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Vol. 118, No. 205 Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages 2 sections Friday Aug. 29, 2014 50 cents Today 94 Hot Tonight 72 Index On this day in history 150 years ago The Democratic National convention convenes in Chicago. The keynote address is given by copperhead Clement Val- landigham, a man who had been banished to the Confederacy, but had been allowed to quietly reenter the county in June. Stocks...... 8A Classified...... 4B Comics...... 9A State...... 5A Weather.... 10A Obituaries...... 6A Opinion...... 4A Sports.... 12A 30% chance of p.m. thunderstorms The city of Corinth’s pro- posed budget for the upcoming scal year will make no change to the property tax rate. The Board of Mayor and Al- dermen held a special meeting Thursday morning to continue working on the budget. It goes to a public hearing in Tuesday’s regular meeting but will not be ready for adoption until a later date, said City Clerk Vickie Roach. Among the details still to be determined is a possible pay raise for city employees. Roach is projecting little change in revenue in the com- ing year. Although sales tax is currently enjoying an upward trend, she told the board she does not look for this year’s growth to be repeated at the current levels next year. And, while preliminary numbers from the tax assessor’s ofce show the city has experienced some increase in assessed val- ue, an increase in homesteads will reduce the overall tax base, resulting in a mill generating a little less in the coming year. The board worked through the requests for outside agen- cies and left most unchanged. Two, however, are getting one- Budget plan has no tax rate change BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Please see BUDGET | 6A If there’s ever a time to get doused by a bucket of icy water, it might as well be 5 p.m. on a sweaty August afternoon. That’s what happened to Cir- cuit Clerk Joe Caldwell and his deputies on Wednesday as the ice bucket challenge, which has been sweeping the nation, found its way to the steps of the Alcorn County Courthouse. It is intended to raise aware- ness about ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), also common- ly known as Lou Gehrig’s dis- ease, and encourage donations to help the cause. “It was quite chilly there for a moment,” said Deputy Clerk Sherra Green, after she and Caldwell & crew accept icy challenge BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Staff photo by Jebb Johnston Getting soaked are (from left) Crystal Starling, Heather Boyer, Joe Caldwell, Kalee Eaton and Sherra Green. Pouring the buckets are (from left) Tom Sweat, Gary Ross, Morgan White and Jody Aldridge. Please see CHALLENGE | 2A IUKA — During John Marshall Stone’s 12-year tenure as Missis- sippi governor in the late 1800’s, he set standards for honesty and integrity — two things that have rarely been matched by other poli- ticians. Before descending on Jackson, Stone left his mark on Tishomingo County as Iuka mayor from 1866- 1868. Author Ben Earl Kitchens has now released a new Mississippi history book detailing the life of Stone. “John Marshall Stone, Missis- sippi’s Honorable and Longest Serving Governor” describes one of Mississippi’s political gures during one of the state’s most crit- ical and tumultuous times follow- ing the Reconstruction era. Stone used his leadership skills and business acumen to help pull Mis- sissippi out of the depths of social and nancial mire. Kitchens will be in Iuka for a book signing event this weekend as part of the Iuka Heritage Festi- val. The author will be at the Old Tishomingo County Courthouse on East Quitman Street at 6 p.m., today and at 10 a.m., on Saturday. All books sold during the festival will benet the operation of the museum. “Little has been written about the scope of the monumental ser- vices Mr. Stone provided to Mis- sissippi,” said Kitchens. “All of Book proceeds help museum BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Please see BOOK | 6A KOSSUTH — Football is king this time of year. That isn’t keeping Kossuth Middle School from looking forward to letting it y come basketball season. KMS has reason to rush the hoop year. A different looking gym will greet KMS fans when round- ball seasons tips off in around two months. An all new oor and freshly painted walls and bleachers have made the gymnasium look like a new place. “The gym has so much tra- dition,” said KMS Principal Sam Roberts. “When I got here last year, I could tell how much people loved it.” Roberts hatched a plan to make the gym more modern over the summer. “We repainted everything after the oor was scraped all the way down to the wood,” he said. Gerald Parks and Terry Dalton with Parks Hardwood were in charge of the proj- ect which took a little over a month to complete. “They did an excellent job and I can’t thank them enough,” said Roberts. The gym oor is very simi- lar to the LSU Tigers basket- ball oor. Kossuth’s oor is now a brighter color with the three-point area stained a dark color. Both free throw circles are done in Kossuth maroon and a white Aggie head is now at center court. The bleachers have been painted all gray and the walls have also been repaint- ed. Each sideline has been stained along with the word Aggies on both baselines. “It has been a process and we still aren’t nished,” said the principal. “I am very hap- py the way it has turned out and hope the Kossuth family appreciates it.” Both middle school coaches approve. “It’s like a new gym and it plays like one it too,” said boys coach Chris Byrd of the no dead spots on the oor now. “The gym brings back memories of when I played here,” said Angie Morelock Malone, who was a member of the Lady Aggies in the ear- ly 90s. “The kids really love it too because it’s so much brighter.” Kossuth will get an extra opportunity to showcase the gym when it hosts the Tri- County Tournament in 2015. “This gym has such a his- tory about it that I wanted to see it done for the students and former students,” said Roberts. “I haven’t heard anything but positives about it.” Kossuth Middle School gym gets facelift BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Staff photo by Steve Beavers Kossuth Middle School coach Chris Byrd (left) and principal Sam Roberts discuss some of the improvements made to the gym. See additional photos on Page 2A. Daily Corinthian HWY 72 EAST CORINTH, MISSISSIPPI LOCAL: 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 RAM 1500 STK# 2681R, 2682R, 2683R, 2684R INCLUDES AUTO, HEMI V8, POWER PKG, & REAR BACKUP CAM! #RAM INCLUDES 500 CHRYSLER CAPITAL BONUS ALREADY APPLIED. BUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN! $374 PER MONTH *$22,499 -$500 ^COLLEGE GRAD BONUS *^$21,999.

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Page 1: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 118, No. 205 • Corinth, Mississippi • 22 pages • 2 sections

FridayAug. 29, 2014

50 centsToday94

HotTonight

72

Index On this day in history 150 years agoThe Democratic National convention convenes in Chicago.

The keynote address is given by copperhead Clement Val-landigham, a man who had been banished to the Confederacy, but had been allowed to quietly reenter the county in June.

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

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

30% chance of p.m. thunderstorms

The city of Corinth’s pro-posed budget for the upcoming fi scal year will make no change to the property tax rate.

The Board of Mayor and Al-dermen held a special meeting

Thursday morning to continue working on the budget. It goes to a public hearing in Tuesday’s regular meeting but will not be ready for adoption until a later date, said City Clerk Vickie Roach.

Among the details still to be

determined is a possible pay raise for city employees.

Roach is projecting little change in revenue in the com-ing year. Although sales tax is currently enjoying an upward trend, she told the board she does not look for this year’s

growth to be repeated at the current levels next year. And, while preliminary numbers from the tax assessor’s offi ce show the city has experienced some increase in assessed val-ue, an increase in homesteads will reduce the overall tax base,

resulting in a mill generating a little less in the coming year.

The board worked through the requests for outside agen-cies and left most unchanged. Two, however, are getting one-

Budget plan has no tax rate changeBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Please see BUDGET | 6A

If there’s ever a time to get doused by a bucket of icy water, it might as well be 5 p.m. on a sweaty August afternoon.

That’s what happened to Cir-cuit Clerk Joe Caldwell and his deputies on Wednesday as the ice bucket challenge, which has been sweeping the nation, found its way to the steps of the Alcorn County Courthouse.

It is intended to raise aware-ness about ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis), also common-ly known as Lou Gehrig’s dis-ease, and encourage donations to help the cause.

“It was quite chilly there for a moment,” said Deputy Clerk Sherra Green, after she and

Caldwell & crew accept icy challenge

BY JEBB [email protected]

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Getting soaked are (from left) Crystal Starling, Heather Boyer, Joe Caldwell, Kalee Eaton and Sherra Green. Pouring the buckets are (from left) Tom Sweat, Gary Ross, Morgan White and Jody Aldridge.Please see CHALLENGE | 2A

IUKA — During John Marshall Stone’s 12-year tenure as Missis-sippi governor in the late 1800’s, he set standards for honesty and integrity — two things that have rarely been matched by other poli-ticians.

Before descending on Jackson, Stone left his mark on Tishomingo County as Iuka mayor from 1866-1868.

Author Ben Earl Kitchens has now released a new Mississippi history book detailing the life of Stone.

“John Marshall Stone, Missis-sippi’s Honorable and Longest Serving Governor” describes one of Mississippi’s political fi gures during one of the state’s most crit-ical and tumultuous times follow-ing the Reconstruction era. Stone used his leadership skills and business acumen to help pull Mis-sissippi out of the depths of social and fi nancial mire.

Kitchens will be in Iuka for a book signing event this weekend as part of the Iuka Heritage Festi-val. The author will be at the Old Tishomingo County Courthouse on East Quitman Street at 6 p.m., today and at 10 a.m., on Saturday.

All books sold during the festival will benefi t the operation of the museum.

“Little has been written about the scope of the monumental ser-vices Mr. Stone provided to Mis-sissippi,” said Kitchens. “All of

Book proceedshelp museum

BY ZACK [email protected]

Please see BOOK | 6A

KOSSUTH — Football is king this time of year.

That isn’t keeping Kossuth Middle School from looking forward to letting it fl y come basketball season.

KMS has reason to rush the hoop year.

A different looking gym will greet KMS fans when round-ball seasons tips off in around two months.

An all new fl oor and freshly painted walls and bleachers have made the gymnasium look like a new place.

“The gym has so much tra-dition,” said KMS Principal Sam Roberts. “When I got here last year, I could tell how much people loved it.”

Roberts hatched a plan to make the gym more modern over the summer.

“We repainted everything after the fl oor was scraped all the way down to the wood,” he said.

Gerald Parks and Terry Dalton with Parks Hardwood were in charge of the proj-ect which took a little over a month to complete.

“They did an excellent job and I can’t thank them enough,” said Roberts.

The gym fl oor is very simi-lar to the LSU Tigers basket-ball fl oor. Kossuth’s fl oor is now a brighter color with the three-point area stained a dark color.

Both free throw circles are done in Kossuth maroon and a white Aggie head is now at

center court.The bleachers have been

painted all gray and the walls have also been repaint-ed. Each sideline has been stained along with the word Aggies on both baselines.

“It has been a process and we still aren’t fi nished,” said the principal. “I am very hap-py the way it has turned out and hope the Kossuth family appreciates it.”

Both middle school coaches approve.

“It’s like a new gym and it plays like one it too,” said boys coach Chris Byrd of the no dead spots on the fl oor now.

“The gym brings back memories of when I played here,” said Angie Morelock Malone, who was a member of the Lady Aggies in the ear-ly 90s. “The kids really love

it too because it’s so much brighter.”

Kossuth will get an extra opportunity to showcase the gym when it hosts the Tri-County Tournament in 2015.

“This gym has such a his-tory about it that I wanted to see it done for the students and former students,” said Roberts. “I haven’t heard anything but positives about it.”

Kossuth Middle School gym gets faceliftBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Kossuth Middle School coach Chris Byrd (left) and principal Sam Roberts discuss some of the improvements made to the gym. See additional photos on Page 2A.

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.

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Page 2: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

Taking the challenge?

Editor’s Note: Are you and your friends taking the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge? Take a photo and send it and the relat-ed information to [email protected]. Please include a cell phone number in case there are any questions.

Staff photo by Jebb Johnston

Crystal Starling reacts to the cold water.

three others got soaked.But when it came down

to it, the anticipation of the icy water was worse than the actual dousing, she said.

Before the buckets were raised, Caldwell issued a challenge to the offi ces of tax assessor and tax collector to do the same. Kenneth Brawner and his staff answered the challenge Thursday after-noon.

ALS affects the nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord that control voluntary muscle move-ment.

CHALLENGE

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

My Journey

My Journey is set for 7 p.m. Saturday

at the Coliseum Civic Center. The play

by Monica Sorrell is an inspirational

story about Sorrell’s daughter, Ebonee

Sanders. MacDonald McCoy (right) plays a

pastor in the story. Tickets are $15 at

the door and the eve-ning includes come-

dian Deno Posey, The Young Family and a

special guest perfor-mance by The Mary

Howell Band.

Staff photos by Steve Beavers

Kossuth Middle School basketball players will have a new floor to play on when bas-ketball season begins.

Gymfacelift

Kossuth Middle School coach Angie Malone works with eighth-grader Morgan Hodum on her shot during a break be-fore practice, below. See related story and photo on Page 1A.

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Page 3: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Local/State3A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

Today in

History

Today is Friday, August 29, the 241st day of 2014. There are 124 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlightin History:

On August 29, 1944, 15,000 American troops of the 28th Infantry Divi-sion marched down the Champs Elysees in Paris as the French capital continued to celebrate its liberation from the Nazis.

On this date:

In 1533, the last Incan King of Peru, Atahualpa, was executed on orders of Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro.

In 1814, during the War of 1812, Alexandria, Virginia, formally surren-dered to British military forces, which occupied the city until Sept. 3.

In 1864, the Demo-cratic National Conven-tion, which nominated Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan for president, opened in Chicago.

In 1877, the second president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Brigham Young, died in Salt Lake City, Utah, at age 76.

In 1910, Korean Em-peror Sunjong abdicated as the Japan-Korea An-nexation Treaty went into effect.

In 1935, the film “Top Hat,” starring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rog-ers, premiered at Radio City Music Hall.

In 1964, Roy Orbison’s single “Oh, Pretty Wom-an” was released on the Monument label.

In 1972, swimmer Mark Spitz of the United States won the third of his seven gold medals at the Munich Olympics, finishing first in the 200-meter freestyle.

In 1982, Academy Award-winning actress Ingrid Bergman died in London on her 67th birthday.

In 1987, Academy Award-winning actor Lee Marvin died in Tucson, Arizona, at age 63.

In 2005, Hurricane Ka-trina hit the Gulf Coast near Buras, Louisiana, bringing floods that dev-astated New Orleans. More than 1,800 people in the region died.

Ten years ago:

Tropical Storm Gaston made landfall in South Carolina at near-hurri-cane strength.

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

GLEN — Honoring those who perished dur-ing the attacks of 9/11, Indian Springs United Methodist Church of Glen and the Glen Vol-unteer Fire Department will sponsor the 9th An-nual September 11th Ser-vice of Remembrance on Thursday, Sept. 11, at 7 p.m.

The community-wide event will take place out-side of the Glen Volun-teer Fire Station on High-way 72 East in Glen.

“Each year our service has grown in participa-tion, attendance and scope,” said the pastor of Indian Springs Unit-ed Methodist Church, Brother Rick Wells Jr. “Several area churches and schools are joining

this year in the time of remembering, refl ection and prayer.”

A multimedia presen-tation will also be add-ed to the program this year.

“The service is divid-ed into three parts. A time of remembrance where those attend-ing are walked through those horrifi c events on that beautiful September

morning in New York, Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania. A time of thanksgiving for our fi rst responders and a prayer of blessing upon those who serve others. The service will conclude with a time of refl ection and prayer for the nation,” said Pastor Wells. “We warmly invite all area fi re departments, police and sheriff’s departments,

medical fi rst respond-ers, churches, civil ser-vants and civic organiza-tions to participate.”

(For more information or to be put added to the program, contact The Reverend Rick Wells Jr., Pastor of Indian Springs United Methodist Church at 662-587-9602 or by email at [email protected].)

Service honors victims of Sept. 11BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

BY JEFF AMYAssociated Press

JACKSON — Four-teen Mississippi school districts sued the state Thursday, seeking money they say they were illegally shorted by the state’s pub-lic school funding formula over the last six years.

The lawsuit also asks a judge to order lawmakers to never again underfund the Mississippi Adequate Educational Program.

State lawmakers have underfunded the for-mula by $1.5 billion since 2009. The districts, including Greenville, Hattiesburg and Simp-son County, say they’re owed $115 million. More school systems could join the lawsuit, but districts that don’t join would not receive back money.

Former Gov. Ron-nie Musgrove has been pushing the effort. As lieutenant governor in 1997, the Democrat helped steer the Missis-sippi Adequate Educa-tion Program into law over the veto of Repub-lican Gov. Kirk Fordice.

With lawmakers put-ting more than $400 million into savings ac-counts in the current budget, Musgrove ar-gues there was enough money to fi ll the $250 million shortfall in this year’s formula.

“It’s disheartening to see over the last several years that the Legisla-ture won’t even follow the law that they them-selves passed,” he told

The Associated Press ear-lier this month.

Current law says the Legislature “shall” fully fund the formula, and Musgrove argues that leaves no room for inter-pretation. He hopes the lawsuit is resolved before the Legislature convenes in 2016. Others say it’s not that simple, and any verdict in Hinds County Chancery Court would be subject to appeal to the state Supreme Court.

Backers of a ballot ini-tiative to guarantee “an adequate and effi cient system of free public schools” into the state Constitution have active-ly worked to persuade school districts not to sue. They warn lawmak-

ers might react angrily by cutting funding.

“Millions of dollars will go into Ronnie’s and other lawyers’ pockets in-stead of into the schools,” said Claiborne Barksdale, a referendum supporter and retired CEO of the Barksdale Reading Initia-tive, which is funded with brother Jim Barksdale’s $100 million pledge to im-prove reading. “The irony is striking. The constitu-tional referendum is by far the best way to attack the underfunding issue — a permanent, conser-vative, constitutionally-grounded approach with broad public backing.”

Musgrove’s legal group would make $27.8 mil-lion in fees from the 14

districts they represent, according to Associated Press calculations using a sample fee schedule.

“It is disappointing to me that Ronnie Mus-grove is using education as a pretense to get rich at the expense of the Missis-sippi taxpayers,” Gov Phil Bryant said in a state-ment, warning that suc-cessful suits could force the state to raise taxes.

Musgrove argues his approach will provide faster relief and get dis-tricts back money they’ve already lost, instead of just helping in the future. He said the amendment would have to be en-forced by time-consum-ing lawsuits that could be as expensive as his.

“There are so many schools out there that can’t wait into the future for the ballot initiative,” he said. “They’re having to cut programs.”

Other districts suing include Clarksdale, Clay County, Leake County, Okolona, Prentiss County, Richton, Smith County, Tate County, Wayne County, West Tallahatchie and Wilkinson County.

Richton Superinten-dent Noal Cochran said board members believe they can support the law-suit and the constitution-al amendment. Cochran said the district has had to cut teachers and elec-tives such as fi ne arts, while it hasn’t been able to improve its buildings.

14 school districts sue over underfunding

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Page 4: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Friday, August 29, 2014www.dailycorinthian.com

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When Barack Obama was fi rst elected president, he asked David Axelrod to leave Chicago and come to the White House with him. Axel-rod would be a senior adviser, a powerful position where he could craft both policy and the president’s message.

But Axelrod hesitated.Though he was often cred-

ited with being a calming in-fl uence in the fractious world of high-stakes politics, there was one thing Axelrod held dear: the ability to tell his boss off when his boss needed telling off.

And when you’re president, Axelrod told Obama, I won’t be able to tell you off.

Obama thought about it.Yes, you still can tell me off, Obama told

Axelrod, as long as you do it in private.Axelrod went to the White House in Janu-

ary 2009 and left in January 2011. And today I wonder whether there is anyone in the West Wing who has the valor and the vigor to oc-casionally tell the president off.

Was there anyone who said last week: “Uh, the golf thing, Mr. President? Maybe delay it a couple of days? So it doesn’t come minutes after you tell the nation how ‘heartbroken’ you are over a beheaded journalist. Maybe go hiking? Sit on a rock, commune with nature, that kind of thing?”

Instead, the president swiftly changed into his golf togs, grabbed his bag and, as one wit put it, introduced the nation to his new doc-trine: “Speak softly and carry a Big Bertha.”

Even the civil unrest in Ferguson, Mis-souri, after the slaying of an unarmed black teenager by a white police offi cer did not keep Obama off the links. Even though he talked about Ferguson in a brief news conference, he wanted to keep it at arm’s length. “I’ve got to make sure that I don’t look like I’m put-ting my thumb on the scales one way or the other,” Obama said.

So Eric Holder, his attorney general, was left to express the kind of sentiments that Obama used to express. It was Holder who went to Missouri and talked about being has-sled by police as a young man and the kind of smoldering anger and mistrust that builds in black America.

Holder called for a “national conversation” on race, not because such a conversation would be easy but because it was necessary for America’s future.

Obama wanted no part of it. In 2012 – af-ter Trayvon Martin, another unarmed black teenager, was shot and killed – Obama said it is not “particularly productive when politi-cians try to organize conversations” on race.

But how does he know? When did he try it?There appears to be nobody working for

him who both disagrees with him and is will-ing to tell him so. Instead, we are left with a president who seems wrapped in his aloof-ness as a protective blanket to keep the out-side from getting in.

