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Vol. 119, No. 179 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages One section Tuesday July 28, 2015 75 cents Today 96 Partly sunny Tonight 77 25 years ago 10 years ago A gift from the Dr. Carl and Mallie Norwood Charitable Trust of $431,000 puts the CARE Endowment over the $1.2 million mark. The funds are to be used for grants and initia- tives to improve the quality of life for all in Alcorn County. 0% chance of rain Ed Bearss, chief of the history division of the National Park Service, tells Corinthians in a community meeting the area would be ideal for the creation of an interpretive center by the NPS. The area was previously slated as a priority site in the American Battlefield Protection Plan. Former MCHS teacher given 100th Honor Staff. Page 3 Northeast offers unique cake decorating class. Page 3 Tippah County squad among schools taking part in intial NE event. Page 10 McNairy County Prentiss County Sports While Alcorn County begins to prepare to name a replacement for Jimmy Dallan “Dal” Nelms as Sec- ond District supervisor, prosecu- tors are seeking to have him held without bond following his arrest on a grand larceny charge last week. The state’s motion regarding bond for Nelms is set to be taken up by Judge Paul Funderburk this morning in Alcorn County Circuit Court. Nelms’ case is not going to trial this week on the charges brought by the state auditor as originally scheduled. The district attorney’s ofce on Friday said an announcement about the case will be made in a press conference this week with the auditor’s ofce. In circuit court Monday morning, Funderburk scheduled the bond hearing for today after speaking with the attorneys. Nelms has been in custody at the county jail since Thursday, when he turned himself in after being accused of stealing cash from a money bag at O’Reilly Auto Parts in Corinth on an earlier date. On Friday, Nelms made it known that he would resign from his post as Second District supervisor effective immediately and withdraw his can- didacy for reelection. Board of Supervisors President Lowell Hinton on Monday said the county is checking into the le- galities of what it needs to do be- fore making an appointment to replace Nelms. There is no meeting State motion: Keep Nelms in jail BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Nelms Please see NELMS | 2 IUKA — A small single-en- gine plane made a crash land- ing on a Tishomingo County road Sunday. The Mississippi Highway Pa- trol responded to the scene of the crash that happened around 3:30 p.m. Sergeant Ray Hall said the plane made a crash landing on County Road 191. “The plane was trying to re- turn to the airport when it when down,” said Hall. The pilot and a passenger were on board at the time of the crash. MHP did not immediately re- lease the names. No one was seriously injured. Plane crash lands in Tish County BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] EMT Ronnie Gray has been on thousands of calls. His last one comes Friday. The 66-year-old is calling it quits after 44 years at Magno- lia Regional Heath Center on July 31. “This is something I have been thinking about for a cou- ple of years,” said Gray. “It’s time to go … I have several things to do and I have grand- kids who need me.” His co-workers say it will be different without Gray on the job. “He has been here since my rst call,” said EMS Director Mike Lutz. “All of us have fall- en under his wing as students.” “You learned the right way to do things with Ronnie,” added paramedic Rick Bridges. Gray started his long career at the hospital in 1971. He be- gan working in the stock room before becoming director of purchasing while also going on calls as an EMT. Gray responds to retirement call BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Staff photo by Steve Beavers Ronnie Gray will be retiring from Magnolia Regional Health Center after 44 years on Friday. Excessive heat will continue to plaque the Crossroads area this week before a cold front brings showers and cooler tem- peratures. A heat advisory has been is- sued by the National Weather Service for today and Wednes- day. Today’s heat index values are expected to reach as high as 106, with a high temperature near 97 and mostly sunny skies. Wednesday’s high will reach near 95 with rain chances in- creasing late Wednesday after- noon. According to the NWS, a cold front will bring a 30 per- cent chance of strong thunder- storms and gusty winds to the area late Wednesday night. The cold front’s passage will bring much cooler temperatures. Thursday’s high is expected to reach 89 with a low around 69. The weekend outlook in- cludes sunny skies and highs in the high 80s with lows in the mid to high 60s. NWS expects front to lower heat index BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Corinth School District chil- dren and their families will take a journey when school be- gins. This journey will take them through forests and mountains and villages. Readers will meet monkeys, dragons and gold- sh. A peddler, a village boy, a king, a dragon, and a man of mystery and wisdom will all be encountered. Students will be introduced to young Minli who leads this journey in Grace Lin’s “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon.” Plans have been nalized for the district-wide read of “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon.” Every family in the Corinth School District will re- ceive a copy of the book during the registration process and asked to participate together in a literacy learning experience during the months of August and September. Funding for this program has been provided by Scholastic and the Corinth School Dis- tricts Innovative Approaches to Literacy Grant funded by the US Department of Education. This initiative is intended to generate a shared experience in which all members of the school community read and discuss the same book. A read- ing schedule will be provided to parents and school and com- munity activities are planned with the hope that families and community members will par- ticipate. Community members may purchase a book for $6 at school ofces. “The Corinth School District is interested in creating lifelong readers,” said Tanya Nelson, a literacy specialist in the Corinth Corinth schools launch reading program for students, families BY TAYLOR COOMBS For the Daily Corinthian Please see GRAY | 2 Please see READING | 2 Daily Corinthian 2782 S Harper Rd www.jumperrealty.com PROGRESS the Sign of Doug Jumper Michael McCreary Ann Hardin Rick Jones Neil Paul Marea Wilson John Hayes

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Page 1: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 119, No. 179 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

TuesdayJuly 28, 2015

75 centsToday96

Partly sunnyTonight

77

25 years ago 10 years agoA gift from the Dr. Carl and Mallie Norwood Charitable

Trust of $431,000 puts the CARE Endowment over the $1.2 million mark. The funds are to be used for grants and initia-tives to improve the quality of life for all in Alcorn County.

0% chance of rain

Ed Bearss, chief of the history division of the National Park Service, tells Corinthians in a community meeting the area would be ideal for the creation of an interpretive center by the NPS. The area was previously slated as a priority site in the American Battlefi eld Protection Plan.

Former MCHS teacher given 100th

Honor Staff.

Page 3

Northeast offers unique cake

decorating class.

Page 3

Tippah County squad among schools taking part in intial NE event.

Page 10

McNairy County Prentiss County Sports

While Alcorn County begins to prepare to name a replacement for Jimmy Dallan “Dal” Nelms as Sec-ond District supervisor, prosecu-tors are seeking to have him held without bond following his arrest on a grand larceny charge last week.

The state’s motion regarding bond for Nelms is set to be taken

up by Judge Paul Funderburk this morning in Alcorn County Circuit Court. Nelms’ case is not going to trial this week on the charges brought by the state auditor as originally scheduled. The district attorney’s offi ce on Friday said an announcement about the case will be made in a press conference this week with the auditor’s offi ce.

In circuit court Monday morning,

Funderburk scheduled the bond hearing for today after speaking with the attorneys.

Nelms has been in custody at the county jail since Thursday, when he turned himself in after being accused of stealing cash from a money bag at O’Reilly Auto Parts in Corinth on an earlier date. On Friday, Nelms made it known that he would resign from his post as

Second District supervisor effective immediately and withdraw his can-didacy for reelection.

Board of Supervisors President Lowell Hinton on Monday said the county is checking into the le-galities of what it needs to do be-fore making an appointment to replace Nelms. There is no meeting

State motion: Keep Nelms in jailBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

NelmsPlease see NELMS | 2

IUKA — A small single-en-gine plane made a crash land-ing on a Tishomingo County road Sunday.

The Mississippi Highway Pa-trol responded to the scene of the crash that happened around 3:30 p.m.

Sergeant Ray Hall said the

plane made a crash landing on County Road 191.

“The plane was trying to re-turn to the airport when it when down,” said Hall.

The pilot and a passenger were on board at the time of the crash.

MHP did not immediately re-lease the names.

No one was seriously injured.

Plane crash lands in Tish County

BY ZACK [email protected]

EMT Ronnie Gray has been on thousands of calls.

His last one comes Friday.The 66-year-old is calling it

quits after 44 years at Magno-lia Regional Heath Center on July 31.

“This is something I have been thinking about for a cou-

ple of years,” said Gray. “It’s time to go … I have several things to do and I have grand-kids who need me.”

His co-workers say it will be different without Gray on the job.

“He has been here since my fi rst call,” said EMS Director Mike Lutz. “All of us have fall-en under his wing as students.”

“You learned the right way to do things with Ronnie,” added paramedic Rick Bridges.

Gray started his long career at the hospital in 1971. He be-gan working in the stock room before becoming director of purchasing while also going on calls as an EMT.

Gray responds to retirement callBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Ronnie Gray will be retiring from Magnolia Regional Health Center after 44 years on Friday.

Excessive heat will continue to plaque the Crossroads area this week before a cold front brings showers and cooler tem-peratures.

A heat advisory has been is-sued by the National Weather Service for today and Wednes-day.

Today’s heat index values are expected to reach as high as 106, with a high temperature near 97 and mostly sunny skies.

Wednesday’s high will reach

near 95 with rain chances in-creasing late Wednesday after-noon.

According to the NWS, a cold front will bring a 30 per-cent chance of strong thunder-storms and gusty winds to the area late Wednesday night. The cold front’s passage will bring much cooler temperatures.

Thursday’s high is expected to reach 89 with a low around 69.

The weekend outlook in-cludes sunny skies and highs in the high 80s with lows in the mid to high 60s.

NWS expects front to lower heat index

BY ZACK [email protected]

Corinth School District chil-dren and their families will take a journey when school be-gins.

This journey will take them through forests and mountains and villages. Readers will meet monkeys, dragons and gold-fi sh. A peddler, a village boy,

a king, a dragon, and a man of mystery and wisdom will all be encountered. Students will be introduced to young Minli who leads this journey in Grace Lin’s “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon.”

Plans have been fi nalized for the district-wide read of “Where the Mountain Meets the Moon.” Every family in the

Corinth School District will re-ceive a copy of the book during the registration process and asked to participate together in a literacy learning experience during the months of August and September.

Funding for this program has been provided by Scholastic and the Corinth School Dis-tricts Innovative Approaches

to Literacy Grant funded by the US Department of Education.

This initiative is intended to generate a shared experience in which all members of the school community read and discuss the same book. A read-ing schedule will be provided to parents and school and com-munity activities are planned with the hope that families and

community members will par-ticipate.

Community members may purchase a book for $6 at school offi ces.

“The Corinth School District is interested in creating lifelong readers,” said Tanya Nelson, a literacy specialist in the Corinth

Corinth schools launch reading program for students, familiesBY TAYLOR COOMBS

For the Daily Corinthian

Please see GRAY | 2

Please see READING | 2

Daily Corinthian

2782 S Harper Rdwww.jumperrealty.com

PROGRESS

theSignof

DougJumper

MichaelMcCreary

AnnHardin

RickJones

Neil Paul

Marea Wilson

John Hayes

Page 2: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, July 28, 2015

School District. “We want children to learn to read at home as well as at school.”

The reading program

is voluntary but students will be given opportuni-ties to win prizes for cor-rectly answering trivia questions, participating in school activities, and special events planned as

a part of the program.“The beauty of this pro-

gram is that it goes be-yond a teacher urging a student to read at home,” said Dana Bullard, Cam-bridge Coordinator in the

Corinth School District. “This involves the entire family in a reading expe-rience and it is our hope that families will read and discuss the book to-gether.”

of the board scheduled this week, and he said the board would give fi ve days notice before a public meeting.

The board will appoint a person to fi ll the post until the general election winner takes offi ce.

The cases of two oth-ers involved in the au-ditor’s embezzlement investigation — Joseph Lin McNair Jr. and Dan-

ny Roy Peters — have previously been contin-ued by the court. Wil-liam Paul Rhodes’ case is also pending.

Jimmy Ray Mitchell pleaded guilty last week to six counts including fraudulently obtaining public funds and false representation to de-fraud government. He remains free on bond and awaits sentencing after prosecution of the co-defendants.

“I had two time cards at that time,” added Gray, who got his feet wet in the ambulance service in 1972. “I thought it was a way I could make a little extra money and give back to the community at the same time.”

Gray moved to ambulance service full-time in 1982.

“It’s all new territory these days,” he said. “The equipment is better today than ever before.”

Gray remembers when the emer-gency room consisted of only three beds.

“We outgrew that,” he said with a smile.

The number of emergency calls have also increased through the years.

“Back then we might break 200 calls a month,” said the EMT. “Today it’s about 500-600 a month … it has become a job for younger people.”

When he clocks out Friday for a fi nal time Gray is going to miss the family atmosphere the hospital has provided.

“If you like what you are doing, you will never work a day in your life,” said Gray. “I like what I am doing … I work with great people who are just like my family.”

“He is the last of the original old

timers,” said dispatcher Dianne Ellzey. “Ronnie has never come to work in a bad mood.”

“If he was having a bad day, he left in the parking lot before he came into work,” added Bridges.

That’s hard to do in his job.“We never see anyone when they

are happy,” said the retiring EMT. “I always wanted to get us to the scene safe and then get patients to trust that we were there to take care of them.”

What Gray has done for over 40 years has been fun. He also made it enjoyable for his co-workers.

“Ronnie has a great attitude and always started the morning with a joke,” said Bridges.

“Everything should be fun,” add-ed Gray, who has been married to Margie for 19 years.

Fun on the job continues for a few more days and then it’s the grand-children’s turn to enjoy their grand-father.

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

EMT Ronnie Gray has been on thousands of emergency calls during his 44 years on the job.

GRAY

CONTINUED FROM 1

READING

CONTINUED FROM 1

NELMS

CONTINUED FROM 1

JACKSON — The state and a Clarksdale teacher accused of helping stu-dents cheat on state tests could settle the case, ending a hearing.

Mississippi Depart-ment of Education offi -cials seek to suspend or re-voke the teaching license of Frances Smith-Kemp, who was a fi fth-grade teacher at Clarksdale’s Heidelberg Elementary

School in 2012-2013.The state and Smith-

Kemp’s lawyer agreed to recess a hearing to dis-cuss a settlement.

State testing direc-tor Walt Drane testifi ed Monday that Smith-Kemp corrected stu-dents’ wrong answers during tests. He says a volunteer proctor, stu-dents, and Heidelberg’s other fi fth-grade teacher told similar stories.

Teacher seeks to settle case

Associated Press

November 3rdRe-Elect

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Page 3: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Region/StateDaily Corinthian • 3Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Today in

History

Today is Tuesday, July 28, the 209th day of 2015. There are 156 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlights in History:

On July 28, 1945, a U.S. Army bomber crashed into the 79th floor of New York’s Empire State Building, killing 14 people. The U.S. Senate ratified the United Nations Charter by a vote of 89-2.

On this date:

In 1540, King Henry VIII’s chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, was executed, the same day Henry married his fifth wife, Catherine Howard.

In 1794, Maximilien Robespierre, a leading figure of the French Rev-olution, was sent to the guillotine.

In 1914, World War I began as Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia.

In 1915, more than 300 American sailors and Marines arrived in Haiti to restore order following the killing of Haitian President Vibrun Guillaume Sam by reb-els, beginning a 19-year U.S. occupation.

In 1932, federal troops forcibly dispersed the so-called “Bonus Army” of World War I veterans who had gathered in Washing-ton to demand payments they weren’t scheduled to receive until 1945.

In 1959, in preparation for statehood, Hawai-ians voted to send the first Chinese-American, Republican Hiram L. Fong, to the U.S. Senate and the first Japanese-American, Democrat Daniel K. Inouye, to the U.S. House of Represen-tatives.

In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson an-nounced he was increas-ing the number of Ameri-can troops in South Vietnam from 75,000 to 125,000 “almost imme-diately.”

In 1976, an earth-quake devastated northern China, killing at least 242,000 people, according to an official estimate.

In 1995, a jury in Union, South Carolina, rejected the death pen-alty for Susan Smith, sentencing her to life in prison for drowning her two young sons (Smith will be eligible for parole in 2024).

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

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Across the Region

Former educator given 100th Honor Staff

SELMER, Tenn. – Former Mc-Nairy Central teacher Tommye Webb was recently given the 100th Honor Staff by Darryl Melton.

Webb and her husband were teachers on the original faculty at McNairy Central.

Melton finds people to honor with the Honor Staff to rec-ognize them in a special way. The wooden staff has Christian themes carved into the wood.

Webb graduated from Selmer High School in 1944 and then went to college at UT-martin. She met her future husband Bill at UTM. The two were married and lived in Metropolis, Ill. until they moved to Selmer to begin work as teachers at McNairy Central. The Webbs stayed at MCHS until they retired and did not leave Selmer until bad health caused them to move closer to their family.

Tommye and Bill were very active in First United Methodist Church in Selmer. The family now honors a student from MCHS with a scholarship an-nually to attend the UT-Martin Campus in Selmer. Mrs. Webb was also once named McNairy County Citizen of the Year.

UNA ranked among list of safest campuses

FLORENCE, Ala. – When it comes to a safe campus, the University of North Alabama is one of the best in the state and one of the best in the country. BestColleges.com recently re-leased a list of the 50 safest college campuses in the country and UNA made the list.  UNA was one of only two Alabama schools listed in the top 50. 

BestColleges.com compiled the list using the latest infor-

mation from the IPEDS and College Navigator databases, both of which are sources maintained by the National Center for Education Statistics. The most recent set of data is for the 2011-2012 school year, though some individual data points reflect the 2012-2013 school year.

Dr. Ken Kitts, UNA President, said it’s the University’s goal to make this type of list.  “We are pleased to find ourselves listed as one of the 50 safest college campuses in America.  At the same time, this news is not surprising to us.  We take cam-pus safety very seriously and are intentional about taking steps to eliminate threats and provide students with a won-derful learning opportunity.”

According to BestColleges.com, some of the things that set UNA apart include excel-lent alert services for students via LionAlert; the department also offers an emergency no-tification system via Nixle for parents and local community members. In addition to com-prehensive patrol plans and security measures such as key-card entry, surveillance and emergency phones throughout campus, the department pro-vides a variety of training ses-sions; these include the ALICE active shooter survival training and rape aggression defense courses.

Kevin Gillilan, UNA chief of police, said being recognized as one of the safest campuses is a very prestigious achieve-ment.  “The UNA Police Depart-ment takes pride in providing a safe atmosphere for our stu-dents, faculty and staff.  It is our goal to continually enhance campus safety and our relation-ships within the campus com-munity,” he said.   

“In an effort to improve our

physical security, we have re-cently completed an upgrade to surveillance equipment in our parking deck, residence halls and science building.  We will continue to assess the quality of programs, policies and tech-nology utilized by our depart-ment and our strategically plan-ning for the future,” said Gillilan.

(To view the full list of the 50 Safest College Campuses from BestColleges.com visit: http://www.bestcolleges.com/features/safest-college-cam-puses/.)

Northeast set to offer cake decorating class

BOONEVILLE – Northeast Mississippi Community Col-lege’s Office of Continuing Edu-cation will provide the area with one of the easiest and most fulfilling ways to decorate a cake with its offering of a “Gum Paste and Fondant” class.

From start to finish, partici-pants will learn how to turn fon-dant, gum paste into a covering from their cakes and produce accessories such as flowers for their designs.

Classes are set to begin in Waller Hall on the college’s Booneville campus on Tuesday, August 4 and extend through August 25 each Tuesday night from 6-8:30 p.m.

The cost is $50 and pre-registration is required.

Pre-registration is required for the Gum Paste and Fondant course and all continuing edu-cation classes and is available online at http://www.nemcc.edu/continuing-education-2/classes/ by clicking the Online Form button.

(For more information on how to register for the Gum Paste and Fondant course or for any other Northeast Mississippi Community College continuing

education class, contact the Office of Continuing Education at 662-720-7296 or email [email protected].)

 TCT to hold auditions for ‘Smokey Joe’s Cafe’

TUPELO – Tupelo Community Theatre will hold auditions for its season-opening produc-tion of the hit musical revue “Smokey Joe’s Café” on August 3 and August 4 at 7 p.m. at the Lyric Theatre. Smokey Joe’s Café showcases the popular songs of Leiber and Stoller, such as “Jailhouse Rock” and “Stand by Me.”

Parts are available for five males and 4 females. All must sing and dance.

The racially diverse char-acters in the show include 4 young males who sing tight harmony in the style of The Drifters or The Coasters; 1 young male in the style of Elvis or Dion; 1 female in the bluesy style of Big Mama Thornton; 1 female in the style of Patti La-Belle or Tina Turner; 1 female in the style of Brenda Lee; 1 fe-male in the style of Janis Joplin or Bonnie Raitt.

Those auditioning should bring a prepared 16-bar cutting of a song from the show or in the style of the show. Please bring the sheet music if it is not from the show. An accom-panist will be provided. Those auditioning will also be taught a short chorus from the show in order to showcase their harmo-nization skills.

Production staff for the show includes Directors Lynn Nelson and Tonya Smith, Assistant Di-rector Pamela Cox, and Music Director Sheryl Zinn. Production dates are September 17-19.

(For more information, con-tact the TCT office at 662-844-1935.)

JACKSON — Health offi cials in Mississippi say the state’s second West Nile virus case for 2015 has been reported in Adams County.

The state health de-partment said Monday in a news release that one other case of the mosquito-borne virus was reported last week in Hinds County.

Symptoms resulting from a West Nile infec-tion are often mild. But some cases can cause fl u-like symptoms including fever, headache and nau-sea; and a small number

can develop into encepha-litis or meningitis that can cause paralysis or death.

Health department offi cials provided no de-tails on the severity of the two cases reported so far this year.

The department said that in 2014, Mississippi recorded 43 West Nile virus cases. Seven of those were fatal.

“Historically, this the time of year when we see the number of West Nile Virus cases begin to increase,” Dr. Thomas Dobbs, the state’s epide-miologist, said in a news release.

2nd West Nile case reported

The Associated Press

HATTIESBURG — The watchwords seemed to be “be yourself,” as the 66th Miss Hospitality pageant got underway Sunday in Hattiesburg.

Thirty Miss Hospital-ity contestants arrived in the city for a week of ac-tivities leading up to the Mississippi Miss Hospi-tality pageant Friday and Saturday at the Saenger Theater.

Miss Hospitality La-mar County Shainah Chabert got advice from her friend Kelsey Addi-son, who was Miss Hos-pitality Lamar County last year.

