050815 daily corinthian e edition

20
Vol. 119, No. 107 Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages Two sections Friday May 8, 2015 75 cents Today 87 Partly sunny Tonight 64 25 years ago 10 years ago Workers are busy renovating the Farmington Water Associa- tion’s 750,000 gallon water tank. General manager Roger Wig- ginton says its the tank’s first major face-lift since its installa- tion in 1988. 20% chance of thunderstorms Corinth Mayor E.S. Bishop announces plans to seek another term in office. Talks are intensifying on the possibility of making the old East Corinth Elementary School building into the com- munity’s Head Start center. Representatives of Missis- sippi Action for Progress, in- cluding Chief Operations Of- cer Dorothy Foster, told the Board of Mayor and Aldermen on Tuesday that the agency is prepared to make a signicant investment to create a state-of- the-art facility to house both the Corinth and Kendrick Head Start students. “Those facilities, at this point, do not meet health and safety standards,” said Foster. She estimates it will take $500,000 to $700,000 to bring the dormant building into com- pliance with health and safety regulations. “We anticipate some funding in the very near future to begin renovation,” said Foster. The two Head Start centers have 153 enrolled children. Re- gional Administrator Deborah Cooper said the school build- MAP eyes dormant school property BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Constructing his dreams with his own two hands, 17-year-old Jacob Brock has proven hard work, determination and good- old-fashioned ingenuity are the building blocks for success. A second-year student in Fred Jackson’s Construction program at the Alcorn Career and Technology Center, Brock was recently chosen as the Mis- sissippi Construction Educa- tion Foundation Student of the Year for their Northern District. Honored at an MCEF lun- cheon in Jackson on Tuesday, the Kossuth High School 11th- grader was one of only three chosen as Student of the Year (one from each district) from a pool of 18 designated as Stu- dent of the month. His award is especially sig- Local receives construction award BY KIMBERLY SHELTON [email protected] Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton Kossuth High School student Jacob Brock, 17, creates a picture frame as part of a Construction program project at ACTC. Training and certifying new adult literacy tutors, the Corinth-Alcorn Literacy Council (CALC) will hold two Tutor Training Workshops from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sat- urday, May 30 and Saturday, June 13 in the Corinth Library auditorium. An orientation will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. on Friday, May 29. Water and coffee will be provided at all sessions. Lunch will provided only at the last session. So, participants are urged to bring a drink and snack for a one-hour lunch at their own expense on Satur- day, May 30. Eligible individuals are those who are 18 years or old- er and are willing to volunteer their time and efforts to help others in the community learn to read English. A snapshot of subjects re- viewed and discussed are as follows: Introduction to Language Acquisition Collaborative Learning Process Goal Setting Modeled Reading Developing a Students Level Three Views of Reading Language Experience Ap- proach Sight Word, Phonics, and Word Pattern Techniques Reading Comprehension and Techniques for Develop- ing Writing Skills Using Real-life Materials Formal and Informal As- sessments Lesson Planning “There is no cost to partici- pate in the program. It is free of charge,” said Student/Tu- tor Coordinator Denise De- Boer. “ “Our tutor training for adult literacy tutors is based on the ‘Principles of Effective Workshops announced for adult literacy tutors BY KIMBERLY SHELTON [email protected] It’s not too late to donate or become a sponsor for the Tom Timms Memorial Golf Tour- nament, but the date of the 4-person scramble is rapidly approaching. Hosted by the Corinth Air- Evac Lifeteam along with Magnolia Regional Health Center and EMS employees, the annual event is slated to be held on Friday, May 22, during EMS Week. Team registration will be held from from 8 to 8:45 a.m. Play will begin at 9 a.m. Door prizes, including sev- eral cash prizes donated this year and last by thoughtful lo- cal merchants will be awarded after the event. The golf tournament is now full with 32 teams registered, but sponsors are still needed and appreciated. For $200, businesses can sponsor a hole on the golf course and have their compa- ny logo added to it. Any dona- tion would be greatly appreci- ated. The money collected will be awarded back to the com- Field full for annual memorial scramble BY KIMBERLY SHELTON [email protected] Please see MAP | 2A Please see TUTORS | 3A Please see SCRAMBLE | 2A Please see CONSTRUCTION | 3A The Boys & Girls Club of Corinth will honor mothers with a special event this week- end. The group will host the Mother’s Day Brunch & Fash- ion Show at the Crossroads Arena Convention Center from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. “The event will include a full catered brunch buffet,” said Cory Holmes, nancial admin- ister for the Boys & Girls Club of Northeast Mississippi. “The fashion show will feature sum- mer fashions and trends from 10 different local boutiques.” Tickets purchased in ad- vance are $15. Tickets will also be available at the door for $20. Children age 12 and un- der are $10. Entertainment will be pro- vided throughout the day by Aneysa Matthews and the Macedonia Praise Team. The latest fashion will be spot- lighted by models from Gin- ger’s, Cato Fashions, T. Feazell, Down South, Archer & Arrow, Lipchic Boutique, J. Brown, Belk, Fabulous Finds and Anna Christie Bridal Boutique. A Mother’s Day Basket val- ued at more than $700 will also be rafed during the event. Tickets are $2 each or three for $5. Items inside the basket in- clude a $100 gift certicate from Vicari, as well as gift cards from Sweet Peppers Deli and Ruby Tuesday. T. Feazell, New Life Chris- tian Supply, Hand to Health Spa, Scentsy, Weaver’s Bou- tique, Ginger’s, Mary’s Fash- ion, Down South, Archer & Ar- row and Diva Nail Salon also donated items for the rafe. The event will mark the rst spring fundraiser held by the organization. The group also Saturday event will honor area mothers BY ZACK STEEN [email protected] Staff photo by Zack Steen Cory Holmes with the Boys & Girls Club of Northeast Mississippi gets the event raffle basket ready for Saturday’s Mother’s Day Brunch & Fashion Show at the Cross- roads Arena Convention Center. Please see MOTHERS | 2A Daily Corinthian 286.6006 BROSE HWY 72 E • Corinth MS www.brosenissan.com Now Renting 2014 Nissans! Call for complete details and rates! 286.6006 BROSE RENTAL Rentals starting at $32 per day!

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050815 daily corinthian e edition

Transcript of 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Page 1: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 119, No. 107 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

FridayMay 8, 2015

75 centsToday87

Partly sunnyTonight

64

25 years ago 10 years agoWorkers are busy renovating the Farmington Water Associa-

tion’s 750,000 gallon water tank. General manager Roger Wig-ginton says its the tank’s first major face-lift since its installa-tion in 1988.

20% chance of thunderstorms

Corinth Mayor E.S. Bishop announces plans to seek another term in offi ce.

Talks are intensifying on the possibility of making the old East Corinth Elementary School building into the com-munity’s Head Start center.

Representatives of Missis-sippi Action for Progress, in-cluding Chief Operations Of-fi cer Dorothy Foster, told the Board of Mayor and Aldermen on Tuesday that the agency is prepared to make a signifi cant

investment to create a state-of-the-art facility to house both the Corinth and Kendrick Head Start students.

“Those facilities, at this point, do not meet health and safety standards,” said Foster.

She estimates it will take $500,000 to $700,000 to bring the dormant building into com-pliance with health and safety regulations.

“We anticipate some funding in the very near future to begin

renovation,” said Foster.The two Head Start centers

have 153 enrolled children. Re-gional Administrator Deborah Cooper said the school build-

MAP eyes dormant school propertyBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Constructing his dreams with his own two hands, 17-year-old Jacob Brock has proven hard work, determination and good-old-fashioned ingenuity are the building blocks for success.

A second-year student in

Fred Jackson’s Construction program at the Alcorn Career and Technology Center, Brock was recently chosen as the Mis-sissippi Construction Educa-tion Foundation Student of the Year for their Northern District.

Honored at an MCEF lun-cheon in Jackson on Tuesday,

the Kossuth High School 11th-grader was one of only three chosen as Student of the Year (one from each district) from a pool of 18 designated as Stu-dent of the month.

His award is especially sig-

Local receives construction awardBY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Kossuth High School student Jacob Brock, 17, creates a picture frame as part of a Construction program project at ACTC.

Training and certifying new adult literacy tutors, the Corinth-Alcorn Literacy Council (CALC) will hold two Tutor Training Workshops from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Sat-urday, May 30 and Saturday, June 13 in the Corinth Library auditorium. An orientation will be held from 1 to 4 p.m. on Friday, May 29.

Water and coffee will be provided at all sessions. Lunch will provided only at the last session. So, participants are urged to bring a drink and snack for a one-hour lunch at their own expense on Satur-day, May 30.

Eligible individuals are those who are 18 years or old-er and are willing to volunteer their time and efforts to help others in the community learn to read English.

A snapshot of subjects re-viewed and discussed are as follows:

■ Introduction to Language Acquisition

■ Collaborative Learning Process

■ Goal Setting■ Modeled Reading■ Developing a Students

Level■ Three Views of Reading■ Language Experience Ap-

proach■ Sight Word, Phonics, and

Word Pattern Techniques■ Reading Comprehension

and Techniques for Develop-ing Writing Skills

■ Using Real-life Materials■ Formal and Informal As-

sessments■ Lesson Planning“There is no cost to partici-

pate in the program. It is free of charge,” said Student/Tu-tor Coordinator Denise De-Boer. “

“Our tutor training for adult literacy tutors is based on the ‘Principles of Effective

Workshops announcedfor adult literacy tutors

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

It’s not too late to donate or become a sponsor for the Tom Timms Memorial Golf Tour-nament, but the date of the 4-person scramble is rapidly approaching.

Hosted by the Corinth Air-Evac Lifeteam along with Magnolia Regional Health Center and EMS employees, the annual event is slated to be held on Friday, May 22, during EMS Week.

Team registration will be held from from 8 to 8:45 a.m. Play will begin at 9 a.m.

Door prizes, including sev-eral cash prizes donated this year and last by thoughtful lo-cal merchants will be awarded after the event.

The golf tournament is now full with 32 teams registered, but sponsors are still needed and appreciated.

For $200, businesses can sponsor a hole on the golf course and have their compa-ny logo added to it. Any dona-tion would be greatly appreci-ated. The money collected will be awarded back to the com-

Field full for annualmemorial scramble

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Please see MAP | 2A

Please see TUTORS | 3A

Please see SCRAMBLE | 2APlease see CONSTRUCTION | 3A

The Boys & Girls Club of Corinth will honor mothers with a special event this week-end.

The group will host the Mother’s Day Brunch & Fash-ion Show at the Crossroads Arena Convention Center from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday.

“The event will include a full catered brunch buffet,” said Cory Holmes, fi nancial admin-ister for the Boys & Girls Club of Northeast Mississippi. “The fashion show will feature sum-mer fashions and trends from 10 different local boutiques.”

Tickets purchased in ad-vance are $15. Tickets will also be available at the door for $20. Children age 12 and un-der are $10.

Entertainment will be pro-vided throughout the day by Aneysa Matthews and the Macedonia Praise Team.

The latest fashion will be spot-lighted by models from Gin-ger’s, Cato Fashions, T. Feazell, Down South, Archer & Arrow, Lipchic Boutique, J. Brown, Belk, Fabulous Finds and Anna Christie Bridal Boutique.

A Mother’s Day Basket val-ued at more than $700 will also be raffl ed during the

event. Tickets are $2 each or three for $5.

Items inside the basket in-clude a $100 gift certifi cate from Vicari, as well as gift cards from Sweet Peppers Deli and Ruby Tuesday.

T. Feazell, New Life Chris-tian Supply, Hand to Health Spa, Scentsy, Weaver’s Bou-tique, Ginger’s, Mary’s Fash-ion, Down South, Archer & Ar-row and Diva Nail Salon also donated items for the raffl e.

The event will mark the fi rst spring fundraiser held by the organization. The group also

Saturday event will honor area mothersBY ZACK STEEN

[email protected]

Staff photo by Zack Steen

Cory Holmes with the Boys & Girls Club of Northeast Mississippi gets the event raffle basket ready for Saturday’s Mother’s Day Brunch & Fashion Show at the Cross-roads Arena Convention Center. 

Please see MOTHERS | 2A

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Page 2: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2A • Daily Corinthian Friday, May 8, 2015

The late Tom Timms and family

Talking tourism State Rep. Bubba Carpenter talks about the importance of the tourism industry to the state of Mississippi with Tishomingo County Tourism Council Administra-tor Theresa Cutshall (left) and Alcorn County Welcome Center Supervisor Sherry Brown at Wednesday’s Traveler’s Appreciation Day at the welcome center as part of this week’s National Travel and Tourism Week, above. On hand for the event from noon to 1 p.m. was local artist Tony Bullard, who gave the first public view-ing of his latest painting, the Lions Gas Station in downtown Corinth in 1954. Bullard will be offering 12 by 16 prints of the painting in the next few weeks, below.

New computers for GED classes Since the 2014 GED test is taken on computers, the Alcorn County Regional Correctional Facility recently purchased new computers for its GED class. Class instruction now includes keyboarding and learning computer basics.

ing would allow MAP to look at expanding to include early Head Start for children zero to three years and would provide space for training and education for parents.

If allowed to lease the building at low cost or no cost, Foster said, MAP would occupy a portion of the building initially and look at expansion in phases.

The board took no action, but it was agreed that City Attorney Wendell Trapp will begin conversations with MAP on what will need to take place to get the property into MAP’s hands.

“The community is used to school there,” Mayor Tommy Irwin said of the East Corinth campus. “I think that would really be well re-ceived.”

The campus is the last of the three vacated elementary schools to be disposed from city ownership.

hosts the popular Catfi sh & Khakis each fall.

“We have had such a won-derful reaction from the com-munity,” Holmes said. “We have been really impressed and can’t wait for Saturday.”

Holmes has worked as coor-dinator for the Mother’s Day event, alongside Tammy Geno-vese, Annie Windom, Mary Dilworth, Wendy Shinault and Nicklyn Rambeau.

“Proceeds from the fund-raiser will help us continue to offer leadership programs to local kids,” added Holmes.

(To purchase tickets, con-tact 662-286-6662.)

MAP

CONTINUED FROM 1A

MOTHERS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

munity.Crossroads Chevrolet is sponsoring

a hole in one contest on all par 3s with the possibility of winning a new Chev-rolet truck on one of the holes. The closest to the pin will also be awarded on all par 3s as well as a long drive, straightest drive, and a putting contest.

Pig Medics of Corinth will cook up and serve their delicious barbecue for lunch on the course.

“We look forward to having a great time and celebrating the life of Tom Timms, a man who loved his family, friends and community,” said Air-Evac Pilot John Mitchell.

Overseers of Tom Timms Memorial Scholarship Fund plan to provide, at no cost to the community, four Auto-mated External Defi brillators, along with several thousand dollars in grant/scholarship money to local students this year.

In addition, they will again be giv-ing out combat tourniquets to the local highway patrol.

“We are presenting a new award this year in Honor of Tom, called the ‘Above and Beyond’ award,” said Shawn Counce, a paramedic at MRHC. “It will be given to a EMS member who has gone above and beyond their nor-mal duties in dedication to the com-munity. We are very excited about this

award and look forward to honoring a very deserving person.”

“The golf tournament is scheduled during National EMS Week because we wanted to celebrate Tom and all our local EMS members and to let them know how much we appreciate them,” said Ron Strom, a paramedic with MRHC and Air-Evac.

“We are coming together as a profes-sional community to raise money for the things Tom cared so much for — EMS and his community.

“We look forward to another suc-cessful event honoring and celebrating the memory of Tom Timms,” he added.

(For more information about the golf tournament or to make dona-tions, contact Ricki Barnett at 662-415-1397 or [email protected]. Checks should be made pay-able to the CREATE Foundation with Tom Timms Memorial in the memo line.)

SCRAMBLE

CONTINUED FROM 1A

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Page 3: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Local/RegionDaily Corinthian • 3AFriday, May 8, 2015

Today in

History

Today is Friday, May 8, the 128th day of 2015. There are 237 days left in the year.

 Today’s Highlightin History:

On May 8, 1945, Presi-dent Harry S. Truman announced on radio that Nazi Germany’s forces had surrendered, and that “the flags of free-dom fly all over Europe.”

On this date:

In 1541, Spanish ex-plorer Hernando de Soto reached the Mississippi River.

In 1945, the Setif Massacre began in Alge-ria as French authorities clashed with protesters celebrating the surrender of Nazi Germany and calling for freedom from colonial rule; tens of thousands of Algerians are believed to have died in weeks of violence.

In 1958, Vice Presi-dent Richard Nixon was shoved, stoned, booed and spat upon by anti-American protesters in Lima, Peru.

In 1962, the musical comedy “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” opened on Broadway.

In 1972, President Richard Nixon announced that he had ordered the mining of Haiphong Har-bor during the Vietnam War.

In 1973, militant Amer-ican Indians who’d held the South Dakota hamlet of Wounded Knee for ten weeks surrendered.

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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

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

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

All other areas will be delivered the next day.

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

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

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

Across the Region

5K run/walk, mud runto benefit Tippah 4-H

TIPPAH COUNTY — A 5K Walk/Run and Kids Fun Mud Run at the Tippah County Fair-grounds will be held on Satur-day, May 16.

Registration will begin at 7:30 a.m. The 5K race will be-gin at 9 a.m., followed by the kids mud run at 9:30 a.m.

All entries must be pre-regis-tered by today to receive a free T-shirt.

All proceeds will benefit Tip-pah 4-H. Forms can be dropped off at the Extension Office, lo-cated on the fairgrounds.

(To register online, visit www.Racesonline.com or contact Connie Walker at 837-8184 for more information.)

Leaders consider sewer repairs, new rates

BOONEVILLE — Aging sewer lines are creating major chal-lenges for city workers and prompting Booneville aldermen to consider a potential increase in water and sewer rates.

Sewer department manager Billy Spencer told board mem-bers they are seeing more and more issues daily from the old clay and tile sewer lines that

crisscross the city.“We’re encountering more

problems every day,” said Spencer.

He said the city is facing sig-nificant repair costs in the com-ing months and years as the old lines must be repaired or replaced. Spencer said the cur-rent rates are simply not high enough to support the costs of the repairs that are coming.

Noting costs for materials, chemicals and other neces-sary equipment to operate and repair the system have also continued to rise, he asked the board to consider a 15 percent increase in the cost of every

1,000 gallons of water usage above the minimum.

“There’s simply no way to fund it, so we have to go up on rates,” he said.

Several aldermen expressed concerns over the proposed increase.

Alderman Jeff Williams said he doesn’t feel comfort-able raising another cost for residents following the recent move to increase garbage rates and last year’s tax increase.

The board took no action on the request Tuesday and asked Spencer to return to them with detailed figures on a proposed increase.

Training’ disseminated by Literacy Volunteers of America, Inc. We do not assume that volunteers will have all the skills or knowledge required to be licensed tutors upon com-pletion of training,” she added. “We do, however, expect that volunteers will have a fi rm founda-tion they can build upon through their experiences with adult students and through ongoing sup-port from the Corinth-Alcorn Literacy Council.

All reading and writing techniques in the work-shop can be applied to all materials of interest and concern to individual adult students.”

A startling Pro-Literacy statistic compiled in 2011 shows that over 63 mil-lion American adults (29 percent) lack basic litera-cy skills.

According to the 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy, Mississip-pi has one of the highest (if not the highest) rate of functional illiteracy in the United States.

Currently, more than 15 percent of Alcorn County citizens function at or below fi fth grade literacy levels.

“The mission of the CALC is to recruit and tu-tor undereducated adults in reading English, both as a primary and second-ary language, and wring; to train and provide backup services and re-fresher training to tutors; and to promote interest in literacy in the commu-nity. CALC equips adults with the reading, writ-ing, speaking and math

skills needed to be suc-cessful in their families, in the workplace and in the community,” said De-Boer. “It is an adult litera-cy program over 25 years old which serves Corinth and surrounding areas as a Volunteer Program Af-fi liate of Pro-Literacy of America”

Founded and sup-ported by United Way, CALC’s basic one-on-one adult literacy tutoring is done by volunteers who do not receive monetary compensation or mileage.

“Our offi ce is located

on the upper level of the Corinth Public Library at 1023 Fillmore Street. Of-fi ce hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Mon-day through Friday,” said the coordinator. “The tu-toring must be scheduled at the library during their hours. Student confi den-tiality is always foremost.”

“The registration dead-line is Monday, May 25,” she continued. “We re-quire a minimum of fi ve attendees for the work-shop to be held. Each at-tendee must complete the total of fi fteen hours

to become certifi ed. We will work with confl ict-ing schedules to the best of our abilities. If there are scheduling problems or questions, please let us know. We can be reached at the above mentioned hours by calling 662-286-9759.”

(For more information or to register, contact Denise DeBoer during morning hours at 662-286-9759, Monday – Thursday or email her at [email protected])

TUTORS

CONTINUED FROM 1A

nifi cant since there are approximately 5,000 Construction Educa-tion students in Missis-sippi in the three districts (Northern, Central and Southern).

As a result of his award, the Kossuth resident re-ceived a $500 prize to be used as he sees fi t, along with a certifi cate of rec-ognizing him as a student of distinction.

“I was shocked when they fi rst announced me as a winner,” said Brock. “My mama looked at me afterward and said she wondered for a minute if I was even going to go up there. I told her for a mo-ment, I wondered myself. I wanted to make sure they had really called my name.”

Praised as an outstand-ing student who listens and follows directions well, Jackson had noth-ing but good things to say about his pupil.

“He has a great work ethic and works well in-dependently,” he said. “He is a creative thinker and a problem solver.”

Jacob Brock is the son of Pat and Angie Brock.

He is currently represent-ing his school at events as a 2014-2015 Alcorn Ca-reer Center Delegate.

He has assisted with the Governor’s Job Fair at the Crossroads Arena

and led tours for area ninth-graders, all while maintaining an excellent GPA and exemplary at-tendance.

A SkillsUSA member, he competed in a carpen-try event in the spring, where he won second in the northern district.

He has for the past three years, been a mem-ber of the FCA and a member of the Kossuth FFA for two.

Additionally, he has aided his church in Vaca-tion Bible School activi-ties.

His plans include the possibility of becom-ing a student intern in construction, during his senior year, through the Career Pathway Experi-ence Class. After high school graduation, he plans to attend Northeast Mississippi Community College, and is currently considering a couple ar-eas of study.

In addition to con-struction, Brock also has

an interest in mechan-ics.

“I was tickled to death when I heard he’d won,” said ACTC Director Rodney Hopper. “He is a good kid who comes from a good family. I had his dad in school and like his father, he is a terrifi c student.”

The Mississippi Con-struction Education Foundation (MCEF), is the leader in construction training in Mississippi. The nonprofi t foundation was formed by a coalition of construction trade as-sociation to administer a construction school-to-work program and provide training oppor-tunities to the industry throughout the state.

MCEF has more than 200 apprentices enrolled in the programs as well as working with indi-vidual company training programs and more than 4,500 in high school and career and technical edu-cation centers.

CONSTRUCTION

CONTINUED FROM 1A

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Rodney Hopper (from left), ACTC director; Lane Bell, North Area MCEF director; stand with with Jacob Brock and Fred Jackson at the MCEF awards cer-emony in Jackson.

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Page 4: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4A • Friday, May 8, 2015www.dailycorinthian.com

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Mark Boehler, editor

President Barack Obama responded to the Baltimore riots with a heartfelt bout of self-righteous hectoring.

Supposedly, we all know what’s wrong with Baltimore and how to fi x it, but don’t care enough. Not only is this attitude highhanded,

it rests on a fl agrantly errone-ous premise.

President Obama doesn’t have the slightest idea how to fi x Baltimore. His solutions fall back on liberal bromides going back 50 years. Dating back to the Kerner Commission af-ter the riots of the 1960s, the left’s go-to solution to urban problems has been more social programs. Since then, we’ve gotten more social programs –

and just as many urban problems.Exhibit A is Baltimore itself. The city hasn’t

been “neglected.” It has been misgoverned into the ground. It is a Great Society city that bought fully into the big-government vision of the 1960s, and the bitter fruit has been cor-ruption, violence and despair.

We don’t know all the facts surrounding Freddie Gray’s tragic death. But as a general matter, it is easy to believe that the Baltimore police are corrupt, dysfunctional and unac-countable — because most of the Baltimore government is that way.

This is a failure exclusively of Democrats, unless the root causes of Baltimore’s troubles are to be traced to its last Republican mayor, Theodore Roosevelt McKeldin, who left of-fi ce in 1967. And it is an indictment of a failed model of government.

The city has been shedding jobs and people for decades, including in the 1990s when the rest of the country was booming.

Baltimore is a high-tax city, with malice aforethought. “Offi cials raised property taxes 21 times between 1950 and 1985,” Steve Hanke and Stephen Walters of Johns Hopkins Uni-versity write in The Wall Street Journal, “chan-neling the proceeds to favored voting blocs and causing many homeowners and entrepreneurs – disproportionately Republicans – to fl ee.

To counterbalance the taxes, they note, de-velopers need to be lured to the city with sub-sidies, and the developers, in turn, contrib-ute to politicians to stay in their good graces. This makes for fertile ground for the city’s traditional corruption.

Baltimore’s preferred driver of growth has been government. Urban experts Fred Sie-gel and Van Smith write in City Journal that Baltimore has “emphasized a state-sponsored capitalism that relies almost entirely on feder-al and state subsidies, rather than market in-vestments.” The model makes for high-profi le development projects, but trickle-down crony capitalism hasn’t worked for everyone else.

At the same time, the city has failed at the basic functions of government.

Mayor Kurt Schmoke, in offi ce for three terms beginning in the late 1980s, was noto-riously soft on crime. Siegel and Smith write, “During the nineties, tolerant Baltimore’s crime rate, much of it drug-fueled, rocketed upward (75 percent of the city’s murders were drug-related); tough-on-crime New York’s plummeted.”