He may not care about the “optics” of all this. He’s got his two terms and his big legacy item, national health care.

So why should he worry? You know who should worry? Hillary Clinton should worry.

She has some of the same fl aws as Obama. She can project a chilly public personality, a re-serve and a detachment from ordinary people.

And the Republicans see their opportunity. They already have their 2016 theme:

“She may be riding high right now, but people may decide against having another four years of this kind of governing,” Paul Ryan, who was the Republican vice presiden-tial nominee in 2012, said recently.

His running mate backed him up. “Our party has to come together, or we will contin-ue with a third term of Barack Obama,” Mitt Romney warned.

Clinton must connect with voters and sell her vision of America – which thus far she has kept largely to herself – in order to win.

And even if she does that, she is not a sure thing. If she can be labeled as Obama’s third term, she can be beaten.

That’s because I don’t think there are too many people who want an Obama third term. Not even Obama.

(Roger Simon is chief political columnist of politico.com, an award-winning journalist and a New York Times best selling author.)

Hillary’s doomed if sheis Obama’s third term

Prayer for today

A verse to share

“The tax system should be simplifi ed and work for all Americans with lower in-dividual and corporate tax rates and fewer brackets.”

That’s from the Obama ad-ministration’s 2009 propos-als for tax reform, straight from whitehouse.gov.

“Because our corporate tax system is so riddled with special interest loopholes,” the document goes on, “our system has one of the highest statutory rates among devel-oped countries to generate about the same amount of corporate tax revenue as our developed country partners as a share of our economy.”

That is still accurate ex-cept that, now that Japan has lowered its corporate tax rate, the U.S. is not “among the highest” but is the high-est among developed coun-tries.

The fi rst step in estab-lishing good public policy is identifying problems with and weaknesses in current policy. On the corporate tax, President Obama and his administration started off on the right foot.

Unfortunately, they haven’t moved any further.

Not while Democrats held supermajorities in both houses of Congress in 2009 and 2010. Not in the so-called grand bargain nego-tiations with House Speaker John Boehner in 2011.

And not in Obama’s sec-

ond term. Acting ap-parently on the belief that he voiced on the campaign trail, that the Republicans’ “fever” would break once he was re-elected -- evi-

dently he regards opposition to his policies as sickness -- Obama upped the ante.

His previous proposals for corporate tax reform were revenue-neutral. Rates would be cut and prefer-ences eliminated so as to maintain the same revenue stream.

But his 2013 proposal was different. Corporate tax re-form would have to increase revenue. More money to spend on infrastructure or food stamps or crony-con-nected solar panel subsidies.

Coupled with that was the appointment of Jack Lew as secretary of the Treasury. Participants in the 2011 grand bargain discussions reported that Lew was the most partisan and obdurate of administration negotia-tors. His appointment was a signal the president wanted no deal.

Even so, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a Democrat, and House Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp, a Re-

publican, engaged in exten-sive negotiations with a view to overall tax reform.

They recognized that the high corporate tax rate handicapped U.S.-based fi rms. They understood as well that the U.S.’s near-unique worldwide taxation policy hurt them further.

Other countries tax only profi ts made domestically. The U.S. taxes profi ts made abroad minus any foreign corporate tax paid.

As a result, U.S. corpora-tions leave trillions in profi ts overseas because they get taxed if they bring it back home to do nefarious things such as create new jobs.

All this is, or should be, in the news this week because of the proposed acquisition of U.S.-based Burger King by the Canada-based Tim Hortons donut chain. The new company would pay U.S. rates on profi ts made here, but less on profi ts made elsewhere.

This is what the adminis-tration calls an “inversion” and which its cheerleaders denounce as “unpatriotic.” Several U.S.-based pharma-ceutical and medical device fi rms have made similar transactions with a view to reducing total tax liability.

But, as Judge Learned Hand wrote long ago, “Any-one may arrange his affairs so that his taxes shall be as low as possible; he is not

bound to choose that pat-tern which best pays the treasury. There is not even a patriotic duty to increase one’s taxes.”

Some liberals lament that many countries have been lowering their corporate rate to attract more busi-nesses. These liberals want to resist this “race to the bottom.” But as economists of just about all stripes agree, the corporate tax is not really paid by Scrooge McDuck-like fi gures wal-lowing in their money bins. The costs are passed along to consumers and employ-ees.

At the beginning of his presidency, when he was hailed as a politician unique-ly amenable to compromise and reconciliation, Obama recognized the strength of this case.

But it turns out that he lacks either the inclination or the skills to negotiate, or both. So we get denuncia-tions of “unpatriotic” corpo-rations rather than a policy that solves a readily solvable problem.

(Michael Barone is se-nior political analyst at the Washington Examiner where this article fi rst ap-peared, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise In-stitute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of Ameri-can Politics.)

Obama’s segue from constructive tax proposals

The international spot-light has recently been shining on Ferguson, Mo., after an 18-year-old black man was fatally shot by a white police offi cer. There was massive national and international media cover-age, much of it engendered by the tantalizing thought that here was a clear-cut case of racism leading to police brutality and indica-tive of the evil inherent in American society. Violent demonstrations and riots ensued, with massive prop-erty damage and many out-side agitators descending on the town, supposedly to guarantee justice as defi ned by mob mentality.

Perhaps it would be use-ful to examine the tragedy with the facts on the table rather than through the lenses of hypersensitized emotions stimulated by those attempting to exploit the situation.

Michael Brown was 6-foot-4 and 290 pounds. He had marijuana in his system and was purported-ly involved in a strong-arm robbery prior to the shoot-ing. He and a companion were walking in the middle of the street and obstruct-ing traffi c and therefore

were admon-ished by a police offi cer to move to the sidewalk. Brown, who may have been phar-macological-ly impaired, became bel-ligerent, and

the ensuing struggle pro-duced facial trauma and an orbital fracture of the police offi cer’s face. The offi cer, who may have been dazed by a blow to the cranium severe enough to produce a fracture, attempted to apprehend the assailant, and shots were fi red, six of which struck the suspect, resulting in a fatality.

We can all agree that this was a horrible tragedy and needless discarding of a precious life. How could this have been avoided? Two obvious answers: The offi -cer could have ignored his duty and backed off when it became apparent that his instructions would not be followed, thereby avoiding a confrontation, or Brown could have complied with the offi cer’s instructions.

If police offi cers generally adopted the fi rst solution,

chaos would reign supreme in all of our streets. If the populace generally adopted the second solution, there would be even fewer inci-dents of police violence. Last year, 100 black males were killed by police in the United States. In the same year, 5,000 blacks were killed by other blacks, the vast majority being males. Could it be that we are erro-neously being manipulated into making this incident a racial issue, when, in fact, it is a component of a much larger social issue?

Why are there so many young black men in the streets of America with defi -ant attitudes that frequently lead to incarceration or death? Could it be that a large number of them grow up without a father fi gure to teach them how to relate to authority and the meaning of personal responsibility? This is not to say that moth-ers cannot convey these im-portant social lessons. But in too many cases, these young unwed mothers have never themselves been ex-posed to personal respon-sibility and self-esteem, and the vicious cycle continues.

Once we get the most powerful economic engine

the world has ever seen back on track with sensible eco-nomic policies, we should devote some of the tax rev-enues generated to child-care facilities that would allow many of those unwed mothers to get their General Education Development or higher degree and become self-supporting. There are also a number of programs across the nation that offer free classes that teach social and job skills, which would give many of the young men some different options.

We must concentrate on these kinds of programs because we cannot afford to lose large segments of our society to despair and underachievement in an increasingly competitive world. We have a social cri-sis brewing if we continue down the path we are on now, but we have the power to change our downward course with true compas-sion that allows people to rise and escape dependen-cy.

(Ben S. Carson is pro-fessor emeritus of neuro-surgery at Johns Hopkins University and author of the new book “One Nation: What We Can All Do To Save America’s Future.”)

A problem bigger than Ferguson

“And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, Write, Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth: Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their la-bours; and their works do follow them.” Rev-elation 14:13

My Father, may there be no room in my soul for doubt. Help me to be cautious and careful that my own neglect and carelessness may not cause the loss of my faith. May I be trustful as I look for the great light that guides me over the uncertain way. Amen.

Roger Simon

Columnist

Michael BaroneColumnist

Ben CarsonColumnist

Page 5: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

Across the Nation Across the State

Murder case couldget another look

WEST POINT — Mis-sissippi inmate Jeffrey Randle, who is serving a life sentence for capital murder, is asking a judge to order DNA testing on evidence used by pros-ecutors during his 1999 trial in Clay County.

The Daily Times Leader reports attorneys for Randle filed the post-conviction petition Tues-day in circuit court.

Randle, of West Point, was convicted of capital murder and sentenced to life in prison in 1999. Randle was convicted in the Jan. 4, 1997 slaying of West Point resident Willie Mae Sewell. Authori-ties say the 79-year-old woman was strangled dur-ing a robbery at her home.

The Mississippi In-nocence Project at the University of Mississippi School of Law filed the pe-tition on behalf of Randle.

Innocence Project Resource Counsel Will McIntosh said DNA test-ing wasn’t widely used during the time period of Randle’s trial and didn’t become commonplace until nearly 2000.

 Judge mulls requestto dismiss challenge

LAUREL — A Missis-sippi judge said Thursday that he will carefully con-sider whether to dismiss a lawsuit that seeks to overturn a Republican primary victory by six-term Sen. Thad Cochran.

Judge Hollis McGehee heard arguments for more than an hour Thurs-day at the Jones County Courthouse, and said he could rule on dismissal

as soon as Friday.McGehee did not indi-

cate how he might rule. He likened the hearing to a tennis match, saying attorneys for each side made strong shots with their arguments.

“I don’t know of any issue I’ve ever dug any harder in or stretched harder trying to under-stand to understand all aspects of it,” McGehee said.

Attorneys for state Sen.

Chris McDaniel argued that current state law does not set a timetable for a candidate such as McDaniel to challenge an election loss.

However, attorneys for Cochran argued that the McDaniel case should be dismissed because the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled in 1959 that a challenge for a multi-county election should be filed no later than 20 days after election.

Associated Press

Possible Perry-Cruz race excites Texas

AUSTIN, Texas — Two Texans, one White House. Is the 2016 Re-publican campaign trail big enough?

After plummeting from prime contender to political punchline three years ago, Gov. Rick Perry has spent months gearing up for a second run. And he’s turned his recent indictment on felony abuse-of-power charges into a cam-paign rallying cry.

But even as Perry works to convince conservatives that he’ll be better at cop-ing with the national spotlight this time, he’s increasingly bumping up against his state’s junior senator, tea party darling Ted Cruz, whose firebomb approach on Capitol Hill has grass-roots activists clamor-ing for him to make a White House run.

The prospect of a two-Texan presidential tilt is dominating politi-cal conversation in the state, even outshining a fiercely contested governor’s race — and starting to get noticed nationally.

 Human skull givento Goodwill store

AUSTIN, Texas — Po-lice are scratching their heads trying to work out who donated a human skull to a thrift store in Austin, Texas.

Homicide Detec-tive Derek Israel said Wednesday that foul play is not suspected and that he just wants to know how the adult skull came to be left at the Goodwill store.

Goodwill store staff discovered the skull while sifting through donations on July 16. A spokeswoman says it could have been gifted up to a week prior to its discovery.

This is at least the fourth skull to be donat-ed to the international nonprofit this summer. Three were donated in July to a Goodwill store in Bellevue, Washing-ton.

 Obama downplays Syria strike outlook

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama played down the prospect of imminent U.S. military action in Syria on Thursday, say-ing “we don’t have a strategy yet” for degrad-ing the violent militant group seeking to estab-lish a caliphate in the Middle East.

The president spoke

shortly before conven-ing a meeting of his na-tional security advisers on a range of Pentagon options for confronting the Islamic State group. However, he said his strategy would require more than military ac-tion and called for a regional strategy that in-cludes political support from other countries in the region.

In blunt terms, the president said it was time for Middle Eastern nations to “stop be-ing ambivalent” about the aims of extremist groups like the Islamic State.

“They have no ideolo-gy beyond violence and chaos and the slaughter of innocent people,” Obama said, alluding to the group’s announce-ment last week that it had killed American journalist James Foley.

 U.S. economy grew at 4.2 percent rate

WASHINGTON — Af-ter a bleak start to the year, the U.S. economy grew at a brisk annual rate of 4.2 percent in the April-June quarter, the government said Thursday, slightly faster than it had first esti-mated.

The upward revision supported expectations that the second half of 2014 will prove far stronger than the first half.

The Commerce De-partment’s second estimate of growth for last quarter followed its initial estimate of 4 percent. The upward revision reflected stronger business investment than first thought.

The seasonally ad-justed 4.2 percent annual growth rate for the gross domestic product — the nation’s total output of goods and services — came after the economy had shrunk at a 2.1 per-

cent annual rate in the January-March quarter. That was the economy’s biggest drop since the depths of the Great Re-cession, and it reflected mainly the effects of a harsh winter that kept consumers away from shopping malls and dis-rupted factory produc-tion.

Many economists say they expect growth of around 3 percent in the current July-September quarter and for the rest of the year.

 Survey: Pessimism on economy rising

WASHINGTON — Americans are more anxious about the econ-omy now than they were right after the Great Re-cession ended despite stock market gains, fall-ing unemployment and growth moving closer to full health.

Seventy-one percent of Americans say they think the recession ex-erted a permanent drag on the economy, ac-cording to a survey be-ing released Thursday by Rutgers University. By contrast, in Novem-ber 2009, five months after the recession of-ficially ended, the Rut-gers researchers found that only 49 percent thought the downturn would have lasting dam-age.

And that was when the unemployment rate was 9.9 percent, com-pared with the current 6.2 percent.

“They’re more nega-tive than they were five years ago,” said Rut-gers public policy pro-fessor Carl Van Horn.

The slow pace of im-provement during most of the recovery, now in its sixth year, has eroded confidence and slowed a return to the pay levels that many enjoyed before the economy suffered its worst collapse since the 1930s.

Associated Press

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Page 6: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

6A • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Mary H. CrumFuneral services for Mary H. Crum,

92, formerly of Corinth, are set for 3 p.m. Sunday at Corinthian Funeral Chapel with burial at Forrest Memorial Park.

Visitation is Sunday from 1 p.m. until service time.

Mrs. Crum died Thursday, Aug. 28, 2014, at her home in Jackson, Tenn. Born April 22, 1922, she was a home-maker and a member of North Corinth Baptist Church.

Survivors include a son, Lonnie Crum of Minnesota; a daughter, Mary R. Nichols (Bobby) of Jackson, Tenn.; nine grandchildren; and several great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Arlando Crum; a son, Ray Eu-gene Crum; and her parents, Abner and Lessie Reed Harris.

Bro. Bill Wages will offi ciate the ser-vice.

Vance DixonFuneral services for Vance Dixon are

set for 2 p.m. Saturday at Memorial Fu-neral Home Chapel. Burial will be in the Lebanon Cemetery.

Mrs. Dixon died on Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2014, at her resi-dence. She was born on Sept. 6, 1920, to the late James Her-man and Fannie Francis Nelms Mc-Callister.

Survivors include three daughters, Brenda Bass (Butch),

Sue Franks (Donald) and Wanda South (Jerry); one sister, Katie Mae Dixon; seven grandchildren; 14 great-grand-children; and one great-great-grand-child.

Along with her parents, she was pre-ceded in death by her husband, Bax-ter Dixon; two brothers, J.B. and O.C. “Loke” McCallister; and three sisters, Nelda King, Blain Hensley and Anna Belle Gray.

Keithern Marie HarrisFuneral services for Keithern Marie

Harris, 56, of Corinth, are set for 11 a.m. today at Corinthian Funeral Chapel with burial at Hicks Family Cemetery.

Visitation is from 10 a.m. until service time.

Mrs. Harris died on Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2014, at her home. Born Sept. 16, 1957, she was a homemaker and seamstress.

Survivors include her husband, Jim-my Harris of Corinth; children: Stepha-nie Willis (Chris) of Adamsville, Tenn., Kathryn Taylor (Randy) of Booneville, Kaylee Harris of Corinth, Casey Har-ris (Kayle) of Booneville, Jason Harris (Courtney) of Booneville, Ronnie Harris of Corinth, Gary Harris (Clarie) of Glen and Bryson Harris of Corinth; siblings: Kathie Keele (David) of Burnsville, Re-becca Copeland (Harvey) of Houston, Miss., David Holloway (Tracy), Ralph Holloway, Rowdy Holloway and Clif-ton Holloway, all of Corinth; and great-grandchildren: Katie Willis, Gabrielle Moore, Madeline Moore, Tyler Harris, Nathaniel Harris, Eli Harris, Ryan Sea-wright, Christon Taylor, Joseph Corni-er, Emma Harris, Colton Harris, Cora Lee Harris, Quinton Harris and Aubrey Harris.

She was preceded in death by her parents, Alford and Edith Pardue Hol-loway.

Clifford McMasters

Clifford McMasters, 75, of Corinth, died Friday, Aug. 22, 2014, at his home. Cutshall Funeral Home of Iuka is in charge of arrangements.

Mr. McMasters was a U.S. Army vet-eran who served as a military police of-fi cer during the Vietnam War. He was a machinist for General Motors for 32 years.

Survivors include his wife of 55 years, Betty McMasters of Corinth; a son, Randy McMasters (Debbie) of Corinth; one brother, Hardy McMasters of Es-till Springs, Tenn.; two sisters, Dottie DeSanto of Cape Coral, Fla., and Joyce Smith of Casa Grande, Ariz.; one grand-child, Luke McMasters; and one great-grandchild.

He was preceded in death by his par-ents, Garland and Eler McMasters.

Memorial contributions may be made to LeBonheur Children’s Medical Cen-ter.

Louise RoyalIUKA — Ellen Louise Royal, 56, died

Thursday, Aug. 28, 2014, at Tishom-ingo Manor Nursing Home. Cutshall Funeral Home is in charge of arrange-ments.

She was a retired registered nurse with Magnolia Regional Health Center.

Survivors include her husband, Greg Royal of Iuka, and a sister, Belinda Parker of Iuka. She was preceded in death by her parents, Carlton and Joan Hardeman Parker, and a brother, Carl Parker.

Agnes Johns NormanGraveside services for Agnes Johns

Norman, 90, are set for 4 p.m. today at Henry Cemetery.

Visitation will be at the home of Mrs. Norman until service time.

Mrs. Norman died Thursday, Aug. 28, 2014, at her residence. She was born on Nov. 6, 1923, to the late William A. Johns and Stella Mae Wilson Johns.

Mrs. Norman was a fi fth genera-tion Corinthian. She was a graduate of Corinth High School and the University of Mississippi where she was a member of the Chi Omega Sorority. Mrs. Nor-man briefl y taught in the Corinth School District before her marriage in 1946 to Mr. Leo R. Norman. She was a member of the First United Methodist Church of Corinth. She was a founding member of the Corinth Junior Auxiliary and a for-mer Girl Scout leader. Mrs. Norman was also a past member of the Corinth Gar-den Club and other women’s organiza-tions.

Mrs. Norman was preceded in death by her husband, Leo Rights Norman; her parents; and a great-grandson, Johns Thomas Pittman.

She is survived by her daughter, Nancy Norman McLemore (Gerald) of Corinth; two grandchildren, Mary Johns McLemore Pittman (Tom) and Dr. Ger-ald McLemore Jr. (Mollie Walker); and three great-grandchildren, Stella Cate McLemore, Mae Walker McLemore and Mary Nancy Pittman. Her loyal caregiv-ers include Delbra Floyd, Maureen El-liott, Vannie Holland, Iris Harris, Renee Patterson, Dorothy Cummings and also the employees of Legacy Hospice.

Dixon

which were performed in the exemplary and pro-fessional manner of a true statesman.”

Stone was 25-years-old when he fi rst moved into the Eastport area in 1855. He worked as a clerk in the mercantile establish-ment of Col. W. R. Price.

He moved to Iuka in 1857 and shortly thereaf-ter found a job in the new railroad depot. “By then, Iuka was thriving, as was Tishomingo County as a whole,” said Kitchens. “After Mr. Stone served as mayor of Iuka and was elected county treasurer of Tishomingo County.”

During the Civil War, Stone served in the Con-federate Army, achieved the rank of colonel and participated in the impor-tant battles of Antietam, Gettysburg and the Wil-derness. After the war, he entered politics in Missis-sippi, was elected to the Mississippi State Senate, and served three terms as Mississippi governor.

The book will be avail-able at the museum after the festival.

BOOK

CONTINUED FROM 1A

time increases: the airport, which has some pressing equipment needs, will get $110,000, increasing from $75,000 last year, and the Verandah-Curlee House will get $35,000, up from $13,000.