“She just told me to be myself — go out there and be myself,” Chabert said. Chabert also got

some schooling in the history of Mississippi from her grandfather, Lamar County Supervi-sor Joe Bounds.

She’ll need that if she is crowned the winner.

“The young lady who will be crowned will be an offi cial goodwill am-bassador for the state of Mississippi,” said Kris-ten Brock, a member of the board of directors for Miss Hospitality. “She will travel across the state and the country promoting tourism and economic development in Mississippi.”

The Hattiesburg Amer-ican reports the contes-tants spent Sunday after-noon checking into their rooms and meeting their roommates at the Cen-

tury Park dormitory at the University of South-ern Mississippi. Then they headed over to the Saenger Theater for an orientation and to attend their fi rst rehearsal.

Southern Miss stu-dent and Miss Hospital-ity Marion County Sarah Hibley, 20, was ready to get started.

“I’m very excited,” she said. “It’s going to be so much fun. I’m ready to make a lot of friends.”

Hibley had some words of advice for her-self as the week unfolds.

“Just to be yourself and to have fun whatever happens,” she said. “To be the best you can be and that’s the best way to succeed at anything you do.”

Miss Hospitality pageant startsThe Associated Press

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662-287-4399 FAXEmail: [email protected]

Due to pump failure on one of our wells our customer’s could experiencelow water pressure in all areas of the

Kossuth Water Association. If youshould have any questions please feel

free to contact our offi ce at (662) 287-4310. Please conserve as

much water as possible.

HONESTY • INTEGRITY • COMMITMENT

ElectREEDMITCHELL4th District Supervisor4th District Supervisor

Having successfully owned and operated a local business for 22 years, I am ready and qualifi ed to oversee the business of the 4th District of Alcorn County. My goal is to effectively and effi ciently manage our tax dollars with the same care and respect as I require with my own business. I live under the guiding principle that if I don’t handle myself and my personal funds with integrity, my family will suffer. I will uphold this same commitment to fi scal responsibility with our tax dollars.

CONTACT ME WITH ANY QUESTIONS, COMMENTS OR CONCERNS

[email protected] for by Reed Mitchell

Page 4: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Tuesday, July 28, 2015www.dailycorinthian.com

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Moses gave us the Ten Commandments. Paul gave us the Epistles. And Ta-Nehisi gave us “Between the World and Me.”

The new book by Atlantic writer Ta-Nehisi Coates, in the form of a letter to his son, has been greeted with a rapturous reception that brooks no dissent.

What everyone says about the literary merit of “Between the World and Me” is correct. But if you refuse to simply stare at the book in wonder, you will realize that it is pro-foundly silly at times, and morally blinkered throughout. It is a masterly little memoir

wrapped in a toxic little philippic.Coates evokes the terror of his upbringing

in West Baltimore in the 1980s with a sick-ening immediacy. His father beat him. Other kids were a constant, perhaps mortal, threat. Coates lived in perpetual fear – although largely of other black people.

He argues – or asserts through a haze of lyricism – that all that other black people did to hurt or threaten him was ultimately the product of white racism.

Given how large race hatred looms in the world of Coates, I was surprised to fi nd the worst thing that evidently happened to him directly at the hands of a white person is recounted beginning on Page 93 of the 152-page book. Coates took his son to a movie theater on the Upper West Side of Manhat-tan, and when they were leaving and got off the crowded elevator, a white woman pushed his kid and said, “Come on!”

Coates interprets the incident as essentially the telescoping of hundreds of years of rac-ism down to this woman invoking her “right over the body of my son.”

Yeah, maybe. It’s also possible that the woman was a jerk (there are at least a couple of them on the Upper West Side) and would have pushed anyone’s kid.

For all his subtle plumbing of his own thoughts and feelings and his occasional invo-cations of the importance of the individuality of the person, Coates has to reduce people to categories and actors in a pantomime of racial plunder to support his worldview. He must erase distinctions and reject complexity.

“‘White America’ is a syndicate arrayed to protect its exclusive power to dominate and control our bodies,” he writes. What is this “white America”? Is it Nancy Pelosi or Ted Cruz? Is it Massachusetts, or is it Utah?

In a monstrous passage about 9/11, he writes of the police and fi refi ghters who died trying to save people from getting obliterated into dust: “They were not human to me. Black, white, or whatever, they were menaces of nature; they were the fi re, the comet, the storm, which could – with no justifi cation – shatter my body.”

Really? Firefi ghters go about shattering the bodies of black people without justifi cation?

Coates objects especially to the cliche that blacks have to be “twice as good.” It’s closer to the truth that they, like all Americans, are in a much better position to succeed if they honor certain basic norms: graduate from high school; get a full-time job; don’t have a child before age 21 and get married be-fore childbearing. Among the people who do these things, research from the Brookings In-stitution tells us, about 75 percent attain the middle class, broadly defi ned.

Even if we adopted the reparations that Coates has famously made the case for, it’s hard to imagine them being generous enough to make a transformative difference in the lives of individual blacks. For poor blacks to escape poverty, it would still require all the personal attributes that contribute to suc-cess, no matter what your race.

Coates reminds us of the shame of the American inner city and powerfully recounts this country’s history of slavery and rac-ism. But his is a stunted version of America. Here’s hoping his son reads more widely.

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

Ta-Nehisi Coates’ toxic worldview

Prayer for today

A verse to share

STARKVILLE — Missis-sippi voters have rejected term limits each time the question has come before them, but the United Con-

s e r v a t i v e Fund group led by state Sen. Chris M c D a n i e l , R-Ellisville, wants to offer state voters another bite at the apple.

In April, UCF’s policy director Keith Plunkett served noted of the intent of the group to seek initiative and referendum on the question of terms limits for the third time since 1995.

UCF’s proposed Initia-tive 51 “limits the number of consecutive terms a per-son can serve in the same state house, state senate or statewide elected offi ce to no more than two (2) terms after the adoption of the amendment. Terms would be deemed consecutive un-less separated by a full four (4) year term.”

Back in May, Plunkett wrote: “The time for term limits has come, and the majority of Mississippians know it. We are at a time and place in history that demands a more hands-on approach from the people. Limiting state legislators and statewide elected of-

fi cials to two consecutive terms is only a start, but it’s a good start.”

McDaniel, UCF’s chair-man, said: “Unlike other term limits proposals this won’t block anyone from public service. Our goal is to increase participation and make elective offi ce more accessible to people who want to serve. The power of incumbency has built a wall between people and their representatives. This has caused an increase in cronyism, back room deals, and corruption. We believe regularly changing out of-fi ceholders is a step toward transcending those prob-lems.”

McDaniel’s version of term limits does offer the notion of a one-term politi-cal time-out after which a legislator or statewide of-fi cial can be returned to of-fi ce. That’s the only thing that make this approach anything different from what Mississippi voters have already soundly reject-ed twice. Initiative 51 also doesn’t address term limits for members of Congress, but has gotten a political nod from the U.S. Term Limits group.

U.S. Term Limits presi-dent Philip Blumel praised McDaniel during his 2014 GOP primary bid against incumbent U.S. Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss. McDaniel

signed the group’s “pledge” to support congressional term limits if elected.

In 1995 and again in 1999, state voters rejected two separate term limits initiatives each by a mar-gin of about 55 percent to 45 percent. Why? Missis-sippi voters weren’t will-ing to give up their right to return competent, familiar public servants to offi ce from their local supervisor and Justice Court judge to their congressman and U.S. senators.

Term limits is a gimmick, pure and simple. Missis-sippians have proven more than able to govern their own affairs at the ballot box without the political baby food of term limits.

The one argument the term limiters can’t refute is that without seniority to dictate a balance of power in the Legislature, the next likely division is either sec-tionalism or factionalism.

That’s because there is no constitutional dictate to determine the division of power in the Legislature be-yond seniority and there is no provision in the current term limits initiative that even considers the ques-tion. That presents a dan-gerous loophole.

Instead of seniority, the committee system in the Legislature will likely fall prey to sectionalism - ur-

ban areas against the rural counties, the Hills against the Delta and the Gulf Coast against DeSoto County - or factionalism in which the divides are blacks against whites, rich against poor or worse.

The seniority system al-lows rural lawmakers, ur-ban lawmakers, black law-makers, white lawmakers, all lawmakers a shot at the seats of power in the Leg-islature. There is an inher-ent balance in the system a check and balance.

Term limits don’t contain such checks and balances on the division of power. Term limits simply dictate that we’ll have frequent elections in which the vot-ers know virtually nothing about the candidates except what he learns about them in paid advertising.

Who will help these new candidates pay for all this advertising? Special inter-est groups and lobbyists will be more than happy to help out.

Term limits is poor public policy that offers the voter this political nanny solu-tion to all his or her prob-lems: “Stop me before I vote for the same public offi cial again!”

(Daily Corinthian colum-nist Sid Salter is syndicated across the state. Contact him at 601-507-8004 or [email protected].)

Initiative 51 state term limits effort is cleaner

“...if we come to see our-selves as meat, then meat we shall become.” -- Leon

Kass, M.D., “Toward a More Natural Science”

What is most shock-ing about an undercover video of a c o n v e r s a -tion between Deborah Nu-

catola, a Planned Parent-hood executive, and two an-tiabortion activists from the Center for Medical Progress (CMP) posing as employees from a biotech fi rm is why anyone is shocked.

For those who haven’t been paying attention (ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN all ignored the story dur-ing their Sunday morning political talk shows, but not Fox), the discussion cen-tered on the sale of donated tissue from aborted fetuses. Nucatola says in the video, “We’ve been very good at getting heart, lung, liver ... so I’m not gonna crush that part, I’m gonna basically

crush below, I’m gonna crush above, and I’m gonna see if I can get it all intact.”

Cecile Richards, presi-dent of Planned Parent-hood, attempted to gain some moral high ground by explaining that in the sale of fetal tissue, “there is no fi -nancial benefi t ... for either the patient or for Planned Parenthood.” Instead, she says, “...actual costs, such as the cost to transport tissue to leading research centers, are reimbursed...”

On Tuesday CMP released a second undercover video showing Dr. Mary Gatter, president of Planned Par-enthood’s Medical Direc-tor’s Council, “negotiating” a price for fetal body parts, an illegal act.

The response to the Nu-catola video was immedi-ate. Republican presidential candidates denounced the practice of “fetal organ har-vesting” and GOP leaders in Congress have again threat-ened to “defund” Planned Parenthood. They won’t, because they haven’t before.

Since Roe vs. Wade, there have been more than 55 mil-

lion (and counting) legal abortions performed in the U.S. There are a number of sociological, moral and po-litical reasons why abortions continue, but the occasional outcry when something like the Planned Parenthood videos surface will not save the lives of unborn children. Because abortions are per-formed behind closed doors, is it simply a case of out of sight, out of mind?

Occasionally, though, something so horrible es-capes the secret chamber that people are repulsed – for a moment at least – by what we have allowed to happen and the collec-tive effect it has had on the growing disregard for hu-man life some of us possess.

The reason no one should be shocked by any of this is because it is the inevitable outcome when moral bound-aries are removed. If we are living in an impersonal uni-verse; if we are evolutionary accidents not endowed with certain rights by our Creator; if we are of no greater moral value than a hamburger; and if human value is to be as-

signed by the courts, then we are all potentially at risk of extermination should we become inconvenient or too expensive to sustain.

But once whatever re-maining boundaries are erased, and the cost of med-ical care rises, government and insurance companies could very well increase the rationing of medical care (as happens now with unequal Medicare payments to med-ical groups vs. patients with private insurance and limits on what private insurance will cover). It will likely begin at the extremes, as most inhumanities do, but once the killing standard is expanded to the elderly and the sick, it will quickly threaten others.

How do you like what we have become, America? Maybe our loss of morality, not to mention our human-ity, is one reason for the rise of ISIS. As we are remind-ed, “Where there is no rev-elation, the people cast off restraint.” (Proverbs 29:18)

(Readers may email Cal Thomas at [email protected].)

Why selling baby parts should shock no one

2 Many are saying of me, “God will not deliver him.” “Selah” 3 But you are a shield around me, O LORD; you bestow glory on me and lift up my head. 4 To the LORD I cry aloud, and he answers me from his holy hill. “Selah” 5 I lie down and sleep; I wake again, because the LORD sustains me. 6 I will not fear the tens of thousands drawn up against me on every side.

Psalm 3:2-6

O Lord, it is not that I am ashamed to ask thee for the truth that I do not more diligently seek it, but it is because I fear the sacrifice that may follow in obtaining it. I would that I could understand that thy strength is given in the sacrifice. Make me braver as I seek to live in the truth. Amen.

Rich LowryNational

Review

Cal Thomas

Columnist

Sid SalterColumnist

Page 5: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

State/NationDaily Corinthian • 5Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Across the Nation Across the State

Re-enactors honor slain local Marine

VICKSBURG — The Vicksburg National Mili-tary Park honored the life of one of their own, Ma-rine Lance Cpl. Squire Wells, killed in the recent Chattanooga recruiting office shootings.

WLBT-TV reports that members of the park service held a memorial for Wells on Sunday, fir-ing rounds from cannons during the reenactment of the Siege of Vicks-burg.

Ranger Tim Kavanaugh told the Vicksburg Post that Wells volunteered near Atlanta as a mem-ber of the Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park’s Living History cannon crew, a sister program to Vicks-burg’s.

Wells was one of four military personnel killed July 16 when a man opened fire at two mili-tary facilities before be-ing killed by police.

 Rankin to choose new superintendent

BRANDON — Rankin County schools will have a new leader for the first time since 1999 after voters choose one of three candidates in the Aug. 4 election.

The Clarion-Ledger reports current Superin-tendent Lynn Weathersby is not running for re-elec-tion, ushering in a major change in leadership.

The three candidates range from a relative outsider to the district, Bobby Franklin, to the district’s second in com-mand, Richard Morrison. The third candidate is Sue Townsend, a longtime educator and former principal in the Northwest Rankin and Brandon school zones.

Penny slot jackpot nets man $638,000

BILOXI — Playing the penny slots can payoff big time.

A Biloxi man has won nearly $638,000 playing a penny Elton John pro-gressive slot machine at Palace Casino Resort.

The Sun Herald reports the man, who was not identified, said he plays at the Palace because it’s a smoke-free casino.

This is the third ma-jor jackpot to hit at the Palace Casino this year. In March a Mississippi man won $305,267 play-ing a Wizard of Oz and in January a player hit a $373,272 jackpot on a Monopoly Luxury Dia-monds game.

Man robbed, shot at Jackson motel

JACKSON — Jackson police say they’ve ar-rested a woman and are looking for two other women and a man in the death of a robbery victim outside a motel.

The Clarion-Ledger re-ports that 22-year-old Tif-fany Brister was charged Sunday as an accessory after the fact to capital

murder.Police spokeswoman

Colendula Green says the victim was a 34-year-old Latino man whose is being withheld until his family is notified.

Green says the victim had met a woman in his room at the American Star Inn. While he was in the bathroom, she alleg-edly took one of his bags and passed it to a man in the hall. Green says the investigators believe the victim confronted them, and was shot.

 1 killed in head-on motorcycle wreck

PEARL — Pearl police are investigating a head-on motorcycle-car ac-cident that left one man dead and two injured.

A 25-year-old female and her 66-year-old fa-ther were on a 2003 Har-ley-Davidson when the accident occurred. The father, Corby Lee Ussry, was pronounced dead at the scene.

The woman was taken to the hospital with se-vere but non-life threat-ening injuries. A front seat passenger in the car was also taken to the hospital for evaluation.

Associated Press

8-year-old girl goes missing in California

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — The mother of a missing 8-year-old girl is plead-ing for the return of her daughter as a statewide search for the girl grew to include federal au-thorities.

Police and the FBI have been looking for Madyson Middleton, who vanished Sunday from a Northern Cali-fornia artist community center where she lives with her mother.

She was last seen riding a scooter outside the Tannery Arts Center in the beach town of Santa Cruz.

Her mother, Laura Jor-dan said Monday she is very worried and wants her home safely.

Helicopters are searching the forest and the coastline. The U.S. Coast Guard is searching the ocean.

 Immigrants coerced into ankle monitors

SAN ANTONIO — Lawyers say immigrant mothers held in a South Texas detention cen-ter with their children have been pressured into accepting ankle-monitoring bracelets as a condition of release, even after judges made clear that paying bonds would suffice.

In a letter to U.S. Im-migration and Customs Enforcement director Sarah Saldana, heads of a pro-bono lawyers’ project raised concerns that women were be-ing misled about their rights before being re-leased.

A court decision last week found holding children to be unlawful, and families are being released from immi-

grant detention centers faster.

 Landscaper gets year in duck killings

WELLINGTON, Fla. — A Florida landscaper who ran over a family of ducks with his riding lawnmower has been sentenced to a year in jail.

A Palm Beach County judge sentenced 24-year-old Jason Scott Falbo II last week after he pleaded guilty to felony animal cruelty charges.

Authorities say Falbo mowed down the ducks May 2 at the home of a family caring for them in Wellington. Police say nine ducklings died, while their mother and two ducklings survived.

Boyd Jentzsch told police his family, includ-ing his 7-year-old son, watched from inside their home, screaming as the ducks were run over.

 Foul-smelling flower attracts bid crowds

BERKELEY, Calif. — Officials with UC Berkeley’s botanical garden say the garden had its busiest day in more than a decade as people flocked to get a whiff of the “corpse flower,” a plant known for its pungent odor.

KPIX-TV reports that the Sumatran titan arum nicknamed “Tru-dy” came into full bloom Sunday and brought out about 1,000 visitors. The garden wrote on Twitter that the plant would only be smelly on Sunday and would begin to go limp Monday.

Associate director for visitors services Jonathan Goodrich says Trudy started to open and was flowering when

garden officials left for the day on Saturday. By Sunday, the plant had run its course.

 Judge: BP payouts for spill start soon

NEW ORLEANS — A federal judge says BP will begin paying up to $1 billion in settlements to compensate local governments across the Gulf Coast for lost tax revenue and other economic damages they blame on the com-pany’s 2010 oil spill.

An order issued Monday by U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier says all of the payments to local governments must be made within 30 days.

July 15 was the dead-line for roughly 500 local governments in five states to decide whether to accept BP’s settlement offers as part of a broader $18.7 bil-lion agreement with the five Gulf states and the federal government over damage from the spill.

 Former fat cat slims down to 19 pounds

DALLAS — A former 41-pound cat dubbed Skinny has lost more than half of his weight to become the darling of a Dallas veterinary clinic.

Dr. Brittney Barton says the orange tabby she adopted in 2013 has slimmed to 19 pounds with exercise and a special diet. Barton calls Skinny the “resident cat” at her practice, HEAL Veteri-nary Hospital.

Barton said Friday that Skinny spends weekdays roaming the clinic. The ex-fat cat’s weekends are spent at home with Barton and her family.

Associated Press

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

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Page 6: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Jane CrumFuneral services for Jane Mullins Crum, 94,

of Corinth, are set for 3 p.m. Wednesday at Me-morial Funeral Home. Rev. Warren Jones and

Rev. Ray Newcomb will be offi ciating. Burial will be in the Wheeler Grove Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 5 to 8 p.m. to-night and Wednesday from 1 p.m. until service time at Me-morial Funeral Home.

Ms. Crum died July 26, 2015, at Magnolia Regional Health Center. She was born August 20, 1920, in Alcorn County and was a 1938 grad-

uate of Chalybeate High School. Ms. Crum was a longtime member of Calvary Baptist Church, a former factory employee and worked at Mor-ris Crum Tire, where many customers became her special friends.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Arnet Crum; her parents, Hugh Ray and Quilla Mullins; her brother, Dennis Mullins; and her sisters, Frances Wilbanks and Ethel Rodgers.

She is survived by a son, Morris (Linda) Crum; daughters, Freida (Larry) Rickman and Annette (Jackie) Cooksey all of Corinth. Grand-children include Candi (Steve) Gaines, Katie (Nick) Rickman, Connie (Ronnie) Blackard all of Corinth, Lamar Settlemires of Homestead, Fla., Rev. Jason (Christine) Cooksey of Decatur, Ind., Dr. Jonathan (Katie) Cooksey of Corinth and Dr. Emily (Kevin) Hawkinson of Madison. Great- grandchildren include Anna Kate and John Thomas Gaines, Maddox, Oakli and Cut-ler Rickman, Tiffany Blackard (Cody) Shirley, Trey Blackard, Olivia, Aidan, Elliott, and Elena Settlemires, Ethan and Cade Cooksey, John Reeder Cooksey and Ryan Hawkinson.

The pallbearers will be Steve Gaines, Nick Rickman, Lamar Settlemires, Ronnie Blackard, Dr. Jonathan Cooksey, Kevin Hawkinson, Ger-ald Wegman and Terry Hudson.

Honorary pallbearers will be the employees of Morris Crum Tire.

Condolences can be left at www.memorial-corinth.com.

Crum

Willie Charles ‘Junebug’ Allen Jr.Willie Charles “Junebug” Allen Jr.,

46, of Corinth died Saturday, July 25, 2015 at Magnolia Regional Health Center.

Arrangements are incomplete with Magnolia Funeral Home.

Cindy FergusonIUKA — Cindy Ferguson, 55, died

Sunday, July 26, 2015 at North Mis-sissippi Medical Center.

Funeral services will be held at a later date.

She was born December 8, 1959.Survivors include her husband,

Nicky Switcher; two children, Andy Anderson and Jennifer Weaver; fi ve grandchildren, Blake Carroll, Amilee Carroll, Brandon Carroll, Lilly Ander-son and Logan Anderson; and a sister.

Bertha HammondSANDY SPRINGS — Bertha Ham-

mond, 73, died Friday, July 24, 2015.Survivors include her husband,

Ronald Hammond of Sandy Springs, a son, Gerald (Cynthia) Tallieu of Dennis; two daughters, Dawn Tallieu of Bad Axe, Michigan and Cynthia Mitchell of Marlette, Michigan; two brothers, James (Bonnie) Mathews of Brown City, Michigan and Lee (Portia) Mathews of Kingston, Michi-gan; a sister, Kay (Dennis) Jefferson of Lebanon, Michigan; six grandchil-dren, Linda Tallieu, Trip Lomenick, Roland (Shanon) Schautt, Stepha-nie (Scott) Umphrey, Melissa (Kurt) Mazure, Taylor Mitchell and Riley Mitchell all of Michigan; and four great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by her parents, John and Elnora Mathews.