Under Mayor Martin O’Malley’s subse-quent, more strenuous policing, the crime rate dropped. But it is still a violent city. Baltimore has the fi fth-highest murder rate among cities with a population of 100,000 or more.

The schools, predictably, are a disaster, run by and for the teachers unions.

On top of all this, two-thirds of births in the city are out-of-wedlock. Toya Graham is being rightly celebrated for smacking her 16-year-old son and getting him out of the streets during the rioting. You can admire her pluck and still be daunted by the chal-lenges she faces as a single mother of six.

What is Obama offering in response to this deep, decades-long decline? Among other things, more pre-K education and job train-ing, even though these programs have a long history of ineffectiveness.

The imperative in Baltimore should be to think and act anew. But the left’s takeaway will be that there’s an urgent need for more of the same, as Baltimore and places like it continue to rot.

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

Baltimore, a greatsociety failure

Prayer for today

A verse to share

In 2 1⁄2 hours of oral ar-guments before the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday, Justice Anthony Kennedy asked the right question: whether it is appropriate for the Court to discard a defi -nition of marriage that “has been with us for millennia,” adding, “it’s very diffi cult for the court to say, ‘Oh, well, we know better.’ “

Kennedy, who is regarded as the swing vote on this and many other controversial issues, may not answer his own question the way pro-ponents of traditional mar-riage wish, but the question is not rhetorical. Should this court, or any court, re-defi ne and force the states to accept a new defi nition of marriage that will not only affect same-sex couples, but open the door to other peti-tioners, for example, polyg-amists, who wish to “marry” more than one person?

If human history, tradi-tion, the Bible, the Consti-tution and biology are to be ignored or re-defi ned, on what basis do courts say “no” to anything? If “equal-ity” and “fairness” are the new standard, one might

as well have no standard at all because such emo-tional ap-peals could justify any relationship or form of be-havior.

The prob-lem for tradi-

tionalists – especially those who believe scripture is the sole authority in such mat-ters – is that in an increas-ingly secular society where younger people are less attuned to appeals about an Authority higher than themselves, how can they be persuaded that same-sex marriage is a bridge too far? After all, don’t they “know” gay people, whom they regard as wonderful and kind? That “standard” be-comes subjective and when it reaches the level of per-sonal feelings it becomes a shifting boundary that is drawn in invisible ink rath-er than set in stone.

Only two years ago, in the case of “U.S. v. Windsor,” which argued whether the IRS could give federal tax

benefi ts to all legally mar-ried homosexuals, regard-less of state law, Justice Kennedy warned it was wrong for courts to “put a thumb on the scales and in-fl uence a state’s decision as to shape its own marriage laws.” And now this court could do precisely that.

Chief Justice John Rob-erts told the plaintiff’s attor-neys on Tuesday, “But if you prevail here, there will be no more debate. ... People feel very differently about some-thing if they have a chance to vote on it than if it’s imposed on them by the courts.”

Yes, they do, which is why, as Justice Antonin Scalia noted; only 11 states have done so by a “vote of the people or the legisla-ture.”

To the surprise of con-servatives, liberal Justice Stephen Breyer echoed Ken-nedy’s concern: “The op-posite rule has been the law everywhere for thousands of years.... And, suddenly, you want nine people outside the ballot box to require states, that don’t want to do it, to change what you’ve heard ... change what marriage is to

include gay people.”That is precisely what

the advocates for same-sex marriage want, just as the pro-abortion movement wanted the same court 42 years ago, in “Roe v. Wade,” to discard state laws pro-tecting the unborn. That 1973 decision continues to stir controversy and should be a lesson to the court not to make a similar mistake with marriage.

Here is the real problem: If people worship pleasure and material things, they are more likely to get lead-ers who give them what they want instead of what they need to hold society togeth-er. If we erase the bound-aries that have guided hu-manity for generations, we weaken our society.

A verse from the Book of Judges seems to defi ne America in 2015, as we sink deeper into a moral and cultural morass: “In those days Israel had no king; everyone did as he saw fi t.” (Judges 21:25)

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

Until the court do us part?

The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution states: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press . . .

With the passage of the 14th Amendment guaran-teeing due process to all U.S. citizens, the federal courts have interpreted the First Amendment to apply to state laws as well. This doc-trine of incorporation is well established in American law.

As a result, neither Con-gress, nor the president, nor state legislatures, nor city councils, nor governors, nor mayors can pass laws prohibiting the free press or free speech.

So are we free to write or say anything we want? Not so fast. There is another aspect of our legal system called “common law” and it has numerous restrictions on what we can say and write.

Common law is the part of English law that is de-rived from custom and ju-dicial precedent rather than statutes. Common law orig-inated in England during the Middle Ages. One-third of the world’s population lives in jurisdictions ruled by common law.

Common law forbids defamation, which is the communication of a false statement that harms the reputation of an individual person, business, product or group.

There are two kinds of

defamation: Slander is ver-bal defamation. Libel is written defamation.

As a journalist and news-paper publisher, I know a lot about libel. In fact, my company has insurance to protect against libel judg-ments. Dealing with libel is part of my job.

The average citizen doesn’t know much about libel, but with the rise in social media, blogs, e-mails and the like, it’s time the general public gets up to speed on libel laws. Ev-ery time you make a post on Facebook, you expose yourself to several hundred years of libel law. Libel is no longer just the concern of newspaper publishers.

The fi rst thing to know about libel is that truth is a foolproof defense. If what you say is true and you can prove it, you can say what-ever you want – if you have the money to defend your-self in a lawsuit. Proving something is often not easy.

The second thing to know is that defamation law is a mess. Basically, anything goes. Anybody can sue any-body for anything. So be careful what you say. Think before posting anything that could harm someone’s reputation or business.

Victims of defamation must prove damages, which can be a big hurdle. Public fi gures have a bigger hur-dle. They must prove malice and reckless disregard of the truth.

Let’s say you had a bad experience at a restaurant and post a vicious online

review full of negative over-statements. Watch out. You can get sued for that.

Let’s say you have a dis-pute with a neighbor and get carried away in a post on the neighborhood blog. Watch out. These are all ac-tionable torts.

I write this as context for the dispute between Madi-son Mayor Mary Hawkins Butler and Madison Coun-ty’s engineer Rudy Warnock.

Butler has long been a critic of Warnock. She is upset that Warnock’s fi rm has been given $23 million in no-bid contracts over the last decade. She created a new website designed to fi ght “corruption” in Madi-son County.

Warnock has threatened to sue Butler for slander and hired Jackson attorney Dorsey Carson to pursue the matter. Carson is scouring social media for any libelous posts from the mayor.

Meanwhile, blog site Y’all Politics posted a press re-lease attributed to Rudy Warnock which makes a variety of salacious accu-sations against the mayor. This opens Warnock up for a libel countersuit from the mayor.

The mayor, being in poli-tics for decades, obviously knows a bit about libel. She was careful not to accuse Warnock directly of “cor-ruption.” Instead, she talks about corruption in Madi-son County. By keeping her accusations suffi ciently broad and vague, she may confer some protection.

Corruption itself is a

vague word. It can mean il-legal activity, but it can also mean “a departure from what is pure,” according to the Merriam-Webster dic-tionary.

Also, Warnock’s high vis-ibility and big county con-tracts could make him a “public fi gure,” raising the bar to a successful libel suit.

In the end, libel is what a jury says it is. There are no hard and fast rules. If Warnock wants to spend enough money, he can tie Butler up in court for a long time. And vice versa.

If Warnock does sue But-ler, the mayor will have subpoena power to defend herself. The fear of giving your enemy subpoena pow-er tends to discourage libel suits.

Over the years, well-heeled powerful people have used defamation laws to intimidate critics by fi ling lawsuits anytime someone made negative comments about their companies.

In 1998, a host on the Oprah Winfrey show made disparaging comments about the meat industry and was sued for slander. Thir-teen states passed the so-called “food libel laws” that lowered the legal threshold for winning a slander law-suit against the meat indus-try. These laws are likely to one day be overturned by the federal courts.

Free speech is important. So is the right not to be falsely defamed. Balancing these two competing goals is tricky business in a free society.

The right not to be falsely defamed

“Thou wilt shew me the path of life: in thy presence is fulness of joy; at thy right hand there are pleasures for evermore.”

— Psalms 16:11

Lord God, may I never feel that I have a right to sell thy joys, nor the privilege of giving away my burdens. Grant that I may not forsake my principles, but may I keep the way clear that memory may fi nd an unruffl ed rest. Amen.

Rich LowryNational

Review

Cal Thomas

Columnist

BY WYATT EMMERICHThe Northside Sun (Jackson)

Page 5: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

State/NationDaily Corinthian • 5AFriday, May 8, 2015

Across the Nation Across the State

Fatal shooting gets man life sentence

NEW ALBANY — A Union County jury has convicted a man in the fatal shooting of a Starkville teenager at a New Year’s Eve party in 2012 in West Point.

According to local me-dia reports, 35-year-old Tavaris Collins of West Point was convicted of first-degree murder Wednesday in the death of Devin Mitchell. Collins was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Authorities say Mitch-ell, who played football at Starkville High School, was visiting relatives at the Ridgewood East Apartments on Missis-sippi Highway 50 in West Point.

West Point Police Chief Tim Brinkley has said fireworks were being set off in the area and Collins told police he thought someone was shooting at him and fired back.

 Deputies: Woman drove naked, drunk

GULFPORT — A woman being held in the Harrison County jail is accused of driving na-ked and impaired when she led deputies on a high-speed pursuit on Interstate 10 two weeks ago.

The Sun Herald reports 52-year-old Stephanie Lynn Steele, of Bay St. Louis, has been held on a $60,000 bond since her April 22 arrest. Judge Diane Ladner reduced her bond Wednesday to $5,000.

Deputies say Steele drove at speeds up to 120 mph, weaving through traffic.

When her car ran over stop sticks blowing out a tire, she finally stopped.

Airlines seeking OK to leave Greenville

GREENVILLE — Sea-Port Airlines is seeking federal approval to end service between Green-ville and Memphis.

Portland, Oregon-based SeaPort in late October was awarded a federally subsidized Essential Air Service contract to restore pas-senger flights to and from Greenville, and the regional airline was cleared to begin service Jan. 12.

The first flight took off March 16. Since then the airline has struggled with cancellations and a shortage of pilots.

The Delta Democrat Times reports the airline filed the 90-day notice to terminal service Tuesday with the U.S. Department of Transportation.

 Remains found may be of missing man

LEAKESVILLE — Hu-man remains found in a Greene County pond are believed to be those of a missing 27-year-old

George County man.WLOX-TV reports Dono-

van Cowart, of Lucedale, disappeared in January 2013.

Now, two people are charged with his murder. Authorities say 35-year-old Welford Lee McCarty and 26-year-old Robert Virgil Stevens, both of Lucedale, were arrested Tuesday. Investigators say they killed Cowart and dumped his body in the pond.

 Police arrest manin theft of weapons

OCEAN SPRINGS — Police have arrested a man suspected of stealing weapons in one of two burglaries at an Ocean Springs attorney’s office.

The Sun Herald reports 20-year-old Tyler McVay has been arrested on two counts of burglary.

Police Capt. William C. Jackson says the burglar-ies were reported twice within a week, on April 24 and Friday. An AR-15 and a 9mm handgun were reported stolen in the first break-in.

Associated Press

Police: Wrestling move killed toddler

JERSEY SHORE, Pa. — A man said he was mimicking a profes-sional wrestling move when he inadvertently slammed his girlfriend’s toddler to the floor, causing head injuries that killed the boy, po-lice said.

Brandon Hoffman, 20, was charged Wednesday with invol-untary manslaughter, endangering the welfare of a child, aggravated assault and other of-fenses in the death of 18-month-old Bryson Shoemaker.

Police said Hoffman was performing a wres-tling move by The Un-dertaker known as “The Last Ride” at his Jersey Shore apartment Tues-day and had intended for Bryson to land on a bed. In the move, depicted in many online videos, the wrestler gets the opponent on his shoulders in a sort of reverse piggyback, then throws him to the ground.

He had earlier per-formed another wres-tling move that also in-volved dropping Bryson onto the bed, authori-ties said.

Hoffman told inves-tigators he tried per-forming CPR and took Bryson to the hospital instead of calling 911 because he feared get-ting in trouble. Hospital staff told police the child may have had a broken neck and col-lapsed lung.

 Dog missing for 4 years heads home

DENVER — It’s a Denver man’s American dream: Getting back the dog that vanished four

years ago on the Fourth of July.

Kelly Booker’s 9-year-old Shih Tzu, Lilly, was found last month wandering the streets nearly a thousand miles away in Elgin, Illinois, suffering from a severe infection and exposure. Her nails grew long, and people who found her said she was in bad shape.

Booker said Thurs-day that his pet disap-peared on July 4, 2011, when he put her in the backyard as he headed to a fireworks show. He does not know if Lilly got frightened by the ex-plosions and ran away or was stolen.

“Kids were outside popping fireworks. We went looking for her and she was gone. It was like a child that went missing,” Booker said as he prepared to go to Denver International Air-port to pick up Lilly.

Volunteers at the Al-most Home Foundation rescued Lilly and nursed her back to health.

 Twins have different fathers, judge finds

PATERSON, N.J. — A New Jersey judge has ruled that a set of twins has different fathers.

Passaic County Judge Sohail Mohammad made the ruling Monday in a paternity case.

It’s possible but rare for a woman to give birth to twins with two fathers. Mohammad says he found two other court cases nationally on such matters.

It can happen when the woman has sexual intercourse with two men in the same week, and an egg is fertilized by each.

It came to light when a Passaic County wom-an sought child-support

payments from a man she thought was the father of her daughters, who were born in Janu-ary 2013.

Paternity tests showed he was almost certainly the father of one but wasn’t the fa-ther of the other.

 McDonald’s brings back Hamburglar

NEW YORK — Based on McDonald’s latest ad, it looks like the Hamburglar settled down in the suburbs and spent the last de-cade going to youth soc-cer games and perfect-ing his stubble.

The company is bring-ing the burger thief back to its advertising after a 13-year absence. On Wednesday, McDon-ald’s Corp. tweeted a 30-second ad featuring the Hamburglar, his face unseen, flipping burgers in a suburban backyard with his wife and son. When he hears a radio ad for McDonald’s new burgers, he drops his spatula in shock.

In April, McDonald’s announced that it is in-troducing a trio of “Sir-loin Third Pound” burg-ers for a limited time, the latest sign the chain is pushing to improve perceptions about the quality of its food. In Wednesday’s ad, those burgers lure the Ham-burglar out of his quiet retirement.

Publicity photos re-veal a grown man in a more fashionable version of the old cos-tume, including a black trenchcoat and fedora with a yellow band. The previous version of the character appeared to be a mischievous child dressed in an old time black-and-white prison-er’s uniform with a hat and cape.

Associated Press

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Page 6: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

6A • Friday, May 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Herbert ‘Lonnie’ LancasterFuneral services for Herbert “Lonnie” Lancaster,

71, of Corinth are set for 11 a.m. Saturday at Magno-lia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Forrest Memorial Park.

Mr. Lancaster died Thursday, May 7, 2015 at UAB Hospital in Birmingham, Ala.

Visitation is 5-8 p.m. today at the funeral home.All other arrangements are incomplete.

Tony C. CookA memorial service for Tony C. Cook, 61, is set for

3 p.m. Sunday at Mission of Hope Church.Mr. Cook died Sunday, May 3, 2015 at his home.Born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, on October 12,

1953 to Matther and Viola Parrist Cook, he was a self employed auto mechanic.

Survivors include his partner, Linda Martin; daughters, Cynthia Holbrook of Walnut, Misty Spires of Charleston, S.C., Ebony Cook of India-napolis, Ind. and Mary Cook of St. Petersburg, Fla.; sons, Joey Dodson of Glen and Jonathan Dodson of Booneville; sisters, Edith Cook of St. Louis, Mo. and Carolyn Harris of Hopkinsville, Ken.; and 12 grand-children.

He was preceded in death by his parents; broth-ers, Joe Cresie and Danny Cook; and granddaugh-ters, Amaria Shy and Sicily Dawn Holbrook.

Bro. James Voyles will offi ciate.Corinthian Funeral Home is in charge of arrange-

ments.

Tommy Joe PickleFuneral services for Tommy Joe Pickle, 76, are set

for 3 p.m. today at Shackelford Funeral Directors in Selmer, Tenn. with burial in Bethesda Cemetery.

Mr. Pickle died Tuesday, May 5, 2015.He was born August 21, 1938 in Selmer, the son

of the late Irvin O. and Ruth Brush Pickle. Mr. Pickle was a co-owner of Pickle Grocery Store. He also managed the Selmer Pool Hall and retired from Tru-Savers Hardware. He was a member of Clear Creek Baptist Church.

Survivors include his son, Joey Pickle and wife DeLana of Corinth; a sister, Peggy Griffi n of Selmer; three brothers, Johnny Pickle and wife Donna of Bethel Springs, Tenn., Bobby Pickle of Selmer and Jackie Pickle and wife Erin of Bethel Springs; three grandchildren, Justin Pickle, Joseph Dean and Ken-dra Dean; and four great-grandchildren.

In addition to his parents, Mr. Pickle was preced-ed in death by a daughter, Lisa Dean; and a brother, Billy Hugh Pickle.

James Smith will offi ciate.Visitation was 5-9 p.m. on Thursday, May 7.

Pickle

The opening scene of the movie is classic: night-time breaks into a smoggy morning haze, and the sun rises over the gridded landscape of Chicago. A ramshackle retired po-lice cruiser, a 1974 Dodge Monaco sedan, pulls up to the gate, and one of the

two main characters gathers his materia ls from the prison at-tendant at the Joliet C o u n t y Correction-al Facility and saun-ters out of

the gate, the light illumi-nating the horizon behind him as if he were a mytho-logical god.

The music begins, opening with a classic blues tune written by Taj Mahal and James Rachel regarding a jilted lover: “She Caught the Katy (And Left Me a Mule to Ride).” The two charac-ters, brothers Jake and Elwood, sport trademark black Beatnik-era suits with skinny ties and Way-farer sunglasses. They drive away, stoic-faced in search of purpose, which ultimately becomes an endeavor to reassemble their old band in order to fi nancially salvage the or-phanage where they were reared and schooled.

The movie The Blues

Brothers, which celebrates its 35th anniversary this summer, was released June 16, 1980, the month after I fi nished kindergar-ten, so I failed to see it at the movie theater at the time. In fact, I watched it for the fi rst time nine years later, during the summer of 1989, while spending a week at the home of my older brother Loyd near Memphis.

One Friday night, Loyd rented the VHS version of the movie and ordered pepperoni pizza. My niece Becky and I sprawled on the carpet in front of the television, slathered our pizza in Parmesan cheese, and watched the travails of “Joliet Jake” and Elwood, on their “mission from God” in an attempt to “put the band back together.”

The illustrious brothers travel through Chicago, their odyssey taking them to a Van Buren fl ophouse, to Maxwell Street, and to lower Wacker Drive. The cast list, made up mostly of cameos, reads like a montage of some of the greatest musicians of blues, R&B, and soul of the 20th century — es-pecially from the South-ern portion of the coun-try. The brothers visit a café run by restaurateur Aretha Franklin, a music shop owned by soulful or-ganist Ray Charles, and a church presided over by James Brown, who glides across the fl oor with

buttery-footed smooth-ness when the Holy Ghost makes its presence.

The band’s manager is played by Cab Calloway, who magically appears refashioned in white tux-edo with bandstand in the background, as he per-forms his standard “Min-nie the Moocher.” The brothers’ backup band is also quite recognizable, consisting in particular of the members of the Mem-phis-based Stax Records rhythm section, other-wise known as Booker T. and the MGs.

While the Blues Broth-ers sing fairly standard blues and R&B tunes -- and even break into a little country & western performance, as they are forced to offer a rendition of “Rawhide” at an out-of-the-ordinary venue, Bob’s Country Bunker, to raise a little extra cash and to appease the resident red-necks -- they also verge on punk. They are anti-he-roes: anti-establishment, anti-political, pro-subcul-ture, and fairly worthless — at least by traditional standards. Together, they form an exemplar of pop-culture underdogs, and they succeed — which is, in addition to their mu-sical repertoire, part of their broad appeal.

The original New York Times movie review of the fi lm by Janet Maslin deemed the fl ick overbud-geted and overwrought,

with too many car crash-es, too many extras, and too many staged dance numbers with only “about three funny scenes dur-ing the course of a long bloated saga.” Maslin, a well-established critic, undershot in this case.

The Blues Brothers holds a special place in movie and music lovers’ hearts for several reasons. The premise may have be-gun as a “Saturday Night Live” skit, but, ultimately, it became a surreal, sty-listic, memorable piece of fi lm that will prompt even halfway dedicated view-ers to hum its songs days afterward.

It will put you on the trajectory to quote mem-orable lines and wear your sunglasses, as you turn up the volume on the R&B pouring out of the radio or CD player. Even if you don’t fi nd yourself 106 miles from Chicago with a full tank of gas rid-ing through the darkness with a mere half pack of cigarettes, as one of the signature lines from the movie suggests, you’ll still feel like you’re well on your way.

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

Cult classic marks anniversary

Stacy Jones

The Dowtowner

LAS VEGAS — A dis-pute over B.B. King’s health and wealth was tossed out of court Thurs-day by a judge in Las Vegas who said two in-vestigations found no evidence the blues legend was being abused.

The ruling in Clark County Family Court rul-ing keeps King’s longtime business manager, La-verne Toney, in legal con-trol of his affairs.

Three of King’s 11 sur-viving children, Karen Williams, Rita Washing-ton and Patty King, said outside court they suspect Toney is stealing money and neglecting B.B. King’s medical care while block-ing them from seeing their father in home hos-pice care.

They vowed to keep fi ghting.

“We lost the battle, but we haven’t lost the war,” Williams vowed.

Toney and her attorney, Brent Bryson, deny the allegations and say visits can be scheduled just like they always have been.

King’s lawyer, Arthur Williams Jr., and King’s personal physician, Dr. Darin Brimhall, said out-side court they have seen no neglect or abuse.

Family Court Hearing

Master Jon Norheim said police and social services investigations in October and April uncovered no reason to take power-of-attorney from Toney. The reports won’t be made public, the judge said.

“There is no evidence of need for guardianship,” Norheim said. “Mr. King has counsel. I don’t have anything here that says he lacks capacity. He has some serious health is-sues. But he has counsel. If he feels like he’s being taken advantage of, he has remedies.”

Norheim said he can’t consider daughter Karen Williams’ petition to take over as King’s guardian until every one of King’s 11 surviving children and dozens of grandchildren receives legal notice.

Williams and a would-be executor, Frederick Waid, are trying to wrest power-of-attorney from Toney. They said in an

April 29 petition seeking appointment as tempo-rary co-guardians that more than $5 million in assets is at stake.

Bryson said he couldn’t comment on King’s es-tate, which also is expect-ed to include intellectual property rights and royal-ties.

The petition alleges Toney blocks King’s friends — including mu-sicians Willie Nelson, Buddy Guy, Carlos San-tana and Eric Clapton — from visiting him. It also says Toney put her fam-ily members on King’s payroll, and that large sums of money have dis-appeared from the musi-cian’s bank accounts

“The family has been unable to account for what is reported to be in excess of $1 million,” the court document says.

Bryson called the theft allegation “almost laugh-able.” He said all of King’s

spending was legitimate and accounted for.

King was hospitalized a week ago, after police were called to his home in a dispute between Toney and Patty King about his medical care. No arrests were made.

B.B. King returned home Friday.

The musician, born Riley B. King in the Mis-sissippi farm town of Itta Bena, toured and per-formed almost continu-ally until October, when he canceled the remain-ing shows in his 2014 tour after falling ill in Chicago with dehydration and ex-haustion.

Las Vegas police were called to King’s home in November on allega-tions of elder neglect and abuse. Offi cer Jesse Roy-bal said this week the case remained open, and no details were available.

King is a Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and a 15-time Grammy winner. He has released more than 50 albums and sold millions of records worldwide. He is considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time.

King was married sev-eral times and had 15 bio-logical and adoptive chil-dren. Four children have died.

Judge: No evidence King is being abusedAssociated Press

“ ... He has some serious health issues. But he has

counsel. If he feels like he’s being taken advantage of, he

has remedies.”Jon Norheim

Family court hearing master

WASHINGTON — Federal investigators learned several hours before a provocative cartoon contest in Texas that a man under inves-tigation for extremist activities might show up, but had no indica-tion that he planned to attack the event, FBI Director James Comey said Thursday.

The information about Elton Simpson was developed about three hours before the event, which the FBI had already identifi ed as a potential target for vio-lence because it involved cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad. Both he and his room-mate, both from Phoe-nix, opened fi re outside the cultural center but were shot dead by an unarmed security offi cer stationed outside.

Simpson, previously

convicted as part of a terrorism-related inves-tigation, had come un-der new investigation in recent months, authori-ties have said. When the FBI learned that he could be heading toward the event, the agency sent an intelligence bul-letin to police in Gar-land, including a picture and other information about Simpson.

Even so, Comey said, “we didn’t have reason to believe that he was going to attack the event. In fact, we didn’t have reason to believe that he had left Phoenix.”

In his fi rst public com-ments on the Sunday shooting, Comey said the FBI was still evalu-ating whether there was anything else that could have been done to pre-vent the attack.

“What I’ve seen so far looks like we did it the way we were supposed to do it,” Comey said.

Simpson came un-der FBI investigation in 2006 and was convicted fi ve years later follow-ing a terrorism-related investigation stemming from what prosecutors said were his plans to travel to Somalia to fi ght alongside extremists there. He was sentenced to three years of proba-tion for lying to a federal agent.