The increase for the house museum is in-tended to help the Siege & Battle of Corinth Com-mission get the reestab-lishment of public visita-tion off to a strong start.

The Northeast Mis-sissippi Chapter of the American Red Cross is in the budget at $3,000 as it

works toward establish-ing a limited presence in an offi ce at City Hall.

Although the park is re-questing an increase for a budget that includes new staff positions, the board agreed to leave its alloca-tion unchanged.

In continued discussion with Philip Verdung, the street commissioner said favorable fi nancials for the solid waste fund may allow for the purchase of needed sanitation poly carts. He is also looking toward an expansion of the inert landfi ll in order to extend the landfi ll’s lifespan and the purchase

of some equipment for the landfi ll.

The city is also plan-ning to proceed with a re-quest for proposals from contractors for sanitation services. Alderman Ben Albarracin said people are asking for curb-side recycling and requested it be considered as part of the plan.

In other business, the board accepted a bid for removal of some addi-tional asbestos discov-ered during the demo-lition of the Wurlitzer building and went into executive session for per-sonnel matters.

BUDGET

CONTINUED FROM 1A

WASHINGTON — With a self-im-posed deadline looming, President Barack Obama said Thursday he still intends to act on his own to change im-migration policies but stopped short of reiterating his past vows to act by end of summer.

Obama raised the slim hope that Congress could take action on a broad immigration overhaul after the mid-term elections in November. He said that if lawmakers did not pass an over-haul, “I’m going to do what I can to

make sure the system works better.”But for the fi rst time since pledging

to act by summer’s end, he signaled that such a target date could slip. He noted that the administration had been working to reduce the fl ow of unaccompanied minors attempting to cross the border and noted that the number of apprehensions at the bor-der had fallen in August.

“Some of these things do affect time lines and we’re just going to be work-ing through as systematically as pos-sible in order to get this done,” he said.

Obama sets no immigration timelineAssociated Press

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Page 7: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, August 29, 2014 • 7A

He’s probably not a writer that most students read in school. Likely, his choice of language and overt themes would

p r e v e n t his work from being r e q u i r e d reading—at least until past the secondary level of ed-ucation.

H o w -ever, a pro-lifi c writer,

Charles Bukowski wrote thousands of poems, hun-dreds of short stories, and six novels, and ultimate-ly published 60 books. Known to fans as “Hank,” he has become a cult hero to a horde of readers.

Henry Charles Bukows-ki, born Heinrich Karl Bu-kowski, was the child of an American soldier and a German mother, who emigrated to the United States when Bukowski was three years old. In the 1930s, his family settled in south central Los An-geles—the city most fa-

mously associated with his work—which fl avored his writing with its social, cultural, and economic eccentricities.

Perhaps some of Bu-kowski’s inspiration for the displaced, downtrod-den characters who peo-ple his work comes from his childhood. His father purportedly abused him frequently, both mentally and physically, allegedly beating him with a razor strap three times a week between ages 6 and 11. He suffered from severe acne, which caused girls to reject him. His German accent and the clothes his parents made him wear led to bullying by boys his age.

He attended Los Ange-les City College, graduat-ing in 1941. Determined to become a writer, he moved to New York but found little success there, so he drowned himself in alcohol for the next ten years and, in order to survive, took on various jobs, including stints as a dishwasher, mail carrier, truck driver, gas station

attendant, elevator opera-tor, slaughterhouse man, stock boy, Red Cross or-derly, and cookie maker.

Despite his time in New York, he was never con-sidered a true “Beat Gen-eration” writer affi liated with the likes of Jack Ker-ouac and Allen Ginsberg; however, he is sometimes considered an honorary Beat writer, as he is often drawn in his work to the same direct language and starkly honest themes: alienation, desperation, desolation, immediacy, and the desire for sensu-ality and connection.

Likely, his itinerant working status infl uenced his work. When he re-turned to writing in 1956, forced to cut back on al-cohol because of a bleed-ing ulcer, his fi ction was replete with the deprav-ity of hard-edged urban characters meandering along worn streets and ramshackled subways, the most well-known of which became his thinly-veiled alter ego, Henry Chinaski, the protagonist of the bulk of his novels.

Unlike writers who try to create a “pleasant” simulacrum of the world, Bukowski does not shy away from profanity or raw violence or sexual-ity; instead, he satirizes the machismo attitude, plumbing the depths of that which is unpleasant in order to obtain a truth that transcends the su-perfi ciality of life—or, as Salinger’s Holden Caul-fi eld might have said in the 1951 novel of the same era, Catcher in the Rye, the “phoniness.” As Stephen Kessler wrote in the San Francisco Re-view of Books: “Firmly in the American tradition of the maverick, Bukowski writes with no apologies from the frayed edge of society.”

These “frayed edges” which Bukowski explores are the very elements that draw me to him—and the reason I selected one of his books for my monthly book club discussion this month. I chose his book Women, a 1978 novel featuring his semi-auto-biographical character

Henry Chinaski. In this selection, Chinaski is old-er and a more established writer than in previous Bukowski novels, earn-ing money now by writing and giving poetry read-ings, a practice he dislikes but must continue in or-der to pay the bills—and, on the side, he is afforded the opportunity to meet literature groupies.

However, he still fl oun-ders in his carousel of re-lationships with women, the prototype for previous novels.

The novel, which hardly follows a traditional story arc, primarily consists of Chinaksi’s anecdotal ex-periences of failed con-nections with the opposite sex. It is considered by many to be Bukowsi’s best of his fi ction. In Women, Bukowski writes under the guise of Hank Chi-naski: “I was sentimen-tal about many things: a woman’s shoes under the bed; one hairpin left be-hind on the dresser … hair ribbons; walking down the boulevard with them at 1:30 in the afternoon,

just two people walking together; the long nights of drinking and smoking; talking; the arguments; thinking of suicide; eating together and feeling good; the jokes; the laughter out of nowhere; feeling miracles in the air; being in a parked car together; comparing past loves at 3 a.m.; being told you snore; hearing her snore; mothers, daughters, sons, cats, dogs; sometimes death and sometimes di-vorce; but always carry-ing on, always seeing it through.”

Although Bukowski died in 1994 of leuke-mia, his work has post-humously garnered an even greater number of readers, who continue to “carry on” a writer who notoriously lived on the fringe.

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

Gritty writer elicits truth in novels, poetry

Stacy Jones

The Dowtowner

Associated PressTUPELO — SeaPort

Airlines will provide new air passenger service in Tupelo.

The U.S. Department of Transportation this week selected the Portland, Or-egon-based carrier a two-year contract paying $2.5 million annually.

Local offi cials hope ser-vice can begin in Octo-ber. Details still are being worked out between Sea-Port, outgoing provider Silver Airways, Tupelo Regional Airport and the federal agency.

SeaPort’s Tupelo bid in-cluded 18 nonstop round trips per week to Nash-

ville and 12 round trips to Memphis. The airline may phase-in its service by pro-viding to a single city — ei-ther Memphis or Nash-ville — in the early going.

“I expect that SeaPort will let us know soon the start date and how they plan to phase in air service with each con-

necting city,” Tupelo Re-gional Airport Executive Director Josh Abramson told the Northeast Mis-sissippi Daily JournalGovernment offi cials are still reviewing propos-als for new subsidized air service in Greenville and Muscle Shoals, Alabama. The two cities must wait

on the Transportation Department’s decision in choosing an airline for their cities, which are in danger of losing service all together because they haven’t met passenger number requirements.

Silver Airways, which announced in April it was ending service to those

cities, is providing air ser-vice through Nov. 1.

Greenville and Muscle Shoals, Alabama have recommended SeaPort as well.

Meridian and Laurel/Hattiesburg, meanwhile, will get new air service starting Nov. 1 with Ex-press Jet.

SeaPort Airlines to provide Tupelo with air service

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Page 8: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Business8A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

17,153.80 14,719.43 Dow Industrials 17,079.57 -42.44 -.25 +3.03 +15.088,515.04 6,237.14 Dow Transportation 8,405.38 -22.68 -.27 +13.58 +32.95

576.98 467.93 Dow Utilities 560.11 +2.98 +.53 +14.18 +17.2211,334.65 9,246.89 NYSE Composite 11,009.70 -28.19 -.26 +5.86 +18.184,575.82 3,573.57 Nasdaq Composite 4,557.70 -11.92 -.26 +9.12 +25.892,005.04 1,627.47 S&P 500 1,996.74 -3.38 -.17 +8.03 +21.891,452.01 1,170.62 S&P MidCap 1,430.21 -3.06 -.21 +6.53 +19.05

21,236.75 17,305.21 Wilshire 5000 21,150.55 -41.93 -.20 +7.33 +21.291,213.55 1,009.00 Russell 2000 1,165.95 -6.76 -.58 +.20 +13.54

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.48 10 61.24 -.15 -8.3AT&T Inc 1.84 10 34.74 -.01 -1.2AirProd 3.08 28 133.34 +.34 +19.3AlliantEgy 2.04 16 58.27 +.29 +12.9AEP 2.00 15 53.32 +.17 +14.1AmeriBrgn .94 70 76.72 +.35 +9.1ATMOS 1.48 18 50.30 +.32 +10.7BB&T Cp .96 15 37.18 ... -.4BP PLC 2.34f 7 47.92 -.44 -1.4BcpSouth .30f 18 21.02 -.20 -17.3Caterpillar 2.80f 18 108.65 +.10 +19.6Chevron 4.28 12 128.75 +.11 +3.1CocaCola 1.22 23 41.63 +.03 +.8Comcast .90 19 54.52 -.04 +4.9CrackerB 4.00f 19 100.19 +.35 -9.0Deere 2.40 9 83.97 +.12 -8.1Dillards .24 16 114.84 -.23 +18.1Dover 1.60f 18 88.10 -.40 +10.0EnPro ... 64 67.57 -.11 +17.2FordM .50 11 17.42 +.06 +12.9FredsInc .24 26 15.03 -.23 -18.7FullerHB .48 21 46.80 ... -10.1GenCorp ... 13 18.37 -.15 +1.9GenElec .88 19 26.01 -.12 -7.2Goodyear .24f 13 25.77 +.26 +8.1HonwllIntl 1.80 19 95.30 -.27 +4.3Intel .90 17 34.65 -.14 +33.5Jabil .32 11 21.44 ... +22.9KimbClk 3.36 19 108.14 -.78 +3.5Kroger .66 17 51.00 +.14 +29.0Lowes .92 22 52.54 +.02 +6.0McDnlds 3.24 17 94.14 +.30 -3.0

MeadWvco 1.00a 9 42.88 -.10 +16.1

OldNBcp .44 15 13.11 +.03 -14.7

Penney ... ... 10.85 -.35 +18.6

PennyMac 2.36 9 22.13 +.05 -3.6

PepsiCo 2.62 21 92.58 +.35 +11.6

PilgrimsP ... 13 29.87 +.07 +83.8

RadioShk ... ... 1.43 +.34 -45.0

RegionsFn .20 13 10.11 -.05 +2.2

SbdCp 3.00 14 2861.82 -24.67 +2.4

SearsHldgs ... ... 35.46 -.48 -10.8

Sherwin 2.20 27 218.13 +.50 +18.9

SiriusXM ... 60 3.60 +.01 +3.2

SouthnCo 2.10 16 44.23 +.40 +7.6

SPDR Fncl .35e ... 23.25 -.07 +6.4

Torchmrk s .51 14 54.93 +.07 +5.4

Total SA 3.25e ... 65.26 -.47 +6.5

USEC Inc ... ... 5.12 -.04 -22.7

US Bancrp .98f 14 42.06 -.14 +4.1

WalMart 1.92 16 75.90 +.05 -3.5

WellsFargo 1.40 13 51.15 -.19 +12.7

Wendys Co .20 29 8.14 +.08 -6.7

WestlkCh s .66f 19 96.09 +.46 +57.4

Weyerhsr 1.16f 27 33.95 -.19 +7.5

Xerox .25 14 13.76 +.05 +13.1

YRC Wwde ... ... 23.09 -.66 +32.9

Yahoo ... 33 38.31 +.13 -5.3

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 26 15.10 +.06AK Steel dd 10.62 -.24AbbottLab 26 42.35 -.25AbbVie 21 55.60 -.10AberFitc 68 41.87 -2.13Accenture 18 81.02 +.04Achillion dd 11.45ActivsBliz 25 23.35 +.16AMD 41 4.14 -.02Aeropostl dd 4.14 -.02AEtern grs dd 1.40 +.07Aetna 14 81.92 +.81Agnico g 27 37.73 +.65AlcatelLuc ... 3.41 +.05Alcoa 39 16.57 -.14AlldNevG 41 3.71 +.11Allstate 12 61.15 -.38AllyFin n ... 24.85 -.10AlphaNRs dd 3.87 -.13AlpAlerMLP q 19.20 +.04AlteraCp lf 28 35.14 +.28Altria 20 42.91 +.09Amarin ... 1.92 -.01Amazon cc 340.02 -3.16Ambev n ... 7.26 -.07AMovilL 18 24.29 +.13AmAirl n dd 39.17 +.18AmApparel dd .94 -.05AEagleOut 28 14.03 -.16AmExp 17 89.02 -.22AmIntlGrp 9 55.73 -.43ARltCapPr dd 13.13 -.02Amgen 21 138.69 +.86AmicusTh dd 7.27 +.43Anadarko dd 111.08 +.58AnalogDev 23 51.29 +.26Annaly 19 11.85 -.04Apache 33 101.37 -.16Apple Inc s 17 102.25 +.12ApldMatl 28 22.80 +.17ArcelorMit dd 14.37 -.35ArchCoal dd 3.05 -.13ArchDan 19 49.75 +.17ArenaPhm dd 4.12 -.10AriadP dd 6.16 -.20ArmourRsd dd 4.20 -.02ArrowRsh dd 14.14 -.63ArubaNet dd 21.18 -.08Atmel cc 8.58 +.08Autohme n ... 46.86 -3.58AvagoTch 32 76.36 +.20AvanirPhm dd 6.01 -.04BHP BillLt ... 68.23 -1.40Baidu 39 213.81 -1.65BakrHu 23 69.21 -.24BcoBrad pf ... 17.80 +.06BcoSantSA ... 9.95 -.13BcoSBrasil ... 6.90 -.08BkofAm 19 16.01 -.19BkNYMel 18 39.00 -.17B iPVix rs q 28.27 +.44BarrickG 23 18.22 +.10BedBath 13 64.31 -.22BerkH B 16 136.11 -.41BestBuy 12 32.24 +.55BitautoH ... 87.36 -1.68BlackBerry dd 10.26 -.05Blackstone 13 33.34 +.29BlockHR 20 33.56 -.28Boeing 19 127.11 -1.09BostonSci 69 12.35 -.03BrMySq 31 50.54 +.29Broadcom 35 39.20 +.70BrcdeCm 21 10.44 +.09Buenavent dd 14.44 +.68BurgerKng 39 31.31 +.96CBS B 19 59.55 -.87CMS Eng 16 30.39 +.40CNH Indl 16 8.82CSX 17 30.77 -.01CVS Care 19 79.43CblvsnNY 9 18.29 -.02CabotO&G 37 33.37 +.46Cache dd .92 -.04Cadence 39 17.47Calpine 31 23.53 +.32Cameron 22 74.36 +.46CdnSolar 18 35.25 +.27Carlisle 21 82.46 -.06Carnival 27 37.27 -.61CatalystPh dd 3.12 +.12Celgene s 55 94.70 -.04Cemex ... 13.19 +.03Cemig pf s ... 8.55 -.02CentAl dd 24.61 -.04CntryLink dd 40.86 +.10CheniereEn dd 78.80 +.77ChesEng 30 26.98 +.55Chicos 24 16.00 +.71Chimera ... 3.29 -.01ChiFnOnl dd 9.85 +.25ChiRecyEn 5 1.51 +.12Cisco 17 24.85 +.05Citigroup 12 51.39 -.47CliffsNRs 7 15.06 -.97Coach 13 36.78 -.40CobaltIEn dd 15.39 +.35CognizTc s 20 45.47 -.66ColgPalm 27 64.51 -.32ConAgra 44 32.13ConocoPhil 13 80.66 -.37Constellm ... 29.41 +1.71Corning 22 20.57 +.08Cosan Ltd ... 13.88 +.19Cott Cp dd 7.49 +.20Covidien 26 86.70 -.38CSVInvNG q 3.86 -.12CSVLgNGs q 16.38 +.48CSVelIVST q 43.08 -.75CSVxSht rs q 2.77 +.09CrownHold 19 48.15 +.37CumMed 21 4.68 -.09DCT Indl dd 7.93DR Horton 15 21.66 -.04DSW Inc s 18 31.01 -.43Danaher 21 76.33 -.32DeltaAir 3 39.89 -.27DenburyR 18 17.03 -.04DigitalAlly dd 15.68 +4.19DirecTV 16 86.09 -.06DxGldBull q 44.70 +1.74DrxFnBear q 16.42 +.18DrxSCBear q 14.52 +.22DirGMnBull q 24.12 +1.12DirDGldBr q 15.58 -.64DrxSCBull q 75.47 -1.19DiscCmA s 13 43.76 -.02DiscCmC s ... 42.91 -.01Disney 22 90.23 -.14DollarGen 20 64.20 +.50DollarTree 19 53.95 +.39DomRescs 21 69.85 +.37DowChm 19 53.64DragonW g dd 1.51 +.05DryShips dd 3.25 -.01DukeEngy 23 73.31 +.38

E-F-G-HE-CDang 50 13.90 -.76E-House 24 11.06 -.42eBay dd 55.43 -.49EMC Cp 24 29.41 -.03EOG Res s 25 108.39 -.22Eaton 20 69.57 -.20EdisonInt 13 58.47 +.12ElPasoPpl 25 41.05 -.09EldorGld g 55 8.18 +.03EmersonEl 18 64.26 -.14EmpDist 16 25.65 +.11EnCana g 16 22.88 -.02Endocyte 26 6.98 +.32EngyXXI 11 16.31 +.24Ericsson ... 12.48 -.07ExactSci h dd 21.43 -.76ExcoRes 52 4.72 +.13Exelixis dd 4.04 -.08Exelon 15 33.00 +.23Express 18 16.99 +.54ExpScripts 33 73.82 -.90ExxonMbl 13 99.57 +.04FMC Corp 21 66.14 +.42Facebook 79 73.86 -.78FedExCp 22 147.87 -1.23FidlNatF n 27 28.27 +.04FifthThird 12 20.27 -.0258.com n ... 43.08 -1.95Finisar 18 19.95 +.06FireEye n dd 30.00 +.55FstHorizon 45 12.11 +.07FstSolar 14 69.15 -.85Flextrn 14 10.97 -.01

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Apple Inc s 658787 102.25 +.12BkofAm 602968 16.01 -.19RadioShk 501662 1.43 +.34S&P500ETF 470840 200.14 -.11Vale SA 456565 13.11 -.57Twitter n 347609 49.43 +1.37SiriusXM 346685 3.60 +.01iShEMkts 340674 45.13 -.45Petrobras 290338 19.12 -.09B iPVix rs 225273 28.27 +.44

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,316Declined 1,777Unchanged 146

Total issues 3,239New Highs 136New Lows 9

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 900Declined 1,753Unchanged 161

Total issues 2,814New Highs 48New Lows 40

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

SGOCO 2.84 +1.23 +76.4DigitalAlly 15.68 +4.19 +36.5CSR plc 51.45 +13.41 +35.3OnTrack 2.85 +.54 +23.4TrovaGn wt 3.54 +.65 +22.5ReprosTh 21.58 +3.37 +18.5Trovagne 6.01 +.77 +14.722ndCentry 3.03 +.34 +12.6Cadiz h 13.01 +1.34 +11.5EZchip 27.96 +2.65 +10.5

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

SungyMo n 8.44 -1.96 -18.8WashFd wt 5.22 -.79 -13.1Frontline 2.25 -.33 -12.8WmsSon 65.93 -8.96 -12.0Koss 2.35 -.27 -10.4ViolinM n 3.76 -.43 -10.3NetSolTch 3.48 -.40 -10.3UBIC 22.64 -2.49 -9.9AMovilA 21.76 -2.37 -9.8Gordmans 3.59 -.37 -9.3

