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Vol. 119, No. 215 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section
TuesdaySept. 8, 2015
75 centsToday90
Partly sunnyTonight
69
25 years ago 10 years agoEfforts continue to support those who have fled the devasta-
tion of Hurricane Katrina as well as help those who remain on the coast. Local Red Cross Director Gwen Spain notes more than $33,000 has been donated locally for relief efforts.
20% chance of rain
Alcorn County Supervisors approve a tax decrease to a total of 63.44 mills from 75.96 mills. Board Attorney Wendell Trapp says the decrease is made possible due to a rise in the assessed value of property in the county.
Unemployment rateranks 27th amongthe 82 counties.
Page 3
4 stuffed and cuffedfollowing drug bustin Bethel Springs.
Page 3
Winner announcedfor Week 2
of Pigskin Picks.
Page 10
Tishomingo County McNairy County Sports
Several individuals are sched-uled to enter pleas today in the state auditor’s Alcorn County corruption probe.
Two defendants are set to ap-
pear in Alcorn County Circuit Court at 10 a.m. followed by others at 2 p.m. before Judge Paul Funderburk.
Also, the auditor’s offi ce said a press conference with State Auditor Stacey Pickering and
District Attorney John Weddle will be held at 11:30 a.m. to dis-cuss the corruption case.
Funderburk will also lead the oath of offi ce this morning for the interim Second District su-pervisor, Ralph Coln, who was
appointed by the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors on Friday.
Prior to today, only Jimmy Ray Mitchell has made a guilty plea to the auditor’s accusa-tions. Others charged are Dal Nelms, the former Second Dis-
trict supervisor; William Paul Rhodes, the former county pur-chase clerk; Joseph Lin McNair Jr.; Danny Roy Peters; Sheriff Charles Rinehart; Teddy Cleve-land Null; Pamela Denise Null; and Douglas Alan Essary.
Alcorn County corruption probeBY JEBB JOHNSTON
Defendants scheduled to appear, enter pleas today in Circuit Court
Appearing before the Alcorn County Board of Supervisors, the Jacinto Foundation pro-posed a new appointee to its board of directors and talked about some of the issues facing the courthouse property.
The discussion followed a re-cent meeting in which Jacinto area residents gathered to air concerns about the condition of the courthouse and grounds.
Executive Director Beth Whitehurst told supervisors in Friday’s special meeting that the Jacinto Foundation Board of Directors wants the supervi-sors to appoint the next elected Second District supervisor to the foundation’s board. The new supervisor, who will take offi ce in January, would fi ll the slot of John Ross Jr., who last week became an elected mem-
ber of the foundation’s board.“The foundation board be-
lieves that since the court-house and park lie in the Sec-ond District of Alcorn County, this will provide not only the people of Alcorn County but also the people of the Second District a representative on the Jacinto Foundation Incorpo-rated Board of Directors,” said Whitehurst.
Alcorn County is the only government contributing funds — currently $24,578 per year — to the upkeep of the 1854 courthouse and surrounding grounds. Neighboring Tishom-ingo County and Prentiss Coun-ty gave fi nancial support in the past but not in recent years, and the Jacinto Foundation has sent letters to both encouraging their renewed support.
Jacinto Foundationaddresses concerns
BY JEBB [email protected]
Photo by Opal Lovelace
Festival FunIuka’s Heritage Festival was a good place to find some indulgent treats over the weekend. Five-year-old Grayson Rhodes enjoys a break from the bouncy toys Saturday with a funnel cake. He is the son of Jill and Jamie Rhodes of Burnsville.
Five branches of the North-east Regional Library will host how-to sessions on the library’s new digital offerings in the next couple of weeks.
E-books, audio books and magazines are all now on offer for compatible smartphones and tablets.
“It is something people have asked for the last several years,” said Corinth Librar-ian Brandon Lowrey. “We are proud we are now able to offer that to the region.”
The library has found the service works best on devices running the Apple iOS or An-droid operating systems. It is
not working well on Amazon’s Kindle.
Using an app, library pa-trons will be able to check out and download the digital me-dia.
The selection of books rang-es from new releases to clas-sics.
“There is something for ev-eryone,” said Lowrey. “Our collection is going to add more on a monthly basis.”
Downloaded items will dis-appear from the device at the end of the check-out period.
During the information ses-sions, presenters will explain what is available and assist
Libraries set session on digital offerings
BY JEBB [email protected]
A chance to join the fun.Numerous youngsters ages
5-18 got a chance to see what 4-H is all about during the an-nual 4-H Promotion Day held recently.
Children took part in hands-on activities such as air rifl e shooting, crafts and planting. An infl atable jumper and games were also available along with hot dogs, popcorn and cokes.
“There were about 150 kids here and several of them signed up for 4-H,” said Misti Crum with the Mississippi State Ex-tension Service.
Leaders with the different 4-H Clubs were on hand to talk about what each has to offer.
As the youth development program of the nation’s 109 land-grant universities and the Cooperative Extension Sys-
tem, 4-H fosters an innovative, “learn by doing” approach with proven results.
More than six million 4-H youth in urban neighborhoods,
suburban schoolyards and rural farming communities stand out among their peers – building
4-H holds annual Promotion DayBY STEVE BEAVERS
Please see JACINTO | 2
Please see LIBRARIES | 3
Photo courtesy of Tammy Parker
Lisha Hopper and her Wenasoga Lucky Clovers had a display which allowed youngsters to plant a flower at 4-H Promotion Day.
Please see 4-H | 2
Daily Corinthian
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“If they don’t [provide funds], I think we need to put a board together that’s interested in it and everybody pulling in the same direction,” said Fifth District Supervisor Jimmy Tate Waldon.
The neighboring coun-ties continue to have the authority to make one appointment to the Ja-cinto board.
The courthouse is cur-rently closed to visita-tion while some of the structural issues are addressed. When it re-opens, it will only be available to the public with staff present be-cause of some instances of vandalism.
“The days of the court-house just being left open so people can walk through are over,” said Whitehurst. “At this point, we’ve got to have people in there to protect it.”
The park, for some time, has been open only with staff present be-cause of some child safe-ty concerns that arose.
“I would like to work with the new sheriff and the Second District super-visor and see if maybe we can leave the park open more than we are now so that when the courthouse isn’t open, the park could be opened,” said White-hurst.
The Jacinto Founda-tion received a $100,000 grant in 2005, and about $75,000 of that has been used. It is a reimburse-ment grant, meaning the organization has to have money in hand to do any work.
That grant has funded masonry restoration, window work, plaster repair, painting, ADA compliance, repairs to the well house and an upgrade to the sprinkler system, among other im-
provements.“To be really clear
here, not one penny of any grant money ever received by the Jacinto Foundation Incorporat-ed has ever been paid to Jacinto staff or the board of directors,” said White-hurst.
A new $50,000 grant coming from the Missis-sippi Development Au-thority will also be on a reimbursement basis.
During the past week, the foundation braced one of the windows that is among the big-gest structural concerns. Whitehurst has exam-ined the structure with an architect and said the building is not about to fall down, while others take a different view.
“The common sense thing I see is if you don’t stabilize that building fairly soon, you aren’t going to have a build-ing,” said Waldon.
revolutionary opportuni-ties and implementing community-wide change at an early age.
The 4-H Study of Posi-tive Youth Development shows youth involved in the free membership pro-gram are:
■ Nearly two times more likely to get better grades in school
■ Almost two times more likely to plan to go to college
■ 41 percent less likely to engage in risky behav-iors
■ 25 percent more likely to positively contribute to their families and com-munities
4-H offers numerous programs and growth op-portunities that put the heads, hearts, hands and health of youth to work learning and applying the essential elements of the 4-H program.
Photos courtesy of Tammy Parker
Linda Laudadio goes over the water cycle with a youngster.
4-H
CONTINUED FROM 1
JACINTO
CONTINUED FROM 1
JACKSON — Displea-sure over how contract-ing was managed at the University of Mississippi Medical Center was the key reason trustees gave earlier this year when they refused to renew the contract of University of Mississippi Chancellor Dan Jones.
Less than six months after the struggle over reappointing Jones, the medical center appears to be making some progress in satisfying demands for reform, but College Board trustee Doug Rouse of Hattiesburg said the ef-fort remains incomplete.
“I think both the board and the medical center realize there’s still work to be done,” said Rouse,
an orthopedist who chairs the board’s Health Affairs Committee.
The dispute over Jones shined a light on long-standing trustee dis-content with how the medical center spent its money, even as it grew to a 10,000 employee opera-tion with a $1.4 billion an-nual budget. That’s nearly 40 percent of the entire budget for Mississippi’s eight public universities.
Board members or-dered an accounting re-view, which recounted numerous examples of the medical center violat-ing trustee policy calling for all contracts worth more than $250,000 to be voted on by the board. There were also claims that the medical center violated state purchas-
ing laws. UMMC offi cials said that the situation improved dramatically after they created a cen-tral contracting offi ce in 2010, taking contracting power out of the hands of individual departments. Medical center offi cials also said new software helped them begin man-aging contracts better.
Trustees said they weren’t satisfi ed that Jones was placing a high enough priority on their concerns or making fast enough progress. UMMC Vice Chancellor LouAnn Woodward is “commit-ted to addressing these is-sues,” Rouse said, a state-ment she echoed.
“I want the board to feel informed and have confi -dence,” said Woodward, who said she spends “a lot
of my time” on contract-ing issues and board com-munication.
Since March, a lawyer and management con-sultants have reviewed UMMC’s situation. In June, the consulting fi rm of Grant Thornton LLP presented a report to the board that suggested a further automation of the contracting pro-cess, a software upgrade, more efforts to explain how UMMC is using its electronic health records program, on which it has spent more than $90 mil-lion.
Trustees remain deep-ly involved in UMMC’s affairs, with dozens of performance indicators being presented to the board each month. That’s a much greater level of
scrutiny than other in-stitutions receive. Rouse said the scrutiny may not last forever, but said he believed it’s appropriate for now.
“We’re not trying to mi-cromanage anything,” he said. “We just are simply committed to helping them become more effi cient and helping them get the infor-mation they need.”
The board has approved the software upgrade in June and UMMC is roll-ing out more automation. However UMMC leaders say they may not create a central program offi ce, saying they fear it would become a bottleneck that would delay projects. UMMC also hired Retha Clark, who had been work-ing as a consultant as its fi rst chief operating offi cer.
Woodward signed a two-year contract on March 1, with her salary set at $680,000 for the fi rst year and $700,000 the second year. The vice chancellor is named by the Ole Miss chancellor with the approval of the board. That leaves the possibility that a new uni-versity leader, expected by December, could re-place her.
When Woodward signed the contract, Rouse said trustees told her that they expected her to resolve the procurement problems. Trustees could refuse to renew her contract when it expires if they aren’t satis-fi ed with the progress.
“When the time is ap-propriate, I think you will see a contract extension,” Rouse said.
College Board maintains focus after Jones exitBY JEFF AMYAssociated Press
PERU, Ind. — A Mis-sissippi man has been sentenced to 45 years in prison in the 1992 killing of an Indiana woman in her mobile home.
Timothy Jimerson, 55, was sentenced Thursday after he was found guilty last month of volun-tary manslaughter with a deadly weapon in the death of Toni Spicer, 27, a dancer at the Hip Hugger strip club. In 2011, DNA testing on a single strand of hair found on Spicer’s naked body linked Jimer-son to the killing.
Jimerson told Indiana State Police detectives in 2012 that he had killed Spicer, the Kokomo Tri-bune reported. But he maintained his innocence during the hearing in Mi-ami County Circuit Court.
He testifi ed Thursday that he woke up in Spic-er’s trailer after black-ing out from a night of drinking and taking three opioid painkillers and he wasn’t sure how he got
there. Jimerson said he found Spicer tied up in her bedroom and leaned over her body to see if she was dead, claiming that’s how his hair got on her.
“I want the family to know that what happened is sad and bad and all that, but I did not do this,” Ji-merson said. “I didn’t even know Toni. I had nothing to do with her.”
Spicer was beaten and strangled. Her two chil-dren found her tied to her bed with pantyhose on Aug. 29, 1992.
“This was a particu-larly brutal and confron-tational murder,” said Miami County Prosecu-tor Bruce Embrey. “This man wrapped pantyhose around her neck four times and proceeded to strangle the life out of her. That takes more than a few seconds. It was a face-to-face murder, and very personal.”
Embrey asked for the maximum 50-year sen-tence due to the brutality of the killing.
Man gets 45 years in woman’s death
The Associated Press
HUMBOLDT, Tenn. — Students in Nancy Sims’ classroom are only in third grade, but they know they make up the college class of 2029.
“I am smart,” the stu-dents recite in unison ev-ery morning. “I am capa-ble. I am important and I deserve this education. One goal, all students, no excuses.”
Throughout East Ele-mentary School in Hum-boldt, classrooms and hallways are fi lled with pennants, mascots and fl ags from colleges across the country as the school works to become a “No Excuse University.”
The program is a net-work of like-minded schools, according to Jennifer Springer, who teaches fourth grade at East. Springer launched the effort to bring No Ex-cuses University to her school. The school is not offi cially part of the pro-gram, but will apply to become a member at the end of the year, she said.
“It’s a belief that all students deserve to be educated in a way that
prepares them for col-lege,” Springer said.
Springer said many parents do not talk about college with their chil-dren, but students need to strive for higher edu-cation.
“High school’s too far down the road to start to talk about school,” Springer said. “By the time they get to high school they’re going to need to know what they want to do. Elementary school, I think, is where to start that.”
In order to bring col-lege to the students, teachers each picked a college for their room, decorating with college paraphernalia. Grades each know their class year — not when they will graduate high school, but when they will graduate college.
No Excuses University is based on six systems: intervention, data man-agement, assessment, standards alignment, col-laboration and a culture of universal achievement.
Charlotte Shivley, principal at East, said the school already had those
systems in place, but em-braced the program be-cause it unifi ed them and tied up loose ends.
Colleges adopted by different teachers in-clude Baylor Univer-sity, Auburn University, Union University, Lane College, Bethel Univer-sity, Hawaii Pacifi c Uni-versity and more.
“The students in that class, they know ev-erything about Hawaii Pacifi c University, and some have said, ‘I’m go-ing to go to Hawaii Pacif-ic University’ when they get older,” Springer said.
The guidance coun-selor’s room takes a dif-ferent twist by being themed after the movie “Monsters University.”
Springer said the pro-gram allows students to learn about differ-ent parts of the country and to realize that their dreams can take them anywhere.
Students refer to them-selves with the names of their adopted college’s mascot. Some know the cheers of the university and students are allowed to wear their college’s
T-shirt on Mondays. Teachers and other em-ployees wear No Excuses T-shirts on Fridays.
Some universities have even coordinated with classrooms. Springer’s classroom adopted Mur-ray State, her alma ma-ter, which is sending a T-shirt for each of her students.
Another teacher, Le-andra Morgan, tie-dyed shirts orange to give out to her students, who cheer “War Eagle” on call.
Maleah Murphy, 7, said she wants to go to college in Memphis. She said she enjoys having her second-grade class-room revolve around Au-burn.
“I want to get my edu-cation and I want to be a teacher,” Murphy said. “It looks fun and you can teach people to learn stuff.”
Zavierre Cook, 8, said that while he enjoys get-ting to wear his orange T-shirt to school, sitting in an Auburn-themed class-room can be a struggle for someone who wants to attend the University of Alabama.
Humboldt starts No Excuses UniversityThe Associated Press
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Region/StateDaily Corinthian • 3Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Today in
History
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 8, the 251st day of 2015. There are 114 days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight
in History:
On Sept. 8, 1935, Sen. Huey P. Long, D-La., was shot and mortally wounded inside the Loui-siana State Capitol; he died two days later. (The assailant was identified as Dr. Carl Weiss, who was gunned down by Long’s bodyguards.)
On this date:
In 1565, a Spanish expedition established the first permanent Euro-pean settlement in North America at present-day St. Augustine, Florida.
In 1761, Britain’s King George III married Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz a few hours after meeting her for the first time.
In 1900, Galveston, Texas, was struck by a hurricane that killed an estimated 8,000 people.
In 1921, Margaret Gor-man, 16, of Washington, D.C., was crowned the first “Miss America” in Atlantic City, New Jersey.
In 1934, more than 130 people lost their lives in a fire aboard the liner SS Morro Castle off the New Jersey coast.
In 1945, Bess Myerson of New York was crowned Miss America in Atlantic City, New Jersey, becom-ing the first Jewish con-testant to win the title.
In 1954, the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) was founded in Manila by the United States, France, Britain, New Zealand, Australia, the Philippines, Thailand and Pakistan.
In 1966, the science-fiction TV series “Star Trek” premiered on NBC; the situation comedy “That Girl,” starring Mar-lo Thomas, premiered on ABC.
In 1974, President Gerald R. Ford granted a “full, free, and abso-lute pardon” to former President Richard Nixon covering his entire term in office.
In 1985, Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds tied Ty Cobb’s career record for hits, singling for hit number 4,191 during a game against the Cubs in Chicago.
Ten years ago: Con-gress hastened to pro-vide an additional $51.8 billion for relief and recovery from Hurricane Katrina.
Five years ago: BP took some of the blame for the Gulf oil disaster in an internal report, acknowledging among other things that it had misinterpreted a key pressure test of the well, but also assigned responsibility to its part-ners on the doomed rig.
P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835
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Across the Region
4 charged with drug offenses after bust
BETHEL SPRINGS, Tenn. — A recent drug bust in Bethel Springs resulted in four adults being charged with drug offenses, based on a press release by Lt. Brad Johnson, of the McNairy County Sheriff’s Department.
Lt. Johnson was called to a home at 1770 Murray School Road in Bethel after a report of marijuana being grown at the residence.
Those arrested at the home were Gary D. Tomasewski, 38, Manufacturer/Sell of Marijuana, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, and Simple Possession. Cameron A. McCain, 23, Manufacturer/Sell of Marijuana, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, Simple Possession and Possession of a Prohib-ited Weapon.
Jeremy V. Overstreet, 23, Manufacture/Sell of Marijuana, Possession of Drug Paraphernalia, Simple Possession and Possession of a Prohib-
ited Weapon and Sherry L. McCain, 53, Manufac-turer/Sell of Marijuana, Possession of Drug Par-aphernalia and Simple Possession.
Johnson and other Mc-Nairy deputies searched the property and made their discovery of illegal drugs. They found five marijuana plants on the home’s back porch, plus a total of 2.6 ounces of marijuana in the home that was already bagged for sale.
Officers found also in their search inside the home the scales and baggies used in the sale of marijuana.
The other officers in-volved in the search and arrests were Lt. James Frazier, Investigator Steve Ellsworth, Deputy Zach Bay, and Deputy/K9 Dustin Jaco.