The FBI continued to track him for sev-eral years after that, but closed the investigation last year. In March au-thorities opened a new investigation into his ac-tivities after suspecting a “renewed interest in ji-had” in connection with the Islamic State group, Comey said.

He said that investiga-tion was “open, but far from complete” at the time of the shooting.

The FBI had been closely monitoring the event, even establishing a command post at its Dallas fi eld offi ce.

FBI sent out bulletin hours before attack

Associated Press

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Page 7: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

FRIDAY EVENING MAY 8, 2015 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

Shark Tank (N) Beyond the Tank (N) (:01) 20/20 Local 24 News

(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WREG # #The Amazing Race “In It to Win It” (N)

Hawaii Five-0 “Luapo’i; A Make Kaua” A bounty hunter is murdered. (N)

News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

James Corden

QVC $ . (6:00) Gold Gala “May is Gold Month” Fashionably Friday Night Beauty La-Z-Boy

WCBI $The Amazing Race “In It to Win It” (N)

Hawaii Five-0 “Luapo’i; A Make Kaua” A bounty hunter is murdered. (N)

News Late Show With David Letterman

James Corden

WMC % %Grimm Wu’s life is put into jeopardy.

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

WLMT & >Barber Battle

Whose Line The Messengers “Drums of War” (N)

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

Modern Family

WBBJ _ _Shark Tank (N) Beyond the Tank (N) (:01) 20/20 News at

10pm(:35) Jimmy Kimmel Live

(:37) Night-line

WTVA ) )Grimm Wu’s life is put into jeopardy.

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

WKNO * Behind Headln

Charlie Rose

TV to Remember Alive-Delta Masterpiece Classic (N) Wolf Hall on Master-piece

WGN-A + (How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met Engage-

mentEngage-ment

Parks/Rec-reat

Parks/Rec-reat

WMAE , ,Washing-ton

Southern Remedy

America’s Ballroom Challenge (N)

Billy Joel: The Library of Congress Gershwin Prize

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `} ››› Scream A psychopath stalks the teens of a sleepy California town.

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

TMZ Dish Nation (N)

Ac. Hol-lywood

WPXX / Cold Case “Wings” Cold Case Cold Case Cold Case Cold Case

WPIX :Barber Battle

Whose Line The Messengers “Drums of War” (N)

PIX11 News PIX11 Sports

Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Two and Half Men

MAX 0 3(:05) } ›› Shallow Hal (01, Romance-Comedy) Gwyneth Paltrow, Jack Black.

} ›› Out of Time (03) A police chief is accused of setting a deadly arson.

} › Poison Ivy: The New Seduction

SHOW 2 } › Vampire Academy (14, Fantasy) Zoey Deutch, Lucy Fry.

Brad Williams: Fun Size (N)

Penny Dreadful “Fresh Hell”

Happyish Penny Dreadful

HBO 4 1Game of Thrones “High Sparrow”

Game of Thrones Real Time With Bill Ma-her (N) (L)

VICE (N) Real Time With Bill Maher

VICE

MTV 5 2 Buckwild Buckwild (7:55) } ›› Think Like a Man (12) Michael Ealy. Wild/Out Wild/Out

ESPN 7 ?NBA Basketball: Cleveland Cavaliers at TBA. Eastern Confer-ence Semifinal, Game 3. (N) (Live)

NBA Basketball: Houston Rockets at TBA. Western Conference Semifinal, Game 3. (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5Cops Cops Cops Sting. Cops Cops Cops Kickboxing: Glory Kickboxing: San Diego. (N)

USA : 8Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

Modern Family

NCIS: Los Angeles “The Fifth Man”

NICK ; C } Holiday in Sun Full H’se Full H’se Prince Prince Friends Friends Fresh Prince

DISC < DBering Sea Gold “Smoke ’Em Out”

Bering Sea Gold (N) Unearthed “Black Dia-monds” (N)

Bering Sea Gold Unearthed “Black Dia-monds”

A&E > Criminal Minds Criminal Minds “Sense

Memory”Criminal Minds “Today I Do”

(:01) Criminal Minds “Coda”

(:01) Criminal Minds

FSSO ? 4Boxing: Golden Boy Live: Joseph Diaz Jr. vs. Juan Luis Hernandez. (N)

UEFA Mag. UEFA Driven UFC Unleashed

BET @ F Single Ladies Nellyville Scandal Lip Sync Hus Wendy Williams

H&G C HLove It or List It “Josmell & Carla”

Love It or List It House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Love It or List It

E! D (6:30) } ›› The Day After Tomorrow Soup Helbig E! News (N) Kardashian

HIST E BAncient Aliens “The Alien Agenda”

Hangar 1: The UFO Files

Hangar 1: The UFO Files “Star People”

(:03) Ancient Aliens (:01) Ancient Aliens “The Alien Agenda”

ESPN2 F @ Draft Academy Boxing: Friday Night Fights. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N)

TLC G (6:00) 19 Kids and Counting

Say Yes, Dress

Curvy Brides

Curvy Brides

Match-maker

Match-maker

Say Yes, Dress

Curvy Brides

Curvy Brides

FOOD H Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

Diners, Drive

INSP I The Waltons JAG Walker, Ranger Matlock Medicine Woman

LIFE J =} ›› Sister Act A Reno lounge singer poses as a nun to elude mob assassins.

(:02) Bama State Style (:02) Bama State Style (N)

(:02) } ›› Sister Act (92)

TBN M Trinity Lindsey Harvest P. Stone } ›› The Cross (09, Documentary) Price Spirit

AMC N 0} ›› Jurassic Park III (01, Adventure) Sam Neill, William H. Macy.

} ›› Jurassic Park III (01, Adventure) Sam Neill, William H. Macy.

(:01) } ››› Drum-line (02)

FAM O <} ››› Pitch Perfect (12) Anna Kendrick. College students enter an a cappella competition.

Young & Hungry

The 700 Club Boy Meets...

Boy Meets...

TCM P } ›››› Touch of Evil (58, Crime Drama) Charl-ton Heston, Orson Welles.

} ››› The Lady From Shanghai (48) Rita Hayworth.

(:45) } ››› Mr. Arkadin (55, Drama) Orson Welles.

TNT Q ACold Justice (N) } ›› The Longest Yard (05) Adam Sandler. Prisoners train for

a football game against the guards.Cold Justice Grimm

TBS R *Big Bang Theory

Big Bang Theory

Meet the Smiths

} ›› Daddy’s Little Girls (07, Romance) Gabri-elle Union, Idris Elba.

Meet the Smiths

} › My Baby’s Daddy Eddie Griffin.

GAME S The Chase Newly Newly FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud FamFeud TOON T King/Hill King/Hill Cleve Burgers American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Childrens Eric TVLD U K Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King Friends Friends FS1 Z Setup NASCAR Racing FOX Sports Live (N) MLB Whiparound

FX Æ ;} ››› 21 Jump Street (12) Jonah Hill, Channing Tatum. Young cops go under cover as high-school students.

} ›› The Dictator (12) A tyrant risks all to prevent democracy in his country.

OUT Ø Zona’s NRA Movie The Strip Gunny Shoot NBCS ∞ NHL Hockey NHL Hockey: Anaheim Ducks at Calgary Flames. (N) NHL Denny OWN ± Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse Worse FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File (N) Hannity (N) The O’Reilly Factor The Kelly File APL ≥ Flipping Ships Flipping Ships (N) The Pool Master Flipping Ships The Pool Master

HALL ∂ G} Mother’s Day on Walton’s Mountain

The Middle The Middle The Middle The Middle Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LDog With a Blog “Stan Has Puppies”

Austin & Ally

Liv & Mad-die

Penn Zero Penn Zero Dog With a Blog “Stan Has Puppies”

Austin & Ally

Liv & Mad-die

SYFY E(5:30) } ››› 1408 John Cusack.

Bitten “Rabbit Hole” (N) Lost Girl Bo and Tamsin disagree.

Bitten “Rabbit Hole” Lost Girl Bo and Tamsin disagree.

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Look for the Exploring Pickwick magazine coming in the Daily Corinthian on Saturday, May 30.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

Daily Corinthian • Friday, May 8, 2015 • 7A

D E A R ABBY: I represented my daughter “Stacy” and her husband as their real estate agent.

W h e n any of my c h i l d r e n p u r c h a s e a home, I waive my

commission. My daughter knew I had been

trying to fi nance a trip to South America for my husband so he could complete his “bucket list.”

She gave me a cruise on one of the most expensive cruise lines and airfare to South Amer-ica as a gift for helping with their home purchase.

After my husband reviewed the itinerary, he said it wasn’t the trip he had in mind and wanted to know if my daughter could change it.

I was embarrassed to ask her after receiving such a gracious gift.

He became indignant and said if she really wanted to give him something he wanted, she wouldn’t mind changing the trip.

I told Stacy I couldn’t accept her gift because it was too much money.

My husband is now angry with me because he feels I am the

person at fault for the loss of the trip. Is my husband right that we should request a gift exchange from the giver, or was I justifi ed for not accepting it in light of the fact that it was too much mon-ey? -- JUST WANTS PEACE

DEAR JUST WANTS PEACE: Your husband sounds like a handful.

HE was at fault. Your mistake was allowing

him to put you in the middle.I’m sorry you fi bbed to your

daughter about why you refused her generosity, because the ex-pense had nothing to do with it.

Your husband’s ingratitude had everything to do with it.

Because the cruise didn’t suit him, HE should have spoken to her and asked if the itinerary could be adjusted.

That way nothing could have been lost in translation, and he might have gotten his wish.

DEAR ABBY: During WWII, while I was overseas in the Navy, I received a “Dear John” letter.

It was devastating, especially because I was so far away and unable to immediately respond.

Do you think it is appropriate for a person to send such a let-ter while the person is far away, especially while in the service, or should the person wait un-til the service member returns home and say it’s over face-to-

face?After all these years, I have

heard many pros and cons about this question.

I can think of no one else with such a wealth of knowledge in this area to ask but you.

After hearing from you, I will fi nally put this to rest. -- JOHN IN VINELAND, N.J.

DEAR JOHN: A decade ago I would have said -- and DID tell someone -- to wait until the per-son came home.

My thinking was the news might demoralize the recipient and distract the person enough to get her/him killed.

I CHANGED MY MIND after hearing from service members stationed in the Middle East who told me I was wrong -- that it’s better to get the word while there were buddies close by who could be emotionally sup-portive.

They suggested that if the ser-vice member hears the news when he gets back -- alone and possibly traumatized by what he or she has been through -- that it could make the person more vulnerable to suicide.

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

ARIES (March 21-April 19). After you make the magic hap-pen, own it. You don’t have to talk about it. You just have to know that this was your doing and stop yourself from giving anyone else the credit.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Set aside some money to be used in an unconventional, cre-ative or risky way. Even a small amount will make a big differ-ence in getting you on a track toward your dreams.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). People have their reasons for acting the way they do, but rea-sons are not excuses. If you want better behavior out of them (or out of yourself, for that mat-ter), create and uphold a system of accountability.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). With Venus visiting your part of the sky, your heart-light is shin-ing like a lighthouse beacon. The souls that are like lost ships in the night will fi nd guidance in your love.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You

like having conversations with people whose interests are wide and different from yours. How-ever, that bossy person who in-sists that you try things is one to resist, if not totally avoid, now.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll entertain with style. An im-portant part of this is showman-ship. You’ll be like the ringleader of a circus calling attention to the special acts and wonders around you.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). Ideally, you can get enthusiastic about the day’s activities, but if not, don’t let that stop you. Just showing up will be enough. The skills you’ve acquired through the years will carry you through.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). When you’re interested in someone, you want to know the whole person, not just the small part shown to you within the confi nes of a particular role. Ask good questions, and you’ll get the bigger picture.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). The menial tasks have to

get done, or you’ll set yourself up for unnecessary problems over the weekend. Make it fun. Add music or comedy. The chores go by quickly when you’re listening to a headset.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Bottom line: People are always more important than “stuff.” Anyone whose behavior regarding material possessions suggests the opposite belief has issues. The best thing to do is steer clear.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’ll play the game of life with verve. Why saunter to the next spot when you can leap ahead? Your energetic ap-proach will attract the attention of someone who will be good for you to know.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Though you prefer to stay on purpose, a certain tolerance for those who dillydally, lollygag and loiter will serve you well. You’ll learn information in those easygoing moments that you would have otherwise missed.

Couple encounters rough seas over present of cruise vacation

Page 8: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Business8A • Daily Corinthian Friday, May 8, 2015

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

18,288.63 15,855.12 Dow Industrials 17,924.06 +82.08 +.46 +.57 +8.309,310.22 7,614.24 Dow Transportation 8,717.05 +97.68 +1.13 -4.63 +13.15

657.17 524.82 Dow Utilities 579.77 +2.15 +.37 -6.20 +5.9111,248.99 9,886.08 NYSE Composite 11,036.41 +20.42 +.19 +1.82 +4.01

5,119.83 4,021.05 Nasdaq Composite 4,945.55 +25.91 +.53 +4.42 +22.072,125.92 1,820.66 S&P 500 2,088.00 +7.85 +.38 +1.41 +11.321,543.48 1,269.45 S&P MidCap 1,505.23 +5.55 +.37 +3.63 +11.45

22,522.83 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000 22,048.11 +81.01 +.37 +1.75 +11.221,278.63 1,040.47 Russell 2000 1,225.54 +6.18 +.51 +1.73 +11.67

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.56 10 63.75 +.21 +4.4AT&T Inc 1.88 30 33.37 -.01 -.7AerojetR ... ... 20.17 +.70 +10.2AirProd 3.24f 29 146.19 +.64 +1.4AlliantEgy 2.20 18 60.29 +.10 -9.2AEP 2.12 16 55.26 +.30 -9.0AmeriBrgn 1.16 ... 114.07 +.01 +26.5ATMOS 1.56 18 53.47 +.84 -4.1BB&T Cp 1.08f 14 38.57 -.09 -.8BP PLC 2.40 35 41.83 -.67 +9.7BcpSouth .30 19 24.26 -.20 +7.8Caterpillar 2.80 14 86.43 -.56 -5.6Chevron 4.28 12 107.57 -.38 -4.1CocaCola 1.32 26 40.70 +.04 -3.6Comcast 1.00f 18 57.92 +.26 -.2CrackerB 4.00 22 136.10 +3.14 -3.3Deere 2.40 11 89.63 -.34 +1.3Dillards .24 17 128.81 +2.22 +2.9Dover 1.60 15 74.35 -1.01 +3.7EnPro .80 85 62.02 +1.19 -1.2FordM .60 20 15.51 +.03 +.1FredsInc .24 ... 17.55 +.54 +.8FullerHB .52f 26 42.38 +.07 -4.8GenElec .92 ... 27.04 +.23 +7.0Goodyear .24 3 28.79 +.81 +.8HonwllIntl 2.07 19 101.01 +.02 +1.1Intel .96 14 32.24 +.03 -11.1Jabil .32 16 23.18 +.29 +6.2KimbClk 3.52 27 109.68 -.18 -5.1Kroger .74 20 70.65 +.85 +10.0Lowes .92 27 72.29 +1.52 +5.1McDnlds 3.40 21 96.78 +.39 +3.3

MeadWvco 1.00 31 48.36 +.15 +8.9

OldNBcp .48 16 13.67 -.04 -8.1

Penney ... ... 8.25 +.06 +27.3

PennyMac 2.44 9 18.30 -2.00 -13.2

PepsiCo 2.81f 22 95.15 -.33 +.6

PilgrimsP 5.77e 8 24.33 -.13 -12.1

RegionsFn .24f 14 9.89 -.03 -6.3

SbdCp 3.00 11 3550.00 +83.75 -15.4

SearsHldgs ... ... 41.80 +.47 +26.7

Sherwin 2.68 31 281.40 +3.51 +7.0

SiriusXM ... 43 3.85 +.02 +10.0

SouthnCo 2.17f 19 44.23 +.15 -9.9

SPDR Fncl .41e ... 24.41 +.17 -1.3

Torchmrk s .54f 14 56.98 +.14 +5.2

Total SA 3.10e ... 52.65 -1.24 +2.8

US Bancrp .98 14 43.10 ... -4.1

WalMart 1.96f 16 78.03 +.38 -9.1

WellsFargo 1.50f 13 54.81 -.11 ...

Wendys Co .22 43 11.20 +.01 +24.0

WestlkChm .66 15 69.85 -1.60 +14.3

Weyerhsr 1.16 26 32.04 +.87 -10.7

Xerox .28f 15 11.32 -.06 -18.3

YRC Wwde ... ... 14.53 +.37 -35.4

Yahoo ... 6 43.87 +2.21 -13.1

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp 15 13.54 +.09AK Steel dd 5.33 +.10AbbottLab 17 46.50 -.04AbbVie 58 64.70 +.76Abraxas 5 3.24 -.39Achillion dd 9.28 +.14ActivsBliz 19 24.41 +1.21AMD dd 2.32 +.03AEtern g h dd .53 -.01Akorn cc 40.26 +.95Albemarle 29 62.83 +2.83AlcatelLuc ... 3.64 +.06Alcoa 22 13.71 +.04Alexion 50 162.96 +7.95Alibaba n 54 86.00 +6.00AllscriptH dd 13.20 +.16Allstate 11 67.72 +.41AllyFincl 9 22.55 +.26AlphaNRs dd .75AlpAlerMLP q 16.90 -.18AlteraCp lf 31 44.60 +.60Altria 21 51.24 +.56Amarin ... 1.98 +.01Amazon dd 426.88 +7.78Ambev ... 6.48 +.03Amedica h dd .32 +.07Ameren 17 40.40 +.03AMovilL 19 20.66 +.13AmAirlines 13 49.06 +2.02ACapAgy cc 20.47 +.07AmCapLtd 18 14.48 -.42AEagleOut 27 16.73 +.06AmExp 14 78.43 +.58AmIntlGrp 10 58.97 +.82ARltCapPr dd 8.93 +.01Amgen 21 157.90 -1.05Anadarko dd 88.77 -.89AnglogldA ... 11.24 +.08Annaly dd 10.06 +.08Anthem 16 155.80 -4.05Apache dd 65.08 -2.26Apple Inc s 15 125.26 +.77ApldMatl 20 19.56 +.12ArcelorMit dd 10.26 -.35ArchDan 15 50.32 +.38AriadP dd 8.75 -.02Atmel 72 7.96 +.42AtwoodOcn 5 33.00 -2.03aTyrPhm n ... 14.95Avon dd 7.02 -.05AxionPw h ... .04 +.00BHP BillLt ... 50.27 -1.14Baidu 31 193.63 +3.58BakrHu 33 66.10 -1.13BcoBrad s ... 10.44 +.10BcoSantSA ... 7.36 -.05BkofAm 24 16.24 -.05BkNYMel 16 43.31 +.37BarcGSOil q 12.27 -.42B iPVixST q 21.70 -.16BarrickG 79 12.69 +.06BasicEnSv dd 9.66 -.36BerkH B 18 145.31 +1.53BestBuy 10 36.12 +.80BBarrett 30 9.04 -.53BlackBerry dd 9.72 -.08Blackstone 13 42.26 +.51BloominBr 23 21.61 +.22Boeing 18 141.49 +.45BostonSci cc 17.18 -.12BrMySq 48 65.05 +.38Broadcom 41 46.42 +.92C&J Engy 31 16.00 -1.24CA Inc 18 31.40 -.05CBL Asc 18 17.55 +.18CBS B 20 61.22 +.10CMS Eng 19 33.17 +.01CSX 18 35.91 +.26CVS Health 24 99.36 +.49CblvsnNY 21 20.56 -.24CabotO&G 39 34.25 +.13Cadence 36 18.98 +.34CalifRes n ... 7.64 -.65CallonPet 36 7.54 -.36Calpine 9 20.55 +.14Cameron 12 52.09 -1.49CdnNRs gs ... 31.41 -.55CdnSolar 8 34.28 -.36CapOne 11 82.02 -.22CareerEd dd 4.88 +.78Carlisle 25 97.44 +.35Carnival 27 44.48 +1.03Celgene s 38 112.01 +3.36Cemex ... 9.77 +.11Cemig pf ... 5.17 -.08CenovusE dd 17.16 -.17CenterPnt 15 20.30 -.06CntryLink 26 34.65 +.12Ceres rs dd 2.70 +.98Chegg dd 8.57 +1.15ChesEng dd 14.50 -.22Cisco 17 28.81 -.17Citigroup 21 53.31 +.54CitizFin n ... 25.95 +.10Civeo n ... 4.43 -.25CleanEngy dd 8.59 -.34CliffsNRs dd 6.32 -.25CobaltIEn dd 10.22 -.10CogentC cc 31.64 -3.83CognizTch 26 61.31 +.69Comc spcl 18 57.80 +.29ConAgra cc 37.36 +.16ConocoPhil 17 66.62 -.61ContlRes s 28 47.04 -1.39CopaHold 9 92.94 -13.96Corning 14 21.04 -.02Coty dd 24.68 +.46CSVInvNG q 6.65 +.17CSVLgNGs q 2.31 -.07CSVLgCrde q 3.56 -.33CSVelIVST q 39.90 +.22CSVixSht q 1.20 -.03CypSemi ... 12.69 +.04CytoriTher dd .69 -.02DDR Corp dd 17.32 +.31DR Horton 16 25.72 +.45Danaher 24 83.19 +.85DeltaAir 15 45.36 +1.30DenburyR 4 7.62 -.94DBXEafeEq q 29.95 +.05DevonE dd 66.47 -1.01DexMedia dd 1.42 -1.25DrGMnBll rs q 21.50 +.16DirSPBear q 18.61 -.25DxGldBull q 11.61 +.21DrxFnBear q 11.97 -.22DxEnBear q 17.67 +.55DrxChiBear q 5.91 +.01DrxSCBear q 10.63 -.14DirGMBear q 8.11 -.06DrxDNGBull q 3.76 -.30DirDGldBr q 13.73 -.27DrxSCBull q 83.59 +.99Discover 12 57.91 -.44DiscCmA s 14 31.51 -.50Disney 23 109.26 -.46DomRescs 21 70.93 +.22DowChm 16 50.64 -.24DuPont 21 73.33 +.61DukeEngy 19 76.81 +.40

E-F-G-HE-Trade 31 28.86 +.41eBay 25 57.96 +.47EMC Cp 21 26.18 +.05EOG Rescs 18 93.50 -1.58EldorGld g 27 4.93 +.15ElectArts 22 60.27 -.66EliLilly 35 71.82 -.23EmeraldO dd .71 -.14EmersonEl 15 58.10 -.12EmpDist 17 23.44 +.16EnCana g 10 13.70 -.10EngyTsfr 71 55.44 -1.05EngyXXI dd 3.86 -.20ENSCO dd 25.52 -1.66EnvisnHlth 76 36.49 +.70Ericsson ... 11.08 +.17EsteeLdr 27 88.33 +.91ExcoRes dd 1.73 -.08Exelixis dd 3.11 +.16Exelon 13 33.83 +.39ExpScripts 30 83.85 -.23ExtrmNet dd 2.47 -.12ExxonMbl 13 87.60 -.59FMC Tech 14 42.14 -1.09Facebook 76 78.43 +.33FedExCp 20 171.74 +2.18FiatChry n ... 14.83 +.50FifthThird 11 19.98 -.14FireEye dd 40.34 +.24

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 752326 208.87 +.83BkofAm 723051 16.24 -.05CSVLgCrde 657935 3.56 -.3321stCFoxA 532957 32.78 -.90Zynga 517768 2.80 +.19iShEMkts 421265 42.33 -.06NokiaCp 420114 6.72 +.24Vale SA 416940 7.84 -.35Apple Inc s 412386 125.26 +.77MktVGold 400967 19.83 +.12

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,807Declined 1,311Unchanged 104

Total issues 3,222New Highs 29New Lows 59

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,525Declined 1,204Unchanged 148

Total issues 2,877New Highs 44New Lows 66

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

Gevo rs 5.46 +3.01 +122.9QltyDistr 15.74 +5.94 +60.6Ceres rs 2.70 +.98 +57.0WPCS Int rs 3.07 +.58 +23.3Yelp 47.01 +8.79 +23.0MER Tele 2.22 +.39 +21.3HubSpot n 47.90 +7.65 +19.0CareerEd 4.88 +.78 +19.0BioTelem 9.50 +1.51 +18.9MarchxB 4.90 +.75 +18.1

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

ICAD 4.63 -3.32 -41.8GblPowEq 8.19 -4.05 -33.1PlasmaT wt 2.65 -1.10 -29.3Varonis 20.07 -6.61 -24.8PhoenxCos 19.05 -5.47 -22.3SucampoPh 14.50 -3.56 -19.7CraftBrew 10.72 -2.48 -18.8PhnxC32 16.60 -3.40 -17.0MYOS 3.33 -.67 -16.8SparkNet 3.20 -.60 -15.8