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.95 -0.03 +6.0YkmFcsSvc d 26.65 -0.01 +6.1AQRMaFtStrI 10.18 -0.01 -3.9American BeaconLgCpVlIs 31.36 -0.06 +9.1American CenturyEqIncInv 9.25 ... +9.2InvGrInv 35.10 -0.07 +7.5UltraInv 36.61 -0.10 +7.1ValueInv 9.02 -0.01 +10.4American FundsAMCAPA m 29.26 -0.06 +10.5AmBalA m 25.74 -0.03 +6.3BondA m 12.82 +0.01 +4.9CapIncBuA m 61.37 -0.08 +7.3CapWldBdA m21.02 ... +5.3CpWldGrIA m 47.63 -0.16 +6.4EurPacGrA m 50.09 -0.34 +2.1FnInvA m 54.82 -0.12 +7.1GrthAmA m 46.50 -0.11 +8.1HiIncA m 11.41 ... +4.4IncAmerA m 21.93 -0.02 +7.9IntBdAmA m 13.56 ... +1.9IntlGrInA m 35.90 -0.20 +4.8InvCoAmA m 40.25 -0.04 +10.5MutualA m 37.08 -0.04 +7.6NewEconA m 40.10 -0.12 +4.9NewPerspA m 38.99 -0.17 +3.8NwWrldA m 61.11 -0.39 +4.0SmCpWldA m 50.61 -0.22 +3.0TaxEBdAmA m13.03 +0.02 +7.8WAMutInvA m 42.26 -0.06 +8.1ArtisanIntl d 31.00 -0.13 +1.7IntlVal d 38.21 -0.11 +3.9MdCpVal 28.27 -0.03 +4.7MidCap 49.27 -0.18 +3.5BBHCoreSelN d 22.60 -0.05 +5.6BlackRockEngy&ResA m36.02 +0.03 +9.5EqDivA m 25.40 -0.04 +5.5EqDivI 25.46 -0.05 +5.7GlLSCrI 10.96 ... +2.2GlobAlcA m 22.08 -0.03 +4.2GlobAlcC m 20.42 -0.03 +3.7GlobAlcI 22.19 -0.04 +4.4HiYldBdIs 8.41 -0.01 +6.3StrIncIns 10.34 ... +3.7CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.31 -0.08 +0.9Cohen & SteersRealty 73.87 -0.13 +19.6ColumbiaAcornIntZ 48.35 -0.25 +4.7AcornZ 37.11 -0.17 +1.6DivIncZ 19.64 -0.02 +8.3Credit SuisseComStrInstl 7.26 +0.01 +0.4DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 10.00 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 11.03 +0.01 +2.3EmMkCrEqI 21.61 -0.10 +11.6EmMktValI 30.62 -0.18 +11.1EmMtSmCpI 22.86 -0.07 +14.0IntCorEqI 13.03 -0.08 +3.6IntSmCapI 21.32 -0.12 +5.2IntlSCoI 19.92 -0.10 +4.3IntlValuI 19.76 -0.13 +2.9RelEstScI 30.97 -0.04 +20.9TAUSCrE2I 14.29 -0.04 +7.4USCorEq1I 17.76 -0.03 +8.1USCorEq2I 17.47 -0.04 +7.4USLgCo 15.80 -0.03 +9.4USLgValI 34.36 -0.06 +9.5USMicroI 19.91 -0.13 -0.8USSmValI 36.65 -0.16 +3.6USSmallI 31.18 -0.14 +0.9USTgtValInst 23.80 -0.10 +4.8DavisNYVentA m 40.37 -0.16 +5.7NYVentY 40.92 -0.16 +5.9Dodge & CoxBal 104.18 -0.18 +7.8GlbStock 12.81 -0.04 +11.6Income 13.97 +0.01 +5.2IntlStk 46.97 -0.27 +9.1Stock 181.87 -0.55 +8.9DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.03 ... +5.2DreyfusAppreciaInv 55.90 -0.07 +7.6DriehausActiveInc 10.68 ... +0.3Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.10 ... +1.4FMILgCap 22.66 -0.03 +8.6FPACres d 34.48 -0.07 +5.5NewInc d 10.23 ... +1.2Fairholme FundsFairhome d 42.53 -0.34 +8.5FederatedStrValI x 6.25 -0.02 +11.4FidelityAstMgr20 13.73 ... +4.0AstMgr50 18.38 -0.02 +5.7Bal 24.32 -0.03 +7.8Bal K 24.32 -0.03 +7.9BlChGrow 69.99 -0.20 +10.4CapApr 39.19 -0.10 +8.3CapInc d 10.23 ... +8.0Contra 101.85 -0.33 +7.0ContraK 101.85 -0.32 +7.1DivGrow 38.49 -0.07 +8.8DivrIntl d 37.36 -0.22 +1.2DivrIntlK d 37.32 -0.23 +1.3EqInc 62.83 -0.09 +8.4EqInc II 26.12 -0.05 +7.6FF2015 12.94 -0.02 +5.2FF2035 13.68 -0.04 +6.1FF2040 9.64 -0.03 +6.1Fidelity 42.99 -0.11 +8.3FltRtHiIn d 9.94 ... +2.0FrdmK2015 13.98 -0.02 +5.3FrdmK2020 14.65 -0.02 +5.5FrdmK2025 15.27 -0.03 +5.9FrdmK2030 15.63 -0.04 +6.1FrdmK2035 16.09 -0.05 +6.2FrdmK2040 16.14 -0.05 +6.2FrdmK2045 16.55 -0.05 +6.2Free2010 15.78 -0.02 +4.9Free2020 15.78 -0.03 +5.5Free2025 13.52 -0.03 +5.8Free2030 16.63 -0.05 +6.0GNMA 11.56 +0.01 +4.7GrowCo 129.82 -0.52 +8.9GrowInc 29.74 -0.06 +7.7GrthCmpK 129.73 -0.52 +9.0HiInc d 9.43 ... +4.4IntlDisc d 40.02 -0.31 -1.2InvGrdBd 7.94 +0.01 +5.1LatinAm d 34.80 -0.07 +11.4LowPrStkK d 52.70 -0.05 +6.6LowPriStk d 52.70 -0.06 +6.6Magellan 95.18 -0.22 +9.8MidCap d 39.33 -0.07 +6.8MuniInc d 13.43 +0.02 +8.5NewMktIn d 16.80 -0.05 +11.2OTC 85.95 -0.37 +11.1Puritan 22.78 -0.03 +8.2PuritanK 22.77 -0.03 +8.2SASEqF 15.02 -0.03 +8.8SInvGrBdF 11.47 +0.02 +5.1STMIdxF d 58.71 -0.11 +8.8SesAl-SctrEqt 15.02 -0.03 +8.7SesInmGrdBd 11.46 +0.01 +5.0ShTmBond 8.60 ... +0.9SmCapDisc d 30.56 -0.15 +2.2StratInc 11.23 -0.01 +6.1Tel&Util 24.34 +0.08 +13.0TotalBd 10.77 +0.01 +5.1USBdIdx 11.71 +0.01 +4.8USBdIdxInv 11.71 +0.01 +4.7Value 114.14 -0.18 +10.2Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 28.24 -0.10 +7.6NewInsI 28.76 -0.10 +7.8Fidelity SelectBiotech d 216.64 -1.88 +19.2HealtCar d 217.64 -0.28 +22.1Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 71.05 -0.11 +9.5500IdxInstl 71.05 -0.11 +9.5500IdxInv 71.04 -0.11 +9.5ExtMktIdAg d 55.66 -0.17 +5.9IntlIdxAdg d 41.43 -0.26 +2.6TotMktIdAg d 58.70 -0.11 +8.8Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF11.52 -0.05 +8.9

Name P/E Last Chg

2,230,358,296Volume 1,272,095,505Volume

15,900

16,200

16,500

16,800

17,100

17,400

AM A M J J

16,560

16,860

17,160Dow Jones industrialsClose: 17,079.57Change: -42.44 (-0.2%)

10 DAYS

First EagleGlbA m 56.78 -0.11 +5.9OverseasA m 24.41 -0.07 +5.6FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.46 +0.02 +9.0FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.45 +0.02 +10.5GrowthA m 71.19 -0.11 +9.2HY TF A m 10.52 +0.03 +11.1Income C m 2.59 ... +8.8IncomeA m 2.57 ... +9.7IncomeAdv 2.55 ... +9.4RisDvA m 50.78 -0.05 +5.2StrIncA m 10.67 ... +4.4FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 35.87 -0.11 +6.4DiscovA m 35.28 -0.12 +6.1Shares Z 30.70 -0.09 +8.3SharesA m 30.41 -0.08 +8.1FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 8.58 -0.05 +3.2GlBond C m 13.41 -0.05 +3.7GlBondA m 13.38 -0.05 +3.9GlBondAdv 13.34 -0.04 +4.2GrowthA m 26.05 -0.14 +4.3WorldA m 20.16 -0.09 +3.9Franklin Templeton IGlTlRtAdv 13.62 ... +3.6GES&SUSEq 60.71 -0.12 +10.9GMOEmgMktsVI d 11.60 -0.10 +7.7IntItVlIV 26.01 -0.16 +3.5QuIII 24.19 -0.05 +8.0USEqAllcVI 17.98 -0.05 +7.3Goldman SachsMidCpVaIs 49.35 -0.01 +11.1HarborBond 12.32 +0.01 +4.0CapApInst 61.13 -0.24 +7.8IntlInstl 71.92 -0.50 +1.3IntlInv b 71.05 -0.50 +1.0HartfordCapAprA m 49.98 -0.05 +7.1CpApHLSIA 55.36 -0.08 +7.2INVESCOCharterA m 23.76 -0.04 +8.7ComstockA m 25.65 -0.08 +8.5EqIncomeA m 11.39 -0.01 +7.7GrowIncA m 29.18 -0.06 +8.5HiYldMuA m 9.84 +0.03 +12.8IVAWorldwideI d 18.93 -0.01 +6.2IvyAssetStrA m 31.80 -0.08 -0.7AssetStrC m 30.79 -0.07 -1.1AsstStrgI 32.11 -0.07 -0.5JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.80 +0.02 +4.4CoreBondA m 11.79 +0.02 +4.1CoreBondSelect11.78 +0.01 +4.2HighYldSel 8.14 ... +5.3LgCapGrA m 34.00 -0.09 +7.0LgCapGrSelect34.05 -0.08 +7.1MidCpValI 38.35 +0.01 +9.2ShDurBndSel 10.91 ... +0.6USLCpCrPS 30.43 -0.06 +9.7JanusGlbLfScT 52.55 -0.07 +22.2John HancockDisValMdCpI 19.69 ... +8.5DiscValI 19.26 -0.03 +7.1LifBa1 b 16.12 ... +6.1LifGr1 b 17.09 ... +6.6LazardEmgMkEqInst d20.89 -0.12 +12.8Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m208.20-0.09+14.8Longleaf PartnersLongPart 35.67 -0.10 +5.7Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.90 +0.01 +7.6BdR b 15.83 +0.01 +7.4Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.64 -0.01 +8.0BondDebA m 8.32 ... +5.8ShDurIncA m 4.53 ... +2.0ShDurIncC m 4.56 ... +1.6ShDurIncF b 4.53 ... +2.1MFSIntlValA m 34.86 -0.16 +3.4IsIntlEq 22.66 -0.10 +1.0TotRetA m 18.46 -0.01 +6.4ValueA m 34.61 -0.07 +5.4ValueI 34.79 -0.07 +5.6MainStayMktfield 17.59 -0.07 -5.0Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.19 -0.07 +1.5Matthews AsianChina d 22.64 -0.31 -0.9India d 24.14 -0.03 NAMergerInvCl b 16.50 -0.01 +3.1Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.89 +0.01 +4.9TotRtBd b 10.89 +0.01 +4.7Morgan StanleyMdCpGrI 46.05 -0.16 +1.6NatixisLSInvBdY 12.44 +0.01 +7.1LSStratIncA m 17.20 +0.01 +7.4LSStratIncC m17.31 +0.01 +6.9Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 60.56 -0.14 -2.2NorthernHYFixInc d 7.63 ... +5.8IntlIndex d 12.63 -0.06 +2.4StkIdx 24.80 -0.04 +9.4OakmarkEqIncI 34.48 -0.06 +5.6Intl I 26.10 -0.16 -0.8Oakmark I 69.50 -0.24 +9.2Select I 45.50 -0.18 +13.6OberweisChinaOpp m 17.37 -0.20 +3.2Old WestburyGlbOppo 8.28 -0.03 +4.8GlbSmMdCp 17.38 -0.06 +3.5LgCpStr 13.18 -0.05 +5.7OppenheimerDevMktA m 41.20 -0.30 +8.4DevMktY 40.78 -0.29 +8.6GlobA m 81.84 -0.48 +3.9IntlGrY 37.85 -0.15 -0.8IntlGrowA m 37.97 -0.15 -1.0MainStrA m 52.55 -0.06 +8.4SrFltRatA m 8.36 ... +2.0StrIncA m 4.21 ... +5.0Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.35 +0.09 +12.1OsterweisOsterStrInc 12.01 +0.01 +3.5PIMCOAllAssetI 12.83 -0.02 +7.6AllAuthIn 10.41 ... +6.6ComRlRStI 5.64 ... +2.7EMFdIdPLARSTIns11.04-0.09+14.0EMktCurI 10.27 -0.03 +2.6EmgLclBdI 9.59 -0.03 +6.1ForBdInstl 11.12 ... +7.4HiYldIs 9.72 -0.01 +5.0Income P 12.76 -0.01 +7.7IncomeA m 12.76 -0.01 +7.5IncomeD b 12.76 -0.01 +7.6IncomeInl 12.76 -0.01 +7.7LgDrTRtnI 11.85 +0.04 +15.9LgTmCrdIn 13.11 +0.04 +16.5LowDrIs 10.35 ... +1.2RERRStgC m 4.28 ... +31.2RealRet 11.64 ... +7.3ShtTermIs 9.91 ... +1.2StkPlARShStrIn 2.50 ... -7.7TotRetA m 10.99 +0.01 +4.0TotRetAdm b 10.99 +0.01 +4.1TotRetC m 10.99 +0.01 +3.5TotRetIs 10.99 +0.01 +4.3TotRetrnD b 10.99 +0.01 +4.1TotlRetnP 10.99 +0.01 +4.2UnconstrBdIns 11.32 ... +3.0PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 33.38 -0.12 +12.6ParnassusCoreEqInv 39.72 -0.04 +8.9PermanentPortfolio 45.17 -0.03 +4.9PioneerPioneerA m 41.89 -0.03 +7.4PrincipalDivIntI 12.40 -0.06 +4.1L/T2020I 15.04 -0.02 +5.9L/T2030I 15.32 -0.04 +6.2LCGrIInst 13.40 -0.05 +5.7Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 42.56 +0.01 +5.1PutnamGrowIncA m 21.64 ... +9.5

NewOpp 87.10 -0.25 +9.4RoycePremierInv d 23.20 -0.04 +4.9Schwab1000Inv d 53.11 -0.09 +9.1S&P500Sel d 31.57 -0.05 +9.4ScoutInterntl 37.33 -0.16 +1.2SequoiaSequoia 220.56 -0.23 +0.1T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 68.86 -0.18 +6.6CapApprec 27.78 ... +8.3EmMktBd d 13.12 -0.03 +9.0EmMktStk d 36.07 -0.22 +11.9EqIndex d 53.98 -0.09 +9.3EqtyInc 34.52 -0.05 +6.2GrowStk 55.76 -0.17 +6.1HealthSci 68.60 -0.20 +18.7HiYield d 7.26 ... +5.6InsLgCpGr 28.77 -0.08 +5.5IntlBnd d 9.77 ... +4.4IntlGrInc d 16.22 -0.10 +4.2IntlStk d 17.13 -0.09 +5.1LatinAm d 34.42 -0.15 +14.7MidCapVa 33.25 -0.07 +10.6MidCpGr 78.19 -0.11 +7.4NewEra 49.91 ... +12.4NewHoriz 47.47 -0.22 +2.6NewIncome 9.60 ... +5.1OrseaStk d 10.35 -0.05 +2.0R2015 15.24 ... +6.4R2025 16.45 ... +7.0R2035 17.47 ... +7.3Rtmt2010 18.91 ... +6.1Rtmt2020 21.77 ... +6.8Rtmt2030 24.23 ... +7.2Rtmt2040 25.14 ... +7.4Rtmt2045 16.76 ... +7.4ShTmBond 4.79 ... +1.0SmCpStk 45.30 -0.20 +1.7SmCpVal d 49.76 -0.27 -1.2SpecInc 13.17 ... +5.5Value 37.21 -0.05 +10.2TCWTotRetBdI 10.32 ... +4.5TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.88 +0.01 +4.7EqIx 15.36 -0.03 +8.8IntlE d 19.71 -0.11 +2.5TempletonInFEqSeS 23.07 -0.13 +1.5ThornburgIncBldA m 22.11 -0.01 +9.0IncBldC m 22.10 -0.01 +8.5IntlValI 30.88 -0.16 -3.0Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.81 -0.09 +4.5Vanguard500Adml 184.83 -0.29 +9.5500Inv 184.80 -0.29 +9.4500Sgnl 152.68 -0.24 +9.5BalIdxAdm 29.24 -0.02 +7.2BalIdxIns 29.24 -0.02 +7.2BdMktInstPls 10.88 +0.01 +4.8CAITAdml 11.78 +0.02 +6.7CapOpAdml 120.35 -0.29 +12.9DevMktIdxAdm13.40 -0.07 +2.7DevMktIdxInstl 13.41 -0.07 +2.6DivGr 22.47 -0.02 +6.4EmMktIAdm 37.72 -0.27 +12.5EnergyAdm 138.74 -0.28 +10.2EqInc 31.80 -0.01 +8.3EqIncAdml 66.67 -0.02 +8.4ExplAdml 97.43 -0.30 +1.3Explr 104.67 -0.32 +1.2ExtdIdAdm 66.42 -0.20 +5.9ExtdIdIst 66.42 -0.21 +5.9ExtdMktIdxIP 163.94 -0.50 +5.9FAWeUSIns 102.45 -0.57 +5.1GNMA 10.74 +0.01 +4.9GNMAAdml 10.74 +0.01 +5.0GlbEq 25.08 -0.08 +6.9GrthIdAdm 52.28 -0.10 +9.8GrthIstId 52.28 -0.10 +9.8HYCorAdml 6.13 ... +5.5HltCrAdml 89.70 +0.02 +18.6HlthCare 212.59 +0.05 +18.5ITBondAdm 11.55 +0.02 +6.2ITGradeAd 9.98 +0.01 +5.5InfPrtAdm 26.89 +0.03 +6.6InfPrtI 10.95 +0.01 +6.6InflaPro 13.70 +0.02 +6.5InstIdxI 183.64 -0.29 +9.5InstPlus 183.66 -0.28 +9.5InstTStPl 45.70 -0.09 +8.9IntlGr 23.77 -0.20 +1.8IntlGrAdm 75.64 -0.65 +1.9IntlStkIdxAdm 28.95 -0.16 +5.3IntlStkIdxI 115.78 -0.64 +5.3IntlStkIdxIPls 115.81 -0.63 +5.3IntlVal 38.39 -0.22 +2.7LTGradeAd 10.77 +0.05 +15.2LifeCon 18.97 -0.01 +6.2LifeGro 29.30 -0.06 +7.2LifeMod 24.41 -0.03 +6.7MidCapIdxIP 162.73 -0.10 +9.7MidCp 32.89 -0.02 +9.6MidCpAdml 149.35 -0.08 +9.7MidCpIst 32.99 -0.02 +9.7MidCpSgl 47.13 -0.03 +9.7Morg 27.46 -0.04 +7.2MorgAdml 85.16 -0.11 +7.3MuHYAdml 11.18 +0.02 +9.3MuIntAdml 14.24 +0.01 +6.0MuLTAdml 11.69 +0.03 +9.0MuLtdAdml 11.09 ... +1.8MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.7PrecMtls 11.60 -0.03 +12.2Prmcp 104.16 -0.18 +12.8PrmcpAdml 108.07 -0.18 +12.9PrmcpCorI 21.99 -0.03 +13.1REITIdxAd 108.73 -0.12 +20.6REITIdxInst 16.83 -0.02 +20.6STBondAdm 10.52 ... +1.1STBondSgl 10.52 ... +1.1STCor 10.75 ... +1.8STGradeAd 10.75 ... +1.8STIGradeI 10.75 ... +1.9STsryAdml 10.70 ... +0.6SelValu 30.28 -0.06 +7.4SmCapIdx 55.59 -0.19 +5.5SmCapIdxIP 160.71 -0.54 +5.6SmCpGrIdxAdm44.17 -0.16 +2.8SmCpIdAdm 55.67 -0.19 +5.6SmCpIdIst 55.67 -0.19 +5.6SmCpIndxSgnl 50.15 -0.17 +5.6SmCpValIdxAdm45.16 -0.15 +8.0Star 25.34 -0.03 +6.9StratgcEq 33.16 -0.04 +10.5TgtRe2010 27.06 -0.01 +5.7TgtRe2015 15.70 -0.02 +6.3TgtRe2020 28.94 -0.03 +6.8TgtRe2030 29.61 -0.05 +7.1TgtRe2035 18.23 -0.03 +7.4TgtRe2040 30.43 -0.07 +7.5TgtRe2045 19.09 -0.04 +7.5TgtRe2050 30.29 -0.08 +7.4TgtRetInc 13.05 -0.01 +5.3Tgtet2025 16.85 -0.02 +7.0TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.31 +0.01 +6.3TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.43 ... +6.2TotBdAdml 10.88 +0.01 +4.8TotBdInst 10.88 +0.01 +4.8TotBdMkInv 10.88 +0.01 +4.7TotBdMkSig 10.88 +0.01 +4.8TotIntl 17.31 -0.09 +5.2TotStIAdm 50.39 -0.09 +8.8TotStIIns 50.39 -0.10 +8.8TotStISig 48.63 -0.09 +8.8TotStIdx 50.36 -0.09 +8.8TxMCapAdm 102.39 -0.15 +9.3ValIdxAdm 32.15 -0.04 +9.2ValIdxIns 32.15 -0.04 +9.2WellsI 26.12 +0.02 +6.8WellsIAdm 63.29 +0.06 +6.9Welltn 40.36 -0.02 +7.7WelltnAdm 69.71 -0.04 +7.7WndsIIAdm 70.15 -0.12 +8.8Wndsr 22.17 -0.03 +9.7WndsrAdml 74.79 -0.11 +9.8WndsrII 39.53 -0.07 +8.7VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.84 -0.05 +14.9Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.94 -0.01 +9.5SciTechA m 16.56 -0.07 +3.2