Larry Ladron NetheryFuneral services for Larry Ladron

Nethery, 72, of Corinth are set for 11 a.m. today at Holly Baptist Church

with burial in Sulfur Springs Nethery Family Cemetery.

Mr. Nethery died Saturday, July 25, 2015 at his home.

Born July 2, 1943, he was a retired printer at Intex Plastics and member of Holly Baptist Church.

Survivors include his wife of 50 years, Anne Nethery of Corinth; a son, Ladron Nethery and wife Nan of Corinth; a daughter, Tina Anne Nethery Essary and husband Ricky of Glen; six grandchildren, Beth Nelms and husband Robbie, Leota King and husband Chip, Tess Cornelius, Bartley Nethery and wife Brittany, Blake Nethery and Bayleigh Nethery; two great-grandchildren; a brother, Taft Nethery and wife Rosa Mae of Corinth; and sisters, Earline Corne-lius and husband Kenneth of Atoka, Tenn., Patsy Cornelius and husband Travis of Corinth and Diane McGee and husband Wayne of Corinth.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Abel Taft Nethery and Dovie Hinton Nethery.

Bro. Trent Nethery Jr. and Bro. John Boler will offi ciate.

Visitation is 10 a.m. until service time today at the church.

Magnolia Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

Joyce PruittFuneral services Joyce Pruitt, 52,

of Corinth are set for 1 p.m. Wednes-day at Synagogue M.B. Church with burial in Rienzi Cemetery.

Mrs. Pruitt died Thursday, July 16, 2015 at her home.

Born May 13, 1963, she was a mem-ber of Synagogue M.B. Church.

Survivors include her children, Willie D. Howard, Marcus J. Howard and Felicia Ann Howard; her moth-er, Bessie Mae Pruitt; siblings, Betty Howard, Dorlene Simmons, William Pruitt, Bobby Pruitt, Mary Pruitt,

Raymond Pruitt and Linda Pruitt; and grandchildren, Lazoya Howard, Zareya Howard, Zasiah Howard, LaZoya Howard, Jamon Moton Jr., Malaysia Howard and Macayla How-ard.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Roma Lee Howard; her father, Benjamin Frank Pruitt; and grandparents, Harvie and Essie Pruitt and John and Lula Thompson.

Rev. Lamar Walker will offi ciate.Visitation is 5-6 p.m. tonight at

Patterson Memorial Chapel.

Lucian PuckettIUKA — Funeral services for Lucian

Puckett, 83, are set for 1 p.m. today at Cutshall Funeral Home Chapel with burial in Carter’s Chapel Cemetery.

Mr. Puckett died Saturday, July 25, 2015 at Tishomingo Community Liv-ing Center.

He was a member of Iuka Church of Christ. He was an avid Atlanta Braves fan, enjoyed trading cars and helping people.

He is survived by his wife, Sandra Puckett of Iuka; four sons, Lawayne Puckett (Judy) of Iuka, Ethan Puck-ett of Iuka, Jason Puckett (Amanda) of Panama City, Fla. and Michael Rone (Tammy) of Iuka; four daugh-ters, Kathy Hubbard (Mike), Hannah Robinson (Kyle), Kallie Puckett and Dionne Lambert (Terry) all of Iuka; eight grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Clay and Molly Puckett; his brothers, Murrah and J.C. Puckett; and his sister, Helen Robinson.

Memorial contributions may be made to the charity of one’s choice. An online guestbook can be accessed at www.cutshallfuneralhome.com.

Lance Foster will offi ciate.Visitation was held from 5-9 p.m.

Monday.

Medical examiners performing an autopsy on Bobbi Kristina Brown said Monday their initial fi ndings turned up no obvious cause of death, while experts said the months that have passed since Brown was found face-down in a bathtub are working against au-thorities now tasked with solving how she died.

The Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Of-fi ce said in a statement Monday afternoon that it will likely be several weeks before it can rule on a manner and cause of death for the 22-year-old daughter of Whitney Houston. The agency said its initial autopsy turned up “no signifi cant injuries” or “previously unknown medical con-ditions.” It said the next step is ordering lab tests and issuing subpoenas for documents — most likely Brown’s hospital records.

Experts said time is defi nitely an enemy in Brown’s case. Any drugs she might have taken passed from her blood-

stream long ago. Physical injuries would have been healing even as Brown re-mained largely unrespon-sive. If police overlooked any physical evidence at Brown’s home after she was hospitalized Jan. 31, recovering it nearly six months later may be im-possible.

Dr. Michael Baden, former medical exam-iner for New York City, has performed more than 20,000 autopsies during a career spanning more than 45 years. He said the fi rst obstacle for forensic pathologists in Brown’s case will be a living body’s ability to mend itself and erase medical evidence.

“Normally, when we do autopsies, we do them in people who freshly died. Things like toxicology and injuries are clear,” said Baden, who helped investigate high-profi le cases including the deaths of comedian John Belushi and civil rights worker Medgar Evers. “Because she was in the hospital for a long time, any drugs that may have been in the body will be gone after a few days. Injuries, if there were any injuries, would be changed by the length of time, the healing pro-cess.”

That means Brown’s hospital records will be as important, if not more so, to medical examiners investigating her death as physical evidence from her autopsy.

Baden said it’s highly possible doctors screened Brown’s blood for drugs as soon as she was admit-ted to the hospital. Her medical charts may also note any physical inju-ries observed by doctors who fi rst treated her. The initial report by emer-gency medical techni-cians who fi rst responded to Brown’s home could also yield critical clues, he said.

Dr. Henry Lee, the fo-rensic scientist whose famous cases include the death of child beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey, said the passage of time could make Brown’s au-topsy “much harder.”

Brown autopsy complicated by months passed

The Associated Press

URBANA, Md. — An apparently homeless Vir-ginia man fatally stabbed a South Korean mission-ary and seriously wound-ed his wife at a Maryland church retreat center, authorities said Monday.

Song Su Kim, 30, of Falls Church, Virginia, was charged in Frederick County, Maryland, with fi rst- and second-degree murder, fi rst- and sec-ond-degree attempted murder and two counts of assault.

Deputies responded Sunday night to a 911 call reporting the stabbing at the Anna Prayer Moun-tain Church Retreat Cen-ter, a Christian complex set amid wooded hills near the rural commu-

nity of Urbana, about 40 miles northwest of Washington, D.C., said Sheriff Chuck Jenkins.

Charging documents identifi ed the victims as Chung Hwan Park, 63, and his wife Ae Suk Ko, 58.

Jenkins told a news conference the victims were missionaries from South Korea. He said the woman had had surgery and was talking to inves-tigators.

“She’s conscious, she’s alert,” the sheriff said, adding that she’s expect-ed to survive.

At a hearing Monday afternoon, Kim was or-dered held without bail. He appeared in court in handcuffs and leg irons.

Deputy State’s Attor-

ney Nanci Hamm said after the hearing that a detective told her the victims were volunteer cooks at the center. Kim had called 911 Saturday to complain about the food at the center, ac-cording to Jenkins.

Park was stabbed 13 times and Ko, four times, Hamm said.

Hamm said the victims had arrived at the center in early July.

Jenkins said Kim had been living at the center for fi ve days, brought there by Kim’s mother.

Hamm said Kim has an arrest record in Virginia for a 2012 assault on a family member; a 2006 malicious destruction of property charge; and a drunken driving charge

in 2005. Court records list a variety of misde-meanor charges against Kim in the past 10 years in northern Virginia, in-cluding assault, drunk-

en driving and posses-sion of marijuana. Many of the charges were ul-timately dismissed. The court records list “Korea” as Kim’s country of birth. Jenkins said he is a U.S. citizen.

Assistant Public de-fender Elizabeth Steiner, Kim’s attorney, said in court that the man is homeless and was previ-ously at the Bailey’s Cross-roads homeless shelter in northern Virginia.

Steiner declined to comment outside the courtroom.

A receptionist at the Bailey’s Crossroads Com-munity Shelter declined to answer any questions about when Kim had last stayed the homeless shelter.

Charging documents state that Kim told in-vestigators he was tired of being treated badly by “all Koreans,” and want-ed to “invade a Korean.”

Man charged in church camp stabbingsThe Associated Press

Northside Church of Christ3127 Harper Rd. • Corinth, Mississippi 38834

415-3558 • Minister - Lennis NowellSunday Worship ............ 9:45 am, 10:30 am, 5:00 pmWednesday Worship .......................................7:00 pm

The Biblical GodToday, God is “in.” Religious book stores, retreats, fads, gimmicks,

sentimental music, infantilism.Recently, they asked “Religious Experts” to testify concerning

Noah’s Ark. Whey do they teach in seminary, now?The fi rst said he was totally disappointed with God! Brutish. “Bad

hair day.” Drowned the world in a temper fi t. He proclaimed we had to outgrow such nonsense.

Another said he was disappointed with Noah! In Genesis 18 Abraham was outraged with God over Sodom. Noah fl unked! He was narrow, exclusive, the “only ones.” Noah fl unked concerning pluralism, universalism, inclusion.

Another said Noah was a learning experience for God! A god of law was to learn how to become a god of love. God will never do that again! (the fl ood.) Liberals think God was converted between Malachi and Matthew! God becomes a universalist!

What can one say? God answers to man in his pride and genius. We must return to the Biblical God.

POWER (of God)PRESENCE (of God)PARTICIPATION (with God)PROMISES (of God)PUNISHMENT (of God)Teach these “Ps.” God comes with Almighty Power yet in loving

Presence. He worked with the human race then joined it. Accept His wonderful Promises! God is a promise-making, keeping God! Those who reject receive punishment.

This is how simple the Bible is! Obey God and go to heaven. Disobey and go to hell. That lesson is in Noah’s Ark.

GOD’S PLAN OF SALVATION1. Hearing the word of God (Romans 10:17; Acts 16:32)2. Believing what is taught (Mark 16:16; Hebrews 11:6)3. Repentance (Acts 2:38; Luke 13:3; Acts 17:30)4. Confession (Romans 10:9, 10; Acts 8:37)5. Baptism (Acts 2:38; Mark 16:16; 1 Peter 3:21; Romans 6:3, 4).6 After the above fi ve steps, faithful Christian Living (1 Peter 2:11,

12; Revelation 2:10)THE CHURCH OF CHRIST1. The Bible is its only guide (Romans 1:16; 1 Thessalonians 2:13)2. Wears a Biblical Name (Romans 16:16)3. Established at the right place (Isaiah 2:2,3; Acts 2).4 Established at the right time (Joel 2:28-32; Acts 2).5. Established on the right person (Matthew 16:18; Acts 2:36).6. Saved are in it (Ephesians 5:23; Acts 2:47).7 Its members are enrolled in heaven (Hebrews 12:23).8. Membership in it is obtained by obedience to God’s commands

including baptism ( Acts 2: 41-47; 1 Corinthians 12:13)

November 3rdRe-Elect

Steve LittleJudge

Paid for by Steve Little

Sunday: 9:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m. , 6:00 p.m.Monday-Tuesday 6:00 p.m.

Tate Baptist Church

August 2nd-4thDr. Jimmy DeYoung

BIBLE PROPHECY CONFERENCE

Page 7: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

TUESDAY EVENING JULY 28, 2015 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

Fresh Off the Boat

blackish Extreme Weight Loss “Rachel” A dancer wants to get healthy. (N)

Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #NCIS “Blast From the Past”

Zoo Searching for a chemist in Alabama.

NCIS: New Orleans News Ch. 3 (:35) Hawaii Five-0 “Ua’aihue”

James Corden

QVC $ . MyPillow Tues. Beauty The Find With Shawn Killinger Christmas in July

WCBI $NCIS “Blast From the Past”

Zoo Searching for a chemist in Alabama.

NCIS: New Orleans News (:35) Hawaii Five-0 “Ua’aihue”

James Corden

WMC % %America’s Got Talent “Judge Cuts 3” Guest judge Marlon Wayans. (N)

(:01) Hollywood Game Night (N)

News Tonight Show-J. Fallon Seth Mey-ers

WLMT & >The Flash iZombie Major makes a

discovery.CW30 News at 9 (N) There Yet? There Yet? Two and

Half MenModern Family

WBBJ _ _Fresh Off the Boat

blackish Extreme Weight Loss “Rachel” A dancer wants to get healthy. (N)

News at 10pm

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )America’s Got Talent “Judge Cuts 3” Guest judge Marlon Wayans. (N)

(:01) Hollywood Game Night (N)

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

WKNO * The Bomb (N) Uranium -- Twisting the

Dragon’s TailAre You Served?

As Time Goes By

Tavis Smiley

Newsline

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

Engage-ment

Engage-ment

Engage-ment

Parks/Rec-reat

WMAE , ,The Bomb (N) Uranium -- Twisting the

Dragon’s TailTavis Smiley

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?

Knock Knock Live “Epi-sode Two” (N)

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 iZombie Major makes a

discovery.PIX11 News PIX11

SportsSeinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

MAX 0 3(:15) } ›› Super Troopers (01) Jay Chan-drasekhar, Kevin Heffernan.

} ››› RoboCop (87) Peter Weller, Nancy Allen.

(:45) Sin City Diaries Feature 2: Inside Out

SHOW 2 Masters of Sex Ray Donovan The Affair Masters of Sex } ››› Swingers (96)

Jon Favreau.

HBO 4 1(6:00) } ›› The Maze Runner (14)

True Detective “Church in Ruins”

Ballers The Brink } › Tammy (14) Melissa McCarthy, Susan Sarandon.

} Neigh

MTV 5 2 Catfish: The TV Catfish: The TV Scream “Exposed” Catfish: The TV (:01) Scream

ESPN 7 ?E:60 (N) E:60 Baseball Tonight (N)

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

SPIKE 8 5Ink Master “Sink or Swim”

Ink Master “Tut for Tat” Ink Master Illusions with naked models.

Tattoo Night.

Tattoo Night.

Tattoo Night.

Tattoo Night.

USA : 8WWE Tough Enough (N) (L)

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Law & Order: Special Victims Unit

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

DISC < DDeadliest Catch: The Bait (N)

Deadliest Catch (N) Land Rush “Bogged Down” (N)

Deadliest Catch Land Rush “Bogged Down”

A&E > Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars (N)

(:01) Big Smo (N)

(:31) Big Smo (N)

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

Storage Wars

FSSO ? 4PowerShares Champions Series Tennis Bull Riding: Champi-

onship.World Poker Tour PowerShares Cham-

pions BET @ F Movie DeSean Nellyville (N) DeSean Nellyville Game 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) Hollywood Cycle E! News (N) Total Divas

HIST E BCounting Cars

Counting Cars

Counting Cars (N)

Counting Cars

(:03) Leepu & Pitbull (N) (:03) The Woodsmen Counting Cars

Counting Cars

ESPN2 F @ City Slam City Slam (N) E:60 (N) NFL Live Baseball Tonight

TLC G Little People, Big World Little People, Big

World (N) My Giant Life (N) Little People, Big World My Giant Life

FOOD H Chopped “Let’s Do Lunch”

Chopped “Family Food Fight”

Chopped (N) Chopped “Dread and Breakfast”

Chopped “Family Food Fight”

INSP I The Waltons JAG Walker, Ranger Matlock Medicine Woman

LIFE J =Dance Moms (N) Dance Moms (N) (:02) Dance Moms (N) (:02) Dance Moms (:02) Dance Moms

TBN M Trinity J. Meyer Prince S. Fur Praise the Lord (N) (Live) Bless the Lord

AMC N 0(6:00) } ›››› The Dark Knight (08) Batman battles a vicious criminal known as the Joker.

} ›› Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (07) Ioan Gruffudd.

} The Fugitive

FAM O <Pretty Little Liars “FrAmed” (N)

(:01) Stitchers “Future Tense” (N)

(:02) Pretty Little Liars “FrAmed”

The 700 Club } ›› You Again (10) Kristen Bell.

TCM P Always for Pleasure (78) (:15) Spend It All (71,

Documentary)(:15) Dry Wood Yum, Yum Garlic Is As Good as

Ten Mothers(:45) Hot Pepper

TNT Q ARizzoli & Isles “Face Value”

Rizzoli & Isles “A Bad Seed Grows”

Proof “St. Luke’s” (N) Rizzoli & Isles “A Bad Seed Grows”

Proof “St. Luke’s”

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Clipped (N) Big Bang Theory

Conan Clipped Conan

GAME S Idiotest Chain Chain FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Burgers Cleve American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Chicken Aqua TVLD U K Love-Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King FS1 Z MLB Baseball: New York Yankees at Texas Rangers. (N) MLB Whiparound FOX Sports Live (N)

FX Æ ;(6:00) } ›› Oblivion (13, Science Fiction) Tom Cruise, Morgan Freeman.

Tyrant Jamal is desper-ate for a victory.

Tyrant Jamal is desper-ate for a victory.

Tyrant Jamal wants mili-tary support.

OUT Ø Hit List Nugent Hunting Driven Thirteen Season Hunting Wanted Hunting Thirteen NBCS ∞ Mecum Auctions: Cars Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More “Denver” Global 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 ≥ Wild Russia (:01) Wild Russia (:02) Wild Russia (:03) Wild Russia (:04) Wild Russia

HALL ∂ GThe Waltons “The Yearning”

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LK.C. Under-cover

Jessie Best Friends

Girl Meets Austin & Ally

I Didn’t Do It

Liv and Maddie

Dog With a Blog

Good-Charlie

Good-Charlie

SYFY E(6:00) } ›› Jurassic Park III (01)

Face Off Original alien animals. (N)

Geeks Who Reactor Face Off Original alien animals.

} ›› Deep Blue Sea Thomas Jane.

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Steve and Amy Taylor of Corinth have restored a circa 1918 home at 811 Jackson Street in downtown Corinth. See the story about

this historic house coming in the Crossroads Magazine Homes Edition on Saturday, Aug. 1.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

D E A R ABBY: I am a 58-year-old, twice d i v o r c e d , hard-work -ing, middle-class female. I spend most of my time working and involved with my three adult chil-

dren. About a year ago I started dating someone. He is 63, very helpful and claims he’s madly in love with me and appreciates this opportunity for a normal, wholesome life.

Occasionally I’ll catch him staring at women’s butts. It bothers me a bit, but oh well, he’s a man. Last week our fam-ily went camping. At least a dozen times I saw him position himself so that he could stare at my 40-year-old daughter’s be-hind. Keep in mind, my daugh-ter dresses VERY conserva-tively, and this trip was almost all jeans and T-shirts.

As we were packed up and ready to head home, she said she had to relieve herself and headed into the bushes (this is a remote campground). Instead of my boyfriend looking the oth-er way as we all did, he stared and gawked in her direction ob-

viously trying to sneak a peek!Abby, I am devastated and

disgusted. Please give me your take on this. -- NORMAL OR NOT IN NEW YORK

DEAR NORMAL: For a man to look at women’s body parts is normal, but what your boy-friend did goes beyond that. For him to try to sneak a peek at your daughter while she re-lieved herself indicates that he is a voyeur. Now you must de-termine whether he just takes advantage of an opportunity or he actively seeks it out, which could present a problem in the future.

DEAR ABBY: My daughter is a 29-year-old new mother. I know times have changed since I was a new mom, but the restrictions my daughter has put on visiting her and my new grandson are unrealistic.

Since his birth three weeks ago, I have seen him only once -- at the hospital. She has taken him on two outings: one where there were 10 people and an-other where there were more than 100.

(My grandson has not yet re-ceived any of his childhood vac-cinations.)

My daughter now says that when I visit, I must change into freshly washed clothes before entering her house. She’s afraid

that the secondhand smoke will harm him.

I’m not unintelligent. I have bought disinfectants to spray on myself, as well as breath strips. I also wash my hands, arms and face before I hold him. Am I unrealistic in think-ing she’s asking too much, or should I say something to her and let her know how much she has hurt me? -- CRYING DAY AND NIGHT

DEAR CRYING: I do think you should talk to your daugh-ter. What she may be trying to do is encourage you to quit smoking. I doubt that she’s do-ing it to be hurtful.

Her motivation may be that she knows how unhealthy smoking is and would like you to be around until your grand-child is well into adulthood. The odds of that happening will be higher if you can fi nd a way to give up tobacco. And when you do, consider putting all the money you save -- and it will be plenty -- into an education fund for your grandson.

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.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ve gotten good at relating to people who are very differ-ent from you. Your style works in multiple circumstances. Your soft words spoken with fi rm confi dence will produce impres-sive results.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). What you don’t understand far exceeds what you do un-derstand. Recognizing all you don’t know is a mark of high intelligence. As for what you do know, you’ll be asked to teach some of that today.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You may feel that your efforts are neither focused nor persis-tent enough to make a differ-ence. But it’s the fact that you’re making an effort at all that makes the biggest difference.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). When it comes to being you, you’re the master. Others will make suggestions that you’re not too keen on following. You’re not beholden to anyone and only have to please your-self.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Arro-

gance is the daddy of all sins. Belittling others is a sign of feeling little inside. When deal-ing with victims of a superiority complex, just remember that pride is often the hallmark of those with the least to be proud of.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). If you can’t change your mind, you can’t change anything. That’s why any effort you make to expand your realm of infl u-ence should be considered im-portant, even if it seems more like play than work.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Your thoughts of a certain per-son make you forget to do the ordinary things you would usu-ally do. That’s how you can tell you’re smitten. And when you’re smitten with the same person for a very long time, it’s even more wondrous.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You have the bright ideas to-day. But you also have a diffi cult group of strong-willed people to contend with. When you make it seem like their idea, they like it more.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You wouldn’t be trying if you didn’t care. That’s what they sense from you now. So don’t worry too much about whether you’re saying or doing it right. It’s a beautiful day when your good intentions effortlessly shine through.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’re not dreaming it. There really is a lack of orga-nized creativity out there. You’re just the one to capture and ap-ply the stellar ideas before they drift off into the ether.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Reconsider your contacts. It’s not who you know; it’s who you can infl uence. Know-ing someone doesn’t count for much if that person isn’t willing to support, help and generally act like a friend.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). The thing about achieving ex-ceptional accomplishments is that after a brief moment of glory you begin to worry about what they’ll expect from you next. Keep doing the work that makes you happy.

