityAstMgr20 13.63 +0.02 +3.4AstMgr50 18.28 +0.05 +5.1Bal 24.42 +0.10 +8.2Bal K 24.42 +0.10 +8.3BlChGrow 67.00 +0.45 +11.2BlChGrowK 67.07 +0.45 +11.3CapApr 39.50 +0.31 +9.2CapInc d 10.14 +0.02 +7.3Contra 102.91 +0.65 +8.1ContraK 102.92 +0.66 +8.2DivGrow 33.83 +0.14 +9.9DivrIntl d 37.17 +0.36 +0.7DivrIntlK d 37.14 +0.36 +0.8EqInc 63.06 +0.24 +8.8EqInc II 26.34 +0.11 +8.5FF2015 12.89 +0.03 +4.8FF2035 13.68 +0.06 +6.1FF2040 9.65 +0.05 +6.2Fidelity 43.42 +0.29 +9.4FltRtHiIn d 9.90 ... +1.9FrdmK2015 13.94 +0.04 +5.0FrdmK2020 14.61 +0.05 +5.2FrdmK2025 15.24 +0.06 +5.7FrdmK2030 15.63 +0.07 +6.1FrdmK2035 16.09 +0.07 +6.2FrdmK2040 16.14 +0.07 +6.2FrdmK2045 16.55 +0.07 +6.2Free2010 15.72 +0.04 +4.5Free2020 15.74 +0.05 +5.2Free2025 13.50 +0.06 +5.7Free2030 16.63 +0.08 +6.0GNMA 11.49 ... +4.2GrowCo 130.69 +0.81 +9.7GrowInc 30.16 +0.17 +9.2GrthCmpK 130.62 +0.82 +9.8HiInc d 9.32 +0.01 +3.5IntlDisc d 39.78 +0.39 -1.8InvGrdBd 7.84 +0.01 +4.0LatinAm d 33.16 -0.23 +6.1LowPrStkK d 50.10 +0.25 +6.3LowPriStk d 50.14 +0.25 +6.2Magellan 95.98 +0.61 +10.7MidCap d 39.10 +0.12 +6.2MuniInc d 13.36 ... +8.2NewMktIn d 16.28 -0.06 +8.0OTC 79.89 +0.48 +11.9Puritan 22.96 +0.08 +9.0PuritanK 22.96 +0.09 +9.1SASEqF 15.15 +0.07 +9.8SEMF 18.67 -0.03 +6.2SInvGrBdF 11.32 ... +3.9STMIdxF d 59.06 +0.28 +9.4SesAl-SctrEqt 15.14 +0.06 +9.6SesInmGrdBd 11.32 ... +3.9ShTmBond 8.58 ... +0.7SmCapDisc d 30.59 +0.16 +2.3StratInc 11.05 ... +4.6Tel&Util 24.27 +0.02 +12.7TotalBd 10.64 ... +4.0USBdIdx 11.56 ... +3.6USBdIdxInv 11.56 ... +3.5Value 113.65 +0.20 +9.7Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 28.42 +0.17 +8.3NewInsI 28.96 +0.18 +8.5Fidelity SelectBiotech d 218.49 +1.22 +20.2HealtCar d 221.74 +0.97 +24.4Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 71.65 +0.36 +10.4500IdxInstl 71.65 +0.36 +10.4500IdxInv 71.64 +0.36 +10.4ExtMktIdAg d 55.42 +0.17 +5.4IntlIdxAdg d 41.08 +0.37 +1.7TotMktIdAg d 59.05 +0.27 +9.4Fidelity®SerBlueChipGrF11.74 +0.08 +11.1

Name P/E Last Chg

3,104,300,611Volume 1,717,189,701Volume

16,000

16,400

16,800

17,200

17,600

M SA M J J A

16,920

17,100

17,280Dow Jones industrialsClose: 17,265.99Change: 109.14 (0.6%)

10 DAYS

SeriesGrowthCoF11.60+0.07 +9.6First EagleGlbA m 56.14 +0.16 +4.7OverseasA m 23.90 +0.07 +3.4FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.39 ... +8.8FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.42 ... +10.5GrowthA m 71.78 +0.31 +10.1HY TF A m 10.50 ... +11.1Income C m 2.56 +0.01 +7.9IncomeA m 2.53 ... +8.4IncomeAdv 2.51 ... +8.1RisDvA m 50.97 +0.24 +5.9StrIncA m 10.57 +0.01 +3.8FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 35.90 +0.13 +7.0DiscovA m 35.31 +0.13 +6.8Shares Z 30.63 +0.09 +8.8SharesA m 30.33 +0.10 +8.6FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond C m 13.37 -0.02 +3.6GlBondA m 13.34 -0.02 +3.9GlBondAdv 13.29 -0.02 +4.1GrowthA m 26.07 +0.15 +4.4WorldA m 20.16 +0.12 +3.9Franklin Templeton IGlTlRtAdv 13.53 -0.02 +3.2GES&SUSEq 61.14 +0.41 +11.7GMOEmgMktsVI d 11.29 -0.06 +4.8IntItVlIV 25.72 +0.17 +2.4QuIII 24.44 +0.13 +9.1USEqAllcVI 18.06 +0.08 +7.8Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 49.26 +0.15 +10.9HarborBond 12.18 -0.02 +2.8CapApInst 61.16 +0.36 +7.9IntlInstl 71.65 +0.60 +0.9IntlInv b 70.77 +0.59 +0.6HartfordCapAprA m 50.22 +0.29 +7.6CpApHLSIA 55.61 +0.31 +7.7INVESCOCharterA m 23.87 +0.11 +9.2ComstockA x 25.87 +0.08 +9.8EqIncomeA x 11.44 +0.01 +8.6GrowIncA x 29.59 +0.13 +10.3HiYldMuA m 9.81 ... +12.8IVAWorldwideI d 18.84 +0.03 +5.7IvyAssetStrA m 31.36 +0.17 -2.1AssetStrC m 30.35 +0.17 -2.5AsstStrgI 31.66 +0.17 -1.9JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.65 -0.01 +3.3CoreBondA m 11.64 -0.01 +3.0CoreBondSelect11.64 -0.01 +3.2HighYldSel 8.04 +0.02 +4.5LgCapGrA m 34.14 +0.26 +7.4LgCapGrSelect34.19 +0.26 +7.6MidCpValI 38.28 +0.03 +9.0ShDurBndSel 10.89 ... +0.5USLCpCrPS 30.82 +0.21 +11.1JanusGlbLfScT 53.28 +0.31 +23.9John HancockDisValMdCpI 19.68 +0.04 +8.5DiscValI 19.45 +0.10 +8.1LifBa1 b 16.03 +0.05 +5.5LifGr1 b 17.01 +0.07 +6.1LazardEmgMkEqInst d20.02 -0.11 +8.1Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m208.47+1.06 +14.9Longleaf PartnersLongPart 35.61 +0.10 +5.5Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.74 +0.04 +6.5BdR b 15.66 +0.03 +6.2Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.70 +0.07 +8.4BondDebA m 8.24 +0.02 +5.0ShDurIncA m 4.52 ... +2.0ShDurIncC m 4.55 ... +1.5ShDurIncF b 4.51 ... +1.8MFSIntlValA m 34.71 +0.31 +2.9IsIntlEq 22.76 +0.28 +1.5TotRetA m 18.44 +0.06 +6.5ValueA m 35.07 +0.23 +6.8ValueI 35.25 +0.22 +7.0MainStayMktfield 17.39 ... -6.1Manning & NapierWrldOppA 8.92 +0.05 -0.1Matthews AsianChina d 22.39 -0.03 -2.0India d 25.11 +0.36 +54.2MergerInvCl b 16.52 +0.01 +3.2Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.78 -0.01 +4.0TotRtBd b 10.78 -0.01 +3.8Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 46.34 +0.07 +2.3NatixisLSInvBdY 12.24 +0.02 +5.7LSStratIncA m 17.06 +0.05 +6.6LSStratIncC m17.16 +0.04 +5.9Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 60.70 +0.33 -1.9NorthernHYFixInc d 7.53 ... +4.7IntlIndex d 12.42 ... +0.6StkIdx 24.88 ... +9.8NuveenHiYldMunI 16.92 ... +15.0OakmarkEqIncI 34.54 +0.10 +5.8Intl I 25.91 +0.21 -1.6Oakmark I 70.22 +0.47 +10.4Select I 46.09 +0.30 +15.1OberweisChinaOpp m 17.40 +0.08 +3.4Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.29 +0.02 +4.9GlbSmMdCp 17.17 +0.09 +2.3LgCpStr 13.19 +0.09 +5.8OppenheimerDevMktA m 40.73 +0.14 +7.1DevMktY 40.32 +0.15 +7.3GlobA m 82.77 +0.97 +5.1IntlGrY 37.28 +0.35 -2.3IntlGrowA m 37.40 +0.36 -2.5MainStrA m 53.18 +0.33 +9.7SrFltRatA m 8.33 ... +1.9StrIncA m 4.16 ... +4.0Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.36 ... +12.6OsterweisOsterStrInc 11.81 +0.01 +3.2PIMCOAllAssetI 12.59 ... +5.6AllAuthIn 10.16 ... +4.1ComRlRStI 5.42 ... -1.3EMktCurI 10.08 ... +0.9EmgLclBdI 9.33 ... +3.5ForBdInstl 11.05 -0.02 +6.9HiYldIs 9.61 +0.02 +4.2Income P 12.72 ... +7.7IncomeA m 12.72 ... +7.5IncomeD b 12.72 ... +7.5IncomeInl 12.72 ... +7.7LgDrTRtnI 11.39 ... +11.7LgTmCrdIn 12.62 ... +12.5LowDrIs 10.31 -0.01 +0.9RERRStgC m 4.00 ... +22.6RealRet 11.33 ... +4.5ShtTermIs 9.92 ... +1.4StkPlARShStrIn 2.49 ... -8.1TotRetA m 10.85 -0.01 +2.8TotRetAdm b 10.85 -0.01 +2.9TotRetC m 10.85 -0.01 +2.2TotRetIs 10.85 -0.01 +3.1TotRetrnD b 10.85 -0.01 +2.9TotlRetnP 10.85 -0.01 +3.0UnconstrBdIns 11.31 ... +3.0PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 33.39 +0.16 +12.6ParnassusCoreEqInv 39.89 +0.12 +9.3PermanentPortfolio 44.10 -0.06 +2.4PioneerPioneerA m 42.02 +0.19 +8.0PrincipalDivIntI 12.30 +0.10 +3.3L/T2020I 14.97 +0.05 +5.4L/T2030I 15.28 +0.06 +5.9LCGrIInst 13.41 +0.09 +5.8Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 42.78 +0.20 +5.7

PutnamGrowIncA m 21.59 ... +9.5NewOpp 87.89 +0.55 +10.3RoycePremierInv d 22.89 +0.08 +3.5Schwab1000Inv d 53.47 +0.25 +9.8S&P500Sel d 31.83 +0.16 +10.3ScoutInterntl 37.09 +0.36 +0.6SequoiaSequoia 222.18 +0.62 +0.8T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 68.89 +0.53 +6.6CapApprec 27.85 +0.06 +8.5EmMktBd d 12.78 -0.05 +6.5EmMktStk d 35.04 -0.13 +8.8EqIndex d 54.43 +0.27 +10.2EqtyInc 34.70 +0.12 +6.8GrowStk 55.82 +0.40 +6.2HealthSci 69.53 +0.15 +20.3HiYield d 7.18 +0.01 +4.8InsLgCpGr 28.78 +0.21 +5.6IntlBnd d 9.47 ... +1.3IntlGrInc d 15.94 +0.09 +2.4IntlStk d 16.96 +0.14 +4.0LatinAm d 32.42 -0.30 +8.0MidCapE 43.92 +0.03 +8.0MidCapVa 33.25 +0.04 +10.6MidCpGr 78.33 +0.06 +7.6NewEra 48.76 -0.17 +9.8NewHoriz 47.53 +0.26 +2.7NewIncome 9.49 ... +4.0OrseaStk d 10.31 +0.10 +1.6R2015 15.13 +0.04 +5.7R2025 16.34 +0.06 +6.2R2035 17.35 +0.07 +6.6Rtmt2010 18.76 +0.04 +5.3Rtmt2020 21.61 +0.07 +6.0Rtmt2030 24.07 +0.10 +6.5Rtmt2040 24.99 +0.12 +6.7Rtmt2045 16.65 +0.07 +6.7ShTmBond 4.78 ... +0.9SmCpStk 45.35 +0.23 +1.8SmCpVal d 49.45 +0.17 -1.8SpecInc 13.00 ... +4.3Value 37.60 +0.18 +11.3TCWTotRetBdI 10.25 ... +4.0TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.75 -0.01 +3.6EqIx 15.46 +0.07 +9.5IntlE d 19.55 +0.18 +1.7TempletonInFEqSeS 22.84 +0.15 +0.9ThornburgIncBldA m 21.91 +0.06 +8.3IncBldC m 21.91 +0.07 +7.9IntlValI 31.22 +0.22 -1.9Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 28.01 +0.08 +5.2Vanguard500Adml 186.39 +0.93 +10.4500Inv 186.35 +0.94 +10.3500Sgnl 153.97 +0.77 +10.4BalIdxAdm 29.21 +0.08 +7.1BalIdxIns 29.22 +0.09 +7.2BdMktInstPls 10.74 ... +3.6CAITAdml 11.72 ... +6.4CapOpAdml 122.18 +1.07 +14.6DevMktIdxAdm13.26 +0.11 +1.6DevMktIdxInstl 13.27 +0.10 +1.5DivGr 22.78 +0.13 +7.9EmMktIAdm 36.91 +0.02 +10.0EnergyAdm 134.34 -0.35 +6.7EqInc 32.05 +0.17 +9.2EqIncAdml 67.20 +0.36 +9.2ExplAdml 97.79 +0.61 +1.7Explr 105.04 +0.65 +1.6ExtdIdAdm 66.13 +0.20 +5.4ExtdIdIst 66.14 +0.21 +5.4ExtdMktIdxIP 163.23 +0.50 +5.4FAWeUSIns 101.20 +0.63 +3.8GNMA 10.65 -0.01 +4.2GNMAAdml 10.65 -0.01 +4.2GlbEq 24.99 +0.16 +6.5GrthIdAdm 52.37 +0.24 +10.0GrthIstId 52.37 +0.24 +10.0HYCorAdml 6.06 +0.01 +4.6HltCrAdml 91.23 +0.61 +20.6HlthCare 216.21 +1.43 +20.5ITBondAdm 11.34 -0.01 +4.4ITGradeAd 9.84 ... +4.2InfPrtAdm 26.10 -0.06 +3.4InfPrtI 10.63 -0.03 +3.5InflaPro 13.29 -0.03 +3.3InstIdxI 185.19 +0.93 +10.4InstPlus 185.21 +0.93 +10.4InstTStPl 45.98 +0.21 +9.6IntlGr 23.64 +0.20 +1.3IntlGrAdm 75.23 +0.63 +1.4IntlStkIdxAdm 28.55 +0.18 +3.8IntlStkIdxI 114.17 +0.70 +3.8IntlStkIdxIPls 114.19 +0.70 +3.8IntlVal 38.03 +0.21 +1.7LTGradeAd 10.33 +0.02 +10.8LifeCon 18.85 +0.03 +5.5LifeGro 29.24 +0.11 +7.0LifeMod 24.31 +0.08 +6.3MidCapIdxIP 162.65 +0.55 +9.6MidCp 32.87 +0.11 +9.5MidCpAdml 149.27 +0.50 +9.6MidCpIst 32.98 +0.12 +9.7Morg 27.65 +0.17 +8.0MorgAdml 85.75 +0.54 +8.1MuHYAdml 11.14 ... +9.1MuIntAdml 14.17 -0.01 +5.7MuLTAdml 11.63 +0.01 +8.7MuLtdAdml 11.07 ... +1.7MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.7PrecMtls 10.83 -0.07 +4.7Prmcp 106.00 +0.80 +14.8PrmcpAdml 109.98 +0.84 +14.9PrmcpCorI 22.44 +0.18 +15.4REITIdxAd 104.24 -0.97 +15.6REITIdxInst 16.13 -0.16 +15.6STBondAdm 10.48 ... +0.8STBondSgl 10.48 ... +0.8STCor 10.71 ... +1.5STGradeAd 10.71 ... +1.6STIGradeI 10.71 ... +1.6STsryAdml 10.68 ... +0.4SelValu 30.14 +0.10 +6.9SmCapIdx 55.39 +0.17 +5.1SmCapIdxIP 160.16 +0.51 +5.3SmCpGrIdxAdm44.07 +0.18 +2.5SmCpIdAdm 55.48 +0.18 +5.2SmCpIdIst 55.48 +0.18 +5.3SmCpValIdxAdm44.96 +0.10 +7.5Star 25.27 +0.11 +6.6StratgcEq 33.24 +0.15 +10.8TgtRe2010 26.88 +0.04 +5.0TgtRe2015 15.62 +0.03 +5.8TgtRe2020 28.82 +0.08 +6.3TgtRe2030 29.54 +0.12 +6.9TgtRe2035 18.19 +0.07 +7.1TgtRe2040 30.40 +0.14 +7.3TgtRe2045 19.07 +0.09 +7.4TgtRe2050 30.26 +0.14 +7.3TgtRetInc 12.96 +0.02 +4.5Tgtet2025 16.79 +0.06 +6.6TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.06 -0.03 +5.6TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.35 -0.01 +5.6TotBdAdml 10.74 ... +3.6TotBdInst 10.74 ... +3.6TotBdMkInv 10.74 ... +3.5TotBdMkSig 10.74 ... +3.6TotIntl 17.07 +0.11 +3.8TotStIAdm 50.69 +0.23 +9.5TotStIIns 50.70 +0.24 +9.5TotStISig 48.92 +0.22 +9.5TotStIdx 50.66 +0.23 +9.4TxMCapAdm 103.06 +0.47 +10.0ValIdxAdm 32.55 +0.17 +10.5ValIdxIns 32.55 +0.17 +10.5WellsI 25.96 +0.07 +6.1WellsIAdm 62.90 +0.16 +6.2Welltn 40.44 +0.15 +7.9WelltnAdm 69.85 +0.26 +7.9WndsIIAdm 71.16 +0.43 +10.4Wndsr 22.38 +0.15 +10.8WndsrAdml 75.50 +0.48 +10.8WndsrII 40.10 +0.25 +10.3VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.58 +0.04 +12.1Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 12.01 +0.05 +10.2SciTechA m 16.50 +0.18 +2.8

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FireEye n dd 33.68 -1.79FstHorizon 48 12.96 +.44FstNiagara 12 8.97 +.09Flextrn 14 10.93 +.09Foamix n ... 6.22FrSeas rsh ... .24 -.01FrptMcM 14 34.31 -.20Freescale 78 22.52 +.76FrontierCm 33 6.54 +.02FuelCellE dd 2.24 -.03GATX 15 64.35 +.20GNC 15 41.02 +1.90GT AdvTc dd 11.61 -.02Gap 16 43.84 +.16GastarExp cc 6.52 -.19GenDynam 20 129.28 +1.04GenGrPrp cc 23.97 -.11GenMills 17 51.22 +.39GenMotors 29 34.03 +.18Genworth 10 13.26 +.05Gerdau ... 5.34Gevo h dd .35 -.06GileadSci 24 105.93 +2.09GlaxoSKln ... 47.29 +.19GlimchRt dd 13.63 +.01Globalstar dd 3.89 -.03GluMobile dd 5.32 +.10Gogo dd 19.16 +.69GoldFLtd ... 4.26 -.04Goldcrp g dd 24.32 -.52GoldmanS 12 187.89 +3.07GoPro n cc 66.33 -.89GraphPkg 21 12.78 -.02Groupon dd 6.89 -.08GpTelevisa ... 35.42 +.23HCP Inc 18 39.83 -.65HSBUS pfF ... 21.75 +.11HalconRes dd 4.67 -.17Hallibrtn 21 66.33 +.09HartfdFn 12 37.79 +.21HeclaM dd 2.75 -.06HercOffsh dd 2.54 -.50Hertz ... 27.77 +.26Hess 9 97.73 -1.17HewlettP 14 37.01 +.34Hilton n 55 24.73 -.28HimaxTch 41 8.91 +.21HomeDp 22 92.09 +.87HopFedBc 29 11.45 -.02HostHotls 17 21.96 -.03HudsCity 29 10.17 +.04HuntBncsh 14 10.21 +.11