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FrptMcM 14 36.16 -.28FrontierCm 34 6.75 +.01Frontline dd 2.25 -.33FuelCellE dd 2.48 -.05GATX 15 66.39 -.04GT AdvTc dd 17.68 -.89GameStop 13 43.17 +.18Gap 17 46.33 +.15Garmin 16 54.12 -.47GenDynam 19 123.39 -.60GenGrPrp cc 24.27 +.04GenMotors 29 34.68 -.03Genworth 11 14.06 -.06Gerdau ... 5.77 -.25GileadSci 24 107.51 +.10GlaxoSKln ... 48.87 +.20GluMobile dd 5.15 -.08GolLinhas ... 6.02 -.13GoldFLtd ... 4.63 +.15Goldcrp g dd 27.77 +.26GoldmanS 11 177.65 -.16GoPro n cc 48.90 +3.40GraphPkg 20 12.66 +.03Groupon dd 6.64 +.11GpFnSnMx ... 14.91 +.15Guess 16 23.38 -2.26HCP Inc 20 43.10 +.28HSBC ... 53.90 +.13HalconRes dd 5.54 -.06Hallibrtn 21 67.38 -1.10HanwhaSol dd 2.19 +.18HartfdFn 12 36.86 -.17HercOffsh dd 3.33 -.09Hertz ... 30.21 -.53HewlettP 14 37.99 -.17Hillshire 37 62.96Hilton n 57 25.66 -.10HimaxTch 37 8.19 +.07Hologic dd 24.71 -.27HomeDp 22 92.51 +.64HopFedBc 29 11.49 -.03HorizPhm dd 10.16 +.26HostHotls 18 22.62 -.01HudsCity 28 9.83 -.12HuntBncsh 14 9.81 -.02

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 3.89 -.01IGI Labs dd 6.79 +.37iShGold q 12.49 +.08iShBrazil q 52.76 -.42iShEMU q 39.93 -.39iShGerm q 29.01 -.29iShItaly q 15.96 -.27iShJapan q 11.82 -.03iSh SKor q 66.66 -.02iSTaiwn q 16.53 -.05iShSilver q 18.74 +.08iShChinaLC q 40.52 -.50iSCorSP500 q 201.42 -.19iShEMkts q 45.13 -.45iSh20 yrT q 118.97 +.62iS Eafe q 66.74 -.30iShiBxHYB q 94.17 -.14iShR2K q 115.91 -.60iShREst q 73.83 -.07iShHmCnst q 23.97 -.07ImageSens dd 3.78 -.30Infinera dd 10.43 +.06IngerRd 28 60.53 -.46IngrmM 17 28.69 +.05IntgDv 23 16.38 +.27InterMune dd 73.21 +.03IntlGame 18 16.70 -.05IntPap 14 48.25 +.11Interpublic 26 19.77 -.07Intuit 27 83.36 +.70Invesco 17 40.58 -.20InvBncp s 28 10.56 -.07Isis dd 39.90 +.32ItauUnibH ... 17.52 -.12JD.com n ... 31.44 -1.20JDS Uniph dd 11.51 -.16JPMorgCh 15 59.16 -.43JetBlue 12 12.41 +.03JohnJn 19 102.95 -.27Jumei n ... 32.52 +.80JnprNtwk 20 23.18 +.05KB Home 17 17.59 -.06KKR 9 23.39 +.12KandiTech dd 19.12 -.14KateSpade 18 32.40 -.11KeryxBio dd 17.81 -.37Keycorp 13 13.51 -.04KindME 39 95.09 -.32KindMorg 34 39.77 -.16Kinross g dd 3.90 -.04KodiakO g 33 15.82 -.15Kohls 15 59.40 -.26LaredoPet 53 23.25 +.32LVSands 21 67.65 +.11LennarA 17 38.95 +.04LexRltyTr ... 10.82 -.02LibGlobA s dd 44.10 +.35LibGlobC s ... 42.56 +.21LibVentA s ... 38.18 +.96LibTripA n ... 36.00 -1.93LillyEli 20 63.11 +.11LockhdM 18 174.10 -1.09LaPac cc 14.20 -.23lululemn gs 24 40.59 -.90

M-N-O-PMGIC Inv 27 8.32 -.04MGM Rsts 92 24.86 +.23Macys 15 62.36 -.22MagHRes dd 6.80 -.01Mallinckdt ... 80.11 +1.82MannKd dd 7.32 -.14MarathnO 11 40.91 +.02MVJrGold q 41.64 +.63MktVGold q 26.46 +.35MktVRus q 24.34 -.78MartMM 41 130.56 +.86MarvellT 21 13.92 +.16Masco 23 23.51MasterCd s 27 76.16 -.48Mattel 15 34.70 -.14McDrmInt 9 7.35 -.21Medtrnic 21 63.12 -.24MelcoCrwn 20 28.68 -.03Merck 32 60.00 -.28MetLife 13 54.39 -.34MKors 23 81.00 -1.34Michaels n ... 16.90 +.36Micrel 54 12.39 +.13MicronT 11 32.81 -.19Microsoft 17 44.88 +.01MobileTele ... 19.42 -.52Mobileye n ... 44.35 -.90Molycorp dd 1.74Mondelez 18 36.29 +.05Monsanto 23 115.76 -.21MorgStan 18 34.06 -.07Mosaic 27 47.97 +.02MotrlaSolu 18 59.37 -.31Mylan 33 48.13 +.05NCR Corp 14 33.75 -.33NII Hldg h dd .14 -.01NRG Egy dd 30.48 +.09NXP Semi ... 66.96 +1.42Nabors 51 26.26 -.16NBGreece ... 3.50 -.02NOilVarco 14 85.42 -.20NetApp 24 41.99 +.43NwGold g 72 6.46 +.02NewmtM 16 26.86 +.34NewsCpA 43 17.67 -.01NikeB 27 78.82 -.66NimbleSt n ... 27.59 -1.20NobleCorp 8 27.94 -.10NokiaCp ... 8.13 -.01NA Pall g ... .26 +.00NAtlDrll n ... 10.99 +.67NoestUt 19 45.58 +.24NorthropG 14 126.88 -.04NStarRlt dd 18.60 -.08Novavax dd 4.62 -.11Nvidia 21 19.39 +.16OcciPet 14 104.01 +.63Och-Ziff 9 12.42 -.06OfficeDpt dd 5.16 +.06Oi SA ... .64 +.01OnSmcnd 18 9.66 +.13OnTrack dd 2.85 +.54Oracle 17 41.27 -.37Orexigen dd 5.73 -.18PDL Bio 6 10.02 -.01PPG 25 205.44 +.20PPL Corp 14 34.45 +.15PallCorp 27 83.43 +2.71PaloAltNet dd 82.26 -.15Pandora dd 26.68 -.31ParagOff n ... 9.19 -.05PattUTI 27 33.54 -.26

PeabdyE cc 15.66 -.31PennVa dd 14.82 +.08PennWst g ... 7.75 +.05PetrbrsA ... 20.32Petrobras ... 19.12 -.09Pfizer 17 29.38 -.11PhilipMor 16 85.26 +.01Pier 1 16 15.76 -.38PiperJaf 13 53.26 -.15PlugPowr h dd 5.55 -.21Potash 22 35.30 +.07PS SrLoan ... 24.73 -.01PwShs QQQ q 99.41 -.11ProShtS&P q 22.79 +.02ProUltSP q 120.62 -.19ProShtR2K q 16.30 +.10PUVixST rs q 24.99 +.88ProctGam 21 83.03 -.28ProUShSP q 24.19 +.03ProUShL20 q 54.30 -.61PShtQQQ rs q 35.84 +.14PUShSPX rs q 44.08 +.11ProspctCap ... 10.26 -.07Prudentl 15 89.06 -1.41PulteGrp 3 19.09 -.07

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 77 88.34 -.09Qualcom 17 76.34 -.63QksilvRes dd 1.28 -.02RF MicD 41 11.76 +.26ReprosTh dd 21.58 +3.37RestorHdw cc 84.55 -3.12RioTinto ... 53.69 -2.00RiteAid 37 6.32 -.02RockwdH 4 80.76 +.96RoyDShllA 16 81.19 +.45RymanHP 33 49.35 +.08SGOCO 6 2.84 +1.23SLM Cp 5 8.88 -.03SpdrDJIA q 170.77 -.24SpdrGold q 124.00 +.68S&P500ETF q 200.14 -.11SpdrHome q 31.50 -.29SpdrLehHY q 41.37 -.01SpdrS&P RB q 38.74 -.31SpdrRetl q 89.03 -.44SpdrOGEx q 78.06 +.45SABESP ... 9.39 +.07Salesforce dd 58.29 -1.29SanDisk 20 98.30 -.54SandRdge dd 5.24 +.02Sanofi ... 54.70 -.51Schlmbrg 22 110.16 -.88Schwab 32 28.35 -.12ScorpioTk ... 9.44 -.39SeadrillLtd 3 36.90 +.27SeagateT 14 62.09 +.91SeaWorld 20 20.56 -.29SvcSource dd 3.84 +.26SiderurNac ... 4.41 -.26SierraWr cc 27.27 -.89SignetJwlrs 25 116.37 +8.34SilvWhtn g 28 24.85 +.33SiriusXM 60 3.60 +.01SkywksSol 29 55.54 +.68SmithWes 8 11.12 -.20SolarCity dd 68.63 -1.26Sonus dd 3.71 +.03SouFun s 15 11.22 -.35SthnCopper 19 32.43 -.38SwstAirl 20 32.05 -.18SwstnEngy 18 40.45 +.28Spansion dd 21.60 +.99SpectraEn 25 41.48 +.34SpiritRltC dd 11.78Splunk dd 45.29 -.61Sprint dd 5.66 -.03SP Matls q 50.45 +.04SP HlthC q 63.63 -.02SP CnSt q 45.10 +.02SP Consum q 68.83 -.09SP Engy q 98.19 +.02SP Inds q 54.07 -.08SP Tech q 40.10 -.06SP Util q 43.00 +.31Staples 14 11.66 +.18Starbucks 30 77.81 -.11Starz A 14 31.47 +.45StlDynam 24 23.14 -.35Stryker 41 82.67 +.34SumitMitsu ... 8.04 +.06Suncor g 12 40.79 +.07SunEdison dd 22.09 -.19SunesisPh dd 7.78 -.45Symantec 17 24.16 -.05Sysco 24 37.79 +.03T-MobileUS cc 29.84 +.40TIM Part ... 27.30 -.84TJX 20 59.77 +.23TaiwSemi ... 20.91TalismE g 37 10.05 -.19Target 25 60.35 -.44TASER 44 15.67 -.28Tekmira g dd 20.76 +1.01TelefBrasil ... 19.52 -.41Teradata 20 45.32 +.48Teradyn 24 20.30 +.07TeslaMot dd 263.86 +.61Tesoro 20 64.48 +.77TexInst 23 48.02 +.243D Sys cc 53.19 +.523M Co 20 143.98 +.04THorton g 26 80.33 +.63TimeWarn 16 76.95 +.10TorDBk gs 14 52.94 -.26Transocn 8 38.41 -.18TriPointe 18 14.79 +.21TrinaSolar 15 12.58 +.10Trinity s 13 48.01 -.72TripAdvis 68 99.37 -2.41TriQuint cc 19.40 +.41TubeMgl n ... 12.87 -.9521stCFoxA 21 35.60 -.2521stCFoxB 21 34.60 -.2321Vianet ... 28.68 +.37Twitter n ... 49.43 +1.37TycoIntl 10 44.69 +.15Tyson 14 38.04 +.33

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 17.93 -.09US Silica 45 70.72 +2.72USEC Inc dd 5.12 -.04UltraPt g 13 26.22 -.14UnionPac s 20 105.04 -.26UtdContl 24 48.32 +.10UPS B 21 97.44 +.06US NGas q 22.10 +.22US OilFd q 35.32 +.29USSteel dd 37.55 -1.48UtdTech 17 109.11 +.02UtdhlthGp 16 86.34 -.04UrbanOut 22 39.77 -.49Vale SA ... 13.11 -.57Vale SA pf ... 11.67 -.44ValeroE 10 54.16 -.09VangEmg q 45.43 -.42VangEur q 57.75 -.39VangFTSE q 41.72 -.20VerizonCm 11 49.41 -.02ViolinM n dd 3.76 -.43Visa 25 214.60 -2.53Vodafone ... 34.41 -.13VoyaFincl 28 38.88 -.52Vringo dd 1.03 -.03VulcanM 55 63.22 -.20WPCS Intl dd 1.20 +.13WPX Engy dd 26.59 +.21Walgrn 21 60.47 -.06WalterEn dd 5.60 -.20WeathfIntl dd 23.34 -.30WellPoint 15 116.25 +.47WstnRefin 19 46.11 +.11WstnUnion 12 17.49 -.04WholeFood 26 39.19 -.62WmsCos 76 58.77 -.35WmsSon 23 65.93 -8.96Windstrm 31 11.33 +.09WiscEngy 17 45.14 +.53WTJpHedg q 49.85 -.20WT India q 22.72 -.15Workday dd 85.89 -4.41Xilinx 18 41.76 +.05Yamana g cc 8.35 +.04Yandex ... 28.34 -.68Yelp dd 82.32 -.54YingliGrn dd 3.33 -.05YoukuTud dd 20.01 +.47YumBrnds 27 72.31 -.01ZionsBcp 16 29.14 -.20Zoetis 34 35.33 -.01Zynga dd 2.88

Today

Eye on consumers

Are a high-flying stock market and solid job growth making consum-ers feel better about the economy?

Find out today, when the University of Michigan reports the results of its latest consumer sentiment index. The July reading fell slightly from the previous month, suggesting consumers have yet to interpret the recent gains in jobs and wages as a sign of more robust hiring and economic growth in the future.

Thinner wallet?

Individual income growth has lagged the U.S. economy’s recovery.

Through much of this year, Americans’ income has been rising, but the rate of growth has been slowing from 0.7 percent in February to a gain of 0.4 percent into early summer. The government reports personal income data for July today. Economists anticipate income growth slowed further last month.

Business barometer

The Institute for Supply Management releases its Chicago business barometer index today.

Economists expect that the index, a gauge of business activity, rose in August to 56.0, the highest level since June.

An index reading above 50 indicates economic activity is growing. Readings below 50 indicate the economy is contracting. Source: FactSet

Chicago business barometerseasonally adjusted

40

50

60

70

AJJMAM

2014

55.9

65.5

52.6

62.663.0

est.56.0

Source: FactSet

Personal incomeseasonally adjusted percent change

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8%

JJMAMF

2014

est.

Source: Morningstar Data through Aug. 27 *annualized

Chinese stocks have been some of the world’s best this summer, and investors are once again flocking to the world’s second-biggest economy.

Improvements in manufacturing and other areas of China’s economy have tamped down worries about its slowing growth, at least for now. Economists credit “mini-stimulus” measures by the government for the recent gains, but they’re still split on whether the improvements will be only fleeting or more permanent.

Mutual fund managers say they’re still finding opportunities in Chinese stocks, even though the summer rebound means they’re no longer as cheap as they were. Many managers are focusing in particular on companies that sell to China’s rising middle class. These stocks carry higher price-earnings multiples

than big Chinese banks and resource companies, but managers say they’re worth it because of their stronger growth prospects.

Still, those same managers caution that the historical volatility of Chinese stocks means interested investors need to be committed for the long term. It will take a long time for the Chinese government to fulfill its goal of shifting the economy toward more consumer spending and away from trade and investment. It’s a transformation that China hopes will result in a more sustainable rate of growth.

“I still think it’s a place to look forward to for the next 10, 20 years to see growth in earnings, valuations and corporate-governance improve-ments,” says Robert Horrocks, chief investment officer of Matthews Asia. “It’s too big to ignore.”

Stan Choe; A.Nieves • AP

Playing China

Vanguard Emerging Markets Stock (VEIEX) 24.4 7.5 11.8% $3,000 0.33%

Fidelity Emerging Markets (FEMKX) 24.9 7.7 11.5 2,500 1.03

T. Rowe Price Emerging Markets (PRMSX) 25.1 8.0 11.7 2,500 1.25

Lazard Emerging Markets Equity (LZOEX) 26.3 9.3 14.2 2,500 1.37

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

EXPENSERATIO

MIN. INITIALINVESTMENT

Seeking stability The Chinese market is rebounding, but a diversified emerging-markets stock fund can have shallower price swings than a China fund.

FundScreener

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: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

BEETLE BAILEY

BC

GARFIELD

BLONDIE

WIZARD OF ID

FORT KNOX

HI & LOIS

DILBERT

PICKLES

Variety9A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

ACROSS1 Herding dog

name5 Pledge of

Allegiance ender8 Red Cross red

cross, e.g.14 Ember, perhaps15 Cattle call16 Diatribe17 Valedictorian,

typically19 Duplicates20 Muskrat relatives21 Company with a

bull in its logo22 Highly skilled23 When Juliet asks

“wherefore artthou Romeo?”

25 Ici __: French“here and there”

28 First femaleSupreme Courtjustice

32 “Consider itdone!”

36 “__ say more?”37 Yeats’ land:

Abbr.38 Green

gemstones40 Get a move on41 Walking aid44 Currier of Currier

& Ives47 Netanyahu, for

one49 River to the Elbe50 Boorish52 Clay being of

Jewish lore56 King’s “__ Lot”59 Picnic serving,

and when dividedproperly, a hint toa hidden featureof six pairs ofpuzzle answers

62 Dodges63 West Germany’s

first chancellor64 Musical Dion65 Quarterback

Tebow66 100 C-notes67 Big name in lawn

care68 1940s mil. zone69 Language that

gave us “clan”

DOWN1 Italy’s La __2 Bamboozled3 Invitation on a

fictional cake4 More roly-poly5 “You’re so right!”6 Extended7 “__ luck!”8 “Blah, blah, blah,”

briefly9 Great number of

10 Element #3511 Path in a pool12 River of central

Germany13 Boot camp meal18 Word of

agreement24 Awaken26 Great Society

monogram27 Self-titled 1991

debut album29 Classic beverage

brand30 Cartoon canine31 Cambodian cash32 Not yet final,

legally33 Scraps34 High-fiber fruit35 Educator LeShan

39 “Zip it!”42 Met the

challenge43 Agitate45 One of the noble

gases46 Nursery arrival48 Girls51 Schedule53 Gumbel’s

“Today”successor

54 Idyllic places55 Sign on an

on-ramp56 Brief moments57 “__ plaisir!”58 Composer of the

opera “Le Roid’Ys”

60 Adjust to fit,perhaps

61 One in an officeexchange

By Frank Virzi(c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 08/29/14

08/29/14

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: My second cousin “Susan” and I are in our 60s and have been friends since childhood. I was widowed six years ago. Susan never married.

Four years ago, Susan and I started traveling to-gether. It’s much cheaper to travel as part of a cou-ple than solo, and we get along well. Now, however, there are a couple of prob-lems. Susan has put on so much weight that she en-croaches on my airplane seat and tour bus bench. Airplane seats are not that comfortable to begin with, and Susan takes up a good third of mine. This makes long fl ights very uncom-fortable. I think Susan should pay for a fi rst-class seat or two coach seats.

The other problem is that Susan has taken in several stray dogs and cats, and her clothes reek of cat urine. I no longer want to share a hotel clos-et when we travel, because my clothes begin to smell like hers.

Susan is already talk-ing about another trip, and I don’t know how to respond. I enjoy travel-ing, but I cannot deal with these things anymore. Any suggestions? — Struggling Cousin

Dear Cousin: You have to tell Susan about the cat odor. She is undoubtedly so ac-customed to it that she can no longer smell it.