Shiloh sets 9/11 observance day
SHILOH, Tenn. — Shi-loh National Military Park is planning a day of remembrance for 9/11 on Friday.
Visitors will join park
rangers in placing Ameri-can flags on the front lawn of the Visitor Cen-ter honoring those killed in the terror attacks of 9/11.
Almost 3,000 people were killed on Sept. 11, 2001. It remains the single largest terrorist attack on American soil. In addition to those U.S. citizens and military per-sonnel lost, more than 90 other countries had citizens perish in the at-tacks.
“On this, the 14th an-niversary of the terror attacks, it is appropri-ate that we take time to reflect on the events of that day and those who perished,” said Shiloh Superintendent Dale Wilkerson. “We invite everyone to come to the park and place a flag in solemn remembrance.”
Flags will be provided by the park and avail-able at the Visitor Cen-ter front desk from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
For more information on this event and future park events, contact the Visitor Center at (731) 689-5696.
Reward at $13,000 in deputy shooting
ABERDEEN (AP) — It has been just over a week since Monroe County Deputy Eric Sloan was shot, and the gun-man remains on the run.
Now, residents are giv-ing money to make sure the shooter is brought to justice.
Sloan was treated and released from the North Mississippi Medical Cen-ter in Tupelo after being shot in the abdomen fol-lowing a traffic stop near Okolona.
WCBI-TV reports people throughout Mon-roe County are digging deep into their pockets to help catch the per-son who shot Sloan. So far, 11 business and residents have donated money. The reward fund, which started at $1,000, is now $13,000.
Precision co-owner Brad Moore, contributed $5,000 and hopes the extra cash will help get people talking.
Anyone interested in donating can call the sheriff’s office at 662-
369-2468.
Tishomingo County unemployment falls
IUKA — Tishomingo County unemployment hit 6.8 percent in July, ranking 27th among Mis-sissippi counties.
The rate is nearly un-changed from June’s 6.9 percent and down from 8.3 percent a year earli-er and 10.2 percent two years prior. Mississippi’s unadjusted rate for the month was 6.9 percent, down from 7 percent in June.
The county had 540 people categorized as unemployed, down from 640 a year earlier, and 7,430 employed, com-pared to 7,020 in July 2014.
New claims for un-employment insurance payments in the county numbered 40 for the month, compared to 36 a year earlier, and continued claims totaled 367, down from 440. Benefits paid totaled $57,051 for the month, compared to $73,514 a year earlier.
JACKSON — Missis-sippi State University is purchasing property on the edges of its cam-pus, as the school and surrounding commu-nity struggle with rapid growth in a formerly ru-ral area south of campus. President Mark Keenum said at a College Board meeting last month that the university wants to buy land “on our door-step” as it comes avail-able to accommodate fu-ture growth.
Keenum said a recent agreement among MSU, Starkville and Oktibbeha
County to allow MSU po-lice to make arrests up to 500 feet off campus could also help manage traf-fi c and speeding along Blackjack and Oktoc roads, where rapid devel-opment has led residents of houses to complain they can’t get out of their driveways. That policing agreement became pos-sible after the Legislature authorized MSU police to work off campus earlier this year.
MSU’s foundation bought two houses earlier, and the uni-versity is now buying them from the founda-tion, paying $331,250
for a 2,400-square-foot house on a half-acre of land and $452,500 for a 2,800-square-foot house on 0.7 acres. The university is also paying $400,000 to buy a 1,400 square-foot house from a private individual. The College Board approved all three transactions last month.
“Since the property is adjacent to the south en-trance of the MSU cam-pus if another party were to purchase this land, the university could be faced with undesirable develop-ment adjacent to campus and near a highly visible border of the university
campus,” the university wrote in documents pre-sented to the board.
MSU already owns one house on the south side of Blackjack.
“We felt like us having an ability to impact fu-ture development would be wise, Keenum said. “The pieces of property don’t come on the market all the time.”
One large student apartment complex al-ready exists near the roundabout at the junc-tion of Blackjack and Ok-toc, developers plan to open a second, 800-unit complex by next fall, and two more are in planning
stages, the Oktibbeha County Board of Super-visors has been told. The unincorporated area lies due south of the heart of MSU campus.
Roads and sewer ca-pacity are being strained by the development, and supervisors are trying to fi gure out how to fi nance improvements in what was once a semi-rural area. Keenum agreed that the area is straining to accommodate apart-ment complexes aimed at students.
“I do think the infra-structure to support that housing is lacking tre-mendously,” he said.
MSU buying property in strained areaBY JEFF AMYAssociated Press
BILOXI — Stun guns get used on an average of more than four people a week in south Missis-sippi, The Sun Herald reported.
The newspaper said a survey answered by 14 of the area’s 15 law enforcement agencies found that all have stun guns, and offi cers used their stun guns at least 253 times over the past 20 months.
The Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics says stun gun use by police nation-wide increased from 60 percent of departments in 2007 to 81 percent in 2013.
Some agencies in Hancock, Harrison and Jackson counties bought stun guns at least 10 years ago, ahead of the curve, and all others soon followed, the newspaper reported.
Biloxi police Major Jim Ad-
amo and other offi cials have said it shows a progressive ap-proach in law enforcement and public safety throughout Han-cock, Harrison and Jackson counties.
Police in Gulfport, the state’s second-largest city, reported the region’s greatest use: 108 stun-gun discharges over 20 months.
Local agencies own 636 Tas-er-brand stun guns, with the largest number, 127, owned by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Offi ce.
A Justice Department study in 2011 showed stun-gun use by police had decreased inju-ries by 50 percent or more.
Adamo agreed with other of-fi cials who maintain Tasers re-duce injuries and can help pro-tect bystanders.
Police may draw a gun but
are less likely to use it — and people tend to believe that peo-ple who pull out a Taser will fi re it, Adamo said.
He said Biloxi offi cers pulled out their Tasers 50 times last year, but discharged them only 25 times. The threat was enough the rest of the time, he said.
“Most people who know about Tasers don’t want any-thing to do with it,” Adamo said.
Gulfport Police Chief Leon-ard Papania said his offi cers pulled out Tasers 135 times in the past year, and discharged them 108 times. Of 6,518 ar-rests, he said, 1.7 percent in-volved Taser use.
“Our offi cers were hit, kicked, shot at and spit on,” he said. “Those 135 were resistive, some being assaultive, and 89 fl ed.”
Law enforcement employs stun gunsThe Associated Press
users in setting up their accounts and digital devices, which need to be running the most recent version of the operating system and have some free memory.
Also, “You have to have a li-brary card,” said Lowrey. “If you do not have a library card al-ready, you’ll need to take an ex-tra couple of minutes to sign up before the session.”
The schedule of sessions is:■ Corinth — 2 p.m. Saturday,
Sept. 12, and 3 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 16
■ Iuka — 10 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 19, and 3 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 24
■ Walnut — 1 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 9
■ Booneville — 10 a.m. Tues-day, Sept. 8, and 4 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15
■ Ripley — 10 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 9, and 5 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 17
LIBRARIES
CONTINUED FROM 1
DR. ROBERT SHAPPLEY
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OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.
4 • Tuesday, September 8, 2015www.dailycorinthian.com
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Back when I was in school, I performed a scientifi c experi-ment in which I poured a liq-uid of one color into a beaker that contained liquid of a dif-ferent color. At fi rst the liquid in the beaker was diluted, but as I kept pouring, the poured liquid eventually overtook the liquid in the beaker, creating an entirely new substance.
That’s what is happening in Europe as thousands of migrants fl ee their home countries, seeking refuge in the Euro-pean Union. Germany, alone, is expected to have received 800,000 migrants by the end of the year, four times last year’s number.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has suspended the EU’s Dublin Regulation for Syrian migrants. Under the rule, writes The Telegraph, “...migrants can only apply for asylum in the fi rst EU member state they en-ter, and face deportation if they try to apply in another. But Germany ... has now ordered its offi cers to process applications from Syri-ans even if they have made their way through other EU countries.”
Critics of the Dublin Regulation have called it expensive and ineffective. Many Syrian mi-grants reach Greece fi rst, but decline to seek asylum there, preferring to push on toward Hungary, which is considered the gateway to Europe. Merkel has said she might reinstate border checks, which was a regular practice before the EU was created. She should.
That most of these migrants come from Muslim countries raises several important questions. The fi rst is how many actual or potential terrorists are among them? Second, why would Muslims, many of whom believe the West is decadent and anti-God, want to come to Europe? Third, why haven’t these migrants sought refuge in other Muslim countries?
No nation, no continent, can survive un-controlled immigration, especially when it involves people whose language, religion, culture and worldview differ – in some cases radically – from the countries to which they are migrating. Uncontrolled migration in Eu-rope and illegal immigration in the United States spell an eventual death knell for both countries, which is, no doubt, the intent of ISIS, which is reportedly backing this fl ood of humanity. Will those fl ooding Europe even-tually embrace European values, or will the migrants demand that their values and reli-gion dominate?
In the U.S., cries of “racism” in the immi-gration debate have replaced sound reason. But this isn’t about discriminating against people of a different language or color; it is about preserving what we have, not only for those of us who have contributed to making America what it is, but also for immigrants who would not only like to partake of our success, but contribute to it. If nations want to preserve the lifestyles and culture which they and their forebears have worked and fought to create and sustain, borders must be controlled and assimilation must be a top priority for those who are allowed to enter. Otherwise, nations become disunited with competing subsets jostling for power, infl u-ence and benefi ts.
Those who support “open borders” have an obligation to tell us when enough is enough. Must we wait until the American “liquid,” which contains the values, faith and prosper-ity from capitalism that built and sustained us through wars and depressions, is replaced by a different “liquid”? If we wait for that day to arrive before we act, it will be too late.
Yes, give us your tired, your poor, your hud-dled masses yearning to breathe free – but le-gally, in an orderly fashion and not en masse. And let’s also learn what these migrants and immigrants likely mean by “freedom.” If they mean Sharia law, that is not freedom for Eu-rope, or for America.
If the EU and the U.S. fail to address this very real crisis, we and they are assisting in national suicide.
(Readers may email Cal Thomas at [email protected].)
Exchanging one country for another
Prayer for today
A verse to share
Barack Obama, as chief law enforcement offi cer of the United States, is going to have to stop acting like a conscientious objector in this war on cops.
Wednesday, another offi -cer, in Fox Lake, Illinois, Lt. Charles “GI Joe” Gliniewicz, was gunned down. Last Friday, Darren Goforth, a Houston deputy sheriff, was shot 15 times by an alleged black racist.
President Obama called the widow of Deputy Go-forth, but he has yet to show the same indignation and outrage he exhibited at what happened to Trayvon Mar-tin in Florida and Michael Brown in Ferguson.
This year, 24 cops have been gunned down. And the day after deputy Goforth’s execution, “Black Lives Mat-ter!” showed up at the Min-nesota state fair chanting, “Pigs in a blanket! Fry ‘em like bacon!”
Last fall, when mobs blocked highways after the death of Eric Garner in an encounter with police on Staten Island, the hoodlum chant was: “What do we want? Dead cops! When do we want ‘em? Now!”
Soon after, two cops in Brooklyn were executed in their patrol car.
Time for Obama to ascend the bully pulpit and call out the racial demagogues in his own radical left constitu-ency.
For some of the evils of the
last century we thought we left be-hind seem to be returning, as is the old indulgence of lawless-ness when done by those claim-ing some
“grievance” against society.Violent crime is rising
again, a direct result, many believe, of a new police re-luctance to be aggressive in enforcing the law, to avoid violent clashes with crimi-nals and suspects, the so-called “Ferguson effect.”
The lead story in the Sept. 1 New York Times reported a surge in murders in the city after the Eric Garner incident, and even greater surges in Milwaukee, St. Louis, Baltimore, Washing-ton, D.C., and Chicago.
A closer look at the Times fi gures reveals something more disturbing. Chicago, a city with not half the popu-lation of New York, exceeds New York in murders this year, 294 to 208.
Washington, a city not a tenth as populous as New York, had half as many mur-ders, 105. Baltimore, where Freddie Gray died in police custody, and six offi cers have been charged in his death, has had more mur-ders this year, 215, than New York, though New York has 14 times the population.
To discover the causes of the new crime wave in America, we should recon-sider what rolled back the tsunami of crime that swept America from the 1960s to the early 1990s.
One of the causes of that crime wave was simple de-mography. From 1962 to 1990, the baby-boom gen-eration, largest in U.S. his-tory, passed into, through, and out of that age cohort, 18 to 36, where crime among males is at its highest.
Second, beginning with the Reagan era around 1980, America nearly qua-drupled the number of in-carcerated, from 600,000 to over 2 million in jails and prisons. Muggers, robbers, rapists, killers were taken off the streets and put away for decades.
With mayors like Rudy Giuliani, hard-core crimi-nals had the book thrown at them, and even petty criminals were prosecuted before they graduated to worse crimes. Cops became heroes. America’s cities be-came livable again.
Washington ceased to be the “murder capital of the nation.” Young people be-gin moving in and fi xing up inner-city neighborhoods that few had dared to visit a couple years before.
While we have nowhere near the murders, rapes and robberies we did in the worst decades of the 20th century, the crime rate is ris-
ing across the nation.Post-Ferguson, America
seems to be dividing angrily over this issue of cops and crime.
The Right sees America’s cops as civilization’s last line of defense against crime and anarchy. Among liberal elites and the Black Lives Matter crowd, an old no-tion is regaining ascendancy -- cops are the problem and police are all too often the oppressors.
In the 1960s, Vice Presi-dent Hubert Humphrey declared that if he had to endure the conditions of the ghetto, he “could lead a pret-ty good riot” himself, while Nixon ridiculed the Kerner Commission report that blamed the riots on “white racism.”
Nixon and George Wallace got 57 percent of the vote in 1968. And a strong stand for law and order helped to give the GOP a near quarter-cen-tury lock on the presidency.
The law and order issue is lying there again, waiting to be picked up.
Meanwhile we ought to hear from our president about who and what he thinks is responsible for all those wounded and dead cops.
(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Pat Buchanan is an American conservative political commentator, au-thor, syndicated columnist, politician and broadcast-er.)
Do cops’ lives matter to Obama?
Aside from the court-or-dered dribbling out of Hill-ary Clinton’s classifi ed-ma-terial-fi lled emails, the big presidential campaign news of the summer has been the boom for Donald Trump in the race for the Republican nomination. Trump has risen from 3 percent in the polls (when he announced on June 16) to where he now stands at 26 percent – 14 percent ahead of any other candidate.
Trump is drawing support from a constituency that in many ways resembles that amassed by another celebri-ty candidate who defi ed the usual political rules, Ross Perot in 1992. Like Perot, Trump runs better among whites than blacks, among men than women, among non-college graduates than college grads, in the suburbs and countryside than in big cities. Like Perot, he does not run especially strong among traditionally reli-gious voters.
But there is one striking difference in their appeal. In November 1992 Perot won more than 20 percent among voters under 45 but only 12 percent among those 60 and over. Younger voters,
perhaps less attached to parties than their elders, fl ocked to his side.
D o n a l d Trump’s ap-peal is stron-gest at the other end of the age spec-trum. Recent
Quinnipiac and CNN/ORC polls showed him with over 40 percent favorable ratings from voters 50 and over. But his favorable ratings among voters under 35 were only 25 and 28 percent, while 66 to 68 percent of them rated him unfavorably.
These young voters have had few years in which to build up party loyalty, and they have been switching around. In 2008 voters under 30 went 66 percent for Barack Obama. But the current Quinnipiac survey shows the under-35 set vot-ing only an average of 51 percent for Hillary Clinton when matched against Re-publicans Jeb Bush, Marco Rubio and Donald Trump.
Many young people are apparently open to voting Republican – but not for
Trump. For millennials, it appears, Donald Trump is yesterday’s news.
Why should that be so? The best explanation I can come up with is that Trump’s signature issues are issues that have been declining in importance in recent years.
They still animate older voters, who have been pay-ing attention for some time. But for younger voters, they’re yesterday’s news.
Consider Mexican immi-gration and Trump’s pro-posal of forcing Mexico to somehow pay for construc-tion of a fence on the south-ern border.
The fact is that net Mexi-can immigration since the 2007-2008 economic col-lapse has slowed to a trickle. Barely half of the country’s illegals now are from Mexi-co, and in 2014, for the fi rst time, more non-Mexicans than Mexicans were appre-hended on the border. More immigrants now come from China and India than from Mexico.
Trump has also not fo-cused on proposals that could reduce the illegal population, like requiring employers to use e-Verify or, as Chris Christie reasonably
advocated, using FedEx-like tracking methods to identify the nearly half of illegals who have overstayed legal visas.
Similarly, Trump’s com-plaints about trade agree-ments, reminiscent of Perot, ignore the fact that interna-tional trade has continued to decline since 2009. Higher Chinese labor costs and the perils of long supply chains have led fi rms to return manufacturing jobs in the United States.
Declining international trade is of course a mixed blessing, a symptom of stag-nant economies here and abroad. But “the giant suck-ing sound” Perot decried is a thing of the past.
Trump’s issues, still rag-ing for older voters, don’t seem to resonate with the young. And don’t point to a way toward a Republican appeal to the electorate of the future.
(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Michael Barone is senior political analyst for The Washington Examin-er, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Insti-tute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of Ameri-can Politics.)
Trump’s appeal seems based on yesterday’s news
“When Jesus heard it, he marvelled, and said to them that followed, Verily I say unto you, I have not found so great faith, no, not in Israel.” Matthew 8:10
Almighty God, cause me to look out this morning, and open wide my eyes, that I may see what great preparation thou hast made that I might live. May I be ashamed to start wrong and be unworthy of the glory of this day. Amen.
Pat Buchanan
Columnist
Michael BaroneColumnist
Cal Thomas
Columnist
State/NationDaily Corinthian • 5Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Across the Nation Across the State
Meridian shootings kill 1, hurt another
MERIDIAN — Meridian Police are investigating two separate shootings that happened within 30 minutes of each other.
The first of the Sunday afternoon shootings hap-pened around 2 p.m.
WTOK-TV reports that 20-year-old Demarcus Smith was pronounced dead shortly after the shooting.
The second shooting happened blocks away just 30 minutes later. Wit-nesses say they heard six shots, and that the victim was shot while he was sitting on his front porch. Police said the victim was hospitalized. There was no information available on his condition.
A detective said police believe the two crimes are connected, and both might be connected to another shooting that happened Saturday night.
Girl scout tapped to help free turtles
BILOXI — An animal enthusiast and girl scout from Ocean Springs was honored over the holiday weekend by being al-lowed to take part in the freeing of several endan-gered sea turtles.