Woman discovers man’s eyes aren’t wandering by accident

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • 7

Page 8: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, July 28, 2015

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

18,351.36 15,855.12 Dow Industrials 17,440.59 -127.94 -.73 -2.15 +2.709,310.22 7,700.57 Dow Transportation 8,059.64 -12.93 -.16 -11.82 -3.28

657.17 524.82 Dow Utilities 570.87 +8.13 +1.44 -7.64 +1.3111,254.87 9,886.08 NYSE Composite 10,656.61 -65.34 -.61 -1.68 -3.015,231.94 4,116.60 Nasdaq Composite 5,039.78 -48.85 -.96 +6.41 +13.382,134.72 1,820.66 S&P 500 2,067.64 -12.01 -.58 +.42 +4.481,551.28 1,269.45 S&P MidCap 1,464.97 -11.77 -.80 +.86 +4.39

22,537.15 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000 21,761.67 -145.08 -.66 +.42 +4.151,296.00 1,040.47 Russell 2000 1,214.69 -11.30 -.92 +.83 +6.60

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.56 10 61.53 -.39 +.7AT&T Inc 1.88 34 34.32 +.03 +2.2AerojetR ... ... 23.14 +.35 +26.4AirProd 3.24 26 128.82 -1.24 -10.7AlliantEgy 2.20 18 60.25 +.99 -9.3AEP 2.12 16 55.74 +1.14 -8.2AmeriBrgn 1.16 ... 107.37 -1.36 +19.1ATMOS 1.56 18 54.29 +.49 -2.6BB&T Cp 1.08f 15 40.46 -.33 +4.0BP PLC 2.40 40 36.05 -.52 -5.4BcpSouth .40f 19 25.23 -.15 +12.1Caterpillar 3.08f 13 75.32 -.78 -17.7Chevron 4.28 10 89.14 -1.46 -20.5CocaCola 1.32 24 40.54 +.10 -4.0Comcast 1.00 18 61.11 -1.06 +5.3CrackerB 4.40f 23 148.59 -.77 +5.6Deere 2.40 12 91.25 -1.17 +3.1Dillards .24 13 99.20 +.09 -20.8Dover 1.60 14 63.95 -.15 -10.8EnPro .80 69 50.25 -.71 -19.9FordM .60 19 14.55 +.16 -6.1FredsInc .24 ... 17.76 -.12 +2.0FullerHB .52 30 38.57 -.26 -13.4GenElec .92 ... 25.95 +.20 +2.7Goodyear .24 3 29.02 -.25 +1.6HonwllIntl 2.07 18 101.64 -1.13 +1.7Intel .96 12 28.35 +.29 -21.9Jabil .32 22 19.39 -.09 -11.2KimbClk 3.52 60 112.36 +.52 -2.8Kroger s .42f 21 38.20 -.16 +19.0Lowes 1.12f 24 67.04 -.14 -2.6McDnlds 3.40 21 96.04 -.06 +2.5

OldNBcp .48 16 14.30 +.02 -3.9

Penney ... ... 8.24 -.20 +27.2

PennyMac 2.44 8 17.41 +.11 -17.4

PepsiCo 2.81 22 95.66 -.52 +1.2

PilgrimsP 5.77e 6 19.41 -.15 -29.9

RegionsFn .24 15 10.41 -.15 -1.4

SbdCp 3.00 11 3260.00 -65.00 -22.3

SearsHldgs ... ... 21.44 -.75 -35.0

Sherwin 2.68 27 266.04 -1.08 +1.1

SiriusXM ... 43 3.84 -.04 +9.7

SouthnCo 2.17 18 43.44 +.56 -11.5

SPDR Fncl .43e ... 24.94 -.18 +.8

Torchmark .54 15 61.21 -.95 +13.0

Total SA 2.93e ... 47.33 -.57 -7.6

US Bancrp 1.02f 14 44.80 -.48 -.3

WalMart 1.96 15 71.38 -.20 -16.9

WellsFargo 1.50f 14 57.59 -.19 +5.1

Wendys Co .22 39 10.06 -.09 +11.4

WestlkChm .66 13 59.82 -.81 -2.1

WestRock n 1.50 ... 58.19 -.72 -8.2

Weyerhsr 1.16 24 29.99 +.22 -16.4

Xerox .28 19 10.62 -.32 -23.4

YRC Wwde ... ... 12.54 +.15 -44.2

Yahoo ... 6 37.84 -1.02 -25.1

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DACE Ltd 11 107.00 +.56ADT Corp 17 31.97 +.59AES Corp 11 12.93 +.14AK Steel dd 2.52 -.01AU Optron ... 3.58AbbottLab 17 50.69 -.36AbbVie 55 69.34 +1.26ActivsBliz 20 25.61 -.57AdobeSy cc 79.93 -1.05AMD dd 1.62 -.05AEtern g h dd .19 -.02Aetna 18 110.23 +.23Agilent 42 39.61 +.30Agnico g 51 22.97 -.91Alcoa 14 9.62 -.19Alibaba n 52 81.40 -1.62Allergan cc 326.98 +18.77AllisonTrn 21 28.37 -.16AllscriptH dd 14.20AllyFincl 8 21.55 -.30AlpAlerMLP q 15.15 +.08Altria 22 53.95 +.16Amazon dd 531.41 +1.99Ambarella 61 119.45 -4.78Ambev ... 5.56 -.09Amedica h dd .78 +.04AMovilL 17 18.58 -.38AmAirlines 7 40.14 +.51ACapAgy cc 18.73 +.09AEagleOut 23 17.78 +.25AmExp 13 74.92 -.98AmIntlGrp 11 63.24 -.40ARltCapPr dd 8.52Amgen 22 165.54 +6.95Anadarko dd 69.99 -1.62AnglogldA ... 6.36 -.42Annaly dd 9.63 +.06Anthem 16 151.50 +.64Apache dd 44.51 -.57Apple Inc 14 122.77 -1.73ApldMatl 17 17.38 +.01ArcelorMit dd 8.54 -.03ArchCoal dd .21 +.01ArchDan 14 47.26 +.07ArmourRsd dd 2.62 -.04AscenaRtl 20 12.50 -.06Atmel 78 8.56 -.10AvagoTch 52 124.65 -3.83Avon dd 5.25 -.18BHP BillLt ... 36.32 +.02Baidu 32 197.68 -8.57BakrHu 60 57.74 -.92BcoBrad s ... 8.02 +.09BcoSantSA ... 7.03 -.06BkofAm 19 17.67 -.23BkNYMel 14 43.26 -.46BarcGSOil q 9.22 -.26Barclay ... 17.17 -.16B iPVixST q 17.72 +.88BarrickG 43 6.90 -.35BasicEnSv dd 5.39 -.28Baxalta n ... 30.60 -.29Baxter s 9 37.70 +.06BerkH B 17 140.72 -.53BestBuy 14 32.06 -.40Biogen 21 309.43 +9.40BlackBerry dd 7.28 -.05Blackstone 15 38.10 -.16BlockHR 18 31.60 -1.16Boeing 19 141.03 -3.03BostonSci cc 17.11 -.25Brandyw cc 13.55 -.10BrMySq 60 64.30 -1.68Broadcom 45 50.79 -.74BrcdeCm 13 9.96 -.11C&J Engy 18 9.02 -.61CA Inc 16 28.75 -.33CBS B 17 52.67 -.37CMS Eng 20 33.28 +.31CSX 15 30.52 -.29CVS Health 27 109.77 -.72CblvsnNY 27 25.90 -.30CabotO&G 43 26.44 -.06Cadence 36 18.97 -.19CalifRes n ... 4.05 -.19Calpine 7 16.57 -.04Cameco g ... 12.94 -.46Cameron 12 49.42 -.17CdnNRs gs ... 23.16 -.36CapOne 11 78.61 -.25CardnlHlth 23 82.29 -1.00Carlisle 24 100.99 -1.45Celgene 50 132.56 -2.34Cemex ... 7.83 -.20Cemig pf ... 2.75 +.03CenovusE dd 13.21 -.20CenterPnt 15 18.68 +.39CntryLink 21 28.12 +.09Chemours n ... 10.75 -.56CheniereEn dd 63.90 -.15ChesEng dd 8.37 +.09Cigna 19 145.90 +.18Cisco 16 28.21 -.19Citigroup 15 57.96 -.74Civeo ... 1.87 -.15CliffsNRs dd 2.40 -.06CloudPeak 2 3.27 +.08Coach 17 30.75 +.28Coeur dd 3.78 -.04ColgPalm 27 67.30 +.30Comc spcl 18 60.93 -1.11ConAgra 29 43.53 -.14ConocoPhil 13 50.65 -1.44ConsolEngy 32 17.35 -.29ContlRes s 19 31.93 -2.52Corning 12 18.45 -.13CSVInvNG q 5.75 -.04CSVLgNGs q 2.01 +.01CSVLgCrde q 1.53 -.11CSVelIVST q 43.75 -2.45CSVixSh rs q 7.03 +.67Cummins 13 123.78 -.59CypSemi dd 11.57 -.31DDR Corp dd 16.09 -.01DR Horton 17 26.74 +.01DanaHldg 10 18.16 +.01Danaher 24 87.22 -.56DeltaAir 13 43.93 -.17DenburyR 2 3.78 -.15DBXEafeEq q 28.91 -.35DBXHvChiA q 39.16 -3.95DevonE dd 48.83 -.57DrGMnBll rs q 7.95 -.93DirSPBear q 18.59 +.35DxGldBull q 3.33 -.41DrxFnBear q 10.80 +.27DrxSCBear q 10.51 +.26DirGMBear q 15.49 +1.21DrxEMBull q 17.36 -1.05DxFnBull s q 33.24 -.81DirDGldBr q 36.06 +3.45DrxSCBull q 81.18 -2.11Discover 11 55.24 -.57DiscCmA s 14 31.54 -.26Disney 25 118.25 -.66DomRescs 20 69.14 +.55DowChm 13 45.63 -.34DryShips h dd .50 -.05DuPont 16 56.73 -.21DukeEngy 18 73.00 +1.31Dynegy dd 24.20 -.74

E-F-G-HE-Trade 16 27.36 -1.16eBay s 15 28.00 -.23EMC Cp 21 26.04 +.42EOG Rescs 14 73.19 -1.97EQT Corp 28 75.75 +1.47Eaton 16 60.57 -.58EldorGld g 18 3.21 -.09ElectArts 27 71.22 -1.07EliLilly 44 84.15 -.57EmersonEl 13 50.46 -.22EmpDist 16 22.38 +.54EnCana g 31 7.42 -.46EgyTrEq s 42 28.96 -.52EngyTsfr 65 50.46 +.22ENSCO dd 17.08 -.29EntPrdPt s 21 28.18 +.79Ericsson ... 10.75 -.01ExcoRes dd .56 -.04Exelixis dd 5.44 -.15Exelon 12 30.63 -.28ExpScripts 32 91.10 -1.19ExxonMbl 12 79.26 -.68FMC Tech 12 32.63 -.21Facebook 91 94.17 -2.78FedExCp 53 164.74 +.63FiatChry n ... 14.41 -.74FifthThird 13 20.85 -.29FireEye dd 46.35 -.39

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 1160366 206.79 -1.21BkofAm 903002 17.67 -.23iShEMkts 707899 36.36 -.70MktVGold 668990 13.57 -.51B iPVixST 668561 17.72 +.88FrptMcM 641344 11.37 -.92iShJapan 569117 12.70 -.05DxGldBull 562895 3.33 -.41SiriusXM 543710 3.84 -.04AT&T Inc 498310 34.32 +.03

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 868Declined 2,288Unchanged 83

Total issues 3,239New Highs 18New Lows 486

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 806Declined 1,992Unchanged 146

Total issues 2,944New Highs 16New Lows 289

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

NymoxPh 2.54 +1.27 +100.0Magnetek 49.52 +17.27 +53.6XuedaEd 4.82 +1.62 +50.6Lumntm wi 20.85 +3.85 +22.6CryoPort rs 2.64 +.39 +17.1TevaPhrm 72.00 +10.15 +16.4OncoGenex 3.60 +.47 +15.0Accuride 4.02 +.51 +14.5JunprPhm 9.58 +1.20 +14.3ImageSens 4.66 +.53 +12.8

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

Belleroph n 3.39 -4.26 -55.7RepubAir 3.77 -4.73 -55.6EnerJex pf 4.35 -2.22 -33.8CastleAM 3.05 -.87 -22.2EKodk wtA 2.10 -.55 -20.8LucasE rs 2.16 -.56 -20.6CorbusPhm 2.05 -.53 -20.5TrnsatlPet 2.56 -.64 -20.0Drx300Chin 27.24 -5.81 -17.6VestRM rs 3.52 -.65 -15.6

AMGYacktmanSvc d23.90 -0.14 -4.9YkmFcsSvc d 24.43 -0.15 -5.6AQRMaFtStrI 10.76 -0.03 +1.2American BeaconLgCpVlIs 28.96 -0.25 -0.6American CenturyEqIncInv 8.49 -0.02 -2.1InvGrInv 30.09 -0.21 +4.6UltraInv 37.82 -0.34 +8.7ValueInv 8.31 -0.04 -2.9American FundsAMCAPA m 27.99 -0.21 +3.3AmBalA m 24.70 -0.09 +1.0BondA m 12.73 +0.02 +0.4CapIncBuA m 58.57 -0.10CapWldBdA m19.30 +0.07 -2.6CpWldGrIA m 46.59 -0.33 +2.3EurPacGrA m 49.77 -0.63 +5.6FnInvA m 52.52 -0.43 +2.6GlbBalA m 29.89 -0.09 -0.4GrthAmA m 44.86 -0.37 +5.1HiIncA m 10.42 -0.06 +0.2IncAmerA m 20.99 -0.09 -1.2IntBdAmA m 13.55 +0.02 +1.0IntlGrInA m 31.49 -0.41 +0.5InvCoAmA m 36.62 -0.11 +0.2MutualA m 36.02 -0.09 -2.0NewEconA m 39.88 -0.45 +8.4NewPerspA m 38.33 -0.37 +5.7NwWrldA m 53.33 -0.77 -0.3SmCpWldA m 49.29 -0.82 +8.8TaxEBdAmA m12.96 +0.01 +0.7WAMutInvA m 40.07 -0.27 -1.3ArtisanIntl d 30.60 -0.52 +2.1IntlI d 30.83 -0.52 +2.3IntlVal d 35.49 -0.32 +3.7MdCpVal 23.72 -0.16 -3.7MidCapI 50.51 -0.76 +5.4BBHCoreSelN d 22.59 -0.14 -0.4BairdAggrInst x 10.73 -0.01 +0.6CrPlBInst x 11.04 -0.01 +0.6BernsteinDiversMui 14.43 +0.01 +0.5BlackRockEngy&ResA m19.12 -0.35 -21.8EqDivA m 24.42 -0.13 -1.2EqDivI 24.47 -0.13 -1.0GlobAlcA m 20.04 -0.10 +1.8GlobAlcC m 18.40 -0.09 +1.4GlobAlcI 20.15 -0.09 +2.0HiYldBdIs 7.76 -0.03 +1.4StIncInvA m 10.06 -0.02 +0.6StrIncIns 10.06 -0.02 +0.7CausewayIntlVlIns d 15.38 -0.14 +4.0Cohen & SteersRealty 70.09 +0.12 -0.4ColumbiaAcornIntZ 42.30 -0.58 +2.2AcornZ 31.33 -0.40 +3.0DivIncZ 18.59 -0.09 -0.7Credit SuisseComStrInstl 5.28 -0.06 -12.1DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.42YrGlbFII 9.94 ... +0.45YrGlbFII 11.00 +0.02 +1.2EmMkCrEqI 17.83 -0.32 -5.4EmMktValI 23.75 -0.41 -7.8EmMtSmCpI 19.58 -0.49 -1.5IntCorEqI 12.09 -0.11 +4.8IntGovFII 12.63 +0.03 +1.5IntSmCapI 19.79 -0.24 +6.8IntlSCoI 18.05 -0.20 +6.8IntlValuI 17.97 -0.15 +3.7RelEstScI 31.93 +0.06 -1.5TAUSCrE2I 14.20 -0.12 +0.3USCorEq1I 17.95 -0.14 +0.9USCorEq2I 17.37 -0.14 -0.1USLgCo 16.33 -0.10 +1.5USLgValI 33.40 -0.25 -0.9USMicroI 19.23 -0.15 -0.4USSmValI 33.75 -0.39 -3.2USSmallI 31.22 -0.26 +0.6USTgtValInst 21.79 -0.21 -1.2DavisNYVentA m 34.57 -0.29 +4.7Delaware InvestValueI 17.91 -0.11 -0.9Dodge & CoxBal 101.41 -0.62 +0.7GlbStock 11.82 -0.13 -0.1Income 13.62 ... +0.2IntlStk 42.58 -0.43 +1.1Stock 179.33 -1.58 +0.7DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.92 ... +1.4Eaton VanceFltgRtI 8.91 -0.01 +2.3FMILgCap 21.56 -0.18 +1.6FPACres d 33.40 -0.16 -0.6NewInc d 10.08 ... +0.8Fairholme FundsFairhome d 35.32 -0.26 +0.7FederatedStrValI 5.91 +0.01 +1.6ToRetIs 10.90 ... +0.6FidelityAstMgr20 13.25 -0.02 +0.9AstMgr50 17.22 -0.07 +1.9Bal 23.05 -0.12 +2.0Bal K 23.05 -0.11 +2.0BlChGrow 73.89 -0.62 +8.0BlChGrowK 74.00 -0.62 +8.1CapApr 37.82 -0.25 +5.0CapInc d 9.69 -0.05 +3.0Contra 103.62 -0.91 +6.8ContraK 103.60 -0.91 +6.8DivGrow 33.94 -0.14 +1.6DivrIntl d 37.64 -0.35 +9.3DivrIntlK d 37.59 -0.35 +9.3EqInc 56.84 -0.21 +0.5EqInc II 26.37 -0.05 -0.3FF2015 12.61 -0.06 +2.0FF2035 13.37 -0.10 +3.2FF2040 9.40 -0.08 +3.2FltRtHiIn d 9.63 -0.01 +2.3FrdmK2015 13.59 -0.07 +2.1FrdmK2020 14.30 -0.07 +2.3FrdmK2025 14.94 -0.09 +2.6FrdmK2030 15.29 -0.11 +3.1FrdmK2035 15.76 -0.13 +3.3FrdmK2040 15.80 -0.13 +3.3FrdmK2045 16.23 -0.13 +3.3FrdmK2050 16.34 -0.13 +3.2Free2010 15.37 -0.06 +1.8Free2020 15.39 -0.08 +2.3Free2025 13.19 -0.08 +2.6Free2030 16.22 -0.12 +3.0GNMA 11.61 +0.01 +0.6GrowCo 142.26 -1.25 +8.0GrowInc 30.34 -0.16 +1.3GrthCmpK 142.16 -1.25 +8.1HiInc d 8.72 -0.04 +1.0IntlDisc d 41.48 -0.44 +9.2InvGrdBd 7.80 ...LatinAm d 19.81 -0.25 -16.7LowPrStkK d 51.51 -0.49 +2.6LowPriStk d 51.53 -0.49 +2.5Magellan 94.19 -0.42 +5.1MidCap d 36.15 -0.33 +1.7MuniInc d 13.36 +0.02 +0.7OTC 85.89 -0.86 +8.0Puritan 21.76 -0.09 +2.6PuritanK 21.75 -0.09 +2.6SASEqF 14.08 -0.08 +2.2SEMF 15.87 -0.31 -4.9SInvGrBdF 11.33 +0.01 +0.4STMIdxF d 60.73 -0.41 +1.7SersEmgMkts 15.82 -0.31 -5.0SesAl-SctrEqt 14.08 -0.09 +2.0SesInmGrdBd 11.33 +0.01 +0.3ShTmBond 8.59 ... +0.7SmCapDisc d 28.39 -0.27 -1.2StkSelec 36.25 -0.32 +2.6StratInc 10.59 -0.01 +1.1Tel&Util 23.29 +0.03 -2.9TotalBd 10.60 +0.01 +0.8USBdIdx 11.63 +0.02 +0.5USBdIdxInv 11.63 +0.02 +0.4Value 113.49 -0.82 +0.2Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 27.69 -0.29 +4.4NewInsI 28.23 -0.29 +4.6Fidelity SelectBiotech d 273.23 -4.49 +26.5HealtCar d 241.00 +0.94 +15.1

Name P/E Last Chg

3,756,560,234Volume 1,890,933,898Volume

16,800

17,200

17,600

18,000

18,400

J JF M A M J

17,360

17,760

18,160Dow Jones industrialsClose: 17,440.59Change: -127.94 (-0.7%)