Say, “Susan, I’m sure you probably don’t no-tice it, but your clothes are starting to smell like your cats. Per-haps it would help to change the type of lit-ter you use or put your clothes in a different closet.”

The weight issue, however, is more sensitive. If you are willing to address it directly, gently let Susan know that her size makes travel un-comfortable for you. Consider buying your own fi rst-class, busi-ness class or premi-um economy ticket, and Susan can follow suit or sit elsewhere. Or perhaps you each could share the cost of a third seat so you have extra room. You also could suggest sitting separately on tour buses so that you can meet new friends along the way.

Dear Annie: My dad is in his mid-90s. There is a woman in her early 60s who has worked for him and been a companion of his for about six months. Dad would like to ask this

lady to move in with him. This isn’t particularly ro-mantic in nature.

The only thing Dad knows about the woman is that she seems to be nice and likes him. She would continue to be his employee and, in addition, would care for him in his own home.

Dad wants us all to get together and discuss this matter. We are concerned about his fi nancial situa-tion and his health. What should we do? — Con-cerned

Dear Concerned: Is Dad mentally compe-tent? Have you met this woman? There are lawyers who spe-cialize in elder law and can draw up papers to protect Dad’s assets, regardless of the cir-cumstances.

But if the woman is essentially a live-in paid companion and caregiver, it is simply a matter of checking on Dad regularly to see that he is properly cared for.

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

‘Susan’ becomes traveling burdenAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

10A • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

FRIDAY EVENING AUGUST 29, 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 # #CSI: Crime Scene Inves-tigation

Hawaii Five-0 “Pe’epe’e Kainaka”

Blue Bloods “The Truth About Lying”

News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

QVC $ . Barbara Bixby Jewelry Portfolio Lisa Robertson Friday Night Beauty WEN by Chaz Dean

WCBI $CSI: Crime Scene Inves-tigation

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Blue Bloods “The Truth About Lying”

News Late 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) The Arsenio Hall Show House of Payne

Meet the Browns

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

Charlie Rose

} ››› Champagne for Caesar (50, Comedy) Ronald Colman, Celeste Holm.

} › Dead Men Walk A professor’s evil twin returns from the grave as a vampire.

WGN-A + (MLB Baseball: Chicago Cubs at St. Louis Cardinals. From Busch Stadium in St. Louis. (N) (Live)

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

WMAE , ,Washing-ton

Great Performances (N) American Masters Photographer Dorothea Lange. (N)

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `MasterChef “Top 7 Compete”

Bones “The Turn in the Urn”

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

TMZ (N) Dish Nation (N)

Access Hollyw’d

WPXX / Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI Law Order: CI

WPIX :Masters-Il-lusion

Whose Line America’s Next Top Model

PIX11 News PIX11 Sports

Seinfeld The Arsenio Hall Show Seinfeld

MAX 0 3The Knick “Method and Madness”

The Knick “Mr. Paris Shoes”

The Knick (:45) } ›› Riddick (13, Science Fiction) Vin Diesel, Karl Urban.

Hypnotika (13)

SHOW 2 Masters of Sex “As-terion”

Heather McDonald: Brag

} › Scary Movie V (13) Ashley Tis-dale, Simon Rex.

Masters of Sex “As-terion”

Ray Dono-van

HBO 4 1The Leftovers Nora stands up to Laurie.

The Leftovers Jonah From

School Girl Hard Knocks: Training Camp

True Blood “Thank You”

MTV 5 2 (6:55) 2014 MTV Video Music Awards No Cameras Allowed (14, Documentary) Ridic. Ridic.

ESPN 7 ?(6:00) College Football: BYU at Connecticut. (N) (Live)

College Football

College Football: UNLV at Arizona. (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Cops Birth of a Rivalry: Cur-

ran/Pitbull 1 (N)} ››› The Fifth Ele-ment (97)

USA : 8NCIS A blind photog-rapher.

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Covert Affairs Annie helps McQuaid.

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

DISC < DBering Sea Gold: Dredged Up

Bering Sea Gold (N) Airplane Repo “Repo Rat Race”

Bering Sea Gold Airplane Repo “Repo Rat Race”

A&E > Criminal Minds “The Good Earth”

(:01) Criminal Minds (:01) Criminal Minds “The Fallen”

(:02) Criminal Minds (:01) Criminal Minds “The Good Earth”

FSSO ? 4College Football UFC Unleashed UFC Insider Game 365 World Poker Tour:

Season 12UFC Countdown

BET @ F Apollo Live Apollo Live Apollo Live Apollo Live Wendy Williams

H&G C HLove It or List It, Too Love It or List It, Too (N) House

HuntersHouse Hunters

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Love It or List It, Too

E! D Kardashian Fashion Police Soup E! News } Never Kissed

HIST E BAmerican Pickers “Pinch Picker”

American Pickers “Frank’s Holy Grail”

American Pickers “Big Boy Toys”

(:03) American Pickers (:01) American Pickers

ESPN2 F @ 2014 U.S. Open Tennis High School Football

TLC G Four Weddings Four Weddings “... And

a Rock Club”(:01) Four Weddings (N) (:01) Four Weddings (:01) Four Weddings

FOOD H Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Eating America

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

INSP I The Waltons JAG Matlock Matlock Robin Hood

LIFE J =} › The Ugly Truth (09, Romance-Comedy) Kath-erine Heigl, Gerard Butler.

} › Killers (10) A woman learns the hard way that her husband is a hit man.

(:02) } › The Ugly Truth (09)

TBN M Trinity Lindsey Harvest P. Stone } ›› Facing the Giants (06, Drama) Price Spirit

AMC N 0} ›› The Lost World: Jurassic Park (97) Jeff Goldblum. An expedition returns to monitor dinosaurs’ progress.

} ››› Ocean’s Eleven (01, Comedy-Drama) George Clooney, Matt Damon.

FAM O <(5:30) } ›› The Last Song (10)

} ›› Ella Enchanted A young woman tries to break her curse of obedience.

The 700 Club Fresh Prince

Fresh Prince

TCM P } ››› Portrait of Jennie (48, Ro-mance) Jennifer Jones.

(:45) } ››› Duel in the Sun (46) A half-American Indian moves in with a rancher’s family.

(:15) } ›››› The Third Man (49)

TNT Q A} ››› The Last Samurai (03) Tom Cruise, Ken Watanabe. A Westerner learns the ways of the samurai in the 1870s.

(:01) Legends “Lords of War”

(:01) Franklin & Bash

TBS R *Family Guy Family Guy } ›› The Change-Up (11, Comedy) Ryan Reyn-

olds, Jason Bateman.} ›› It’s Complicated (09)

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 Griffith Griffith King of Queens King King King Raymond Love-Raymond FS1 Z NASCAR Pregame College Football: Colorado State vs. Colorado. From Denver. (N) (Live) Sports

FX Æ ;} ››› Avatar (09, Science Fiction) Sam Worthington, Voice of Zoe Saldana. A former Marine falls in love with a native of a lush alien world.

} ››› Avatar Sam Worthington.

OUT Ø SOLO Winch. Fear No Instinct Razor Dobbs Alive Driven Ram Hunting Bone NBCS ∞ MLS Soccer: Dynamo at Sporting Auctions America “Auburn” (N) OWN ± Oprah: Now? Undercover Boss Undercover Boss Oprah: Now? Undercover Boss FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ Tanked Redwood Kings Redwood Kings (N) Redwood Kings Redwood Kings

HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The Attack”

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LGirl Meets Girl Meets Girl Meets Girl Meets I Didn’t

Do It Liv & Mad-die

Dog With a Blog

Dog With a Blog

Dog With a Blog

Dog With a Blog

SYFY EWWE Friday Night SmackDown! (N) Wizard Wars “Puppy

Love”The Almighty John-sons (N)

Defiance “All Things Must Pass”

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

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

Magazine Homes edition on Saturday.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Being organized is a talent that comes naturally to some, and for the rest of us, it’s a skill that can be learned. With a little fore-thought, you’ll get prepared for every important occurrence and some unimportant ones, too.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). If only you could choose how oth-ers respond to you. Mostly it’s a game of trial and error. And in-stinct. And training. Some have turned the social game into a science and written about it, too. You might profi t from looking into it.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You now make career connec-tions as easily as your sign mate Angelina Jolie lands mega-movie roles. No need to oversell yourself. Quiet confi dence wins.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). Every adventure involves the element of danger. No danger, no risk. No risk, no excitement. No excitement, no fun. You’ll dangle your toes off of the high

dive today.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). What’s

said in jest is true, at least part-ly. As Feud said, “There are no jokes.” Even so, taking the truth too seriously is a bad habit -- one you don’t usually have. You’ll lighten the mood for the rest.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your loved ones need the warmth of your attention - but not in short bursts, quick hugs or pecks on the cheek. They want to lavish in your love. Work fast so that you can love slow.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’re just not in the mood to follow the rules, especially when you suspect that they are arbitrary or unjust. You’ll push against the boundaries to see what they’re really made of.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). If you see an open loop, close it -- it’s a brain drain. You need all of your mental power to seize today’s stellar opportunity. No distractions! Tie things up. Fin-

ish what you start.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Why wait until life gets stressful to connect to your power? Set aside time to cen-ter yourself. You’ll create a kind of magnetic force fi eld around yourself and attract just what you want.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The challenges get per-sonal, but don’t worry -- you’re not a regular contender; you’re a force. Tonight, try to tolerate your friend’s partner with a smile (if you can muster it).

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Put the word out. Hire a PR per-son or become your own. Hold nothing back. What you share will multiply your good fortune and the good fortune of others.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’re a torpedo aimed at the moon, and with this highly fo-cused ambition, you could hit it, too. They’ll name a crater after you. This is one for the history books.

D E A R ABBY: My m o t h e r - i n -law is 80 and in the early stages of Al-z h e i m e r ’ s . She lives alone an hour and a half from us. She also has a profes-sional who

takes care of her once a week. My husband, “Fred,” goes to help and entertain her every weekend, and I sometimes ac-company him. She has enough money to stay in an assisted living facility, but Fred wants to build a mother-in-law apartment for her on our property.

Abby, I DON’T LIKE HER. She was a bully when she was younger, and she’s still manipulative. She has made some comments about me hit-ting her, which never happened. Of course, Fred believed me. If she lives with us, I will be her main caregiver because I have a home-based business and a fl exible schedule.

I have already said no to Fred’s idea, but I don’t want to be the bad guy. His two brothers live states away and don’t want to be involved because of the way their mother treated them during their teens. Fred is the only son willing to overlook past issues and has made peace

with her.Could you help me to sort this

out? -- THREE’S A CROWD IN MARYLAND

DEAR THREE’S A CROWD: I’ll try. Caring for someone who has Alzheimer’s disease is a full-time job because the disease is PROGRESSIVE. While Fred’s mother can live alone with the help of a professional once a week now, that will soon not be the case. She will become in-creasingly helpless and so con-fused that should an emergency arise in her apartment she will be unable to think sequentially enough to know what to do. She may no longer recognize who you are and become agitated and combative.

For these reasons your mother-in-law should be in an assisted living facility staffed with caregivers who have been trained to take care of people with Alzheimer’s. Because you have a business to run, it can’t be you. Since Fred has made peace with his mother, he should visit her often to ensure she is well-treated. But he should NOT expect the responsibility of car-ing for her to be yours because it is unrealistic.

DEAR ABBY: My wife likes to leave money hidden in the house or car as her little ATM. The problem is, one or both of our teenagers discover her stashes and the money disap-pears. We have had a family

meeting about it, yet it contin-ues. I have argued for years with her that part of the problem is leaving money around, not cleverly hidden.

My wife blames one kid who she wants to kick out, but what if it’s the other? Now she’s blaming me for not solving the problem. Yes, it’s terrible, but she has fed the impulsiveness and refuses to change her ways. She wants us to be on the “same page,” but that usually means her page. Any ideas? Family counseling? -- DAD IN THE MIDDLE

DEAR DAD: Your wife may want to place the blame on you, but there is more than one prob-lem happening in your house-hold. The fi rst is her insistence on leaving money where it’s tempting a teen (or two) who steals. Second, you don’t know who is taking the money and what it’s being used for. Third is your wife’s idea that a quick fi x would be to throw a dependent child out.

It may take the services of a licensed marriage counselor to mediate an agreement between the two of you to work coopera-tively together. If your wife needs money, the only ATM she should use is one that’s connected with your bank rather than the cookie jar. Your teens should both be tested for drugs and evaluated for emotional problems. After that, family counseling might help you all communicate more successfully with one another.

Wife is unwilling to shoulder burder of mother-in-law’s care

Page 11: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, August 29, 2014 • 11A

Reminder

Events need to be sub-mitted at least two weeks prior to the event. Com-munity events publishes on Wednesdays and Sundays and on Friday if space is available.

  Garbage RoutesThe city of Corinth will

be closed on Monday for Labor Day. The Monday garbage route will be col-lected on Tuesday along with Tuesday’s normal route.

Heritage Day Car Show

The Wheels of North East Ms. Car Club will present their “Heritage Day Car Club Show” on Saturday, Aug. 30 at Jay Bird Park in downtown Iuka. Cash prizes will be given away. Registra-tion starts at 8 a.m. All entrants will be given a free t-shirt. The first 100 will receive a free dash plaque. Registration is $20. All entrants will be entered into the cash drawings. Two trophies will also be awarded. Door prizes will be given out, throughout the day. For more information call Jimmy Ramsey at 423-5448 or Paul Morris at 423-8150 or visit www.iukacarclub.com.

Family Reunion

The families of Bogard E. Wallace and Caladonia Romine Wallace will have their 64th annual reunion at Wallace Grove (7 CR 157 in Corinth) on Sun-day, Aug. 31. A Potluck dinner will be served at 1 p.m. All relatives and family friends are invited. For more information call Lucille Wallace at 662-287-2827.

Bishop Activity Center

Upcoming activities for the center include: Mon-day, Sept. 1, Labor Day Holiday – Center closed; Tuesday, Sept. 2, outing to Tate Baptist Church for exercise, quilting, puzzles, table games and open discussion; Wed. Sept. 3, Oakland Baptist Church bible study, table games, quilting, jigsaw puzzles and open discus-sion; Thursday, Sept. 4, bingo, quilting and open discussion; and Friday, Sept. 5, Roger’s Super-market for Grocery Shop-ping, table games and open discussion.

KHS Class Reunion

The Kossuth High School Class of 1984 will hold its 30 year class reunion at 6 p.m. on Saturday, September 6 at the LC Follin Christian Life Center in Kossuth.

The cost for the meal is $20 per person. Checks should be made pay-able to the KHS Class of 1984 and mailed to: Robbie Rogers Coleman, 7 CR 519A, Corinth, MS 38834. For questions, call 662-415-3100 or email [email protected]. Forward information to all class-mates and RSVP to at-tend.

The Green Market

The Green Market at the Crossroads Museum is Saturday, Sept. 6, with new hours from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the C.A.R.E. Garden green space, 221 N. Fillmore St., Corinth.

The free event features handmade or homegrown items only including fresh produce, pottery, paint-ings, wood work, re-pur-posed furniture, jams, jel-lies, honey, food goodies, clothing, soaps, lotions, yard art, bird houses, home décor, jewelry and much more. Food con-cessions include hand-dipped corn dogs, funnel cakes, fish sandwiches, kettle corn, boiled pea-nuts and much more.

Enjoy free admission to the Crossroads Museum on Green Market day only!

The Green Market is non-profit organization and the banner fund-raiser for the Crossroads Museum.

For more information and to download the vendor application, visit www.corinthgreenmarket.com

Back to School Jam

There will be a back to school jam for Corinth and North Mississippi on Sept 6, featuring “Bluff City” and their newest member “TreVante”and other surprise guests at E.S. Bishop Park, located at 1002 S. John Street. The gates will open at 5 p.m. with different activi-ties, vendors, waterslides and other games. The gates will close at 9 p.m. Tickets will be $5 in advanced or $10 at the gate. Advanced tickets are recommended.

Those interested in showcasing their talents should contact De’ Sor-rell by phone at 817-235-9183 or by email at [email protected] for a registration form. Vendors are welcome to set up all day with a $40 setup fee.

Cruise-in

The Magnolia Car Club is sponsoring a cruise-in Sept. 6 at Arby’s.

All donations taken in at the 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. event will go to the Mili-

tary Order of the Purple Heart to help pay for a monument to be placed at the Alcorn County Courthouse.

For more information about the cruise-in, con-tact the club’s Rick Kelley 662-284-7110 or Reggie Rickman 662-415-2582.

Benefit

A benefit for Landy Hodges will be held at noon on Saturday, Sept. 6 at Aqua Yacht Marina, located at 3822 Hwy 25 in Iuka. Registration for the motorcycle ride is at 9 a.m., followed by the ride itself at 10 a.m. There will be games, hot dog plates, BBQ plates, a silent auction and a raffle drawing for a Smart HDTV. Ms. Hodges is bat-tling stage 4 lung cancer.

  Nagle ReunionDescendants of Patrick

and Emelia Estes Nagle will meet for the 89th time in Mineral Springs Park in Iuka on Sept. 7. Lunch will begin at 1 p.m. For additional informa-tion, call Rilla Wiley at 662-423-5252.

Community CPR Class

A free Community CPR class will be offered from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 10 at Magnolia Regional Health Center in the Learning Institute. It is not a certi-fication – it is basic CPR.  To register call 293-1202.

  50th ReunionACHS Class of 1964

will celebrate their 50th class reunion at 5 p.m. on Sept. 13 at Chap-man’s Restaurant. For more information contact 662-415-3619 or 662-415-1983.

Love day program

The Lighthouse Founda-tion, located at 1103 S. Johns St. will present a Love Day program for Sis. Tonya Nicole Williams, daughter of Mayor Wal-ter Williams and Hattie Mae Williams at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 13. The event will be hosted by Pastor Wade and friends of the community. Churches are encour-aged to bring their choirs, groups and soloists. Food

will be served.For more information,

contact Lamar Garner at 662-603-1792.

Fillmore Block Party

Corinth will be the stage for the first ever Fillmore Block Party on Saturday, Sept. 20. There will be live music, food, face painting and shop-ping. Musicians Cary Hudson and Highway One will perform from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. The free family event will feature samples 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 Reunion

CHS 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, mu-sic and fellowship. Cost for the weekend is $40 per person and is due by Sept 15. Please mail your checks payable 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 wel-come to attend.

Community Calendar

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ENJOYMENT TIED TO UNDERSTANDINGA mother, unable to fi nd a babysitter, took her seven year old

daughter to the ballet. Being her fi rst trip, the girl understood nothing about the art. After watching the players tiptoe across the stage for over an hour, she fi nally turned to her mother with a puzzled look and said, “Mommy, why don’t they just get taller actors?”

People rarely (if ever) enjoy things they do not understand. I once knew a man who did not enjoy watching football games. Yet when he eventually took the time to learn about the game, he became a football addict. His delight in the sport increased in direct proportion to his understanding.

No doubt, this is why some people do not appreciate or enjoy Christianity. They simple do not understand it, and have never taken the time to seriously investigate it. “Religion is just not my thing, man!” someone once blurted to me. “Organized religion is not my thing, either,” I replied. “I’m just as much against that as you are. I’m talking about Christianity--pure and simple. We can open our Bibles and learn about it together if you like.” He refused.

As far as I know, the man never obeyed the gospel. He remained one of those people “who do not know God” or “obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ” (II Thessalonians 1:8). He never investigated Christianity’s rules and regulations (yes, there are some!), so he has never learned to appreciate its privileges and promises or its purpose and practicality. He has never known the joy of gospel singing, the edifi cation of faith-building preaching, or the power and consolation of fervent prayers.

The apostle Paul said, “to be carnally minded is death, but to be spiritually minded is life and peace”. The carnal mind is “emnity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, nor indeed can be” (Romans 8:6-7). The apostle Peter described the false teachers of the fi rst century as being “like natural brute beasts made to be caught and destroyed”, and “they speak evil of the THINGS THEY DO NOT UNDERSTAND, and will utterly perish in their own corruption, and will receive the wages of unrighteousness, as those who count it pleasure to carouse in the daytime” (II Peter 2:12-13, emphasis mine).

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Page 12: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

Thursday Scores

Shorts

HRAY Soccer

The HRAY Soccer Clinic will be held Saturday, Sept. 6 at 9 a.m. Freed-Harde-man coaches and players will be the in-structors. Players must have shin guards. For more information contact Robert Browder at 731-212-0578.

Church Bowling League

Plaza Lanes is accepting regis-tration for its Fall Church Bowling League through Sept. 1. The league,

FootballBaldwyn 41, Booneville 12Co-Lin 37, ICC 13Gulf Coast 41, NEMCC 8Walnut 28, Falkner 21 VolleyballBelmont 3, Central 0

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

The Corinth Lady Warriors got rid of the Prentiss County hangover fi rst.