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 3.25 -.05iShBrazil q 48.37 -.72iShGerm q 29.28 +.36iSh HK q 21.38 -.08iShItaly q 16.16 -.04iShJapan q 11.79 +.07iSTaiwn q 16.01 +.06iShSilver q 17.77iShChinaLC q 40.28 -.06iSCorSP500 q 203.11 +1.06iShEMkts q 43.79 +.06iSh20 yrT q 113.16 +.36iS Eafe q 66.20 +.51iShiBxHYB q 93.02 +.03iShR2K q 115.43 +.70iShREst q 70.91 -.52iShHmCnst q 24.01 -.12Infinera dd 11.56 +.49Infosys 19 59.46 +.24IngrmM 17 28.06 +.09IBM 12 193.75 +.95IntPap 14 49.00 +.40InvenSense cc 23.99 +1.01InvBncp s 27 10.44 +.01Isis dd 41.88 +.68ItauUnibH ... 16.28 -.30JD.com n ... 29.55 +1.45JDS Uniph dd 13.71 +.14JPMorgCh 16 61.32 +1.01JanusCap 16 11.55 -.05JetBlue 11 11.33 +.13JinkoSolar 15 32.66 -.34JohnJn 20 107.35 +1.16JohnsnCtl 20 46.54 +.17JnprNtwk 19 22.79 -.03KB Home 17 17.34 -.11Keycorp 13 14.13 +.17Kimco 49 22.35 -.11KindMorg 32 38.00 -.13Kinross g dd 3.64 -.05KiOR dd .22 +.04KodiakO g 30 14.28 -.50Kohls 15 62.50 +.98KraftFGp 14 57.44 +.12LaredoPet 53 23.35 -.17LVSands 19 63.95 +1.57LennarA 17 41.38 -.02Level3 73 47.50 +1.66LibGlobA s dd 43.50 +.19LibGlobC s ... 41.80 +.15LillyEli 21 66.59 +.68LincNat 11 55.69 +1.23LloydBkg ... 5.03 +.11LockhdM 18 179.57 +.77LaPac cc 14.83 +.01LyonBas A 15 113.75 +2.17

M-N-O-PMGIC Inv 27 8.44 +.06MGM Rsts 87 23.39 +.55MSCI Inc 20 48.98 +2.69Macys 15 60.56 -.07MagHRes dd 6.02 -.36Manitowoc 29 27.06 -.04MannKd dd 6.23MarathnO 10 39.32 -1.01MarathPet 14 87.33 -.86MarchxB 41 4.07 -3.43MVJrGold q 37.68 +.08MktVGold q 23.13 -.30MV OilSvc q 51.97 +.05MktVRus q 23.67 -.22MartMM 40 128.29 -.11MarvellT 21 13.89 +.04MasterCd s 28 77.80 +1.58Mattel 15 34.04 -.12McDrmInt 8 6.33 -.07Medtrnic 23 66.53 +.55MelcoCrwn 19 27.36 +.64Merck 32 60.31 +.43MetLife 13 55.89 +.61MKors 22 77.22 +1.11MicronT 10 32.48 +.50Microsoft 18 46.68 +.16Mobileye n ... 46.81 -3.48Molycorp dd 1.31 -.21Mondelez 18 35.81 +.39Monsanto 23 115.49 +1.80MorgStan 19 36.13 +.57Mylan 33 48.43 +.43vjNII Hld dd .11 +.04NQ Mobile dd 6.03 -.13NRG Egy dd 30.80 +.24NXP Semi ... 73.01 +2.28Nabors 46 23.96 -.27NBGreece ... 3.14 -.05NOilVarco 13 80.59 -.32NetElem dd 2.99 +.01NwGold g 65 5.88 -.10NY CmtyB 16 16.43 +.09NewfldExp 28 39.01 -.40NewmtM 14 24.49 -.18NewsCpA 42 17.03 -.01NielsenNV 42 44.49 -.02NikeB 28 81.97 +.46NobleCorp 7 24.48 -.16NobleEngy 33 71.22 +.05NokiaCp ... 8.63 +.09NA Pall g ... .21 -.03NorthropG 15 132.44 -.13NStarRlt dd 17.32Novavax dd 4.48 -.11Nucor 34 58.09 +.28Nvidia 21 19.44 +.29OasisPet 14 43.96 -2.09OcciPet 13 97.87 -.30OcwenFn 13 28.91 +.54OfficeDpt dd 5.70 -.06Oi SA ... .73 +.02OnSmcnd 19 9.84 +.09OnTrack dd 3.54 +.03Oncothyr dd 2.15 +.15Oracle 17 41.55 +.41Orexigen dd 4.89 -.07OwensIll 22 28.10 -.48PDL Bio 5 7.89 -.59PG&E Cp 25 45.90 -.25PPG 25 203.16 +1.33PPL Corp 14 33.28 -.18Pandora dd 26.67 -.41ParagOff n ... 6.73 -.21

PeabdyE 90 13.49 -.70PennVa dd 13.11 -.57PennWst g ... 7.62 +.61PeopUtdF 19 14.98 +.03PetrbrsA ... 18.04 -.66Petrobras ... 17.09 -.52Pfizer 17 30.58 +.23PhilipMor 16 84.72 -.18Phillips66 16 85.89 +.20Pier 1 14 12.66 -2.88PiperJaf 13 56.21 +.12PlugPowr h dd 4.31 -.31Potash 22 35.38 -.07PS SrLoan ... 24.46 +.02PwShs QQQ q 100.28 +.75ProLogis cc 38.31 -.47ProQR n ... 14.73ProShtS&P q 22.59 -.12ProUltSP q 122.53 +1.29PUVixST rs q 22.89 -.73ProctGam 21 84.19 +.03ProUShSP q 23.78 -.26ProUShL20 q 59.57 -.40PShtQQQ rs q 34.79 -.79ProspctCap ... 10.15 -.06Prudentl 15 92.95 +2.13PSEG 15 37.76 -.13PulteGrp 3 19.08 -.27

Q-R-S-TQEP Res 28 31.49 -.66Qihoo360 68 77.99 -.88Qualcom 17 76.44 +.61QksilvRes dd .97 -.07RF MicD 42 12.17 +.46Rackspace 55 32.28 -.11RangeRs 47 71.87 -1.34RltyInco 50 41.76 -.78ReneSola dd 3.39 +.01ReprosTh dd 10.09 -2.79ReWalkR n ... 28.25 -5.45RiteAid 32 5.41 -1.23RubiconTc dd 5.12 -.20RymanHP 31 47.54 +.47SLM Cp 5 9.14 +.21SpdrDJIA q 172.61 +1.03SpdrGold q 117.78 +.24S&P500ETF q 201.82 +1.07SpdrHome q 31.18 -.31SpdrLehHY q 40.67 +.03SpdrS&P RB q 40.21 +.70SpdrOGEx q 73.37 -1.18Salesforce dd 57.66 +.21SanDisk 21 103.22 +3.00SandRdge dd 4.85 -.05Schlmbrg 21 104.47 +1.16Schwab 35 30.78 +.58SeadrillLtd 3 30.35 -.04SeagateT 13 59.79 +.81SenHous 21 21.31 -.27Sequenom dd 3.25 -.06SiderurNac ... 4.17 +.07SilvWhtn g 25 22.25 -.24SinoGlob 7 2.27 -.55SinoCoking cc 4.34 -1.78SiriusXM 61 3.64 +.01Sky-mobi ... 9.88 -.54SkywksSol 30 57.80 +1.92SolarCity dd 65.99 -1.01Sonus dd 3.81 +.19SonyCp ... 18.04 -.84SouFun s 13 9.82 +.18SwstAirl 22 35.23 +.80SwstnEngy 17 37.21 -.30SpectraEn 24 40.28 -.25SpiritRltC dd 11.15 -.18Sprint dd 6.85 +.16SP Matls q 50.69 +.34SP HlthC q 65.04 +.48SP CnSt q 45.60 +.09SP Consum q 68.69 +.30SP Engy q 94.35 -.49SP Inds q 54.74 +.26SP Tech q 40.60 +.24SP Util q 42.54 -.31StdPac 15 8.13 -.06Staples 16 13.04Starbucks 29 75.73 +.39StarwdPT 11 22.87 -.32StateStr 16 75.73 +.92StlDynam 26 24.95 +.10StillwtrM 26 16.53 -.58Stryker 42 84.07 +.13Suncor g 12 39.31 +.20SunEdison dd 20.79 +.07SunTrst 14 40.12 +.40Symantec 18 24.59 +.09Sysco 24 38.00TD Ameritr 24 34.24 +.38TE Connect 17 61.90 +.04TECO 17 17.28 -.27TRWAuto 14 102.80 -.04TaiwSemi ... 20.92 +.30TalismE g 35 9.35 -.13Target 27 63.93 +1.06TASER 47 16.91 -.29TeckRes g ... 21.26 -.27Tekmira g dd 21.00 -.12TeslaMot dd 263.82 +2.44TevaPhrm 17 52.41 +.04TexInst 24 48.98 +.613M Co 21 146.84 +1.47TibcoSft 43 20.79 +.03TW Cable 21 153.51 -1.11TimeWarn 16 77.38 +.52TollBros 20 33.79 +.04TrCda g 23 55.52 +2.01Transocn 7 35.15 +.38TriPointe 17 14.50 +.20TrinaSolar 17 14.40 -.07Trinity s 13 50.03 +1.27TurqHillRs dd 3.9421stCFoxA 21 34.91 +.2621Vianet ... 20.04 -.9622ndCentry dd 2.89 +.32Twitter n ... 50.88 +.18TwoHrbInv cc 10.23 -.02TycoIntl 10 45.04 +.73Tyson 14 38.78 +.35

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 17.76 +.18UnionPac s 21 109.40 -.18UtdContl 25 49.90 +.97UPS B 22 99.63 +.24US NGas q 21.34 -.53US OilFd q 34.62 -.39USSteel dd 46.00 +.39UtdTech 17 108.52 +.49UtdhlthGp 16 87.63 +.64Vale SA ... 12.32 -.07Vale SA pf ... 10.78 -.09ValeroE 9 47.62 -.59VlyNBcp 15 10.01 +.09VangREIT q 73.55 -.65VangEmg q 44.30 +.10VangEur q 57.67 +.52VangFTSE q 41.25 +.28Ventas 37 61.03 -.83VerizonCm 11 49.69 +.48ViacomB 15 80.46 +.98Vimicro h dd 9.35 +1.12ViolinM n dd 4.41 -.46VirnetX dd 5.37 -2.25Visa 25 216.44 +.91VitaminSh 21 45.44 +2.09Vivus dd 4.36 +.48Vodafone ... 33.23 +.52VulcanM 54 62.44 -.86Walgrn 21 63.18 -.55WalterEn dd 2.94 -.50WashPrm n ... 16.86 +.02WeathfIntl dd 22.33 +.05WellPoint 16 122.16 +1.94WDigital 15 99.58 +1.76WstnUnion 12 16.85 -.10WetSeal h dd .61 -.02WhitingPet 17 81.33 -2.70WholeFood 26 39.79 +.42WmsCos 73 56.50 -.56Windstrm 30 11.23 -.05WTJpHedg q 52.10 +.55WT India q 23.10 +.70Wynn 23 187.83 +4.73Xilinx 20 44.47 +.55YY Inc ... 78.53 -2.42Yamana g 88 7.01 -.10Yandex ... 29.74 -.28YingliGrn dd 3.58 -.07YoukuTud dd 19.28 +.04ZionsBcp 17 29.87 +.34Zoetis 35 36.70 +.05Zynga dd 3.08 -.07

Today

Quadruple witching

It’s quadruple witching day, which marks the simultaneous expiration of four kinds of options and futures contracts.

The oddly named phenomenon happens on Wall Street four times a year, and forces traders to tie up loose ends in contracts they hold. The “witching hour” is what traders sometimes call the final stretch of such a day, before the closing bell. That’s a period that can see particularly heavy volume.

Biggest stock debut?

It’s sizing up to be potentially the biggest initial public offering ever.

Alibaba Group Holding is slated to make its market debut today with the goal of raising up to $21.8 billion. The Chinese company has emerged as a hot commodity because of its e-commerce bazaar, a shopping magnet for businesses and consumers alike as China’s economy steadily grows. Alibaba’s network of sites includes Taobao, Tmall and AliExpress.

Economic barometer

A measure of the U.S. economy’s future health is expected to be down slightly for August.

Economists anticipate that the Conference Board’s index of leading indicators rose 0.4 percent last month after rising 0.9 percent a month earlier. The index, derived from data that for the most part have already been reported individually, is designed to anticipate economic conditions three to six months out. The latest reading is due out today. Source: FactSet

Leading indicatorsseasonally adjusted percent change

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0%

AJJMAM

2014

est.

Sources: Factset; Data as of Sept. 18 Ken Sweet; A.Nieves • AP

Banking on high ratesBank stocks are the best performers among the

S&P 500’s 10 industry groups in the last month.The reason: Banks typically do well in an

improving economy and when interest rates are expected to go higher, both of which have been true the last several weeks. The Federal Reserve is expected to raise its federal funds rate, or the rate the Fed charges banks to borrow money, starting next year. At the same time, higher long-term rates mean banks can charge more for loans, which boost their profits. Bond investors have been moving

interest rates higher the last month in anticipation.The economy has also been holding steady,

with the U.S. economy creating more than 200,000 jobs on average each month since

February. A better economy means borrowers are less likely to default on bank loans and mortgages.

The increase: The S&P 500 Financial sector is up 3.3 percent in the last 30 days, more than 2.1 percent the S&P 500 has risen in the same period. The KBW Bank Index, which tracks only the nation’s largest banks, is up 5.3 percent.

-40

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100%

0

1

2

3

4

5

6%

’09 ’10 ’11 ’12 ’13 ’14 Aug. Sept.

Five-year percent change One-month percent change

2014

Bank stocks (KBW Bank index)

S&P 500

Bank stocks (KBW Bank index)

S&P 500

Over the last five years, bank stocks have lagged behind the rest of the market ...

... But they’ve been market leaders over the last month.

e

,

bb

sdh

n

Financial Solutions witha Smile and a Handshake

Member SIPC

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

www.edwardjones.com

Page 9: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9A • Daily Corinthian Friday, September 19, 2014

ACROSS1 Caesar in “Rise

of the Planet ofthe Apes,” forone

6 Road __9 Long-legged

wader14 Halos15 Bold alternative16 Really ticked17 Start of a riddle18 “Shirt Front and

Fork” artist19 Well-mannered

fellows20 Summertime

woe23 “__ Shorty”:

Elmore Leonardnovel

24 Sumptuousmeals

27 Somemicrobrews

29 Rm. coolers30 Riddle, part two32 Big piece34 Kazakhstan,

once: Abbr.35 Polite gesture39 Chevrolet SUV41 Mystery guest

moniker43 Highs and lows,

perhaps44 Suppress46 KOA visitors48 Mice, to owls49 Riddle, part

three52 Buddy53 Monkey wrench

wielder?56 Catch in a web58 Many a lap dog59 Coat closet

locale, often61 Dropped the ball63 Sellout sign,

briefly64 End of the riddle68 Lagoon border69 Goad, with “on”70 Heroic stories71 Like a string

bean72 Burnt __ crisp73 Unauthorized

disclosures

DOWN1 Farm field cry2 “That’s a surprise”3 Lyricist Gershwin4 British subject?5 Currency

replaced by theeuro

6 Beef, e.g.7 Answer to the

riddle8 Melonlike fruit9 Headlight setting

10 “Let us part, __the season ofpassion forgetus”: Yeats

11 Singer’s asset12 River mammal13 Makes a home21 Egyptian snakes22 Actor Green of

“Robot Chicken”24 Doesn’t take

anything in25 Fanfare26 Tokyo-based

brewery28 Bar, in law31 Suffix with Mao33 Smashing, at the

box office36 Singer with the

Mel-Tones

37 A muse mayinspire them

38 “Fooled you!”40 With joy42 Louis __,

eponym of theKentucky city

45 All square47 Lose sleep (over)50 Square one51 Tooth covering53 Pinch

54 Cardiologist’sconcern

55 Lakers coach __Scott

57 Nearsighted one60 Activity on a mat62 Image on the

Michigan stateflag

65 Through66 “Gross!”67 Small opening?

By Jacob Stulberg©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 09/19/14

09/19/14

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: I am a proud father of two young chil-dren, who both mind and respect me.

I know that kids get in trouble. We were all kids once. The problem is, I am the disciplinarian at home, and I wish my wife and her mother did a little more.

They can’t seem to han-dle any of it. My mother-in-law babysits a lot, and I get calls at work for things like, “Your son won’t eat his lunch,” and “Tell your son not to do this,” or “Your daughter pushed her broth-er.”

My mother-in-law and I get along fi ne. But when it comes to my kids, she seems to want me to fi x ev-erything, but restricts me at the same time.

I work six days a week, and I don’t get a lot of posi-tive bonding time with the kids. Is it damaging that I’m the one who is the “mean” parent? — Just Wondering in Indianapolis

Dear Wondering: Let’s fi rst go on the re-cord as being opposed to corporal punish-ment.

Nonetheless, in most families, one parent tends to be the discipli-narian.

As long as you also spend time doing posi-tive things with your children, we wouldn’t worry about that. But your wife and mother-in-law should not be disturbing you at work

for minor infractions, and your mother-in-law should not be un-dermining you.

Dear Annie: Every now and then someone writes in lamenting that they have no social life.

I have yet to read the sug-gestion of splitting the cost of a date.

Anyone who wants to know someone better should ask that person whether they’d like to see a movie or go to a restaurant and split the expense.

Then the man doesn’t have to worry about paying, and the woman doesn’t fear she has to somehow repay him.

If this “date” doesn’t gen-erate another outing, there are no hard feelings. — Lou-isville, Ky.

Dear Louisville: Gen-erally, the person who issues the invitation is the one who pays, but this can be daunting for those on a limited income or for women who think the man al-ways has to do the ask-ing.

Understanding in advance that you will be splitting the cost allows you to get to know someone with-out worrying about the

expense or any future obligation.

Dear Annie: This is for “Concerned Friend,” who thinks her friend is showing signs of dementia.

A few years ago, I noticed that my husband was no longer the active, energetic man I had known for 50 years. I was afraid he was rapidly succumbing to Al-zheimer’s. I mentioned this to his doctor, who attrib-uted it to “old age.” I didn’t like the doctor’s response and had my husband see my physician, who sub-mitted him to some tests. At the second visit, he was diagnosed with a brain tu-mor that was removed two months later.

More recently, I was in constant need of a nap, my hands were shaky and I couldn’t hold anything without dropping it. This time, I was sure I had Par-kinson’s. I went to see the doctor with my self-diag-nosis, but I didn’t need to wait for test results. That evening, when I looked at my nightly medication, I noticed that I had been tak-ing twice the recommended dose.

I’m happy to say I now have the husband I had before, and I can read the mail without picking it up off of the fl oor three times. “Concerned Friend” might discuss her worries with her friend’s relatives and others who spend time with her to see what else may be going on. -- Been There

Father upset about being a ‘mean’ parentAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

10A • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

FRIDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 19, 2014 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Shark Tank (:01) 20/20 Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #Big Brother (N) Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods “Exiles” News Ch. 3 Late Show With David

Letterman Ferguson

QVC $ . Joan Rivers & Dennis Basso Friday Night Beauty (N) Christmas

WCBI $Big Brother (N) Hawaii Five-0 Blue Bloods “Exiles” (:15) The

EndzoneLate Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

WMC % %Running Wild With Bear Grylls

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

WLMT & >Masters-Il-lusion

Whose Line America’s Next Top Model

CW30 News at 9 (N) There Yet? There Yet? Two and Half Men

Modern Family

WBBJ _ _Last Man Standing

Last Man Standing

Shark Tank (:01) 20/20 News at 10pm

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )Running Wild With Bear Grylls

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

WKNO * Behind Headln

Sports Files

The Roosevelts: An Intimate History Roosevelt prepares the U.S. for war. (N)

} › The Devil Bat (41) Bela Lugosi, Suzanne Kaaren.