AMGYacktmanSvc d24.33 -0.06 -3.1YkmFcsSvc d 25.09 -0.10 -3.1AQRMaFtStrI 10.95 ... +3.0American BeaconLgCpVlIs 29.91 +0.01 +2.7American CenturyEqIncInv 8.74 +0.01 +0.2InvGrInv 29.62 +0.13 +3.0UltraInv 36.50 +0.20 +4.9ValueInv 8.64 ... +0.5American FundsAMCAPA m 29.11 +0.09 +4.0AmBalA m 24.98 +0.07 +1.7BondA m 12.82 +0.02 +0.7CapIncBuA m 60.64 ... +2.6CapWldBdA m19.70 -0.01 -0.7CpWldGrIA m 48.01 -0.02 +4.5EurPacGrA m 50.80 -0.13 +7.8FnInvA m 53.23 +0.17 +3.7GrthAmA m 44.87 +0.20 +5.1HiIncA m 10.88 -0.01 +3.3IncAmerA m 21.84 +0.02 +2.0IntBdAmA m 13.57 +0.01 +0.8IntlGrInA m 33.16 -0.14 +4.7InvCoAmA m 37.63 +0.07 +2.6MutualA m 37.35 +0.09 +1.1NewEconA m 38.97 +0.16 +6.0NewPerspA m 38.83 +0.14 +7.0NwWrldA m 55.66 -0.24 +4.0SmCpWldA m 49.04 +0.01 +8.2TaxEBdAmA m13.00 +0.01 +0.3WAMutInvA m 41.07 +0.09 +0.7ArtisanIntl d 31.39 +0.05 +4.8IntlVal d 35.85 ... +4.8MdCpVal 25.28 -0.03 +2.6MidCap 46.88 +0.09 +3.2MidCapI 49.47 +0.09 +3.3BBHCoreSelN d 22.71 +0.02 +0.1BairdAggrInst 10.82 +0.03 +0.9CrPlBInst 11.16 +0.03 +1.0BernsteinDiversMui 14.44 +0.01 +0.1BlackRockEngy&ResA m25.50 -0.48 +4.3EqDivA m 24.79 +0.08 -0.1EqDivI 24.85 +0.08GlobAlcA m 20.60 +0.02 +4.2GlobAlcC m 18.89 +0.02 +4.0GlobAlcI 20.72 +0.02 +4.3HiYldBdIs 7.99 -0.01 +3.2StIncInvA m 10.17 -0.01 +1.2StrIncIns 10.17 -0.01 +1.3CausewayIntlVlIns d 16.03 -0.07 +8.4Cohen & SteersRealty 76.31 +1.16 -0.2ColumbiaAcornIntZ 44.70 -0.22 +7.1AcornZ 33.28 +0.08 +4.2DivIncZ 18.92 +0.05 +0.5Credit SuisseComStrInstl 5.92 -0.08 -1.5DFA1YrFixInI 10.32 ... +0.32YrGlbFII 9.93 ... +0.35YrGlbFII 11.05 +0.01 +1.1EmMkCrEqI 20.21 -0.19 +6.8EmMktValI 27.78 -0.34 +7.9EmMtSmCpI 21.46 -0.27 +7.9IntCorEqI 12.70 -0.02 +8.7IntSmCapI 20.43 +0.03 +9.8IntlSCoI 18.55 -0.02 +9.2IntlValuI 19.30 -0.06 +9.3RelEstScI 32.35 +0.50 -1.3TAUSCrE2I 14.58 +0.04 +2.6USCorEq1I 18.35 +0.07 +2.7USCorEq2I 17.89 +0.05 +2.5USLgCo 16.50 +0.07 +2.1USLgValI 34.41 +0.07 +1.6USMicroI 19.69 +0.10 +1.7USSmValI 35.57 +0.12 +1.7USSmallI 31.70 +0.13 +2.0USTgtValInst 22.82 +0.06 +3.2DavisNYVentA m 38.55 +0.15 +4.6Delaware InvestValueI 18.56 +0.03 +2.2Dodge & CoxBal 102.36 +0.01 +1.2GlbStock 12.24 -0.02 +3.5Income 13.80 +0.02 +0.9IntlStk 44.83 -0.06 +6.5Stock 180.52 -0.04 +1.0DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.95 ... +1.1Eaton VanceFltgRtI 9.03 ... +2.8FMILgCap 22.01 +0.08 +3.7FPACres d 34.21 +0.03 +1.4NewInc d 10.13 ... +0.8Fairholme FundsFairhome d 36.09 +0.20 +2.9FederatedStrValI 5.99 ... +2.2ToRetIs 11.04 +0.02 +1.1FidelityAstMgr20 13.38 +0.02 +1.6AstMgr50 17.49 +0.04 +3.0Bal 23.25 +0.08 +2.5Bal K 23.25 +0.08 +2.6BlChGrow 71.99 +0.50 +5.2BlChGrowK 72.08 +0.50 +5.3CapApr 37.38 +0.24 +3.7CapInc d 9.98 ... +4.6Contra 100.89 +0.65 +4.0ContraK 100.85 +0.65 +4.0DivGrow 34.15 +0.13 +2.2DivrIntl d 37.36 +0.02 +8.4DivrIntlK d 37.30 +0.01 +8.5EqInc 58.28 +0.09 +2.2EqInc II 26.81 +0.08 +0.9FF2015 13.00 +0.02 +3.1FF2035 13.87 +0.01 +4.6FF2040 9.77 +0.01 +4.6FltRtHiIn d 9.79 ... +3.1FrdmK2015 14.03 +0.02 +3.2FrdmK2020 14.73 +0.02 +3.4FrdmK2025 15.42 +0.02 +3.8FrdmK2030 15.83 +0.02 +4.4FrdmK2035 16.34 +0.02 +4.7FrdmK2040 16.38 +0.02 +4.7FrdmK2045 16.81 +0.02 +4.7FrdmK2050 16.92 +0.02 +4.6Free2010 15.82 +0.02 +2.8Free2020 15.89 +0.03 +3.5Free2025 13.64 +0.02 +3.8Free2030 16.83 +0.02 +4.3GNMA 11.67 +0.02 +0.8GrowCo 139.31 +0.94 +5.8GrowInc 30.99 +0.07 +3.0GrthCmpK 139.18 +0.94 +5.8HiInc d 9.01 -0.01 +3.2IntlDisc d 41.17 -0.05 +8.4InvGrdBd 7.91 +0.01 +0.8LatinAm d 23.61 ... -0.8LowPrStkK d 52.18 +0.07 +3.9LowPriStk d 52.21 +0.07 +3.9Magellan 95.81 +0.55 +3.6MidCap d 40.14 +0.05 +4.6MuniInc d 13.39 +0.01 +0.1OTC 84.59 +0.84 +6.3Puritan 21.95 +0.09 +2.5PuritanK 21.94 +0.09 +2.5SASEqF 14.21 +0.05 +3.1SEMF 17.68 -0.20 +5.9SInvGrBdF 11.43 +0.02 +0.7STMIdxF d 61.20 +0.26 +2.5SersEmgMkts 17.63 -0.20 +5.8SesAl-SctrEqt 14.22 +0.06 +3.0SesInmGrdBd 11.43 +0.03 +0.7ShTmBond 8.60 ... +0.6SmCapDisc d 30.71 +0.06 +2.1StkSelec 36.75 +0.16 +4.0StratInc 10.82 -0.01 +2.5Tel&Util 24.30 +0.03 +1.1TotalBd 10.71 +0.02 +1.3USBdIdx 11.71 +0.03 +0.7USBdIdxInv 11.71 +0.03 +0.6Value 117.49 +0.46 +3.7Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 27.45 +0.13 +3.5NewInsI 27.97 +0.14 +3.6Fidelity SelectBiotech d 246.31 +2.78 +14.0HealtCar d 231.08 +1.58 +10.4Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 73.79 +0.30 +2.1

Name P/E Last Chg

3,545,628,937Volume 1,986,538,606Volume

16,800

17,200

17,600

18,000

18,400

N MD J F M A

17,720

17,960

18,200Dow Jones industrialsClose: 17,924.06Change: 82.08 (0.5%)

10 DAYS

500IdxAdvtgInst73.79 +0.30 +2.1500IdxInstl 73.79 +0.30 +2.1500IdxInv 73.78 +0.30 +2.1ExtMktIdAg d 56.61 +0.28 +3.9IntlIdxAdg d 40.43 -0.16 +8.6TotMktIdAg d 61.19 +0.25 +2.5Fidelity®SeriesGrowthCoF12.69+0.08 +5.9First EagleGlbA m 54.41 -0.23 +3.8OverseasA m 23.46 -0.15 +7.8FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 12.37 +0.01 +0.1FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.45 +0.01 +0.3GrowthA m 77.17 +0.34 +3.3HY TF A m 10.51 ... +0.3Income C m 2.44 ... +2.3IncomeA m 2.41 ... +2.5IncomeAdv 2.39 -0.01 +2.6RisDvA m 52.35 +0.20 +0.7StrIncA m 10.03 ... +1.8FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 34.96 -0.02 +4.9DiscovA m 34.39 -0.01 +4.8Shares Z 30.63 -0.02 +3.8SharesA m 30.36 -0.02 +3.7FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond C m 12.44 -0.02 +0.4GlBondA m 12.41 -0.02 +0.6GlBondAdv 12.37 -0.02 +0.7GrowthA m 24.87 -0.13 +4.5WorldA m 18.04 -0.12 +4.9GES&SUSEq 55.14 +0.22 +1.5GMOEmgMktsVI d 10.51 -0.11 +7.7IntItVlIV 23.91 -0.12 +8.9QuIII 22.61 +0.08 +1.0USEqAllcVI 16.41 +0.06 +1.9Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 6.84 -0.01 +3.3MidCpVaIs 42.44 +0.15 +2.1SmCpValIs 56.27 +0.27 +1.1HarborCapApInst 62.48 +0.46 +6.8IntlInstl 71.66 -0.21 +10.6IntlInv b 70.90 -0.20 +10.5HartfordCapAprA m 38.83 +0.25 +4.7CpApHLSIA 57.51 +0.33 +5.1INVESCOComstockA m 25.88 -0.03 +1.7EqIncomeA m 10.44 +0.02 +1.2GrowIncA m 26.85 +0.05 +1.4HiYldMuA m 9.95 +0.01 +1.3IVAWorldwideI d 17.90 -0.05 +2.5IvyAssetStrA m 26.00 +0.01 +2.0AssetStrC m 24.98 +0.01 +1.8AsstStrgI 26.27 +0.01 +2.1JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.76 +0.02 +0.8CoreBondA m 11.75 +0.02 +0.5CoreBondSelect11.74 +0.02 +0.6DiscEqUlt 24.08 +0.14 +1.9HighYldSel 7.70 ... +3.2LgCapGrSelect36.47 +0.27 +5.4MidCpValI 37.92 +0.15 +2.1ShDurBndSel 10.89 ... +0.6USEquityI 14.79 +0.08 +1.9USLCpCrPS 29.83 +0.22 +1.5ValAdvI 30.33 +0.08 +1.7JanusBalT 31.05 +0.11 +1.9GlbLfScT 59.51 +0.46 +13.3John HancockDisValMdCpI 20.81 +0.10 +4.2DiscValI 19.11 +0.06 +0.7LifBa1 b 15.95 +0.02 +3.4LifGr1 b 16.95 +0.02 +4.1LazardEmgMkEqInst d17.92 -0.07 +4.2Legg MasonCBAggressGrthA m210.72-0.11 +3.5CBAggressGrthI228.68 -0.12 +3.6WACorePlusBdI11.66 +0.03 +1.2Longleaf PartnersLongPart 31.47 -0.21 +0.7Loomis SaylesBdInstl 14.69 -0.01 +0.1BdR b 14.62 -0.01Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 16.35 +0.04 +1.0BondDebA m 8.08 +0.01 +3.5ShDurIncA m 4.45 ... +1.1ShDurIncC m 4.48 ... +0.9ShDurIncF b 4.45 ... +1.4MFSIntlValA m 35.84 -0.05 +8.4IsIntlEq 22.95 -0.09 +9.8TotRetA m 18.35 +0.04 +1.5ValueA m 35.29 +0.11 +1.6ValueI 35.48 +0.11 +1.7Matthews AsianChina 25.67 -0.20 +19.6India 26.84 -0.72 +1.4Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.91 +0.03 +0.7TotRtBd b 10.91 +0.02 +0.5TtlRtnBdPl 10.28 +0.02 +0.6NatixisLSInvBdY 11.71 ... -0.5LSStratIncC m16.28 -0.01NorthernHYFixInc d 7.16 ... +3.2StkIdx 25.60 ... +1.7NuveenHiYldMunI 17.11 +0.02 +1.0OakmarkEqIncI 32.54 -0.02 +2.0Intl I 25.07 -0.15 +7.4Oakmark I 67.33 +0.23 +1.4Select I 41.50 +0.24 +1.7OberweisChinaOpp m 15.86 -0.20 +15.0Old WestburyGlbOppo 7.90 ... +4.1GlbSmMdCp 16.98 -0.02 +4.7LgCpStr 13.36 +0.01 +3.5OppenheimerDevMktA m 36.16 -0.15 +1.8DevMktY 35.72 -0.15 +1.9GlobA m 82.43 +0.15 +8.4IntlGrY 38.00 ... +8.3IntlGrowA m 38.18 ... +8.2MainStrA m 48.98 +0.24 +2.3SrFltRatA m 8.18 ... +2.4Oppenheimer RochesteFdMuniA m 15.16 +0.01 +1.1OsterweisOsterStrInc 11.57 -0.01 +2.9PIMCOAllAssetI 11.84 ... +2.4AllAuthIn 9.31 ... +2.3ComRlRStI 4.52 ... +0.9EMktCurI 9.34 ... +1.8EmgLclBdI 8.05 ... -1.7ForBdInstl 10.67 ... -0.4HiYldIs 9.26 ... +3.2Income P 12.41 ... +2.5IncomeA m 12.41 ... +2.4IncomeC m 12.41 ... +2.1IncomeD b 12.41 ... +2.4IncomeInl 12.41 ... +2.6LowDrIs 10.03 ... +0.6RERRStgC m 3.15 ... -1.3RealRet 10.90 ... +0.2ShtTermIs 9.80 ... +0.8TotRetA m 10.65 ... +0.4TotRetAdm b 10.65 ... +0.5TotRetC m 10.65 ... +0.2TotRetIs 10.65 ... +0.5TotRetrnD b 10.65 ... +0.4TotlRetnP 10.65 ... +0.5UnconstrBdIns 11.17 ... +0.4PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 34.92 +0.27 +6.0Growth 26.88 +0.14 +3.1ParnassusCoreEqInv 40.03 +0.16 -1.4PermanentPortfolio 40.03 -0.06 +1.2PioneerPioneerA m 37.00 +0.13 +1.1PrincipalDivIntI 12.19 -0.01 +7.2L/T2030I 14.79 +0.03 +3.4LCGrIInst 13.06 +0.08 +5.0Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 41.97 +0.14 +4.8TotRetBdZ 14.41 +0.03 +1.1PutnamCpSpctrmY 38.06 -0.01 -1.9GrowIncA m 21.84 ... +1.1NewOpp 82.74 +0.31 +2.8

Schwab1000Inv d 53.72 +0.23 +2.4FUSLgCInl d 15.45 +0.04 +1.0S&P500Sel d 32.82 +0.13 +2.1ScoutInterntl 34.88 -0.15 +7.0SequoiaSequoia 259.45 +1.65 +10.4T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 71.22 +0.61 +5.9CapApprec 26.93 +0.07 +3.1EmMktBd d 12.24 -0.02 +3.5EmMktStk d 34.56 -0.15 +6.7EqIndex d 56.33 +0.23 +2.0EqtyInc 32.85 +0.03 +0.5GrowStk 55.37 +0.45 +6.6HealthSci 76.69 +0.66 +12.8HiYield d 6.91 ... +4.0InsLgCpGr 29.13 +0.25 +6.0IntlBnd d 8.70 -0.04 -2.1IntlGrInc d 14.91 -0.03 +8.3IntlStk d 17.01 -0.05 +9.0LatinAm d 22.27 +0.07 +1.5MidCapE 45.99 +0.24 +6.7MidCapVa 29.95 +0.11 +3.9MidCpGr 80.32 +0.40 +6.5NewHoriz 46.12 +0.28 +5.3NewIncome 9.59 +0.02 +0.9OrseaStk d 10.24 -0.01 +8.7R2015 14.91 +0.03 +3.0R2025 16.33 +0.03 +3.9R2035 17.43 +0.04 +4.6Real d 26.67 +0.41 -0.3Rtmt2010 18.18 +0.02 +2.5Rtmt2020 21.44 +0.04 +3.5Rtmt2030 24.01 +0.05 +4.3Rtmt2040 25.08 +0.07 +4.8Rtmt2045 16.77 +0.04 +4.8ShTmBond 4.76 ... +0.7SmCpStk 44.61 +0.10 +0.7SmCpVal d 46.36 +0.20 -0.9SpecInc 12.73 +0.01 +1.3Value 35.39 +0.16 +2.1TCWTotRetBdI 10.32 +0.02 +0.8TIAA-CREFBdIdxInst 10.90 +0.02 +0.7EqIx 15.89 +0.06 +2.5IntlE d 18.99 -0.06 +8.9TempletonInFEqSeS 21.95 -0.20 +9.5ThornburgIncBldA m 21.80 -0.04 +5.7IncBldC m 21.79 -0.04 +5.4IntlI 31.24 -0.09 +14.0LtdTMul 14.48 ... +0.2Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.17 -0.04 +4.3Vanguard500Adml 192.90 +0.78 +2.1500Inv 192.88 +0.77 +2.1BalIdxAdm 30.04 +0.11 +1.7BalIdxIns 30.04 +0.10 +1.7BdMktInstPls 10.84 +0.02 +0.6CAITAdml 11.70 +0.01 +0.1CapOpAdml 126.24 +0.73 +3.7DevMktIdxAdm13.21 -0.04 +9.0DevMktIdxInstl 13.22 -0.05 +9.0DivGr 22.99 +0.08 +1.2EmMktIAdm 35.86 -0.34 +8.0EnergyAdm 106.10 -1.60 +5.4EqInc 31.49 +0.06 +1.5EqIncAdml 66.00 +0.13 +1.6ExplAdml 90.36 +0.20 +4.5ExtdIdAdm 69.19 +0.34 +3.9ExtdIdIst 69.19 +0.33 +3.9ExtdMktIdxIP 170.75 +0.83 +3.9FAWeUSIns 99.56 -0.43 +8.2GNMA 10.78 +0.02 +0.9GNMAAdml 10.78 +0.02 +1.0GlbEq 25.27 +0.04 +4.8GrthIdAdm 55.51 +0.31 +3.7GrthIstId 55.51 +0.31 +3.7HYCorAdml 6.01 ... +2.8HltCrAdml 95.26 +0.24 +9.7HlthCare 225.80 +0.57 +9.7ITBondAdm 11.51 +0.03 +1.4ITGradeAd 9.87 +0.02 +1.6InfPrtAdm 26.03 +0.08 +0.6InfPrtI 10.60 +0.03 +0.6InflaPro 13.26 +0.04 +0.6InstIdxI 191.01 +0.77 +2.1InstPlus 191.02 +0.76 +2.1InstTStPl 47.58 +0.20 +2.5IntlGr 23.51 +0.02 +9.1IntlGrAdm 74.78 +0.08 +9.2IntlStkIdxAdm 28.06 -0.12 +8.3IntlStkIdxI 112.20 -0.48 +8.2IntlStkIdxIPls 112.22 -0.48 +8.3IntlVal 36.80 -0.09 +8.4LTGradeAd 10.37 +0.09 -1.5LifeCon 18.72 +0.04 +2.0LifeGro 29.80 +0.06 +3.4LifeMod 24.73 +0.04 +2.7MidCapIdxIP 173.57 +0.64 +4.2MidCp 35.10 +0.13 +4.1MidCpAdml 159.31 +0.60 +4.2MidCpIst 35.19 +0.13 +4.2MorgAdml 82.55 +0.54 +5.1MuHYAdml 11.18 +0.01 +0.4MuInt 14.12 +0.01MuIntAdml 14.12 +0.01MuLTAdml 11.60 +0.01 +0.1MuLtdAdml 11.00 ... +0.2MuShtAdml 15.82 ... +0.1PrecMtls 9.52 ... +5.6Prmcp 104.97 +0.39 +2.1PrmcpAdml 108.78 +0.40 +2.1PrmcpCorI 22.00 +0.09 +1.7REITIdxAd 112.49 +1.70 -1.5REITIdxInst 17.41 +0.26 -1.4STBondAdm 10.52 ... +0.9STCor 10.70 ... +1.0STGradeAd 10.70 ... +1.0STIGradeI 10.70 ... +1.1STsryAdml 10.71 ... +0.4SelValu 29.28 ... +3.2ShTmInfPtScIxIv24.35 -0.01 +0.7SmCapIdx 57.66 +0.25 +3.3SmCapIdxIP 166.57 +0.71 +3.3SmCpGrIdxAdm46.30 +0.34 +4.6SmCpIdAdm 57.71 +0.25 +3.3SmCpIdIst 57.70 +0.24 +3.3SmCpValIdxAdm46.38 +0.07 +2.2Star 25.38 +0.07 +3.1StratgcEq 33.69 +0.17 +4.7TgtRe2010 26.82 +0.04 +1.9TgtRe2015 15.66 +0.03 +2.4TgtRe2020 29.23 +0.05 +2.7TgtRe2030 29.99 +0.05 +3.3TgtRe2035 18.47 +0.03 +3.5TgtRe2040 30.89 +0.04 +3.8TgtRe2045 19.36 +0.03 +3.8TgtRe2050 30.74 +0.04 +3.8TgtRetInc 13.08 +0.02 +1.7Tgtet2025 17.02 +0.03 +3.0TlIntlBdIdxAdm 21.17 +0.02 +0.2TlIntlBdIdxInst 31.77 +0.04 +0.3TlIntlBdIdxInv 10.59 +0.01 +0.3TotBdAdml 10.84 +0.02 +0.6TotBdInst 10.84 +0.02 +0.6TotBdMkInv 10.84 +0.02 +0.6TotIntl 16.78 -0.07 +8.2TotStIAdm 52.61 +0.22 +2.4TotStIIns 52.62 +0.22 +2.5TotStIdx 52.59 +0.22 +2.4TxMCapAdm 106.85 +0.43 +2.9ValIdxAdm 33.12 +0.10 +1.1ValIdxIns 33.12 +0.10 +1.1WellsI 25.69 +0.06 +1.1WellsIAdm 62.23 +0.14 +1.2Welltn 39.56 +0.11 +1.6WelltnAdm 68.33 +0.19 +1.7WndsIIAdm 67.32 +0.11 +1.7Wndsr 22.13 +0.08 +3.1WndsrAdml 74.66 +0.26 +3.2WndsrII 37.93 +0.06 +1.7VirtusEmgMktsIs 10.08 -0.04 +1.9Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 11.04 +0.04 +4.8SciTechA m 15.72 +0.09 +4.9

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FstSolar 26 56.32 +.66Flextrn 14 11.87 +.07ForestCA dd 22.70 -.15FrptMcM dd 22.91 -.35FrontierCm cc 5.95 +.01FuelCellE dd 1.23 -.01GATX 11 55.81 -.04Gap 14 40.04 +.36GenDynam 18 138.30 +.67GenGrPrp 26 27.10 +.37GenMotors 16 34.88 +.11Genworth dd 8.25 -.08Gerdau ... 3.30 -.07Gevo rs ... 5.46 +3.01GileadSci 14 101.79 -.48GlaxoSKln ... 44.22 -1.80Globalstar dd 2.31 -.10GluMobile 67 6.70 +.11GoldFLtd ... 3.71 -.41Goldcrp g dd 18.14 +.05GoPro n 43 49.55 +1.36Groupon dd 6.41 +.09HCA Hldg 15 76.59 +2.09HCP Inc 35 39.24 +.61HalconRes dd 1.34 -.05Hallibrtn 17 46.35 -1.32Hanesbds s 30 31.28 +.32HarmonyG ... 1.78 -.10HartfdFn 12 41.19 +.32HltCrREIT 54 71.47 +.68HeclaM cc 3.05 +.06Hemisphrx dd .26 -.01HercOffs h dd .94 -.04Hertz ... 20.68 -.07Hess 15 73.46 -1.01HewlettP 13 32.82 +.32Hilton 42 29.48 +.42HollyFront 14 41.65 +2.14HomeDp 23 110.04 +1.73HopFedBc 19 12.98HorizPhm dd 29.39 +.86HostHotls 13 19.80 +.35HudsCity 39 9.36 -.03HuntBncsh 14 10.91 +.03

I-J-K-LIAMGld g dd 2.13ICAD dd 4.63 -3.32ICICI Bk s ... 10.31 -.02IMS Hlth 78 27.95 +.06INC Rsch n ... 30.06 -2.48iSAstla q 22.69 -.29iShBrazil q 36.47 +.16iShEMU q 39.29 -.15iShGerm q 29.72 -.05iSh HK q 23.56 -.01iShJapan q 12.84 +.02iSh SKor q 59.71 -.64iShMexico q 58.88 -.14iSTaiwn q 16.39 -.04iShSilver q 15.60 -.17iShChinaLC q 49.29 -.02iSCorSP500 q 210.29 +.82iShEMkts q 42.33 -.06iShiBoxIG q 118.33 +.47iSh20 yrT q 122.18 +1.62iS Eafe q 66.13 -.22iShiBxHYB q 90.37 -.01iShIndia bt q 29.52 +.18iShR2K q 121.73 +.46iShUSPfd q 39.23 +.20iShREst q 75.21 +.98iShHmCnst q 26.38 +.36Infosys s 18 30.82 +.20IngrmM 15 26.37 +.37Inovalon n ... 23.44 -1.23IntgDv 30 20.13 +.62InterCloud dd 3.37 -.34InterXion ... 29.60 -1.33IntPap 18 52.00 +.19Interpublic 17 20.71 +.03iSh UK q 18.98 -.05iSCHeafe q 27.78 -.03ItauUnibH ... 12.46 +.16JD.com n ... 33.08 +.60JDS Uniph dd 12.39 +.15JPMorgCh 12 64.50 +.58JanusCap 20 17.42 -.43JetBlue 14 21.49 +.32JohnJn 18 99.66 +.49Jumei n ... 23.04 +1.47JnprNtwk dd 26.73 +.06KB Home 16 14.61 +.06KBR Inc dd 18.00 -.11KateSpade 63 29.16 -3.40KeryxBio dd 9.73 -.23KeurigGM 27 98.16 -9.92KeyEngy dd 2.54 -.08Keycorp 14 14.35 -.11Kimco 21 24.22 +.33KindMorg 47 42.66 -.01KindredHlt dd 23.12 -.06Kinross g dd 2.43 +.03Kohls 17 73.36 +.40Lannett 14 53.04 -7.28LaredoPet 7 13.72 -.58LVSands 16 52.17 +.02LendingC n ... 17.30 -1.01LennarA 16 46.47 +1.18LibtyGlobC ... 50.30 -.29LockhdM 17 188.21 +1.38Lorillard 22 71.21 +.35LaPac dd 16.78 -.22LumberLiq 18 27.07 -.16LyonBas A 12 101.79 -1.47