10 DAYS

Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 72.94 -0.43 +1.5500IdxAdvtgInst72.94 -0.43 +1.6500IdxInstl 72.94 -0.43 +1.5500IdxInv 72.93 -0.43 +1.5ExtMktIdAg d 55.69 -0.56 +2.3IntlIdxAdg d 39.46 -0.31 +6.0TotMktIdAg d 60.73 -0.40 +1.7Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF12.96 -0.11 +8.2First EagleGlbA m 52.20 -0.32 -0.5FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.32 ... +0.3FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.40 ... +0.3GrowthA m 77.03 -0.38 +3.1HY TF A m 10.38 ...Income C m 2.27 -0.01 -4.1IncomeA m 2.25 -0.01 -3.5IncomeAdv 2.23 -0.01 -3.4RisDvA m 50.62 -0.41 -2.3StrIncA m 9.72 -0.02 -0.6FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 34.21 -0.30 +2.7DiscovA m 33.63 -0.29 +2.5Shares Z 30.08 -0.17 +1.9SharesA m 29.79 -0.17 +1.7FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond C m 12.08 -0.06 -1.9GlBondA m 12.05 -0.06 -1.6GlBondAdv 12.01 -0.06 -1.4GrowthA m 23.97 -0.10 +0.7WorldA m 17.45 -0.09 +1.5GES&SUSEq 55.31 -0.31 +1.8GMOEmgMktsVI d 9.02 -0.13 -7.3IntItVlIV 22.88 -0.17 +4.6QuIII 21.03 -0.09 +0.7USEqAllcVI 15.49 -0.09 +0.6Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 6.61 ... +1.1MidCpVaIs 40.21 -0.38 -3.3SmCpValIs 54.77 -0.44 -1.6HarborCapApInst 65.32 -0.72 +11.6IntlInstl 68.98 -0.70 +6.5HartfordCapAprA m 38.19 -0.41 +3.0CpApHLSIA 56.38 -0.56 +3.1INVESCOComstockA m 25.11 -0.22 -1.0EqIncomeA m 10.38 -0.04 +1.0GrowIncA m 26.76 -0.15 +1.3HiYldMuA m 9.88 +0.01 +1.8IVAWorldwideI d 17.53 -0.06 +0.3IvyAssetStrA m 24.97 -0.24 -2.0AssetStrC m 23.94 -0.23 -2.5AsstStrgI 25.24 -0.24 -1.9JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.73 +0.02 +1.0CoreBondSelect11.72 +0.02 +0.8DiscEqUlt 23.84 -0.18 +1.2EqIncSelect 13.93 -0.08 -1.5HighYldSel 7.48 -0.03 +1.1LgCapGrA m 37.78 -0.44 +9.4LgCapGrSelect37.88 -0.45 +9.5MidCpValI 37.37 -0.23 +0.6ShDurBndSel 10.90 +0.01 +0.8USEquityI 14.75 -0.10 +1.9USLCpCrPS 29.92 -0.25 +1.8ValAdvI 29.84 -0.17 +0.1JanusBalT 30.55 -0.05 +0.6GlbLfScT 64.36 -0.06 +22.5John HancockDisValMdCpI 20.29 -0.19 +1.6DiscValI 18.75 -0.11 -1.2GAbRSI 11.29 ... +3.3LifBa1 b 15.66 -0.10 +1.9LifGr1 b 16.67 -0.13 +2.4LazardEmgMkEqInst d15.84 -0.23 -7.9IntlStEqInst d 14.45 -0.12 +5.3Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m202.76+0.36 -0.5CBAggressGrthI220.19+0.40 -0.3WACorePlusBdI11.57 ... +1.1Longleaf PartnersLongPart 28.89 -0.18 -7.5Loomis SaylesBdInstl 14.05 -0.01 -3.7BdR b 13.99 ... -3.8Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 15.79 -0.08 -1.9BondDebA m 7.92 -0.03 +2.4ShDurIncA m 4.42 ... +1.3ShDurIncC m 4.45 ... +0.9ShDurIncF b 4.42 ... +1.6ShDurIncI 4.42 ... +1.6MFSIntlValA m 35.47 -0.23 +7.3IsIntlEq 22.38 -0.22 +7.0TotRetA m 18.22 -0.06 +1.2ValueA m 34.99 -0.23 +1.1ValueI 35.18 -0.23 +1.3Matthews AsianChina 22.93 -1.02 +6.8India 27.86 -0.27 +5.3Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.84 +0.01 +0.5TotRtBd b 10.84 +0.01 +0.2TtlRtnBdPl 10.22 +0.01 +0.5NatixisLSInvBdY 11.32 ... -3.4LSStratIncC m15.49 -0.02 -4.2NorthernHYFixInc d 6.96 -0.02 +1.6StkIdx 25.58 ... +2.1NuveenHiYldMunI 16.93 +0.01 +1.2OakmarkEqIncI 31.59 -0.17 -1.0Intl I 24.42 -0.30 +4.6Oakmark I 65.70 -0.43 -1.0Select I 39.99 -0.25 -2.0OberweisChinaOpp m 14.17 -0.63 +2.8Old WestburyGlbOppo 7.78 -0.05 +2.5GlbSmMdCp 15.91 -0.19 +2.9LgCpStr 13.13 -0.12 +1.7OppenheimerDevMktA m 33.47 -0.72 -5.8DevMktY 33.08 -0.71 -5.6GlobA m 83.56 -0.96 +9.9IntlGrY 37.24 -0.40 +6.2IntlGrowA m 37.39 -0.41 +6.0MainStrA m 49.47 -0.30 +3.3SrFltRatA m 8.09 -0.01 +2.2Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 14.70 -0.04 -0.6OsterweisOsterStrInc 11.42 -0.02 +3.0PIMCOAllAssetI 11.29 ... -1.7AllAuthIn 8.80 ... -2.5ComRlRStI 3.98 ... -9.9EMktCurI 8.95 ... -1.9EmgLclBdI 7.56 ... -6.7ForBdInstl 10.66 ... -0.1HiYldIs 9.00 -0.04 +1.6Income P 12.36 ... +3.3IncomeA m 12.36 ... +3.1IncomeC m 12.36 ... +2.6IncomeD b 12.36 ... +3.1IncomeInl 12.36 ... +3.3LowDrIs 9.99 -0.02 +0.8RERRStgC m 3.11 ... -0.2RealRet 10.88 ... +0.2ShtTermIs 9.82 ... +1.3TotRetA m 10.64 -0.01 +1.0TotRetAdm b 10.64 -0.01 +1.1TotRetC m 10.64 -0.01 +0.6TotRetIs 10.64 -0.01 +1.2TotRetrnD b 10.64 -0.01 +1.0TotlRetnP 10.64 -0.01 +1.2UnconstrBdIns 11.10 -0.03 +0.6PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 34.56 -0.31 +4.9Growth 27.21 -0.18 +4.4ParnassusCoreEqInv 40.02 -0.15 -1.2PioneerPioneerA m 37.13 -0.22 +1.7PrincipalDivIntI 11.82 -0.11 +4.0L/T2030I 14.58 -0.08 +2.0LCGrIInst 13.44 -0.12 +8.0Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 41.32 -0.59 +3.2TotRetBdZ 14.26 +0.01 +0.7PutnamCpSpctrmY 37.35 -0.05 -3.8

GrowIncA m 21.29 ... -1.2NewOpp 83.03 -0.88 +3.1Schwab1000Inv d 53.34 -0.34 +1.6FUSLgCInl d 15.01 -0.10 -1.8S&P500Sel d 32.64 -0.19 +1.5ScoutInterntl 32.91 -0.25 +2.4SequoiaSequoia 268.29 +0.76 +15.3T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 74.19 -0.52 +10.3CapApprec 27.36 ... +4.7EmMktBd d 11.75 -0.07 +0.8EmMktStk d 31.54 -0.50 -2.6EqIndex d 55.72 -0.32 +1.4EqtyInc 31.45 ... -3.3GrowStk 58.05 ... +11.7HealthSci 82.59 ... +21.5HiYield d 6.70 -0.02 +2.2InsLgCpGr 30.49 ... +11.0IntlBnd d 8.45 +0.04 -4.4IntlGrInc d 14.60 -0.08 +6.0IntlStk d 16.65 -0.18 +6.7LatinAm d 18.81 -0.23 -14.3MidCapE 46.53 ... +7.9MidCapVa 28.91 ... +0.3MidCpGr 80.34 -0.88 +6.5NewHoriz 47.05 -0.65 +7.5NewIncome 9.49 +0.01 +0.4OrseaStk d 9.95 -0.09 +5.6R2015 14.76 ... +2.0R2025 16.19 ... +3.1R2035 17.30 ... +3.8Real d 26.42 ... -0.7Rtmt2010 18.00 ... +1.5Rtmt2020 21.24 ... +2.6Rtmt2030 23.81 ... +3.4Rtmt2040 24.90 ... +4.1Rtmt2045 16.65 ... +4.1ShTmBond 4.75 ... +0.8SmCpStk 44.92 ... +1.4SmCpVal d 45.67 ... -2.4SpecInc 12.45 ... -0.2Value 34.60 ... -0.1TCWTotRetBdI 10.29 ... +0.8TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.83 +0.01 +0.5EqIx 15.78 -0.10 +1.7IntlE d 18.53 -0.13 +6.2TempletonInFEqSeS 21.05 -0.18 +5.0ThornburgIncBldA m 21.02 -0.24 +2.8IncBldC m 21.01 -0.24 +2.4IntlI 30.81 -0.43 +13.1LtdTMul 14.49 ... +0.7Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 26.50 -0.20 +1.8Vanguard500Adml 190.95 -1.11 +1.5500Inv 190.94 -1.11 +1.5BalIdxAdm 29.76 -0.10 +1.2BalIdxIns 29.76 -0.10 +1.2BdMktInstPls 10.77 +0.02 +0.5CAITAdml 11.71 +0.01 +0.8CapOpAdml 124.60 -0.33 +2.3DevMktIdxAdm12.68 -0.09 +6.0DevMktIdxInstl 12.69 -0.09 +6.0DivGr 22.66 -0.11 +0.6EmMktIAdm 31.38 -0.70 -4.6EnergyAdm 88.02 -1.46 -12.6EqInc 30.51 -0.14 -1.0EqIncAdml 63.96 -0.29 -0.9ExplAdml 88.91 -1.03 +2.8ExtdIdAdm 68.06 -0.68 +2.2ExtdIdIst 68.07 -0.68 +2.2ExtdMktIdxIP 167.99 -1.68 +2.3FAWeUSIns 93.43 -0.92 +2.7GNMA 10.70 +0.01 +0.7GNMAAdml 10.70 +0.01 +0.7GrthIdAdm 55.83 -0.37 +4.5GrthIstId 55.83 -0.37 +4.6HYCorAdml 5.85 -0.02 +1.3HltCrAdml 99.46 -0.63 +14.6HlthCare 235.73 -1.50 +14.5ITBondAdm 11.42 +0.03 +1.2ITGradeAd 9.76 +0.02 +1.1InfPrtAdm 25.92 +0.05 +0.2InfPrtI 10.56 +0.02 +0.2InflaPro 13.20 +0.03 +0.2InstIdxI 189.09 -1.10 +1.5InstPlus 189.10 -1.10 +1.6InstTStPl 47.01 -0.32 +1.6IntlGr 22.51 -0.29 +4.5IntlGrAdm 71.61 -0.92 +4.6IntlStkIdxAdm 26.34 -0.28 +2.7IntlStkIdxI 105.34 -1.13 +2.7IntlStkIdxIPls 105.35 -1.13 +2.7IntlVal 35.08 -0.28 +3.3LTGradeAd 10.17 +0.03 -2.4LifeCon 18.45 -0.04 +1.0LifeGro 28.98 -0.18 +1.6LifeMod 24.17 -0.10 +1.4MidCapIdxIP 169.52 -1.46 +1.7MidCpAdml 155.58 -1.34 +1.7MidCpIst 34.37 -0.29 +1.7MorgAdml 84.09 -0.71 +7.1MuHYAdml 11.14 +0.01 +0.9MuIntAdml 14.11 +0.01 +0.6MuLTAdml 11.59 +0.01 +0.9MuLtdAdml 11.01 ... +0.6MuShtAdml 15.81 ... +0.3PrecMtls 7.07 -0.17 -21.5Prmcp 102.83 -0.19PrmcpAdml 106.57 -0.19PrmcpCorI 21.50 -0.06 -0.6REITIdxAd 110.77 +0.17 -2.0REITIdxInst 17.14 +0.02 -2.0STBondAdm 10.51 +0.01 +1.1STCor 10.66 +0.01 +1.1STGradeAd 10.66 +0.01 +1.1STIGradeI 10.66 +0.01 +1.1STsryAdml 10.72 +0.01 +0.7SelValu 28.03 -0.32 -1.2ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.32 +0.02 +0.5SmCapIdx 56.55 -0.52 +1.3SmCapIdxIP 163.41 -1.52 +1.4SmCpGrIdxAdm46.25 -0.46 +4.5SmCpIdAdm 56.61 -0.52 +1.4SmCpIdIst 56.61 -0.52 +1.4SmCpValIdxAdm44.77 -0.38 -1.4Star 24.87 -0.11 +1.7StratgcEq 32.88 -0.23 +2.2TgtRe2010 26.58 -0.05 +1.0TgtRe2015 15.47 -0.05 +1.2TgtRe2020 28.82 -0.12 +1.3TgtRe2030 29.46 -0.17 +1.4TgtRe2035 18.12 -0.11 +1.6TgtRe2040 30.23 -0.22 +1.6TgtRe2045 18.94 -0.14 +1.6TgtRe2050 30.08 -0.22 +1.6TgtRetInc 12.91 -0.02 +0.8Tgtet2025 16.76 -0.08 +1.4TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.12 +0.01 +0.2TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.70 +0.03 +0.3TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.56 ... +0.2TotBdAdml 10.77 +0.02 +0.5TotBdInst 10.77 +0.02 +0.5TotBdMkInv 10.77 +0.02 +0.4TotIntl 15.75 -0.17 +2.6TotStIAdm 51.98 -0.34 +1.6TotStIIns 51.98 -0.35 +1.6TotStIdx 51.96 -0.34 +1.6TxMCapAdm 106.13 -0.71 +2.2ValIdxAdm 32.28 -0.18 -0.8ValIdxIns 32.28 -0.18 -0.8WellsI 25.20 -0.01 -0.1WellsIAdm 61.06 -0.02Welltn 38.95 -0.14 +0.7WelltnAdm 67.27 -0.24 +0.7WndsIIAdm 65.36 -0.46 -0.2Wndsr 21.37 -0.20 +0.4WndsrAdml 72.08 -0.67 +0.5WndsrII 36.83 -0.26 -0.2VirtusEmgMktsIs 9.65 -0.12 -2.4Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.34 -0.02 +7.7SciTechA m 15.32 -0.14 +2.2

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FMajSilv g 62 3.08 -.51Fitbit n ... 43.93 -1.61Flextrn 10 10.63 -.12Flotek 57 16.58 -.13FrankRes 12 46.41 +.01FrptMcM dd 11.37 -.92FrontierCm cc 4.59 +.05GATX 10 50.63 -.04GalenaBio dd 1.51 -.10Gap 13 36.22 +.24GenDynam 18 142.41 -.21GenGrPrp 25 26.50 +.20GenMills 25 56.96 +.04GenMotors 12 31.05 -.01Genworth dd 7.05 -.19Gerdau ... 1.69 -.06GileadSci 13 110.54 -2.29Globalstar dd 2.12 -.09GoldFLtd ... 2.88 -.04Goldcrp g dd 12.61 -.67GoldmanS 12 205.02 -2.33Google A 31 658.27 +3.50GoPro 48 61.27 -.90GraphPkg 19 14.33 -.25Groupon dd 4.93 -.04GrubHub 86 31.01 -2.78GulfCUDp ... .53 -.01GulfportE 14 31.88 -1.81HCP Inc 34 38.32 +.30Hallibrtn 18 40.98 -.74Hanesbds s 31 32.78 -.96HarmonyG ... 1.04 -.04HartfdFn 13 45.66 -.81HeclaM cc 2.08 -.09HelmPayne 9 55.64 -.28HercOffs h dd .14 -.01Hertz ... 15.79 -.14Hess 12 57.68 -.81HewlettP 12 30.25 -.56Hilton 37 26.50 -.33HomeDp 23 113.07 -.52HopFedBc 17 11.96 +.05HorizPhm dd 36.13 -1.07HostHotls 13 19.71 -.02HuntBncsh 14 11.60 -.16Huntsmn 19 18.02 -.80

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 1.34 -.04ICICI Bk s ... 9.56 -.17iShGold q 10.58 -.04iShBrazil q 28.05 -.45iShEMU q 38.10 -.35iShGerm q 27.93 -.32iSh HK q 21.71 -.60iShItaly q 15.04 -.31iShJapan q 12.70 -.05iShMexico q 54.32 -.67iSTaiwn q 14.41 -.29iShSilver q 13.92 -.10iShAsiaexJ q 58.40 -1.29iShChinaLC q 40.13 -1.61iSCorSP500 q 207.99 -1.26iShEMkts q 36.36 -.70iShiBoxIG q 115.88 +.01iShGblFin q 57.53 -.17iSh20 yrT q 122.04 +.65iSh1-3yTB q 84.85 +.06iS Eafe q 63.42 -.47iShiBxHYB q 86.88 -.37iShNsdqBio q 373.58 -4.00iShR2K q 120.57 -1.01iShChina q 49.27 -2.29iShREst q 74.11 +.16Infosys s 9 16.74 -.49IngrmM 14 24.07 -.01InotekPh n ... 16.76 -.89IntgDv 29 19.17 -.09IBM 13 159.07 -.68IntPap 17 47.36 -.39Interpublic 17 20.62 -.18iShCorEM q 44.12 -.93iShCHEmu q 27.75 -.53ItauUnibH ... 8.48 -.11JD.com ... 32.15 -2.49JDS Uniph dd 11.09 -.08JPMorgCh 12 68.01 -.90JPMAlerian q 37.46 +.30JanusCap 18 16.36 -.11JetBlue 14 22.35 -.38JohnJn 17 98.28 -.87JohnsnCtl 19 44.00 -.24JoyGlbl 9 25.83 -1.06JnprNtwk dd 27.43 -.11KB Home 21 15.22 -.08KKR 15 23.75 -.37KeyEngy dd 1.16 -.06Keycorp 14 14.78 -.24KindMorg 46 35.22 +.37Kinross g dd 1.68 -.01Knowles dd 17.23 +.34Kohls 14 61.78 -.10KraftHnz n ... 77.38 +.97LaredoPet 5 8.52 -.38LVSands 18 53.59 -1.22LendingC n ... 14.35 -.25LibtyGlobC ... 48.21 -.73LifeLock dd 7.74 -.05LinearTch 19 40.27 +.06LinnEngy dd 5.51 -.28LinnCo dd 5.61 -.20LloydBkg ... 5.33 +.03LockhdM 18 201.17 +.13LyonBas A 10 89.85 -.52

M-N-O-PMBIA 4 6.21 -.08MGIC Inv 13 10.92 -.05MGM Rsts dd 17.69 -.42Macys 17 69.95 +.01MagHRes dd .97 -.09Manitowoc 17 16.46 -.64MannKd dd 4.77 -.21MarathnO 8 20.69 -.72MarathPt s 10 54.46 -1.86MVJrGold q 18.81 -.68MktVGold q 13.57 -.51MV OilSvc q 30.67 -.43MV Semi q 51.01 -.20MktVRus q 16.52 -.43MartMM 47 153.60 -4.23MarvellT 15 12.29 +.10Masco 10 23.16 -.21MasterCrd 29 94.39 -1.44Mattel 19 23.08 -.13MaximIntg 47 33.85 +.28McDrmInt dd 4.19 -.11McGrwH dd 99.59 -5.99MediciNova dd 3.81 +.30Medtrnic 28 75.66 -.35MelcoCrwn 26 19.89 -.58Merck 15 56.99 -.42MetLife 10 55.60 -.55Microchp 22 41.78 -.09MicronT 6 18.12 -.22Microsoft 31 45.35 -.59Mobileye n ... 58.79 -1.60Mondelez 30 42.03Monsanto 19 101.46 -1.40MorgStan 12 39.25 -.35Mosaic 14 42.29 -.60MurphO 8 33.07 -.26Mylan NV 26 56.37 -9.57NRG Egy 35 21.55 +.15NXP Semi ... 88.22 -2.06Nabors 8 11.18 -.26NBGreece ... .90 -.06NOilVarco 8 41.65 -.57NetApp 18 30.80 -.30Netflix s cc 106.43 -2.91NwGold g dd 2.12 -.07NY CmtyB 16 18.41 -.02NewfldExp 23 30.88 -1.90NewmtM 18 17.22 -.58NewsCpA 38 14.83 -.03NiSource s 10 17.25 +.22NielsenNV 44 44.80 -.37NikeB 30 111.73 -1.26NobleCorp dd 12.20 -.06NobleEngy 13 34.73 -.64NokiaCp ... 6.66 -.08NorthropG 17 162.56 -2.24NStarRlt dd 15.54 -.03Novavax dd 11.62 -.17Nucor 22 43.80 +1.16Nvidia 17 19.31 -.11NymoxPh dd 2.54 +1.27OasisPet 3 9.42 -.72OcciPet 17 67.76 -.66OfficeDpt dd 7.63 -.30OnSmcnd 24 10.14 -.17OncoGenex dd 3.60 +.47OpkoHlth dd 16.60 -.28Oracle 17 38.51 -.49OwensIll 25 20.59 -.25

PDL Bio 4 5.86 -.17PG&E Cp 18 51.83 +1.48PMC Sra cc 6.71PPG s 21 102.39 -.86PPL Corp 11 31.06 +.36Paccar 16 64.65 -.25PanASlv dd 6.23 -.21Pandora dd 15.97 +.01PattUTI 37 15.72 -.39PayPal n ... 36.39 -.61PeabdyE dd 1.06 -.18PengthE g dd 1.53 -.13Pentair 50 58.75 -2.09PeopUtdF 19 16.16 +.01Perrigo 87 193.60 +7.10PetrbrsA ... 5.68 -.36Petrobras ... 6.25 -.40Pfizer 24 34.34 +.08PhilipMor 18 85.53 +.88PhilipsNV ... 27.18 +.87Phillips66 11 76.72 -2.31PiperJaf 12 44.60 +.82PlainsAAP 19 41.59 +1.16PlatfmSpc dd 22.40 -.21PolyOne 39 34.00 -2.91Potash 15 27.30 -.35PS USDBull q 25.25 -.20PwShs QQQ q 110.18 -.92PrecDrill 12 4.72 -.09ProShtS&P q 21.22 +.13ProUltSP s q 64.91 -.77PUltSP500 s q 66.88 -1.25PUVixST rs q 32.15 +3.04PrUCrude rs q 27.78 -1.38ProctGam 25 79.97 -.32ProUShSP q 20.83 +.25PUShtQQQ q 33.03 +.54PShtQQQ q 22.54 +.53PUShtSPX q 34.60 +.63ProspctCap 7 7.14 -.04PulteGrp 14 19.50 +.01