(:32) Just Seen It

WGN-A + (} ›› Hulk (03, Fantasy) Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly. Scientist Bruce Banner transforms into a powerful brute.

How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met

WMAE , ,The Roosevelts: An Intimate History Roosevelt prepares the U.S. for war. (N)

The Roosevelts: An Intimate History Roosevelt prepares the U.S. for war.

Tavis Smiley

World News

WHBQ ` `Utopia “Week Two in Utopia -- B” (N)

Red Band Society “Pilot” Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 News

TMZ (N) Dish Nation (N)

Access Hollyw’d

WPXX / (6:30) } ›› Demolition Man (93) } ›› The Guardian (06) Kevin Costner, Ashton Kutcher.

WPIX :Masters-Il-lusion

Whose Line America’s Next Top Model

PIX11 News PIX11 Sports

Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

MAX 0 3(6:45) } ›› The Wolverine Wolverine confronts the prospect of real mortality.

The Knick “Start Calling Me Dad” Edwards finds his career in jeopardy. (N)

The Knick “Start Calling Me Dad”

SHOW 2 Masters of Sex “Below the Belt”

} ›› The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (12) Kristen Stewart.

Masters of Sex “Below the Belt”

Ray Donovan “Volcheck”

HBO 4 1(6:15) } ››› Pacific Rim (13) Char-lie Hunnam.

Fight Game Real Time With Bill Maher (N) (L)

Real Time With Bill Maher

} ››› The Bourne Legacy (12)

MTV 5 2 Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. } ›› Fighting (09, Drama) Channing Tatum. Special

ESPN 7 ?College Football: Connecticut at South Florida. American Athletic Conference rivals take the field in Tampa. (N) (Live)

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

SPIKE 8 5Cops Cops Bellator MMA Live The world’s top fighters take part

in this tournament. (N)(:15) Cops (:26) Cops Jail Jail

USA : 8Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

NICK ; C Turtles Turtles Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Mother Mother How I Met/Mother

DISC < DBering Sea Gold: Dredged Up (N)

(:01) Bering Sea Gold (N)

(:02) Airplane Repo “Blood & Mud” (N)

(:03) Bering Sea Gold (:04) Airplane Repo “Blood & Mud”

A&E > Criminal Minds “Nanny Dearest”

(:01) Criminal Minds “No. 6”

(:01) Criminal Minds (:02) Criminal Minds “The Replicator”

(:01) Criminal Minds “Nanny Dearest”

FSSO ? 4Boxing: Golden Boy Live: Emmanuel Gonzalez vs. Tevin Farmer. From Boston.

UEFA Mag. UFC Insider World Poker Tour: Season 12

UFC Unleashed

BET @ F (6:00) } I’m in Love With a Church Girl Being Comic Comic Wendy Williams

H&G C HLove It or List It, Too “Violet & Rob”

Love It or List It, Too (N) House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Love It or List It, Too

E! D E! News Fashion Police (N) Fashion Police E! News (N) Total Divas

HIST E BAmerican Pickers American Pickers American Pickers

“Pam’s Labyrinth”(:03) American Pickers (:01) American Pickers

ESPN2 F @ MLB Baseball: Detroit Tigers at Kansas City Royals. (N) (Live) NFL Live (N) Baseball Tonight

TLC G 19 Kids-Count

19 Kids-Count

Four Weddings (N) (:01) Four Weddings (N) (:02) Four Weddings (:03) Four Weddings

FOOD H Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Eating America

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

INSP I The Waltons JAG “Gypsy Eyes” Matlock Matlock Robin Hood

LIFE J =Movie Movie (:02) Movie

TBN M Trinity Lindsey Harvest P. Stone } › Left Behind (00) Kirk Cameron. Price Spirit

AMC N 0} ›› The Bucket List (07) Jack Nicholson, Mor-gan Freeman.

} ››› Ocean’s Eleven (01) A suave ex-con assembles a team to rob a casino vault.

} Bucket

FAM O <(6:00) } ›› Accepted Justin Long.

} ››› Mean Girls A teen becomes friends with three cruel schoolmates.

The 700 Club } ›› Mean Girls 2 Meaghan Martin.

TCM P } ›› Blonde Venus (32, Drama) Marlene Dietrich.

(:45) } ››› I’m No Angel (33, Comedy) Mae West, Cary Grant.

} ››› She Done Him Wrong

} Blonde-Crz

TNT Q A} ›› Along Came a Spider (01, Mystery) Morgan Freeman, Monica Potter.

(:01) Legends “Gauntlet” (:01) Franklin & Bash (:01) } ››› Mystic River (03)

TBS R *} ›› Old School (03) Three men relive their wild past by starting a fraternity.

Deal With It Deal With It Deal With It Deal With It Deal With It Deal With It

GAME S Newly Newly Newly Newly Newly Newly Skin Wars Baggage Baggage TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Hillbillies Cleve King of Queens King King King Raymond Love-Raymond FS1 Z ARCA Series Racing: Kentucky. (N) (Live) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N)

FX Æ ;} ›› Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (09) Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox. Sam Wit-wicky holds the key to defeating an ancient Decepticon.

} ›› Contraband (12) Mark Wahl-berg, Kate Beckinsale.

OUT Ø SOLO Winch. Fear No Instinct Razor Dobbs Alive Driven Ram Hunting Bone NBCS ∞ Reborn NFL Turning Point Premier MLS Soccer: Colorado Rapids at Real Salt Lake. Racing OWN ± Oprah Oprah Oprah Oprah Oprah FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ Treehouse Masters Treehouse Masters Tanked (N) Treehouse Masters Tanked

HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The Typewriter”

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LJessie (N) Girl Meets Gravity

Falls Wander-Yonder

I Didn’t Do It

Liv & Mad-die

Austin & Ally

A.N.T. Farm Dog With a Blog

Austin & Ally

SYFY EWWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Z Nation The survivors

run out of fuel.Spartacus: Gods of the Arena “Missio”

(:05) Z Nation “Fracking Zombies”

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Coming Sunday in the Daily Corinthian -- 2014 Medical Guide special section

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Dreaming takes effort. And while you’re asleep, your body upholds one side of the deal, keeping you going while repairs are being made. So don’t dis-count relaxation as a waste of time. It’s important.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). To perform well, you have to be physically comfortable. By all means, take the time to get the shoes, clothing and temper-ature-related issues right.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Those who tolerate uncertainty well will have a better (and luck-ier) sense of timing than those who can’t stand not knowing and rush to bad choices, pre-mature action or faulty conclu-sions.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). There are some stories best re-served for your diary, and even then you should write in a secret code, password protect it and lock it away in a drawer. It’s still good to get things out.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Dis-covering something new is

a great pleasure, which is why spoiler alerts aren’t just for movie and book reviews. Sometimes you need a spoiler alert on life! Tell the ones who already know that you’d rather fi nd out for yourself.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You will disagree with your counterpart. Bonds are not bro-ken because of disagreement as long as it is accompanied by respect and a genuine effort to try to understand the other per-son’s point of view.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). There are those you fell in love with immediately and forever. They can do no wrong in your eyes. They may not be around you all that much these days, but you still feel the world is bet-ter just knowing they are in it.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Being well educated in one area does not make a per-son smart across the board. Beware of the expert giving advice outside of his realm of expertise.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). When trouble calls you from the curb, don’t go out to greet it. It’s only a threat if it knocks on your door. If you ig-nore today’s ruckus, the odds are good that it will go away.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You can stave off disap-pointment -- yours or anyone else’s -- by managing expecta-tions. There’s an art to deciding what to expect and how much. It has a lot to do with heeding your intuition.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). The right goal ignites your passion and motivates you. If you’re lukewarm on a goal, go back to the drawing board. You might not come up with any-thing today, but it’s better than starting something you don’t totally care about.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Your sign mate Michelangelo insisted that he never created his magnifi cent statues; he simply revealed them by chis-eling away at any part of rock that didn’t belong. That sums up your work today.

D E A R ABBY: I had suspic ions my dad was cheating on my mom, and when she found a mysterious earring in the house one day, I knew I had to fi nd the proof.

I went into his iPad and checked his email/Facebook and IMs and found he appar-ently has a girlfriend.

She works in his offi ce and is also married with a family.

Dad found out I broke into his iPad and confronted me. In-stead of apologizing for cheat-ing on my mom, he told me I need to think about what I’m do-ing because I could be ruining a bunch of lives.

He also made sure to tell me that by breaking into his iPad, I had broken the law.

I think I should tell my mom because she doesn’t deserve this, but I’m not sure how to tell her. HELP! -- FOUND THE PROOF IN GEORGIA

DEAR FOUND THE PROOF: There is a saying, “The best de-fense is a good offense.”

That’s the playbook your fa-

ther is following by trying to make you feel guilty for HIS transgression.

Because your mother found another woman’s jewelry in her home, she may already have a hunch that something is wrong. It is not your job to save any-body’s marriage.

Tell your mother what you have discovered, because her marriage is threatened and she deserves to know so she can decide how she wants to handle it.

Forewarned is forearmed.

DEAR ABBY: My husband, “Evan,” and my mother do not get along. It began when our second child was born.

Mom came to help out, and she and Evan engaged in tense conversations concerning poli-tics and religion. I

asked them to please not talk about such things with each other, but they didn’t listen.

Two days after my arrival home with the baby, they had a huge argument and Mom walked out.

She has never returned to our home.

Since then, I have never had a holiday with my parents, al-though I do travel once or twice a year with the kids to see them.

Mom and Evan did come to

an understanding when our third child was born, but that, too, ended in separation six months later.

I have tried asking them both to apologize or talk with each other, to no avail.

I can’t control either person, so what suggestions do you have to repair the relationship so I can have family holidays and get-togethers again? -- IN THE MIDDLE IN COLORADO

DEAR IN THE MIDDLE: From where I sit, you’re not in the middle -- your husband and your mother are on the OUTS.

Much as you might wish dif-ferently, the only people who can fi x this are the two of them. If they were more mature, they would, in the name of family harmony, agree to disagree.

Until they reorganize their pri-orities, you have no choice but to create your own family dur-ing holidays by getting together and celebrating with friends or other relatives if they are close by.

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

Suspicions confirmed: proof of infidelity is found online

Page 11: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 19, 2014 • 11A

NEW YORK — More encouraging economic news and friendly signals from the Federal Re-serve cheered investors on Thursday, as the stock market climbed to anoth-er record high.

The gains came a day after the Fed made clear that it’s in no hurry to raise a key bank lending rate, easing a major con-cern for the stock market.

Eight of 10 industry groups in the Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose, led by fi nancial stocks.

“The question isn’t ‘Why are we up today?’” said Dan Veru, chief in-vestment offi cer at Pali-sade Capital Partners in New York. “It’s ‘Why aren’t we up a lot more?’ What you’re seeing is the U.S. economy growing at a modest pace, not too hot and not too cold.”

Veru said it’s an envi-ronment that allows the Fed to stick to a policy that coaxes businesses to borrow and spend and could fuel further gains for stocks.

The S&P 500 and Dow Jones industrial aver-age closed at all-time highs. The S&P 500 in-dex gained 9.79 points, or 0.5 percent, to 2,011.36. The Dow surged 109.14 points, or 0.6 percent, to 17,265.99. The Nasdaq composite climbed 31.24 points, or 0.7 percent, to 4,593.43.

The S&P Financials sec-tor rose 1.1 percent. Bank profi ts could rise if short-term rates stay low while the rates they charge on longer-term loans creep higher.

The day began with good news about the economy. Fewer Ameri-cans fi led fi rst-time claims for unemploy-

ment benefi ts last week, according to the Labor Department. Weekly ap-plications fell to 280,000, well below economists’ forecasts. The four-week average, a less-volatile measure, also dropped.

Major markets in Eu-rope headed higher as voters in Scotland decid-ed whether to break from the United Kingdom. Ger-many’s DAX advanced 1.4 percent, and France’s CAC 40 gained 0.8 per-cent. Britain’s FTSE 100 added 0.6 percent.

Scotland opened poll-ing stations on Thurs-day for a referendum on whether the country should leave the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to become an independent state. Opinion polls have suggested the “Yes” cam-paign favoring indepen-dence is neck and neck with the “No” campaign

that wants Scotland to stay in the U.K.

“A ‘yes’ vote is likely to weigh heavily on the ster-ling and equities,” said IG strategist Stan Shamu in a commentary. “A ‘no’ vote should result in a re-lief rally and is likely to be positive for the sterling and equities.”

The pound was trading at a two-year high against the euro at €1.27, and holding steady against the dollar at $1.64.

On Wednesday in the U.S., the Fed maintained its stance of keeping short-term interest rates near zero for a “consider-able time.” Investors had speculated that the Fed might hint at an earlier start for rate hikes.

Among companies making big moves on Thursday, Rite Aid plunged 19 percent after it cut its profi t forecasts for the full year, laying part of

the blame on higher costs for generic drugs. The drugstore chain still ex-pects sales of $26 billion this year. Rite Aid’s stock fell $1.23 to $5.41.

ConAgra said its quar-terly profi ts nearly tri-pled, sending its stock up $1.47, or 5 percent, to $33.48. Sales for the company behind Chef Boyardee canned pasta and Hebrew National hot dogs were fl at, but other costs fell.

Alibaba Group is ex-pected to wrap up its mammoth initial public offering later Thursday, then make its debut on the New York Stock Ex-change on Friday under the symbol “BABA.”

The Chinese e-com-merce company could raise as much as $21.8 billion from institutional investors, making it the largest IPO on record in the U.S.

Elsewhere, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fi n-ished 0.9 percent lower and Japan’s Nikkei 225 gained 1 percent as the yen traded at a six-year low against the dollar. Markets in mainland Chi-na, India and Southeast Asia also rose.

In commodity trad-ing, prices for precious and industrial metals fell broadly. Gold dropped $9 to settle at $1,226.90 an ounce, and silver sank 22 cents to $18.52. Copper dropped 5 cents to $3.09.

The price of oil fell on expectations of a quick re-turn of Libyan production and continuing signals of lower global demand. Benchmark U.S. crude fell $1.35 to close at $93.07 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many U.S. refi neries, fell $1.27 to close at $97.70 in London.

Stocks rise amid calm about lending rateBY MATTHEW CRAFT

AP Business Writer

Associated PressPORTLAND, Ore. —

Gidget is going back to Pennsylvania.

A Jack Russell terrier that somehow ended up in Oregon more than four months after she went missing from her home near Philadelphia will soon be fl own back to the Keystone State.

A microchip implanted in Gidget allowed workers at an animal shelter south of Portland to fi nd the dog’s owner. PetLink, the

company that manufac-tured the microchip, will pay for her return fl ight, said Deborah Wood, manager of Animal Ser-vices for Washington County.

“We have no idea how she came from Pennsyl-vania to Oregon, but we are thrilled that she will be going home safe and sound,” Wood said.

Gidget’s odyssey at-tracted national atten-tion Wednesday, spur-ring many people to offer

money for the fl ight .Wood said the dog’s

owner asked to remain private, but wants every-one to know she’s grateful for the outpouring of sup-port. She did not have the

money to fl y to Oregon to retrieve her dog.

A good Samaritan spot-ted the 7-year-old dog earlier this month wan-dering in the Portland suburb of Tualatin.

Dog found in Oregon heads home to Pennsylvania

Great SelectionLowest Prices

1005 Hwy 72 W. • Corinth, MS • 662.594.1842Mon-Sat 10am-9pm

7 DIFFERENT PREFORMEDCOUNTERTOPS

$795 per liner ft.

ROCK

Y L

ACRO

SSE

NIK

E N

EW B

ALAN

CE

COLU

MBI

A

RUSSELL UNDER ARMOR M

OSSY OAK BROWNINGBERETTA REMINGTON WINCHESTER WEATHERBY BENELLI

OPEN 8:00 AM UNTIL 7:00 PM MON - SAT

Athletic/Fishing Supplies Under Armor Clothing & Sandals

Columbia PFG ShirtsCosta del Mar Sunglasses

Yeti Coolers

602 South Cass Street • Corinth, MS 38834(Beside Goody’s) (Beside Goody’s) 662-287-2323

Momma’s HomemadeMomma’s HomemadeRecipeRecipe

Friday 5pm - Until

FRY-DAYNIGHT

FISH FRYWith Unlimited

Sides

BEST HUSHPUPPIES YOU BEST HUSHPUPPIES YOU HAVE EVER TASTED!HAVE EVER TASTED!

JOIN US AT LUNCHTIME!

726 S. Tate St.(College Hill Rd)

THE PIT STOP

FRESHFRESHBBQ Chicken, BBQ Chicken, Ribs & Brisket Ribs & Brisket

Also AvailableAlso Available

FAMILY PACKSFAMILY PACKSTO GO!TO GO!

$5.50$5.50+ FREE+ FREEDessertDessert

1 Meat1 Meat3 Vegetables3 Vegetables& Bread& BreadDifferent Varieties of Different Varieties of homemade vegetables dailyhomemade vegetables daily

662.665.9109

Page 12: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12A • Daily Corinthian Friday, September 19, 2014

Local Schedule

Today

FootballSmithville @ Biggersville, 7Corinth @ New Albany, 7 (WXRZ)Kossuth @ Nettleton, 7Central @ Mantachie, 7Booneville @ Tishomingo Co., 7South Pontotoc @ Walnut, 7Fayette-Ware @ McNairy, 7Falkner @ Hamilton, 7Independence @ New Site, 7Ripley @ Calhoun City, 7Coffeeville @ Thrasher, 7Open: Belmont 

Saturday

FootballICC @ Northwest, 2VolleyballCorinth @ Tupelo TourneyCross CountryAC @ Saltillo InvitationalCorinth @ Saltillo Invitational

Shorts

Basketball Camp

The Hoop Dreams Basketball Camp -- for ages 4-14 -- will be held Oct. 4 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Easom Outreach Foundation. Registration deadline is to-day. For more information contact Janai Patterson (231-8905), Stephanie Pat-terson (643-3921) or Kolisha Strickland (415-1117).

FootballBaldwyn 13, Saltillo 0, suspendedEast 65, Northeast 7 SoftballCorinth 5, Mooreville 4Pine Grove 6, Biggersville 2 VolleyballCentral 3, Potts Camp 0Corinth 3, Lafayette Co. 0

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

Corinth answered Moor-eville’s seventh-inning run ... twice over.

The Lady Warriors sent fi ve batters to the plate and all reached in a two-run seventh as Corinth (11-5) registered a walk-off win over perennial 3A contender Mooreville on Thursday.

Mooreville (11-4) snapped a 3-3 tie with a single run in the seventh. Hallie Donald’s two-out double to left staked the Lady Troopers to a 4-3 lead.

Corinth didn’t need any of its allotted three outs in the home half.

Jamia Kirk reached on an error and Anna Kayte Webb followed with her second double of the game.

“We had the top of the order up and when Jamia got on, I felt we had a good chance to win it,” said CHS Head Coach Rob Scarbrough. “Anna Kayte Webb, Katie Vandiver, Re-bekah Williams and Colby Cox were due up and they all got it done.”

After Katie Vandiver was walked to set up the double play and force out at home, Rebekah Williams delivered her second hit of the night to re-tie the contest at 4-4.

Colby Cox, who tied Donald

for game honors with three hits, laced a 1-2 pitch into left fi eld for the walk-off win.

“She had a big game at the plate,” said Scarbrough.

Webb and Williams fol-lowed Cox’s hat trick with two hits each. Cox also added a double.

Both clubs registered 11 hits and eight singles. Moor-eville had a pair of doubles to go along with Donald’s fi rst-inning solo home run.