M-N-O-PMFA Fncl 10 7.78 +.05MGM Rsts dd 19.75 +.17MRC Glbl 11 15.86 -.40Macys 15 64.71 +1.10Magna g s 13 55.12 +2.30MagHRes dd 1.89 -.05MannKd dd 4.02 -.14MarathnO 12 28.92 -.89MVJrGold q 25.03 +.05MktVGold q 19.83 +.12MV OilSvc q 37.52 -1.23MV Semi q 56.04 +.40MktVRus q 20.09 +.13MartMM 46 150.58 +1.49MarvellT 17 14.09 +.03Masco 11 26.39 +.28MasterCrd 28 92.05 +1.48Mattel 20 26.83 -.37McDrmInt dd 5.03 -.18MedProp 51 13.68 +.29Medtrnic 24 74.60 +.28MelcoCrwn 18 20.03 +.28Merck 16 60.30 +.04MetLife 9 52.07 +.67MicronT 8 27.27 -.72Microsoft 19 46.70 +.42MolsCoorB 27 74.02 +.50Molycorp dd .59 -.08Mondelez 30 38.98 +.53Monsanto 25 119.13 +2.83MonstrWw ... 6.05 +.36MorgStan 11 37.54 +.49Mosaic 15 44.49 +.15MurphO 11 46.71 -.33Mylan NV 32 70.39 -.66NRG Egy 31 24.97 +.38Nabors 13 15.68 -.65NBGreece ... 1.44 +.04NOilVarco 10 51.97 -2.55NwGold g dd 3.28 -.01NY CmtyB 15 16.93 -.21NewfldExp 26 35.24 -.81NewmtM 22 25.82 +.17NewsCpA 38 14.97 -.02NielsenNV 44 44.99 +.25NikeB 29 101.45 +1.23NobleCorp dd 16.41 -1.16NobleEngy 18 48.12 -.88NokiaCp ... 6.72 +.24NorthropG 16 153.46 +.16NStarRlt dd 18.69 +.10Novavax dd 7.89 +.01NuSkin 15 53.99 -5.28NuanceCm dd 15.31 -.04Nvidia 20 22.49 +.39OasisPet 5 16.84 +.54OcciPet 20 77.61 -1.81OcwenFn dd 10.51 +.46OfficeDpt dd 9.29 +.10Oi SA s ... 1.86 -.12OnSmcnd 28 12.09 -.01ONEOK 31 43.92 -.92Oracle 18 43.48 +.22OraSure ... 5.33 -.83Orbitz 76 11.45 -.18PDL Bio 5 6.56 +.05PHH Corp dd 26.15 +1.34PPG 22 224.91 +3.58

PPL Corp 12 33.40 +.02Pandora dd 18.49 +.50PattUTI 23 21.21 -.53PeabdyE dd 4.44 -.25PennVa dd 6.03 -.15PennWst g ... 2.15 -.13PeopUtdF 18 15.17 -.07PetrbrsA ... 9.04 +.11Petrobras ... 9.66 -.05Pfizer 23 33.58 +.12PhilipMor 18 84.01 +.14Phillips66 11 79.94 +.12PioNtrl 32 159.57 -.33PiperJaf 13 50.46 +.21PlasmaTch ... 7.30 -1.30Potash 17 32.64 +.50PS USDBull q 24.88 +.13PS SrLoan ... 24.17 +.03PwShs QQQ q 107.35 +.64PrecDrill 15 6.82 -.44ProLogis 34 40.23 +.62ProShtS&P q 21.19 -.07ProUltSP q 132.06 +1.03PrUltPQQQ q 107.23 +1.81ProSht20Tr q 25.49 -.32PUltVixST q 10.65 -.14PrUltCrude q 9.47 -.60ProctGam 25 80.20 -.20ProgsvCp 13 26.95 +.12ProUShSP q 20.79 -.15PUShtQQQ q 35.46 -.38ProUShL20 q 47.19 -1.30PShtQQQ q 25.17 -.47PUShtSPX q 34.56 -.43ProspctCap 8 8.04 +.26Prudentl 10 85.17 +1.47PSEG 15 41.96 +.22PulteGrp 16 19.70 +.29

Q-R-S-TQEP Res 18 21.16 -.90Qorvo n ... 75.56 +6.50Qualcom 16 68.43 +.62QltyDistr 28 15.74 +5.94QntmDSS dd 2.06 -.04RangeRs 25 60.80 -1.26RexEnergy dd 5.06 -.23ReynAmer 27 75.72 +.76RiteAid 20 7.87 +.06RosettaR 2 19.10 -.78Rovi Corp dd 17.61 +.36Rowan dd 22.26 -.68RylCarb 20 68.69 +1.79RoyDShllB 12 63.01 -1.36RoyDShllA 12 62.12 -1.36RymanHP 29 56.25 -.15SLM Cp 26 10.35 -.01SpdrDJIA q 179.28 +.89SpdrGold q 113.42 -.94S&P500ETF q 208.87 +.83SpdrHome q 35.32 +.45SpdrLehHY q 39.19 -.03SpdrOGEx q 51.33 -1.27SABESP ... 6.41 +.17Salesforce dd 74.52 +.73SanchezEn dd 12.65 -1.00SandRdge 4 1.63 -.14Schlmbrg 23 90.23 -2.04Schwab 34 31.17 +.15SciGames dd 13.61 +.64ScorpioTk ... 9.12 -.18SeadrillLtd 2 13.37 -.98Sequenom ... 3.79 -.68SiderurNac ... 2.76 -.13SilvWhtn g 27 19.86 +.27SiriusXM 43 3.85 +.02SkywksSol 29 97.07 +2.50SouFun 14 7.95 -.03SwstAirl 26 42.10 +1.22SwstnEngy 14 27.34 -.70SpectraEn 26 36.09 -.29SpiritRltC dd 11.19 +.13Sprint dd 4.73 -.11Sprouts 43 30.21 -.85SP Matls q 50.76 +.22SP HlthC q 72.28 +.34SP CnSt q 48.76 +.12SP Consum q 75.79 +.39SP Engy q 80.44 -.88SP Inds q 55.92 +.29SP Tech q 42.42 +.31SP Util q 43.72 +.16Staples 78 16.46 +.12Starbucks s 29 49.35 +.42StarwdHtl 25 85.69 +.70StemCells dd .64 +.04Stratasys dd 34.97 -1.32StratHotels 25 11.89 +.28Stryker 47 92.61 +.05Suncor g ... 29.97 -.80SunEdison dd 27.96 +3.13SupEnrgy 17 24.11 -1.34Supvalu 12 8.92 +.07SwftEng dd 2.45 -.39Synageva dd 214.21 +10.82SynthesEn dd 1.73 -.25Sysco 24 36.37 +.40TIM Part ... 14.55 -.14TaiwSemi ... 24.37 -.08TalismE g 24 7.99TallgEGP n ... 31.75Target dd 80.11 +.99TASER 76 32.58 -1.83TeckRes g ... 14.87 -.33Teradata 18 41.80 -3.14TeslaMot dd 236.80 +6.37Tesoro 13 88.82TevaPhrm 19 60.04 -.11TexInst 20 54.06 +.36ThomCrk g dd 1.22 -.093D Sys dd 22.13 -.773M Co 21 158.61 +.97TimeWarn 19 83.68 +.05Transocn dd 18.31 -.68TreeHseF 28 72.83 -9.26TriangPet 5 5.36 -.11Trinity s 8 29.96 +.96TripAdvis 52 78.47 +1.67TumiHldgs 23 19.71 -3.69TurqHillRs cc 4.30 -.0521stCFoxA 8 32.78 -.9021stCFoxB 8 32.34 -.69Twitter dd 37.71 +.45

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUltraPt g 6 16.05 -1.06UnionPac s 18 107.31 +.38UtdContl 11 62.52 +3.08UPS B 29 99.64 +.42US NGas q 13.55 -.12US OilFd q 20.20 -.62USSteel 47 23.81 -.26UtdTech 16 116.04 +.96UtdhlthGp 19 114.76 +1.27Vale SA ... 7.84 -.35Vale SA pf ... 6.36 -.02ValeroE 8 57.79 +.27VangTotBd q 82.19 +.17VangREIT q 79.37 +1.20VangEmg q 43.28 -.06VangEur q 56.21 -.21VangFTSE q 41.08 -.14Ventas 44 68.46 +1.36Verisk 31 72.10 -.39VerizonCm 22 49.73 +.09ViacomB 16 66.68 -1.08Vipshop s cc 27.32 +.30Visa s 28 66.58 +.91VulcanM 86 89.50 +2.15W&T Off dd 5.73 -.46WPX Engy dd 13.79 -.17WalgBoots 33 84.23 +1.13WarrenRs 3 .99 -.06WeathfIntl dd 14.10 -.39WstnUnion 13 21.70 -.15WhiteWave 49 43.72 +.47WhitingPet 15 35.12 -1.29WholeFood 26 43.07 -4.65WmsCos 90 49.70 +.26Windstm rs dd 9.83 -.45WT EurHdg q 63.83 +.25WisdomTr 49 19.28 +.09WTJpHedg q 56.52 +.14WT India q 21.21XL Grp 54 36.70 +.13XcelEngy 18 33.48 -.03Yamana g dd 3.76 +.07Yelp 96 47.01 +8.79YingliGrn dd 1.67 -.13ZionsBcp 17 28.58 -.20Ziopharm dd 10.50 +.97Zulily ... 11.80 +.98Zynga dd 2.80 +.19

Today

Eye on unemployment

The Labor department reports today its latest data on unemploy-ment.

The nation’s unemployment rate has been gradually declining this year. While job gains slowed in March, hiring has been robust for a year. At the same time, fewer Americans have been applying for unemployment benefits, a sign that employers are not laying people off, another reason the unemployment rate has mostly held at 5.5 percent the past two months.

Hiring rebound?

A 12-month streak of monthly job gains above 200,000 snapped in March, but was it a blip or part of a trend?

The latest employment data, due out today, should help answer that question. Econo-mists predict that the Labor Department’s April tally of hiring will show a pickup of 215,000 jobs. That would represent a rebound from the addition of just 126,000 jobs in March, the fewest since December 2013.

Economic bellwether

Wholesale companies have been modestly increasing their stockpiles in recent months.

Stockpiles rose 0.3 percent in February after a 0.4 percent in January. Wholesale companies have increased their stockpiles even as sales of wholesale goods have either fallen or been flat the past seven months. When businesses order more goods, it generally leads to more factory production and that boosts economic growth. The Commerce Department reports March data today. Source: FactSet

Unemployment rateseasonally adjusted

5.0

5.5

6.0%

AMFJDN

Source: FactSet

Nonfarm payrollsseasonally adjusted change

100

300

500 thousand

AMFJDN

’14 ’15

est.215

423

329

126

est.5.4

5.8

5.65.7

5.5

’14 ’15

201

5.5264

S&P 500changeStart date End date Duration

Longest bull markets This week the current bull market became the third-longest in history according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

Steve Rothwell: J.Paschke • APSource: S&P Dow Jones Indices

Despite flagging in recent days, the current bull market in stocks still managed to notch up another milestone this week.

On Wednesday, the market extended its current run to 2,249 days, taking it past the bull-market that stretched from October 1974 to November 1980. This bull market is now the third-longest since the Great Depression.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index has gained 209 percent since bottoming out on March 9, 2009 during the recession.

Stocks have been climbing as the economy has gradually strengthened and corporate earnings have picked up. Years of economic stimulus from the Federal Reserve have also helped bolster the market.

Although the current stretch, at 74 months old, has gone way beyond the average 55-month duration of a bull market, it still has a long way to go to match the longest sequence of gains. That came between October 1990 and March, 2000 when the S&P 500 rose 417 percent.

Top three

1. 10/10/90 3/24/00 3,452 days (9 years, 5 months, 13 days) 417%

2. 6/14/49 8/2/56 2,606 days (7 years, 1 month, 19 days) 266

3. 3/9/09 5/7/15 2,250 days (6 years, 1 month, 28 days) 209

4. 10/13/74 11/28/80 2,248 days (6 years, 1 month, 25 days) 126

5. 8/12/82 8/25/87 1,839 days (5 years, 13 days) 229

Financial strategies.One-on-one advice.

Member SIPC

www.edwardjones.com

413 Cruise Street Corinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Page 9: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

PICKLES

DILBERT

WIZARD OF ID

BC

HI & LOIS

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FORT KNOX

GARFIELD

Variety9A • Daily Corinthian Friday, May 8, 2015

ACROSS1 Flock leader7 Old

14 Film genre15 Co-creator of the

Rutles, a parodicband

16 Good feelingsduring Jewishbreadcelebrations?

18 iComfort maker19 Spiritualist’s

sighting20 Greek peak21 Vietnam

VeteransMemorialdesigner

23 Newspaperthickener

25 Cautionary taleabout Greekbread?

33 Scores34 Big opening35 Calf neighbor36 Scraps37 Commandment

word40 Draw, as a

portrait41 Home of minor

league baseball’sRubberDucks

43 Friend of Eeyore44 Signs of island

hospitality45 Baker of only one

type of Indianbread?

49 Conquistador’streasure

50 Decorativeswimmer

51 Mont Blanc, parexemple

55 “A good deed __ever forgot”:“HuckleberryFinn”

57 Blush cause62 Ability to laugh at

deli bread ... andat three otheranswers in thispuzzle?

65 Planned66 Hit with force67 Happens to68 Fight

DOWN1 D.C. fundraisers2 Pine3 Take the lead4 Slope

5 “C’est magnifique!”6 Genetic

messenger7 Ancient landing

spot8 King Saud

University city9 Speculative bond

rating10 Jaunty greeting11 Summer quaffs12 Martinique et

Réunion13 Michael of

“ArrestedDevelopment”

15 URL ending17 Disney’s

Montana22 Pet food creator

Paul24 Place for quiet, at

times25 Yukon warmer26 Mural beginning27 1980s-’90s

heavyweightchamp

28 Grumpy, say29 Hesitant thought30 Theatrical honors31 Control, in a way32 Followers33 Halloween effect38 Seek guidance

from

39 Brand forgreenskeepers

42 Sgt., for one46 Grand Marnier

flavor47 Malfunction

indicators,perhaps

48 Thing gonewrong

51 Many an 8-Downnative

52 Harp relative53 Sassy

54 Actor Morales56 Composer

Rorem58 Hardest part59 It’s used in

rounds60 Springfield

watering hole61 Paris : terre ::

Bonn : __63 Word with

game or point

64 Not to

By Jeffrey Wechsler©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 05/08/15

05/08/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Dear Annie: I am 17 years old. I have a job that requires I work only a few times a month, and the staff can trade shifts if they choose. I have been at this job for two years, and I enjoy it.

During my fi rst year here, I was taken advan-tage of quite a lot. People would constantly ask me to change shifts, but I would later fi nd out they had nothing particular going on to require it. I learned how to say no, be-cause I don’t really trust some of them. I agree to change shifts with people who ask me in advance or tell me what’s going on, but have become wary of those who ask at the last minute.

The problem is my mother. She always makes me feel as though I’m not behaving prop-erly. When I’m asked to switch shifts for no good reason, she says, “Why didn’t you say yes? You’re supposed to say yes.” I then get a lecture on how I need to be more responsible and more un-derstanding when people have other things to do with their time.

I know that most peo-ple’s intentions are good, but I don’t want to be taken advantage of. Why doesn’t my mother think I’m good enough? I don’t drink, I go to church, I obey my parents, and I’m in the National Honor

Society. People say my mother is lucky to have a daughter like me, but I don’t feel that from her.

I don’t mean to sound conceited, but I’m start-ing to get tired of always being good. I’m scared I may just stop trying. — Not Good Enough

Dear Not Good: Ev-eryone needs to feel that their efforts are appreciated, and kids especially need to know that their par-ents believe them to be good people. We think your mother knows this, but she worries. She doesn’t want you to alienate the people you work with, but you are right to set boundaries for yourself (as long as you are polite about it). It engenders re-spect.

But please don’t use your mother’s fretting as an excuse to go off the rails. Talk to her. Reassure her that you are not expected to say “yes” to every request. Let her know that she has done a great job raising you and now must allow you to make your own deci-sions and live with

the consequences, so you can learn to be the responsible adult she expects. Enlist her support and coopera-tion. Ask for her ad-vice. It will make her happy to know you still value it.

Dear Annie: This is in response to the “horror stories” that women tell pregnant mothers-to-be. As an obstetrician (re-tired), with over 5,000 babies delivered, here is what I call Dr. Elfmont’s Rule of Pregnancy:

Never listen to what people (your mother, grandmother, aunts, etc.) tell you about their preg-nancies -- you’re too big or too small for your due date; you’re carrying high (or low) and that means it’s a boy (or a girl); you’ve gained too much or too little weight; they were in terrible labor for 197 hours, etc.

I told my patients that nobody in the history of human civilization had ever given birth to the particular baby they were carrying, that the odds were overwhelming for a normal labor and deliv-ery, and if there were any problems, I’d be there to take care of them. — Dr. John Elfmont in Redondo Beach, Calif.

Dear Dr. Elfmont: Well said. Thank you for the reassuring words.

Teen asks how to stay motivated with jobAnnie’s Mailbox

Crossword

Page 10: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Sports10A • Daily Corinthian Friday, May 8, 2015

Local Schedule

Today

BaseballClass 3A PlayoffsMooreville @ Kossuth, 7TrackClass 1A-3A State 

Saturday

TrackClass 4A State

Shorts

Softball TournamentThe Heart of a Champion Scholar-

ship Tournament will take place Sat-urday, May 16 at the Selmer Patriot Park.

There will be five divisions: Adult Open Co-Ed, Adult Church Co-Ed, Youth Co-Ed (grades 7-12), Children’s Co-Ed (up to 6th grade) and School Co-Ed.

Proceeds will fund Kelly Clayton Amerson Heart of a Champion Schol-arships and Teacher Grants. Contact Kelsey Hutcherson 731-610-0098, Stacey Moore 731-610-3976 or Chris Whitten 901-826-0923 with any questions.

 Golf Tournaments

The Carson Herrin Memorial 4-man scramble will be held May 16 at Shiloh Golf Course in Adamsville, Tennessee. Cost is $200 per team for the 8 a.m. shotgun start. Putting contest, long drive and closest to the pin will also be held. For more information contact Keith Herrin at 643-5910.

• The Corinth Professionals’ 3rd Annual Golf Scramble will be held May 28 at Hillandale. Cost for the nine-hole scramble $25 per person or $100 per team, which includes greens fee, cart and reception din-ner. Singles are welcome, first come, first serve.

Registration is at 5 p.m. with 5:30 shotgun start.

To sponsor or for more information, please contact Andrea Rose at The Alliance at 287-5269 or [email protected]

 Corinth Area Baseball Camp

The 29th Annual Corinth Area Baseball Camp for ages 6-13 is set for June 1-4 at Crossroads Regional Park. Cost is $90 for entire session and includes noon meal each day along with camp T-shirt. Accident in-surance is included. Discount will be given if more than one family mem-ber attends. Camp is from 8:30 a.m. until 2 p.m. A $40 deposit is required with the remaining balance due on the first day of camp.

Each camper will need their own bat. Bat needs to be marked in some manner with their name. Shorts are not recommended.

Uniform pants should be worn if possible.

Checks should be made payable to Diamond S/Baseball Camp, 3159 Kendrick Road, Corinth, MS 38834.

For more information contact John Smillie at 808-0013.

 Corinth Area Softball Camp

The 4th Annual Corinth Area Soft-ball Camp for ages 6-12 is set for June 8-11 at Crossroads Regional Park. Cost is $75 for entire session and includes noon meal each day along with camp T-shirt.

Accident insurance is included. Dis-count will be given if more than one family member attends.

Camp is from 8:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. A $40 deposit is required with the remaining balance due on the first day of camp.

Each camper will need their own bat. Bat needs to be marked in some manner with their name. Shorts are not recommended.

Uniform pants should be worn if possible.

Checks should be made payable to Diamond S/Baseball Camp, 3159 Kendrick Road, Corinth, MS 38834. For more information contact John Smillie at 808-0013.

The Associated PressFlorida believes it has an-

other young, up-and-coming coach.

The fi rst one made basket-ball matter in Gainesville.

This one has the tough task of following Billy Donovan.

The Gators hired Louisi-ana Tech’s Michael White on Thursday, a week after Donovan left to take the head coaching job with the NBA’s Oklahoma City Thunder.

White, who led the Bull-dogs to a 27-9 record and the NIT quarterfi nals last sea-son, agreed to a six-year deal worth $2 million annually. He is scheduled to be formally introduced at a news confer-ence Monday.

Donovan tearfully said

goodbye to Florida on Mon-day, and athletic director Jer-emy Foley said he would “call a lot of people and try to fi g-ure out the right person.” He landed White three days later.

“Michael White is someone who came to the top of our list very quickly and he checks all of the boxes we were look-ing for,” Foley said in a state-ment. “He is a winner who has a high level of integrity, plays an up-tempo style of play and has the respect of his peers and the basketball com-munity. He has experience in coaching, recruiting and playing in the Southeastern Conference and has a strong pedigree. He has a certain au-thenticity with people and is not afraid of challenges.”

White, the son of Duke ath-letic director Kevin White, grew up in Florida, played and coached in the SEC, and has experience recruiting in the south. His roster last sea-son included fi ve players from Florida.

Tennessee tried to hire White to replace Cuonzo Martin last season, but White chose to stay at Louisiana Tech and signed a six-year contract extension.

Although Florida fans seemingly wanted a more well-known coach — Dayton’s Archie Miller and Xavier’s Chris Mack were popular pro-jections — White might just provide the Gators with an-other young coach undaunted about the challenges of work-

ing at football-fi rst Florida.Donovan spent 19 years at

Florida, delivering two na-tional championships, four trips to the Final Four and 14 appearances in the NCAA Tournament.

Now, White has to replace him.

White, who played at Mis-sissippi, spent four seasons as an assistant at Jacksonville State (2000-04) and then seven with the Rebels (2004-11) before getting his fi rst head coaching job with Loui-siana Tech. He went 101-40 (.716) in four seasons with the Bulldogs, winning at least 27 games in each of the last three years.

Florida hires La. Tech’s White

Please see WHITE | 11A

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

The Booneville Blue Devils fi nished 62 shots behind St. Patrick in 2014 as it rolled to its third straight Class 3A Golf championship.

The Blue Devils went from runner-up to champion in one year, but it wasn’t threatened by the three-time defending champions.

Booneville fi red a two-day 669 at Lake Caroline Golf Club in Madison, edging out St. Andrews by three strokes.

St. Patrick fi nished third at an even 700, after carding a 642 in the 2014 event.

Teams are allowed to use

fi ve golfers each round. The highest of the fi ve is thrown out to determine that day’s total.

In addition, Booneville’s Tate Dickerson claimed med-alist honors with a two-day total of 152. He opened with a 72 and followed up with an 80 over the fi nal round.

BHS, which shot a 704 last year at Windance Country Club, led by fi ve strokes fol-lowing Wednesday’s round. St. Andrews shot a 341 over the fi nal 18 holes -- two strokes better than BHS -- but couldn’t surpass the club house leaders from Day One.

Kossuth garnered its best

fi nish at their third State Match. The Aggies, who have made the season fi nale in con-secutive years, fi nished fourth -- just 29 shots behind third place St. Patrick.

The Aggies, who had fi n-ished fourth in their previous two appearances, fi nished with a program-best 729. KHS put itself in a hole with a 373 on Wednesday, but im-proved by 17 shots -- match-ing Choctaw County -- to get back into contention for the No. 3 spot.

Kossuth amassed a 770 in its fi rst event -- also at Lake Caroline -- in 2013. The Ag-gies improved 16 stokes to a

754 in 2014.

1) Booneville 669 -- 326- 3432) St. Andrews 672 -- 331- 3413) St. Patrick 700 -- 337- 3634) Kossuth 729 -- 373- 3565) Choctaw County 761 -- 389- 372

 Local TeamsBOONEVILLE -- Tate Dickerson 72-

80 152 , Austin Lauderdale 80-82 162, Preston Jones 87-92 179, Alex Floyd 87-92 179, Chase Calvery 91-89 180

KOSSUTH -- Jack Kather 87-85 172, Nick Crump 89-84 173, Luke Lyles 93-82 175, Weston Bobo 107-107 214, Carson Wilder 104-112 216

North Individuals

MOOREVILLE -- Nicholas Brown 85-84 169

BELMONT -- Ken Waddell 81-80 161 Hunter Lucas 90-93 183

Booneville wins Class 3A golf title

The Associated PressSpurs and Celtics? Already

eliminated.Lakers and Heat? Didn’t

even make the playoffs.There’s a new look to this

NBA postseason, which will crown a champion that hasn’t won the title in at least 17 years — or, quite possibly, a franchise that has never been on top. “There is not just one dominant team,” Washing-

ton’s Bradley Beal said Thurs-day. “You’re not going to see the same teams.”

Indeed, of the eight confer-ence semifi nalists, the most recent to win a champion-ship is the Chicago Bulls, who claimed the last of six Michael Jordan-era titles in 1998. The Houston Rockets are the only other multiple champion still playing, winning back-to-back titles in 1994-95.