Asher Day, 18, carried the rescued turtles to the water Saturday as a crowd watched on the beach in Biloxi.
Day has been work-ing since 2013 with the Institute for Marine Mam-mal Studies on a sea turtle awareness project.
She tells WLOX-TV that she held workshops and presentations to educate the community about the dangers that five species face.
“The turtles that we released today were all Kemp’s Ridley sea turtles, they were all juveniles. Some of them were caught incidentally at local fishing piers and some were actually strandings,” IMMS’ Den-nis McGrury said.
Getting to release the turtles was not Ashley’s only honor. She also unveiled one of two new sea turtle informational signs she created with her dad that will adorn the beach.
“My signs are about the three species (Green, Loggerhead, Kemp’s Ridley) and they tell you about the Kemps mainly because they are
the most endangered and they also tell you what you can do to help,” said Day.
“It is a really great thing to see someone like that and the scale of things that she has done. The signs alone will impact visitors to the coast for years to come,” said McGrury.
Authorities review death of 1-year-old
KOSCIUSKO — Attala County authorities have launched a child abuse investigation connected to the death of a 1-year-old girl.
Jasmine Irwin was taken off life support on Sunday. She had been airlifted to University of Mississippi Medical Cen-ter after first being taken to Attala Baptist Hospital on Friday with severe head injuries.
Attala County Sheriff Tim Nail confirmed to WLBT-TV that the child had a fractured skull, bruises and burns to her feet.
One dead, two hurt after triple shooting
MOSS POINT —Author-ities in Moss Point say one person is dead and two others hospitalized after a triple shooting at a car wash.
The shooting occurred around 8 p.m. Sunday.
A clerk who was work-ing at a nearby store at the time of the shoot-ing told The Sun Herald that she heard too many shots to count. She said she looked out and saw one victim on the ground between two vacuum stations.
Moss Point police con-firmed Monday morning that one man died, one underwent surgery at
Singing River Hospital and one was in stable condition.
Jackson County Coroner Vicki Broadus identified the dead man as 24-year-old Darnell Bolton of Moss Point. He died shortly after arriving at a hospital.
Both drivers killed in head-on collision
CARTHAGE — Two peo-ple died in a weekend traffic accident in Leake, County.
The Mississippi High-way Patrol says the head-on collision hap-pened late Saturday night on Mississippi Highway 488.
A Highway Patrol news release says a pickup truck driven by 46-year-old Thomas Page of Car-thage was eastbound on the highway; a car driven by 38-year-old Rocky Tucker, also of Carthage, was heading west.
Police said the pickup crossed the center line and collided with the car. Both drivers were pronounced dead at the scene.
Coroner: Worker died during overnight shift
PASCAGOULA — The Jackson County coro-ner’s office says there’s no indication of foul play in the death of a woman whose body was found in her office at Ingalls Ship-building.
Deputy Coroner Jason Moody tells The Missis-sippi Press that an au-topsy will determine the cause of 53-year-old Ev-elyn Richardson’s death.
Police say her body was found about 6:30 a.m. Friday, when co-workers came to her office to pick up two-way radios.
Associated Press
Salmonella may be part of big outbreak
BATON ROUGE, La. — Three cases of salmo-nella in Louisiana may be part of the outbreak that sickened 285 peo-ple in 27 states, killing a 99-year-old California woman, according to the Louisiana Depart-ment of Health and Hospitals.
The Louisiana cases were in the Baton Rouge area, the north-east and the northwest, according to a news release Saturday.
The outbreak also in-cluded one or two cas-es in Mississippi, 60 in Arizona and 51 in Cali-fornia as of Thursday, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention website.
Andrew & Williamson Fresh Produce of San Diego made a voluntary recall Friday of “Limited Edition” brand cucum-bers, which are pro-duced in Mexico.
Louisiana’s health department received notification Friday night and began calling na-tional companies with Louisiana outlets that might have sold or used the cucumbers, spokes-woman Ashley Lewis wrote. The agency said Red Lobster restaurants in Louisiana disposed of the cucumbers Fri-day.
Whole Foods also was on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s recall list of chains which had bought the cucumbers, and manag-ers at the Baton Rouge store told state sani-tarians Saturday that they had stocked and were getting rid of the vegetables, said Olivia Watkins, also a spokes-woman for the Depart-ment of Health and Hospitals.
However, she said Sunday night, the chain assured her that Whole Food managers in Ba-ton Rouge were mistak-en when they said they had that brand.
Whole Foods Market national spokesman Mi-chael Silverman wrote in an email Sunday night, “We did and do not carry the cucum-bers at issue in this recall.”
Authorities say the cucumbers also were distributed in Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois,
Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, and Utah.
Search for tangled blue whale resumes
RANCHO PALOS VERDES, Calif. — Whale watch boats and the Coast Guard are resum-ing their search off Southern California for a blue whale entangled in hundreds of feet of fishing line.
Federal marine of-ficials said Sunday that they are seeking assis-tance from boaters and pilots who may spot the 80-foot mammal.
The whale hasn’t been seen since rough seas forced rescuers to abandon efforts Friday to cut the animal free. They managed to at-tach a buoy to make the whale easier to spot, but it hasn’t been seen since.
A spokesman for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administra-tion says people should stay 1,000 feet away from the whale if they spot it and should alert the Coast Guard.
Spear taken fromHawaii warrior statueHILO, Hawaii -- Part
of King Kamehameha’s spear is missing.
Police on Hawaii’s Big Island are asking the public for help locating the top section of the spear that’s part of the statue of the Hawaiian warrior in Hilo.
Police say the spear was last seen Saturday and was reported miss-ing Sunday.
The bronze spear with a golden tip is about 6 feet long.
Kamehameha the First is known for unit-ing the Hawaiian islands in 1810. The statue in Wailoa State Park is one of several bearing his likeness across the state.
On Kamehameha Day, celebrated June 11, his statues are ceremoni-ously draped with lei.
According to the Ha-waii Tourism Authority, the Wailoa State Park statue in downtown Hilo was dedicated in 1997.
School suspends 2 football players
MARBLE FALLS, Texas — A San Antonio school district has suspended
two football players from the team and from school after one of them ran into the back of a referee watching a play and the other dove into the official.
The district’s athletic director Stan Laing told The Associated Press Monday that the stu-dents were suspended indefinitely pending the outcome of an investi-gation and due process hearing.
Video showed the ref-eree watching the play, and his head snapping back when he is leveled from behind. The other player then dove on top of him. The team from John Jay High School in San Antonio was play-ing Marble Falls High School in Marble Falls, located about 90 miles north of San Antonio.
The names of the players and the referee have not been released.
Deer devour hemp crops in Oregon
MURPHY, Ore. — Deer got the munchies at an industrial hemp crop in southern Or-egon.
The deer got by barbed-wire fencing a couple weeks ago and went through the hemp plants like high-powered mowers, the Grants Pass Daily Courier re-ported.
“Generally, I don’t think they like canna-bis. They liked ours, though,” said Cliff Thomason, a real es-tate agent who is the steward of the first industrial hemp crop in Oregon, which was planted near Murphy by Thomason and his part-ners with Orhempco.
The company planted roughly 1,000 plants in the section the deer got into, and Thoma-son said there are only about 40 left.
Industrial hemp has a low level of THC, the psychoactive property of marijuana. Kit Doyle, another partner in Orhemco, said it’s high in protein and that’s likely why the deer went on a binge.
Orhempco has sev-eral crops of industrial hemp — each planted at a different time and is in a different stage of maturity. Doyle said the group expects to have other plants go to har-vest that will produce hemp seed for sale.
Associated Press
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6 • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
Deaths
Bro. Virgil R. HowellMIDDLETON, Tenn. — Funeral services for Bro.
Virgil R. Howell, 85, are set for 2 p.m. today at Brint’s Chapel Baptist Church in Middleton, Tenn., with burial in Brint’s Chapel Cemetery.
Bro. Howell died Saturday af-ternoon, Sept. 5, 2015, at the Jackson-Madison County General Hospital. A native and lifelong res-ident of Hardeman County, he was the son of the late Willie Everett and Lillie Gertrude Sisco Howell. On Dec. 31, 1949, he was united in marriage to the former Mary DeL-ois Rogers, to whom he was mar-ried for more than 65 years.
Bro. Howell was a Baptist min-ister for many years, having pastored at Mt. Olive, Butler’s Chapel, Chapel Hill and Lone Oak. He also served in an interim capacity at Essary Springs and Enon. Presently, he had been a member of the Brint’s Chapel Baptist Church. He enjoyed farming and working with cattle. In addition to his ministe-rial duties, he worked at Reichold Chemical for 10 years and was a school bus driver for 19 years. Bro. Howell was also co-founder, in 1986, of Middleton Care Center.
Survivors include his wife, DeLois Howell of Mid-dleton; his daughter, Maxine (Wayne) Thomas of Middleton; his son, Calvin (Brenda) Howell of Bo-livar; four brothers, William, Orville, Frankie and Jackie Howell; his sister, Linda Webb; six grand-children, Gary (Jennifer) Howell, Renée (Bill) Rus-sell, Chad (Stephanie) Massey, Lisa Hampton, Ja-son (Ashlee) Howell and Tiffany (Chris) Gray; 17 great-grandchildren, Joseph Howell, Ashley (Brian) Keller, Matthew Howell, Kirstann Howell, Jessica Howell, Alyssa Walker, Haley Walker, Eric Hamp-ton, Carson Howell, Ian Hampton, Collier Howell, Karleigh Shields, Valerie, Natalie and Tessa Massey and Easton and Oaklee Gray; one great-great-grand-child, Zaiden Howell; and a son-in-law, Steve Pulse.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by three sisters, Sadie Mae, Lillie Fay and Dor-othy Howell, and three brothers, Billy Joe, Leon and James Howell.
Memorial contributions may be made to Gideons International (http://www.gideons.org/howyou-canhelp/give.aspx).
Shackelford Funeral Directors of Bolivar had charge of the services.
Howell
LOUISVILLE, Ky. —At-torneys for the Kentucky clerk who was jailed last week because of her re-fusal to issue marriage licenses to gay couples said Monday they have fi led an emergency mo-tion with a federal court that they hope will result in Kim Davis’ freedom.
The fi ling seeks to have Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear accommodate Davis’ “religious convic-tion,” and not compel her to grant licenses to gay couples, Liberty Counsel said in a statement.
“The motion requests an injunction pending appeal for an exemp-tion from the Governor’s mandate that all county clerks issue marriage licenses,” said the state-ment by Liberty Counsel, which is representing Davis.
The same injunction request was denied last month by U.S. District Judge David Bunning, who jailed Davis on Thursday.
Charla Bansley, com-munications director for Liberty Counsel, said Davis could be released from jail immediately if the motion were granted by the U.S. Court of Ap-peals for the Sixth Circuit ordering Beshear to issue Davis an “accommoda-tion” — allowing her to remove her name and title from offi cial mar-riage certifi cates issued
in Rowan County.By doing that, Davis
would not be sanctioning any same-sex unions and her conscience would be satisfi ed, they say.
“If there was an ac-commodation, she would be released (from jail) because she would no longer be in contempt,” Bansley said.
On Sunday, about 30 protesters lined the side-walk outside Bunning’s home in Fort Thomas, Kentucky, carrying signs that read “Free Kim Da-vis.” Fort Thomas Police Lt. Casey Kilgore said the group gathered around 2 p.m., and the protest stretched on several hours. He said the group sang and waved their signs; they broke no laws and no one had been ar-rested. He did not know if Bunning was home.
Davis, an apostolic Christian, says gay mar-riage is a sin. She also says it would be a sin for her to issue a marriage li-cense to a same-sex cou-ple because the licenses are issued under her au-
thority. She tried in vain to have state lawmakers change the law as a legal challenge to Kentucky’s same-sex marriage ban wound its way through the federal appeals court.
Davis stopped issuing all marriage licenses in June the day after the U.S. Supreme Court le-galized same-sex mar-riage nationwide. Two gay couples and two straight couples sued her. Judge Bunning or-dered Davis to issue the licenses and the Supreme Court upheld his ruling.
But Davis still refused to do it, saying she could not betray her conscience or her God.
Thursday, Bunning ruled Davis was in con-tempt of court for dis-obeying his order and sent her to jail. Her dep-uty clerks then issued marriage licenses to gay couples Friday with Da-vis behind bars.
Bunning indicated Da-vis will be in jail at least a week. She could stay longer if she continues to not obey the judge’s or-
der. Bunning had offered to release Davis from jail if she promised not to in-terfere with her deputy clerks as they issued the licenses. But Davis re-fused.
Kentucky law requires marriage licenses be is-sued under the author-ity of the elected county clerk. Davis views issu-ing marriage licenses to same-sex couples as a stamp of approval of something she believes is a sin. She has said she will not issue marriage licenses until the state legislature changes the law so the licenses can be issued under someone else’s authority.
The state legislature is not scheduled to meet again until January and Beshear has refused to call a special session. Davis has refused to re-sign her $80,000-a-year job. As an elected offi cial the only way she could lose her job is to lose an election or have the state legislature impeach her, which is unlikely given the conservative nature of the state General As-sembly.
Davis’ plight has reig-nited the gay marriage debate and the limits of religious freedom. Her imprisonment has in-spired spirited protests from both sides in this small eastern Kentucky community known most-ly as the home to More-head State University.
Kentucky clerk appeals jailingThe Associated Press
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Hillary Rodham Clin-ton said Monday she does not need to apologize for using a private email ac-count and server while at the State Department because “what I did was allowed.”
In an interview with The Associated Press during a Labor Day cam-paign swing through Iowa, the front-runner for the Democratic presiden-tial nomination also said the lingering questions about her email practices while serving as President Barack Obama’s fi rst sec-retary of state have not damaged her campaign.
“Not at all. It’s a distrac-tion, certainly,” Clinton said. “But it hasn’t in any way affected the plan for our campaign, the efforts we’re making to organize here in Iowa and else-where in the country. And I still feel very confi dent about the organization and the message that my campaign is putting out.”
Yet even in calling the inquiry into how she used email as the nation’s top diplomat a distraction, Clinton played down how it has affected her person-ally as a candidate.
“As the person who has been at the center of it, not very much,” Clinton said. “I have worked re-
ally hard this summer, sticking to my game plan about how I wanted to sort of reintroduce myself to the American people.”
As she has often said in recent weeks, Clinton told AP it would have been a “better choice” for her to use separate email ac-counts for her personal and public business. “I’ve also tried to not only take responsibility, because it was my decision, but to be as transparent as pos-sible,” Clinton said.
Part of that effort, Clin-ton said, is answering any questions about her email “in as many different set-tings as I can.” She noted she has sought for nearly a year to testify before Congress about the issue, and that she is now slated to do so in October.
The one-on-one in-terview with AP was the
second for Clinton in the past four days. On Friday, she did not apologize for using a private email sys-tem when asked directly by NBC, “Are you sorry?” Asked Monday by the AP why she won’t directly apologize, Clinton said: “What I did was allowed. It was allowed by the State Department. The State Department has confi rmed that.
“I did not send or re-ceive any information marked classifi ed,” Clin-ton said. “I take the re-sponsibilities of handling classifi ed materials very seriously and did so.”
Clinton’s efforts to ad-dress the email issue comes as her chief rival for the Democratic nomi-nation, independent Ver-mont Sen. Bernie Sand-ers, exits the summer surging in still-quite-early
public opinion polls and drawing massive crowds to his rallies and events.
Asked for an example of how she differs with Sanders on policy, Clin-ton demurred. “I’m going to keep laying out what I would do as president, what I stand for. ... I’m very much looking for-ward to the debates that we’re going to have and we’ll have plenty of time to draw those contrasts.”
Asked when she might start, Clinton said: “I don’t have any timing. I’m talk-ing about what I would do as president: where I stand, what I believe.”
Late Monday, Clinton picked up the endorse-ment of Iowa Rep. Dave Loebsack, adding to a growing collection that includes the nod Satur-day from New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen.
Last year, Clinton turned over roughly 55,000 pages of emails to the State Department that she sent and received using a home-brew email server set up at her home
in suburban New York while serving as secre-tary of state from 2009 to 2013.
Clinton has said she set up her own system instead of using a State Department account for the convenience of using a single hand-held email device.
The State Department is currently reviewing and publicly releasing those emails, some showing that Clinton received messages that were later determined to contain classifi ed infor-mation, including some that contained material regarding the production and dissemination of U.S. intelligence.
“There is always a debate among differ-ent agencies about what something should be ret-roactively (marked classi-fi ed),” Clinton told the AP on Monday. “But at the time, there were none. So I’m going to keep answer-ing the questions and providing the facts so that people can understand better what happened.”
Clinton says no apology needed for private email accountThe Associated Press
“If there was an accommodation, she would
be released (from jail) because she would no longer
be in contempt.”
Charla BansleyLiberty Counsel communications director
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Which Bible Do You Have?There are so many different Bibles available today. Do you have
one of those “baby Bibles”? The one that is light blue or pink or white and is small enough to fi t into a baby’s hand. Those are precious and are a great way for young children to learn to love the Bible. Do you have one of those pocket-sized or checkbook-sized Bibles? Sometimes it’s the entire Bible, and sometimes it’s just the New Testament. Those are convenient editions to take with you anywhere you go. Do you have one of those handy-sized Bibles? It’s not too big and not too small. It’s a handy size to carry to worship or to a Bible study. Do you have one of those large-pint Bibles? They often come in “large”, “giant” and “super-giant” print. They’re easier on the eyes, but maybe not as easy to carry. Do you have one of those study Bibles, reference Bibles, analytical Bibles? Those usually provide very helpful aids in studying various topics that are developed throughout the Bible. There is great variety in these types of Bibles, and careful Bible students will use them with caution, remembering that notes in the margins are put there by men. The variety of Bibles thus far discussed does not even begin to touch the abundance of what is available, including compact Bibles, devotional Bibles, parallel Bibles, chronological Bibles, Bibles for teens, Bibles for women, Bibles for children, etc.
Now, what’s the point of all of this? There is defi nitely a wide variety of Bibles available today, but when you get beyond “what kind” it is and “what features” it might have, what kind do you have? There is one type of Bible out there called the “Open Bible”. It doesn’t really matter if you have that name (“Open Bible”) printed on the spine of your Bible; what matters is that you open your Bible! There is one type of Bible out there called a “Study Bible”. Again, it doesn’t really matter if you have that name (“Study Bible:) printed on the spine of your Bible; what matters is that you study your Bible! There is one type of Bible out there called a “Daily Bible”. it doesn’t matter if you have that name printed on the spine of your Bible; what matters is that you spend time daily with your Bible! There is one type of Bible out there called a “Life Application Bible”. Even if that is not printed on the spine of your Bible, what matters is that you make application to your life every time you study your Bible!