Cox’s heroics put Corinth on the winning end of a close contest. CHS was coming off a 6-4 Division 1-4A loss at Amory on Tuesday and had dropped a 2-1 decision to an-

other 3A contender Nettleton in its second of three games on Saturday.

“We played really good de-fensively and that kept us in the game with a good Moor-eville club,” said Scarbrough. “Allie Rhea Jacobs pitched re-ally well.”

  Corinth 5, Mooreville 4

Mooreville 100 020 1 -- 4 11 3Corinth 101 010 2 -- 5 11 1

  WP: Allie Jacobs (11-5). LP: Abby

McDonald.Multiple Hits: (M) Hallie Donald 3,

Summer Cryder 2. (C) Colby Cox 3, Anna Kayte Webb 2, Rebekah Wil-liams 2. 2B: (M) Cryder, Donald. (C) Webb 2, Cox. HR: (C) Donald.

Records: Mooreville 11-4, Corinth 11-5

Lady Warriors walk off for 11th win

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

The Corinth Warriors are looking to bounce back from their fi rst regular-season loss since Aug. 30, 2013 while continuing one of its oldest series.

Corinth (3-1) travels to New Albany (0-4) as the teams battle for the 30th consecu-tive season. It will be the 65th meeting dating back to 1923 between two of the Little 10 Conference charter members.

The Warriors saw their 12-game regular-season winning streak come to a halt last Fri-day with a 38-33 loss at Boon-eville. The Blue Devils scored 14 unanswered points to end

a three-game slide against the Warriors.

“The loss speaks for itself,” said third-year CHS Head Coach Doug Jones. “They just beat us.”

Corinth rolled up 285 yards in the opening half and led 33-24 after three quarters. The Warriors managed just one fi rst down and nine yards on 13 plays in the fourth quar-ter.

Meanwhile, Booneville re-sponded with 203 yards of offense in a 21-point second half. The Warriors also suf-fered on both sides of the kicking game.

“We need to have improve-ment offensively, defensively

and on special teams,” said Jones.

Corinth has split its last two games, but given up nine touchdowns and 768 yards on defense. Last week’s loss was evidenced by a bad week of practice.

“They always say you play how you practice,” said de-fensive coordinator Jonathan Beard.

Jones concurred.“We’ve really had a good

week of practice this week,” said Jones. “The players have done an excellent job of get-ting better this week.”

Corinth is the fourth

Warriors looking to bounce back from loss

Please see WARRIORS | 13A

BY DAVID BRANDTAP Sports Writer

OXFORD — Mississippi cornerback Senquez Gol-son’s biggest claim to fame had been an embarrassing play against Alabama in 2011, when Trent Richardson faked him two different times dur-ing a 76-yard touchdown run.

Now the senior is fi nally making some highlights that he’s proud to have shown.

The 5-foot-9, 176-pounder leads the Southeastern Con-ference with three intercep-tions so far this season, in-cluding one that was returned 59 yards for a touchdown in last weekend’s 56-15 victory over Louisiana-Lafayette.

“It took me about three years to get it right,” Golson said with a grin.

The 10th-ranked Rebels (3-0, 1-0 SEC) are off this

weekend before a home game against Memphis on Sept. 27. A big reason for the team’s fast start — and highest na-tional ranking since 2009 — is an opportunistic defense that already has eight inter-ceptions.

Safeties Cody Prewitt, Tony Connor and Trae Elston were supposed to be the strength of the secondary coming into the season, and all three have

been very good, but the emer-gence of Golson has given the Rebels a quality cover corner-back that is consistently mak-ing big plays.

Golson has always been a gifted athlete and there was some question if he’d even come to Ole Miss to play foot-ball. The Pascagoula, Missis-sippi, native was also a star

Golson’s improvement key for Ole Miss

Please see GOLSON | 13A

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

Kossuth (3-1) @ Nettleton (1-3)

When: Tonight, 7Where: Nettleton High SchoolCoaches: Kossuth, Brian Kelly (4th

year, 22-17); Nettleton, Mike Scott (3rd year at NHS, 9-18)

Last Meeting: Nettleton won 6-0 last year.

Series History: Dating back to 1960, Nettleton leads 14-9.

Last Week: Kossuth blanked Tisho-mingo County 39-0, Nettleton lost 33-27 at Shannon.

The Skinny: Kossuth looks to con-tinue on its revenge tour, venturing to Nettleton for the fi rst time since 1994. The teams met every season from 1963-82 -- mostly Tombigbee Conference contests -- but this is just the third encounter over the last 32 years.

After opening the season with a 42-0 loss at Corinth, the Aggies have

reeled off three wins -- avenging two losses from 2013 in the process. KHS reversed those losses in style, outscoring McNairy Central (Tenn.) and Tishomingo County 59-0 after dropping those contests by a com-bined eight points last season.

Nettleton eked out a 6-0 win last season in a monsoon. The Tigers had less than 100 yards of offense, including negative numbers rushing.

Kossuth has put up 15 touchdowns during its three-game winning streak. QB Weston Bobo has accounted for six scores -- four in last week’s win -- while Matt Stewart and Elijah Potts headline a deep running back corps with three rushing TDs each.

 Alcorn Central (1-3) @ Mantachie

(2-2)

When: Tonight, 7Where: Mantachie High SchoolCoaches: Alcorn Central, Jeff Boren

(3rd year, 5-21); Mantachie, Timothy Joe Seago (1st year, 2-2)

Last Meeting: Mantachie rolled 52-0 last season.

Series History: Mantachie leads 3-1. Teams fi rst met in 1982.

Last Week: Alcorn Central lost 40-0 at Hatley, Mantachie lost 40-6 at Mooreville.

The Skinny: T.J. Seago faces off with his former rival for the fi rst time as a head coach as Alcorn Central visits Mantachie. In his fi nal on-fi eld appearance against the Golden Bears in 1999, Seago rushed for 301 yards and had 471 yards of offense -- both school marks -- as Kossuth prevailed 54-20.

Mantachie has alternated wins and losses and is facing its fourth of fi ve straight Class 3A foes. In fact the Mustangs are facing their third Divi-sion 1-3A member -- losses to Bel-mont and Mooreville -- while the Bears are facing the third of four straight 1-2A teams, having lost previously to Walnut and Hatley with New Site on the horizon.

The Mustangs got six offensive TDs and a fumble return while converting fi ve 2-point conversions in last year’s 52-0 win. Mantachie had 297 yards of offense, including 138 and 3 scores on the ground from then-sophomore Alston Dill. AC was limited to 65 yards on 47 plays, including 0-of-10 pass-ing.

Central has been outscored 124-6 in their three games following a sea-son-opening 42-8 win over Biggers-ville. The Bears have been blanked twice and posted 26 points twice in their previous outings against the Mustangs.

 Smithville (3-1, 1-0) @ Biggersville

(0-4, 0-1)

When: Tonight, 7Where: Lions’ Den, Biggersville

High SchoolCoaches: Smithville, Chad Collums

(1st year, 3-1), Biggersville, Ronnie

Tonight’s Ticket: Alcorn County Football Capsules

Local Scores

Staff Photo by H. Lee Smith II

Corinth defensive coordinator Jonathan Beard talks over things with Brady Pratt (15), Dee Brown (17), Domerius Campbell (33) and other defensive players during the Oxford/Ole Miss Jamboree.

Please see CAPSULES | 13A

Corinth (3-1) @ New Albany (0-4)

When: Tonight, 7Where: Kitchens Field, New Albany High SchoolOn the Air: WXRZ-FM (94.3) “Game of the Week”Coaches: Corinth, Doug Jones (3rd year, 21-6); New Albany, Ron Price (6th year, 40-27)Last Meeting: Corinth won 24-16 last season.Series History: Dating back to 1923, Corinth leads 40-22-2Last Week: Corinth lost 38-33 at Booneville, New Albany lost 33-28 at Amory.

BY BLAKE D. LONGNEMCC Sports Information

SCOOBA— Top ranked East Mis-sissippi Community College defeated Northeast Mississippi Community College 58-7 on Thursday night at Sul-livan-Windham Field to keep its lead in the MACJC North Division.

The Lions turned four Tiger turn-overs into points. Allen Sentimore, De-metrius Cain and Quan Latham each returned interceptions for touchdowns while DJ Law caught a 49-yard scoring pass from Chad Kelly after a Northeast fumble.

Kelly also had touchdown passes to Camion Patrick and Kameron Myers to help East Mississippi (4-0, 2-0) take a 51-7 lead at the break.

Northeast (1-3, 1-1) broke a score-less streak of nine quarters against the Lions with a Joe Horn, Jr., 21-yard touchdown catch from Brett Thomp-son just before the break. The Tigers drove 80 yards on only four plays during that possession. Marcus Rob-inson and Jamel Dennis continued to impress during their sophomore sea-sons. Robinson, an Ole Miss commit, and Dennis both had interceptions as did fellow linebacker Mario Virges. Northeast returns home next week-end to host Coahoma Community Col-lege. The annual meeting of the Tigers serves as Northeast’s homecoming matchup and kicks off at 3 p.m. at Ti-ger Stadium.

For a complete recap, statistics, video and more from Northeast’s road trip to Scooba, visit www.nemccathlet-ics.com throughout the weekend.

No. 1 East Miss. 65, Northeast 7

Northeast 0 7 0 0 - 7East Miss. 37 14 7 7 - 65

 First Quarter

EM – Camion Patrick 12 pass from Chad Kelly (Drew White kick), 13:14.

EM – Bad Snap for Safety, 8:27.EM – DJ Law 49 pass from Kelly (White kick),

8:10.EM – Allen Sentimore 32 INT return (White

kick), 6:54.EM – Kameron Myers 4 pass from Kelly (White

kick), 3:14.EM – Law 24 pass from Kelly (White kick),

:08.3. Second Quarter

EM – Demetrius Cain 55 INT return (White kick), 13:01.

EM – Todd Mays 13 run (White kick), 2:34.NE – Joe Horn Jr. 21 pass from Brett Thompson

(Cesar Resendiz kick), 0:41.8. Third Quarter

EM – Quan Latham 55 INT return (White kick), 11:55.

 Fourth Quarter

EM – Mays 21 run (White kick), 13:30.

Top-ranked East rolls past Tigers

Please see SHORTS | 13A

Page 13: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

ScoreboardBaseballA.L. standings, schedule

East Division W L Pct GBx-Baltimore 92 60 .605 —New York 77 74 .510 14½Toronto 77 74 .510 14½Tampa Bay 74 79 .484 18½Boston 66 86 .434 26

Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 84 68 .553 —Kansas City 83 68 .550 ½Cleveland 78 73 .517 5½Chicago 69 83 .454 15Minnesota 65 87 .428 19

West Division W L Pct GBx-Los Angeles 95 57 .625 —Oakland 83 69 .546 12Seattle 81 70 .536 13½Houston 67 85 .441 28Texas 60 92 .395 35

x-clinched division Wild-Card standings

W L Pct WCGBOakland 83 68 .550 —Kansas City 83 68 .550 —Seattle 81 70 .536 2Cleveland 78 73 .517 5Toronto 77 74 .510 6

–––Wednesday’s Games

Pittsburgh 9, Boston 1Baltimore 6, Toronto 1N.Y. Yankees 3, Tampa Bay 2Kansas City 6, Chicago White Sox 2Cleveland 2, Houston 0Minnesota 8, Detroit 4L.A. Angels 5, Seattle 0Texas 6, Oakland 1

Thursday’s GamesTexas 7, Oakland 2Pittsburgh 3,Boston 2 Toronto 2, N.Y. Yankees 3Cleveland at HoustonSeattle at L.A. Angels, (n)

Today’s GamesBoston (Webster 4-3) at Baltimore

(Gausman 7-7), 6:05 p.m.Toronto (Buehrle 12-9) at N.Y. Yankees

(Kuroda 10-9), 6:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Quintana 8-10) at

Tampa Bay (Hellickson 1-3), 6:10 p.m.Cleveland (Bauer 5-8) at Minnesota

(P.Hughes 15-10), 7:10 p.m.Detroit (Verlander 13-12) at Kansas

City (J.Vargas 11-9), 7:10 p.m.Seattle (T.Walker 1-2) at Houston (Pea-

cock 4-8), 7:10 p.m.Philadelphia (D.Buchanan 6-7) at Oak-

land (Lester 15-10), 8:35 p.m.Texas (Bonilla 1-0) at L.A. Angels

(H.Santiago 5-8), 9:05 p.m.Saturday’s Games

Detroit at Kansas City, 12:05 p.m.Philadelphia at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.Toronto at N.Y. Yankees, 3:05 p.m.Boston at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Tampa Bay, 6:10

p.m.Cleveland at Minnesota, 6:10 p.m.Seattle at Houston, 6:10 p.m.Texas at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesToronto at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m.Boston at Baltimore, 12:35 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Tampa Bay,

12:40 p.m.Cleveland at Minnesota, 1:10 p.m.Detroit at Kansas City, 1:10 p.m.Seattle at Houston, 1:10 p.m.Texas at L.A. Angels, 2:35 p.m.Philadelphia at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBx-Washington 87 64 .576 —Atlanta 76 76 .500 11½Miami 74 77 .490 13New York 73 80 .477 15Philadelphia 70 82 .461 17½

Central Division W L Pct GBSt. Louis 84 68 .553 —Pittsburgh 81 70 .536 2½Milwaukee 79 73 .520 5Cincinnati 71 82 .464 13½Chicago 68 84 .447 16

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 86 66 .566 —San Francisco 84 68 .553 2San Diego 70 81 .464 15½Arizona 62 90 .408 24Colorado 61 91 .401 25

x-clinched divisionWild-card standings

W L Pct WCGBSan Francisco 84 68 .553 —Pittsburgh 81 70 .536 —Milwaukee 79 73 .520 2½Atlanta 76 76 .500 5½

–––Wednesday’s Games

Colorado 16, L.A. Dodgers 2San Francisco 4, Arizona 2Pittsburgh 9, Boston 1Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3Atlanta 3, Washington 1Chicago Cubs 3, Cincinnati 1St. Louis 2, Milwaukee 0Philadelphia 5, San Diego 2

Thursday’s GamesPittsburgh 3,Boston 2Washington at MiamiL.A. Dodgers 8,t Chicago Cubs 4Milwaukee at St. LouisColorado 7, Arizona 6 Philadelphia at San Diego, (n)

Today’s GamesL.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 19-3) at Chi-

cago Cubs (E.Jackson 6-14), 1:20 p.m.Milwaukee (Gallardo 8-10) at Pitts-

burgh (Locke 7-5), 6:05 p.m.Washington (Fister 14-6) at Miami

(Koehler 9-9), 6:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Za.Wheeler 10-10) at At-

lanta (Teheran 13-12), 6:35 p.m.Arizona (C.Anderson 9-6) at Colorado

(Lyles 6-3), 7:10 p.m.Cincinnati (Holmberg 1-1) at St. Louis

(Lackey 2-2), 7:15 p.m.Philadelphia (D.Buchanan 6-7) at Oak-

land (Lester 15-10), 8:35 p.m.San Francisco (T.Hudson 9-11) at San

Diego (Despaigne 3-7), 9:10 p.m.Saturday’s Games

L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, 12:05 p.m.

Philadelphia at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.Arizona at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m.Washington at Miami, 6:10 p.m.Cincinnati at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m.San Francisco at San Diego, 7:40 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesWashington at Miami, 12:10 p.m.Milwaukee at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 12:35 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, 1:20

p.m.Philadelphia at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.Arizona at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.San Francisco at San Diego, 3:10 p.m.Cincinnati at St. Louis, 7:05 p.m.

Football

NFL standings, scheduleAMERICAN CONFERENCE

East

W L T Pct PF PABuffalo 2 0 0 1.000 52 30Miami 1 1 0 .500 43 49N.Y. Jets 1 1 0 .500 43 45New England 1 1 0 .500 50 40

South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 2 0 0 1.000 47 20Tennessee 1 1 0 .500 36 36Jacksonville 0 2 0 .000 27 75Indianapolis 0 2 0 .000 51 61

North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 2 0 0 1.000 47 26Baltimore 1 1 0 .500 42 29Pittsburgh 1 1 0 .500 36 53Cleveland 1 1 0 .500 53 54

West W L T Pct PF PADenver 2 0 0 1.000 55 41San Diego 1 1 0 .500 47 39Oakland 0 2 0 .000 28 49Kansas City 0 2 0 .000 27 50

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAPhiladelphia 2 0 0 1.000 64 44Washington 1 1 0 .500 47 27Dallas 1 1 0 .500 43 38N.Y. Giants 0 2 0 .000 28 60

South W L T Pct PF PACarolina 2 0 0 1.000 44 21Atlanta 1 1 0 .500 47 58New Orleans 0 2 0 .000 58 63Tampa Bay 0 2 0 .000 31 39

North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 1 1 0 .500 48 43Minnesota 1 1 0 .500 41 36Detroit 1 1 0 .500 42 38Green Bay 1 1 0 .500 47 60

West W L T Pct PF PAArizona 2 0 0 1.000 43 31Seattle 1 1 0 .500 57 46San Francisco 1 1 0 .500 48 45St. Louis 1 1 0 .500 25 51

–––Thursday’s game

Atlanta 56, Tampa Bay 14Sunday

Dallas at St. Louis, NoonMinnesota at New Orleans, NoonSan Diego at Buffalo, NoonWashington at Philadelphia, NoonHouston at N.Y. Giants, NoonTennessee at Cincinnati, NoonBaltimore at Cleveland, NoonGreen Bay at Detroit, NoonIndianapolis at Jacksonville, NoonOakland at New England, NoonSan Francisco at Arizona, 3:05 p.m.Denver at Seattle, 3:25 p.m.Kansas City at Miami, 3:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at Carolina, 7:30 p.m.

Monday, Sep. 22Chicago at N.Y. Jets, 7:30 p.m.

Thursday’s college scoresToday

Auburn 20, Kansas State 14

Today’s college scheduleEAST

Holy Cross (2-1) at Harvard (0-0), 6 p.m.

SOUTHUConn (1-2) at South Florida (1-2), 7 p.m.

TransactionsThursday’s deals

BASEBALLAmerican League

OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Signed a four-year player development contract

with Nashville (PCL) through the 2018 season.

National LeagueCHICAGO CUBS — Signed a four-year

player development contract with South Bend (MWL) through the 2018 season.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Claimed INF Pedro Florimon off waivers from Min-nesota. Designated OF Eury Perez for as-signment.

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

CHICAGO BULLS — Signed G E’Twaun Moore.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

ARIZONA CARDINALS — Re-signed RB Jalen Parmele. Placed RB Jonathan Dw-yer on the reserve/non-football illness list.

CHICAGO BEARS — Signed CB Demon-tre Hurst.

SOCCERMajor League Soccer

MLS — Fined Los Angeles coach Bruce Arena $20,000 for making critical com-ments of the league.

National Women’s Soccer LeagueSKY BLUE FC — Re-signed MF Katy

Freels.COLLEGE

TEXAS TECH — Announced the res-ignation of defensive coordinator Matt Wallerstedt. Named Mike Smith interim defensive coordinator.

Television

Today’s lineupAUTO RACING

8:30 a.m. (NBCSN) – Formula One, practice for Singapore Grand Prix

11 a.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for SYLVANIA 300, at Loudon, N.H.

12:30 p.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Truck Se-ries, practice for UNOH 175, at Loudon, N.H.

2 p.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Truck Series, fi nal practice for UNOH 175, at Loudon, N.H.

3:30 p.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for SYLVANIA 300, at Loudon, N.H.

5:30 p.m. (FS1) – NASCAR, Nation-wide Series, fi nal practice for VisitMyrtle-Beach.com 300, at Sparta, Ky.

7 p.m. (FS1) – ARCA, ZLOOP 150 at Sparta, Ky.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL7 p.m. (ESPN) – Connecticut at South

FloridaGOLF

9 a.m. (TGC) – European PGA Tour, Wales Open, second round, part II, at Newport, Wales

1 p.m. (TGC) – Web.com Tour Cham-pionship, second round, at Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.