There are two franchises that won their only champi-onships so long ago, well, one had a different nickname (the Washington Wizards were the Bullets when they took the 1978 title) and another was in a different city (the 1958 St. Louis Hawks, who moved to Atlanta a decade later). The Golden State War-riors are 40 years removed from their lone championship

season, but at least they’ve got a banner.

The Los Angeles Clippers, Cleveland Cavaliers and Memphis Grizzlies have nev-er won a title.

“I don’t think there’s any question that fresh faces and new teams invigorate the sport,” Grizzlies general manager Chris Wallace said.

NBA playoffs take on fresh look this postseason

Please see PLAYOFFS | 11A

The Associated PressSOUTH BEND, Ind. — Ev-

erett Golson, once on track to be the winningest quarter-back in Notre Dame history, is instead joining the long list of Fighting Irish quarterbacks who sought success else-where.

Golson announced Thurs-day he will use his fi nal season of eligibility at an-other school, ending an up-and-down career for the Irish

that included a trip to the na-tional championship game, a season lost to a suspension over academics and a compe-tition this spring with Malik Zaire for the starter’s job.

“After much thought, prayer and discussion with my family, I have decided that it is in my best interest to graduate from Notre Dame and transfer to another school effectively immediately,” Gol-son said in a statement re-

leased to Fox Sports.The 6-foot, 200-pound

senior from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, thanked Notre Dame fans for their support and asked for privacy during what he called a life-changing moment. A call to his cellphone by The Associ-ated Press wasn’t returned.

Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly issued a statement thanking Golson and wishing him well.

“He had many signifi cant achievements, including helping us to an undefeated regular season and berth into the national title game,” Kelly said.

There has been speculation about Golson possibly leaving Notre Dame since December, and along with that rumors about where he could trans-fer.

Notre Dame QB Golson transferring

Please see GOLSON | 11A

Prep Baseball

Class 3A PlayoffsMooreville 12, Kossuth 2(Series tied 1-1) Note: The two-time defending 3A

champion Aggies will host Game 3 tonight at 7 p.m., with the winner fac-ing Belmont in the North Half Cham-pionship series.

Submitted Photo

The Booneville Blue Devils claimed the Class 3A Golf title following a two-day total on 669 at Lake Caroline Golf Club in Madison.

Page 11: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

“It adds new fl avors for the fans to sample. And they like it. The game has never really been more popular on a glob-al standpoint than it is right now.”

While the NBA was the fi rst major North American league to put in a salary cap, it’s had the most exclusive group of champions. Over the last 16 years, just three teams — the Los Ange-les Lakers, San Antonio Spurs and Miami Heat — have hogged a total of 13 titles. Going back even farther to the launch of the modern NBA in 1950, two teams — the Boston Celtics, with 17 banners, and the Lakers, who have a total of 15 including their time in Minneapolis — account for nearly half the cham-pionships.

“Whoever wins is go-ing to be a brand new face,” Warriors coach Steve Kerr said. “That’s exciting for those of us who are still playing.”

Some possible reasons for this changing of the playoff guard:

Team ball

San Antonio proved last year that a team doesn’t need a megastar to win the title, and plen-ty of teams are trying to

follow the Spurs model.Most notable is At-

lanta, where the roster was expertly assembled by former Spurs ex-ecutive Danny Ferry and the coach is Mike Budenholzer, a longtime assistant under San An-tonio’s Gregg Popovich. The Hawks went 60-22 and claimed a top seed in the East for the fi rst time since 1994 with an absurdly balanced line-up; the fi ve starters av-eraged between 12 and 17 points a game.

There are plenty of prominent teams, espe-cially in the Southeast-ern Conference, that will head into preseason practice with no clear starter. Among them are LSU, Alabama, Georgia and Golson’s home state school of South Carolina. The SEC is no lock to ac-commodate Golson be-cause of his suspension at Notre Dame: A school would have to apply for a waiver with the con-ference for Golson to be allowed to play because league rules prohibit ac-cepting graduate trans-fers who have been disci-plined by their previous schools.

The list of other Irish quarterbacks to leave early since 2000 include Gunner Kiel (Cincin-nati), Andrew Hendrix (Miami, Ohio), Dayne Crist (Kansas), Deme-trius Jones (Cincin-nati), Zach Frazer (Con-necticut), David Wolke (Western Kentucky), Chris Olsen (Virginia) and Matt LoVecchio (In-diana). Golson, though, was the most successful of the group.

He led the Irish to a 12-0 regular season in 2012 and a berth in the title game, where Notre Dame lost 42-14 to Ala-bama. He was then sus-pended from school in the fall of 2013 for aca-demic impropriety.

The Irish started last season 6-0 and were ranked No. 5 as Gol-son’s record as a starter improved to 16-1, the best winning percent-age in school history. But Golson commit-ted 22 turnovers during the season and the Irish lost fi ve of their fi nal six regular-season games. He was benched during the regular-season fi -nale blowout loss to USC and Zaire started for the Irish against LSU in the Music City Bowl.

Golson refused to talk to the media all spring after The Times-Pica-yune in January quoted a source as saying he had reached out to LSU about transferring there less than a week after the Irish beat the Tigers in the Music Bowl. Gol-son responded at the time with a tweet: “Don’t believe everything you hear.”

“I have an incredible amount of respect for the University of Florida, and I am so excited to be a Gator,” White said in a statement. “Not only is Florida home for me, but the tradition and success that the Gators have built make this an incredible opportunity. I know about the great home-court advantage in the O’Connell Center, which is a testament to the fans and the Rowdy Reptiles. There’s an un-believable commitment to excellence athletically and academically at UF, and it starts with the leadership of Dr. Fuchs and Jeremy Foley.

“I look forward to returning to the SEC where I have a lot of great memories, and I can’t wait to create many more alongside the Ga-tor Nation.”

White led Louisiana

Tech to three consecu-tive regular-season conference titles, all of which resulted in NIT berths, as the Bulldogs lost in the Western Ath-letic Conference (2013) and Conference USA (2014-15) tournaments. He was C-USA’s coach of the year last season.

White brings a high-energy, fast-paced style that could help players ease any unrest follow-ing Donovan’s depar-ture. In four seasons at Louisiana Tech, the Bulldogs averaged 74 points, 14 assists, eight steals and seven 3-point-ers a game.

“Coach White brings with him a distinguished career and an extraordi-nary record of success,” school president Kent Fuchs said. “I have no doubt he will uphold high standards on and off the court, and am de-lighted to welcome him to the Gator Nation.”

ScoreboardAuto racing

Sprint Cup standingsThrough May 3

1. Kevin Harvick, 394.2. Martin Truex Jr., 354.3. Jimmie Johnson, 342.4. Joey Logano, 335.5. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 319.6. Brad Keselowski, 305.7. Jamie McMurray, 297.8. Matt Kenseth, 292.9. Kasey Kahne, 286.10. Denny Hamlin, 281.11. Paul Menard, 280.12. Aric Almirola, 279.13. Jeff Gordon, 277.14. Ryan Newman, 271.15. Kurt Busch, 255.16. Danica Patrick, 253.17. Clint Bowyer, 249.18. Carl Edwards, 240.19. AJ Allmendinger, 229.20. David Ragan, 224.

Baseball

N.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBNew York 18 10 .643 —Atlanta 14 14 .500 4Washington 14 15 .483 4½Miami 13 15 .464 5Philadelphia 10 19 .345 8½

Central Division W L Pct GBSt. Louis 21 7 .750 —Chicago 14 13 .519 6½Cincinnati 14 14 .500 7Pittsburgh 13 15 .464 8Milwaukee 9 20 .310 12½

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 18 10 .643 —San Diego 15 14 .517 3½San Francisco 14 14 .500 4Arizona 12 14 .462 5Colorado 11 15 .423 6

–––Wednesday’s Games

Washington 7, Miami 5Arizona 13, Colorado 7, 1st gameSan Diego 9, San Francisco 1Arizona 5, Colorado 1, 2nd gameCincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 0N.Y. Mets 5, Baltimore 1Atlanta 7, Philadelphia 5Milwaukee 6, L.A. Dodgers 3Chicago Cubs 6, St. Louis 5

Thursday’s GamesL.A. Dodgers 14, Milwaukee 4St. Louis 5, Chicago Cubs 1Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 2San Diego at Arizona, (n)Miami at San Francisco, (n)

Today’s GamesAtlanta (Stults 1-2) at Washington

(G.Gonzalez 2-2), 6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Harvey 5-0) at Philadelphia

(Hamels 1-3), 6:05 p.m.St. Louis (Wacha 4-0) at Pittsburgh

(Liriano 1-1), 6:05 p.m.Chicago Cubs (Hammel 2-1) at Milwau-

kee (Nelson 1-2), 7:10 p.m.Cincinnati (Marquis 3-1) at Chicago

White Sox (Noesi 0-3), 7:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (B.Anderson 1-1) at Colo-

rado (E.Butler 2-2), 7:40 p.m.San Diego (Shields 3-0) at Arizona

(Hellickson 1-3), 8:40 p.m.Miami (Cosart 1-2) at San Francisco

(Lincecum 2-2), 9:15 p.m.Saturday’s Games

Atlanta at Washington, 3:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 6:05 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 6:10 p.m.Cincinnati at Chicago White Sox, 6:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 7:10 p.m.San Diego at Arizona, 7:10 p.m.Miami at San Francisco, 8:05 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesAtlanta at Washington, 12:35 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 12:35 p.m.St. Louis at Pittsburgh, 12:35 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 1:10 p.m.Cincinnati at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m.Miami at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 3:10 p.m.San Diego at Arizona, 3:10 p.m.

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBNew York 18 11 .621 —Tampa Bay 15 14 .517 3Toronto 14 15 .483 4Boston 13 15 .464 4½Baltimore 12 14 .462 4½

Central Division W L Pct GB

Kansas City 18 10 .643 —Detroit 18 11 .621 ½Minnesota 16 13 .552 2½Chicago 10 15 .400 6½Cleveland 10 17 .370 7½

West Division W L Pct GBHouston 18 10 .643 —Los Angeles 13 15 .464 5Texas 12 16 .429 6Oakland 12 18 .400 7Seattle 11 17 .393 7

–––Wednesday’s Games

Toronto 5, N.Y. Yankees 1N.Y. Mets 5, Baltimore 1Tampa Bay 5, Boston 3Cleveland 10, Kansas City 3Chicago White Sox 7, Detroit 6Minnesota 13, Oakland 0Texas 11, Houston 3L.A. Angels 4, Seattle 3

Thursday’s GamesMinnesota 6, Oakland 5Kansas City 7, Cleveland 4Detroit 4, Chicago White Sox 1N.Y. Yankees 4, Baltimore 3Texas 5, Tampa Bay 4Houston at L.A. Angels, (n)

Today’s GamesBaltimore (Mi.Gonzalez 3-1) at N.Y. Yan-

kees (Warren 2-1), 6:05 p.m.Boston (Miley 1-3) at Toronto (Aa.San-

chez 2-2), 6:07 p.m.Kansas City (Ventura 2-2) at Detroit

(Price 3-1), 6:08 p.m.Minnesota (Pelfrey 2-0) at Cleveland

(Bauer 2-0), 6:10 p.m.Texas (Gallardo 2-4) at Tampa Bay

(Karns 1-1), 6:10 p.m.Cincinnati (Marquis 3-1) at Chicago

White Sox (Noesi 0-3), 7:10 p.m.Houston (R.Hernandez 1-2) at L.A. An-

gels (Weaver 0-4), 9:05 p.m.Oakland (Gray 4-0) at Seattle (T.Walker

1-3), 9:10 p.m.Saturday’s Games

Baltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m.Boston at Toronto, 12:07 p.m.Kansas City at Detroit, 12:08 p.m.Minnesota at Cleveland, 3:10 p.m.Texas at Tampa Bay, 5:10 p.m.Cincinnati at Chicago White Sox, 6:10 p.m.Houston at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m.Oakland at Seattle, 8:10 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesBaltimore at N.Y. Yankees, 12:05 p.m.Boston at Toronto, 12:07 p.m.Minnesota at Cleveland, 12:10 p.m.Texas at Tampa Bay, 12:10 p.m.Cincinnati at Chicago White Sox, 1:10 p.m.Houston at L.A. Angels, 2:35 p.m.Oakland at Seattle, 3:10 p.m.Kansas City at Detroit, 7:05 p.m.

Basketball

NBA playoff scheduleCONFERENCE SEMIFINALS(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)

Sunday, May 3Washington 104, Atlanta 98Golden State 101, Memphis 86,

Monday, May 4Chicago 99, Cleveland 92L.A. Clippers 117, Houston 101

TuesdayAtlanta 106, Washington 90, series

tied 1-1Memphis 97, Golden State 90, series

tied 1-1Wednesday

Cleveland 106, Chicago 91, series tied 1-1

Houston 115, L.A. Clippers 109, series tied 1-1

TodayCleveland at Chicago, 7 p.m.Houston at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.

SaturdayAtlanta at Washington, 4 p.m.Golden State at Memphis, 7 p.m.

SundayCleveland at Chicago, 2:30 p.m.Houston at L.A. Clippers, 7:30 p.m.

MondayAtlanta at Washington, 6 p.m.Golden State at Memphis, 8:30 p.m.

TuesdayxChicago at Cleveland, 6 p.m.L.A. Clippers at Houston, 8:30 p.m.

WednesdayWashington at Atlanta, 7 p.m.Memphis at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.

Thursday, May 14x-Cleveland at Chicago, TBDx-Houston at L.A. Clippers, TBD

Friday, May 15x-Atlanta at Washington, TBDx-Golden State at Memphis, TBD

Sunday, May 17x-Chicago at Cleveland, TBDx-L.A. Clippers at Houston, TBD

x-Memphis at Golden State, TBDMonday, May 18

x-Washington at Atlanta, 7 p.m.

GolfPlayers Championship

scoresThursday at TPC Sawgrass, The Players

Stadium Course, Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. Purse: $10 million. Yardage: 7,215; Par: 72 (36-36)

First RoundHideki Matsuyama 34-33—67 -5David Hearn 34-33—67 -5Charley Hoffman 36-31—67 -5Kevin Na 33-34—67 -5Troy Merritt 33-35—68 -4Ben Martin 34-34—68 -4Billy Horschel 34-34—68 -4Brendon Todd 34-34—68 -4Charles Howell III 34-34—68 -4Derek Fathauer 33-35—68 -4Jeff Overton 35-34—69 -3Cameron Tringale 36-33—69 -3Marc Leishman 35-34—69 -3Webb Simpson 35-34—69 -3Rickie Fowler 37-32—69 -3Steve Stricker 34-35—69 -3Rory McIlroy 36-33—69 -3Jason Day 33-36—69 -3Ricky Barnes 36-33—69 -3Jason Kokrak 33-36—69 -3Alex Cejka 35-34—69 -3Brandt Snedeker 36-33—69 -3Sergio Garcia 36-33—69 -3Martin Kaymer 34-35—69 -3Freddie Jacobson 33-37—70 -2Rory Sabbatini 35-35—70 -2Chris Kirk 37-33—70 -2James Hahn 36-34—70 -2Bo Van Pelt 37-33—70 -2Spencer Levin 36-34—70 -2Chris Stroud 36-34—70 -2Jamie Donaldson 36-34—70 -2Louis Oosthuizen 32-38—70 -2J.B. Holmes 35-35—70 -2Robert Streb 33-37—70 -2Russell Henley 37-33—70 -2Jim Furyk 35-35—70 -2K.J. Choi 33-37—70 -2Robert Allenby 35-35—70 -2Scott Stallings 36-35—71 -1Padraig Harrington 33-38—71 -1Chesson Hadley 36-35—71 -1Jimmy Walker 34-37—71 -1Bubba Watson 36-35—71 -1Ian Poulter 34-37—71 -1Ben Crane 37-34—71 -1Joost Luiten 35-36—71 -1Jason Bohn 34-37—71 -1Ryo Ishikawa 36-35—71 -1Jerry Kelly 36-35—71 -1Pat Perez 33-38—71 -1Branden Grace 36-35—71 -1Andrew Svoboda 37-34—71 -1Justin Rose 35-36—71 -1Zach Johnson 36-35—71 -1Charl Schwartzel 36-35—71 -1Vijay Singh 34-37—71 -1Brian Harman 36-35—71 -1Daniel Berger 35-36—71 -1Bryce Molder 35-37—72 EAndres Romero 38-34—72 EMichael Putnam 37-35—72 ENick Taylor 35-37—72 EPatrick Reed 36-36—72 EScott Brown 36-36—72 ERussell Knox 36-36—72 EScott Langley 34-38—72 ESangmoon Bae 34-38—72 EGeoff Ogilvy 35-37—72 EBill Haas 35-37—72 EHunter Mahan 37-35—72 EDustin Johnson 33-39—72 EHenrik Stenson 37-35—72 EAdam Scott 36-36—72 EDanny Willett 37-35—72 EStephen Gallacher 33-39—72 EJustin Thomas 37-36—73 +1Graeme McDowell 36-37—73 +1Michael Thompson 38-35—73 +1Scott Piercy 34-39—73 +1Ernie Els 35-38—73 +1Boo Weekley 36-37—73 +1John Senden 35-38—73 +1Matt Kuchar 35-38—73 +1Seung-Yul Noh 34-39—73 +1David Toms 36-37—73 +1Bernhard Langer 37-36—73 +1Shane Lowry 35-38—73 +1George McNeill 37-36—73 +1Kevin Kisner 37-36—73 +1Danny Lee 38-35—73 +1Brendon de Jonge 38-35—73 +1Ryan Moore 35-38—73 +1Justin Leonard 38-35—73 +1Jason Dufner 35-38—73 +1Phil Mickelson 37-36—73 +1Tiger Woods 37-36—73 +1Tim Wilkinson 37-36—73 +1Thongchai Jaidee 39-34—73 +1Brendan Steele 36-37—73 +1Martin Flores 34-39—73 +1

Gonzalo Fdez-Castano 36-38—74 +2Brian Stuard 36-38—74 +2Luke Guthrie 36-38—74 +2Billy Hurley III 39-35—74 +2Matt Every 37-37—74 +2Erik Compton 35-39—74 +2John Huh 38-36—74 +2Jhonattan Vegas 38-37—75 +3Daniel Summerhays 37-38—75 +3Angel Cabrera 36-39—75 +3Harris English 37-38—75 +3Jordan Spieth 37-38—75 +3Will MacKenzie 38-37—75 +3Adam Hadwin 35-40—75 +3Brice Garnett 40-36—76 +4Anirban Lahiri 42-34—76 +4Lee Westwood 38-38—76 +4Morgan Hoffmann 40-36—76 +4Stewart Cink 38-38—76 +4Sean O’Hair 35-41—76 +4Carl Pettersson 41-36—77 +5Shawn Stefani 37-40—77 +5Ryan Palmer 40-37—77 +5Jonas Blixt 40-37—77 +5Keegan Bradley 38-39—77 +5Luke Donald 37-40—77 +5Steven Bowditch 38-39—77 +5Kevin Chappell 38-39—77 +5Bernd Wiesberger 40-37—77 +5Aaron Baddeley 37-41—78 +6Camilo Villegas 38-40—78 +6Nick Watney 39-39—78 +6Brooks Koepka 34-44—78 +6Retief Goosen 39-39—78 +6Gary Woodland 37-42—79 +7Paul Casey 40-39—79 +7Darren Clarke WD

Hockey

NHL playoffsSECOND ROUND

(Best-of-7)Thursday, April 30

Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1Anaheim 6, Calgary 1

Friday, May 1Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1, 2OTChicago 4, Minnesota 3

Saturday, May 2N.Y. Rangers 3, Washington 2

Sunday, May 3Tampa Bay 6, Montreal 2, Tampa Bay

leads series 2-0Chicago 4, Minnesota 1, Chicago leads

series 2-0Anaheim 3, Calgary 0, Anaheim leads

series 2-0Monday

Washington 1, N.Y. Rangers 0, Wash-ington leads series 2-1

TuesdayChicago 1, Minnesota 0, Chicago leads

series 3-0Calgary 4, Anaheim 3, OT, Anaheim

leads series 2-1Wednesday

Tampa Bay 2, Montreal 1, Tampa Bay leads series 3-0

Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1, Wash-ington leads series 3-1

ThursdayMontreal 6, Tampa Bay 2, Tampa Bay

leads series 3-1.Chicago at Minnesota (n)

TodayWashington at N.Y. Rangers, 6 p.m.Anaheim at Calgary, 8:30 p.m.

Saturdayx-Tampa Bay at Montreal, 6 p.m.x-Minnesota at Chicago, TBD

Sundayx-N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 6 p.m.Calgary at Anaheim, TBD

Mondayx-Chicago at Minnesota, TBD

Tuesday, May 12x-Montreal at Tampa Bay, TBDx-Anaheim at Calgary, TBD

Wednesday, May 13x-Washington at N.Y. Rangers, TBDx-Minnesota at Chicago, TBD

Thursday, May 14x-Tampa Bay at Montreal, TBDx-Calgary at Anaheim, TBD

TransactionsThursday’s deals

BASEBALLAmerican League

BOSTON RED SOX — Fired Juan Nieves, pitching coach.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Announced LHP Chris Sale has dropped his appeal of a fi ve-game suspension for his involve-ment in a bench-clearing brawl against Kansas City on April 23.

HOUSTON ASTROS — Placed OF George Springer on the 7-day concussion DL. Selected the contract of OF Preston Tucker from Fresno (PCL).

11A • Daily Corinthian Friday, May 8, 2015

The Associated PressATLANTA — In the

Braves’ new world, even small successes are to be savored.

The Braves celebrated their second straight win over the last-place Phillies on Wednesday night. The win wasn’t memorable ex-cept that it gave Atlanta its fi rst two-game win-ning streak since open-ing the season 5-0. It also brought the Braves, who open a weekend series at Washington on Friday night, back to .500. That’s another small success be-cause there is a feeling — at least from outside the clubhouse — that breaking even might be too much to

ask of this patchwork ros-ter.

Jason Heyward, Jus-tin Upton, Craig Kimbrel, Evan Gattis and Melvin Upton were traded in a massive purge. The trades took away most of the team’s power hitters, the best closer in franchise history and the entire starting outfi eld.

Manager Fredi Gonza-lez has tried 28 new line-ups in 28 games, mixing in veterans A.J. Pierzyn-ski, Kelly Johnson, Cam-eron Maybin, Eric Young Jr., Alberto Callaspo and Jonny Gomes. He is the majors’ only manager to write a new lineup in ev-ery game. “I’m not trying

to do that. I just put it to-gether ... I swear to you,” Gonzalez said.

“But it has worked. It really has worked to keep guys fresh and ... putting them in a situation where they can be successful. That’s what we’re trying to do all the time.” Like Pierzynski and Gomes, 38-year-old closer Jason Grilli is a short-term fi x while the Braves build to-ward the 2017 opening of their new stadium.

Shortstop Andrelton Simmons, fi rst baseman Freddie Freeman and right fi elder Nick Marka-kis are the only daily locks for the lineup. The hope is that catcher Christian

Bethancourt earns his place as a fi xture in the lineup, but so far he is hit-ting only .159.

Pierzynski, 38, has hit .344 to take some pressure off Bethancourt. Johnson, 33, has a team-leading six homers with starts at third base, left fi eld and right fi eld.

“We’ve got three guys we’re going to lean on ev-ery day,” Johnson said. “All the rest of the guys, we’re going to prepare to do our best and keep put-ting us in a position to succeed more times than not.”

The Braves have the ma-jors’ third-fewest strike-outs and fi fth-most runs.

Winning streaks are rare for these Braves

WHITE

GOLSON

PLAYOFFS

CONTINUED FROM 10A

CONTINUED FROM 10A

CONTINUED FROM 10A

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Page 14: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

2B • Friday, May 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

Community Events

MRHC Auxiliary Scholarships

Magnolia Regional Health Center Auxiliary is offering scholarships for students pursuing ca-reers in the health care fields. Students must provide documentation of acceptance in their chosen medical field in order to be eligible. Ap-plication forms are avail-able at the MRHC Gift Shop or at the Auxiliary Desk inside Entrance B.

Completed applica-tions may be taken to the gift shop addressed to the attention of Mari-lyn Easter, or mailed to her address listed on application. They must be received no later than Monday, June 1. Addi-tional information may be obtained by calling 662-286-2272.

Relay for LifeA Relay for Life fund-

raiser will be held from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Kroger in Corinth on Saturday. Attendees will witness fresh kettle corn made before their eyes as they help raise funds for the American Cancer Society or Relay for Life. For more information call 662-415-1765.

Civitan Steak SaleThe 13th Annual Ci-

vitan Steak Sale will be held Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Gardner’s Supermarket. The meal consist of an 8-ounce ribeye, baked beans, cole slaw and Texas Toast.

Tickets for the annual club fundraiser are $12 and can be purchased at Gardner’s or Roger’s Supermarket or at the event.

All proceeds will go toward Civitan projects such as the Lighthouse Foundation, four col-lege scholarships for high school seniors and Christmas Kids, which helps 10-12 under-privileged youngsters in Alcorn County during Christmas.

CT-AAuditions for “Into the

Woods” are set for 10 a.m. on Saturday and 6 p.m. on Monday, May 11 at the Crossroads The-atre. Call backs will be at 6 p.m. on Thursday, May 14. “Into the Woods”

is a musical. So, those auditioning should come prepared to sing. All auditions will be a cap-pella. There will be some reading.

Mother’s Day BrunchThe Boys and Girls

Club of Corinth will host a Mother’s Day Brunch & Fashion Show on from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sat-urday inside the Cross-roads Arena Convention Center.

Advance tickets are $15 and tickets the day of the event are $20. Ad-mission for children 12 and under will be $10. The price of the ticket includes a full brunch buffet, refreshing drinks and admission to the summer fashion show.

There will also be a raffle for a Mother’s Day basket full of goodies valued at over $500. Tickets for the raffle are $2 each or 3 for $5.