Sometimes we place a lot of emphasis on “what kind” of car we drive or “what kind” of clothes we wear or “what kind” of food we eat, etc. However, what really matters is, “What kind of Bible do you have?” Is it an open, study, daily, life application Bible? Is it a well-worn, marked-up, been-through-a-lot Bible? With all that is happening around us in our country today, we need to make sure we’re getting into our Bibles and that the Bible is getting into us!
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TUESDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 8, 2015 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^
Shark Tank Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.
Extreme Weight Loss “Hannah” (N)
Local 24 News
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Night-line
WREG # #NCIS “Neverland” Zoo “Eats, Shoots and Leaves; Wild Things” Jack-
son is injured. (N) News Ch. 3 Late Show-Colbert James
Corden QVC $ . Tuesday Night Beauty “Supersmile” (N) The Find With Shawn Killinger (N) Women, Control
WCBI $NCIS “Neverland” Zoo “Eats, Shoots and Leaves; Wild Things” Jack-
son is injured. (N) News Late Show-Colbert James
Corden
WMC % %America’s Got Talent “Semi-Final 2” Eleven acts perform for the judges. (N)
(:01) Hollywood Game Night (N)
News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers
WLMT & >The Flash “Rogue Time” iZombie “Blaine’s World” CW30 News at 9 (N) House of
PayneMeet the Browns
There Yet? Modern Family
WBBJ _ _Shark Tank Marvel’s Agents of
S.H.I.E.L.D. Extreme Weight Loss “Hannah” (N)
News at 10pm
(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live
(:37) Night-line
WTVA ) )America’s Got Talent “Semi-Final 2” Eleven acts perform for the judges. (N)
(:01) Hollywood Game Night (N)
News (N) Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers
WKNO * In Their Own Words (N) The Civil War As Time
Goes ByTavis Smiley
Newsline
WGN-A + (Elementary “We Are Everyone”
Elementary “Poison Pen” Elementary Elementary “The Mar-chioness”
Elementary “Blood Is Thicker”
WMAE , ,In Their Own Words (N) The Civil War Charlie Rose (N) World
News
WHBQ ` `Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?
Brooklyn Nine
Last Man Fox 13 News--9PM (N) Fox 13 News
TMZ Dish Nation (N)
Ac. Hol-lywood
WPXX / Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds The Listener The Listener
WPIX :The Flash “Rogue Time” iZombie “Blaine’s World” PIX11 News PIX11
SportsSeinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends
MAX 0 3(:15) } ›› Evolution Alien organisms develop rapidly in Earth’s atmosphere.
} ››› Get Shorty (95, Comedy) John Travolta, Gene Hackman.
(10:50) } ››› 16 Blocks (06)
SHOW 2 60 Minutes Sports Inside the NFL (N) A Season
WithA Season With
Inside the NFL 60 Minutes Sports
HBO 4 1} ›› Draft Day (14, Drama) Kevin Costner, Jen-nifer Garner.
Hard Knocks: Training Camp With
} ›› The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (14, Fantasy) Ian McKellen.
MTV 5 2 Faking It Faking It Todrick Girl Code True Life (N) } ›› Can’t Hardly Wait (98, Comedy)
ESPN 7 ?(6:00) 2015 U.S. Open Tennis: Men’s and Women’s Quarterfinals. From the USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y.
SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)
SPIKE 8 5Ink Master Artists paint with fire.
Ink Master “Hell on Wheels”
Ink Master “Hail Mani” (N)
Ink Master (N)
Tattoo Night.
Ink Master “Hell on Wheels”
USA : 8Modern Family
Modern Family
Modern Family
Modern Family
Playing House
Playing House
Modern Family
Modern Family
Chrisley Knows
Chrisley Knows
NICK ; C iCarly iCarly Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Full H’se Friends Friends (:12) Friends
DISC < DEdge of Alaska Edge of Alaska: Leg-
endsEdge of Alaska Edge of Alaska Edge of Alaska
A&E > Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
Storage Wars
FSSO ? 4(6:00) College Football: Alcorn State at Georgia Tech.
Bull Riding: Champi-onship.
World Poker Tour Red Bull Cliff Diving “Yucatán”
BET @ F (5:00) } Set It Off The BET Life of (N) Hus Punk’d Hus Punk’d Wendy Williams
H&G C HFlip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop House
HuntersHunters Int’l
Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop Flip or Flop
E! D Total Divas Total Divas (N) WAGS (N) E! News (N) Total Divas
HIST E BCounting Cars
Counting Cars
Counting Cars
Counting Cars (N)
(:03) Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels
(:03) Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels
Counting Cars
Counting Cars
ESPN2 F @ Soccer: International Friendly Soccer: International Friendly Baseball
TLC G Cake Boss Cake Boss
(N)Cake Boss (N)
Cake Boss (N)
Little People, Big World (N)
(:01) Cake Boss
FOOD H Chopped “Brunch Boxes” Chopped “Salt Pearls of
Wisdom”Chopped (N) Chopped “We Love
Leftovers!”Chopped “Salt Pearls of Wisdom”
INSP I The Waltons JAG Walker, Ranger Matlock Medicine Woman
LIFE J =} ›› The Proposal (09, Romance-Comedy) San-dra Bullock, Ryan Reynolds.
(:02) } › Hope Floats A newly divorced woman finds love in her hometown.
(:02) } ›› The Pro-posal (09)
TBN M Trinity J. Meyer Prince S. Fur Praise the Lord (N) (Live) Bless the Lord
AMC N 0} ›› Con Air (97, Action) Nicolas Cage, John Cusack. Vicious convicts hijack their flight.
} ››› Air Force One (97) Harrison Ford. A terrorist and his gang hijack the U.S. president’s plane.
FAM O <Monica the Medium (N) Next Step Realty: NYC
“Field Trip”(:01) Startup U (N) The 700 Club } ›› Along Came
Polly (04)
TCM P } ››› Across the Pacific (42) Humphrey Bogart.
(:45) } Report From the Aleutians
(:45) San Pietro } ››› Let There Be Light (46)
} Red-Courage
TNT Q A(5:30) } ››› The Dark Knight Rises (12) Chris-tian Bale, Anne Hathaway.
Public Morals “O’Bannon’s Wake” (N)
Public Morals “O’Bannon’s Wake”
CSI: NY “Jamalot”
TBS R *Big Bang Theory
Big Bang Theory
Big Bang Theory
Big Bang Theory
Big Bang Theory
Big Bang Theory
Conan The Office Conan
GAME S Chain Chain FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve Cleve American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King FS1 Z MLB’s NFL Boxing: Austin Trout vs. Joey Hernandez. FOX Sports Live (N) FOX Sports Live (N)
FX Æ ;} ›› White House Down (13, Action) Channing Tatum, Jamie Foxx. Para-military soldiers take over the White House.
} ›› White House Down (13) Paramilitary sol-diers take over the White House.
OUT Ø Hit List Nugent Hunting Driven Thirteen Season Hunting Wanted Hunting Thirteen NBCS ∞ Poker Poker Poker Poker Poker OWN ± The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots The Haves, Nots FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced To Be Announced
HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The Ro-mance”
The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
Golden Girls
DISN “ L} ››› Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams (02) Antonio Banderas.
Best Friends
Liv and Maddie
I Didn’t Do It
Jessie Good-Charlie
Good-Charlie
SYFY EHaunting in Connecticut 2: Georgia
Face Off “All That Glit-ters” (N)
Face Off “Extraterrestrial Enterprise”
Face Off “All That Glitters”
Geeks Who Geeks Who
Abigail Van Buren
Dear Abby
Horoscopes
The readers have spoken. Find out who are the favorites in the Crossroads in the Daily Corinthian’s annual Readers’ Choice
contest. Results coming Saturday, Sept. 19.
Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian
ARIES (March 21-April 19). A fairytale quality touches today’s situation. There is no happily ever after, but the promise of a series of days in varying de-grees of happiness makes a pretty good ending, too.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Just because they are talking about it doesn’t mean they are really interested in it. To get to know the people you’re with, you’ll have to rise above the so-cial constraints.
GEMINI (May 21-June 21). The thing that gets you out of the house and talking to people will be your luckiest activity to-day, even if it happens to also be grueling work. Casual con-versations build relationships. Relationships build your future.
CANCER (June 22-July 22). The light of wisdom cannot get into a heart that has never been broken. The cracks are what make illumination possible. Wisdom may not make you feel better now, but it will help you make better choices later.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Get the feeling that you’re being watched? It’s probably your ad-mirer, your boss, or it could just be the dog. (With all dogs see, sometimes you think it’s a good thing they don’t speak your lan-guage.)
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). In order to see, sometimes it’s best to open your eyes; other times it’s best to close them. Every sense you have will in-form you today, but none will be so keen as your sixth sense.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Money, power, government, re-lationships, responsibilities -- all of these things could affect your freedom, but none of them has to. If you can do what you want to do, you’re free.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The reason they see you doing it and then immediately want to do it, too, is because you make it look so easy. Making it look easy is the defi nition of being good at it.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Bottom line: Nothing gets done unless you put the hours in. Your willingness to put the hours in is your success key. In fact, nothing will contribute more to your ultimate suc-cess than your adherence to a schedule.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). One crucial element to your work will be how you in-corporate or ignore feedback. Let down your defenses and go into learning mode. They don’t have to be totally right to have a point.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You feel like you’re in an arm wrestling match with fate. This is a contest you don’t want to win. If you win, you’ll never know the glories that fate had in mind for you.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). As you quest for new experi-ence, consider spending a lot less energy on it. Maybe new experience doesn’t have to be quested after. In fact, you’re having one right now.
DEAR ABBY: I am 44 and my husband of 20 years is 48.
On a recent second honey-moon trip to Sweden, I became pregnant.
We already have two beauti-ful, intelligent daughters, 17
and 14. One start-
ed university this fall while the other’s a high school sophomore.
My prob-lem is not so much the high-risk pregnancy, but rather that both of my girls
strongly oppose the idea of us keeping the baby.
Not only were they not thrilled when I broke the news to them, but they also cried.
My younger daughter is now giving me the cold shoulder. She doesn’t like change and thinks having a sibling will dis-rupt our life. My older girl said she is glad she will be at the university so she won’t have to have anything to do with the baby.
I am deeply hurt by their reac-tions. I need help to talk to them. Please give me some advice. -- EXPECTING IN CANADA
DEAR EXPECTING: Far more important than how your
immature and self-centered daughters feel about your preg-nancy is how you and your hus-band feel about it. Teenagers don’t like to consider their par-ents as sexual beings, which may be part of the reason for their reaction.
Not knowing your girls, I’m not sure what they need to hear other than you love them and hope at some point they will be-come mature enough to accept the situation.
But do not allow them to put you on the defensive. You don’t owe them an apology. As a mat-ter of fact, they owe you and their father one.
DEAR ABBY: My mother-in-law was in a car accident a few months ago and her car was to-taled. Since then, my husband takes her food shopping and wherever else she has to go. She has made no effort to buy a new car.
She’s content with calling him for every need.
She wasn’t injured and she isn’t disabled. If she doesn’t want to do something, her ex-cuse is, “I’m an old lady. I can’t do it.” It’s annoying. She doesn’t come visit or call to check on us. She makes us feel like our family has to do everything for her -- while she claims she’s “independent.”
This has been an issue for a while and I’m sick of it. I sug-
gested she do her grocery shopping online and have it delivered to her house. Once again, she gave the same ex-cuse.
I think she needs a man so I can have my husband back. What do you think? -- OVER IT IN PHILADELPHIA
DEAR OVER IT: From the tone of your last remark it’s clear you and your mother-in-law aren’t close and probably never were. Philadelphia has a very large transit system. Surely there is alternate transportation for her -- buses, taxis, Uber and Lyft come to mind. If she was so traumatized by the accident that she’s afraid to get behind the wheel again, she may need a therapist to overcome it.
Whatever the reason, this won’t stop until you and your husband quit enabling her. Give her a list of what’s available and “suggest” she use it the next time she calls wanting a ride. If she needs groceries, offer to or-der them online for her yourself if she isn’t computer literate. And your husband should also offer to help her fi nd a new car.
Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • 7
Mom’s surprise pregnancy not pleasant news for her girls
8 • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
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GARFIELD
VarietyDaily Corinthian • 9Tuesday, September 8, 2015
ACROSS1 Ponzi scheme,
e.g.5 Diplomat’s
specialty9 Tire pattern
14 Word of amore15 Worker protection
org.16 Wheel spokes,
geometrically17 “Am I supposed
to take thisseriously?”
20 Catholicsacrament ofconfession andforgiveness
21 Least healthy22 LAX posting23 British peer25 “Alice” diner
owner26 Cloistered sister27 Four-song discs,
briefly29 Cut with acid33 Post-spill carpet
spot36 Clean
vigorously38 Weed chopper39 “Oops, thought
you wouldn’t hearthat”
42 Pound sound43 Lugged44 Bill’s attorney
general45 __ estate47 Estonia or Ukr.,
once48 Ten, in Toulouse49 Tuna in a sushi
bar51 Shortest-shadows
time53 “Liquor not
provided” letters
56 Starts to melt60 Aged at the
brewery62 Nursery rhyme
plum finder’sboast
64 Started the pot65 Shipping option66 Nights of
anticipatoryrevelry
67 Like poorlydrained rockgardens
68 Family map69 Word of
admonition
DOWN1 Suffix with land or
sea2 Insertion mark3 Sports venue4 Early Yucatán
settler5 Bird on a Froot
Loops box6 “Jeopardy!”
contestant7 Windy City
station, onAmtrak skeds
8 Little boys9 Split second
10 Rub the wrongway
11 Slight advantage12 Gets in one’s
sights, with “at”13 Cola request from
a calorie watcher18 Blood bank
quantity19 Chinese appetizer24 Speaker’s stand26 Suffix with no-
good28 Cattle poker30 In those days31 Old King or Nat
King32 Test the weight of33 Marquee name34 Button on a deli
scale
35 __ Romeo: sportscar
36 Superiors of cpls.37 “Heavens to
Betsy!”40 Snooping (around)41 Jazz band
instrument46 Foam-topped
coffeehousedrinks
48 Not impossible50 Intoxicating, as
wine
52 Any EverlyBrothers tune,now
53 Curtain call cry54 Red Sea country55 Pindar, notably56 Did pool laps57 “It can’t be!”58 “Minnesota” pool
legend59 Place in order61 Gave the once-
over63 Rowboat mover
By Fred Piscop©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 09/08/15
09/08/15
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
Dear Annie: I am the youngest of three girls and have always been the black sheep of the family.
I have two sisters who don’t have kids, yet they constantly tell me I’m not a good mother or daugh-ter.
I have always tried to be a good daughter, es-pecially after Dad passed away.
My sisters don’t do much for our mom.
One lives out of state, so I guess she thinks she doesn’t have to do anything. The other sis-ter calls Mom often, but doesn’t bother to stop by and see her.
Mom is on a limited income. We all work full time and have husbands, but I’m the only one who buys her groceries and takes her places. I recent-ly told my mother how I was feeling about my sis-ters, and she told me they will never change.
And why should they? Mom refuses to ask for any help from the other two. She never asks me to take her shopping, but I know she needs food in her house. I also enjoy spending time with my mom. She’s an awesome woman who worked hard and provided for her chil-dren.
I had once before dis-appeared from Mom’s life because I was tired of putting up with this non-sense. I didn’t speak to
anyone for a year. But I realized my moth-
er won’t be here forever, and we’ve been attached at the hip ever since. Now I’m tired of the nonsense again.
What am I supposed to do?
My sisters are perfectly aware of Mom’s needs. I believe they are selfi sh. What’s it going to take for them to wake up? I can’t talk to either one of them because it just upsets me. But I can’t go back and keep taking care of Mom all by myself. It gets expensive to do this every week with no help whatsoever. — The Black Sheep
Dear Sheep: You sound like a caring daughter, but you cannot force your sis-ters to be the same. If you were an only child, would you con-tinue helping Mom? It might be less frus-trating for you to think of yourself that way.
However, you may be able to get your sisters to contribute fi nancially if it lets them off the hook otherwise.
Calmly explain that
Mom’s income lim-its what she can buy at the grocery, and though you are happy to take her shopping and supplement her supplies, it is becom-ing too diffi cult. Ask how much they can contribute for these expenses. We hope they come through.
Dear Annie: I felt the need to respond to the letter from “Gary,” won-dering about appropriate dress for a funeral. I have attended more wakes and funerals than I can count, and I know what is considered “appropri-ate” attire.
My husband passed away suddenly six months ago. We are a quiet family and the at-tendance at his funeral was astounding and un-expected. We did not notice what color clothes people wore, their neck-lines, collars, hemlines, sneakers or boots.
What I can say, un-equivocally, is that I, along with our 14-year-old son and 12-year-old daughter couldn’t have cared less what anyone had on.
It only mattered that they came. — Heartbro-ken in Connecticut
Dear Heartbroken: Thank you for mak-ing it clear what is important. Our con-dolences.
Working with siblings can be a challengeAnnie’s Mailbox
Crossword
Sports10 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Local Schedule
Today
SoftballCorinth @ Amory, 5Wheeler @ BiggersvilleTish County @ MantachieVolleyballCorinth @ Hardin Co., 6New Albany @ Tish CountySoccerLexington @ McNairy, 6
Thursday
FootballNortheast @ Northwest, 6:30Itawamba @ Holmes, 7SoftballNettleton @ Corinth, 5:30Kossuth @ New SiteBiggersville @ ThrasherTish County @ BoonevilleVolleyballLafayette Co. @ Corinth, 6:30Potts Camp @ Central, 6:30Ripley @ Tish CountyGolfMcNairy @ Pine Tree, 4
Friday
FootballBooneville @ Corinth, 7 (WXRZ)Haltey @ Central, 7Kossuth @ Tish County, 7Biggersville @ West Lowndes, 7Middleton @ Walnut, 7Thrasher @ Smithville, 7Adamsville @ Baldwyn, 7Belmont @ South Pontotoc, 7Coldwater @ Falkner, 7Ripley @ Saltillo, 7McNairy @ Bruceton, 7:30Open: New Site
Saturday
SoftballCorinth TournamentCorinth, Kossuth, Tish Co,VolleyballCentral @ North Corinth, NoonCross CountryAC @ Freed-Hardeman
Shorts
NE Golf Tryout
Northeast Mississippi Community College’s golf program is hosting an open tryout on Friday. A 10 a.m. start time is scheduled for the Booneville Golf and Country Club, which serves as Northeast’s home course. Regis-tration takes place at 9:45 a.m. at the clubhouse. All entries must bring documentation of a current physi-cal examination and sign a liability release in order to partake in the session.