4 p.m. (TGC) – LPGA, Yokohama Tire Classic, second round, at Prattville, Ala.

6:30 p.m. (TGC) – Champions Tour, Hawaii Championship, fi rst round, at Ka-polei, Hawaii

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL1 p.m. (MLB) – L.A. Dodgers at Chicago

Cubs1:15 p.m. (WGN) – L.A. Dodgers at

Chicago Cubs7 p.m. (ESPN2) – Detroit at Kansas

City9 p.m. (MLB) – Regional coverage, San

Francisco at San Diego or Texas at L.A. Angels

SOCCER9 p.m. (NBCSN) – MLS, Colorado at

Real Salt Lake

13A • Daily Corinthian Friday, September 19, 2014

The Associated PressMANHATTAN, Kan. —

Nick Marshall threw two touchdown passes, Au-burn forced three turn-overs and the fi fth-ranked Tigers held on to beat mis-take-prone No. 20 Kansas State 20-14 on Thursday night.

Marshall fi nished with 231 yards passing for the Tigers (3-0), who were forced to the air by a Wildcats defense that was bent on stopping the run. The nation’s sixth-ranked rushing attack had only 130 yards on the ground, 200 less than its season average.

Not that it mattered the way Kansas State (2-1) squandered its chances.

Jake Waters threw for 245 yards, but he also tossed two interceptions — one in the Auburn end zone. The Wildcats also fumbled the ball away, and Jack Cantele missed three fi eld-goal attempts.

Kansas State tried to mount a rally in the clos-ing minutes, scoring on a run by Charles Jones out of the wildcat forma-

tion with 3:49 left. After the kickoff, Auburn soon faced third-and-9 at its own 37 with 2:06 left. Marshall dropped back and found D’haquille Wil-liams running wide open downfi eld, and the 39-yard completion resulted in a fi rst down and effec-tively ended the game.

The win was the Tigers’ fi rst on the road against a nonconference opponent since Virginia in 1997, and the fi rst over a ranked nonconference foe on the road since Florida State in 1984.

Auburn was the highest-ranked team to play in Manhattan since second-ranked Penn State in 1969, and an overfl ow crowd started tailgating Tuesday. The festivities continued until shortly after kickoff, when the Wildcats started to throw away opportuni-ties to spring an upset.

The fi rst serious miscue was a fumbled handoff deep in Kansas State ter-ritory. Auburn hopped on the loose ball and, four plays later, kicked a 34-yard fi eld goal to take a

3-0 lead.The second turnover

was even more costly. The Wildcats had second-and-goal from the Auburn 2, and Waters zipped a pass that bounced off Tyler Lockett’s shoulder pads in the end zone. Rather than an easy touchdown, the ball was picked off by the Tigers’ Jonathan Jones.

The Wildcats kept buck-ling down on defense, though, stuffi ng Auburn’s read-option attack. The Tigers had just 55 yards rushing in the fi rst half, the fewest in the Gus Mal-zahn era.

The nation’s best team in converting third downs also failed on its fi rst fi ve attempts.

Kansas State fi nally scored with 4:56 left in the fi rst half when DeMarcus Robinson scampered in from 3 yards out for his fi rst career touchdown. But the Tigers hurried the other way, capping a 75-yard drive with Marshall’s 40-yard strike to Ricardo Louis for a 10-7 lead.

Cantele pushed a po-tential tying fi eld-goal at-

tempt wide on the fi nal play of the half, his sec-ond miss of the night. He hooked one wide left late in the fi rst quarter.

He made it a frustrating hat-trick midway through the third quarter.

The Wildcats had once again marched downfi eld, and once again pushed the ball inside the Auburn 5. But after the Tigers stiff-ened, Cantele was sum-moned to try a 22-yarder — a mere chip-shot, hardly more than an extra point. He missed it wide right.

Given a chance to put the game away, Auburn quickly capitalized.

Riding on the broad shoulders of running back Cameron Artis-Payne, Au-burn marched 80 yards amid the din of the 15th straight sellout at Bill Sny-der Family Stadium.

Marshall then capped it with a nifty fade pass to Williams in the corner of the end zone for a 17-7 lead.

Daniel Carlson tacked on his second fi eld goal of the night to build on the cushion.

No. 5 Auburn holds off No. 20 K-State

SHORTS

WARRIORS

straight Division 1-4A opponent for the Divi-sion 2-4A Bulldogs. NA is 0-4, but three of the losses are by a combined 10 points and the set-backs of three, two and fi ve were on the road.

“They are not a bad football team at all,” said Jones. “They’re always a solid football team, re-gardless of their record.”

The Bulldogs are coached by former Al-corn Central standout Ron Price, who’s in his sixth season.

Price led NA to back-to-back wins in 2010 and 2011, before Corinth answered with two of its

on.Corinth took a 24-

16 win last season in a pouring rain. The War-riors amassed 315 yards in the elements, but only Antares Gwyn’s 87 pass-ing yards are back this time around.

The Warriors have posted 1,068 yards on the ground and 495 through the air for 1,563 yards in four games....just under 400 per out-ing. Montavious Shields leads the ground attack with 414 yards on 65 carries. Gwyn has 255 despite suffering seven sacks last week.

Isaac Haney has 213 in three games and is aver-aging 8.9 per attempt.

CONTINUED FROM 12A

CAPSULES

Lawson (12th season, 32-92).Last Meeting: Smithville won

47-6 last season.Series History: Smithville

leads 25-5. Teams fi rst met in 1976.

Last Week: Smithville beat Thrasher 20-7, Biggersville lost 28-0 at Coldwater.

The Skinny: The weird his-tory between the two programs continues with the 31st meet-ing tonight. Biggersville won the fi rst fi ve in the series -- 1976-80 -- while Smithville has claimed the last 25.

The now-division foes didn’t play between 1981-86, but have played 25 of the last 27 years -- missing out in 2003-04.

BHS surrendered a season-low 28 points in their 1-1A opener at Coldwater, but were blanked for the second straight week.

The Lions turned the ball over fi ve times, including four inter-ceptions.

Tyran Davis and Bradley Da-vis combined for 278 of the Lions’ 282 all-purpose yards last week. BHS had 108 yards on 37 carries, 105 courtesy the two.

Darious Deen paced the de-fensive effort with a team-high-tying eight tackles and a team-best three sacks.

Bradley Davis has now rushed for 373 yards on 69 carries, and has totaled 745 all-purpose digits with four of the team’s fi ve touchdowns.

CONTINUED FROM 12A

NE Baseball Showcase

Northeast Mississippi Community College has scheduled a fall baseball showcase for Saturday at Harold T. White Field.

The third annual event gets underway at noon and is open to any high school athlete in the ninth-through-twelfth grades. Each participant is expected to bring their own equipment, which in-cludes but is not limited to athletic apparel, cleats, a glove, a bat and a helmet. Baseballs will be provided. Registration is $60.

To register, go to www.nemccathletics.com and completely fill out the form that is available on the baseball page. Please make checks payable to Northeast Baseball and send by mail to Kent Farris, 101 Cunningham Blvd., Booneville, Miss., 38829.

Golf Tournament

Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club is holding the Rally For a Cure ladies’ tour-

nament on Saturday, Oct. 4. Entry fee, which includes green fee, cart and practice round, for the four-lady scramble is $75 for a player or $350 for team. Dead-line for entry is Sept. 27. For more informa-tion, call 662-286-8000.

 Mississippi Record Book

The 19th annual Mis-sissippi Baseball Record Book is now available for purchase by mail. The book includes records of public schools and four-year colleges. The book is published by Diamonds By Smillie. Coach John Smillie has worked hard to publish a comprehensive record book to promote the baseball history of public high schools and four-year colleges. If you would to buy a copy of the book, you can send a $12 check to: Ms. Baseball Re-cord Book; Diamonds By Smillie; 3159 Ken-drick Road; Corinth, MS. 38834. For more information call 662-808-0013.

CONTINUED FROM 12A

GOLSON

baseball player in high school and drafted by the Boston Red Sox in the eighth round of the 2011 draft.

He chose college foot-ball and it’s a decision that’s looking much bet-ter in recent days after a mostly non-descript fi rst three years in the program. Freeze said Golson’s improvement can be traced back to a better attitude. He said Golson was never a seri-ous problem child, but both the coach and the player said he wasn’t al-ways focused enough on improving.

“This is, in my opin-ion, the fi rst year he de-cided to really buy in,” Freeze said. “Not that he was anti-good things the last couple years, but there’s no question the way he comes to work every day, the way he allows me to coach him, he’s just a different guy. And when somebody

does that and has suc-cess on the fi eld it’s very rewarding.”

Golson said there was no epiphany that led to his better attitude, just the gradual realization that his college career was coming to a close.

“It was best for the team,” Golson said. “I’m a senior this year and I wanted to go out with a tradition with the cor-ners, the secondary and the defense period. I just wanted to leave them with all the knowl-edge I’ve had from four years.” Freeze and Gol-son both credit cor-nerbacks coach Jason Jones with aiding the secondary’s noticeable improvement. Freeze said Jones has “done a good job of coaching them technique and staying in the correct position on deep balls.”

Golson said Jones’ ad-vice on the mental side of the game — and about life in general — has been just as valuable.

CONTINUED FROM 12A

BY PAUL NEWBERRYAP Sports Writer

ATLANTA — Matt Ryan, Julio Jones and high-stepping Devin Hes-ter led the Atlanta Falcons to one of the biggest wins in franchise history.

Ryan threw for 286 yards and three touch-downs, Jones hauled in nine passes for 161 yards and a couple of scores, and Hester set an NFL re-cord with his 20th return for a TD as the Falcons routed the hapless Tampa Bay Buccaneers 56-14 on Thursday night.

The Falcons (2-1) led 35-0 before the Bucca-neers (0-3) picked up a fi rst down. Ryan and the other offensive starters left the game after Steven Jackson’s 3-yard touch-down run made it 49-0

before the midway point of the third quarter.

Atlanta had a stunning 56-0 lead heading to the fourth quarter. Tampa Bay scored two meaning-less touchdowns to avoid the worst loss in franchise history. “I’ve never been in a game quite like this in the NFL,” Falcons coach Mike Smith said.

It was the second-larg-est win in the Falcons’ 48-year history, eclipsed only by 62-7 rout of New Or-leans in 1973. It was only the fi fth time Atlanta has won a game by as many as 40 points. Hester and Jones provided the signa-ture moments.

With the Falcons al-ready up 28-0, Hester took a punt at his own 44, found a seam up the mid-dle of the fi eld and zipped

around the last man with a chance to tackle him, punter Michael Koenen. The 56-yard play was Hes-ter’s 20th career return for a touchdown, break-ing the mark he shared with former Falcons star Deion Sanders. Sanders, now a television analyst, watched Hester’s return from the sideline at the Georgia Dome. Hester high-stepped the last 10 yards are so, his left hand bobbing behind his ear — a tribute to Sanders’ sig-nature move.

“It’s tough to break the record of the guy who is my No. 1 mentor,” Hester said. “I’m kind of emo-tional right now.”

Prime Time didn’t mind a bit. He smiled broadly and waved to the crowd when he was shown on the

video board, the Hall of Famer’s record falling in the stadium he once pro-claimed as “my house.”

Jones could’ve made the same claim after the su-perb 40-yard touchdown catch in the third quarter.

Turning toward the sideline, he looked fi rst over his left shoulder for the pass, turned his body when realized it was com-ing over his right shoul-der, juggled the ball a bit as he tumbled into the end zone, cradling it under his arm just before slammed the turf, getting both feet down.

Coming off three inter-ceptions in a loss at Cin-cinnati, Ryan bounced back with a 21-of-24 showing that set a team record for completion per-centage (.875).

Falcons romp to 56-14 win over hapless Buccaneers

Page 14: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

14A • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

For many years I have heard the expression “that is good enough.”

H o w good is g o o d enough?

M a n y times my wife has told me the task I was do-ing that I had done it “good

enough”. My reply to her was that I don’t want to do it good enough, I want to do it right!

So many times in our lives and, especially, in our daily living we are accepting jobs and com-pletion of projects as be-ing good enough but not complete or exactly right.

Where is the line being

drawn on when we deci-pher something as being good enough especially when it is not completed or right? Why has our ac-ceptance level come down from the point of perfec-tion to a worldly stan-dard? Have we all gotten in such a hurry that time is dictating to us on what is right or good enough?

What do we not under-stand about the Ten Com-mandments? They are simple, straight forward, and to the point. God has told us and taught us through His Son Je-sus Christ that the only way to have eternal life is through a sin-confessed relationship with Jesus. We sin, He forgives if we ask Him and our heart becomes changed with the purity of Jesus’ mes-sage. It is not we sin, He

forgives us and we do not have a conversion expe-rience within our heart. This is not good enough!

The fi rst command-ment tells us, “You shall have no other gods before me.” How many of us re-ally obey this command-ment? Too many of us put worldly values and treasures ahead of God and then go to church on Sunday, saying that this is good enough. No, it’s not!

“Remember the Sab-bath Day, to keep it holy.” What a far cry we are from this commandment. Look around you and then examine yourself, do we really obey this com-mandment? No, we don’t!

One more command-ment that has really got-ten lopsided is, “Honor your father and your mother.” For us to do this the family unit has to be in tact. With so many unwed pregnancies in the world today, is it a wonder that this commandment has gone awry?

Good enough is never good enough! God tells us the truth and what we have to do to reap the ben-efi ts of eternal life. Listen to His quiet still voice and you will be amazed at what He is telling you.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for another day of life. I pray that I will be in tune with you and not with the world. Guide me in the direction that I should go. Amen.

(Alcorn County native and Daily Corinthian col-umnist Gary Andrews is the author of “Encourag-ing Words – 30 days in God’s Word,” an uplifting devotional book leading into a daily journey. To obtain a copy of his book visit his website at www.gadevotionals.com.)

When is good enoughreally good enough?

Gary AndrewsDevotionals

Suggested daily Bible readings

Sunday - Exodus 20:1-17; Monday - James 2:1-13; Tuesday - Romans 3:9-20; Wednes-day - Psalm 1:1-6; Thursday - Ecclesi-astes 5:1-20; Friday - Matthew 16:13-19; Saturday - 1 Corin-thians 13:1-13.)

Honoring local emergency responders on 9/11

Cash Express of Corinth recently marked 9/11 by honoring local emer-gency responders. The company pre-

sented responders with cakes and signed cards honoring their service and commitment to the community.

The emergency groups honored included local fire, rescue and law

enforcement agencies.

2011 Chevrolet Camaro

Yellow, SHARP!!!

#A0590 $20,963

2011 Ford F1504X4

Race Red, SHARP!

#A0602 $28,963

2013 GMC DenaliAll wheel drive, Must see, SHARP!

#4F221A $39,963

2011 Nissan Altima28k miles, Leather

#A0589 $18,963

PRE-OWNED SUPER SALE TRADES OF THE WEEK

PLUS TAX TITLE AND ADMINISTRATION FEE.

20,110 MSRP

-4,000* LONG LEWIS DISCOUNTS

16,110* FINAL VALUE PRICE

47,005 MSRP

-12,000* LONG LEWIS DISCOUNTS

35,005* FINAL VALUE PRICE

$16,110 PLUS TAX TITTITLE ALE ANDND $35,005PLUS TAX TITLE AND ADMINISTRATION FEE.

2020,1

4-4 0,00

1616,,

2006 Dodge Ram 15004WD, low miles, Reg Cab!

#A0553A $16,963

2013 Ford F150 LariatCertified Pre-owned, Leather,

Nav, Roof, LOADED!

#A0595 $39,985

1Offer ends 9/30/14. Prices and model availability may vary by dealer. Some restrictions apply; other special rates and terms may be available, so see your dealer for details and other financing options. Available in select counties. †Manufacturer’s estimate of power (ISO) per 97/68/EC. 2Offer ends 10/31/2014. Subject to approved installment credit with John Deere Financial. Some restrictions apply; other special rates and terms may be available, so see your dealer for details and other financing options. Available in select counties.

TriGreenEquipment.com

Work Harder. Play Harder.

AUTHORIZED DEALER

$13,9001

0% FOR 36 MONTHS2

5045D Utility Tractor†

Gator™ Utility Vehicles

Affordable Solutions for Farm, Home and Worksite.

1703 Johnson Dr 662-287-4494

TRI3X100919DC-BW

Labs-N-LaceUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

• Medical Wear • Stethoscopes

1405 Hwy 72 E.Corinth, MS

662-808 (LABS) 5227

Page 15: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 19, 2014 • 1B

BOX

COCA-COLA

FRESHFRESH

BEST CHOICE

CAKE MIX

COOK’SCOOK’S

OSCAR MAYEROSCAR MAYER

U.S.D.A SELECTU.S.D.A SELECT

BEST CHOICEBEST CHOICE

$$669898

FIORAFIORA

TENNESSE PRIDETENNESSE PRIDE

LB.LB.

BEST CHOICEBEST CHOICE

LB.LB.

QUARTERLOINQUARTERLOIN

15 OZ. CANS15 OZ. CANS

2 LITER BOTTLES

$$550000

COCA-COLACOCA-COLA

20 OZ. LOAF20 OZ. LOAF

PORK SAUSAGEPORK SAUSAGE

9999¢¢2 LIMIT 2 LIMIT OROR $ $112929

MEATMEATBOLOGNA OR WEINERSBOLOGNA OR WEINERS

16 OZ. PKG.16 OZ. PKG. 2/2/$$330000

BONELESSBONELESSENGLISH CUTENGLISH CUT

BEEF ROASTBEEF ROAST

1 LB. PKG.1 LB. PKG. LB.LB.

PORK CHOPSPORK CHOPS

LB.LB.

4/4/$$10100000 CASE 12 CANS CASE 12 CANS MIX OR MATCHMIX OR MATCH

SANDWICH SANDWICH BREADBREAD OROR

BATHROOM TISSUEBATHROOM TISSUE12 ROLL12 ROLL

BEST CHOICEBEST CHOICEPLAIN OR SELF-RISINGPLAIN OR SELF-RISING

68¢SPRITE, DR. PEPPER, DIET COKE 4/$500

FAMILY PACKFAMILY PACK

6868¢¢

$$116969 $$119999LB.LB. LB.LB.

U.S.D.A SELECTU.S.D.A SELECT

EXCLUDES BEEFEXCLUDES BEEF

$$224949

$$110000

$$114949FINAL COSTFINAL COST EACHEACH

EACHEACH

WHEN YOU BUY ANY 5 PARTICIPATING ITEMS MIX OR MATCH WHEN YOU BUY ANY 5 PARTICIPATING ITEMS MIX OR MATCH

$$119898

$$334848

T-BONE STEAKST-BONE STEAKSCHICKEN LEG QUARTERSCHICKEN LEG QUARTERS

KRAFT SHREDDED OR CHUNK CHEESE 8 OZ. PKG.KRAFT SHREDDED OR CHUNK CHEESE 8 OZ. PKG.

KRAFT AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES 12 OZ. PKG.KRAFT AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES 12 OZ. PKG.

BUTT PORTIONBUTT PORTIONSHANK PORTIONSHANK PORTION

PAPER TOWELSPAPER TOWELS8 ROLL 8 ROLL

WHEN YOU BUY ANY TWO MIX OR MATCHWHEN YOU BUY ANY TWO MIX OR MATCH

FINAL COSTFINAL COST

$$339999

$$110000

$$229999

CUT OR FRENCH GREEN BEANS, CUT OR FRENCH GREEN BEANS, CREAM OR WHOLE KERNAL CORN, CREAM OR WHOLE KERNAL CORN,

SWEET PEAS OR MIXED VEGETABLESSWEET PEAS OR MIXED VEGETABLES

KRAFT NATURAL SLICES 7 OZ. TO 8 OZ. PKG.KRAFT NATURAL SLICES 7 OZ. TO 8 OZ. PKG.

PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEES 8 OZ. PKG.PHILADELPHIA CREAM CHEES 8 OZ. PKG.