For more information or to purchase tickets, contact 662-286-6662.

Bike RunThe 14th Annual

Pink Chicks Bike Run for Relay for Life is set for Saturday at the Bar None building, formally C Baby’s on the state line. Registration begins at 11 a.m. Bikes will be out at 1 p.m. Food and drinks will be available. All proceeds will benefit the American Cancer Society.

For information contact Michelle Hammond at 415-3715 or Lisa Parks at 415-1855.

 Bishop Activity Center

Bishop Activity Center will hold the following activities: Monday, May 11 – Bingo by Alliance Hospice; Tuesday, May 12 – Trip to Good Will; Wednesday, May 13 – Bible Study by Jackie Calvart from Oakland Baptist Church; Thurs-day, May 14 – Bingo; Friday, may 15 – Grocery Shopping at Roger’s Supermarket. Daily ac-tivities include: quilting, jigsaw puzzles, table games, rolo golf and washer games.

Senior Citizens age 60 and above are welcome and encouraged to at-tend.

 

ITT BreakfastITT will have its Quar-

terly Breakfast at Mar-tha’s Menu at 8:30 a.m. on Tuesday, May 12.

Free ClinicThe Free Clinic will be

open from 1 to 5 p.m. on Wed. May 13 and Sat. May 23. Walk-ins are welcome.

Republican MeetingThe Alcorn County Re-

publican Party will meet at 6 p.m. on Thursday, May 14 at the Corinth City Library. The special guest speaker will be Clayton Stanley, who will be teaching the candi-dates campaign strate-gies and how to win their election.

A meet-and-greet will be held at 5:45 p.m. As always, all meetings are free and open to the public.

Senior ConnectorsThe Senior Connec-

tors, a group consisting of senior citizens from Alcorn and surrounding counties, will meet for their monthly luncheon at 11 a.m. on Thursday, May 14 at Ryan’s Caf-eteria. The luncheon is Dutch Treat.

Senior Connectors was formed under the aus-pices of the Community Development Council at The Alliance. The group, in addition to the monthly luncheon, also conducts an annual fall day trip and The Spring Fling each April.

Each month the group invites a guest speaker in line with items of concern and/or interest to senior citizens. This month’s guest speaker will be, Ophthalmologist, Dr. Darwin B. Wooten, M.D., of the Crossroads Eye Clinic.

All local seniors are in-vited to attend and sign up for the free monthly newsletter.

Student art exhibitThe Corinth Artist Guild

Gallery at 609 North Fill-more is hosting an exhib-it of student art through May 15. The artists in-clude students of Corinth High School, including Cambridge course work; Corinth Middle School; and county students in grades 2 through 6 who were winners in the Quest competition.

The CHS work includes a piano painted by the students for use in down-town street performanc-es. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

 Southeastern Wrestling Entertainment

Southeastern Wrestling Entertainment, spon-sored by Barnes Cross-ing Hyundai of Tupelo will hold an event at the Crossroads Arena, locat-ed at 2800 South Harper Road in Corinth on Friday, May 15. The doors will open at 6:30 p.m. Bell time will be at 7:30 p.m. General admission is $10. Ringside tickets are $14. The wrestling event will feature: Rock & Roll Express, Danger-ous Doug Gilbert, Chase Stevens, Candi Divine, Byron Wilcott, Legend-ary “Outlaw” Don Bass, Tommy Gilbert, Fantasti-co, Texas Tornadoes and Terral Tempo. There will be a give away for a new 2015 Elantra. For ticket information, visit the Crossroads Arena from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday, call 662-287-7779 or check out their website at www,crossroadsarena.com.

 Motorcycle Awareness

B.A.G.G.E.R.S (Biker Awareness Group Giv-ing Every Road Safety) will hold a “Can You See Me Now” Motorcycle Awareness Day at 2 p.m. on Sunday, May 17 at the Crossroads Arena, located at 2800 South Harper Road in Corinth. There will be a staged accident involving a car vs. motorcycle. It will be a working live dem-onstration involving all emergency agencies with Guest Speakers.

Fish FryVFW Post 3962 fish

fry from noon until 3 p.m. on Monday, May 25. Plates are free to veterans with proof of service. Beverages will be sold separately. Non-veterans can purchase a plate for $7.00 per plate. The post will also be selling hot dogs and hamburgers at local Trac-tor supply from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Saturday,

May 23. Proceeds will go to help local veterans in need. The VFW is closed on Thursday nights until September when football games start up. 

Cruise-InQuick Lane Tires &

Auto Center and the Magnolia Car Club will host a Long-Lewis Ford Cruise-In on Saturday, May 23 at 1500 S. Harper Road in Corinth. Registration is from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. There will be door prizes, a 50/50 pot, TV raffle and lunch for participants. The cost is $15 to register. In the event of rain, the event will be rescheduled for Saturday, May 30. For more information, call 662-284-7110 or visit www.magnoliacarclub.net.

Decorating on a DimeThe MSU Extension

Service in Alcorn County will present Decorating On A Dime: Distressing Furniture from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, June 4.  Attendees will learn the techniques of sanding, painting, distressing and waxing.  This will be a hands-on opportunity, so bring a small piece of furniture to refinish.  All supplies will be provided. To reserve a spot call 662-286-7756 to reserve a spot.  The class is lim-ited to 15 participants ages 18 and older.

NAACP ReunionThe Alcorn County

branch of the NAACP will host the biennial reunion/homecoming, set for July 3-5. Organi-zational meetings are held the Tuesday before the second Thursday of each month at the Johns Street Community Center on South Johns Street at 6:30 p.m.

Email [email protected] to receive e-mail updates. For more information contact Wil-liam Dilworth, branch president, at 662-603-4230 or 662-284-0854; Annie Windom, branch secretary and reunion co-coordinator at 662-287-8212 or 662-643-3592 or Eleanor Benson, reunion co-coordinator at 662-287-2975.

Cruise-InThe Magnolia Antique

Car Club and Arby’s will host a Cruise-In at Arby’s May through September (every 4th Sunday) from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. The event will feature car enthusiasts, 50s music

and fellowship. Guests are encouraged to bring lawn chairs. There will be a drawing for free food. A $5 registration fee will be charged. The money received will be given back as door prizes to participants. For more information, call Rick Kel-ley at 662-284-7110 or Reggie Rickman at 662-415-2582.

 Kindergarten Registration

First Baptist Church is now taking registrations for the 2015-16 school year with classes for 3, 4 and 5 year olds. The 3 year olds have class two days a week. New next year is the option of a five day or three day week for 4 year olds. The Kindergarten classes feature the same cur-riculum being offered by the elementary schools, with an emphasis on Bib-lical principals. For more information call Jackie Huskey at the church at 662-286-2208.

 Pre-K, Kindergarten Registration

Oakland Baptist Church is enrolling for Preschool and Kinder-garten classes for fall 2015. The church follows a BEKA curriculum with beginning reading and writing, Bible, music, library, field trips, avail-able speech therapy and snack time. Classes begin Tuesday, Sept. 1. Pre-k hours are Tuesday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to 11:50 a.m. Kindergarten hours are Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Early morning care is from 7:30 to 8 a.m. Limited spaces are avail-able. For more informa-tion call 662-287-3118 Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Retired RailroadersThere will be a meet-

ing for retired railroaders at 8 a.m. on the first Tuesday of each month at Martha’s Menu Res-taurant in downtown Corinth. Active railroad-ers are welcome.

Alliance HospiceAlliance Hospice is

looking for volunteers ages 16 to 85, who would love to interact with local senior citizens. For more information, contact Angel Bradley at Alliance Hospice at 662-286-9833 or by email at [email protected].

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Page 15: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Religion3B • Daily Corinthian Friday, May 8, 2015

Gospel ConcertAdam Crabb, the lead singer for

Gaither Vocal Band; Gerald Crabb, songwriter/singer; Sean Greer of Ma-con and Ricky Johnson of Corinth will be in concert tonight at 7 p.m.  at the Corinth National Guard Armory, located at 2813 South Harper Road in Corinth. Door open at 6 p.m. The cost is $12 per person at the door. Kids get in free.

HomecomingHomecoming at Hilltop Church of

God will begin at 10:30 a.m. on Sun-day. Lunch will be served at noon, with singing in the afternoon. The church is located two miles east of Jacinto on Hwy 356.

Women’s ConferenceThe Little Zion MB Church will hold

their first Women’s Conference from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday, May 15 and from 8 a.m. until noon on Saturday, May 16 at the Little Zion M B Church in Corinth. The guest Speaker will be Sister Thel-ma Bess of Corinth.

There will be educational sessions related to women’s issues such as heart disease, depression, breast can-cer and other healthy tips for women on the go, presented by Sister Ann

Walker.The theme will be: “Christian Women

Striving for Excellence” – 1 Corinthians 10:31.

Breakfast will be served at 8 a.m. Saturday morning.  For more informa-tion call 662-415-7856 or 662-665-1422.

Annual Ladies DayAll ladies are invited to the 15th An-

nual Ladies Day at New Hope Church of Christ in Glen on Saturday, May 16. Registration will begin at 8:30 a.m., followed by the program at 9 a.m. The theme is: “Choosing Life’s Best.” The speakers will be Angela Burrell from Liberty Church of Christ in Canton and the ladies of New Hope. Lunch will be served after the program. For more information call Peggy Holder at 662-287-8381.

Annual Missionary ProgramCentral Grove Missionary Baptist

Church will hold its Annual Missionary Program on at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, May 17. The guest speaker for the occasion will be Sis. Leslie Watts, First Lady of Mt. Pleasant M.B. Church in Kossuth. She will be accompanied by the Mt. Pleasant Church family and choir. The Rev, Kelvin Cummings is pastor.

Pastor’s AnniversarySt. Rest Church will celebrate the

First Anniversary of its Pastor the Rev. Avence Pittman Jr. at 3 p.m. on Sun-day, May 17. The special guest will be the Rev. Rodney D. Spears and the Oak Grove M.B. Church of New Albany. An 11 a.m. service will also be held. The Rev. Thurman Norman from Mem-phis TN will bring the message.

HomecomingTishomingo Chapel Baptist Church,

located on CR 634, will have home-coming beginning at 10 a.m. on Sun-day, June 7. Bro. Anthony (Tony) Row-land from Providence Baptist Church in Bethel Springs, Tenn., will be preach-ing. The Downs family will be singing. A fellowship meal will be served following the service. Dr. Ray Newcomb is in-terim pastor.

Precept Bible StudiesPrecept Bible Studies – a new study

from Kay Arthur covering the Gospel of Luke – are currently being held in the First Baptist Church Chapel. Classes will be from 9-11:30 a.m. The cost for two workbooks is $40.50. To register call Dorothy Taylor at 396-1512.

Luke Part 1 – Who is This Man Who Forgives Sins? – is set for now-May 12.

Luke Part 2 – The Savior of Sinners – is slated for Aug. 18-Sept. 29.

Prayer BreakfastThe American Legion Post 6 is hosting

a prayer breakfast every Wednesday at 7 a.m. The menu and speakers will change weekly. The prayer breakfasts are being held at the American Legion Building on Tate St. in Corinth. Post membership is not required to attend. Donations for breakfast will be accepted. For more in-formation, call 662-462-5815.

Bible StudyCity Road Temple will hold a Bible

study each Wednesday at 6 p.m.

Living Free MinistriesLiving Free Ministries will meet at

6 p.m. on Mondays in small groups. There will be a ‘Celebration Night’ at 6 p.m. on Thursday nights. There will also be a Mens’ Bible Study Group meeting at 7 a.m. on Saturday morn-ings. There is no cost to attend and all meetings are open to everyone.

Living Free Ministries is located be-hind Magnolia Funeral Home in the 2 metal buildings at the rear of the park-ing lot.

For more information call Living Free Ministries at 662-287-2733.

Worship Call

My eyes fi lled with tears when I read the words on the tote bag in a local store. “We dream of summers that last forever.” The picture was a beauti-ful, brightly colored beach scene that would make even a mountain-lover long for a day in the sand overlooking the endless blue waters of the ocean.

I was already in a sentimen-tal mood because I had been searching for gifts for some special lady friends of ours and my heart was tender. The words struck me like lightning and shocked me back to a day when my kids were small and we worked and played while we enjoyed the summers that seemed to end much too soon.

As I drove on into town, I wiped tears as I remembered the summer vacations, the long walks and creek-wading at the north end of our place, and the early mornings I spent in the vegetable garden as I tried to get that work done while the kids were still asleep.

I turned around a few times and they were grown and now I’m wondering how all those summers passed so quickly. I guess that’s why I’m passion-ate about the importance of encouraging our young moth-ers to savor the moment and not get bogged down while rushing and wondering when they will ever get to slow down.

I read a quote the other day from an older mother who was saying to young mothers, “The days are long but the years are

short.” Guess that sums up what I was feeling when I saw the bag in the store. The sum-mer days are long - but the summers are much too short and the years even shorter.

I can remember wondering if I could endure more years of cooking breakfast every morning – and I did it every morning. I had a shorter ver-sion - but “special” breakfast - on Sundays. There was fam-ily time around the table every day. Maybe that’s why I feel good today when all my kids’ feet are under my table at the same time.

…But they say looking back refreshes us and gives us hope to look forward. I look back with all kinds of emotions on the days of young mothering, but at the present stage of my life, I’m thankful I get to em-brace the moments with our grandchildren. It’s good to get a second chance at the joy – but again I’m fi nding the time goes by much too quickly.

Yes, we do dream of sum-mers that last forever while, in reality, they can’t. We dream of a perfect life and a perfect world, but that’s not reality either. What is true, though, is we have a chance to make a difference in the lives of our children and all the people around us. We take this trip only one time and while we’re taking it, we should love and encourage - not only with words but by doing something to prove we mean what we say.

(Lora Ann Huff is a Wena-soga resident and special col-umnist for the Daily Corin-thian. Her column appears Friday. She may be reached at 1774 CR 700, Corinth, MS 38834.)

Cherish those endless summers

Lora Ann Huff

Back Porch

As we cel-ebrate Mother’s Day ensure that you tell your mother you love her and appreci-ate everything she has ever done for you. For those of us that only have memories of our mom, rejoice in the great times you had together on earth and look forward to the time of be-ing reunited with her again in heaven.

For the ones of you that are young and have never tasted the greatness of motherhood, it is hard to understand what a mother does for her family and children. Her abilities are God given talents that only she can understand. For me being a father and a husband, I don’t understand all of the things that my wife and the mother of our children was able to do as we raised our children together. Mothers have instincts that no one else can fathom. Many times they are not given the respect they deserve by their family members or in a public forum.

Reading a story not long ago about a mother renewing her driver’s license really spoke to me about how stay-at-home moms are treated. As one mom, a mother of four children, stood in line to renew her license, she overheard the attendant at the desk ask the woman in front of

the counter what her occupa-tion is. Not knowing exactly how to respond the attendant said, “Do you have a job?” The young mother said of course I have a job, “I am a mom!” The attendant told her mom was not listed on her report so she would put down that she is a house-wife.

When the mother of four came to the counter she was asked the same question and she replied, “I’m a Research Associate in the fi eld of Child Development and Human Relations.” The at-tendant seemed impressed and asked her exactly what she did in her career fi eld.

Coolly, without any trace of fl uster in her voice, she replied, “I have a continuing program of research (what mother doesn’t) in the laboratory and in the fi eld (normally, I would have said indoors and out). I’m working for my Masters (fi rst the Lord and then the whole family) and already have four credits (all daughters). Of course, the job is one of the most demanding in the humanities (any mother care to disagree?), and I often work 14 hours a day. But the job is more challenging than most run-of-the-mill careers and the rewards are more of a satisfac-tion rather than just money.”

There was an increasing note of respect in the clerk’s voice as she completed the form, stood up and personally ushered her to the door.

The work of a mom is never done and her love for her family

is unconditional and unending. She deserves your respect and unconditional love in return.

We are told in Proverbs 1:8-9; “My son, heart the instruction of your father, and do not for-sake the law of your mother; for they will be a graceful ornament on your head, and chains about your neck.”

Celebrate this Mother’s Day with your mom and show her the love she has given you all of your life. My mom went home to be with the Lord in 1973 and it is not a day that goes by that I don’t miss her.

Prayer: Father God thank you for all of the mothers in the world. I pray that all of them will be blessed by you and that all of their children will show their love and gratitude to her. Amen.

(Daily Corinthian columnist and Corinth native Gary An-drews is retired after 35 years in the newspaper and maga-zine business. He is the author of Encouraging Words: 30-days in God’s Word. To obtain a copy visit his website at www.gadevotionals.com.)

Motherhood is the ultimate career choice

Gary AndrewsDevotionals

(Suggested daily Bible readings: Sunday – Exodus 20:12; Monday – 1 Timothy 5:3-16; Tuesday – Genesis 24:59-60; Wednesday – Luke 2:41-50; Thursday – 1 Kings 3:16-28; Friday – John 16:21; Saturday – Song of Solomon 8:1-4.)

Associated PressKATHMANDU, Nepal —

Thousands of Nepalese dressed in white offered prayers and fl owers at home and in temples Thursday in a Hindu ritual

marking the end of a 13-day mourning period for those killed in the country’s massive earthquake.

The main ceremony was held in the ruins of Kastamandap,

a temple for which the capital, Kathmandu, was named.

Lawmakers in Nepal’s con-stituent assembly also stood for a minute of silence in memory of the dead.

Thousands of Nepalese pray for earthquake victims

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“ I will always try to help you”

FiFin lal EExpense

CHRIS GRISHAM

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Structure demolition & RemovalCrushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

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

Bill Jr., 284-6061G.E. 284-920940 Years

Loans $20-$20,000

RUN YOUR AD ON THIS PAGEIn The Daily Corinthian

FOR ONLY $165 A MONTHROOF

TUNE-UPComplete Package

$295.001. Clean off Entire Roof2. Thorough Inspection (roof and fascias)3. Replace any missing shingles4. Seal around pipes, chimneys, and sky lights5. Locate and Stop Leaks6. Clean out gutters

662-665-1133

We can also install H.D. leaf-guards. JIMCO is your full

service roofi ng company with 38 years experience and 1

Million in liability insurance.

Business &Service Guide

References AvailableLicensed & Insured.

No Job too large or too small.

Chad Cornelius - Owner662-665-1849FREE ESTIMATE

E L I T EPressure Washing

• Driveways • Walk-ways

• Air Conditioner Pads • House Exteriors (Vinyl,

brick, stucco)• Pool Decks

• Boat Houses • Patios and Patio Furniture

Residential & Commercial

We Clean Roofs!

Allen PoolsOUR 25th Year! Thank you!!

Warm weather is right around the corner, remember us for

all of your pool needs.

• New Installs• Custom Shapes• In Ground & Above ground • Liners

• Salt Systems • Pumps & Filters

Give us a call, we’ve got it all!

79 State Line RoadMichie, TN 38357

Randy731-239-5500-Shop662-286-1622- Cell

Andy731-239-5500- Shop

504-442-0944 Cell

Buddy Ayers Rock & Sand

662-286-9158or 662-287-2296

We Haul:

665-1686or

415-0494

20 years Experience

•Pool Openings•Inground & Above Ground Pool Liners Installed•Above Ground pools installed

SWIMMING POOLS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107

Attention is called to the fact that not less than the minimum salaries and wages set forth in the Contract Documents must be paid on this project and that the Contractor must ensure that employees and applicants for employment are not discriminated against because of their race, color, religion, sex, or natural origin. Also, bidders must abide to the Federal Housing and Urban Development’s Section 3 Regulation (24 CFR 135).

Minority and Women’s business enterprises are solicited to bid on this contract as prime contractors and are encouraged to make inquiries regarding potential subcontracting opportunities, equipment, material and/or supply needs.

No Bidder may withdraw the bid within 90 days after the actual date of the opening thereof. Simultaneously with the delivery of the executed contract, the Contractor shall furnish surety bonds subject to the conditions provided in the Information for Bidders.

All applicable laws, ordinances and the rules and regulations of all authorities having jurisdiction over construction of the project shall apply to the contract throughout.

Award will be made to the lowest responsible, responsive Bidder.

This project is fi nanced by a Community Development Block Grant and is subject to the rules and regulations thereof. The Owner reserves the right to waive any informalities or to reject any or all Bids.

John Little, Mayor Town of Glen, MS Publish: May 1, 2015 & May 8, 2015

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDSSeparate and sealed bids for the construction of Water System Improvements for theTown of Glen, MS and the County of Alcorn, MS will be received by Alcorn County WaterAssociation at 116 South Cass Street, Corinth, MS 38834, until 5:00 p.m. on June 1,2015,at which time all bids will be publicly opened and read aloud.

The project consists of the following items:

8” CL 200 PVC Water Pipe 9,000 Lin. Ft.6” CL 200 PVC Water Pipe 15,400 Lin. Ft.4” CL 200 PVC Water Pipe 9,400 Lin. Ft.8” Gate Valve & Box 2 Each6” Gate Valve & Box 7 Each4” Gate Valve & Box 7 Each3” Gate Valve & Box 2 EachDuctile Iron Pipe Fittings, MJ 4,380 Lbs Each4 112” Flush Hydrants 3 Each12”x 0.188” Steel Encasement, Bored for 8” Water Line 30 Lin. Ft.12”x 0.188” Steel Encasement, Open Trench for 8” Water Line 250 Lin. Ft.1 0” x 0.165” Steel Encasement, Bored for 6” Water line 160 Lin. Ft.1 O”x 0.165” Steel Encasement, Open Trench for 6” Water Line 580 Lin. Ft.8” x 0.148” Steel Encasement, Bored for 4” Water Line 70 Lin. Ft.8” x 0.148” Steel Encasement, Open Trench for 4” Water Line 490 Lin. Ft.Crushed Stone Resurfacing 140 Cu. Yd.Washed Gravel Resurfacing 300 Cu. Yd.3” Bituminous Re-Surfacing 70 Sq. Yd.Concrete 30 Cu. Yd.6”WetTap 1 Each4” Wet Tap 1 Each3/4” Service Line Tubing, SDR 9 925 Lin. Ft.Meter Reconnections 37 EachSeeding and Cleanup 15,335 Lin. Ft.

Each bid must be submitted in a sealed envelope addressed to Town of Glen, MS andAlcorn County Water Association, marked on the outsider as “Bid for Water SystemImprovements”. Amy bid for a sum in excess of $ 50,000.00 shall contain on the outsideor exterior of the envelope of such bid the Contractor’s current Certifi cate ofResponsibility number, and no bid shall be opened or considered unless suchContractor’s current certifi cate number appears on the outside or exterior of the envelopeor unless there appears a statement on the outside or exterior of such envelope to theeffect that the bid enclosed does not exceed $50,000.00.

Bids will be accepted only under the name of the Bidder to whom contract documentshave been issued by the Engineer.

Contract Documents, including Drawings and Specifi cations, may be examined at thefollowing locations: Newcomb Engineering Company, Inc., 904 East Shiloh Road, Corinth,MS 38834, and Alcorn County Water Association offi ce, 116 South Cass Street, Corinth,MS 38834.

Copies of the Contract Documents, including Drawings and Specifi cations, may beobtained at the offi ce of Newcomb Engineering Company, Inc., 904 East Shiloh Road,Corinth, MS 38834 upon payment of $140.00 which will not be refunded.

Each Bidder must deposit with this bid, security in the amount, form and subject to theconditions provided in the Information for Bidders.

GENERAL HELP0232

ACCOUNTING POSITION Looking for experienced individual with accounting background. Work

with monthly accounting. Prior experience with accounting software

and profi ciency with QuickBooks/Peachtree and Excel a plus.

Send resume to:

Daily Corinthian ATTN: Box #2730

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

MEDICAL/DENTAL0220

MS CARE CENTERis looking for

Certifi ed CNA’sfor all shifts, LPN’s, PRN

Please apply in person. 3701 Joanne Dr. • Corinth

Mon. – Fri 8 – 4:30E.O.E.

HAPPY ADS0114

SHERRELove,

YOUR MOTHER, LEXY & DJ

PLUS 1

4B • Friday, May 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

2X3 Birthday

Ad(with or without

picture.)Only $30.

Deadline Noon 2 days before publication.

662-594-6502

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

MULTI-FAMILY, Fri-Sat, 8-2, 15 Peacock Dr., TurtleCreek S/D,home decor,pre-teen girl clths, h/hitems, purses, shoes

MULT I -FAMILY , S A T ,7am-'til, 1209 Cruise St,tools, furn, toys, baby &adult clths, cookware,Xmas items,Much More

GARAGE SALESat Only 8am-'til, 1103Polk St., variety of itemsinc. furniture, clthg,jewelry, trampoline

SAT ONLY, 7am-'til, 3004N. Madison St, antiques,XL-2X wmns scrubs; ofc.suppl ies, pic & pic-frames, linens & More

SAT ONLY, 8am-'tl, 2105Hawthorne Rd (NearOak & Hickory Rd) CLEANOUT SALE. furn, kidsclths,LOTS & LOTS MORE

SAT., 7 AM, 4 Fam. 3 mi.E on Farm. Rd. on rightpast Dollar General.

THUR. & FRI. 8 AM until,2200 Hickory Rd., BigSale , Imogene Maynardand Jerry Lambert .clothing, home decor.

THURSDAY-SATURDAY1205 MAIN STREET

LOTS OF MISC ITEMS

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

ANNOUNCEMENTS

SPECIAL NOTICE0107BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-t ion, f loor level ing,bricks cracking, rottenw o o d , b a s e m e n t s ,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. FREE ESTIM-ATES. 731-239-8945 or662-284-6146.