Q-R-S-TQEP Res 11 12.82 -.75Qualcom 17 61.98 +.34RadianGrp 6 18.33 +.12RangeRs 17 42.24 -.08Raytheon 15 104.34 +.44RepubAir 3 3.77 -4.73RestBrds n ... 41.50 +1.41ReynAmer 28 79.19 -.36RioTinto ... 36.97 -.42RiteAid 23 8.59 -.13RoyDShllA 12 53.89 -.49RymanHP 29 55.09 -.52SLM Cp 18 9.17 -.26SM Energy 8 32.64 -.76SpdrDJIA q 174.23 -1.29SpdrGold q 104.86 -.49SpdrEuro50 q 38.01 -.37S&P500ETF q 206.79 -1.21SpdrShTHiY q 28.22 -.11SpdrLehHY q 37.52 -.16SpdrS&P RB q 43.44 -.35SpdrOGEx q 37.44 -1.15SpdrMetM q 19.72 -.28Salesforce dd 72.46 -1.46SanDisk 24 61.16 -.68SandRdge dd .53 -.04Schlmbrg 22 81.76 -1.14Schwab 36 34.08 -.73ScorpioBlk ... 1.65 -.06ScorpioTk ... 10.97SeadrillLtd 3 8.28 -.37SeagateT 8 47.91 +.59SilvWhtn g 19 12.64 -.28SiriusXM 43 3.84 -.04SkywksSol 24 93.49 -4.22SonyCp ... 28.88 -.39SouFun 14 6.76 -.41SwstAirl 14 35.09 +.09SwstnEngy 9 18.33 -.22SpectraEn 21 29.21 -.10Spectranet dd 15.48 -.82SpiritRltC dd 10.03 -.07Sprint dd 3.10 -.34SP Matls q 44.58 -.50SP HlthC q 74.78 -.07SP CnSt q 49.65 -.03SP Consum q 78.26 -.59SP Engy q 68.51 -1.00SP Inds q 52.64 -.26SP Tech q 41.98 -.38SP Util q 42.87 +.54Staples 93 13.95 -.27Starbucks s 26 56.98 -.31StateStr 18 74.83 -.55Statoil ASA ... 15.84 -.40StlDynam 28 19.04 +.17StemCells h dd .44 -.02StillwtrM 17 9.45 +.23StratHotels 29 13.50 -.24Stryker 41 100.02 -.95Suncor g ... 25.08 -.28SunEdison dd 26.01 -.06SunesisPh dd 1.05 +.09SunTrst 13 43.92 -.39SupEnrgy 13 17.56 -.60SwiftTrans 15 21.34 -.23SynrgyPh dd 8.19 +.28Sysco 24 35.78 -.22T-MobileUS 94 36.50 -.90TaiwSemi ... 21.63 -.01Target dd 79.49 -.72TataMotors ... 28.72 -1.01TeckRes g ... 6.73 -.36Tenaris ... 24.45 -.08Terex 8 20.69 -.80TerraFmP dd 31.33 +.48TeslaMot dd 253.01 -12.40TevaPhrm 23 72.00 +10.15TexInst 18 49.033M Co 19 148.71 -.62TimeWarn 21 86.54 -.84Transocn dd 13.11 -.15TrinaSolar 15 9.60 +.26Trinity 7 28.31 +.98TripAdvis 56 80.60 -.26TrueCar dd 5.84 -1.0321stCFoxA 8 33.17 -.49Twitter dd 34.70 -.72TycoIntl 10 36.29 -.15

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUSG cc 29.23 +.31UltraPt g 3 7.73 -.18UnderArmr cc 96.43 +.38UnionPac 16 92.39 -.22UtdContl 8 56.81 +.32UPS B 28 95.12 +.37UtdRentals 11 65.16 +.44US OilFd q 15.65 -.38USSteel 33 16.80 +.55UtdTech 14 98.87 -.44UTech pfA ... 50.67 -.25UtdhlthGp 19 117.88 -.06Vale SA ... 4.99 -.06Vale SA pf ... 4.17 -.04ValeroE 9 64.38 -1.32VangTSM q 106.85 -.71VangREIT q 78.21 +.14VangEmg q 37.53 -.86VangEur q 54.23 -.42VangFTSE q 39.43 -.25VerizonCm 19 45.83 -.21ViacomB 13 56.39 -.02Vipshop s 70 19.99 -.26Visa s 30 73.86 -.94Vodafone ... 36.61 -.30VulcanM 85 88.24 -1.55WPX Engy dd 8.00 -.33WsteMInc 21 49.06 +.23WeathfIntl dd 10.23 -.41WstnUnion 11 18.36 -.29WhitingPet 9 21.13 -1.80WholeFood 24 40.16 -.27WmsCos 94 51.89 -.75Windstm rs dd 4.70 +.13WT EurHdg q 62.52 -1.20WTJpHedg q 56.21 -.43WT India q 21.52 -.41Wyndham 17 81.60 -1.46XL Grp dd 37.88 +.10XOMA dd .82 -.12XcelEngy 18 33.34 +.48Xilinx 17 40.06 -.18XuedaEd cc 4.82 +1.62Yamana g dd 1.95 -.10Yandex ... 14.53 -.31Yelp 69 33.73 -.83YumBrnds 39 85.98 -.73ZionsBcp 28 30.96 -.43Zynga dd 2.54 -.08

Today

Economic barometer

A gauge of consumers’ confidence in the economy is expected to be slightly down this month.

Economists anticipate that the Conference Board will reveal today that its latest consumer confidence index slipped to 100 from 101.4 in June. The index is now 17.4 percent higher than it was a year ago. That suggests the economy could enjoy stron-ger growth in coming months after a dismal start to the year.

Back on track?

Ford delivers it’s financial results for the second quarter today.

The automaker’s earnings have been hurt this year by lower sales of key vehicles like the F-150 pickup and a stronger U.S. dollar. Ford also has struggled to sell small cars in the U.S., China and elsewhere. Investors will be listening for an update on how the company’s sales trends are faring this summer.

Worth Tweeting?

Financial analysts predict that Twitter turned a profit in the second quarter after reporting a loss a year earlier.

The social media company is also expected to report improved revenue versus the same quarter last year. Twitter is coming off a mixed performance in the first quarter, when its earnings topped Wall Street expectations, but its revenue fell short. The company reports its latest quarterly results today.Source: FactSet

Consumer confidence index

90

92

94

96

98

100

JJMAMF

100est.

Source: FactSet

10

15

$20F $14.55

$17.62

’15 ’14

2Q ’14

Operating EPS

2Q ’15

$0.40 est.$0.37

Price-earnings ratio: 19based on trailing 12 month results

Dividend: $0.60 Div. yield: 4.1%

AP

CATERPILLAR (CAT)Monday’s close: $75.32

Price change

Avg. broker rating

SELL BUYHOLD

Number of analysts: 23

1-year performance

July 27$75.32

1-YR 3-YR ̂ 5-YR^

CAT -28.2% -4.4% 1.7%

2014 201570

80

90

$100

The Dow Jones industrial average is down 2.2 percent this year and Caterpillar isn’t helping. The construction equipment company’s stock is down 17.7 percent and was one of six in the Dow that set a 52-week low on Monday.

A key concern is China. China’s economic growth slowed to 7.4 percent last year, the slowest since 1990 when it was 3.8 percent. And growth is expected to fall further to 6.8 percent this year and 6.3 percent in 2016.

“The economy in China is actually slowing even further than most people expected,’’ says Bill Selesky, an analyst at Argus Research, noting that its economic problems are probably the biggest factor driving down Caterpillar stock.

Caterpillar has also been dinged because mining and energy companies have reacted to a drop in commodity prices by cutting equipment purchases.

Even so, Selesky says it might be a good time to buy Caterpillar stock, especially “if you believe that 2016 may be better than 2015.’’ Caterpillar carries a dividend yield of 4.1 percent, “so you are paid to

wait,’’ he says, and the company has announced

plans to repurchase $1.5 billion in stock in

the third quarter.

July 25$104.85

North America

48%

Europe, Africa, Middle East

2015 2Q RevenuePercentage by region

18

Latin America

Total: $12.3 billion

Time for CAT?

*based on past 12-month results

24

Asia/Pacific

10

wait, he says, and tcompany has an

plans to repur$1.5 billion in

theq

Source: FactSet

P/E ratio*: 12 5-yr avg. ratio*: 17

Dividend yield: 4.1%

^annualized

Financial strategies.One-on-one advice.

Member SIPC

www.edwardjones.com

413 Cruise Street Corinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Page 9: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

PICKLES

DILBERT

WIZARD OF ID

BC

HI & LOIS

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FORT KNOX

GARFIELD

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, July 28, 2015

ACROSS1 Ways to go:

Abbr.4 Ltr. addenda7 None too bright

12 Obama’sbirthplace

14 Somewhatsurprisedgreeting

16 Nebraska city17 “American

Gothic” artist19 Golf course

halves20 Causing goose

bumps21 Equitable

transaction23 Scolding sound24 Belted weapons26 Camp beds28 Poet __-tzu29 Strong coffee32 NCAA’s __-12

conference33 Italian sparkling

wine36 One of two in a

typical stringoctet

38 “Now!”41 Beyond rotund42 Round in a pistol43 Writer LeShan44 Conan O’Brien’s

network45 Org. with Raiders

and Vikings47 Folk singer Burl49 Retired boxer

with a perfect 24-0-0 record

52 Serioushostilities

55 Award forseagoing heroes

58 Say “cap’n,” e.g.60 Cheri of “SNL”61 Flying speed

boosters ... or,literally, what theends of 17-, 21-,38- and 55-Across can have

63 Shirk work64 Easy thing to do65 Wrinkled tangelo66 In la-la land67 __ Arbor,

Michigan68 One of a D.C.

100

DOWN1 Man of many

words2 Shows some

backbone3 Protective

enclosures fordivers

4 “Bang!”5 Did a

blacksmith’s job6 Push rudely7 “Keep still!”8 Mideast

dignitaries9 Mom’s mom’s

nickname10 Place for a lawn

mower11 Alleviate13 Prefix with lateral15 High-mindedness18 Word after

screen or scratch22 Agency under

FDR25 “The wolf __ the

door”27 Folk legend Phil29 Sudden changes

in disposition30 Wrist-to-elbow

bone31 Mom’s guy

32 Mr. __: DrPepper rival

34 Kitchen bulbs35 Tiny Dickens boy37 Java Freeze

maker38 Poppycock39 Stick-to-it-iveness40 Flowerpot filler46 Christmas tree

choice48 Seaside home

selling point

49 Like some poetry50 Yoga pose51 Japanese, e.g.53 Fluster54 Lacquer

ingredient55 Wordless okays56 On the roof of57 1970s Chevy

subcompact59 Sch. with a

Brooklyn campus62 Hosp. worker

By George Simpson and C.C. Burnikel©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 07/28/15

07/28/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: My daugh-ter is getting married in two weeks. My 80-year-old mother-in-law is unable to attend, but she called us with a request. Her daugh-ter, “Donna,” the bride’s aunt, will be fl ying across the country with her two young children to attend the wedding. She asked whether Donna’s two chil-dren could have a role in the celebration because she thinks Donna assumed they would be asked to par-ticipate after going to the expense of buying three tickets to attend.

We do not feel this is an appropriate request and it puts us in an awkward po-sition. My mother-in-law is trying to make us feel bad for saying no to something that was never a consider-ation. Donna has a history of being manipulative. No other children were invited and we do not want other parents to feel bad that their children were not in-cluded at all.

If we say no now, my mother-in-law will push even harder, adding more stress to an already stress-ful event. Can we simply say we are “taking under advisement” and let it go? — Stressed in Shrewsbury

Dear Shrewsbury: Yes, that is one way of dealing with a pre-sumptuous request. You also can bite the bullet and say fi rmly, but politely, “No, but we appreciate that

Donna is coming and bringing the children.” What someone spends to attend the wedding is up to them. It should not be used as black-mail to get a starring part in the production.

Still, you might con-sider fi nding a small role for the children, possibly handing out programs, asking guests to sign a wel-come book or directing them to their seats if the kids are old enough to handle the responsi-bility. It’s a minor ef-fort that will make the children feel impor-tant and assuage your in-laws. And please don’t worry about not having invited other children. The bride’s fi rst cousins are in a separate category. But you should not be held hostage by some-one else’s inappropri-ate demands on your daughter’s big day.

Dear Annie: I read the letter from “Artist’s Wife,” whose husband was asked to do a portrait for a fam-ily member who has yet to pay him. She has at least one real boar for a relative.

My niece is an artist. I

like her work, family or not. When I saw something on her website I really wanted to own, I approached her about it. She offered to sell it to me at a discount. I refused her kindness and bought two pieces from her at the same price she was asking for her other work.

One family member did not take advantage of an-other on either side of this transaction. If I couldn’t afford my niece’s prices, I wouldn’t have asked her to sell me anything.

When all was said and done, she was so grateful for the decent treatment that she created a third piece of art for me as a gift. It was her choice, and I ap-preciated it tremendously. — Grateful Family Mem-ber

Dear Grateful: Thank you for demon-strating how relatives should behave toward one another. Taking advantage of someone because you are re-lated not only is unfair and unkind, but it poi-sons the well for future family encounters.

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

How to answer an out of line family requestAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Sports10 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Shorts

JH Football

A meeting for any seventh and eighth graders interested in playing junior high football at Biggersville will be held tonight at 6 p.m. at the field-house.

 AC Boosters

The Alcorn Central Football boost-ers for middle and high school will meet Monday at 6:30 at Farmington Town Hall. Every parent/guardian needs to be there to discuss some important topics for this upcoming season. Also, all ads will need to be turned in as well.

 5K Walk/Run

The Booneville Kiwanis Club will host its third annual Back to School 5K Walk/Run on Saturday, Aug. 15 at 7:30 p.m. at West Side Park on Third Street in Booneville. Preregis-tration for the race is $10 for those 10 and under and $20 for 11 and over. Raceday registration is $15 for 10 and under and $25 for 11 and up. All those who preregister will be guar-anteed a t-shirt and entered to win a cash prize.

Online registration is available at http://racesonline.com/events/3rd-annual-back-to-school-5k-glow. For more information contact race direc-tor Brandi Reese at 662-663-0308 or [email protected].

 Football League

The Alcorn County Football league will hold registration at the Cross-roads Youth Ministry Association through Friday, Aug. 14 from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Divisions are available for 5 and 6-year-olds, 7 and 8-year-olds, 9 and 10 year-olds and 11 and 12 year olds. The cost is $75 per child which includes the use of a helmet, mouth piece, shoulder pads, and a person-alized NFL jersey with their name on it which they can keep and carry home. In addition to registration, the league will hold an evaluation day on Saturday, Aug. 15. The new season will kick-off on Saturday, Sept. 12.

For more information contact Shane Barnett at 662-415-1524.

 Hunter’s Education Class

Oakland Baptist Church in Corinth will host a Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks Hunter’s Education Class on Saturday. The free class is open to anyone 10 years of age or older. The 10-hour course begins at 8 a.m. with a 1-hour break for attendees to each lunch at the place of their choice. All must know their social security number and pre-register at www.MDWFP.com.

 Golf Tourneys

The Boys and Girls Club of Corinth will hold a 4-Man Scramble on Friday, Aug. 7 at Shiloh Ridge Golf Course. Shotgun will start at 8 a.m.

To register call 662-286-6662.• The Owen B. Whitehurst 15th

Annual Memorial Scholarship Tourna-ment is set for 9 a.m. on August 15 at Shiloh Ridge Athletic Club. Cost for the four-person scramble is $60 per player. Golf package includes tourna-ment comfort color shirt and tote bag, 18 holes of golf (cart included), Subway lunch and awards ceremony. Flights and prizes will be determined by number of entries.

Sponsorships are available. For more information contact Mike White-hurst 662-415-5514, Winners Circle 662-287-7678 or fax 662-287-7679.

 

The Associated PressOXFORD — Mississippi starting

guard Stefan Moody was arrested and charged with driving under the infl u-ence early Saturday morning.

Lafayette County jail records show that Moody was arrested at 1:45 a.m. and also cited for no proof of insurance and failure to yield. He was released after posting bail at 6:25 a.m. the same morning.

An Ole Miss spokesman said on Monday that the school is “aware of the situation” and gathering more in-formation.

The 5-foot-10 Moody led the Rebels with 16.6 points per game last season. He made 78 3-pointers to help push Ole Miss to the NCAA Tournament for the second time in three seasons.

Ole Miss guardMoody arrestedon DUI charge

The Associated PressBOSTON — Opponents are

cheering the unceremonious demise of Boston’s bid for the 2024 Summer Olympics, but some are wistfully wondering what might have been.

The U.S. Olympic Commit-tee offi cially severed ties with Boston on Monday, saying it was exploring other op-tions amid lackluster public support and concerns from elected leaders and organized opposition about the impact to taxpayers.

For some supporters, the announcement dashed hopes for billions of dollars in new investments that would have dramatically remade New

England’s largest city and further tarnished Boston’s image as a city of cynics and curmudgeons with a “can’t do” spirit.

“I’m sad for Boston. I don’t think there are any winners here,” said Ed Lyons, a Boston resident who has been among the most active on social me-dia defending the proposal. “I think a lot of people had a lot of hope and civic energy that they were willing to put into Boston 2024...That’s going to be a wound that hurts for a while.””

But Rafael Mares, an attor-ney for the Conservation Law Foundation, an environmen-tal group that’s been closely

following the bid’s develop-ment, suggests that, if any-thing, the ferocity of the local Olympics debate showcased the ability of Bostonians not to shy away from tough ques-tions.

“It’s a sign of how smart this region is that it can delve into the details, understand the numbers and come to the conclusion that this isn’t good for us,” he said.

“Does that mean we don’t want any development or any improvements? No. Of course we do.”

Jake Duhaime, a Mansfi eld resident who had been among the early supporters of the games, blames Boston 2024

organizers for turning resi-dents against the idea at near-ly every step since Boston was picked over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, D.C. in January.

“This bid started as truly grassroots. It had a heart and soul. But that got stripped through the process,” he said. “It became less about the Olympics and more about people cashing in.”

Duhaime also feared that public interest that seemed to be building around fi nally ad-dressing some of the greater Boston area’s most intrac-table problems might evapo-rate, relegating those impor-tant topics to the back burner.

Boston turns down Olympic bid

The Associated PressARLINGTON, Texas — Alex

Rodriguez doesn’t remember any clubhouse conversations as a young player about still being in the game at 40 years old.

“You talk more about 35, coming into your mid-30s. Forty’s not really talked about,” Rodriguez said. “So, sure, there’s a certain amount of pride.”

A-Rod marked his 40th birthday Monday night with the New York Yankees’ series opener at Texas. He was the designated hitter and batted

third against the team that gave him his fi rst huge con-tract.

It came a year after Rodri-guez turned 39 while serving a season-long suspension for violations of baseball’s drug agreement and labor contract.

“I had a lot of time to think and evaluate. It was a dark time, for sure,” Rodriguez said. “To be able to come back this year and look back, and hopefully I’m going to be a better player but more impor-tantly a better person for the next 40 years.”

When asked what a

40-year-old A-Rod would tell the 30- or 20-year-old A-Rod, he fi rst said he wasn’t in posi-tion to give anyone advice, in-cluding himself. But he then said there was a point in time when hitting home runs and being a great player were all that mattered to him.

“I fi gured that if I hit more home runs, it would justify for whatever behavior I had off the fi eld,” he said, with-out being specifi c. “And I re-alize today that it’s not that way at all. Hitting home runs doesn’t make you a good fa-ther. It doesn’t make you a

good friend. And it certainly doesn’t make you a good teammate. And to me, they’re both important.”

Rodriguez went into Mon-day night’s game hitting .277 with 23 home runs and 58 RBIs. He got his 3,000th ca-reer hit June 19 against De-troit, and this is his 16th ca-reer 20-homer season — he is fourth on the major league homer list with 677.

The three-time MVP be-came the 10th current major league player who is at least

A-Rod takes pride in playing at 40

Please see A-ROD | 11

The Associated PressANAHEIM, Calif. — The

Los Angeles Angels acquired veteran outfi elder Shane Vic-torino and more than $3.8 million from the Boston Red Sox on Monday for infi elder Josh Rutledge.

The 34-year-old Victorino is a two-time World Series champion, a two-time All-Star and a four-time Gold Glove winner. He has spent the past three years in Boston, batting .245 in just 33 games

this season with two stints on the disabled list.

Overall, Victorino has hit .276 with 108 home runs, 486 RBIs and 229 stolen bases in 12 major league seasons, in-cluding stints with San Diego, Philadelphia, Los Angeles Dodgers and the Red Sox.

The AL West-leading An-gels coveted Victorino’s post-season experience after he played a key role for the Phil-lies’ championship team in 2008 and again for the Red

Sox’s title-winning team in 2013. Victorino memorably hit a grand slam in Game 6 of the ALCS to send Boston to the World Series, where he added a key three-run double in the Red Sox’s title-clinch-ing victory in Game 6.

“My opinion is that we wouldn’t have won the World Series without him in 2013,” Red Sox general manager Ben Cherington said.

“I think about a guy that is maybe one of more passion-

ate baseball players I’ve ever been around,” Cherington added.

The trade was announced about one hour before the fi rst pitch in Boston’s game against the Chicago White Sox, forcing the Red Sox to scratch Victorino from the No. 2 spot in their lineup.

Victorino mostly played right fi eld for Boston, but seems likely to play in left fi eld against left-handers for the Angels.

Angels acquire outfielder Victorino from Red Sox

The Associated PressMANKATO, Minn. — The

Minnesota Vikings acquired Mike Wallace for his speed and his experience at the wide receiver position.

The former Ole Miss stand-out came to training camp with more than that.

“I’ve got to take some things from Miami that I don’t think I did as well and just try to

bring it here and be a better person and a better player. Just lead more,” Wallace said. “I think I did a good job of leading by example on the fi eld, but there’s some things I could’ve” done better.

Though the Dolphins dealt with many issues beyond Wallace, his time there was largely unfulfi lling and un-comfortable. The most obvi-

ous problem was that he had trouble connecting with quar-terback Ryan Tannehill on the deep passes he was being paid so highly for.

One of the fastest players in the NFL was tied for 42nd in the league in 2013 with 11 receptions of 20-plus yards and tied for 47th in 2014 with a mere 10.

The fi ve-year deal that Wal-

lace signed for $30 million guaranteed after four seasons with Pittsburgh that were productive at least and out-standing at times, looked like an albatross.

The Dolphins found a trade partner in the Vikings, who sent a fi fth-round draft pick in exchange for Wallace, his huge contract and a seventh-round selection.