KRAFT VELVEETA SLICES 12 OZ. PKG.KRAFT VELVEETA SLICES 12 OZ. PKG.

1/2 LTR.1/2 LTR.6-PACK6-PACK

BOTTLESBOTTLES

5 LB. BAG5 LB. BAGFLOURFLOUR

SMOKED HAMSMOKED HAM

SUPER SEPTEMBER

SAVINGS

12 PACK12 PACK CANS CANS

Kraft Buy 5 And Save $5 Sale

$$334949

SPRITE, DR. PEPPER, DIET COKESPRITE, DR. PEPPER, DIET COKE

3/3/$$10100000

8888¢¢

HOME OWNED AND OPERATEDWe Now Accept Visa/Mastercard/Discover & Gulfnet Atm Cards At Both Stores

We Gladly Accept Mississippi, Tennessee & Alabama Food Stamp Cards. We Welcome Food Stamp ShoppersQuantity Rights Reserved. None Sold to Dealers.

THIS AD GOOD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19TH, 2014 THRU TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23RD, 2014

662-286-6653HIGHWAY 72 EAST • CORINTH, MS

STORE HOURS: SUN-THURS 7AM TIL 10PMFRIDAY & SATURDAY 7AM TIL 11PM

www.gardnerssupermarket.com

662-286-6244410 CASS STREET - CORINTH, MS

SAVE CASH BY SHOPPING ROGERS’ EVERYDAY LOW PRICESSTORE: MON-THURS 7AM TIL 9PM, FRI & SAT 7AM TIL 9PM, CLOSED SUN

1% To Your Church at Rogers’www.rogerssupermarket.com

Page 16: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

2B • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Community Events

ReminderEvents need to be submit-

ted at least two weeks prior to the event. Community events publishes on Wednesdays and Sundays and on Friday if space is available.

Sickle Cell Awareness Month

September is Sickle Cell Disease awareness month. Support your community and those with Sickle Cell and other diseases by donating blood at any local hospital or blood bank.

Free SeminarA free informational seminar

will be presented by Cross-roads Insurance Services at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 23 at the MSU Extension Center (be-side the Crossroads Arena). Meredith King of Crossroads Insurance Services will be speaking about the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). Ann Walker of the Easom Com-munity Center will be speak-ing about some of the free services offered at the center. Johnny Johnson of Air Evac Lifeteam will share the ben-efits of that program & how it works.

This will be an informative event for people in the com-munity who are looking for an-swers and real life examples of how the Affordable Care Act is working in the communi-ty.  There will also be informa-tion about options available to those who did not qualify for financial assistance under the Affordable Care Act. For more information about the event, please contact Meredith King at 662-286-6962 or reply by email to [email protected].

Corinth Artist GuildThe Corinth Artist Guild

Gallery is hosting a “Three Generations” exhibit through Sept. 30. The artists are Dot Courson; her daughter, Susan Patton; and her granddaugh-ter, Faith Patton.

Courson primarily paints ru-ral landscapes in oil, and her works reflect the influence of her Delta upbringing. She is a Corinth native.

Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Satur-day at 609 Fillmore Street.

Bishop Activity CenterFriday, Sept. 19: Roger’s

Supermarket for grocery shop-ping.

Daily activities: quilting, jig-saw puzzles, table games, rolo golf and washer game.

Google Drive seminarThe Alliance is offering a

seminar for businesses that would like to learn the basics of Google Drive, which is a free service, from noon to 2 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 19, at The Alliance. The beginner’s course costs $10 or is free for Alliance members. The presenter is Jeffrey Powell of Northeast Mississippi Com-munity College. Attendees should bring a laptop, tablet or smart phone and have a gmail account already set up. RSVP to Andrea Rose at The Alli-ance at 287-5269 or [email protected].

Alcorn County FairThe Alcorn County Fair will

be at the Crossroads Arena Sept. 19-20. A talent show and bullriding will take place on Friday. There will be a beauty pageant, antique trac-tors, a goat milking demo and bullriding. The carnival, petting zoo and Thomas the train will be present everyday. Those in-terested in becoming vendors or participating in any of the contests should call the Arena Box Office at 662-287-7779 or go online at www.alcornfair.com for all forms and a sched-ule of each event.

Fillmore Block PartyCorinth will be the stage for

the first ever Fillmore Block Party on Saturday, Sept. 20. There will be live music, food, face painting and shopping. Musicians Cary Hudson and Highway One will perform from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The free family event will feature sam-ples of local cuisines as well as a fashion show at 1 p.m. Pre-sale wrist bands will be available to try the food. They can be purchased for $5 and will be available at participat-ing vendors. Wristbands are free for children four years old and under.

40th ReunionCHS class of 1974 40th

reunion weekend will be Sept. 26-27. A tailgate party at the

CHS Football game begins at 6 p.m. with BBQ served. On Saturday at 6 p.m., we will meet at the Weaver center on Linden St. for refreshments, music and fellowship. Cost for the weekend is $40 per person and is due by Sept 15. Please mail your checks pay-able to CHS Class of 1974 to Nan Nabors, 2703 Brentwood Dr. Corinth, MS 38834. Check out the Facebook page or call 662-287-0721 for more details. Faculty members are welcome to attend.

Re-enactmentThe 152nd Anniversary Re-

enactment of the Battle of Iuka and Farmington is set for Sept. 19-21 in Iuka.

The battles will feature two large scale re-enactments including action from infan-try, cavalry and cannons. The three-day event will also feature an education day for 1,000 students, living history presentations, meet the gen-erals dinner, grand ball and quilt show. A military parade will be held the morning of Sept. 20 in historic downtown Iuka. A special event is set for Sept. 21 to commemorate the 175th anniversary of the Trail of Tears.

For more information, con-tact 1-800-funhere or visit bat-tleofiuka.com.

Coleman Family ReunionThere will be a Coleman

family reunion on Sunday, September 21, 2014, begin-ning at noon at the Chapman’s Restaurant, located west of Corinth on County Road 744.

Town Hall MeetingNorthern District Public Ser-

vice Commissioner Brandon Presley will hold a Town Hall meeting at from 6 to 7 p.m. at the Corinth City Hall, lo-cated at 300 Childs street in Corinth on Thursday, Sept. 25. Among other things, Presley will discuss the “Zap the Gap” program, addressing poor cell phone service, the lack of high-speed internet, natural gas service and the No-Call law.

The meeting is free and open to the public.

Cruise-inMagnolia Antique Car Club

and Arby’s will host a cruise-

in at Arby’s restaurant from 1 to 4 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 28. There will be car guy fel-lowship, 50s music and enter-tainment by the Joe Rickman Band. Guests should bring their lawn chairs. There will be door prizes and drawings for free food. Registration is $5. The money received will be given back as door prizes to participants. For more informa-tion call Rick Kelley at 662-284-7110.

Firearm ClassThere will be an Enhanced

Concealed Firearms Permit class from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on

Monday, Sept. 29. Call Rick Ward at 601-665-6088 or Karen at 601-918-6310 for further information.

DUVCW and SUVCWThe Daughters of Union Vet-

erans, Tent 02 of Tenn. and Sons of Union Veterans, Camp 6 of Tenn. will hold a joint meeting at 11 a.m. on Tues-day, Sept. 30 at the Firehouse Grill Restaurant in Selmer, Tenn. These groups are non-profit organizations organized to honor all veterans past and present, especially Union veterans of the Civil War. Rela-tives of Union veterans who received an honorable dis-charge or died in service from 1861-1865 are encouraged to call 731-645-4100 for more information.

Benefit LuncheonThere will be a benefit lun-

cheon for Tommy Crenshaw from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 4 at the VFW on Forrest School Road. There will be a huge yard sale, auc-tion and 50/50 drawing. BBQ plates will be served. All pro-ceeds will go toward personal and medical expenses.

Catfish and KhakisThe Boys and Girls Club of

Corinth will host the ninth an-nual Catfish and Khakis fund-raiser on Tuesday, Oct. 7.

KHS ReunionKossuth High School class

of 1994 will hold its reunion on Oct. 17 beginning at 6 p.m. at the L.C. Follin Multipurpose Building (the Blue Building) at Kossuth. Please bring finger foods or desserts. Spouses, guests and family are wel-

come. Football game tickets are $5 at the gate. School staff and faculty are also invited to visit with former stu-dents at the reunion.

Breast Cancer WalkHopewell M.B. Church in

Rienzi hosts its inaugural Breast Cancer Awareness Walk at 8 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 18. 

The walk begins at Hopewell and will have registration one hour prior to start time.The cost is $15 which includes a t-shirt and complimentary reg-istration packet.  

All proceeds benefit the Susan G. Komen For The Cure Foundation. It is strongly rec-ommended that everyone pre-register by Sunday, September 28. T-shirts will not be avail-able for sale on the day of the event. Walkers can pre-regis-ter from 10 a.m. to noon at the church’s life center on Sat-urday, September 20 and from noon until 2 p.m. on Sunday, September 28. 

For more information con-tact Areka Elliott at 662-665-1147, Channcie Brock at 662-416-6266, Valerie Harris at 662-415-7496 or Dorothy Campbell at 662- 401-7896.

Easom Outreach• The Easom Outreach

Foundation Community Garden is open to the public between the hours of 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. Monday-Friday. All par-ticipants must register prior to harvesting. Sign in and pick up bags at the Easom Community Cafeteria.  For more informa-tion contact Samuel Crayton at 404 386 3359 or Bobby Ratliff at 594-5675.

Alliance HospiceAlliance Hospice is looking

for volunteers from ages 16 to 85, who would love to interact with local senior citizens. For more information please con-tact Sabrina Hall at 662-286-9833 or by email at [email protected]

Checker PlayersChecker players are needed,

especially Intex retirees, to play from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Mondays at the American Steel Builders Union building across from Ability Works. For more information, call 662-728-5498.

Free Informational SeminarPresented by Crossroads Insurance Services at the MSU Extension Center

(Beside the Crossroads Arena) on Tues. Sept. 23 @ 6:00 pm.

• Meredith King of Crossroads Ins. will speak about the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare).• Ann Walker of the Eason Community Center will speak of the Free Services offered at the Center.• Johnny Johnson of Air Evac Lifeteam will share the benefi ts of that program & how it works.

A very informative event for people in the community who are looking for answers & real life examples of how the

Affordable Care Act is working in our community. Information about options available to those who did not qualify for

fi nancial assistance under the Affordable Care Act.

9th Year Anniversary

September 8th-October 31st$5.29 $5.29

Lunch SpecialMon-Fri 11:00AM - 3:30PM

All You Can EatMore Sushi Items • New Items Added

2115 S. Harper Rd • 662-287-3666 • Across From Wal-Mart • Corinth, MS

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

to Law Professionals

Odom and Allred, P.A.Attorneys at Law

404 Waldron Street • Corinth, MS _________________________________________

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

___________________________________________

(Payment Plans available)

Serving NortheastMississippi’s legal needs...

John O. WindsorAttorney at Law

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

401 E. Waldron St.Corinth, MS

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

NEW!Best Deal in Town!

$5FILLUPSPLUS TAX

BREAST PIECE-MASHED POTATOES & GRAVY -FLAKY BISCUIT -MEDIUM DRINK -CHOC CHIP COOKIE

GGRAVY

Kentucky Fried Chicken1209 Hwy. 72 E.Corinth, MS662.286.3539

Page 17: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Religion3B • Daily Corinthian Friday, September 19, 2014

Worship Call

HomecomingThe  Little ZionM.B. Church

Family will celebrate its Home-coming and Church Anniver-sary at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 12.  

Pastor Houston Owens and OakHill M.B.Church will be the special guests.

Friends and Family DayMount Moriah United Meth-

odist church will host Friends and Family Day at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 21.

The guest speaker will be Pastor Kim Ratliff of St. Mark Baptist Church. Music will be provided by Pastor Richard Wade of East Fifth Street Bap-tist Church and his choir.

Revival• Lone Oak Baptist Church

will continue its revival at 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 19. Youth are encouraged to bring a friend. Bro. Kevin Merritt will

preach the revival.• Glendale Baptist Church

(2478 Hwy 72 East in Glen) will hold revival services from 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Sun-day, Sept. 21through Wednes-day, Sept. 24 as part of Na-tional Back to Church Sunday. Evangelist Wayne Hudson and Music Evangelist Mark Mathis will be the guest speakers.

• The Little Zion M.B. Church Family will hold a Fall Revival from Sept. 28-30. The Sunday service will start at 3 p.m. Monday and Tuesday ser-vices will start at 7 p.m. Pas-tor Richard Boone will be the guest minister.

Men and Women’s DayDanville C.M.E. Church will

hold its annual Men and Wom-en’s Day Program at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 28. Bro. Oliver Stovall from Hopewell M.B. will be the guest speaker. He will be accompanied by his church

family.

121st Anniversary Celebration

Oak Grove CME Church is celebrating its 121st Church Anniversary at 3 p.m. on Sun-day, Oct. 19. The Rev. Kenneth Miller and his church family will be the special guests. A souvenir booklet will be avail-able for the special day. Ads may be purchased for the booklets.

For more information, con-tact Sis. Juanita Butler or Sis. Kolisha Strickland

Couples ClassHopewell M.B. Church in

Rienzi will host a Couples Class from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. every Monday. The free 4 to 6 weeks class will focus on Christian Family Values. The Rev. Dr. Lamar Walker will be the teacher.

Prayer breakfastThe American Legion Post 6

is hosting a prayer breakfast every Wednesday at 7 a.m. The menu and speakers will change weekly. The prayer breakfasts are being held at the American Legion Building on Tate Street in Corinth. Post membership is not required to attend.

Donations for breakfast will be accepted.

For more information, call 462-5815.

Bible Study• Spirit & Truth Ministries –

across from Gateway Tire – is hosting a Bible Study each Tuesday night called Tuesday Night Truth Seekers. The event is open to the public and is set for 6:30-8 p.m. each week. For more information call 662-603-2764,

• City Road Temple will hold a Bible study each Wednesday

at 6 p.m.

Living Free MinistriesLiving Free Ministries will

meet at 6 p.m. on Monday nights in small groups.

There will be a concerned persons group that meets at 7 p.m. on Tuesday nights and ‘Celebration Night’ at 6 p.m. on Thursday nights.

There will also be a  Mens’ Bible Study Group meeting at 7 a.m. on Saturday mornings.

Living Free has started a faith based Twelve Step Program at lunch (11:30am - 12:30pm) on Tuesdays.

There is no cost to attend and all meetings are open to everyone.

Living Free Ministries is lo-cated behind Magnolia Funeral Home in the 2 metal buildings at the rear of the parking lot.

For more information call Living Free Ministries at 662-287-2733.

Watching a recent TV replay of a retirement concert by the Statler Brothers, I remembered the days when as a teen-ager, I began to love their music.

The fi rst song coming to mind was “Flowers on the Wall” in the 1960s. Back then I knew most of the words and sang along with the group.

After seeing the TV show, I read the story of how and when the Statlers got started. I learned three of them started out in the mid-1950s as a church trio made up of bass Harold Reid, baritone Phil Bals-ley and tenor Lew DeWitt. In 1960, Harold’s younger brother Don Reid joined as lead vocal. and they be-came a quartet known as the Kingsmen.

The group started in their hometown of Staunton, Virginia, where they grew up together, played baseball, double dated, went to church, and learned to harmonize their voices.

Eventually the quar-tet was asked to open for a Johnny Cash concert, and Cash liked them so much he asked them to go on tour with him. They changed their name to the Statler Brothers, after a brand of (toilet) tissue – very unusual I thought – and they traveled with

Johnny until 1971.As far as I’m concerned,

one of the good parts of their story is that in 1976 the Statler Brothers came

to Corinth, Missis-sippi.

America was celebrating her 200 year anniver-sary and as I recall, Corinth planned several special ac-tivities. The sing-ing group came to Corinth High School and I was so

excited when the concert date was announced. I insisted that my husband and I get tickets to the event.

As falls my luck some-times, I got sick just be-fore the day of the concert and knew there was no way I could possibly sit through the performance – so we gave our priceless tickets to a young couple we thought would enjoy going.

Good reports came from the concert and then I found that one of my co-workers was there “with bells on.” Bettye Ship-man went to the concert, stayed for autographs, and the whole nine yards. She loved it!

Only recently, though, did I learn that Bettye also saw the Statlers at lunch the day of the concert. Because of the historical celebration in our town, the female offi ce work-ers at Tyrone Hydraulics dressed up that day and

aseveral went to the Holi-day Inn restaurant for lunch. I missed out be-cause I was sick, but while Bettye was there, she met up with her cousin Arlin Mohundro who was mak-ing pictures of the Statler Brothers beside the hotel pool for the local newspa-per.

Arlin immediately in-sisted that Bettye get her picture made with the group. “Oh, no,” she told him. “I don’t need to do that.” I can just see her acting shy and laughing

as she said that.“Oh, come on over

here,” Arlin encouraged her. “You don’t want to miss out on this.”

Bettye decided she shouldn’t pass up the op-portunity so she politely walked over and got in the middle of the group – and made the picture look a whole lot better, I must say.

When Bettye showed me the photo made on May 7, 1976, I asked for permission to put it in the newspaper. Most folks

in this area would have loved being in her spot, I’m sure.

The Statlers continued to travel and sing. In the early 1980s, tenor Lew DeWitt had to leave the group because of Crohn’s disease, and Jimmy For-tune came on as his suc-cessor. Lew passed away in August of 1990.

The Statler Brothers re-tired in 2002 after playing a fi nal concert to 10,000 folks in Salem, Virginia, near their hometown of Staunton. In 2008 all fi ve members of the group were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

So Bettye Shipman treasures her photo made with the Hall of Famers and kept up with their ac-complishments through the years. To this day I’m sure when she hears them sing, “Do You Remem-ber These?,” she prob-ably answers with a “yes” and thinks of the day she was privileged to stand in the middle of the four original guys and smile as Arlin snapped one of her favorite photos.

Thanks, Bettye, for sharing with us – your sister-in-law says you looked like a movie star and I agree.

(Wenasoga resident Lora Ann Huff is a col-umnist for the Daily Co-rinthian.)

Remembering the music of the Statler Brothers

Bettye Shipman with the Statler Brothers at the former Holiday Inn in Corinth during America’s 200th Anniversary on May 7, 1976.

Gary Andrews’ column appears on page 14A today.

Lora Ann Huff

Back Porch

State Farm Bank, F.S.B., Bloomington, IL

*Potential savings may vary based upon individual circumstances. Consult your agent for more details.

Get a better ride with a better loan.

And the more you save with a State Farm Bank® car loan, the easier it is to get behind the wheel and just enjoy the ride. That’s borrowing better.GET TO A BETTER STATE.®

CALL ME TODAY FORMORE INFORMATION.

Our great rates can save you hundreds of dollars.*

1303025 07/13

Scott Sawyer, AgentState Farm Agent102 N Cass Street

Corinth, MS 38834Bus: 662-287-8077Scott Sawyer, Agent

State Farm Agent102 N Cass Street

Corinth, MS 38834 Bus: 662-287-8077

And the more you save witha State Farm Bank® car loan, the easier it is to get behind the wheel and just enjoy the ride. That’s borrowing better. GET TO A BETTER STATE.®

CALL ME TODAY FORMORE INFORMATION.

Our great rates can save you hundreds of dollars.*

Get a better ride with a better loan.

Stop the Harassment & Keep your PropertyQUICK - EASY - LOW COST

Affordable fl exible payment plansZERO down payment gets you a fresh start with

106 West College Street, Booneville, MS

Dr. Charles M. Wren llannounces the opening of

The Wren Clinic, PCTreating Disorders of the Skin, Hair, and Nails

With Locations in Tupelo and Corinth, MS

Treating All Age Groups

We Accept Most Health PlansWe Accept and File Medicare

Call Now for an Appointment

662.844.2499874 Barnes Crossing Road

Tupelo, MS2041 Shiloh Road

Corinth, MS

LOOKINGTO SCALEDOWN?