This tryout is only for prospective student-athletes that have not signed a National Letter of Intent (NLI) with another institution of higher learning. For more information about tryouts for the Northeast golf team, contact head coach Mark Hatfield at 720-7270 or by email at [email protected].
Golf Tourney
Southwest Human Resource Agen-cy and Southwest TN Community Development Corporation are hosting their 8th Annual Golf Tournament on Thursday, Sept. 10 at Chickasaw Golf Course in Henderson. Registration begins at 10 a.m. with a shotgun start at noon. Lunch provided by Coyote Blues at 11 a.m. Tournament is limited to the first 36 paid teams.
BY PIGSKIN PETE JR., [email protected]
Will Burns of the Corinth communi-ty claimed the Week 2 title — and $25 booty ... to boot — by going 10-1 in the weekly high school and college football seer contest.
The Kossuth High School alum and sideline statistician for Brian Kelly’s Aggies, beat out Chris Brooks on the tiebreaker.
Burns’ 68 digits were closer than Brooks’ 48.
The on-mark total was 78 — from Corinth’s 42-36 win at Ripley.
Forty-six entries were received by close of business on Friday.
Previous WinnersWeek 1 -- Jerry Robertson, Corinth,
9-2##Won on tiebreaker
BY DAVID BRANDTAP Sports Writer
OXFORD— It’s hard to get too excited about any statis-tics from No. 17 Mississippi’s lopsided victory over an ob-viously inferior opponent on Saturday.
But one number did catch the attention of coach Hugh Freeze: The Rebels averaged nearly 10 yards per rushing attempt and had fi ve players run for at least 40 yards in the 76-3 victory over the Sky-hawks.
That’s important because Ole Miss was among the worst teams in the SEC last season running the football. With ex-perienced offensive linemen and running backs return, the
Rebels had hoped for vast im-provement in that area.
The progress after one game was promising.
But the opponents will become tougher in a hurry, starting with a home game against Fresno State on Sat-urday.
“Like I’ve said throughout the summer, I’ve been cau-tiously optimistic that we’ve done some things that will help us improve,” Freeze said. “I just hope we have a healthy offensive line. We’re yet to get totally there.”
Health is one issue for the offensive line — potential starting guard Rod Taylor missed Saturday’s game with a shoulder injury.
NCAA eligibility is another.Starting left tackle Laremy
Tunsil was held out of the UT Martin game for what the school called “precautionary” reasons while the program looks into potential NCAA violations. Freeze didn’t know on Monday if Tunsil will play against Fresno State and said that any decisions regarding his status would be made by administration.
The school said during the summer that it was working with the NCAA after Tunsil’s stepfather made allegations that the offensive lineman had improper contact with agents and received illegal benefi ts.
“That can be quite frustrat-
ing and make you anxious at times, but I am confi dent that our people and whatever pro-cess is going on that they’re on top of it,” Freeze said.
Ole Miss shifted the offen-sive line because of Tunsil’s absence, moving Fahn Coo-per to left tackle and inserting Sean Rawlings at right tackle. It worked just fi ne against the overmatched Skyhawks.
The Rebels gained 338 yards on the ground on Sat-urday. Eugene Brazley led the way with 88 yards and one touchdown on six carries while starter Jaylen Walton ran for two touchdowns — including a 60-yarder on his
Ole Miss pleased by running game
Please see OLE MISS | 11
BY TERESA M. WALKERAP Pro Football Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The Tennessee Titans have spent months being ridiculed as possibly the NFL’s worst team, compounding the pain of the franchise’s poorest sea-son since 1994.
Now they’ll fi nd out just how motivating a 2-14 record can be.
“That’s just one thing here
that nobody wants to experi-ence, ever again,” safety Mi-chael Griffi n said.
Not that the Titans are looking back. The biggest benefi t of a season that ended with 10 straight losses was the No. 2 overall draft pick, and the Titans believe they found their franchise quarter-back in Marcus Mariota, the Heisman Trophy winner out of Oregon. Revamping this
roster to better fi t what coach Ken Whisenhunt wants in his second season in Tennessee means eight starters with two or fewer years of NFL experi-ence.
Combining Mariota with all that youth and key free agents such as three-time Pro Bowl linebacker Brian Orakpo has Griffi n very excited about this season. The 2007 fi rst-round pick has been on this roster
longer than anyone else, and Griffi n says he’s seen these Ti-tans improve each week.
Still, the Titans have to prove it starting Sunday in Tampa Bay against Jameis Winston, the top pick over-all. They also must show they can win at home and convince fans to fi ll the thousands of seats that stayed empty last
With Mariota, Titans eager to erase 2014
Please see TITANS | 11
The Associated PressWASHINGTON — Nationals
slugger Bryce Harper didn’t like what he saw at Nationals Park — in the seats, that is.
Harper criticized the home fans after Washington lost to the NL East-leading New York Mets 8-5 Monday in the opener of a key three-game series.
“They left in the seventh, that’s pretty brutal,” Harper said. “Playoffs is totally differ-
ent. Our fans are going crazy.”The Nationals’ fi ve-game
winning streak ended and they dropped fi ve games be-hind the Mets with just 25 to play. After starter Max Scher-zer was hit hard, Blake Trein-en (2-3) took over to begin the seventh with the score 5-all. The Mets wound up scoring three times against Treinen, Felipe Rivero, Casey Janssen and Matt Thornton.
“Blake’s been good. Felipe’s
been good. Thorny’s pitched well against the lefties. Those guys have matched up really well in the second half for us. It didn’t work out our way today,” Nationals manager Matt Williams said.
The Nationals built a 5-3 lead on Wilson Ramos’ grand slam and Jayson Werth’s RBI double in a fi ve-run fourth. It was 5-4 in the fi fth when Wil-liams let Scherzer bat in the fi fth with runners at second
and third and two outs, and the ace grounded out.
Yoenis Cespedes, Michael Conforto and Kelly Johnson homered off Scherzer. Ces-pedes started the sixth with a double off Scherzer, went to third on a balk and scored on Travis D’Arnaud’s tying sacri-fi ce fl y. “(Max) was (still) our best option in the sixth,” Wil-liams said. “He’s at 90 (pitch-es) and he’s got the lead. He’s our No. 1 for a reason.”
Harper criticizes fans after Nationals fall to Mets
The Associated PressTUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Ala-
bama’s offense had a new look both on the fi eld and on the sideline.
The third-ranked Crimson Tide adjusted to life without some of the top playmakers from last season and with Jake Coker taking most of the snaps at quarterback against No. 20 Wisconsin. Alabama also broke out a variety of
placards to signal in plays, ranging from the Seattle Su-personics logo to the Tasma-nian Devil.
That’s nothing new for col-lege football with all the no-huddle teams, but it’s another indication of the Tide’s adap-tation to being able to go up tempo more often.
“It’s cool probably for the fans but for us, we look at it
more like it has a meaning to us,” tight end O.J. Howard said Monday. “So we don’t really get caught up in the funny-looking signs. Some of them are pretty funny to us, especially when we get new ones. But at the same time, they mean things to us so we really don’t get caught up in what they stand for or what they look like.”
His favorite is a Domino’s Pizza sign, since he’s a fan.
The signs don’t mean Ala-bama is trying to be fast like Oregon or Baylor, but they do help expedite the process of communicating the play to all 11 players on the fi eld. The only blip came when the Tide’s signal fl ashers didn’t
Alabama’s offense flashes diversity, placards
Please see ALABAMA | 11
Staff Photo by H. Lee Smith II
Strong ShowingCorinth High School seniors Millie Hill (left) and Anna Kayte Webb helped lead the Class of 2016 to an unbeaten record and the championship of the 9th Annual Powder Puff Tournament. Proceeds for the two-night event totaled $1,083.15, which benefited the Susie Coleman Scholarship Fund. Coleman, a former teacher whose three daughters graduated from CHS, passed away due to cancer in 2008.
Please see SHORTS | 11
Pigskin Picks
get the call in time be-cause the coaches’ head-sets went down.
“Other than that we didn’t have any kind of mechanical issues,” Ala-bama coach Nick Saban said.
“I thought it went pret-ty smoothly.”
The offense still showed it had a formida-ble backfi eld duo in Der-rick Henry and Kenyan Drake during the 35-17 win over the Badgers. Henry ran for 147 yards while Drake had 77 rush-ing yards and 48 receiv-ing yards along with a play of 30-plus yards in each category.
Coker and Cooper Bateman both had suc-cess passing the ball, and each could play Saturday against 34-point under-dog Middle Tennessee as well.
Saban bristled at a re-porter’s question about using this game spe-cifi cally to create quar-terback competition against a heavy under-dog but is hoping both can build off a successful opener.
“I don’t think there’s any question about the fact that both quarter-backs did a nice job when they were in there, and that’s going to help their confi dence and growth,” Saban said.
The Tide did spread the ball around more in the passing game in the fi rst outing without Am-ari Cooper gobbling up so many of the passes. Alabama had nine play-ers log catches in the opener, with receivers Robert Foster and Ar-Darius Stewart collect-ing four apiece.
Howard caught three passes for 37 yards.
season.“We don’t have much
equity,” Whisenhunt said. “We’ve got to build that up. The only way you can do that is to con-sistently do those kinds of things.”
Mariota’s impres-sive performance since being drafted has fed the Titans’ confi dence that they fi nally have the man to settle down a position where Ten-nessee has started eight quarterbacks and played nine since trading Steve McNair in June 2006. Mariota was intercepted only once by teammates in training camp, and he posted a 102.9 passer rating this preseason while completing 70 per-cent of his passes.
“By the end of the sea-son, they’ll know who we are,” wide receiver Ken-dall Wright said.
Here are some things to watch with the Titans:
Protect Mariota: The Titans cut their losses, releasing right tackle Michael Oher in February and benching left guard Andy Levitre before recently trading him to Atlanta for two draft picks. That leaves new left guard Byron Bell as the veteran going into his fi fth season after making only one start at guard in his career. This youthful group is being led by left tackle Tay-lor Lewan, the 11th pick overall last year, with this year’s third-round draft pick Jeremiah Poutasi replacing Bell at right tackle.
fi rst carry of the game.Jordan Wilkins added
41 yards on six carries.“We’ve got to keep im-
proving,” Wilkins said. “But it was good to get out there and see fi ve different running backs run the ball well and even the second string offensive line was open-ing up holes.”
An improved running game would almost cer-tainly take some pres-
sure off of new starting quarterback Chad Kelly. The junior transfer had a good fi rst game, com-pleting 9 of 15 passes for 211 yards, two touch-downs and an intercep-tion.
“Anytime you can run the ball at will, it gives you a lot of options to open up the playbook and keep the defense on their heels,” Kelly said. “That’s when you can throw it around a little bit.”
For more information, contact Christy at (731) 989-5111, [email protected], or visit www.SWCDCGOLF.com.
There will be a hole-in-one contest, $100,000 4-Player Shootout, $5,000 putting contest, and cash prizes for win-ning teams. Proceeds from tournament go to SWCDC to assist in the maintenance of rental properties across seven counties and is used as matching dollars for new funding.
Soccer Clinic
The HRAY Soccer Clinic will be held Sat-urday, Sept. 12 at 9 a.m. in Middleton, Ten-nessee. Shin guards are required. For more information, contact Robert Browder at 731-212-0578.
Adult Flag Football
The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Depart-ment is offering a fall flag football league for
adults, 16 years and above. The team fee is $250, in county or $300 outside the coun-ty. Games will begin the week of September 9 and finish up by No-vember 6. Teams will play 7-8 games. Call the Park Office for more in-formation at 286-3067. Other Fall programs to be offered by the Park, if interest is sufficient, includes; Adult Kickball, Ultimate Frisbee/Disc Golf, Tennis Leagues and a Walking program. Call for more informa-tion.
Baseball Record Book
The 2015 Mississippi Baseball Record Book has been published. The book includes re-cords for high school and college baseball. There are many area baseball players and teams mentioned in the book.
You can order the book for $10 by sending a check to: Mississippi Baseball Record Book Diamonds by Smillie; 3159 Kendrick Road Corinth, MS 38834.
ScoreboardBaseball
AL standingsEast Division
W L Pct GBToronto 78 59 .569 —New York 77 59 .566 ½Tampa Bay 67 70 .489 11Baltimore 65 72 .474 13Boston 65 72 .474 13
Central Division W L Pct GBKansas City 82 54 .603 —Minnesota 70 66 .515 12Cleveland 67 69 .493 15Chicago 65 71 .478 17Detroit 63 74 .460 19½
West Division W L Pct GBHouston 75 63 .543 —Texas 72 64 .529 2Los Angeles 69 67 .507 5Seattle 66 72 .478 9Oakland 59 79 .428 16
___Sunday’s Games
N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 4Toronto 10, Baltimore 4Cleveland 4, Detroit 0Boston 6, Philadelphia 2Chicago White Sox 7, Kansas City 5Houston 8, Minnesota 5L.A. Angels 7, Texas 0Seattle 3, Oakland 2
Monday’s GamesN.Y. Yankees 8, Baltimore 6Detroit 5, Tampa Bay 4Boston 11, Toronto 4Cleveland 3, Chicago White Sox 2Oakland 10, Houston 9Texas 3, Seattle 0Minnesota at Kansas City (n)L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels (n)
Today’s GamesBaltimore (Gausman 2-6) at N.Y. Yan-
kees (Tanaka 11-6), 6:05 p.m.Tampa Bay (E.Ramirez 10-5) at Detroit
(Boyd 1-5), 6:08 p.m.Toronto (Dickey 10-10) at Boston (Ow-
ens 2-2), 6:10 p.m.Cleveland (Carrasco 12-9) at Chicago
White Sox (Rodon 6-6), 7:10 p.m.Minnesota (Gibson 9-9) at Kansas City
(Volquez 12-7), 7:10 p.m.Houston (Kazmir 7-9) at Oakland
(S.Gray 12-7), 9:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 12-6) at L.A.
Angels (Heaney 6-2), 9:05 p.m.Texas (Hamels 2-1) at Seattle (T.Walker
10-7), 9:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games
Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m.Tampa Bay at Detroit, 6:08 p.m.Toronto at Boston, 6:10 p.m.Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 7:10
p.m.Minnesota at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.Houston at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.Texas at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.
NL standingsEast Division
W L Pct GBNew York 76 61 .555 —Washington 71 66 .518 5Miami 57 81 .413 19½Atlanta 55 83 .399 21½Philadelphia 53 85 .384 23½
Central Division W L Pct GBSt. Louis 87 50 .635 —Pittsburgh 81 55 .596 5½Chicago 79 57 .581 7½Milwaukee 61 76 .445 26Cincinnati 57 79 .419 29½
West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 78 58 .574 —San Francisco 71 67 .514 8Arizona 66 72 .478 13San Diego 65 73 .471 14Colorado 57 80 .416 21½
___Sunday’s Games
Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 3Miami 4, N.Y. Mets 3Washington 8, Atlanta 4Boston 6, Philadelphia 2Chicago Cubs 6, Arizona 4L.A. Dodgers 5, San Diego 1San Francisco 7, Colorado 4Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1
Monday’s GamesN.Y. Mets 8, Washington 5Milwaukee 9, Miami 1Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 1Chicago Cubs 9, St. Louis 0Colorado 6, San Diego 4Arizona 6, San Francisco 1Atlanta 7, Philadelphia 2 L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels (n)
Today’s GamesAtlanta (Undecided) at Philadelphia
(Nola 5-2), 6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Harvey 12-7) at Washington
(Zimmermann 12-8), 6:05 p.m.Milwaukee (Jungmann 9-5) at Miami
(Conley 3-1), 6:10 p.m.Pittsburgh (Liriano 9-7) at Cincinnati
(R.Iglesias 3-6), 6:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Hammel 7-6) at St.
Louis (Wacha 15-4), 7:15 p.m.San Francisco (Vogelsong 9-11) at Ari-
zona (Ch.Anderson 6-5), 8:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 12-6) at L.A.
Angels (Heaney 6-2), 9:05 p.m.Colorado (J.Gray 0-0) at San Diego
(Rea 2-2), 9:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games
Chicago Cubs at St. Louis, 12:45 p.m.Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Washington, 6:05 p.m.Milwaukee at Miami, 6:10 p.m.Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m.Colorado at San Diego, 8:10 p.m.San Francisco at Arizona, 8:40 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.
MLB LeadersAMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTINGMiCabrera, Detroit, .353; Bogaerts,
Boston, .320; Brantley, Cleveland, .319; Altuve, Houston, .315; LCain, Kansas City, .312; Fielder, Texas, .312; Kipnis, Cleveland, .311.
RUNSDonaldson, Toronto, 105; Bautista, To-
ronto, 93; Dozier, Minnesota, 92; Trout, Los Angeles, 88; LCain, Kansas City, 87; Gardner, New York, 85; Kinsler, Detroit, 85.
RBIDonaldson, Toronto, 114; CDavis,
Baltimore, 100; KMorales, Kansas City, 99; Bautista, Toronto, 94; Encarnacion, Toronto, 93; JMartinez, Detroit, 89; BMc-Cann, New York, 86; Ortiz, Boston, 86.
HITSAltuve, Houston, 167; Bogaerts, Bos-
ton, 163; Kinsler, Detroit, 163; Donald-son, Toronto, 159; NCruz, Seattle, 158;
Fielder, Texas, 158; Hosmer, Kansas City, 155; MMachado, Baltimore, 155.
DOUBLESBrantley, Cleveland, 42; Donaldson,
Toronto, 38; KMorales, Kansas City, 38; Kipnis, Cleveland, 37; Betts, Boston, 34; Dozier, Minnesota, 34; Kinsler, Detroit, 33.
TRIPLESKiermaier, Tampa Bay, 12; ERosa-
rio, Minnesota, 11; RDavis, Detroit, 9; DeShields, Texas, 9; Gattis, Houston, 9; Betts, Boston, 8; Burns, Oakland, 8; Ea-ton, Chicago, 8.
HOME RUNSCDavis, Baltimore, 40; NCruz, Seattle,
39; Donaldson, Toronto, 36; JMartinez, Detroit, 35; Pujols, Los Angeles, 35; Trout, Los Angeles, 34; Bautista, Toronto, 33.
STOLEN BASESAltuve, Houston, 36; LCain, Kansas
City, 26; Burns, Oakland, 25; JDyson, Kansas City, 23; DeShields, Texas, 22; Gose, Detroit, 20; RDavis, Detroit, 18; Gardner, New York, 18; Pillar, Toronto, 18.
PITCHINGKeuchel, Houston, 17-6; FHernandez,
Seattle, 16-8; McHugh, Houston, 15-7; Eovaldi, New York, 14-3; Price, Toronto, 14-5; Buehrle, Toronto, 14-6; Lewis, Texas, 14-8.