Corinth (5-1) bounced back from Tuesday’s late-inning loss at Booneville to get past Kossuth 6-2 in slow-pitch softball action on Thursday.

Kossuth, coming off an 18-1 loss to Baldwyn on Tuesday, dropped its fi fth straight deci-sion to open the season.

“We came out fl at Tuesday and were a little fl at tonight,” said fi rst-year CHS Head Coach Rob Scarbrough. “We just did enough to win.”

The two will complete the home-and-home set on Sept.

9 at KHS.Kossuth jumped out to an

early 1-0 lead on Carleigh Mills’ fi fth home run in as many games. The blast also marked the fi rst long ball at the now two-game old soft-ball complex.

Corinth scored two in its initial at-bat and never trailed again. The Lady Warriors banged out 20 hits, but left 11 runners on base.

“We got them on, we just couldn’t get them all in,” said Scarbrough.

Mills provided Kossuth with its other run on a bases-loaded single in the third. The shot just stayed in the park, hitting off the top of the wall.

Corinth’s 1-5 batters were 15-of-19 with six runs scored and four knocked in. Leadoff hitter Jamia Kirk was a per-fect 4-for-4 with a pair of dou-bles, while Colby Cox went 3-for-3 with three doubles and a team-high two RBI.

“It’s always big to get a win over Kossuth,” said Scar-brough. “Coach (Steve) Lyles always puts a good team on the fi eld and to pick up a win after a tough loss on the road to Booneville is big for us.”

Anna Kayte Webb and Ka-tie Vandiver also logged three hits each.

Mills led Kossuth at the plate, going 2-for-2 while driving in both runs. Abie

Trim was 2-for-3 as Kossuth had seven singles in addition to Mills’ blast.

Corinth returns to action Tuesday at Wheeler. Kos-suth will have a week off be-fore traveling to Tishomingo County.

Corinth 6, Kossuth 2

Kossuth 101 000 0 — 2 8 0Corinth 201 201 x — 6 20 1

WP: Allie Jacobs (5-1). LP: Abbie

Clausel (0-5).Multiple Hits: (K) Carleigh Mills 2,

Abie Trim 2. (C) Jamia Kirk 4, Anna Kayte Webb 3, Katie Vandiver 3, Colby Cox 3, McKenzie Patterson 2, Re-bekah Williams 2. 2B: (C) Cox 3, Kirk 2. HR: (K) Mills.

Records: Kossuth 0-5, Corinth 5-1

Lady Warriors take Round 1 in rivalry

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

When you post a 10-2 mark, there’s no much room for re-venge the next go around.

Corinth will get that chance when it travels to face a Lafay-ette County football team for the fi rst time since 1994.

Lafayette, making its fi rst appearance in Corinth since 1993, handed the Warriors a 28-12 setback in Week 2 of the 2013 season. Corinth would reel off nine straight to

close the regular season.“We get an opportunity to

avenge last season’s loss and that’s big for us,” said third-

year CHS Head Coach Doug Jones. “We also get a chance to face the defending Class 4A North champions.”

Lafayette tallied 14 unan-swered in the second half to top the eventual Division 1-4A champions. The ‘Dores would turn a 6-5 regular season into an appearance in the 4A title game, losing 21-6 to Forrest County AHS.

“We just want to compete against a good football team,” said Jones. “A program like Lafayette is a good measuring stick and why we put them on the schedule.”

Both teams were involved

in shutouts in their season openers. Corinth blanked Kossuth 42-0, while Lafay-ette was handed a 20-0 loss to Class 6A Tupelo.

Corinth posted 492 yards of offense, including 464 on the ground at nearly nine yards a pop. Montavious Shields had 183 and two scores on 18 car-ries, while Isaac Haney added 171 and a tally on 17 totes as the seniors both set career highs.

The Warriors also won the turnover battle 5-1. Kerrigan Maness had a pair of picks in his initial start and Javen Morrison housed his inter-

ception for the game’s fi rst score.

The Warriors and Commo-dores were Division 1-4A ri-vals during the 1993 and 1994 seasons. The two split their two encounters, winning on the other ones turf -- which was natural grass at the time.

“We just want to stick our nose in there and compete,” said Jones. “They are a good football team, but we are two.”

Lafayette installed an ar-tifi cial surface last season, meaning the Warriors are playing the second of three straight on the synthetic.

Corinth Warriors out looking for revenge

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

Tishomingo Co. (0-1)

at Alcorn Central (1-0)

When: Tonight, 7Where: ACHSOn the Air: WXRZ-FM 94.3 “Game of the Week”Coaches: Tishomingo Co., Preston Leathers

(1st year, 0-1); Alcorn Central, Jeff Boren (3rd year, 5-18)

Last Meeting: Tishomingo County won 28-6 last season

Series History: Tish County leads 17-5Last Week: Tishomingo County lost to Moor-

eville 14-7, Alcorn Central ran past Biggersville 42-8

Notes: The Braves saw Mooreville rally in the second half in last week’s season opener to spoil Preston Leathers’ debut. The Braves have won nine straight in the series since Central took a 20-7 decision at home in 2004.

Central churned out 282 yards and fi ve scores on the ground in beating Biggersville for the fourth straight time. Ethan Carmichael had 108 and two scores on eight carries, while Saylor Gray added 96 and two on 13 totes.

  McNairy Central (0-0)

at Kossuth (0-1)

When: Tonight, 7Where: Larry B. Mitchell Stadium, KHSCoaches: McNairy, Chad Hodge (1st season);

Kossuth, Brian Kelly (4th year, 19-17)Last Meeting: McNairy Central won 16-10 last

year.Series History: McNairy leads 4-1Last Week: This is McNairy Central’s season

opener, Kossuth lost 42-0 at CorinthNotes: With Hodge taking over for former Kos-

suth Head Coach Charlie Dampeer, the game has lost some of its luster. McNairy was open last week after taking on Scotts Hill in jamboree action the week prior.

Kossuth committed fi ve turnovers -- three in the opening quarter -- in a season-opening shutout at Corinth. The Aggies started the 2013 season 0-2 before breaking even in their fi nal four regular-season games.

 

New Site (1-0)

at Biggersville (0-1)

When: Tonight, 7Where: Lions’ Den, BHSCoaches: New Site, Ronnie Jackson (3rd year);

Biggersville, Ronnie Lawson (12th season, 32-89)

Last Meeting: New Site won 51-50 last yearSeries History: Biggersville leads 2-1Last Week: New Site beat Thrasher 16-6, Big-

gersville lost 42-8 to Alcorn Central.Notes: There aren’t a lot of wins on paper for

a short-handed Biggersville roster, but this could be one. The Lions put up over 220 yards of of-fense last week but had only eight points to show for it.

Bradley Davis leads the way on the ground with 138 yards on 17 carries. Tyran Davis threw for 64 yards and one score and added 19 on the ground.

Alcorn CountyGrid Capsules

Photo Courtesy Rob Brown/Tee Rage Photography

Corinth’s Montavious Shields fights through a tackle en route to some of his 183 yards in last Friday’s 42-0 win over Kos-suth.

The Associated PressATLANTA — Bo Wal-

lace threw four touch-downs passes in a sloppy season opener, and No. 18 Mississippi pulled away in the fourth quar-ter to beat Boise State 35-13 on Thursday night.

Shaking off Wallace’s three fi rst-half intercep-tions, the Rebels (1-0) got the victory before a sparse crowd in the Chick-fi l-A Kickoff Game. But it was hardly the sort of convincing perfor-mance they were hoping for entering the season with their highest rank-ing since 2009.

Ole Miss led only 7-6 entering the fourth quar-ter before fi nishing off Boise State (0-1) when

Wallace threw for TDs on three consecutive throws, ruining the debut of new Broncos coach Bryan Harsin.

Cody Core hauled in a pair of TDs: a 30-yarder in the fi nal minute of the fi rst quarter, then a 76-yarder midway through the fourth after grabbing a short pass on a slant route and break-ing free down the middle of the fi eld.

Also in the fi nal period, Wallace went to Laquon Treadwell for a 14-yard TD and hooked up with Quincy Adeboyejo on a 31-yard scoring play.

That was more than enough against Boise State, which was coming off its worst season since

1998 (8-5) and seems to have lost its BCS-busting swagger. The Broncos had fi rst-and-goal at the Ole Miss 1 in the sec-ond quarter, ran three straight plays that lost a total of 2 yards, and set-tled for a fi eld goal. More telling, when still in the game and facing fourth-and-3 at the Rebels 40, they took a delay of game and punted the ball away.

For much of the night, neither team looked as if it was ready for the season. Wallace’s three picks before halftime were matched by his Boise State counterpart, Grant Hedrick. For good measure, both QBs also

Ole Miss edges Boise State in a sloppy season opener

Please see OLE MISS | 13A

PLAYERS OF THE WEEK

Home Banking Branch Manager Kevin Mitchell presents Kossuth’s #53 Chazz Bain and Biggerville’s #24 Clint

Young with a Player of the Week Game Ball. The players are chosen by their head coach.

Page 13: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Scoreboard13A • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

OLE MISS

SHORTS

which is open to all de-nominations, will begin play on Sept. 2. Teams consist of four players, who must be mem-bers of that church. So far teams from Al-corn County, Iuka and Counce, Tennessee, have registered. For more information, con-tact Plaza Lanes (286-8105) or David Curry (415-3555).

Men’s Basketball League

The Adamsville High School Cardinal basket-ball program is sponsor-ing a Men’s Basketball League beginning Sun-day, Sept. 7. Games will be played on Sunday evenings with accom-modations for church teams and church activi-ties. Anyone out of high school is eligible to par-ticipate. Each team will be guaranteed 5 games along with a tournament at conclusion. Cost is $100 per team. For additional information or to reserve a spot for your team please contact: Coach Root (731) 645-0169, Coach Campbell (662) 415-8308 or Tyrone Luster (731) 610-6754. See the Cardinal Basket-ball Facebook page for Men’s League informa-tion, scores and game schedules.

  Golf Tournaments

Hillandale Golf Course is holding a Labor Day

2-Person Scramble on Sept. 1 with a 9 a.m. shotgun start. Entry fee is $40 per player, which includes green fee and cart. Deadline to enter is Aug. 27. For more info call William Cole at 665-2115.

• Shiloh Ridge will be holding its annual Labor Day 4-Person Scramble on Sept 1. Breakfast and registration will be at 8 a.m. with a shotgun start at 9. Cost is $10 plus cart for members and $50 -- which includes green fee and cart -- for all others. Teams will be drawn. Deadline for entry is Sunday, Aug. 31 at 2 p.m. There will also be a closest-to-the-pin and long drive contest. Call PGA Golf Professional Trey Adams at 286-8000 for more details.

• Southwest Human Re-source Agency will be hosting its 7th Annual Golf Tournament on Sept. 10 at Woodland Hills Golf Club in Pinson, Tennes-see. Entry fee for a team of four is $300 which includes lunch, driving range use, cart, and green fees for 18 holes.

Cash prizes for all winning teams. Sponsorships range from Platinum Sponsor of $2,500 to a Hole Sponsor of $100. All proceeds are directly applied to the affordable hous-ing program of Southwest TN Community Development Corporation. For additional tournament information please contact Christy McMahan at (731)989-5111, (731)435-9129, or [email protected].

  

Whitehurst Memorial Tournament

The 14th Owen B. White-hurst Memorial Golf Tour-nament is set for August 30 at Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club. Cost is $60 for the four-person scramble with proceeds awarded to area charities. Golf package in-cludes tournament comfort color T-shirt and tote bag; 18 holes of golf with cart included, lunch and awards ceremony. Event begins

with 9 a.m. shotgun start. For more information call Mike Whitehurst 662-415-5514 or Winners Circle 662-287-7678.

 Mississippi Record Book

The 19th annual Mis-sissippi Baseball Record Book is now available for purchase by mail. The book includes records of public schools and four-year col-leges.

The book is published by Diamonds By Smillie. Coach John Smillie has worked hard to publish a compre-hensive record book to pro-mote the baseball history of public high schools and four-year colleges.

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

had one picked off in the end zone, ruining good scoring chances. But the poor play went beyond a bunch of errant throws.

Ole Miss was fl agged for moving too soon on its fi rst two attempts at getting off an offensive snap — and wound up being called for a stagger-ing seven false-start pen-alties in the fi rst half. The Rebels couldn’t blame the crowd for being too noisy, either. The up-per deck at the Georgia Dome wasn’t even used for a turnout announced at 32,823.

Boise State was even worse, hardly looking like the powerhouse that former coach Chris Pe-tersen built before bolting for Washington after last season. Harsin, a former Broncos quarterback and offensive coordinator un-der Petersen during the glory days, watched his offense managed only a pair of fi eld goals before a meaningless touchdown in the closing minutes.

Hedrick threw his fourth interception early in the fourth quarter, which pretty much fi n-ished off Boise State. Two plays later, Wallace found Adeboyejo open at the 10, and he easily broke away from a cou-ple of would-be tacklers who did little more than stick out their arms.

CONTINUED FROM 12A

CONTINUED FROM 12A

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected] — Willie

and Mickey weren’t in Baldwyn on Thursday.

But the Duke was. Duke Upshaw tallied four touchdowns, including a 99-yard kickoff return to open the game, as Bald-wyn rolled past Booneville 41-12 in the Skunk Bowl. Upshaw amassed over 400 total yards as Baldwyn end-ed a fi ve-game skid to neigh-boring Booneville. Boonev-ille was kept out of the end zone, but did get four fi eld goals off the foot of Austin Holloway. Booneville is idle next week, while Baldwyn hosts Mooreville.

Walnut 28, Falkner 21

At Walnut Will Quinn’s 18-yard run with fi ve minutes remaining pre-vailed Walnut past Tippah County rival Falkner in the annual Joe Bowl.

Dandy Dozen selec-tion Armani Linton tal-lied a pair of scores for Walnut. He also added the two-point conver-sion following the fourth-quarter rally that made it a seven-point game. The two rivals play for the Joe Horton Memorial Trophy. Horton coached at both schools and died during the Walnut-Falkner game in 2000. Walnut hosts Alcorn Central on Friday, while Falkner continues its Tippah Tour with a date at Ripley.

Skunk Bowl Baldwyn 41, Booneville 12Booneville 0 6 3 3 -- 12Baldwyn 14 0 7 20 -- 41 First QuarterBA – Duke Upshaw 99

kick return (Zachary Win-stead kick) 11:46

BA – Upshaw 40 run (Winstead kick) 5:16

Second QuarterBO – Austin Holloway

42 FG 11:55BO – Holloway 26 FG

3:55 Third QuarterBO – Holloway 36 FG

3:07BA – Upshaw 12 run

(Winstead kick) 1:08 Fourth QuarterBO – Holloway 26 FG

8:19BA – Upshaw 63 run

(Winstead kick) 7:51BA – Laquintez Up-

shaw 3 run (kick failed) 5:33 BA – Laquintez Up-shaw 63 yard run (Win-stead kick) 44.9

Records: Baldwyn 2-0, Booneville 1-1.

Joe Bowl Walnut 28, Falkner 21Falkner 6 8 7 0 -- 21Walnut 6 6 8 8 -- 28 First QuarterWAL -- Armani Linton

12 run (kick failed), 2:03FAL -- Jeramie Law-

rence 1 run (kick failed), 9:17

Second QuarterWAL -- Monterio

Hunt 3 run (run failed), 4:06

FAL -- Lawrence 21 pass from Jase Stroupe (Stroupe run), :15

Third QuarterFAL -- Lawrence 34

pass from Stroupe (O.J. Prather kick), 2:47

WAL -- Linton 70 kick return (Linton run), 2:37

Fourth QuarterWAL --Will Quinn 18

run (Linton run), 5:01Records: Falkner 1-1,

Walnut 1-1

Baldwyn, Walnut prevail in rivalries

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Page 14: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

14A • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

Page 15: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, August 29, 2014 • 1B

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2B • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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Page 17: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

Each time I have heard the president give his State of the Union ad-dress, Congress sits di-vided according to their political persuasion. I

have nev-er seen anything d i f f e r -ent until this year w h e n some of the con-gressmen d e c i d e d to sit next

to their opposing party friends.

This is a great step forward in healing the diversity that this na-tion seems to be going through. As most of you, I didn’t think much about the division because I thought that was the way it was supposed to be.

On June 16, 1858, Abraham Lincoln, upon his acceptance as the Republican Party candi-date, gave his famous “A House Divided” speech to over 1,000 people. His long lasting and many times used quote was, “A house divided against it-self cannot stand.”

This was a paraphrase from what Jesus told the Pharisees in Matthew 12:25, “Every kingdom divided against itself will be ruined, and every city

or household divided against itself will not stand.”

Lincoln made his state-ment during a time of much controversy in the United States and was chastised by members of his own party for speak-ing this way. Why would any of us subject our-selves to criticism about this when our Lord and Savior spoke these words of truth?

Jesus went on to say, “If Satan drives out Sa-tan, how then can his kingdom stand?”

I believe all of us as citi-zens of this great nation need to encourage our congressmen to work to-gether for the good of the common man. Over the last 50 years we have al-lowed Satan to crawl into our government systems and take away many of our Christian inheritanc-es and rights. It seems that today everyone has to be politically correct and stand for something whether it is what the Bible teaches or not.

We need to go back to the roots and beliefs that made our country the strongest and best in the world. Hopefully with this last State of the Union address and mem-bers crossed party lines to sit with their friends, this will be a good start.

Prayer: Father, thank you for a blessed nation. Thank you for the free-doms that you, and only you, allow us to have. I pray that the entire world will see our country as a Godly country and come to know you on a person-al basis. Amen.

(Alcorn County native and Daily Corinthian columnist Gary Andrews is the author of Encour-aging Words: 30-days in God’s Word. To obtain a copy go to his website www.gadevotionals.com.)

“What’s this?” Grand-son Hayden asked as he reached to pick up the round, black thing on our bedside table.

I laughed and said, “ T h a t ’ s an alarm clock.”

“ Y o u m e a n Popaw ac-tually has a alarm c l o c k ? What for?”

was the next question.Since we don’t go to

work every day, I guess he thought we wouldn’t have such a thing in the house anymore.

“Well,” I said as I tried to come up with the ap-propriate answer, “this summer I need one so I’ll wake up and unlock the door before you get here!”

This child usually gets up ready for the day – if it’s “daylight” busy life should begin. One morn-ing he came in and sat down on the couch as I fl opped down in our big brown recliner and stretched out. I thought I needed to relax a few more minutes before thinking about the day’s

agenda.Hayden said, “Momaw,

what can we do?” His standard question.

“Let’s rest a few min-utes fi rst,” I said.

With dismay in his voice and a grin on his face, he quickly replied, “I just got up, I don’t need to rest!”

Of course, I cackled at the thought that I had said I needed to rest – when I had just gotten out of bed fi ve minutes before. Then I thought that what my grandson doesn’t know is that in a space of time like the blink of an eye, he will be saying the same thing.

… So we came up with something “to do” rather quickly so his young body would not be bored even though my old body often fi nds peace in the midst of boring moments.

Gene Perret says that “an hour with your grand-children can make you feel young again.” That’s so true – but then he add-ed, “anything longer than that, and you start to age quickly.”

I never thought I would say it but that’s true, too.

… But the summer break from school is over and the regular routine

has begun again – and we don’t need to set that black noisy thing beside our bed – we just have to remember to be at home for the school bus in the afternoon on certain days of the week.

We do realize how blessed we are to have grandchildren close by so we can see them often and enjoy their different per-sonalities and fresh, cre-ative ideas. I agree with the guy who said, “the idea that no one is perfect is a view most commonly held by people with no grandchildren.”

These little ones have a perfect God-given way of showing us that life is great, time is precious, and every day is a new opportunity to learn ex-citing things and make more memories. I may be “retired” and not need an alarm clock, but I don’t think the grandchildren will allow me to become stale and dull – not any-time soon anyway.

(Lora Ann Huff is a We-nasoga resident and spe-cial columnist for the Dai-ly Corinthian. Her column appears Friday. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)

Religion3B • Daily Corinthian Friday, August 29, 2014

Lora Ann Huff

Back Porch

Gary AndrewsDevotionals

HomecomingThe Lovelace 6th Annual

Homecoming will be held at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 30 at Wheeler Grove Baptist Church. The doors will open at 5 p.m. Admission is free but a love offering will be taken.

Labor Day FestThe 2014 Labor Fest,

organized by Sloan Family Ministries will be held at The Tabernacle (24 CR 742 in Wal-nut) on Friday, Aug. 29 and Saturday Aug. 30 at 7 p.m.; Sunday, Aug. 31 and Monday, Sept. 1 at 2 p.m. There will be food following the Friday and Saturday night services and the 3 p.m. service on Sunday. No food will be served on Mon-day. For more information con-cerning the event, motels or RV hookups contact the Sloan Family at 662-665-4822.Saturday night is T-shirt night. Labor Day Fest shirts will be available. A special announce-ment will be made this year.