Michie Healthcare Associates, LLC5823 Hwy. 22 S. • Michie, TN

731-239-9470Walk-ins Welcome

Our professional weight-lossservices can help you lose weight and maintain the results. Through weight-loss manage-ment, diet counseling, exercise programs and support, we give clients the tools they need to win the battle against weight gain and get healthy. If you really need to win the battle against weight gain and get healthy. If you really want to lose weight, we can show you how. Give us a call today for more information.

Phentermine • Adipex • Ionamine • XencialWeight Loss Injections

602 South Cass Street • Corinth, MS 38834662-287-2323(Beside Goody’s)

Real. Good.Food.

“NOT ABILITY, BUT AVAILABILITY ”Preacher Scott Warne correctly points out that God used

all sorts of people for His service in the Bible. He used a murdered “keeper of sheep” to teach the world about faithful worship. He used a too-old-for-children couple to be the parents of His chosen people. He used a former con man to be the name-sake for His chosen people. He used an imprisoned slave in a foreign cell to save His people. He used a fugitive, exiled prince to lead His people out of slavery. He used a harlot to rescue the spies who were scouting out the city of Jericho. He used the “least” man of the “poorest” tribe to lead a mere 300 soldiers against an innumerable horde of Midianites. He used a long-haired womanizer to defeat the enemy Philistines. He used a shepherd boy to kill a 9 foot giant. He used a young virgin and a poor carpenter to raise His Son. He used fi shermen, a tax collector, a political rebel, and a former persecuting activist, to be among the fi rst leaders of His Son’s Church.

Abraham, the “father of the faithful”, had moments of doubt, and lied on at least two occasions. Moses was full of excuses why he wasn’t the man to lead the Israelites out of slavery. Gideon hesitated, doubted, and asked for “signs” of proof. King Saul correctly noted that David was just a boy and Goliath was a seasoned warrior. The apostles, for the most part, lacked formal education and the “customary” leadership skills. Still God used all of these.

If you have obeyed the gospel and are forgiven, what do you see when you look at yourself? You may have no “great” ability. You may be shy and reserved. You may have made mistakes in your life (haven’t we all?). You are just ordinary and no one special. Please allow me to point out that just as God was able to use all these people in the Bible, He can use you. It wasn’t the case that God used all these people because they were special. What made these people special is that God used them, as ordinary as they were, to do something extraordinary by His power. (I Corinthians 12: 18, 22-24). God seeks those who are willing to surrender their hearts to His will. In other words, He is looking more for our availability than He is for our ability in serving Him.

CLEAR CREEK CHURCH OF CHRISTminister: Duane Ellis

responses to: 2 Sunnywood, Corinth, MS 38834

Page 18: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

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

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR GRISHAM INSURANCE

(662)415-2363

Final Expense Life Insurance

Long Term Care Medicare Supplements

Part D Prescription Plan

Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?

Call me for a free quote.

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

Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

FiFin lal EExpense

CHRIS GRISHAM

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Structure demolition & RemovalCrushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

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

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

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000GOLD New Construction,

Home Remodeling & Repair.

Licensed & Insured

SHANE PRICE BUILDING, INC.

662-808-2380

We Haul:

We also do Dozer, Back-Hoe, &

Track-Hoe Work!Let us clear your land!

662-286-9158or 662-287-2296

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

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

• Brakes • Tune-ups• A/C• Oil Changes

Open 8-5Monday - FridayCall for extended

hours185 B CR 509,

Corinth(In Front of K&W Body Shop on

Hwy 45)

Towning Available

662-396-2222

CorinthAutomotive

Center

RUN YOUR AD ON THIS PAGEIn The Daily Corinthian And The Community Profi les

FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH(Daily Corinthian Only $165)

Business &Service Guide

Cuts, Colors, Perms,

Highlights, Waxing

Located in Rienzi

Call for an Appointment

Today!662-643-8065

Salon Treatment

with Affordable

Prices!Tidwell Roofi ng CoNew Roofs & RepairsBig or Small,

we top them all!Licensed and Insured

Free Estimates40 Years ExperienceAll Work Guaranteed

Offi ce 662-284-4360Cell: 662-415-5247

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Low Prices

HAPPY ADS0114

DYLLONFrom ALL of your Family,

We love you!

BUILDING MATERIALS0542

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

The Best Deals on Building &

Remodeling Products!!Check Here First!

Landscape Timber ...................$249

Cross Ties .........................................$695

T-1-11 Siding ..........................$1895

Corrugated metal

2ft wide 8, 10,12 ft length ............ $100

Ft.

Air Compressors.Starting at$4695

7/16 OSB Tech Shield ............................$750

Vinyl Floor Remnants ..$100

sq. yd.

Laminate Floor From 39¢-$109sq. ft.

Pad for Laminate Floor $500-$1000

Huge Selection of Area Rugs .................Starting at

$6995

Handicap Commodes .....$6995

3/4” Plywood each .....................$2195

1/2” Plywood each .....................$1650

25 Year 3 Tab Shingle .$4695

35 Year Architectural

Shingle ...........................................$5595

4 X 8 Masonite Siding ....$1595

12 x 12 Celotex Ceiling (40Sq Ft) ......$3995

box

Croft Windows ......................................................

Tubs & Showers .. starting at $21500

2 x 4 x 8 Utility .....................................$209

2 x 4 x 16 Utility .................................$539

All types of lumberregular and treated

Smith Discount Home Center

HAPPY ADS0114 ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-t ion, f loor level ing,bricks cracking, rottenw o o d , b a s e m e n t s ,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. FREE ESTIM-ATES. 731-239-8945 or662-284-6146.

D I V O R C E W I T H O RW I T H O U T C H I L D R E N$125. Includes namechange and propertysettlement agreement.SAVE HUNDREDS. Fastand Easy. Call 1-888-733-7165 24/7

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

FRI & SAT: joining sale @25/29 CR 109- Lg selectof designer clothes,handbags, shoes & Acc.Men/ Womens, All Sz!

FRI/ SAT- 2303 LouisianaStreet. Bedroom Fur-niture, c lothes, oldtrading cards, comicbooks, and more!

FRI/SAT till noon, 6 FAM-ILY, 25 & 29 CR 109 (1st Rpast KC). Furn., rugs,lathe, n.b. clothes, h.h.,too much to list!

FRI/SAT- 153 CR 340(Glen)- Furn., appl., h.h.items, propane wallheaters, ht. water heat-ers, fireplace insert.

FRI/SAT- 8AM 1316 PineRd. Ant. , furn. , h.h.items, pottery, books,1980's toys, seasonal,china, NO CLOTHES

FRI/SAT- 8AM, 273 CR614: Hunting clothes,h.h.,men/ women/ boyclothes, lamps, back-packs, luggage & More!

4B • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

2X3 Birthday

Ad(with or without

picture.)Only $30.

Deadline Noon 2 days before publication.

662-594-6502

Page 19: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

MS CARE CENTERis looking for

Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts.

Sign-On Bonus.Please apply in person.

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

E.O.E.

At Terminix®, we do more than provide pest control services. Our exceptional sales professionals help deliver satisfaction to our customers. If you’re passionate about going above and beyond and you’re seeking challenging and interesting work, join us.

In this Outside Sales Representative position you will learn to:• Creatively develop sales leads• Partner with homeowners to determine their needs• Identify the products and services that best meet customer needs• Record accurate measurements and write correct descriptions of property inspected

We offer:• An exceptional training program• Compensation and Benefi ts• The opportunity for the professional growth and respect that comes from working for

an industry leader

We are seeking individuals that:• Are highly motivated• Have strong problem solving skills• Have strong communication skills

Qualifi ed candidates must have a high school diploma or general education degree (GED). Six to twelve months related experience and/or training in sales and dealing with the public or equivalent combination of education and experience is strongly preferred. Valid driver’s license from current state of residence required. We perform pre-employment tests.

Skills/Qualifi cations: Customer Service, Meeting Sales Goals, Closing Skills, Territory Management, Prospecting Skills, Negotiation, Self-Confi dence, Product Knowledge, Presentation Skills, Client Relationships, Motivation for Sales.

EOE/AA M/F/DN

APPLY AT: JOBS.TERMINIX.COM

WANTING TO HIRE! Experienced Saddle Stitcher Operator

MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: Three years experience of operating saddle stitching equipment; Verifi able work experience with current contact number; Good attendance record with previous employer; Must be professionally minded and take pride in one’s work; Must demonstrate a good mechanical aptitude; Must be physically able to per-form all job functions; Must relocate to the greater Pulaski, TN area.

DESIRABLE ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS: Four or more years experience in operating saddle stitching equipment; Experience with Web Press/ Web Leader printing presses; Experience with micrometers, gauges and other measur-ing instruments related to printing; Offset printing techni-cal training such as G.A.T.F. certifi cation. Contact Richard Gaines, 931-363-5005.

1607 S. Harper Rd., Corinth, MS

WANTED INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

(Newspaper Carrier)Counce, TN

EXCELLENT EARNINGSPOTENTIAL

Requirements: • Driver’s License • Dependable Transportation • Light Bookwork Ability (will train) • Liability Insurance

Please come by the DailyCorinthian and fill out

a questionaire.

1607 S. Harper Rd., Corinth, MS

WANTED INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS

(Newspaper Carrier)Walnut Area

EXCELLENT EARNINGSPOTENTIAL

Requirements: • Driver’s License • Dependable Transportation • Light Bookwork Ability (will train) • Liability Insurance

Please come by the DailyCorinthian and fill out

a questionaire.

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

*REDUCED*4005 IVY LANE

3BR, 2 Bath Brick/VinylHome in Nice, QuietNeighborhood, Ap-prox. 1500 sq. ft. Incl.L a r g e K i t c h e nw/Breakfast Bar, Hard-wood & Tile Floors,Marble Vanities, Re-cent ly Remodeled,N e w P a i n tThroughout, AttachedDbl. Garage, Shed andFenced Backyard.

Corinth School District

Call 662-808-0339

$133,900Owner Wants Offers!This property is NOTfor rent or rent to

own

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.WHEELS AND tires for ariding mower, $10.00Each- 415-3415

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

3 BR, 2 BA, South of Cor-inth, ALSO 1BR Apt.,everything furnished.462-8221 or 415-1065.

E. BROOKE APTS., 2 BR, 1BA, D/W, icemaker, 850sq. ft. 287-8219.

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

FURNISHED APARTMENTS0615

ONE BR , furn ished ,washer/dryer. $400mo.Call Christy- 603-2035

HOMES FOR RENT0620

2BR/ 1BA newly re-modeled house. Stove &F r i d g e f u r n i s h e d .$500mo/ $400 dep.- 662-415-1482

4/BR, 2.5/BA- In CityLimits. Deposit and Ref-e r e n c e s R e q u i r e d .$ 8 5 0 . 0 0 M o n t h - N oTVRHA- 662-415-1838

TRUCKING0244

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

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320FREE KITTENS to a goodhome- 662-415-3043

FREE KITTENS - DarkCalico-Raised inside, lit-terbox trained. 396-1788

FARM

MERCHANDISE

WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE0554

M&M. CASH FOR JUNKCARS & TRUCKS. 662-415-

5435 or 731-239-4114.WE PICK UP!

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

10.5 Horse Power/ Brigs& Stratton Industrial,C o m m e r c i a l l a w nmower engine, goodw o r k i n g c o n d i t i o n ,electric start- $75. 415-3415

11.5 HP, Briggs & Strat-ton Industrial, Commer-cial, lawn mower en-gine, good workingcondition, electric start-$75.00- 662-415-3415

16", 33CC craftsmanchainsaw, good condi-tion, $100.00- 415-3415

2 DEWALT cordless drills& battery, 14.4V withcharger, Ryobi cordlesssander, 18v battery. Allfor $75- 415-3415

2 JBL HOUSE SPEAKERS,$25.00- 415-3415

2 PANASONIC HouseSpeakers, $25.00- 415-3415

2 RCA HOUSE SPEAKERS-25.00-415-3415

2 YORK HOUSE SPEAK-ERS- $25.00-415-3415

40 GALLON propane wa-ter heater, good work-ing condition- $75.00-415-3415

REAR END for a ridingmower, tires and all,$50.00 OBO- 415-3415

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

THUR/FRI/SAT- 6AM- 101East Sixth Street. A littlebit of everything!

THUR/FRI/SAT- 7AM, 308CR 1151, RIENZI. 3 Fam-ily 20 years of hording,Everything must go!tools, toys, tv's & more!

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

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

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

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUSTBE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

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

EMPLOYMENT

EDUCATION/TEACHING0216

MEDICAL BILLING Train-ees Needed! Begin a ca-reer in billing, coding,and insurance pro-cessing! NO EXPERI-ENCE NEEDED! Onlinetraining st Bryan Uni-versity gets you ready!HS Diploma/GED andC o m p u t e r / I n t e r n e tneeded. 1-877-259-3880

GENERAL HELP0232COOKS NEEDED! If youc a n c o o k o r h a v eworked in a kitchen andwant an exciting careerin the oil and gas in-dustry, s ign up fortraining today!. CooksStart at $950-1150 perweek. Call 850-424-2600

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

FRI/SAT- For VictoryBaptist Church Youth 9CR 256- Pear preserves,peanut brittle & tons ofdifferent items!

HUGE, PARTIAL EstateSale- 1211 E. 2nd St (bt-wn. jr.high & old eastelem.) FRI/ SAT 7-3. Forthe Women: Clothes,Shoes , Purses , h .h .items, bedding, decor,books, Xmas items, lug-gage, furn., lamps, &more. For the Men: skillsaws, grinders, sanders,cordless drills, bits, drillpress, wrenches, Dew-lat Recip drill, pressuregauges, windows, leafcatcher, sm. batterycharger, 200 amp fusebox, Manas til ler w/trimmer, small portablegas grill, built in woodfireplace & chimney w/5 b l o w e r s & g l a s sscreen, cattle trailer &tons more. Some items"NEW". 50 years of col-lected items. You don'twant to miss this one!!

MOVING SALE: SAT 7AM,1209 Cruise Street. Babyboy and girl toddlerclothes, adult clothes,glass, movies & more

MOVING SALE: SAT- 9-3,2010 Liddon Lake Road.Baby bed & oak chan-ging table, tools, h.h.items, and much more!

SAT- 372 CR 218. mater-nity clothes and juniorall sizes,child:boy 8/10,girl nb-4t, bedding, kit-chenware, & more!

SAT: 84 Forrest SchoolRd- 7AM Baby girls &women's c lothes &s h o e s , w a l k e r , h . hitems, xmas, & more

SAT- 1907 Princess AnneDrive: Men & Women XLclothes, TV, ChildrenClothes, linens, AVON,and much more!

SAT. BEHIND MiTORO onHWY 72, fol low thesigns. 8AM-2:30, appli-ances, c lothes, fur-niture & more!

THUR/FRI- 7AM, CR 708( 1 . 2 5 m i l e s N WWenasoga Rd) ThirdDriveway, follow signs.

THUR/FRI 8:00am - In-door Sale @ old HuffInd. Bldg, 3265 N. Polk.Boys cloths 8-XL & lotsof Stuff.

Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 19, 2014 • 5B

Page 20: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

AUTO REPAIR0844

We’ll Put Collision Damage in Reverse

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

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

We’ll Deal Directly With Your Insurance CompanyNo up-front payments.No hassle. No paperwork.

Free Estimates25 Years professional service experienceRental cars available

Corinth Collision Center810 S. Parkway

662.594.1023

HOMES FOR SALE0710

2 Story Brick3 or 4 Bedroom,

2.5 BathLiving Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, Den,

Equipment Building, 2 car garage

Michie, Melvin Qualls Road 7 Miles from

Corinth, 19 Miles from Pickwick

$185,000Call: 662-286-7046

CHOOSE YOUR LIFESTYLE.....

IN TOWN: Live on Pine Road

4 Bed, 3 Bath, $139,900Call Joyce 662-279-3679

IN THE COUNTRY: Bring your horse & move

to CR700.3 Bed, 2 Bath,

4+ Acres $129,900.Call Joyce 662-279-3679

3BR 2 Bath7+ Acres & Pond

$84,900Call Wesley 662279-2490

RESORT LIVING:Live where you play at Shiloh Ridge.

Several lots to choose from.Call April 662-279-2490

308 Nelson Street, Corinth, MS

2 Bedroom, 1 Bath. Very nice Lot with

Storm Shelter. Great Rent House or 1st

time buyer.$15,000

Family Financial Services

662-665-7976

Beautiful, quiet country setting! Large tri-level home

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

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

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

additional 5 acres that can be purchased with the adjoining

property. Call 662-284-5379

for an appointment.

Owner Wants Offers

Lake house for saleon the beautiful

Tennessee River, 14 miles west of Florence. 100ft

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

Florence, AL, 35630.

256-764-6943

$24,500.2002

Doublewide80' X 28'

2200 sq. ft.4 BR, 2 Bath,

FireplaceVery Nice, Must

be Moved.

Located at 12, CR 1451

Booneville

Family Financial Srvc.662-665-7976

SOLD

565 CR 2- KossuthHorse County!

4.48 Acres with 1 fenced acre, corral w/ 2 stall barn, shade trees all over. This property

offers 3 Bed, 3 Full Baths, 2 half baths, 30 x 25 Bonus Room, &

3 Car Garage.

Kossuth School District

Call Neil before this one gallops away!

$219,000Coldwell Banker

Southern RE

662-287-7601

Cane Creek Properties

END OF SUMMER

SPECIALFOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY $200 DEPOSIT

2 BR/ 1 BAStove and Fridge

Furnished W/D Hook Ups5 Mins. from the Hospital

Kossuth & Corinth School District

Units Starting at

$400 Per MonthCall for an appointment:

662-643-0162 or 662-415-4052

APARTMENTS

PICTURE YOUR

PROPERTY HERE!

LAND, FARM,COMMERCIAL

or HOME

662-594-6502 orclassad@

dailycorinthian.com

2010 Liddon Lake Road

Behind Jackson Hewitt

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath

Newly Remodeled- Everything is

New!$76,500

662-255-2626

SOLD SOLD

2 & 3 Bedroom Homes

Corinth and Central

School Districts

Patti'sProperty Rentals

662-279-9024662 279 9024

For more information callBailey Williams Realty at

662-286-2255 or visitwww.corinthhomes.com

Open House Sunday,

September 211 to 2:30 p.m.923 E. 6th Street

2003 E. Borroum Circle

OPEN HOUSE

House of HondaDOSSETT BIG 4

628 SOUTH GLOSTER • TUPELO • 842-4162 or 1-888-892-4162

*3 year/36,000 mile lease with approved credit thru American Honda financial. $0 due at delivery. payments plus tax.

2014 HondaACCORD SPORTAutomatic • 18” Alloy Wheels • Power Seat

2014 HondaCIVIC LX

Automatic

2014 HondaCRV LX

Automatic • 2WD

$259mo. 0.9%$259mo. 0.9% $219mo. 0.9% $259mo.– OR – 0.9%plus tax

$219mo.– OR – 0.9%plus tax

$259mo.– OR –0.9%plus tax

King RentalSmall & Mid Size Car

7 & 15 Passenger VansRental Department8:00AM To 5:00PM

916 HWY 45 SOUTH | CORINTH, MS 38834PHONE 662-287-8773 | FAX 662-287-7373

Your Keys to Adventure

TRANSPORTATION

AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES

0848

F R O N T C A P f o r 5 6 'Chevy. Right side good.Michie- $225.00. 731-646-0984

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: IN THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF AGNESJOHNS NORMAN, DE-CEASED

NO. 2014-0476-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters Testamentaryhav-ing been granted on the 16thday of September, 2014, bythe Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi, tothe undersigned as Executrixof the estate of Agnes JohnsNorman, deceased, notice ishereby given to all personshaving claims against said es-tate to present the same tothe Clerk of said Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law within ninety(90) days of the date of firstpublication of this notice, orthey will be forever barred.

This the 16th day ofSeptember, 2014.