ERAKeuchel, Houston, 2.29; SGray, Oak-
land, 2.36; Price, Toronto, 2.43; Price, Toronto, 2.43; Kazmir, Houston, 2.50; Kazmir, Houston, 2.50; Archer, Tampa Bay, 2.88.
STRIKEOUTSSale, Chicago, 239; Archer, Tampa
Bay, 228; Kluber, Cleveland, 219; Price, Toronto, 196; Keuchel, Houston, 185; Carrasco, Cleveland, 173; Salazar, Cleve-land, 173.
SAVESBoxberger, Tampa Bay, 34; Perkins,
Minnesota, 32; Street, Los Angeles, 32; AMiller, New York, 31; Britton, Baltimore, 30; DavRobertson, Chicago, 29; GHol-land, Kansas City, 29; ShTolleson, Texas, 29.
NATIONAL LEAGUEBATTING
Harper, Washington, .339; DGordon, Miami, .329; Posey, San Francisco, .326; Goldschmidt, Arizona, .321; Votto, Cincin-nati, .318; LeMahieu, Colorado, .317; Pollock, Arizona, .315; YEscobar, Wash-ington, .315.
RUNSHarper, Washington, 101; Pollock,
Arizona, 93; Fowler, Chicago, 89; Gold-schmidt, Arizona, 85; Votto, Cincinnati, 85; Arenado, Colorado, 82; Braun, Mil-waukee, 81; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 81.
RBIArenado, Colorado, 105; Goldschmidt,
Arizona, 97; Kemp, San Diego, 89; Bry-ant, Chicago, 86; CaGonzalez, Colorado, 86; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 85; Harper, Washington, 83; Rizzo, Chicago, 83.
HITSDGordon, Miami, 169; Pollock, Arizona,
162; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 156; Marka-kis, Atlanta, 155; Posey, San Francisco, 155; LeMahieu, Colorado, 154; Black-mon, Colorado, 152.
DOUBLESFrazier, Cincinnati, 39; Arenado, Colo-
rado, 34; MCarpenter, St. Louis, 33; Harper, Washington, 33; McCutchen, Pittsburgh, 33; Bruce, Cincinnati, 32; Pol-lock, Arizona, 32.
TRIPLESDPeralta, Arizona, 9; Blackmon, Colo-
rado, 8; DGordon, Miami, 8; Fowler, Chi-cago, 7; Grichuk, St. Louis, 7; 7 tied at 6.
HOME RUNSArenado, Colorado, 36; CaGonzalez,
Colorado, 36; Harper, Washington, 34; Frazier, Cincinnati, 30; Rizzo, Chicago, 28; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 27; Stanton, Miami, 27; Votto, Cincinnati, 27.
STOLEN BASESBHamilton, Cincinnati, 54; DGordon,
Miami, 48; Blackmon, Colorado, 36; Pol-lock, Arizona, 33; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 26; Revere, Philadelphia, 24; GPolanco, Pittsburgh, 23.
PITCHINGArrieta, Chicago, 18-6; Bumgarner, San
Francisco, 17-7; GCole, Pittsburgh, 16-8; Greinke, Los Angeles, 15-3; Wacha, St. Louis, 15-4; CMartinez, St. Louis, 13-7; BColon, New York, 13-11.
ERAGreinke, Los Angeles, 1.59; Arrieta,
Chicago, 2.03; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 2.18; deGrom, New York, 2.40; GCole, Pittsburgh, 2.54; Harvey, New York, 2.60; Wacha, St. Louis, 2.69.
STRIKEOUTSKershaw, Los Angeles, 251; Scher-
zer, Washington, 219; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 203; Arrieta, Chicago, 197; Shields, San Diego, 188; TRoss, San Diego, 179; deGrom, New York, 175; GCole, Pittsburgh, 175.
SAVESMelancon, Pittsburgh, 43; Rosenthal,
St. Louis, 42; Familia, New York, 36; Kimbrel, San Diego, 36; FrRodriguez, Milwaukee, 34; Casilla, San Francisco, 32; Storen, Washington, 29; Jansen, Los Angeles, 29.
Pacifi c Coast LeagueAmerican North Division
W L Pct. GBz-Oklahoma City (Dodgers) 86 57 .601 —Iowa (Cubs) 80 63 .559 6Omaha (Royals) 80 63 .559 6Colorado Springs (Brewers) 62 80 .437 23½
American South Division W L Pct. GBz-Round Rock (Rangers) 77 66 .538 —Memphis (Cardinals) 72 71 .503 5Nashville (Athletics) 65 78 .455 12New Orleans (Marlins) 57 86 .399 20
Pacifi c North Division W L Pct. GBz-Fresno (Astros) 84 58 .592 —Sacramento (Giants) 70 73 .490 14½Reno (Diamondbacks) 69 74 .483 15½Tacoma (Mariners) 67 76 .469 17½
Pacifi c South Division W L Pct. GBEl Paso (Padres) 78 65 .545 —Las Vegas (Mets) 77 66 .538 1Albuquerque (Rockies) 62 81 .434 16Salt Lake (Angels) 57 86 .399 21
z-clinched playoff spotSunday’s Games
Oklahoma City 5, Memphis 3Colorado Springs 9, New Orleans 2Iowa 8, Round Rock 5Nashville 8, Omaha 3Sacramento 5, Albuquerque 2Fresno 7, Salt Lake 0El Paso 7, Reno 4, 10 inningsTacoma 6, Las Vegas 3
Monday’s GamesMemphis 7, Oklahoma City 3Nashville 6, Omaha 3
Round Rock 7, Iowa 4Salt Lake 8, Fresno 5Tacoma at Las Vegas New Orleans at Colorado Springs Albuquerque at Sacramento El Paso at Reno .
Today’s Games No games scheduled
Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled
Basketball
WNBA standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE
W L Pct GBx-New York 22 9 .710 —x-Chicago 20 12 .625 2½x-Indiana 18 13 .581 4Washington 16 15 .516 6Connecticut 14 18 .438 8½Atlanta 13 18 .419 9
WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBx-Minnesota 21 11 .656 —x-Phoenix 19 13 .594 2x-Tulsa 16 15 .516 4½Los Angeles 14 18 .438 7Seattle 9 22 .290 11½San Antonio 7 25 .219 14
x-clinched playoff spot___
Sunday’s GamesAtlanta 73, Washington 67Los Angeles 92, Tulsa 73Chicago 93, Seattle 65New York 75, Minnesota 71
Monday’s GamesNo games scheduled
Today’s GamesIndiana at Washington, 6 p.m.San Antonio at Tulsa, 7 p.m.Seattle at Minnesota, 7 p.m..
Football
NFL regular seasonThursday’s Game
Pittsburgh at New England, 7:30 p.m.Sunday’s Games
Green Bay at Chicago, NoonKansas City at Houston, NoonSeattle at St. Louis, NoonCleveland at N.Y. Jets, NoonIndianapolis at Buffalo, NoonMiami at Washington, NoonCarolina at Jacksonville, NoonNew Orleans at Arizona, 3:05 p.m.Detroit at San Diego, 3:05 p.m.Cincinnati at Oakland, 3:25 p.m.Baltimore at Denver, 3:25 p.m.Tennessee at Tampa Bay, 3:25 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Monday’s GamesPhiladelphia at Atlanta, 6:10 p.m.Minnesota at San Francisco, 9:20 p.m.
Thursday, Sep. 17Denver at Kansas City, 7:25 p.m.
Sunday, Sep. 20Tampa Bay at New Orleans, NoonDetroit at Minnesota, NoonArizona at Chicago, NoonHouston at Carolina, NoonSan Francisco at Pittsburgh, NoonNew England at Buffalo, NoonSan Diego at Cincinnati, NoonTennessee at Cleveland, NoonAtlanta at N.Y. Giants, NoonSt. Louis at Washington, NoonBaltimore at Oakland, 3:05 p.m.Miami at Jacksonville, 3:05 p.m.Dallas at Philadelphia, 3:25 p.m.Seattle at Green Bay, 7:30 p.m.
Monday, Sep. 21N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis, 7:30 p.m.
College ScoresSUNDAY’S GAME
EASTMarshall 41, Purdue 31
SATURDAY’S LATE SCORESEAST
West Virginia 44, Georgia Southern 0SOUTH
Alabama 35, Wisconsin 17Florida 61, New Mexico St. 13Florida St. 59, Texas St. 16Kentucky 40, Louisiana-Lafayette 33Mississippi St. 34, Southern Miss. 16
SOUTHWESTHouston 52, Tennessee Tech 24Texas A&M 38, Arizona St. 17
FAR WESTNew Mexico 66, MVSU 0Oregon 61, E. Washington 42San Diego St. 37, San Diego 3Southern Cal 55, Arkansas St. 6
Saturday’s college scoresEAST
Alderson-Broaddus 22, Central St. (Ohio) 14
Alfred 39, Husson 25Assumption 41, Kutztown 37Boston College 24, Maine 3Bowie St. 35, Merrimack 32Bryant 27, American International 3Bucknell 17, Marist 0Buffalo 51, Albany (NY) 14Castleton 21, Plymouth St. 10Cortland St. 26, Heidelberg 24Dayton 27, Robert Morris 24Delaware Valley 27, Montclair St. 24Duquesne 47, Kentucky Christian 7Framingham St. 42, Endicott 6Gannon 26, S. Connecticut 22Harding 20, Oklahoma Baptist 19, OTHartwick 34, W. Connecticut 23Hobart 29, Dickinson 7Holy Cross 27, Monmouth (NJ) 19Ithaca 38, Union (NY) 23John Carroll 26, St. Vincent 3Juniata 26, Grove City 13Lincoln (Pa.) 29, Cheyney 22Mercyhurst 35, Bentley 20Moravian 21, King’s (Pa.) 17Muhlenberg 35, Wilkes 7NY Maritime 30, Maine Maritime 0Navy 48, Colgate 10Pace 36, Ave Maria 23Pittsburgh 45, Youngstown St. 37RPI 37, Norwich 0Rowan 24, Widener 10Rutgers 63, Norfolk St. 13Sacred Heart 43, St. Anselm 19Salve Regina 41, Worcester St. 28Shepherd 43, WV Wesleyan 0Shippensburg 64, Seton Hill 14Slippery Rock 39, New Haven 13St. Francis (Pa.) 48, Georgetown 20Stonehill 27, Bloomsburg 10Susquehanna 28, Lycoming 13Temple 27, Penn St. 10Thiel 37, Allegheny 21Thomas More 48, St. John Fisher 0Utica 42, Misericordia 28W. New England 34, Springfi eld 14West Liberty 29, Concord 28William & Mary 34, Lafayette 7
SOUTH
Appalachian St. 49, Howard 0Auburn 31, Louisville 24Birmingham-Southern 29, LaGrange 28California (Pa.) 35, Virginia St. 16Chowan 41, Fayetteville St. 31Christopher Newport 31, College of
NJ 21Clemson 49, Wofford 10Cumberland (Tenn.) 33, Georgetown
(Ky.) 26East Carolina 28, Towson 20Elizabeth City St. 71, Va. Lynchburg 0Emory & Henry 55, Ferrum 7Georgia 51, Louisiana-Monroe 14Hampton 35, Kentucky St. 20Huntingdon 56, Louisiana College 35Jacksonville St. 23, Chattanooga 20James Madison 56, Morehead St. 7Johns Hopkins 52, Randolph-Macon
17Lane 17, Concordia (Ala.) 14Livingstone 49, Benedict 6Maryland 50, Richmond 21Maryville (Tenn.) 43, Berry 17Mercer 28, Austin Peay 7Mississippi 76, UT Martin 3NC A&T 61, Shaw 7NC Central 72, St. Augustine’s 0NC State 49, Troy 21Point (Ga.) 50, Bluefi eld South 27Rhodes 65, S. Virginia 10Sewanee 31, Kenyon 21Shenandoah 51, Gallaudet 6Shorter 38, College of Faith 12Tennessee 59, Bowling Green 30The Citadel 69, Davidson 0Tuskegee 26, Clark Atlanta 0Virginia Union 35, Brevard 21Wabash 35, Hampden-Sydney 3Warner 42, Union (Ky.) 21West Georgia 44, Catawba 13Wingate 14, Johnson C. Smith 0
MIDWESTAdrian 31, Defi ance 13BYU 33, Nebraska 28Baker 58, Culver-Stockton 0Benedictine (Kan.) 44, Avila 28Brockport 44, Oberlin 7Buffalo St. 29, Otterbein 0Carleton 27, Macalester 12Centre 63, Hanover 7Chicago 31, Case Reserve 30Concordia (Ill.) 51, Beloit 50Concordia (Moor.) 41, Jamestown 17Dakota St. 28, Dordt 24Dakota Wesleyan 23, Ottawa, Kan. 22Elmhurst 31, Loras 17Eureka 32, Knox 21Glenville St. 49, Urbana 0Grand View 27, Cent. Methodist 8Hamline 40, Minn.-Morris 7Illinois 52, Kent St. 3Illinois College 53, Aurora 20Illinois Wesleyan 34, Franklin 24Incarnate Word 18, Texas A&M-Kings-
ville 16Indiana 48, S. Illinois 47Indiana St. 52, Butler 17Iowa 31, Illinois St. 14Martin Luther 35, Maranatha Baptist 0Miami (Ohio) 26, Presbyterian 7Missouri 34, SE Missouri 3Missouri Valley 35, Graceland (Iowa) 0Monmouth (Ill.) 31, Hope 19Morningside 77, Sterling 17Mount Union 47, Bethany (WV) 0North Park 23, Concordia (Wis.) 16Northwestern 16, Stanford 6Northwood (Mich.) 20, N. Michigan 7Old Dominion 38, E. Michigan 34Olivet 74, Earlham 13Ripon 17, St. Scholastica 16Rockford 52, Lawrence 17S. Dakota St. 41, Kansas 38Siena Heights 45, Lindenwood (Ill.) 20Simpson (Iowa) 28, Wis.-River Falls 21Sioux Falls 55, Mary 7St. Ambrose 25, Concordia (Mich.) 21St. John’s (Minn.) 45, Dubuque 9St. Norbert 35, Carthage 6St. Olaf 16, Northwestern (Minn.) 13St. Xavier 34, St. Francis (Ill.) 28Upper Iowa 17, Northern St. (SD) 6Valley City St. 55, Mayville St. 6Washington & Jefferson 56, Wooster
10Washington (Mo.) 45, Carnegie-Mellon
24Wayne (Neb.) 58, Minn.-Crookston 16Waynesburg 35, Muskingum 10Wheaton (Ill.) 52, Coe 14Wilmington (Ohio) 14, Bluffton 10Wis. Lutheran 38, Lake Forest 37, 2OTWis.-Platteville 49, Buena Vista 13Wittenberg 38, Capital 27
SOUTHWESTArkansas 48, UTEP 13Austin 55, Hendrix 41Hardin-Simmons 77, Southwestern
(Texas) 6Lincoln (Mo.) 35, Langston 32Rice 56, Wagner 16SW Assemblies of God 30, Westmin-
ster (Mo.) 17Texas Tech 59, Sam Houston St. 45Tulsa 47, FAU 44, OT
FAR WESTAir Force 63, Morgan St. 7California 73, Grambling St. 14Carroll (Mont.) 26, S. Oregon 20Colorado Mines 63, S. Dakota Tech 28Colorado St. 65, Savannah St. 13Idaho St. 55, Black Hills St. 0La Verne 27, George Fox 23Montana Tech 58, Montana St.-North-
ern 14N. Colorado 42, Western St. (Col.) 34North Dakota 24, Wyoming 13Pacifi c (Ore.) 32, Coll. of Idaho 31Portland St. 24, Washington St. 17Puget Sound 22, Claremont-Mudd 19,
OTUCLA 34, Virginia 16W. Montana 49, Rocky Mountain 6W. New Mexico 70, Arizona Christian
14
TransactionsMonday’s Deals
BASEBALLAmerican League
KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Selected the contracts of RHPs Joba Chamberlain and Louis Coleman from Omaha (PCL). Des-ignated RHP Yohan Pino and INF Dusty Coleman for assignment.
NEW YORK YANKEES — Selected the contract of LHP Chris Capuano from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). Recalled LHP Jacob Lindgren from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and placed him on the 60-day DL.
SEATTLE MARINERS — Recalled RHP Danny Farquhar from Tacoma (PCL). Op-tioned LHP Edgar Olmos to Tacoma.
TEXAS RANGERS — Recalled RHP Nick Martinez from Round Rock (PCL). Activated C Robinson Chirinos from the 15-day DL.
National LeagueCHICAGO CUBS — Recalled RHP Carl
Edwards, Jr. and LHP Zac Rosscup from Iowa (PCL).
11 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, September 8, 2015
The Associated PressSALT LAKE CITY — Te-
renn Houk couldn’t stop laughing Monday as he reminisced about the “cra-ziest, happiest experience” of his life.
BYU shockingly beat Nebraska with a long pass as time expired Saturday that handed the Corn-huskers their fi rst loss in a season opener since 1985.
As BYU turned Memori-al Stadium into their own personal mosh pit, includ-ing coach Bronco Men-denhall running in circles and getting emotional af-terward, cameras caught
Houk in a moment of ela-tion. It’s been dubbed the “Houk Hug.”
The BYU receiver was in the end zone when Mitch Mathews caught the ball and immediately turned to the ref standing on the goal line. As soon as he signaled touchdown, Houk sprinted to the man in stripes and gave him a hug. “He catches it and I freak out. I can’t believe he came down with it,” Houk said.
“So I’m in shock. I look at the ref thinking he’s go-ing to go, no, incomplete or something. Because
there’s no way that hap-pened.
“Then he raises his hand and it was literally the happiest moment in my life. So I run over, I’m like, ‘Thank you!’ I was outside myself. I don’t even re-member. In the moment it was probably the dumbest thing to ever do. But I run over and I hug him. Then I realize it’s the ref and I’m like, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m go-ing to get fl agged.’ So I let go and run over and just jump on the pile. It prob-ably was the most surreal, amazing moment ever. ... Yeah, it was pretty stupid.”
Houk said he could see fear in the referee’s eyes, not knowing what he was going to do. Since then, the moment has been re-peatedly shown across sports platforms.
“I felt so dumb, to be honest,” Houk said. “I can’t believe that hap-pened.
“You just have to own it because it got blasted all over social media. I had people from third grade telling me, ‘Did you know?’ Yeah I know. I was there. It was me. You just have to own it and laugh at it.”