Wallace aims for more than deep throws

Photo Courtesy NEMCC

Falkner 7-on-7 ParticipantsStudents from six area high schools descended upon the Northeast Mississippi Community College campus on June 25 to participate in the first-ever seven-on-seven and linemen camps. The following from Falkner High School participated in the 2015 Northeast Seven-on-Seven Camp: Front row (from left), Lane Elliott, Elijah Moore and Cole Wilbanks. Back row (from left), Deshaun Alexander, Avery Russell, Autry Windham, Alex Caldwell and Emonti Peterson.

Please see SHORTS | 11

Page 11: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

40, according to STATS. The oldest is Colorado pitcher LaTroy Hawkins at 42 years, 218 days old Monday, followed by Mets pitcher Bartolo Co-lon (42 years, 64 days). The oldest position player is Miami outfi elder Ichi-ro Suzuki (41 years, 278 days).

Yankees manager Joe Girardi said Rodriguez is extremely productive and re-established himself as an everyday player.

“I’m going to continue to work hard. I thought April would be my most challenging month. Then as I started getting more repetition, I was hoping to get better and I think that’s happened,” Rodri-guez said.

“It’s also a nice remind-er to me that if you play clean and you work hard, that good things can hap-pen.”

Rodriguez has been with the Yankees since 2004. Just before spring training that year he was traded by Texas only three seasons into the $252 million, 10-year contract he signed after starting his career with Seattle from 1994-2000.

During his three sea-sons in Texas, he was a three-time All-Star while hitting 156 homers with 395 RBIs.

He got a new $275 mil-lion, 10-year contract from the Yankees after the 2007 season.

Little Cheerleader Camp

The Corinth High School Cheerleaders are sponsoring a Little Cheerleader Camp for students in Kindergar-ten through 6th grade. The camp is set for Au-gust 3-5 from 12-3:00 p.m. at Corinth Elemen-tary Gym. Registration is Monday, August 3 at 11:30 am. The cost is $35, which covers the cost of the camp and a camp t-shirt.

 Youth Baseball & Softball

The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Depart-ment is offering a fall league for boys Dixie Youth baseball and girls ASA softball. Registra-tion has started and will run through August 21. Player cost is $35. Age groups will be divided as 5/6, 7/8, 9/10 and 11/12. There will be a player observation day and a volunteer coach-es’ meeting after that to draft teams. Games will begin the week of September 14th and finish up by November 6th. Teams will play 7-8 games and a single elimination tournament. Call the Park Office for more information at 286-3067.

 Adult Fall Softball

The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Depart-ment is offering a Fall League for adult soft-ball. League divisions could include; Men’s Open, Women, Coed, Church, Senior, Wooden Bat and a One Pitch League. There must be a minimum of 4 teams registered to form the division. If 80% of the team’s players live in Alcorn County, the cost per team is $300 and $350 for all oth-ers. Players must be 16 years of age as of September 1 and teams must wear numbered uniformed tees. Team registration is open and goes through Au-gust 28th. Play is ASA sanctioned and games

will begin the week of September 7th. Teams will play 8 games and a single elimination tournament to end the season. Call the Park Office for more informa-tion at 286-3067.

 NFL Youth Flag Football

The Corinth/Alcorn County Parks Depart-ment in partnership with the NFL’s Play 60 program is offering Youth Flag Football. En-couraging 60 minutes of exercise weekly, this is the most recogniz-able youth flag football program in the USA. Open to girls and boys, ages 5-10 years old, the player fee is $55. Fee includes an NFL branded reversible jersey and insurance. Players will be required to wear a mouth guard. Registration is open and runs through Friday, August 14. There will be a league clinic/observa-tion day. Coaches will draft teams and games will begin the week of September 14 and fin-ish up on November 6. Call the Park Office for more information at 286-3067.

 Adult Fall 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.

ScoreboardBaseball

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBNew York 55 42 .567 —Toronto 50 50 .500 6½Baltimore 49 49 .500 6½Tampa Bay 50 51 .495 7Boston 44 55 .444 12

Central Division W L Pct GBKansas City 60 38 .612 —Minnesota 52 46 .531 8Detroit 48 51 .485 12½Chicago 46 50 .479 13Cleveland 45 53 .459 15

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 55 43 .561 —Houston 55 45 .550 1Texas 47 50 .485 7½Seattle 46 53 .465 9½Oakland 44 56 .440 12

___Saturday’s Games

Detroit 5, Boston 1San Francisco 2, Oakland 1Toronto 8, Seattle 6Baltimore 5, Tampa Bay 1Chicago White Sox 10, Cleveland 3Kansas City 2, Houston 1, 10 inningsN.Y. Yankees 8, Minnesota 5Texas 7, L.A. Angels 6

Sunday’s GamesBaltimore 5, Tampa Bay 2Chicago White Sox 2, Cleveland 1Kansas City 5, Houston 1N.Y. Yankees 7, Minnesota 2L.A. Angels 13, Texas 7San Francisco 4, Oakland 3Seattle 6, Toronto 5, 10 inningsBoston 11, Detroit 1

Monday’s GamesBaltimore 2, Atlanta 1, 11 inningsTampa Bay 5, Detroit 2Kansas City 9, Cleveland 4Chicago White Sox at Boston (n)N.Y. Yankees at Texas (n)Arizona at Seattle (n)

Today’s GamesAtlanta (Teheran 6-5) at Baltimore

(U.Jimenez 7-6), 6:05 p.m.Philadelphia (Morgan 1-2) at Toronto

(Doubront 1-0), 6:07 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 7-5) at

Boston (Miley 8-8), 6:10 p.m.Detroit (Price 9-3) at Tampa Bay (Odor-

izzi 5-6), 6:10 p.m.Kansas City (C.Young 8-6) at Cleveland

(Bauer 8-7), 6:10 p.m.N.Y. Yankees (Capuano 0-4) at Texas

(M.Perez 0-1), 7:05 p.m.L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 8-7) at Houston

(McHugh 11-5), 7:10 p.m.Pittsburgh (Morton 6-4) at Minnesota

(Pelfrey 5-7), 7:10 p.m.Arizona (Godley 1-0) at Seattle (Iwa-

kuma 2-1), 9:10 p.m.Oakland (Gray 10-4) at L.A. Dodgers

(B.Anderson 5-5), 9:10 p.m.Wednesday’s Games

Detroit at Tampa Bay, 11:10 a.m.Kansas City at Cleveland, 11:10 a.m.Pittsburgh at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m.Arizona at Seattle, 2:40 p.m.Atlanta at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.Philadelphia at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Boston, 6:10

p.m.N.Y. Yankees at Texas, 7:05 p.m.L.A. Angels at Houston, 7:10 p.m.Oakland at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m.

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBWashington 52 45 .536 —New York 51 48 .515 2Atlanta 46 52 .469 6½Miami 41 58 .414 12Philadelphia 37 63 .370 16½

Central Division W L Pct GBSt. Louis 63 35 .643 —Pittsburgh 57 41 .582 6Chicago 51 46 .526 11½Cincinnati 43 53 .448 19Milwaukee 43 56 .434 20½

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 56 44 .560 —San Francisco 54 44 .551 1San Diego 47 52 .475 8½Arizona 46 51 .474 8½Colorado 42 54 .438 12

___Saturday’s Games

San Francisco 2, Oakland 1Philadelphia 5, Chicago Cubs 0Washington 9, Pittsburgh 3N.Y. Mets 15, L.A. Dodgers 2St. Louis 1, Atlanta 0Cincinnati 5, Colorado 2Arizona 2, Milwaukee 0San Diego 3, Miami 1

Sunday’s GamesN.Y. Mets 3, L.A. Dodgers 2, 10 inningsPittsburgh 3, Washington 1Atlanta 3, St. Louis 2Philadelphia 11, Chicago Cubs 5San Francisco 4, Oakland 3Colorado 17, Cincinnati 7San Diego 3, Miami 2Arizona 3, Milwaukee 0

Monday’s GamesBaltimore 2, Atlanta 1, 11 inningsColorado at Chicago Cubs (n)Cincinnati at St. Louis (n)Arizona at Seattle (n)Milwaukee at San Francisco (n)

Today’s GamesAtlanta (Teheran 6-5) at Baltimore

(U.Jimenez 7-6), 6:05 p.m.Philadelphia (Morgan 1-2) at Toronto

(Doubront 1-0), 6:07 p.m.San Diego (Shields 8-3) at N.Y. Mets

(Syndergaard 4-5), 6:10 p.m.Washington (Zimmermann 8-5) at Mi-

ami (Fernandez 3-0), 6:10 p.m.Colorado (Undecided) at Chicago Cubs

(Undecided), 7:05 p.m.Pittsburgh (Morton 6-4) at Minnesota

(Pelfrey 5-7), 7:10 p.m.Cincinnati (Leake 8-5) at St. Louis (Jai.

Garcia 3-3), 7:15 p.m.Arizona (Godley 1-0) at Seattle (Iwa-

kuma 2-1), 9:10 p.m.Oakland (Gray 10-4) at L.A. Dodgers

(B.Anderson 5-5), 9:10 p.m.Milwaukee (W.Peralta 1-5) at San Fran-

cisco (M.Cain 2-1), 9:15 p.m.Wednesday’s Games

Pittsburgh at Minnesota, 12:10 p.m.Colorado at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m.Arizona at Seattle, 2:40 p.m.Milwaukee at San Francisco, 2:45 p.m.Atlanta at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.Philadelphia at Toronto, 6:07 p.m.San Diego at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m.Washington at Miami, 6:10 p.m.Cincinnati at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.Oakland at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m..

TransactionsMonday’s Deals

BASEBALL

American LeagueLOS ANGELES ANGELS — Assigned

LHP Adam Wilk outright to Salt Lake (PCL).

TAMPA BAY RAYS — Sent LHP Drew Smyly to Durham (IL) for a rehab assign-ment.

TEXAS RANGERS — Sent OF Antoan Richardson to Round Rock (PCL) for a rehab assignment.

National LeagueCINCINNATI REDS — Designated OF

Chris Dominguez for assignment.LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Optioned

RHPs Chin-hui Tsao and Josh Ravin to Oklahoma City (PCL). Sent RHP Carlos Frias to Rancho Cucamonga (Cal) for re-hab assignments.

MIAMI MARLINS — Sent 2B Dee Gor-don to Jupiter (FSL) for a rehab assign-ment.

NEW YORK METS — Sent OF Cesar Puello to the GCL Mets for a rehab as-signment.

American AssociationGARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS — Re-

leased INF Sam Lind.KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Released

OF Kyle Robinson and LHP Blake Holo-vach.

SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Signed OF Cody Bishop. Released RHP Will Rankin.

Can-Am League

QUEBEC CAPITALES — Released RHP Jamaine Cotton and INFs Vince Guglietti and Tyler Heil.

SUSSEX COUNTY MINERS — Signed INF Brett Zaziski. Released INF Frank Salerno.

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS — Traded F David Lee to Boston for F Gerald Wallace and G Chris Babb.

MIAMI HEAT — Traded G Shabazz Napier to Orlando for a protected 2016 second-round draft pick, and G Zoran Dragic, a 2020 second-round draft pick and cash to Boston for a 2016 second-round draft pick.

Women’s National Basketball Association

ATLANTA DREAM — Sent C Erika de Souza to Chicago, who sent a 2016 sec-ond-round draft pick to Atlanta and C Syl-via Fowles to Minnesota. Minnesota sent F Damiris Dantas, C Reshanda Gray and a 2016 fi rst-round draft pick to Atlanta.

SOCCERMajor League Soccer

NEW YORK RED BULLS — Signed M Shaun Wright-Phillips.

COLLEGEEDINBORO — Named Joe Wanson

quarterbacks and receivers coach and Jack Corey part-time offensive line and tight ends coach.

EMORY & HENRY — Named Jared Ei-riksson and Kenny Sterne men’s assis-tant soccer coaches.

MEMPHIS — Named Alex Winchell women’s basketball video coordinator.

NEBRASKA — Named Dr. Todd Stull director of sports psychology.

PENNSYLVANIA — Named Geoff Bond men’s heavyweight rowing coach.

RUTGERS — Announced women’s bas-ketball G Natalie Parsons is transferring to Westminster (Utah).

TEXAS STATE — Named Karen Blair women’s assistant basketball coach/re-cruiting coordinator.

VIRGINIA — Announced men’s basket-ball F Austin Nichols has transferred from Memphis.

CyclingTour de France

Sunday at Paris Champs-ElyseesFinal Overall Standings

(After 21 stages)1. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky, 84:46:14.2. Nairo Quintana, Colombia, Movistar,

1:12 behind.3. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar,

5:25.

4. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana, 8:36.5. Alberto Contador, Spain, Tinkoff-

Saxo, 9:48.6. Robert Gesink, Netherlands, Lotto

NL-Jumbo, 10:47.7. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Trek

Factory Racing, 15:14.8. Mathias Frank, Switzerland, IAM Cy-

cling, 15:39.9. Romain Bardet, France, AG2R La

Mondiale, 16:00.10. Pierre Rolland, France, Europcar,

17:30.11. Andrew Talansky, United States,

Cannondale-Garmin, 22:06.12. Samuel Sanchez, Spain, BMC Rac-

ing, 22:50.13. Serge Pauwels, Belgium, MTN-

Qhubeka, 31:03.14. Warren Barguil, France, Giant-Alpe-

cin, 31:15.15. Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky,

31:39.16. Thibaut Pinot, France, FDJ, 38:52.17. Roman Kreuziger, Czech Republic,

Tinkoff-Saxo, 1:02:51.18. Mikael Cherel, France, AG2R La

Mondialee, 1:05:00.19. Jarlinson Pantano, Colombia, IAM

Cycling, 1:09:08.20. Jan Bakelents, Belgium, AG2R La

Mondiale, 1:16:36.Also148. Tyler Farrar, United States, MTN-

Qhubeka, 4:32:32.

Basketball

WNBA standings,

scheduleEASTERN CONFERENCE

W L Pct GBNew York 12 5 .706 —Chicago 11 6 .647 1Washington 9 6 .600 2Connecticut 8 7 .533 3Indiana 8 8 .500 3½Atlanta 7 10 .412 5

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBMinnesota 12 4 .750 —Phoenix 9 7 .563 3Tulsa 10 8 .556 3San Antonio 5 12 .294 7½Seattle 5 13 .278 8Los Angeles 3 13 .188 9

___Monday’s Games

No games scheduledToday’s Games

Indiana at Connecticut, 6 p.m.

11 • Daily Corinthian Tuesday, July 28, 2015

SHORTS

A-ROD

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 10

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Page 12: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

REBECCA COLEMAN PHIPPS

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

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

www.corinthlawyer.com“Supporting Education”

GLOBALAuto Sales & BrokersTerry Gramling

Phone: 662-284-9860Cell: 662-816-3514Fax: 662-284-9858

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[email protected]

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

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

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Appliances, Electronics, Lawn & Garden Tools

Pratt Family Medical Clinic, P. A.

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

A TO ZKids News

On Sunday, July 26, many people in the United States will observe Parents’ Day. This day is set aside to celebrate parents and their love for their chil-dren and for them to rededicate themselves. Unlike Mother’s and Father’s Day, this day was set aside to place focus on healthy parenting, not just to honor the parents themselves. In 1994, President Bill Clin-ton signed a resolution making every fourth Sunday in July Parent’s Day. The official Congressional Res-olution states that Parent’s Day was created for “rec-ognizing, uplifting, and supporting the role of parents in the rearing of children.” Communities around the Nation are encouraged to celebrate the commemo-ration by having family-focused events which allow families to communicate with each other. Set some time aside on that day to spend with your Mom or Dad and tell them how much you appreciate all that they do for you!

Cross-word Ans: Across- 3)children 6)uncon-ditional 7)family Down-1)

rededicate 2)clinton 3)community 4)parent 5)

healthy

Celebrating Family OnNational Parent’s Day

A Special Thank You To All Our Sponsors!

Across Clues:3. Youngsters who are raised by adults.6. The love parents have for their child.7. Parent’s Day is for the entire ____.Down Clues:1. Parent’s Day is a day for parents to?2. President that signed Parent’s Day into law.3. Who is to participate in this day?4. A person who brings up a child.5. Type of parenting to focus on.

Family Member Word Find

Parent’s Day Crossword

Parent Maze

v

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662-287-831

Visit our website www.kingkars.net662-287-8773

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12 • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Funeral Directors1951 East 3rd St • Corinth

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665-9314

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Page 13: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • 13

& Business– Run Your Ad On This Page For $165 Mo. –

Harper Square Mall. Corinth, MS 38834

GRISHAM INSURANCE662-286-9835662-415-2363

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CHANGE & BALANCE

662-415-6375 Help Wanted-Mechanic

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HWY 45 @ BIGGERSVILLE

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Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

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JasonRoach’sPlumbing & Electric

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find a loving companion in the classified ads!

PETS

FARM

FARMS FOR SALE0480300 ACRES forty milesWest on Hwy 72. Call

662-216-6444

MERCHANDISE

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT0521

CRAFTSMAN, 15 .5 HP.42" cut- $350. 662-286-2655

TROY BUILT 17 Hip. 42"CUT. $350. 662-286-2655

YARD MACHINE RIDINGMOWER. 42" cut. 17 HP,$375.00 662-664-2113

FURNITURE0533BASSETT FLORAL printcouch with claw footlegs $125. 731-239-9898

SOLID WOOD Bunkbeds,& Mattresses, side stair-case w/ drawers. 1 yearold, $400., Ser. inq. onlytext 662-212-3730

MISC. TICKETS05361 YR Old Rider Mower,

No Motor, Paid $1000.00To Sell For Parts $100.00

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2 A N T I Q U E F R E N C HB E R G E R E P A R L O RCHAIRS. EXCELLENTCONDITION. $300. FORTHE PAIR. 415-7791

2 DRAWER OAK FILINGCABINET. LETTER SIZE.

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250.00 OBO 665-1133

3 PAIRS of mens pants,size 38/32 $15.00 for all

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ADULT EXERCISE ChairGym, as advertised onTV. Excellent Condition.$35. 415-7791

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AIR CONDITIONERGood Condition $60.00

287-7424

BROTHER OFFICE Faxand Copy Machine. $25.

415-7791

DAVIS 32 Cal Semi-AutoPistol $200.

Call 662-720-6855

DUKE MANUFACTURINGCo., Restaurant Convec-tion Oven. Natural Gas,

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JIMENEZ ARMS22 Semi-Auto Pistol$140. Call 662-720-6855

MAYTAG WASHER andpedestal. Just installeda new motor $150.00

286-6582

ONE ROOM AC 6000 BTU$50.00 662-396-1326

PFALTZGRAFF DISHES,Service for 15, Lots ofServing pieces. $75.00

509-251-1940

RIMS FOR a aftermarketCorvette 17x10, $200.00

OBO 212-2957

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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.

FOUND0149REDDISH BROWN youngfemale dog found in Ac-ton area. Has collar, notag. Call 731-239-9776 or731-610-2728

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

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

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

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUSTBE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL HELP0232

Experienced Electricians

needed

Corinth, MS and surrounding areas.

662-594-5133

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.INTERMITTENT U.S. Gov-ernment job with FarmService Agency, Corinth,MS. Seeking candidatewith farm experience orknowledge to perform workin support of MississippiAgriculture and Farmers.Computer Skills required.Starting pay is $12.07-$15.15, depending on qual-ifications. Applications areavailable at 3105 MullinsDrive, Corinth, MS 38834o r b y e m a i l a [email protected] deadline is Au-gust 10, 2015 at 4:30 pm.USDA is an Equal Oppor-tunity Provider and Em-ployer.

TRUCKING0244

FERROUS METALTRANSFERIN IUKA, MS

IS HIRING FLATBED OTR

TRUCK DRIVERS

Clean background,25 years old and

min. of 6 monthsexperience flat-

bed a plus but notrequired.

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Bonus's, Homeevery weekend.

Apply in person at:38 CR 370Iuka, MS

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Gross paybetween, $775-$1200 per week.

Have you finished your to-do list?FIND WHO YOU

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TO-DO Clean house

Fix the sink

Sell the car

Find the dog

Look for a Job

662-287-6111

Page 14: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

14 • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

HOMES FOR SALE0710

Patti'sProperty Rentals

662-279-7453

Farmington/Central

3 bed, 2 bath, $750

3 Bed, 2 Bath - $675

3 Bed, 2 Bath - $65012 Month Lease, Deposit required

BURNSVILLE

40 ACRESOF

WOODED LAND

$80,000

CALL662-808-9313

OR415-5071

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Call Ronnie:662-287-8111

52 CR 713(2 miles from the hospital)

Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 2.5 Bath Custom Built home. Hardwood,

Vaulted ceilings, Designer Ceramic tile showers. Lots of high end details in this home. Sitting on

2 acres with 2 additionalacres available.

$228,500

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!

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

Desirable Farmington Area

25 CR 217

3 Bedrooms, 2 BathsPrivate Offi ce,Large Open

Concept LivingFenced Yard

Flat Lot.Only $109,000.

Call 662-279-3679 for Private Viewing.

SOUTHERNREAL ESTATE

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 Representative District 2

State Senate District 4

Supervisor District 1

Superintendent of Education

Luke Doehner Chris GrishamGeorge Haynie

Steve Little

Jeremy “Jerry” FieldsLowell Hinton Jerry Miller

Larry B. MitchellGina Rogers Smith (Inc)

Rufus “Jaybird” Duncan, JR.Scotty Little

Brodie McEwenDal Nelms (Inc)Jon Newcomb

J.C. ParkerJames Voyles

Supervisor District 2

SheriffBilly Clyde Burns

Ben CaldwellNed CregeenDavid DerrickMike LaRue

David NunleyKeith Settlemires

Roger Voyles

Chancery Clerk

Constable Post 1

Constable Post 2

Scotty L. BradleyJohnny Butler

Wayne MaddoxLandon Tucker

James BryantDaniel CooperPaul Copeland Wayne Duncan

Jason WillisCoroner

District Attorney

Jay JonesRon Strom

Arch BullardJohn Weddle

Lashunder BlanchardRandle Castile

Aneysa “Neicy” MatthewsJimmy McGee

Nick BainBilly Miller

Rita Potts-Parks Eric Powell

Supervisor District 4Mike Coleman

Keith “Dude” Conaway (Rep.)Steve Glidewell

Danny “Shorty” MinceyReed Mitchell

Gary Ross

4th District Election Commissioner

Bill Gatlin Sandy Coleman Mitchell

Karen Burns DuncanKevin HarvellGreg Younger

Tax Collector

Supervisor District 5

Jeff RencherLarry Ross

Jimmy Tate Waldon

Supervisor District 3Tim Mitchell (Inc)

Shane Serio

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT

This 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.