NANCY NORMANMcLEMORE, EXECUTRIX

3tc 9/19, 9/26, 10/03/2014 14578

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION OFTHE ESTATE OF EDITH M.SMITH, DECEASED

No. 2014-0382-02

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF EDITH M. SMITH, DE-CEASED

You have been made a De-fendant in the Complaint filedin this Court by Ronnie KeithSmith, individually and as ad-ministrator of the estate ofEdith M. Smith, deceased, andChristina Lynn Campbell, andyou must take immediate ac-tion to protect your rights.

Respondents other than youin this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofEdith M. Smith at 9:00 o'clocka.m. on the 3 0th day ofSeptember, 2 014, at the Al-corn County Chancery Build-ing, Corinth, Mississippi, andin case of your failure to ap-pear and defend a judgmentwill be entered against youfor the things demanded insaid Complaint.

You are not required to filean answer or other pleading,but you may do so if you de-sire.

ISSUED under my hand andseal of said Court this the25th of August, 2 014.

BOBBY MAROLT,

CHANCERY COURT CLERK

BY: WILLIE JUSTICE, D. C.

4tc: 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, &09/19/201414753

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

$ SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $

Red Tag ClearanceEVENT!

Over 15 Models MUSTGO!!!

Save THOUSANDS onModel Price Cuts.These homes are

LOADED!Hurry Now for the best

selection.

CLAYTON HOMESof CORINTH, MS3802 HWY 72 W.

1 Mile W. of the Hospital

16 X 80 Single wide -3BR/2BA ready to go.New Kit. Cabinets, sinks,toilet, floor covering, &paint t/o. Home will notlast long! $18,900 in-cluding delivery and setup. Call 662-760-2120

2007 16 x 52 2BR/1BASingle Wide- Home hasVinyl Siding, shingleroof, & CHA. $18,900 setup and delivery- 662-760-2120

BRAND "R" New 4 Bed-room 28 x 76 EnergyStar Double Wide, de-livered and set up w/AC. ONLY $49,995.00-662-401-1093

CLOSE OUT special on all2014 lot models. CALL662-419-9762 for details

DOUBLE WIDE for Sale:28 x 42 3BR/2BA de-livered and set up for$24,500- 662-419-9762

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HOUSE FOR Sale: 3 bed-room, 1 Bath wi thTwenty- PLUS Acres onHighway 22 South. inM i c h i e , T e n n e s s e e3 8 3 5 7 . P l e a s e c a l l :1-708-710-6524

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.

6B • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

1. Find You Tag # In The Classified Section of the

Daily Corinthian.

2. Drive Your Vehicle To The Daily Corinthian

3. Collect $50.

Page 21: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES0848

*#$20,299*#$20 299

*#$12,597

*#$18,594

AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES0848

2013 Buick Verano

leather, full loaded, 38,000 miles ..... $16,000

2007 Hyundai Tuscon

auto, air, 81k miles, nice ................... $7,700

2006 Chevy Silverado

reg. cab, v6, swb ............................... $6,800

2000 Mustang GT

blue, v-8, fully equipped..................... $6,800

2007 Ford Explorer

white, 3rd row seat ............................ $7,500

2007 Chevy Malibu

v-6, blue, $127k miles ...................... $5,800

2008 Mercury Mariner

automatic, air, clean ........................... $6,800

1993 Chevy Silverado

regular cab, automatic ....................... $4,500

2002 Dodge Dakota

extended, v-6, silver color .................. $4,500

Don’t Miss These Specials!

See Gene Sanders

Corinth Motor Sales108 Cardinal Drive

just East of Caterpillar - Corinth, MS662-287-2254 or 665-2462

SOLD

All Rolled Into One!

and more…

Be informed. Know what’s happening in

your city and county.Subscribe now for GREAT

savings off the newstand price!

SUBSCRIBE NOW!!!

12 Weeks $48.00 $38.85 19%

24 Weeks $96.00 $73.85 23%

52 Weeks $208.00 $139.85 33%

NewsStandPrice

YourPrice

Savings

Call now to take advantage of this great offer (662) 287-6111.

Must not have been a subscriber in the past 60 days.

Offer expires: 12/31/14

COUPONS LOCAL NEWS STOCKS COMICS SPORTS STATE NEWS OBITUARIES

Special Home Delivery Offer

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION OFTHE ESTATE OF JANICE P.MITCHELL, DECEASED

NO. 2014-0420-02

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF JANICE P. MITCHELL,DECEASED

You have been made a De-fendant in the Complaint filedin this Court by Dewayna P.Smith and Bobby E. Mitchell,both individually and as jointadministratrix - administratorof the estate of Janice P.Mitchell, deceased, and youmust take immediate actionto protect your rights.

Respondents other than youin this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofJanice P. Mitchell at 9:00o'clock a.m. on the 3 0th dayof September, 2014, at theAlcorn County ChanceryBuilding, Corinth, Mississippi,and in case of your failure toappear and defend a judg-ment will be entered againstyou for the things demandedin said Complaint.

You are not required to filean answer or other pleading,but you may do so if you de-sire.

ISSUED under my hand andseal of said Court this the25th of August, 2014.

BOBBY MAROLT

CHANCERY COURT CLERK

BY: WILLIE JUSTICE, D. C

08/29, 09/05, 09/12,09/19/201414754.

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

HANDY-MAN Repa i rSpec . Lic. & Bonded,plumbing, electrical,floors, woodrot, car-p e n t r y , s h e e t r o c k .Res./com. Remodeling& repairs. 662-286-5978.

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION OFTHE ESTATE OF EDITH M.SMITH, DECEASED

No. 2014-0382-02

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF EDITH M. SMITH, DE-CEASED

You have been made a De-fendant in the Complaint filedin this Court by Ronnie KeithSmith, individually and as ad-ministrator of the estate ofEdith M. Smith, deceased, andChristina Lynn Campbell, andyou must take immediate ac-tion to protect your rights.

Respondents other than youin this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofEdith M. Smith at 9:00 o'clocka.m. on the 3 0th day ofSeptember, 2 014, at the Al-corn County Chancery Build-ing, Corinth, Mississippi, andin case of your failure to ap-pear and defend a judgmentwill be entered against youfor the things demanded insaid Complaint.

You are not required to filean answer or other pleading,but you may do so if you de-sire.

ISSUED under my hand andseal of said Court this the25th of August, 2 014.

BOBBY MAROLT,

CHANCERY COURT CLERK

BY: WILLIE JUSTICE, D. C.

4tc: 08/29, 09/05, 09/12, &09/19/201414753

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION OFTHE ESTATE OF JANICE P.MITCHELL, DECEASED

NO. 2014-0420-02

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF JANICE P. MITCHELL,DECEASED

You have been made a De-fendant in the Complaint filedin this Court by Dewayna P.Smith and Bobby E. Mitchell,both individually and as jointadministratrix - administratorof the estate of Janice P.Mitchell, deceased, and youmust take immediate actionto protect your rights.

Respondents other than youin this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofJanice P. Mitchell at 9:00o'clock a.m. on the 3 0th dayof September, 2014, at theAlcorn County ChanceryBuilding, Corinth, Mississippi,and in case of your failure toappear and defend a judg-ment will be entered againstyou for the things demandedin said Complaint.

You are not required to filean answer or other pleading,but you may do so if you de-sire.

ISSUED under my hand andseal of said Court this the25th of August, 2014.

BOBBY MAROLT

CHANCERY COURT CLERK

BY: WILLIE JUSTICE, D. C

08/29, 09/05, 09/12,09/19/201414754.

Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 19, 2014 • 7B

Page 22: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2013 NissanFrontier

Desert Runner2x4

4 door, Silver1350 Miles

$26,000662-415-8881

1997 F150 Ford

Extended Cab XLT

Good Condition

$4950.

662-643-5845

2000 GMC Jimmy4x4 • 150K

leather, sunroof, 4.3 vortecgood tires

$2,550.00 OBO662-319-7145

REDUCED

REDUCED

REDUCED

REDUCED

$1600.00 OBO

1994 DODGE 250 VANWHITE w/ V8, 318

ENGINE, AC, RUNS GOOD, DOES NOT USE OIL.

Great Work or Utility Van.

$1800662-284-6146

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1996 VW CabrioConvertible

178,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

1999 Jeep Grand Cherokee

283,000 Approx. Miles

$3000.

662-396-1182

2005 Dodge Ram 1500V-6 Automatic,

77,000 MilesCold AC, Looks

& Runs Excellent!$6300

662-665-1995

2001 Nissan XterraFOR SALE

Needs a little work.Good Bargain!

Call:662-643-3084

1984 DODGE RAM CLASSIC

CUSTOMIZED

CALL FOR DETAILS

731-239-8803

2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bike

w/removable (three bolts) trike kit.

6400 miles, excellent condition.

$8500.00662-808-9662 or

662-286-9662

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $2600 obo.

662-664-1957.

1984 CORVETTE383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum.

heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt

w/new paint job (silver fl eck paint). $9777.77

Call Keith662-415-0017.

REDUCED

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

FOR SALE

Call:287-1552

2000 ChryslerTown & Country

$2,70000

804BOATS

1993 BAYLINER CLASSIC

19’6” LONGFIBERGLAS

INCLUDES TRAILERTHIS BOAT IS

KEPT INSIDE AND IS IN EXCELLENT

CONDITIONNEW 4 CYL MOTOR

PRICE IS NEGOTIABLECALL 662-660-3433

Loweline Boat

14’ fl at bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor

and all. Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503

2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer

Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube

$19,300662-427-9063

17’ 1991 Evinrude40 h.p.Bass

Tracker$2500.00

Call: 662-287-0991

or662-665-2020

Bass Boat2005 Nitro 882

18’+ w/ 150 HP Mercuryupgraded electronics,

low hoursNice condition$14,000 OBO

665-0958 Leave a message

REDUCED

17ft. Fisher Marsh Hawk75hp Force- M/Guide

Hummingbird Fish FinderGalv. Trailer, totally

accessorized!$6500

662-808-0287 or 662-808-0285

$4500 OBORecently Serviced

1996 CROWNLINE CUDY23’ on trailer

& cover5.7 liter engine

runs & works great.

$10,000

731-607-3172$6,900

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

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

$85,000662-415-0590

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a

High Five stainless prop,

for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat

Sales in Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr.,

new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2005 Yamaha V-star 1100 Silverado

Loaded with Chrome, 32,000 Miles, factory

cover with extras

$3,200662-396-1098

804BOATS

868AUTOMOBILES

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

1964 1/2 Mustang Coupe

351 Windsor w/ 3 speed

transmission, good interior,Needs Paint.

$6500.00 OBO662-664-0357

2012 JeepWrangler 4WD

9,600 MilesGarage Kept, it has

been babied.All maintenance

records available.Call or Text:

662-594-5830

$4500.00 OBO

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS

AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO731-453-5031

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor

1400 Hours

$8500.00731-926-0006

1993 John Deere 5300

Tractorw/ John Deere

loader.2900 Hours

$10,500731-926-0006

2000 John Deere 5410

Tractorw/ Loader

950 Hours

$16,500

731-926-0006

804BOATS

2004

662-287-2703 or662-415-3133

F & F 17.5 ft.

Custom Built Crappie Boat w/ 50hp Honda Motor, Tilt & Trim, completely loaded.

$8500.00FIRM

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some

work.$1500

662-664-3958

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2007 White Toyota Tundra

double cab, 5.7 V8 SR5, Aluminum wheels, 64,135

miles, lots of extras, $19,000.

Call 662-603-9304

$1,250.00662-462-5669

BED ONLY Fully Enclosed Utility Truck

8' Long BedAll tool trays & Boxes have locks

2000 Chevy Express RV

Handicap Van w/ Extra Heavy DutyWheelchair Lift101,538 Miles

$ ,000 OBO

662-287-7403

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat25 HP Motor

$2700.00Ask for Brad:

284-4826

SOLD

GUARANTEEDAuto SalesAdvertise 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.

2004 White

Ford 2505.4 Titan Engine

Goose neck Hitch

Xtended Cab

Short Bed

$8,000.00

662-415-3600

$25,000

REDUCED!2003 WhiteFord 250

REDUCED

REDUCED

$7,500

2010 Black Nissan Titan Pro4x

Off Road 5.6 V-84 Door

93,000 Miles

$25,000662-415-8869 or

662-415-8868

2012 Buick EnclavePearl White

Fully Loaded!Heated Leather Seats

DVD, Sunroof,Back-up Camera

56xxx Miles$30,400

662-415-6290or

662-287-2968

REDUCED

SOLD

SOLDKUBOTA TRACTOR

L4630 46 HP, 4wd, 295 Hours

6’ LMC Bush Hog5’King Cutter Tiller

All $17,500.00Will Separate

Call: 662-415-2340

92’ Ford TaurusONE OWNER

77K MilesV-6

$2650.00

662-415-5247

2004 Malibu Classic

2nd Owner, New TiresNever Wrecked

$3250 OBO662-415-3415

15ft 1988 Dixie Craft BoatWith 2002 25HP Mercury

Electric Start with Minnkota Trolling Motor. 2 Eagle Fish

Finders, Turff inside.

$2500.00Call 416-1316 after 3P.M.

OBO

SOLD

SOLD

2013 KUBOTA3800 SERIES

TRACTORBUSH HOG, BACKHOE,FRONT LOADER AND

BOX BLADE$23,500

WILL TRADE662-643-3565

REDUCED

2001 TOYOTA TACOMA

2.3 Liter, Excellent Condition

New Tires, Great ACOne Owner67K Miles

$7500.00Call:

662-643-3565

2006 Chevy TruckRegular CabOne Owner

4.3 Liter, 71K MilesGood on Gas,

5 Speed

$8500.00Call 662-643-3565

2006 Wilderness

Camper

5th Wheel 29.5ft w/ large

one side slide out

non-smoking owner

fully equip.IUKA

662-423-1727

SOLD

White 2006 Wrangler XMint Condition! Straight 6- auto-

matic- with 44,100 miles.Trail Certifi ed, but never been off-road.

Mickey Thompson wheels with BF Goodrich Tires (35’s)- less than 15K miles on them. Black Hard

top currently on it & Bikini top comes with it. Tan Leather Interior, Stereo Sound Bar, Custom Jeep Cover, and Custom Bumpers. Serviced regularly. 4\” lift with 2\” body lift. Title in Hand- $22,000.

Cashier’s Check or Cash only, extra pictures available. Serious Buyers Only,

located in Corinth, MS.Call Randy: 662-415-5462

FOR SALE:2001 Dodge

Caravan

Appx: 176K milesEXTRA CLEAN

$2600.00

Call: 287-9254

REDUCED

New Tires Cold Air

$2,100

2010 BuickLacrosse CXL

36,000 MilesFully Loaded, leather,

sunroof, Harman Kardon Stereo System

$18,000662-415-4752

2003 VW BeetleAutomatic, Cold Air

Good Tires Paint and Body Good Condition

Extra Clean139,989 Miles

$5900.00662-287-5929

$7800$7000.00

REDUCED

$3100

SOLD

SOLD

2010 DodgeCalibur

56,000 Miles, 41 MPGLocal Car, one owner

$10,500731-412-1863

8B • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Page 23: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

Highway 145 in Booneville • 662-728-5381www.cartwrightford.com

@JPC 13* 72 months, @ 2.9% APR. $2,000 down payment excludes tax, title, $255 doc fee. W.A.C.

• Honest Deals • Fair Prices • Huge Inventory To Choose From.

• 2014 Chevy Suburban Black, leather #2171...................................................Kickoff Price$33,90000

• 2012 Ram 2500 Crewcab 4x4 Diesel #0779............................................Kickoff Price$38,90000

• 2012 Ford Explorer White, Moonroof, Leather #3070............................................Kickoff Price$25,50000

• 2011 Chevy Silverado 4x4 LT Red #6761.................................................Kickoff Price$29,80000

• 2011 Ford Expedition EL Blue, Tan Leather, #3876.........................................Kickoff Price$25,90000

• 2010 Chevy Tahoe LT Silver, Leather. #8069....................................................Kickoff Price$22,90000

• 2010 Buick Enclave CXL Leather. #0647.....................................................Kickoff Price$21,90000

• 2010 Ford F150 Crewcab 4x4 White, #2074 ...........................................Kickoff Price 27,80000

2014 HYUNDAI SONATA LIMITEDMoonroof, Nav. Leather, 5k Miles. stk#3795

$22,900 or

$31700month

2014 FORD FUSION SESilver, Moonroof. stk#3039

$19,400 or

$26400month

2014 CHEVY CAPTIVA LTwhite.. stk#6544

$18,800 or

$25500month

2013 FORD FUSION SEWhite. stk#0349

$17,900 or

$24000month

2013 FORD ESCAPE SEWhite. stk#4931

$16,400 or

$21900month

2013 CHEVY CAPT1VASilver. stk#8198

$17,500 or

$23500month

2013 FORD EXPEDITION EL.Leather. stk#0069

$33,900 or

$48500month

2013 FORD EDGE LIMITEDSilver, Leather, Chrome Wheels. stk#8661

$23,900 or

$33200month

2012 FORD FOCUS SE4 door. stk#4794

$14,400 or

$18800month

2013 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SXTBeige stk#2757

$17,900 or

$24000month

2013 CHEVY EQUINOX LTSilver. stk#0166

$21,800 or

$29900month

2012 FORD ESCAPE XLTRed. stk#1191

$15,900 or

$21000month

2014 FORD MUSTANGRed, Tan Leather, 12k miles.. stk#1946

$20,900 or

$28700month

2012 NISSAN MAXIMABlack, Moonroof. stk#1311

$19,900 or

$27200month

2011 NISSAN SENTRA4 door, White. stk#1208

$12,900 or

$16500month

2010 FORD FUSION SEBlack. stk#0324

$11,900 or

$14900month

TRUCKS AND SUVS

Daily Corinthian • Friday, September 19, 2014 • 9B

Page 24: 091914 daily corinthian e edition

RICKY KING

662-842-5277

966 S. Gloster

Tupelo, MS 38804

662-287-8773

916 Hwy. 45 South

Corinth, MS 38834

Bring Us Your Trade-In

Readers Choice Favorite Used Car Dealer 2013 WWW.KINGKARS.NETRICKY KING MIKE DORAN TONY BONDS

2007 GMC Sierra Z71 4x4#18103, Crew Cab

$20,888

2013 Chevy Cruze#18125

$15,888

2008 Ford Explorer Sport Trac#18165

$14,888

2009 GMC Sierra#18109, Crew Cab

$22,888

2008 Jeep Wrangler #18154, Hardtop, Automatic, Lots of Extras

$23,888

2011 GMC Terrain SLT#18126

$22,888

2009 Jeep Wrangler#18102

$22,988

2011 Chevy Silverado Z71#18150, Crew Cab, LT

$31,888

2008 Ford Mustang GT#18027, Leather, 5 Speed

$18,950

2012 Chevy Silverado Z71#18083, Crew Cab, LT

$22,888

2011 Chevy Silverado#18107, Ext Cab

$19,888

2011 Buick Lacrosse CXL#18101, Leather, Dual Sunroof

$24,800

2008 GMC Sierra Ext Cab#18033, Texas Edition

$17,888

2009 Chevy SilveradoCrew Cab, 36K Miles #18156

$24,888

2011 Chevy SilveradoCrew Cab #18166

$22,888

2010 GMC Acadia #18161, Leather, Sunroof, SLT, 1 Owner

$19,888

2014 Dodge Charger#18174, 20K Miles

$19,888

2012 Chrysler 300#18113, 54K Miles, Leather, Sunroof

$22,888

2008 Jeep Wrangler#18169, Automatic

$17,888

Nissan QuestMUST SEE! #18048

$17,888

2013 Dodge Challenger #18059

$25,888

2008 Chevy Tahoe LTZ #18157, Loaded

$24,888

STOP BY & REGISTERFOR A

FREE GRILLTO BE GIVEN

AWAY ONSEPTEMBER 30

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.

UNBEATABLE DEALS ON EVERY MODEL!

LOWEST PRICES IN THE AREA— Guaranteed!

SUPERSTICKER DAYS

10B • Friday, September 19, 2014 • Daily Corinthian


Top Related