BYU receiver Terenn Houk: ‘I felt so dumb’
SHORTS
OLE MISS
TITANS
ALABAMA
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10
12 • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
Entry Weekly ContestMAIL TO:Daily CorinthianFootball ContestP.O. Box 1800Cornith, MS 38835
OR BRING TO:Daily Corinthian
1607 S. Harper St.Cornith, MS 38834
Name
Address Phone
City State Zip
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
(List Total Points):
RULES
If you‘ve always been good at picking winners. these sponsoring merchants and the Daily Corinthian have a way for you to make some easy money. In each ad there is a Football game. Pick who you think will win and fi ll in the entry blank completely. In case of a tie. enter the total number of points that you think will be scored in the tie-breaker game.1. Only one entry per person. 2. All entries must be submitted on offi cial contest ballot. 3. Employees of the Daily Corinthian and immediate families or participating sponsors are not eligible for prizes. 4. All entries must reach the Daily Corinthian by 5:00 P.M. Friday. 5. Mail contest ballot in or drop by the Daily Corinthian, Classifi ed Dept. 6. The person with most correct picks will win. In case of a tie the winner will be decided by the tie breaker. 7. Tie breaker should list total points scored by both teams.
Tiebreaker: Corinth @ Ripley
FOOTBALL CONTEST! WIN $25
For more Best Selection of latemodel used vehicles
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Visit our websitewww.kingkars.net
or662-287-8773
916 Hwy 45 SouthCorinth
Bryan Huggins, DVM3118 North Harper Rd. • Corinth, MS 38834
Phone: 662-396-4250
FERRELL’S HOME& OUTDOOR, INC.
807 SOUTH PARKWAY • 287-21651609 HARPER ROAD • 287-1337 • CORINTH, MS
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306 South Cass Street • Corinth, MS 38834 NMLS#416762
www.cnbcorinth.com
Julie LittleNMLS#479445 662-286-6120
Fax: 662-287-4905
409 Cruise Street • Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1903
Integrity • Knowledge • Reliability
Securities off ered through GIRARD SECURITIES, INC., A Registered Broker/Delaer, Member FINRA/SIPC, and a Registered Invest-ment Advisor. Cooley & Labas is not a subsidiary of GIRARD SECURITIES, Inc. 409 Cruise Street, Corinth, MS 38834 (662) 287-1903.
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We Let our work speak for itself.
Chappell’s Car Wash 325 W. HWY 72
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Owner- Ronnie Chappell
for itself.
1 Hour Approval • $500-$10,000 Loans• Home Inprovement Loans• Bill Consolidation Loans• Auto Loans• Vacation Loans
Family Financial Services101½ N. Cass St., Corinth, MS
662-665-7976
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Debt!Debt!MEMBER FDIC
601 Fillmore St.Corinth
662-287-3171
Hwy 72 EastCorinth
662-287-0800
Right Where You Are
BUY ONE GET ONE
FREEDaily 11am-2pm only
1517 Hwy 72 ECorinth
Village Square Shops662-287-8781
3000 Hwy 72 WCorinth
662-665-0022Drive Thru Available
1609 N Harper RdCorinth
662-287-8255
Buy one Get one 6” sub with purchase of 30 oz. drink
now until Sept. 30th
MEMBER FDIC
601 Fillmore St.Corinth
662-287-3171
Hwy 72 EastCorinth
662-287-0800
Right Where You Are
1.Booneville @ Corinth
2.Haltey @ Central
3.Kossuth @ Tish County
4.Big
gersville @
West Low
ndes
5.Middleton @ Walnut
6.Thrasher @ Smithville
7.Northeast @ Northwest
8.Itawamba @ Holmes
9.Coldwater @ Falkner
10.Ripley @ Saltillo
11.Georgia @ Vanderbilt
12.Fresno State @ Ole Miss
13.LSU @ Mississippi State
Hatley @ Central
Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • 13
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 Corinthian offi ce at 1807 S. Harper Rd. or call 662-287-6111 for more info. Must be paid in advance.
Justice Court Post 1
Justice Court Post 2
State Senate District 4
State Representative District 2
State Representative District 1
Luke Doehner Chris Grisham
Steve Little
Scotty LittleBrodie McEwenJames Voyles
Supervisor District 2
Sheriff
Billy Clyde Burns Ben CaldwellMike LaRue
David Nunley
Constable Post 1
4th District Election Commissioner
Constable Post 2
Scotty L. BradleyJohnny Butler
James BryantWayne Duncan
District Attorney
Arch BullardJohn Weddle
Aneysa “Neicy” MatthewsJimmy McGee
Nick BainBilly Miller
Rita Potts-Parks Eric Powell
Supervisor District 4
Keith “Dude” Conaway (Rep.)Steve Glidewell
Bill Gatlin Sandy Coleman Mitchell
Supervisor District 3
Tim Mitchell (Inc)Shane Serio
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.
Lester “Bubba” Carpenter Lisa Benderman-Wigginton
SERVICES
& Business– Run Your Ad On This Page For $165 Mo. –
Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834
GRISHAM INSURANCE662-286-9835662-415-2363
Final Expense Life Insurance
Long Term Care Medicare Supplements
Part D Prescription Plan
Are you paying too much for your Medicare Supplement?
“ I will always try to help you”
FiFiFinall EExpense
CHRIS GRISHAM
40 Years
Loans $20-$20,000
ROOFTUNE-UP
Complete Package$295.00
1. Clean off Entire Roof2. Thorough Inspection (roof and fascias)3. Replace any missing shingles4. Seal around pipes, chimneys, and sky lights5. Locate and Stop Leaks6. Clean out gutters
662-665-1133
We can also install H.D. leaf-guards. JIMCO is your full
service roofi ng company with 38 years experience and 1
Million in liability insurance.
Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand• Lime Rock• Iuka Gravel• Masonry Sand • Top Soil• Rip-Rap
662-286-9158or 662-287-2296
We also do:• Dozer• Back-Hoe• Track-hoe• Demolition• Dig Ponds and Lakes
We Haul:
DANNY662-603-5465
TRACY662-396-1175
TIM662-284- 6542
ROACH PLUMBING &
ELECTRICAL OF CORINTH
COMBINED 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE
LICENSED & BONDED
References AvailableLicensed & Insured.
No Job too large or too small.
Chad Cornelius - Owner662-665-1849FREE ESTIMATE
E L I T EPressure Washing
Churches • Warehouses Houses • Roofs • Driveways
Fences • & MoreWE DO IT ALL!
Residential & Commercial
We Clean Roofs!
Professional Pressure Washing
High-grade mold inhibitor chemicals & Soft wash system
used to clean roofs
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
PLUMBING& ELECTRIC
JasonRoach’sPlumbing & Electric
662-396-1023
• Home Repair & Remodeling• Backhoe
JASON ROACH OWNER
1159 B CR400CORINTH MS 38834
W & W
INTERIOR - EXTERIORPAINTING
VINYL SIDINGHARDWOOD FLOORING
TRIM WORK $1.25 SQ. FT.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED
25 YEARS EXPERIENCE
662-664-0957
Hat Lady
Is still here!!!Mary Coats
Thank you for 15 years!!
Call me with your vehicle needs, new, certifi ed,
and pre-owned.Come by, text or
call today!!!Long Lewis Ford
Lincoln of Corinth(662)664-0229 Cell / (662)287-3184 Offi [email protected]
STEVENS LAWN MOWING &
MAINTENANCE, LLC
Licensed & Fully InsuredFREE ESTIMATES
662-603-7751 Rhonda & Bubba
StevensOwners
Pressure WashingLicensed & Fully Insured
MEDICAL/DENTAL0220
MS CARE CENTER
is looking for
Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shiftsPlease apply in person.
3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30
E.O.E.
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PETS
FARM
MERCHANDISE
FURNITURE0533
OAK DINING Table & 8Chairs w/ China Cabin-et, Oak Desk, Sofa &Love Seat. Good Cond.603-1860
GENERAL HELP0232
TULL BROS. INCis currently seekingfull time employeesfor its new roof coat-ing division. Tull Bros.offers competit ivewages & a benefit pkg.If interested please ap-ply @ Tull Bros. 1111Hwy 72E. Corinth MS.Mon-Fri. 7a-4p.
GENERAL HELP0232
CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.
GENERAL HELP0232
LPN position for Corinth Medical
Clinic.Please send
resume to Job Opportunity, P.O. Box 298, Florence, AL
35631 oremail to
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
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT
Take stock in America.
Buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
14 • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
HOMES FOR SALE0710
BURNSVILLE
40 ACRESOF
WOODED LAND
$80,000
CALL662-808-9313
OR415-5071
2155 Davis Yancey Rd – Guys
Great Brick house with 4 BRs, 3 and 1/2 half Bath. 2.491 acres. This house is a duplex house with 2 Kitch-ens, 2 LRs & BRs. Each bed-room is good sized and can be used easily with the other sides. Home has 2 shops, one with a 30 x 20 fl oor plan and sitting on a Blacktop Rd. Has a Carport and 1/2 on each side. The outside garage Bedroom has a Full Bath and Utility room, with Bath that has its own Septic system. Fenced back yard. Metal roof. Price reduced from $138,500 to $129,900.
Larry Raines Realty731-645-7770
Bruce Manley 731-610-7129
Property Directory
FOR SALE BY OWNER
3901 Worsham DriveSpacious, well-maintained
3600 square foot trilevel home that offers country style living in the city. 4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths, kitchen, den, sun room, living room and dining room. Large elevated deck in back.
New energy effi cient windows. Roof only one year old.
All major appliances included. Large lot with lots of
beautiful fl owers. Call 662-415-2285 for an appointment.
Price just reduced by $10,000!
WELL ESTABLISHED
BUSINESS FOR SALE ON HWY 72BUILDING, LAND AND BUSINESS
OWNER RETIRINGGREAT INVESTMENT,
$495,000.00
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY662-808-0965662-396-1095
House For Sale By Owner
240 CR 409 Rienzi, MS 38865
2200 sq. ft. 3BR, 2 Bath, Central
Heat & AirNew Paint, New
Carpet in Bedrooms, New Roof, 2 Car Garage, Outside Storage Building
& More
$139,900.00(662) 690-0834
HOME FOR SALE Beautiful, 2 story 2300+ sq ft. 3 BR, 2 baths, Bonus room,
including fridge/freezer combo, gas oven/ stove, dish washer and full size washer and dryer. Cherry hardwood fl oors throughout, new laminate fl ooring in kitchen and
bathrooms, new windows on up-per story. Central heating and air also has gas heaters throughout home. Lg. fenced-in back yard and lg. front yard on corner lot.
Gift card from Walmart upon successful closing!!!
131 N 8th St., Selmer, TN 38375 $65,000 Contact: Ann McLain
(731) 632-1246
3 Bed, 2 Bath on 1.3 AcresFenced Yard,
Open ConceptReduced $105,000
$1,000 BONUS TO BUYER
CALL 662-279-3679 For Viewing.
Desirable Farmington
Area
Patti'sProperty Rentals
662-279-7453 662-808-5229
10AM-6PM
25 CR 3033 Bedroom/2 Bath $750
467 CR 3062 Bedroom/1 Bath $550
Available SoonCaroline Street
5 Bedroom/2 Bath $800
Commercial Offi ce Space for rent on Shiloh Rd in
Corinth, MS!
Completely remodeled! Really
nice! Can be customized to fi t
your needs.
$550 per month(includes
high speed internet, cable, & garbage pickup)
Renter pays utilities.
Serious inquiries only.
Call 662-286-6962662-808-5050 and mention this ad.
SMALL, RESIDENTIAL, 1 BEDROOM. REFERENCES
REQUIRED.662-286-6962 OR
662-808-5050
4414 CR 200
3 BR, 2 Bath Brick with
large shop on 31.5 acres.
Electric CHA$165,000.00
662-286-8513662-212-2031
For Sale By Owner1203 Orchard Lane, Corinth
1,877-square-foot brick home. Three bedrooms,
two baths. Fireplace.Enclosed garage. Large, partially covered deck.
Fenced-in backyard with workshop/shed.
New carpet and fl ooring. Good neighborhood.
$120,000Call (662) 287-6408 or
284-6507.
KENDRICKROAD
3 Bedrooms,2 Bathrooms2 Car Garage662-665-5385
$79,500
LAND &MANUFACTURED
HOMEIUKA, MS
22 +/- ACRES1988 MFG.
HOME3 BEDROOMS
2 BATHSELECTRIC
CENTRAL HEAT & AIR
$69,500Call For Details
& Appt.
256-483-1051
HOMES FOR SALE0710
FOR SALE:LAKESIDE NEIGHBORHOOD PROPERTY
10 Owl Cv., Iuka, MS...located in a unique cove off CR 378 across from Aqua Yacht Harbor... Excellent location for this 5 BR, 3.5ba, 2.5 story home nestled on 2 lots and ready for immediate occupancy. Custom designed inside and out with hardwood fl oors, new cabinets, 9ft ceilings, crown molding and decorative paint thru-out. This home features a large master suite with luxury master bath. Private quarters for the guest in mind add to the vast appeal of this home. WAIT... there’s more: wrap around porch, circle driveway, pull thru garage, open concept living space... only steps from beautiful Pickwick Lake... Call for a private viewing. MLS#3289634. Owner/Agent
$199,000 REDUCED...$189,000
Broker/Owner
Offered to you by Barbara Wilson
Unique Properties365 Hwy 51 N, Ripley, Tn. 38063
731-635-3660 (offi ce) • 731-635-6749 (cell)
HOMES FOR SALE0710
House For Sale By Owner
38 CR 116 • Corinth, MS 38834 (Farmington area)
3BR, 2 Bath. Brick, Large Sunroom, Central Heating & Air, Fireplace, 2 Car Garage, New Roof, Patio,
Outside Storage Building, & More.
662-284-5311 OR 662-286-6901
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
LEGALS0955
IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
RE: IN THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF ALEXR A Y H E W I L B A N K S ,D E C E A S E DNO. 2015-0379-02MM
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on the 20th
day of August, 2015, in CauseNo. 2015-0379-02, issued tothe unders igned, AngelaSimpson, on the Estate ofAlex Rayhe Wilbanks, de-ceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days from thefirst publication of this No-tice, and that failure to pro-bate and register their claimswith the Clerk within thattime will forever bar theclaim.
WITNESS my signature onthis the 21st day of August,2015.
/s/ Angela Simpson Angela SimpsonAdministratrix of the Estateof Alex Rayhe Wilbanks,Deceased
/s/John O. WindsorJohn O. Windsor ; MSB:102155John O. Windsor, Attorney atLawPost Office Drawer 1860Corinth, Mississippi 38835(662)872-0121
3tc 8/25, 9/1, 9/8/2015
14994
LEGALS0955
IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
RE: ADMINISTRA-TION OF THE ESTATEOF BOBBIE N. TREECE,DECEASEDNO. 2015-0440-02
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
NOTICE is herebygiven that letters of ad-ministration have beenon this day granted tothe undersigned, SheilaStone, on the estate ofBobbie N. Treece, de-ceased, by the Chan-cery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, anda l l persons hav ingclaims against said es-tate are required tohave the same pro-bated and registered bythe Clerk of said Courtwithin ninety (90) daysafter the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice or the same shallbe forever barred. Thefirst day of the publica-tion of this notice is the25th day of August,2015.
WITNESS my signa-ture on this 20th day ofAugust, 2015.
SHEILA STONE, AD-MINISTRATRIX OFTHE ESTATE OF BOB-BIE N. TREECE, DE-CEASED3tc 8/25, 9/1, 9/8/2015
Donald DownsP.O. Box 1618Corinth, MS 38835662-287-8088
14990
PUBLICNOTICE
Pursuant to resolu-t ion of the A lcornCounty Board of Super-visors adopted on Au-gust 17, 2015, at a regu-lar meeting thereof, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi, does hereby givenotice of its intentionto borrow the sum of$500,000.00 to be evid-enced by a negotiablenote of Alcorn County,Mississippi, with a finalmaturing date of twoyears from executiondate. All entities desir-ing to submit a bid forpurchase of said negoti-able note shall submit awritten, sealed bid atthe Board Room of theAlcorn County Board ofSupervisors Buildinglocated at 305 SouthFulton Drive, in the Cityo f C o r i n t h , A l c o r nCounty, Mississippi, by9:00 A.M. on the 21stday of September 2015.
Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, intends to ac-cept the lowest rate ofinterest or the bid thatrepresents the lowestnet cost to A lcornCounty, Mississippi, butAlcorn County, Missis-sippi, reserves the rightto reject any and allbids.
The rate of interestto be quoted by inter-ested bidders shall notexceed that authorizedin Section 75-17-101,Miss iss ippi Code of1972. Said promissorynote shall mature withone-half of the princip-al and all accrued in-terest due and payableone year from date ofexecution and the bal-ance (principal and in-terest) shall be due andpayable two years afterthe date of execution.The County shall re-serve the right to pre-pay in whole or in partat any time withoutpenalty.
This 17th day of August,2015.
ALCORN COUNTY BOARDOF SUPERVISORS
BY:Lowell Hinton,President
ATTEST:Bobby Marolt,Chancery Clerk 2tc 9/8, 9/15/2015
14991
IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
RE: IN THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF ALEXR A Y H E W I L B A N K S ,D E C E A S E DNO. 2015-0379-02MM
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on the 20th
day of August, 2015, in CauseNo. 2015-0379-02, issued tothe unders igned, AngelaSimpson, on the Estate ofAlex Rayhe Wilbanks, de-ceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and all persons hav-ing claims against said estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days from thefirst publication of this No-tice, and that failure to pro-bate and register their claimswith the Clerk within thattime will forever bar theclaim.
WITNESS my signature onthis the 21st day of August,2015.
/s/ Angela Simpson Angela SimpsonAdministratrix of the Estateof Alex Rayhe Wilbanks,Deceased
/s/John O. WindsorJohn O. Windsor ; MSB:102155John O. Windsor, Attorney atLawPost Office Drawer 1860Corinth, Mississippi 38835(662)872-0121
3tc 8/25, 9/1, 9/8/2015
14994
MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563
2 PAIR Orange Coveralls$25.00 each. 284-4604
METAL CARGO Contain-ers. 20 and 40 foot Greatstorage. 731-689-5616.
BLACK & DECKER Elec-tric Lawn Mower &
Weed Eater, Great Cond.(50' cord included) $100.
662-415-4400
EUREKA VACUUM Clean-er (bagless) $10.00
284-4604
JUNIOR GIRLS Tops sizexs-med. Name Brand. 12for $20. 643-7650
LADIE'S Scrubs size xs-s.5 tops, 4 bottoms. $27.643-7650
WANT TO make certainyour ad gets attention?Ask about attentiongetting graphics.