State Representative District 1

Lester “Bubba” Carpenter Lisa Benderman-Wigginton

MEDICAL/DENTAL0220

MS CARE CENTERis looking for

Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts &

Full-timeEnvironmental Services

Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth

Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30E.O.E.

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Send To: Daily Corinthian • P. O. Box 1200 • Corinth, MS 38835

Daily Corinthian

LEGALS0955

I N T H E C H A N C E R YC O U R T O F A L C O R NCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THEESTATE OF

NO. 2015-0368-02

KENNETH EUGENEDILDY, DECEASED

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby giv-en that Letters Testa-mentary were on the7th day of July, 2015, is-sued to the under-signed by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County,Mississippi, on the Es-tate of KENNETH EU-GENE DILDY, Deceased,and all persons havingclaims against the saidestate are hereby noti-fied to present thesame to the Clerk ofsaid Court for probateand registration accord-ing to law within ninety(90) days from July 14,2015, the date of thefirst publication or theywill be forever barred.

THIS the 7th day ofJuly, 2015.

MICHELLE LYNN DILDY,Executrix of the Estateof KENNETH EUGENEDILDY, Deceased

3tc July 14, 21 and 28,2015

Sharp Fisher & Borden404 E Waldron StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-286-2214

14939

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION

OF THE ESTATE OF

MILDRED IRENE ISBELL,

DECEASED

)NO. 2015-0383-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on this daygranted to the undersigned,Randy D. Isbell, on the estateof Mildred Irene Isbell, 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 after thedate of the first publication ofthis notice or the same shallbe forever barred. The firstday of the publication of thisnotice is the 21st day of July,2015.

WITNESS my signature onthis 16th day of July, 2015.

RANDY D. ISBELL, ADMIN-ISTRATOROF THE ESTATE OF MIL-DRED IRENE ISBELL, DE-CEASED

Donald Ray Downs, P.A.509 Waldron Street(38834)P.O. Box 1618Corinth, Mississippi 38835-1618(662)287-8088

14949

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

L A S T W I L L A N DTESTAMENT OF DIXIEL . M A S I E R S , D E -C E A S E D

CAUSE NO. 2015-0365-02-M

SUMMONS

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

COUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: Unknown Heirs ofDixie L. Masiers, De-ceased

You have been made aDefendant in the suit filed inthis Court by Bonnie L. Patty,Petitioner, seeking a determ-ination of heirs.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 o'clock A.M. on the24th day of August, 2015,in the Courtroom of the Al-corn County Courthouse inCorinth, Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and in case of yourfailure to appear and defend-ant , a judgment wi l l beentered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the complaint orpetition.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing but you may do so if youdesire.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the9 day of July, 2015.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERK

ALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPI

BY: W JUSTICEDEPUTY CLERK

Rebecca Coleman PhippsATTORNEY AT LAW605 Taylor StreetPost Office Box 992Corinth, MS 38834662-286-9211

3tc 7/14, 7/21, 7/28

14938

I N T H E C H A N C E R YC O U R T O F A L C O R NCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THEESTATE OF

NO. 2015-0368-02

KENNETH EUGENEDILDY, DECEASED

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby giv-en that Letters Testa-mentary were on the7th day of July, 2015, is-sued to the under-signed by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County,Mississippi, on the Es-tate of KENNETH EU-GENE DILDY, Deceased,and all persons havingclaims against the saidestate are hereby noti-fied to present thesame to the Clerk ofsaid Court for probateand registration accord-ing to law within ninety(90) days from July 14,2015, the date of thefirst publication or theywill be forever barred.

THIS the 7th day ofJuly, 2015.

MICHELLE LYNN DILDY,Executrix of the Estateof KENNETH EUGENEDILDY, Deceased

3tc July 14, 21 and 28,2015

Sharp Fisher & Borden404 E Waldron StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-286-2214

14939

TRANSPORTATION

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

L A S T W I L L A N DTESTAMENT OF DIXIEL . M A S I E R S , D E -C E A S E D

CAUSE NO. 2015-0365-02-M

SUMMONS

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

COUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: Unknown Heirs ofDixie L. Masiers, De-ceased

You have been made aDefendant in the suit filed inthis Court by Bonnie L. Patty,Petitioner, seeking a determ-ination of heirs.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 o'clock A.M. on the24th day of August, 2015,in the Courtroom of the Al-corn County Courthouse inCorinth, Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and in case of yourfailure to appear and defend-ant , a judgment wi l l beentered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the complaint orpetition.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing but you may do so if youdesire.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the9 day of July, 2015.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERK

ALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPI

BY: W JUSTICEDEPUTY CLERK

Rebecca Coleman PhippsATTORNEY AT LAW605 Taylor StreetPost Office Box 992Corinth, MS 38834662-286-9211

3tc 7/14, 7/21, 7/28

14938

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.

LOTS & ACREAGE07342.64 ACRE LOT, EDGE OFCORINTH OFF 72 E .LOADED DOWN WITHOAK TIMBER. WILL FIN-ANCE WITH DOWN PAY-MENT. $9750.00

CALL 662-664-3350

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HUDPUBLISHER’S

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

MISC. TICKETS0536

TRANSMISSION FOR 307OLDSMOBILE OF 1984 98R E G E N C Y , W O R K E DGOOD WHEN REMOVED,SOLD AS IS $180.287-9739

WHITE CEILING Fan, 5blades & 3 lights, $35.00

212-2957

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

COMPLETE DESKTOPcomputer, custom builtat Computer Universe,

Windows XP Profession-al- $120- 287-9739

GRAY TV stand. 32"wide, 20" ta l l . Verysturdy. $20. call 662-287-9739

MOSSBURG 22 Semi-Auto Rifle. $110. Call

662-720-6855

REVERSE YOURAD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6111

for details.

LEGALS

LEGALS0955

Page 15: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • 15

SERVICES

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 Coachman28’ Catalina CamperSleeps 6 (Memory

Foam Mattresses), 32” Flatscreen TV w/DVD, Bath-tub/Shower, Range/Stove/

Microwave, & More. William Whitaker

662-660-4298 for More Info

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

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

W & W HORSE OR CATTLE TRAILER

ALL ALUMINUMLIKE NEW

$7000.

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

KUBOTA B7100 HST4 W/D WITH

LOADER4 FT. TILLERBOX BLADE

$5250/OBONEED TO SELL

CALL 662-287-7403 OR 415-4561

1956 FORD 6005 SPEED

POWER STEERINGREMOTE HYDRAULICS

GOOD TIRESGOOD CONDITION

$4,200 662-287-4514

HAULER

$ 00CALL FOR

ADDITIONALINFORMATION

662-808-9313 OR662-415-5071

30' MOTOR HOME

1988 FORD

SLEEPS 6

51,000 MILES

$4300

662-415-5247

1992 SPECTRUM PONTOON

24 FT. 2003 - 90HP MERCURY MOTOR,

GOOD TRAILER - NEW TIRES

$5500/OBO662-286-1717

SOLD

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

WINNEBAGO JOURNEYCLASS A , RV 2000

MODEL34.9 FT. LONG

50 AMP HOOKUPCUMMINS DIESEL

FREIGHTLINER CHASSISLARGE SLIDE OUT

ONAN QUIET GENERATOR

VERY WELL KEPT.,500.

662-728-2628

SOLD

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

House For Sale By Owner

38 CR 116 • Corinth, MS 38834 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

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION

OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES

CASSIE CASTILE,

DECEASED

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF JAMES CASSIE CASTILE,DECEASED

You have been made aDefendant in the Complaintfiled in this Court by Emily Es-sary, both individually and asadministratrix of the estate ofJames Cassie Castile, de-ceased, and you must take im-mediate action to protectyour rights.

Respondents other thanyou in this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofJames Cassie Castile at 9:00o’clock a.m. on the 31st day ofAugust, 2015, at the AlcornCounty Chancery Building,Corinth, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will beentered against you for thethings demanded in said Com-plaint.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing, but you may do so if youdesire.

ISSUED under my handand seal of said Court this the16th of July, 2015.

BOBBY MAROLTC H A N C E R Y C O U R TC L E R K

4tc 7/21, 28, 8/4, 11

14950

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

DOROTHY BOBORHODAPLAINTIFFVSUNKNOWN HEIRS ATLAW OFPEARL BOBO, SR., ETALDEFENDANTS

CAUSE NO. 2015-0304-02M

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MIS-SISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs atlaw of Pearl Bobo, Sr., de-ceased; the unknown heirs atlaw of Cheerful Bobo, de-ceased; and each and everyperson claiming any right, titleor interest in and to the realproperties described in theComplaint herein.

You have beennamed as Defendants in thecivil action filed in this Courtby Dorothy Bobo Rhodaseeking the judicial determin-ation of heirship of PearlBobo, Sr., deceased; judicialdetermination of heirship ofCheerful Bobo, deceased; andconfirmation of title of thereal properties described inthe Complaint in this cause.

YOU ARE COM-MANDED TO APPEARAND DEFEND THISACTION AT 9:00 A.M.,ON THE 25th DAY OFAUGUST, 2015, ATTHE CHANCERYCOURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTYCOURTHOUSE, COR-INTH, MISSISSIPPI, andin case of your failure to ap-pear and defend, a judgmentwill be entered against youfor the money or other thingsdemanded in the Complaint.

You may mail or handdeliver a copy of a written an-swer either admitting ordenying such allegations in theComplaint to attorney forPlaintiff, Rhett R. Russell, P.O.Box 27, 204 North SpringStreet, Tupelo, Mississippi38802.

You must also file theoriginal of your answer withthe clerk of this Court after-ward, but no later than 9:00a.m., on the 25th day of Au-gust, 2015.

This the ___ day ofJuly, 2015.

Bobby MaroltCHANCERY CLERK

BY: Karen Duncan, D.C.

Russell & Russell, PLLCP.O. BOX 27Tupelo, MS 38802(662)844-1630

3tc 7/21, 28, 8/4/2015

14951

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION

OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES

CASSIE CASTILE,

DECEASED

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF JAMES CASSIE CASTILE,DECEASED

You have been made aDefendant in the Complaintfiled in this Court by Emily Es-sary, both individually and asadministratrix of the estate ofJames Cassie Castile, de-ceased, and you must take im-mediate action to protectyour rights.

Respondents other thanyou in this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofJames Cassie Castile at 9:00o’clock a.m. on the 31st day ofAugust, 2015, at the AlcornCounty Chancery Building,Corinth, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will beentered against you for thethings demanded in said Com-plaint.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing, but you may do so if youdesire.

ISSUED under my handand seal of said Court this the16th of July, 2015.

BOBBY MAROLTC H A N C E R Y C O U R TC L E R K

4tc 7/21, 28, 8/4, 11

14950

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION

OF THE ESTATE OF

MILDRED IRENE ISBELL,

DECEASED

)NO. 2015-0383-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giventhat Letters of Administra-tion have been on this daygranted to the undersigned,Randy D. Isbell, on the estateof Mildred Irene Isbell, 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 after thedate of the first publication ofthis notice or the same shallbe forever barred. The firstday of the publication of thisnotice is the 21st day of July,2015.

WITNESS my signature onthis 16th day of July, 2015.

RANDY D. ISBELL, ADMIN-ISTRATOROF THE ESTATE OF MIL-DRED IRENE ISBELL, DE-CEASED

Donald Ray Downs, P.A.509 Waldron Street(38834)P.O. Box 1618Corinth, Mississippi 38835-1618(662)287-8088

14949

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: ADMINISTRATION

OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES

CASSIE CASTILE,

DECEASED

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: THE HEIRS-AT-LAWOF JAMES CASSIE CASTILE,DECEASED

You have been made aDefendant in the Complaintfiled in this Court by Emily Es-sary, both individually and asadministratrix of the estate ofJames Cassie Castile, de-ceased, and you must take im-mediate action to protectyour rights.

Respondents other thanyou in this action are: None

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidComplaint to establish anddetermine heirs-at-law ofJames Cassie Castile at 9:00o’clock a.m. on the 31st day ofAugust, 2015, at the AlcornCounty Chancery Building,Corinth, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will beentered against you for thethings demanded in said Com-plaint.

You are not required tofile an answer or other plead-ing, but you may do so if youdesire.

ISSUED under my handand seal of said Court this the16th of July, 2015.

BOBBY MAROLTC H A N C E R Y C O U R TC L E R K

4tc 7/21, 28, 8/4, 11

14950

Page 16: 072815 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Tuesday, July 28, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

SERVICES

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.

White 2006 Wrangler XMint Condition! Straight 6- auto-

matic- with 44,100 miles.Trail Certifi ed, but never been off-road.

Mickey Thompson wheels with BF Goodrich Tires (35’s)- less than 15K miles on them. Black Hard

top currently on it & Bikini top comes with it. Tan Leather Interior, Stereo Sound Bar, Custom Jeep Cover, and Custom Bumpers. Serviced regularly. 4\” lift with 2\” body lift. Title in Hand- $22,000.

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

located in Corinth, MS.Call Randy: 662-415-5462

2002 Saturn

4Cyl, Automatic Transmission

32 MPGAll New

Electrical System

$1500.00

662-423-8449

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

REDUCED

$7500.00 OBO

2004 Cadillac Seville SLSLoaded, leather, sunroof, chrome

wheels.

89,000 Miles$5900.

Call 662-603-1290

1996 ToyotaAvalon LS316,600 miles, Runs Great!

Everything is in working condition.

$2500662-212-3883

TAKE OVER

PAYMENTS!

662-462-8274

2008 Nissan Versa

2012

35000 miles, 4 cylinder, auto, ipod ready, cd

player, power windows and locks, runs and

drives like new, Perfect graduation present!

$10,650.00

662-665-1995

2012 Nissan Sentra SR

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

1989 Mercedes Benz300 CE

145K miles, Rear bucket seats,

Champagne color, Excellent Condition.

Diligently maintained. $5000.00

662-415-2657

01 JEEP 4.0 New top

front & rear bumper Custom Jeep radio

and CD player$9,800

662-643-3565$9,800

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

2001 Honda Shadow Spirit

Great bike with only 32,000 milesWhite in color with new tires and a

Mustang Seat.Very Good Condition

$2000.00662-396-1232

leave message if no answer

2009 Yamaha 650 V-Star

Great Bike with only 3500 Miles

Bike is like new, Gray in ColorRuns Great!$3000.00

662-396-1232 Leave message if no answer

2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bikew/removable

(three bolts) trike kit., 6400 miles,

excellent condition.$7500.00

662-808-9662 or 662-808-2020

REDUCED2012

BansheeBighorn

Side-by-Side4 X 4 w/ WenchAM/FM w/ CD

$7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

FOR SALE2005 FORD

EXPEDITION

• Am/Fm Cd Player• 144,O00 Miles• Third Row Seat• Towing Package• Leather Interior• Keyless Entry

$7,000

• 4X4 Wheel Drive• Automatic Transmission• Cruise Control

662-416-6989

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, $4000.00

662-287-8894

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

E-Z- Electric Golf Cart

New charger and new batteriesBack seat

Rain enclosure windshield

$2000.662-212-4450

SOLD

SOLD

1976 F115428 Motor

Very Fast

$3,500.

662-808-9313662-415-5071

SOLD

SOLD

1997 Mustang

BlackLike new on the inside and out.

Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles

$4,500.00662-664-0357

REDUCED!

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

2006 Nissan Xterra SE111,444 Well Maintained Miles.

4WD, High fl ow cat back exhaust. Air Raid air intake, CD changer, power windows. locks, mirrors,

cruise control, auto transmission, V-6, Alloy wheels, side steps,

towing pkg, excellent tires, silver w/grey interior. Second owner.

$7950 Reduced662-286-0725 or 662-287-8252

after 6 pm

2008 CHEVY MALIBUBEIGE

4 DOOR78,000 MILES APPROX.

$7900.CALL 662-286-9316

MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS 2004

LOW MILEAGE - ONE OWNEREXCELLENT COND.

$5000.662-284-6768

SOLD

$7500

1991 TOYOTAEXT. CAB222,000 miles

4 cylinder, 5 speedNew Paint Job$4000. OBO

662-223-0428662-415-6004

1996 MERCSABLESILVER

139,000 MilesNewer radiator, tires,suspension & much

more!

$995662-664-0956

2001 Dodge1500 4X4Ext. Cab, 4 DR,

Loaded, 218k mls,New Tires$3500

662-665-5679

1991 TOYOTAEXT. CAB 4WD

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

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

DOROTHY BOBORHODAPLAINTIFFVSUNKNOWN HEIRS ATLAW OFPEARL BOBO, SR., ETALDEFENDANTS

CAUSE NO. 2015-0304-02M

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MIS-SISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs atlaw of Pearl Bobo, Sr., de-ceased; the unknown heirs atlaw of Cheerful Bobo, de-ceased; and each and everyperson claiming any right, titleor interest in and to the realproperties described in theComplaint herein.

You have beennamed as Defendants in thecivil action filed in this Courtby Dorothy Bobo Rhodaseeking the judicial determin-ation of heirship of PearlBobo, Sr., deceased; judicialdetermination of heirship ofCheerful Bobo, deceased; andconfirmation of title of thereal properties described inthe Complaint in this cause.

YOU ARE COM-MANDED TO APPEARAND DEFEND THISACTION AT 9:00 A.M.,ON THE 25th DAY OFAUGUST, 2015, ATTHE CHANCERYCOURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTYCOURTHOUSE, COR-INTH, MISSISSIPPI, andin case of your failure to ap-pear and defend, a judgmentwill be entered against youfor the money or other thingsdemanded in the Complaint.

You may mail or handdeliver a copy of a written an-swer either admitting ordenying such allegations in theComplaint to attorney forPlaintiff, Rhett R. Russell, P.O.Box 27, 204 North SpringStreet, Tupelo, Mississippi38802.

You must also file theoriginal of your answer withthe clerk of this Court after-ward, but no later than 9:00a.m., on the 25th day of Au-gust, 2015.

This the ___ day ofJuly, 2015.

Bobby MaroltCHANCERY CLERK

BY: Karen Duncan, D.C.

Russell & Russell, PLLCP.O. BOX 27Tupelo, MS 38802(662)844-1630

3tc 7/21, 28, 8/4/2015

14951

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

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

DOROTHY BOBORHODAPLAINTIFFVSUNKNOWN HEIRS ATLAW OFPEARL BOBO, SR., ETALDEFENDANTS

CAUSE NO. 2015-0304-02M

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MIS-SISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs atlaw of Pearl Bobo, Sr., de-ceased; the unknown heirs atlaw of Cheerful Bobo, de-ceased; and each and everyperson claiming any right, titleor interest in and to the realproperties described in theComplaint herein.

You have beennamed as Defendants in thecivil action filed in this Courtby Dorothy Bobo Rhodaseeking the judicial determin-ation of heirship of PearlBobo, Sr., deceased; judicialdetermination of heirship ofCheerful Bobo, deceased; andconfirmation of title of thereal properties described inthe Complaint in this cause.

YOU ARE COM-MANDED TO APPEARAND DEFEND THISACTION AT 9:00 A.M.,ON THE 25th DAY OFAUGUST, 2015, ATTHE CHANCERYCOURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTYCOURTHOUSE, COR-INTH, MISSISSIPPI, andin case of your failure to ap-pear and defend, a judgmentwill be entered against youfor the money or other thingsdemanded in the Complaint.

You may mail or handdeliver a copy of a written an-swer either admitting ordenying such allegations in theComplaint to attorney forPlaintiff, Rhett R. Russell, P.O.Box 27, 204 North SpringStreet, Tupelo, Mississippi38802.

You must also file theoriginal of your answer withthe clerk of this Court after-ward, but no later than 9:00a.m., on the 25th day of Au-gust, 2015.

This the ___ day ofJuly, 2015.

Bobby MaroltCHANCERY CLERK

BY: Karen Duncan, D.C.

Russell & Russell, PLLCP.O. BOX 27Tupelo, MS 38802(662)844-1630

3tc 7/21, 28, 8/4/2015

14951

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

DOROTHY BOBORHODAPLAINTIFFVSUNKNOWN HEIRS ATLAW OFPEARL BOBO, SR., ETALDEFENDANTS

CAUSE NO. 2015-0304-02M

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MIS-SISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs atlaw of Pearl Bobo, Sr., de-ceased; the unknown heirs atlaw of Cheerful Bobo, de-ceased; and each and everyperson claiming any right, titleor interest in and to the realproperties described in theComplaint herein.

You have beennamed as Defendants in thecivil action filed in this Courtby Dorothy Bobo Rhodaseeking the judicial determin-ation of heirship of PearlBobo, Sr., deceased; judicialdetermination of heirship ofCheerful Bobo, deceased; andconfirmation of title of thereal properties described inthe Complaint in this cause.

YOU ARE COM-MANDED TO APPEARAND DEFEND THISACTION AT 9:00 A.M.,ON THE 25th DAY OFAUGUST, 2015, ATTHE CHANCERYCOURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTYCOURTHOUSE, COR-INTH, MISSISSIPPI, andin case of your failure to ap-pear and defend, a judgmentwill be entered against youfor the money or other thingsdemanded in the Complaint.

You may mail or handdeliver a copy of a written an-swer either admitting ordenying such allegations in theComplaint to attorney forPlaintiff, Rhett R. Russell, P.O.Box 27, 204 North SpringStreet, Tupelo, Mississippi38802.

You must also file theoriginal of your answer withthe clerk of this Court after-ward, but no later than 9:00a.m., on the 25th day of Au-gust, 2015.

This the ___ day ofJuly, 2015.

Bobby MaroltCHANCERY CLERK

BY: Karen Duncan, D.C.

Russell & Russell, PLLCP.O. BOX 27Tupelo, MS 38802(662)844-1630

3tc 7/21, 28, 8/4/2015

14951