Fifth SundayButlers Chapel Baptist

Church will hold their Fifth

Sunday on Sunday, Aug. 31. Entertainment will be provided by the Barnetts. Preaching will begin at 10:30 a.m. followed by the fellowship meal. Bring a potluck dish. Bro. Wayne Mckee is pastor.

Southern Gospel SingingRutherford Chapel, located

at CR 755 (8 miles West of Corinth in the Theo community) will hold a Southern Gospel Singing at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 6, 2014.  Entertainment will be provided by The Ser-vants Quartet of Ripley and The Singing Prayer Warriors. For in-formation call Rev. Casey Ruth-erford 662-396-1967. There will be a dinner at 6 p.m.

Annual Choir DayThe East Fifth Street M.B.

Church will hold their Annual Choir Day on Sunday, Sept. 7 at 3 p.m. All area church choirs, praise teams and solo-ists are invited to render se-lections. The theme this year is “I will sing unto the Lord, for he hath triumphed glorious-ly...” (Exodus 15:1). The Rev. Richard Wade is pastor.

Homecoming and RevivalCharity Christian Church in

Jacinto will have homecom-ing from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 7. Tom Weaver from Solid Rock Ministries will be the guest speaker. Lunch will be served at noon followed by special singing by Pam Gardner at 1 p.m. Revival will be held each night at 7 p.m.

Friends and Family DayPleasant Grove in Den-

nistown is hosting Friends and Family Day at 3 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 12. The guest speaker will be pastor David Curry of Wades Chapel in Ra-mer, Tenn. He will be accom-panied by his church family and choir. Food will be served after the service.

Annual Fall RevivalPleasant Grove Missionary

Baptist Church in Rienzi will hold their annual revival on Sunday, Sept. 14 – Tuesday Sept. 16. The revival will begin at 6 p.m. on Sunday and 7 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday. The theme is “Reviving our Purpose” (Philippians 4:13).

The Rev. Derrick Gibbs, As-sociate Minister of White Hill M.B. Church in Tupelo will be the guest speaker.

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 St. in Corinth. Post membership is not required to attend. Donations for break-fast 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 ‘Celebra-tion Night’ at 6 p.m. on Thurs-day nights.

There will also be a  Mens’ Bible Study Group meeting at 7 a.m. on Saturday morn-ings. They have 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 located 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.

Worship Call

Little ones demonstrate that time is precious

A house divided just cannot standBible readings

Sunday - Matthew 12:22-36; Monday - Psalm 55:9-11; Tues-day - Luke 12:49-53; Wednesday - Gala-tians 4:8-20; Thurs-day - Jude 17-19; Friday -John 7:12-43; Saturday -Ezekiel 13:20-23.)

We need to go back to

the roots and beliefs that made our

country the strongest and

best in the world.

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Page 18: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

HOMES FOR SALE0710

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438 CR 127 Tishomingo NLY 5 year old custom built

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

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

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

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

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

$56,000

711 Sara Lane Lake Front brick home with

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

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conditioning, and located minutes from all the amenities

that the wonderful city of Corinth offers,dinning, shopping

$179,000

Lyle Murphy 2 CR 783, • Corinth, MS 38834

662-212-3796662-287-7707

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

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Family Financial Services

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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

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Owner Wants Offers

Lake house for saleon the beautiful

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

Florence, AL, 35630.

256-764-6943

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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, &

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PICTURE YOUR

PROPERTY HERE!

LAND, FARM,COMMERCIAL

or HOME

662-594-6502 orclassad@

dailycorinthian.com

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

CARS FOR SALE0868

4B • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320CHIYORKIE FEMALE, CKCRegistered, 4 MonthsOld- all shots, wormed.$200.00 Cash 662-284-4572 or 594-5407

MALE ENGLISH BULLDOGPUPPY AKC REGISTERED-12 Weeks Old. NewCrate included. $750.00-662-284-7142

FARM

FARM MARKET0410CANNING TOMATOES

5 Gallons662-603-1500

MERCHANDISE

MUSICAL MERCHANDISE0512

B E A U T I F U L " K E N T "BANJO, green & goldmetal flake w/gold star-burst on back. GREATsound. $350. 662-287-4370

GUITAR, PEAVY JackDaniels Signature series,o l d N 0 7 B r a n d .$500/OBO, 662-212-0189or 286-8138

ELECTRONICS0518GATEWAY COMPUTERwith Windows 8, $230.663-212-2729

SPORTING GOODS0527

H & R 410 single shotgun in good conditionfor $140. Call 662-720-6855

MARLIN MODEL 60 semi-automatic rifle withscope in good condi-tion. $150. 662-720-6855

FURNITURE0533COFFEE TABLES and 2End Tables, Dark Maple-$150.00- 287-5064

HALF CAPTAINS Bed, LikeNew, w/ mattress -$200 .00 - 287-5064

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

MOVING SALE!!! Sat. @7AM. Wynbrooke Dr.-Furn., lamps, pics, homedecor, clothing- wo-men & Child, TV's

SAT/ SUNDAY, Sept 6th& 7th- 1011 HWY 57 EastRamer, TN 38367

THU/ FRI/ SAT- 2917 N.Wood Drive- HillcrestSub.- Carport Sa le-Furn, Clothes and alittle bit of everything!

THURSDAY/ FRIDAY -C o u n t y R o a d 2 1 8 -household items, fur-niture, clothes, glass-ware & bedding

YARD SALE!! SATURDAYONLY, 7AM! 4006 IVYLANE. A Little Bit ofeverything!

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

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL HELP0232WANTED, 20 hrs/wk fore lder ly man . Cook ,housekeeping, errands,bath. Dependable, Non-smoker, drug free, ref-erences. 501-533-3232

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.

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

3 DAY SALE !! THUR/ FRI/SAT- Rain or SHINE! 40County Road 662- Kos-suth, behind the watertower.

SAT/ SUN/ MON- 20 CR271, Mens clothes, pel-let gun, l.h. bow, l.h.golf clubs, pct knives &small app. & More!

FRI & SAT- 700 CR 400-C l o t h e s , C h r i s t m a sitems, pictures, oddsa n d e n d s & m u c hm o r e ! ! ! !

FRIDAY ONLY! 699 HWY 2(Kossuth) 7 :30-4 :30 .Clothes, Junior sz 5 &up, Misses Dress andCasual 10- Plus & Misc...

U.S. Savings Bonds

are gifts with a future.

Page 19: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

2003 DodgeReg. Cab, 2WD, 133K Miles, Super Clean

ONLY $8,950

2008 Ford Expedition Eddie Bauer Edition

White/Tan 112K

$18,950

2004 Mitsubishi Endeavor110K, Silver, Leather, Heated

$8,950

2009 GMC Acadia SLEDVD, Back-Up Camera, 104K Miles, Local Vehicle

ONLY $16,950

2014 Chevy Traverse LTOnly 13K Miles, White, Heated Seats, Back-Up Camera

ONLY $30,950

2006 GMC Yukon XL4WD, Leather, Loaded

$10,950

2002 Chevy SilveradoExtended Cab, Red 135K

$8,950

2012 Dodge Caravan SXT47K Miles

ONLY $17,950

2013 Chevy Captivia LTSilver, 19K Miles

$19,950

2012 Dodge Avenger SESilver, Only 34K Miles

ONLY $15,950 or $279 mo.

2006 GMC Z71Extended Cab, 4x4, White

$14,950

2014 Dodge RamQuad 4, Big Horn, 19K Miles, White, Chrome Pkg.

ONLY $29,950

2013 Malibu LTWhite, 37K Miles

ONLY $18,900

2008 Saturn Aura XEBlue, 73K

$8,950

2006 Chrysler Town & CountryLocal Trade, 105K Miles, Stow-n-Go

ONLY $7,950

72 months @ $3.99, $2000 down include tax and title. Sales Prices are tax & title.

ACT NOW FOR YOUR BEST DEAL!

Labor Day Deals!

GENERAL HELP0232

Longwood CLC, in Booneville, is in need of a:

DIETARY MANAGER

Experience a plus, computer skills required

Mon-Fri 8:00-5:00Contact: Teresa Davis, Administrator

662.728.6234EOE: We are an Equal Opportunity Employer.

MEDICAL/DENTAL0220

MS CARE CENTERis looking for

Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts.

Sign-On Bonus.Please apply in person.

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

E.O.E.

Daily Corinthian • Friday, August 29, 2014 • 5B

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

3 BR, 2 BA, South of Cor-inth, 462-8221 or 415-1065.

HOMES FOR RENT0620

2143 HWY 72 East- 3BR/2BA- Corinth School Dis-trict. $750 Dep/ $750Mo.- 279-9024

3/BR, 1/BA Wenasoga-Kossuth Dist. $400/mo.$400/sec. dep. Stove &Fridge furnished Call(662)286-2809

4240 CR 200- 3/BR, 2/BA,Central School Dist.$700mo. w/ $700 dep.

ALSO

1410 Gaines Road- FarmHouse- 2/BR, 1/BA- $400per month

call: 662-279-9024

DUPLEXES FOR RENT0630

1 BEDROOM DuplexApartment- 28 CR 330A662-665-1310

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

CASIO TABLE TOP ELEC-TRIC KEYBOARD. $35.662-415-3770

CHANDELIER WITH crys-tals. Like new. $40. 662-603-1674

COKE TRAYS. $8 EACH.662-415-3770

HARDWOOD FIREWOOD-You Cut- tops onground 603-4803

MIKASA MAXINA f inechina, Grande Harvest. 8pl . setting + 4 xtraplates & salad plates.(new over $200) willtake $75. 603-1674

O L D I N D I A N H E A DNICKLES & PENNYS. $8.EACH. 662-415-3770

OLD SWORD, MADE INSPAIN. $90. 415-3770

QUEEN BED RAILS. $20.662-415-3770

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.ROLLED UPHOLSTERYFactory, Multiple Yard-age, $4.00 per Yard 731-453-4166

SMALL SWORD. $25. 662-415-3770

WATER COOLER/foun-t a i n . W o r k e d g o o dwhen taken out ofbuilding. $45. Call 662-808-0118

WOLF KNIFE & DISPLAY.$30. 662-415-3770

FURNITURE0533

LIKE NEW roll top desk,54"WX46"T w/7 drawers.$165. Call 662-423-5095

PATIO TABLE with Um-brella & 4 chairs- $75.00-870-768-5735

SOFA, LOVESEAT , BigChair, Ottoman. LikeNew, Brown/Beige withs o m e w o o d t r i m -$ 5 0 0 . 0 0 - 2 8 7 - 5 0 6 4

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

(1) OLD 36" DOOR. $35.662-415-3770

(2) 36" SCREEN DOORS.$15. EACH. 662-415-3770

(2) 36" STORM DOORS.$35. EACH. 662-415-3770

192 CARTOON COMICBOOKS. $40. CALL 662-415-3770

2 NEW post formedcounter tops. light tantextured formica. Ea 10"long w/left & r ightmitres, fastners inc.$150. 662-423-5095

ANTIQUE #6 IRONS. $15.EACH. 662-415-3770

BASEBALL CARDS. $25.PER THOUSAND. 662-415-3770

BURGUNDY SECTIONAL,Used in Very Good Con-dition. $500.00- 731-453-4166

SERVICES

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

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

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR GRISHAM INSURANCE

(662)415-2363

Final Expense Life Insurance

Long Term Care Medicare Supplements

Part D Prescription Plan

Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?

Call me for a free quote.

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

Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

FiFin lal EExpense

CHRIS GRISHAM

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Structure demolition & RemovalCrushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

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

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

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000GUNS New Construction,

Home Remodeling & Repair.

Licensed & Insured

SHANE PRICE BUILDING, INC.

662-808-2380

We Haul:

We also do Dozer, Back-Hoe, &

Track-Hoe Work!Let us clear your land!

662-286-9158or 662-287-2296

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

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

Advertising Pays

with the Daily

Corinthian

• Brakes • Tune-ups• A/C• Oil Changes

Open 8-5Monday - FridayCall for extended

hours185 B CR 509,

Corinth(In Front of K&W Body Shop on

Hwy 45)

Towning Available

662-396-2222

CorinthAutomotive

Center

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!

Page 20: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

6B • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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 ArchitecturalShingle ...........................................

$5595

4 X 8 Masonite Siding ....$1595

Foil Back Foamboard 1/2” .$595

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

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

ALL NEW 2014 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT

*$20,499STK# 838J DEAL# 53342

*$324 PER MONTHBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

BRAND NEW 2014 DODGE JOURNEY SE*$18,499

*$293 PER MONTHBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

CHOOSE FROM 6!STK# 2624R, 2636R, 2664R, 2669R, 2671R,

2685R DEAL# 51968

BRAND NEW 2014 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE*$19,439

STK# 2672R, 2673R

BRAND NEW 2014 RAM 1500 QUADCAB

*$25,499

STK# 2562R*$374 PER MONTHBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

#PRICE INCLUDES 500 CHRYSLER CAPITAL BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

INCLUDES AUTO, HEMI V8, POWER PKG, TOW

PKG & REAR BACKUP CAM!

BRAND NEW 2014 DODGE AVENGER SE*$16,999

STK# 1125D

*$279 PER MONTHBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

#INCLUDES 500 CHRYSLER CAPITAL BONUS ALREADY APPLIED.

BRAND NEW 2014 DODGE CHARGER SE*$22,499

STK# 1126D, 1129D

*$356 PER MONTHBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

*#$20,285 *#$310 PER MONTHBUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!*$195 PER MONTH

BUY IT NOW! ZERO DOWN!

LEGAL SERVICES

ATTN: CANDIDATESList your name and offi ce under the political listing for only $190.00. Runs every publishing day until fi nal election. Come by the Daily Coriathian offi ce at 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 287-8147 for more info. Must be paid in advance.

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTThis is a paid political advertisement which is intended as a public service for the voters. It has been submitted to and approved and submitted by each political candidate listed below or by the candidate’s campaign manager or assistant manager. This listing is not intended to suggest or imply that these are the only candidates for these offi ces.

CHIEF OF POLICE

BEN GANNRALPH DANCE

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

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

ADVERTISEMENT FORBIDS

Notice is hereby given thatsealed bids will be received bythe Public Utilities Commis-sion of the City of Corinth,Mississippi at the office of theCorinth Gas & Water De-partment, 305 West WaldronStreet, P. O. Box 1870, Cor-inth, MS until 2:00 P.M., C.S.T.September 25th, 2014 foritems as follows:

New CompactRadius Excavator

Bids must be submitted ona form furnished by the Pub-l ic Uti l i t ies Commission.They should be addressed to:Public Utilities Commission,Attention: Chris Curtis, Cityof Corinth Gas & Water De-partment, 305 West WaldronStreet, P.O. Box 1870, Cor-inth, MS 38835-1870 andshould be plainly marked onthe envelope: New CompactRadius Excavator – September25, 2014 Opening. Bids notmarked as such on the envel-ope will not be accepted.

Specifications and bidforms may be obtained at theoffice of the Corinth Gas &Water Department, Mondaythrough Friday, during regu-lar business hours (8:00 AM -5:00 PM). Bid price, includingdelivery, must be firm for aperiod of 30 days from dateof opening. The bids will beopened, starting at 2:00 PMC.S.T., on September 25th

2014, at the offices of theCity of Corinth Gas and Wa-ter Department, which is loc-ated at 305 West WaldronStreet, Corinth, Mississippi.

No bid can be acceptedwhich contains any provisionfor price escalation, and thesubmission of such a propos-al will constitute a waiver ofthe price escalation. All bid-ders must be duly licensed tosell the product(s) bid upon.All products must be de-livered F.O.B. to our facility inCorinth, Mississippi. TheCommission reserves theright to waive any informalit-ies in or to reject any or allbids.

Advertisement for solicita-tion of bids was authorized bythe Public Utilities Commis-sion on the 11th day of Au-gust 2014.

JOHN RHODES,General Manager

City of Corinth Gas & WaterDept.

3tc: 8/22, & 8/29/201414845

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

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

WE BUY & TRADE FORUSED HOMES662-287-0354

TRANSPORTATION

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955IN 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

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

MOVE IN Ready- 28 x 70.4 bedroom, 2 bath,Double-wide. New car-p e t a n d R e n othroughout. $35,500 in-cluding deliver and setup. 662-419-9762

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

*SALE * SALE* SALE*

MODEL DISPLAYSMUST GO!

SAVE THOUSANDS!!New Spacious 4 BR/2BA

Starting at $43,500Clayton HomesHWY 72 West

1/4 Mile past theHospital

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HUDPUBLISHER’S

NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.

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.

2X3 Birthday

Ad(with or without

picture.)Only $30.

Deadline Noon 2 days before publication.

662-594-6502

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.

Page 21: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

VEHICLES FOR SALE

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

2009 Nissan Murano

LE Sport 4 DR, AWD, 27000 mi., V6 3.5,

Leather Seats,AM/FM stereoCD Multi Disc.

$18,750.662-284-7110

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

$5000 OBORecently Serviced

1996 CROWNLINE CUDY23’ on trailer

& cover5.7 liter engine

runs & works great.

$10,000

731-607-3172$9,000

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

gas burner, workhorse eng., 2 slideouts, full body paint, walk-in shower, SS sinks & s/s refrig w/im, Onar Marq gold 7000 gen., 3-ton cntrl. unit, back-up camera, auto. leveling, 2-fl at screen TVs, Allison 6-spd. A.T., 10 cd stereo w/s.s, 2-leather capt. seats & 1 lthr recliner, auto. awning, qn bed, table & couch (fold into bed), micro/conv oven, less than 5k mi.

$85,000662-415-0590

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never launched, powerhouse outboard motor with a

High Five stainless prop,

for only $7995. Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat

Sales in Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr.,

new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2005 Yamaha V-star 1100 Silverado

Loaded with Chrome, 32,000 Miles, factory

cover with extras

$3,500662-396-1098

804BOATS

868AUTOMOBILES

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

2011 Malibu LSFully LoadedRemote Entry

In the Pickwick/ Counce Area

$10,900

256-412-3257

1964 1/2 Mustang Coupe

351 Windsor w/ 3 speed

transmission, good interior,Needs Paint.

$6500.00 OBO662-664-0357

$10,400 256-577-1349

Iuka

1994 Crown Victoria2nd Owner/Been

driving since 1997RUNS, DRIVES,

STOPSGOOD BODYNEW TIRES

$1500 FIRM662-415-1516

$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 & F17.5 ft.

Custom Built Crappie Boat w/ 50hp Honda Motor, Tilt & Trim, completely loaded.$8500.00

FIRM

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

long wheel base, rebuilt & 350 HP engine & auto. trans., needs paint & some

work.$1500

662-664-3958

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2007 White Toyota Tundra

double cab, 5.7 V8 SR5, Aluminum wheels, 64,135

miles, lots of extras, $19,000.

Call 662-603-9304

$1,250.00662-462-5669

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.

1995 Buick Regal Custom

3.8 Litre V6$1200.00

662-665-1143

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$30,900

662-415-6290or

662-287-2968

REDUCED

SOLD

SOLD

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- $22,500.

Cashier’s Check or Cash only, extra pictures available. Serious Buyers Only,

located in Corinth, MS.Call Anthony: 662-415-3723

FOR SALE:2001 Dodge

Caravan

Appx: 176K milesEXTRA CLEAN

$2600.00

Call: 287-9254

Daily Corinthian • Friday, August 29, 2014 • 7B

Page 22: 082914 daily corinthian e edition

8B • Friday, August 29, 2014 • Daily Corinthian

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

Come in this weekend and let’s work out a deal that works for you.We won’t rest until you’re completely satisfi ed!

2007 GMC Sierra Z71 4x4#18103, Crew Cab

$20,888

2013 Chevy Cruze#18125

$15,888

2013 Dodge Avenger SXT#18053

$16,888

2011 Chevy HHR#17974

$9,888

2012 Dodge Grand Caravan #18047

$15,888

2008 Jeep Wrangler #18154, Hardtop, Automatic, Lots of Extras

$23,888

2011 GMC Terrain SLT#18126

$22,888

2013 Chevy Camaro SS#18062

$29,888

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

2014 Chevy Silverado#18116, Crew Cab

$29,888

2013 Nissan Altima#18147, 30K Miles, 1 Owner

$17,888

2008 GMC Sierra Ext Cab#18033, Texas Edition

$17,888

2013 Nissan Pathfi nder#18151, 46K Miles

$21,888

2012 Nissan Leaf#17897

$16,888

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

$24,888STOP BY & REGISTER FOR A FREE GRILL TO BE GIVEN AWAY ON AUGUST 31. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.