MENS CLOTHING pants40x34, shirts XLG, 2XX-Lg, Sport Coat, Jacket5.00 to 10.00, Sport Coat52 @12.00 731-689-3373
NEW NAVY BlueCoveralls $10.00
284-4604
NEW NAVY Blue Shirts.$8.00 284-4604
NEW NAVY Blue SweatJackets $8.00 284-4604
PAIR (2) Queen AnneChairs with arms, darkwood, plum fabric. Nice,hardly used chairs. $25.each. 662-415-2447
REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00
EXTRACall 662-287-6111
for details.SMITH CORONA ElectricTypewriter. $10.00
284-4604
TELEVISION (NOT f latscreen) 32" $55.
643-7650
TELEVISION (NOT f latscreen) 26" $45.
643-7650
TELEVISION (NOT f latscreen) 19" $25.
643-7650
USED BRASS interiordoor knobs, Light Fix-tures and 2 Ceiling Fans,all for $60.00
662-603-1860
USED JENNAIR cook top30 in. $45.00662-603-1860
VANITY MIRRORS , NoFrame 48in. x 39 in. and40 in. x 39 in. $20.00 foreach. 662-603-1860
VCR TAPES.50cents each
284-4604
YOUTH GIRLS Tops size12 - 14. Name Brand. 10for $16. 643-7650
REAL ESTATE FOR RENT
UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610
W E A V E R A P T S . 5 0 4N.Cass,1BR,porch,w/d$375/400 + util. 284-7433
FURNISHED APARTMENTS0615
3 BR , 2 Bath, CH/A,Stove/Refrig., 500.mo.Burnsville. 662-660-9429
MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
HOMES FOR SALE0710
HUDPUBLISHER’S
NOTICEAll real estate adver-tised herein is subjectto the Federal FairHousing Act whichmakes it illegal to ad-vertise any preference,limitation, or discrimi-nation based on race,color, religion, sex,handicap, familial statusor national origin, or in-tention to make anysuch preferences, limi-tations or discrimina-tion.State laws forbid dis-crimination in the sale,rental, or advertising ofreal estate based onfactors in addition tothose protected underfederal law. We will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis.
TRANSPORTATION
FINANCIAL
LEGALS
LEGALS0955IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
RE: ADMINISTRA-TION OF THE ESTATEOF BOBBIE N. TREECE,DECEASEDNO. 2015-0440-02
NOTICE TOCREDITORS
NOTICE is herebygiven that letters of ad-ministration have beenon this day granted tothe undersigned, SheilaStone, on the estate ofBobbie N. Treece, de-ceased, by the Chan-cery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, anda l l persons hav ingclaims against said es-tate are required tohave the same pro-bated and registered bythe Clerk of said Courtwithin ninety (90) daysafter the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice or the same shallbe forever barred. Thefirst day of the publica-tion of this notice is the25th day of August,2015.
WITNESS my signa-ture on this 20th day ofAugust, 2015.
SHEILA STONE, AD-MINISTRATRIX OFTHE ESTATE OF BOB-BIE N. TREECE, DE-CEASED3tc 8/25, 9/1, 9/8/2015
Donald DownsP.O. Box 1618Corinth, MS 38835662-287-8088
14990
LEGALS0955 LEGALS0955
Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • 15
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
868AUTOMOBILES
864TRUCKS/VANS/
SUV’S
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.
134,514 miles$13,900 OBO
Just serviced and ready for the road.
2004 Hummer H2
Call @ 662-664-0210
2006 Jeep Liberty
New Tires100K Miles
Never BeeWrecked
$8200 OBO662-664-0357
REDUCED
$7500.00 OBO
2004 Nissan Quest 104,000
miles, cold ac, new tires, fully loaded, dvd entertainment system, runs and
looks great, 4850.00 662-665-1995
2012 JeepWrangler 4WD
00 Miles, Red Garage Kept, it has
been babied. All maintenance
records available. Call or Text:
662-594-5830
1973 Jeep CommandoNew tires, paint, seats,
and window & door seals. Engine like new, 3 speed, 4x4, roll-bar,
wench.Great Shape!
$10,000731-607-3172
832Motorcycles/ATV’S
1990 Harley Davidson
Custom Soft-Tail$9000
1949 Harley Davidson Panhead
$9000 OBO
662-808-2994
1987 FORD 250 DIESELUTILITY SERVICE TRUCK
$4000. IN GOOD CONDITION731-645-8339 OR
731-453-5239
1500 Goldwing
Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.
$4500662-284-9487
2003 100 yr. Anniversary 883 Harley Sportster,
color: blue, 14,500 miles, $4,900. OBO. Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.
Call @662-664-0210
2002 Harley Fat Boy,color: purple, 27,965 miles, $7,900 OBO
Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for the road.
Call @ 662-664-0210
2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bikew/removable
(three bolts) trike kit., 6400 miles,
excellent condition.$7500.00
662-808-9662 or 662-808-2020
REDUCED 2012 BansheeBighorn
Side-by-Side4 X 4 w/ WenchAM/FM w/ CD
$7200.00 OBO
662-664-0357
2008 FORD F150 STX
54,000 miles, 4.2 V-6, automatic, new tires,
dark blue, cold AC, runs and drives like new.
$8950 FIRM662-665-1995
2003 MustangSVT Cobra
Tuned 4.6 Engine5 SpeedLowered
4:10 GearsAll Power & Air
$7000.Call/Text
662-286-7977
2010 Chevy Equinox LS
130K Miles, Fully Loaded
GREAT Condition!
$10,500662-415-8343 or 415-7205
$10,000
Antique 1986 FORD F350 XL- Dualley, 7.3
Diesel, new tires, Paint, Lots of Extras, 164,803 Miles, Motor runs well. 2nd Owner, $3500.00- Serious inquiries only.
662-287-8894
Antique 1986 FORDREDUCED
2001 Nissan XterraFOR SALE
Needs a little work.Good Bargain!
Call:662-643-3084
95’CHEVYASTRO
Cargo VanGood, Sound
Van
$2700872-3070
06 Chevy Trailblazer
Powereverything!Good heat
and Air$3,250 OBO
662-319-7145
2006 Kawasaki Vulcan 1600
13,500 Miles, Serviced in November, New Back
Tire, Cobra Pipes, Slingshot Windshield
$4295 OBO662-212-2451
2007Harley-Davidson
STREET GLIDE23,710 MILES
$13,500662-665-1044
2006 YAMAHA 1700GREAT CONDITION!
APPROX. 26,000 MILES
$4350(NO TRADES)
662-665-0930662-284-8251
1999 Harley Classic Touring, loaded, color:
blue, lots of extras. 70,645 Hwy. miles,
$7,900.00 OBO Just serviced, good or new tires, brakes, ready for
the road. Call @ 662-664-0210
1976 F115428 Motor
Very Fast
$3,500.
662-808-9313662-415-5071
1997 Mustang
BlackLike new on the inside and out.
Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles
$4,000.00662-664-0357
GT
2006 Express 25006.6 Diesel Runs
and drives great. 172,000 miles. A/C
and new tiresWell serviced!
$8500.00662-594-1860
1987 FORD BRONCOALL ORIGINAL
VINTAGE!RUNS & DRIVES
GOOD
$2500/OBO662-286-1717
1994 Nissan Quest New Lifters,Cam, Head,
Struts and Shocks.$2000.
Call 603-9446
1998 PORSCHE BOXSTER6 cyl., 5 speed
ConvertibleLeather Seat Covers
All OriginalElectric Windows
& Seats88,000 miles
$15,000. OBO664-6484
For Sale or Trade1978 Mercedes
6.9 Motor 135,000 miles.Only made 450 that year.
$2,500. OBOSelling due to health
reasons.Harry Dixon
286-6359
2011 GMC CANYON-RED
REG. CAB, 2 WD
78,380 MILES
$11,900 OBO
662-462-7790
2004 BMW• 3.0L • 155K miles
• New tires$12,900 OBO
Just serviced and ready for the road.
Call @ 662-664-0210
1996 Pontiac Bonneville
White, 3800 engine158,000 miles
New Tires, New Fuel Pump
Same Owner Since 1998
CLEAN
$1700. OBO 287-3719415-1202665-1014
1989 Mercedes Benz300 CE
145K miles, Rear bucket seats,
Champagne color, Excellent Condition.
Diligently maintained. $5000.00
662-415-2657$4000.00
1994 F150Long Wheel
Base & Tool BoxGood Motor & Transmission
Runs fi ne
$1400.00662-664-3350
2005Chev. Impala
Tan, 4 DR162,000 mi.
CLEAN,GREAT SHAPE
$3000.00287-8456
01 JEEP 4.0 New top
front & rear bumper Custom Jeep radio
and CD player$9,200
662-643-3565
2004 Ford Expedition"Eddie Bauer"
Dark Green with Gold Trim, 2WD Third Row Seats, New Brakes,
Nearly New Tires, Clean$4750. OBO287-3719415-1202 665-1014
2014 Jeep WranglerApprox 15000 miles
BOUGHT NEW, Complete History, Loaded, 4x4, All power, Phone, CD, DVD, Satellite, Auto,
Removable Tops, Step Bars, Dark Tint, Red - Black,
(LIKE NEW) IUKA
256-577-1349$29,500.00
2013 Arctic Cat
308 miles4 Seater w/seat beltsPhone charger outlet
Driven approx. 10 times
Excellent ConditionWench (front bumper)
(662)279-0801
18 FT. CAR TRAILERASKING
$1800.00662-643-5735
2009 Pontiac G6
Super Nice, Really Clean,
Oil changed regularly, Good cold air and has
good tires. 160k
Asking $5400. OBO CALL/TEXT DANIEL @
662-319-7145
2004 Cadillac Seville SLSLoaded, leather, sunroof, chrome
wheels.
89,000 Miles$5500.
Call 662-603-1290
SOLD
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY
HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR
ALL-PRO Home Mainten-ance and Repair- 662-415-6646
STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR
AMERICANMINI STORAGE
2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color
287-1024
MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE
286-3826.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
LEGALS0955
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’SSALE
WHEREAS, on July 17,2009, Wayne Null executedand delivered to William H.Davis, Jr. as trustee, a deed oftrust on the property herein-after described to secure pay-ment of an indebtednesstherein mentioned owing toCommerce Bank (f/k/a Com-merce National Bank), Cor-inth, Mississippi, beneficiary,which deed of trust is recor-ded in the office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn County,Mississippi, as InstrumentNumber 200903527; and
WHEREAS, said indebted-ness has matured in its en-tirety and is now past due,unpaid and in default, the pro-visions of said deed of trusthave been broken by saidgrantors and have not beencured and the said beneficiary,the present holder of said in-debtedness, has requestedthe undersigned to foreclosesaid deed of trust pursuant tothe provisions thereof to en-force payment of said debt;
NOW, THEREFORE, no-tice is hereby given that I, theunders igned trustee, onSeptember 30, 2015, at thesouth doors of the countycourthouse of Alcorn County,Mississippi, in the City ofCorinth, Mississippi, withinlegal hours for such sale, willoffer for sale and sell at pub-lic outcry to the highest bid-der for cash the said prop-erty conveyed to me by saiddeed of trust described as fol-lows:
Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:
Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;thence run East 642.21 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun North 04 degrees 24minutes 04 seconds East300.89 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin; thence run West 665.30feet to a steel post found;thence run North 525.63 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun South 81 degrees 42minutes 06 seconds West247.63 feet to a 1/2 inch steelpin on the East Right-Of-Wayof Alcorn County Road 402;thence run South 10 degrees33 minutes 01 seconds East126.14 feet, South 11 de-grees 40 minutes 45 secondsEast 372.14 feet to a steelpost found; thence continuealong said Right-Of-WaySouth 16 degrees 38 minutes37 seconds East 208.77 feetto a steel post found; thencerun East 63.09 feet to thePoint of Beginning. Contain-ing 3.04 Acres in the South-east Quarter of Section 23,and 4.50 Acres in the South-west Quarter of Section 24,for a total of 7.54 Acres,more or less.
LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:
Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.
ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT:One (1) 2002 Clayton manu-factured home, Serial No.CLA051163TN.
I will sell and convey onlysuch title as is vested in me bysaid deed of trust.
Signed, posted and publishedthis 8th day of September,2015.
William H. Davis, Jr.Trustee
Publication Dates:September 8, 2015,September 15, 2015,September 22, 2015,September 29, 2015
Clayton O'Donnell, PLLCAttorneys at Law511 Franklin StreetP.O. Box 1613Corinth, MS 38835-1613662.396.4808
15008
16 • Tuesday, September 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian
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.
COMMERCIAL
804BOATS
816RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES
470TRACTORS/FARM
EQUIP.
Sportsman CamperQueen Bed, Couch
sleeps 2, lots of cabinets, pulled 6 times,
non-smoker, clean as new on the inside.
$9,500.00 287-3461 or
396-1678
2011 AR-ONE Star Craft, 14ft. Fridge/AC, Stove,
Microwave, Full bath, immaculate condition. Refi nance or payoff (prox. $5300) @ Trustmark,
payments $198.Excellent starter for small family.
284-0138
36ft, 2 Air conditioners, Generator, 30K miles
$27,000808-0653
1999ENDEAVOUR
2006 WILDERNESSCAMPER
29 FT.
5TH WHEELLARGE SLIDE OUTFULLY EQUIPPED
NON-SMOKING OWNERIUKA
CALL 662-423-1727
‘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.
$65,000662-415-0590
REDUCEDSOLD
2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out
& built-in TV antenna, 2 TV’s, 7400 miles.
$75,000. 662-287-7734
REDUCED
Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,
new tires, Price negotiable.
662-660-3433
1997 New Holland 3930 Tractor
1400 Hours
$8500.00731-926-0006
Older
Model Ford
Tractor
with 2 Row
Equipment.
$6000.00
662-286-6571662-286-3924
1993 John Deere 5300
Tractorw/ John Deere
loader.2900 Hours
$10,500731-926-0006
TRACTOR FOR SALE
JOHN DEERE 40-20
NEW PUMPS, GOOD TIRES
RETIRED FROM FARMING$14,000
662-419-1587
2009 TT45ANew Holland Tractor
335 Hours8 x 2 Speed, non-Synchro Mesh Transmission. Roll over protective structure, hydrolic power lift. Like New Condition, owner
deceased, Kossuth Area. $12,500- 662-424-3701
Tractor For Sale!John Deere
16-30New injectors & Fuel PumpGood Tires
$6500.00662-419-1587
Hyster ForkliftNarrow Aisle
24 Volt Battery3650.00287-1464
Clark Forklift8,000 lbs,
outside tiresGood Condition
$15,000
662-287-1464
Big Boy Forklift$1250
Great for a small warehouse
662-287-1464
Toyota Forklift5,000 lbs
Good Condition662-287-1464
53' STEP DECK TRAILER
CUSTOM BUILT TO HAUL 3 CREW CAB 1
TON TRUCKS.
BUILT-IN RAMPS & 3' PULL OUTS @ FRONT
& REAR.
BOOMS, CHAINS & LOTS OF ACCESSORIES
$10,000/OBO
CALL 662-603-1547
2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.
Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never
launched, powerhouse out-board 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
Loweline Boat
14’ fl at bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor
and all. Call
662-415-9461 or
662-554-5503
1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP
Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint,
new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot
control.
$6500.662-596-5053
15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat25 HP Motor
$2700.00Ask for Brad:
284-4826
2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer
Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube
$19,300662-427-9063
14 Ft. Aluminum Boat & Trailer,25 HP Johnson
Motor.New Battery
$2400.REDUCED
Call for More Info:662-286-8455
1979 GMCDUMP TRUCKGRAIN BED$4,000GOOD CONDITION
731-645-8339 OR
731-453-5239
ASKING $7500.00Or Make Me An Offer CALL 662-427-9591
Call (662)427-9591 orCell phone (662)212-4946
Built by Scully’s Aluminum Boats of Louisiana.
ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE16FT./5FT.
115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR
TRAILER NEWLY REWIREDALL TIRES NEW
NEW WINCH
2003 CHEROKEE 285SLEEPS 8
EXCELLENT CONDITIONEVERYTHING WORKS
5TH WHEEL W/GOOSE NECK ADAPTER
CENTRAL HEAT & AIRALL NEW TIRES & NEW
ELECTRIC JACK ON TRAILER
$8995Call Richard 662-664-4927
1956 FORD 6005 SPEED
POWER STEERINGREMOTE HYDRAULICS
GOOD TIRESGOOD CONDITION
$4,200 662-287-4514
EQUIPMENT HAULER
CALL FOR ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION
662-808-9313 OR662-415-5071
30' MOTOR HOME
1988 FORD
SLEEPS 6
51,000 MILES
$4300
662-415-5247
Bass Tracker Boat
17 foot with console, foot
control trolling motor, 2 new
batteries, depth fi nder, live well, life jackets, no leaks, carpet in good shape, 40
hp Johnson, good boat.
$2800.00662-415-8425
SOLDWINNEBAGO JOURNEY
CLASS A , RV 2000 MODEL
34.9 FT. LONG50 AMP HOOKUPCUMMINS DIESEL
FREIGHTLINER CHASSISLARGE SLIDE OUT
ONAN QUIET GENERATOR
VERY WELL KEPT.,500.
662-728-2628
CAMPER & TRUCK2007 F250 Super
Duty Power Stroke Diesel Truck
2006 Forest River 30 Ft. Camper.
Both for$10,000
Call 662-462-3754
WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOME
198940'
Queen Size Bed1 Bath
Sleeps 6-7people comfortably
$8500662-808-9313
StarcraftSemi V Boat
15' Long, 5.5' Wide50 hp Mercury outboard motor
Motor guide trolling 30 pound thrust
3 Seats + 2 Bench Seats, Canopy
$2000Call 662-415-5842
or 415-5375
REDUCED
$8500.00
SOLD
SOLD
Excellent ConditionBrand New RefrigeratorNew Tires & Hot Water
Heater. Sleeps Six7,900 ACTUAL MILES
$12,500. OBOMust See!!
Call 662-665-1420
1990 Allegro Motor Home
$25,000
1995 15’ Aluminum Boat, Outboard
Motor, Trolling Mtr., New Rod Holder,
New Electric Anchor
$2550.00462-3373
SOLD
W & W HORSEOR CATTLE TRAILER
ALL ALUMINUMLIKE NEW
$7000.731-453-5239731-645-8339
CAMPING TRAILER
2009 WILDWOOD WITH QUEEN BED & TWO BUNK BEDS.
$8900.00 256-585-0602 (CELL)731-632-4296(HOME)
ADVERTISE YOUR AUTO, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR,
MOTORCYCLE, RV OR ATVLIST IN OURGUARANTEED AUTO SECTIONFOR AS LITTLE AS.................................(No Dealers - Non Commercial Only)
1607 South Harper Rd email: [email protected] Corinth MS 38834 662-287-6111