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

1ST TIMECOMMUNITY WIDE SALE

DEER PARKCR 168,171,172,173

FRI & SAT - 7AM-UNTIL

2 FAMILIESFRI & SAT8AM - 'TIL

286 CR218, CentralSchool Rd.

3 FAMS Sat Only, 108ADeer Path Circle, Fol-low Signs,Plus sz ladies;mens,kids,jewelry,toys,furn,shoes, h/h items

5713 N Shiloh Rd., Fri., &Sat., Some Of All

FRI & SAT, 7am-noon, 9CR308, Glen; clths, furn,electronics, toys, babycloths, Lots of Misc.

FRI & SAT. 8am-'til. 254CR218. furn, clothes &household items.

FRI. & SAT. 7am-til,corner of CR 606 & 607,

Furn., glassware, Christ-mas items, jewelry, TV's,

Lots more

FRI., & SAT., 7 AM until,2 fam. , 432 HubertManul Rd., Michie, 1/2mile off Hwy 22.

FRIDAY ONLY , 7AM-1PM,HUGE SALE, 3903Cedar Creek, clths, toys,TOO MUCH TO LIST

INSIDE MOVING SALE,3265 N. Polk St. Fri- Sat9 a m - 4 p m . S u n d a yNoon-4pm. LOTS OFNEW ITEMS!! ! !

Page 17: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Bridal Edition

CrossroadsMagazine

If you were married between

January 2014 and December

2014 we are looking for your

picture and wedding information

for our upcoming Crossroads

Magazine Bridal Edition.

Submit your photo and pickup

your form at the Daily

Corinthian and you will be

included in our June edition.

Deadline for submitting your

photo and form is Friday,

May 15th, 2015!

For more information call: 662-287-6111The Crossroads Magazine is a supplement to the Daily Corinthian

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

The Best Deals on Building &

Remodeling Products!!Check Here First!

2 X 4 X 92 5/8” Stud .....$289

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3/8” T-1-11 Siding ...........$1395

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Air Compressors. Starting at$4695

Vinyl Floor Remnants ..$100

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Pad for Laminate Floor $500-$1000

New Load of Area Rugs .................Starting at

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3/4” Plywood each .....................$2195

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25 Year 3 Tab Shingle .$4695

35 Year Architectural

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1 X 16 X 16 Masonite Siding $1195

Croft Windows ......................................................

Tubs & Showers .. starting at $21500

2 x 4 x 16 Utility .................................$539

Spring into Savings!

Smith Discount Home Center

AUTO SERVICES0840

King RentalSmall & Mid Size Car

7 & 15 Passenger VansRental Department

8:00AM To 5:00PM

916 HWY 45 SOUTH | CORINTH, MS 38834PHONE 662-287-8773 | FAX 662-287-7373

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ENVIRONMENTCALL 662-415-8578

Daily Corinthian • Friday, May 8, 2015 • 5B

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on June 12,2008, Wayne Null, executeda deed of trust to Gerald R.McLemore, Trustee for thebenefit of Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., whichdeed of trust was filed for re-cord on June 12, 2008, in In-strument# 200803387, in theOffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated March 26,2015, and recorded April 2,2015 in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument #201501215; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., havingrequested the undersignedSubstitute Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sell saidland and property in accord-ance with the terms of saiddeed of trust for the purposeof raising the sums due there-u n d e r , t o g e t h e r w i t hattorney’s fees, substitutetrustee’s fees and expenses ofsale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 West,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.

ALSO: One (1) 2002 Claytonmanufactured home, SerialNo. CLA051163TN.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Robin E. Pate(MS Bar No. 103449)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.

Post Office Box 2727

Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000

Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/15/201514838

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on June 12,2008, Wayne Null, executeda deed of trust to Gerald R.McLemore, Trustee for thebenefit of Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., whichdeed of trust was filed for re-cord on June 12, 2008, in In-strument# 200803387, in theOffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated March 26,2015, and recorded April 2,2015 in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument #201501215; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., havingrequested the undersignedSubstitute Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sell saidland and property in accord-ance with the terms of saiddeed of trust for the purposeof raising the sums due there-u n d e r , t o g e t h e r w i t hattorney’s fees, substitutetrustee’s fees and expenses ofsale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 West,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.

ALSO: One (1) 2002 Claytonmanufactured home, SerialNo. CLA051163TN.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Robin E. Pate(MS Bar No. 103449)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.

Post Office Box 2727

Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000

Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/15/201514838

LOTS & ACREAGE0734

40 ACRES, Burnsville.$80,000 for all. 662-808-9313 or 415-5071.

TRANSPORTATION

CARS FOR SALE0868LEXUS, 58,000 MI, NICEONE OWNER VEHICLE.$12,000. 731-610-2068

SEVERAL VEHICLES forsale: 66' Fury: $4500, 72'Cougar, 2 Tow Trucks,Sebring, Green Truckand a 1964 Comet. Callfor more info- 662-808-9313, 662-415-5071

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955SUBSTITUTE

TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OFSALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on June 12,2008, Wayne Null, executeda deed of trust to Gerald R.McLemore, Trustee for thebenefit of Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., whichdeed of trust was filed for re-cord on June 12, 2008, in In-strument# 200803387, in theOffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated March 26,2015, and recorded April 2,2015 in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument #201501215; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., havingrequested the undersignedSubstitute Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sell saidland and property in accord-ance with the terms of saiddeed of trust for the purposeof raising the sums due there-u n d e r , t o g e t h e r w i t hattorney’s fees, substitutetrustee’s fees and expenses ofsale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 West,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.

ALSO: One (1) 2002 Claytonmanufactured home, SerialNo. CLA051163TN.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Robin E. Pate(MS Bar No. 103449)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.

Post Office Box 2727

Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000

Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/15/201514838

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 & ACREAGE073414.9 Acres- County Road620. Kossuth Schools.$3000 an acre, will notseparate. 662-286-7067,after 5 on weekdays.

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

LARGE HEAVY duty met-al roll-around utilitycart. $50. 731-645-4899

NEW IN BOX! SCROLLSAW. $75. 662-415-6542

NEW SET 4 chrome mag15" wheels, Nissan orToyota truck, 6 holes.$150. 662-212-2492

ONE PAIR cutting outscissors, new $20.00662-287-8370

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6111

for details.STEP BARS FOR 2005EXT. CAB F150, $100 ORO/B/O. 662-643-3789

STRAIGHT TALK HOMEUNIT PHONE RECEIVER.$40. CALL 662-415-6572

TANNING BED24 VOLT - $400

731-620-1112 or662-643-3565

VOLT GRAVITY RiderRowing Exercise Bike.$20. 731-645-4899

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

2BR 1BA, Stv.& Frg. furn.$425m/$300d Sec. 8, Wa-ter paid. Call 603-4127

HOMES FOR RENT0620

4BR/3BA- Single FamilyHome. $800mo + Dep &Ref. *Historic Dist.*,leave message- 287-7424

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

2 BR, c/p, deck, HVAC, 4mi to Kossuth School.Call 662-284-5078

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

MISC. TICKETS0536

2 CHANDLIERS, will take$50. & 60. 662-603-1674

RECTANGLUR RESTAUR-ANT table and 4 chairs.$100.00 662-664-0245

T J percussion drum set,jet black, completew / d r u m s , c y m b a l s ,stands & throne $225.662-664-0245

WOOD OFF ICE desk$45 .00 662-664-0245

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

2 SECTIONS White VinlyPorch Railing w/8.5 ft.Column. Sectons 7.5' lg&11.5' lg. $30. 731-645-4899

2 STEEL T post, clothesline ready to be set inconcrete for immedi-ate use. $35. 286-8257

ALL TERRAIN KendaScorpion 3-Wheeler tire,size 25X12-9 (most pop-ular size. Brand new.$50. 731-645-4899

AUTHENIC ARROWHEADcollection, Am Silvereagle sillver $'s, old halfdimes,nickels,pennies &quarters 662-396-1529

BABY LOCK Anna sew-ing machine used 4-6t i m e s . 1 5 b u i l t i nstitches with 4-stepbuttonhole, thread cut-ter, $180. 662-287-8370

FIN ISHED W/100 yr .home demo, lots of sol-id oak studs, rafters,ceil ing & floor joist;tongue & groove beadboard & flooring.Somehand hewn beams. $1-$20. 662-286-8257

FOR SALE: STETSON HAT.$75. FOR MORE INFOCALL 662-287-9479 or603-5811. Interestedparties only.

GUIDE WIRE galv. cable,heavy duty perfect fordog runs, security fen-cing & other uses. 50¢per ft. 662-286-8257

HAND GUN, SINGLE AC-TION 357. $450. Formore info: 662-287-9479or 603-5811.Interestedparties only, please

HEAVY DUTY 4 Ft. BoxBlade with spikes. $300.

731-645-4899

NEW 16" Class 1 Insu-lated, Flexible Duct, Ap-prox. 20 ft. $25. 731-645-4899

GENERAL HELP0232

BEST WADE Petroleumis now accepting applic-ations for truck drivingposition. Class A & ClassB Drivers needed. Com-petitive pay, 401K, Insur-

ance, Contact DannyNewsom @ 286-2936.

EOE

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS0320GERMAN SHEPARD PUP-PIES, 11 Weeks Old.$150.00. Parents on Site-662-462-4193

FARM

MERCHANDISE

HOUSEHOLD GOODS0509

CHEST FREEZER, 6 ft.,Frigidaire, $100. 662-643-8510 I f no answer ,please leave message.

FURNITURE0533USED 1 TIME! PILLOW-TOP FULL SIZE MAT-TRESS. $125. 415-6542

MISC. TICKETS05361 DECORATIVE cornplant tree 6 ' $50.00662-603-1674

1 STUDENT desk w/hutch handmade oak,$150.00 662-603-1674

12 PC place setting Mi-kasa dishes gave $250.new, will take $100. 662-603-1674

4 FT wooden displayunit shelves on bothsides $35.00 662-664-0245

4 PC LR suit $300.00 sofa,love seat, lg chair & ot-toman 662-643-8878

40 " ROUND dining tableon Duncan Phyffe Tablepedestal $30.00 662-664-0245

6 FT long sol id oakchurch pew, paddedseat $100. 662-664-0245

G I N G H E R P I N K I N Gshears, new $30.00 662-287-8370

GIRLS B/room suite lightbeige w/flowers head-board for queen fullbox spring & matress,dresser & night stand.$250. 662-415-1282

KARERA ELECTRIC bassg u i t a r , w h i t e w i t hmaple fretboard $85.00662-664-0245

PANASONIC DVD 5 discplayer with speakersand hdmi output willtake $75. 662-603-1674

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

THUR- FRI., 2078 S. TateSt., (old bus 45) TV arm-oire , p laystat ion wgames, furn., jr & adultclothing, baby swing,

THURS-SAT, 1703 CruiseSt,Plus Sz & kids's clthsbaby bed, changing tbl.g'ware, nook reader,h/hitems, furniture

Y A R D S A L E S T A R T STHURSDAY EVENINGTHRU SAT. 2 FAMILIES ONMATROSE CARROLL RD ,MICHIE, TN

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL HELP0232

Electricians & Electrical

Helpers needed

Corinth, MS and surrounding areas.

662-594-5133

EXPERIENCEDACCOUNTANT/TAX PREPARERCPA preferred,

but not required. Mail Resume to: PO Box 730 Corinth, MS

38835CAUTION! 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.

F U L L T I M E p e r s o nneeded @ small loancompany in Corinth &I u k a . H r l y w a g e +monthly bonuses. Paidholidays, vacation & sicktime. Requirements in-clude excellent custom-er service skills & a will-ingness to work. Cashhandling & basic com-puter skills a plus. Train-ing provided. Applywww.cashtn.com/nowhiring or fax resume to931-241-6032

LEGALS

Page 18: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

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 McEwenJon 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 Bullard

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

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HOMES FOR SALE0710

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3 bed, 2 bath2 car garage/ Barn-

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CARS FOR SALE0868

DOSSETT BIG 4House of Honda

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6B • Friday, May 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on December12, 1997, Sondra Dowd, ex-ecuted a deed of trust toJimmy S. Griffin, Trustee forOakwood Acceptance Cor-poration, Beneficiary, whichdeed of trust is recordedDecember 23, 1997, in Book473 at Page 555 in the Officeof the Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, said deed oftrust was assigned to TheBank of New York Mellon,successor Trustee under trustby JPMorgan Chase Bank(f/k/a and successor trusteeto The Chase ManhattanBank, successor as trustee toChase Manhattan Trust Com-pany, National Association,successor as Trustee to PNCBank, National Association, asTrustee under OakwoodMortgage Investors, Inc. ,Series 1998-A Pooling andServicing Agreement dated asof February 1, 1998), by As-signment of Deed of Trustdated November 18, 2013,and recorded December 9,2013, in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk inInstrument# 201306015; and

WHEREAS, The Bank ofNew York Mellon, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured therebyby and through its agent andattorney-in-fact, VanderbiltMortgage and Finance, Inc.,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated December30, 2013, and filed for recordJanuary 6, 2014 in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryC l e r k i n I n s t r u m e n t #2 0 1 4 0 0 0 3 4 ; a n d

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, The Bank of NewYork Mellon, by, and throughits agent and attorney-in-factVanderbilt Mortgage and Fin-ance, Inc., having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land and prop-erty in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust forthe purpose of raising thesums due thereunder, togeth-er with attorney’s fees, substi-tute trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, towit:

Commence at the SouthwestCorner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run East 444.18 feetfor the point of beginning;thence run East 239.76 feet;thence run North 2 degrees10 minutes West 1165.41feet; thence run West 195.7feet ; thence run South1164.57 feet to the point ofbeginning, containing 5.82acres, more or less. Propertysubject to road right-of-way.

ALSO: One (1) 1998 Oak-wood manufactured home,Serial No. OW58991.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.

WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_Substitute Trustee

Lori M. Creel(MS Bar No. 104145)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.Post Office Box 2727Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/1514839

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL AND TEST-AMENT OF V IRGINIAMARTIN, DECEASED

NO. 2015-0229-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is herebygiven that Letters Test-amentary have been onthis day granted to theundersigned, Bobby JanMartin, on the estate ofVirginia Martin, de-ceased, by the Chan-cery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, anda l l p e r s o n s h a v i n gclaims against said es-tate are required tohave the same pro-bated and registered bythe Clerk of said Courtwithin ninety (90) daysafter the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice or the same shallbe forever barred. Thefirst day of the publica-tion of this notice is the24th day of April, 2015.

WITNESS my signatureon this 22 day of April,2015.BOBBY JAN MARTIN,EXECUTOR OF THEESTATE OF VIRGINIAMARTIN, DECEASED

BOBBY MAROLT, CLERKWillie Justice, D.C.

Donald Ray Downs, P.A.Attorney at Law509 Waldron StreetP. O. Box 1618Corinth MS 38835662-287-8088

3tc4/24, 5/1, 5/8/2015

14841

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL AND TEST-AMENT OF DORIS LEEWOODRUFF, DECEASED

NO. 2015-0228-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giv-en that Letters Testa-mentary have been onthis day granted to theunders igned, JoyceBarnett Cox and RickieWayne Barnett on theestate of Doris LeeWoodruff, deceased, bythe Chancery Court ofAlcorn County, Missis-sippi, and all personshaving claims againstsaid estate are requiredto have the same pro-bated and registered bythe Clerk of said courtwithin ninety (90) daysafter the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice or the same shallbe forever barred. Thefirst day of the publica-tion of this notice is the24th day of April, 2015.

WITNESS our signa-tures on this 22nd dayof April, 2015.

JOYCE BARNETT COX

RICKIE WAYNE BARNETT

JOINT EXECUTRIX - EX-ECUTOR OF THE ESTATEOF DORIS LEE WOOD-RUFF

BOBBY MAROLT CLERKWillie Justice, D.C.

Donald Ray Downs, P.A.Attorney at Law509 Waldron StreetP. O. Box 1618Corinth, Miss iss ippi38835

3tc4/24, 5/1, 5/8/2015

14842

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on December12, 1997, Sondra Dowd, ex-ecuted a deed of trust toJimmy S. Griffin, Trustee forOakwood Acceptance Cor-poration, Beneficiary, whichdeed of trust is recordedDecember 23, 1997, in Book473 at Page 555 in the Officeof the Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, said deed oftrust was assigned to TheBank of New York Mellon,successor Trustee under trustby JPMorgan Chase Bank(f/k/a and successor trusteeto The Chase ManhattanBank, successor as trustee toChase Manhattan Trust Com-pany, National Association,successor as Trustee to PNCBank, National Association, asTrustee under OakwoodMortgage Investors, Inc. ,Series 1998-A Pooling andServicing Agreement dated asof February 1, 1998), by As-signment of Deed of Trustdated November 18, 2013,and recorded December 9,2013, in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk inInstrument# 201306015; and

WHEREAS, The Bank ofNew York Mellon, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured therebyby and through its agent andattorney-in-fact, VanderbiltMortgage and Finance, Inc.,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated December30, 2013, and filed for recordJanuary 6, 2014 in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryC l e r k i n I n s t r u m e n t #2 0 1 4 0 0 0 3 4 ; a n d

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, The Bank of NewYork Mellon, by, and throughits agent and attorney-in-factVanderbilt Mortgage and Fin-ance, Inc., having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land and prop-erty in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust forthe purpose of raising thesums due thereunder, togeth-er with attorney’s fees, substi-tute trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, towit:

Commence at the SouthwestCorner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run East 444.18 feetfor the point of beginning;thence run East 239.76 feet;thence run North 2 degrees10 minutes West 1165.41feet; thence run West 195.7feet ; thence run South1164.57 feet to the point ofbeginning, containing 5.82acres, more or less. Propertysubject to road right-of-way.

ALSO: One (1) 1998 Oak-wood manufactured home,Serial No. OW58991.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.

WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_Substitute Trustee

Lori M. Creel(MS Bar No. 104145)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.Post Office Box 2727Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/1514839

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on December12, 1997, Sondra Dowd, ex-ecuted a deed of trust toJimmy S. Griffin, Trustee forOakwood Acceptance Cor-poration, Beneficiary, whichdeed of trust is recordedDecember 23, 1997, in Book473 at Page 555 in the Officeof the Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, said deed oftrust was assigned to TheBank of New York Mellon,successor Trustee under trustby JPMorgan Chase Bank(f/k/a and successor trusteeto The Chase ManhattanBank, successor as trustee toChase Manhattan Trust Com-pany, National Association,successor as Trustee to PNCBank, National Association, asTrustee under OakwoodMortgage Investors, Inc. ,Series 1998-A Pooling andServicing Agreement dated asof February 1, 1998), by As-signment of Deed of Trustdated November 18, 2013,and recorded December 9,2013, in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk inInstrument# 201306015; and

WHEREAS, The Bank ofNew York Mellon, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured therebyby and through its agent andattorney-in-fact, VanderbiltMortgage and Finance, Inc.,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated December30, 2013, and filed for recordJanuary 6, 2014 in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryC l e r k i n I n s t r u m e n t #2 0 1 4 0 0 0 3 4 ; a n d

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, The Bank of NewYork Mellon, by, and throughits agent and attorney-in-factVanderbilt Mortgage and Fin-ance, Inc., having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land and prop-erty in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust forthe purpose of raising thesums due thereunder, togeth-er with attorney’s fees, substi-tute trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, towit:

Commence at the SouthwestCorner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 24, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run East 444.18 feetfor the point of beginning;thence run East 239.76 feet;thence run North 2 degrees10 minutes West 1165.41feet; thence run West 195.7feet ; thence run South1164.57 feet to the point ofbeginning, containing 5.82acres, more or less. Propertysubject to road right-of-way.

ALSO: One (1) 1998 Oak-wood manufactured home,Serial No. OW58991.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.

WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_Substitute Trustee

Lori M. Creel(MS Bar No. 104145)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.Post Office Box 2727Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/1514839

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on June 12,2008, Wayne Null, executeda deed of trust to Gerald R.McLemore, Trustee for thebenefit of Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., whichdeed of trust was filed for re-cord on June 12, 2008, in In-strument# 200803387, in theOffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated March 26,2015, and recorded April 2,2015 in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument #201501215; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., havingrequested the undersignedSubstitute Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sell saidland and property in accord-ance with the terms of saiddeed of trust for the purposeof raising the sums due there-u n d e r , t o g e t h e r w i t hattorney’s fees, substitutetrustee’s fees and expenses ofsale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 West,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.

ALSO: One (1) 2002 Claytonmanufactured home, SerialNo. CLA051163TN.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Robin E. Pate(MS Bar No. 103449)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.

Post Office Box 2727

Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000

Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/15/201514838

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on June 12,2008, Wayne Null, executeda deed of trust to Gerald R.McLemore, Trustee for thebenefit of Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., whichdeed of trust was filed for re-cord on June 12, 2008, in In-strument# 200803387, in theOffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated March 26,2015, and recorded April 2,2015 in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument #201501215; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., havingrequested the undersignedSubstitute Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sell saidland and property in accord-ance with the terms of saiddeed of trust for the purposeof raising the sums due there-u n d e r , t o g e t h e r w i t hattorney’s fees, substitutetrustee’s fees and expenses ofsale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 West,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.

ALSO: One (1) 2002 Claytonmanufactured home, SerialNo. CLA051163TN.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Robin E. Pate(MS Bar No. 103449)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.

Post Office Box 2727

Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000

Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/15/201514838

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF

SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on June 12,2008, Wayne Null, executeda deed of trust to Gerald R.McLemore, Trustee for thebenefit of Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., whichdeed of trust was filed for re-cord on June 12, 2008, in In-strument# 200803387, in theOffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi;and

WHEREAS, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., theholder of said deed of trustand the note secured thereby,substituted Lori M. Creel asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument dated March 26,2015, and recorded April 2,2015 in the Office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument #201501215; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said deed oftrust, and the entire debt se-cured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said deed of trust,and the legal holder of said in-debtedness, Vanderbilt Mort-gage and Finance, Inc., havingrequested the undersignedSubstitute Trustee to ex-ecute the trust and sell saidland and property in accord-ance with the terms of saiddeed of trust for the purposeof raising the sums due there-u n d e r , t o g e t h e r w i t hattorney’s fees, substitutetrustee’s fees and expenses ofsale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, LoriM. Creel, Substitute Trusteein said deed of trust will, onthe 22nd day of May, 2015,offer for sale at public outcryfor cash to the highest bidder,and sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.) atthe south main door of thecounty courthouse at Cor-inth, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, the following describedproperty situated in theCounty of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 West,and the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the South-east Corner of the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7 East,and the Southwest Corner ofthe Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 24, Township 2South, Range 7 East; thencerun North 1020.00 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun West 63.09 feet to a steelpost found on the East Right-Of-Way of Alcorn CountyRoad 402; thence run alongsaid Right-Of-Way North 16degrees 38 minutes 37seconds West 208.77 feet,North 13 degrees 19 minutes57 seconds West 41.23 feetto a 1/2 inch steel pin; thencerun East 215.83 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runSouth 240.14 feet to a 1/2inch steel pin; thence runWest 83.44 feet to the Pointof Beginning. Containing 0.54Acres in the SoutheastQuarter of Section 23, and0.46 Acres in the SouthwestQuarter of Section 24, for atotal of 1.00 Acre, more orless.

ALSO: One (1) 2002 Claytonmanufactured home, SerialNo. CLA051163TN.

Said property shall be soldas is, where is. I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substitute Trustee.The full purchase price mustbe paid in cash or by certifiedfunds at the time of sale.WITNESS my signature thisthe 21st day of April, 2015.

/s/ Lori M. Creel_

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Robin E. Pate(MS Bar No. 103449)

ROSEN HARWOOD, P.A.

Post Office Box 2727

Tuscaloosa, AL 35403

Telephone: (205) 344-5000

Fax: (205) 758-8358

4tc: 04/24, 05/01, 05/08,05/15/201514838

LEGALS

LEGALS

Page 19: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Friday, May 8, 2015 • 7B

TRACTOR FOR SALE

JOHN DEERE 40-20

NEW PUMPS, GOOD TIRES

RETIRED FROM FARMING$14,000

662-419-1587

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2001 Nissan XterraFOR SALE

Needs a little work.Good Bargain!

Call:662-643-3084

868AUTOMOBILES

804BOATS

Loweline Boat

14’ fl at bottom boat. Includes trailer, motor

and all. Call

662-415-9461 or

662-554-5503

2012 Lowe Pontoon90 H.P. Mercury w/ Trailer

Still under warranty.Includes HUGE tube

$19,300662-427-9063

REDUCED!Bass Boat

2005 Nitro 882 18’+ w/ 150 HP Mercury

upgraded electronics, low hours

Nice condition $11,500

665-0958 Leave a message

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

‘07 Dolphin LX RV, 37’

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

$85,000662-415-0590

Excaliber made by Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine owning a like-new, water tested, never

launched, powerhouse 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

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr., new paint,

new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

804BOATS

868AUTOMOBILES

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS AND LOTS OF

ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO

731-453-5031

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

804BOATS

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

662-808-5005

COMMERCIAL

15 FT Grumman Flat Bottom Boat25 HP Motor

$2700.00Ask for Brad:

284-4826

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.

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2006 Jeep Liberty

New Tires100K Miles

Never BeeWrecked

$8200 OBO662-664-0357

REDUCED

2010 Black Nissan Titan Pro4x

Off Road 5.6 V-84 Door

93,000 Miles

$25,000662-415-8869 or

662-415-8868

2006 Wilderness

Camper

5th Wheel 29.5ft w/ large

one side slide out

non-smoking owner

fully equip.IUKA

662-423-1727

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

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

REDUCED

REDUCED

2012 JeepWrangler 4WD

00 Miles, Red Garage Kept, it has

been babied. All maintenance

records available. Call or Text:

662-594-5830

1989 Mercedes Benz300 CE

145K miles, Rear bucket seats,

Champagne color, Excellent Condition.

Diligently maintained. $5000.00

662-415-2657

Hyster ForkliftNarrow Aisle

24 Volt Battery3650.00287-1464

Big Boy Forklift$1250

Great for a small warehouse

662-287-1464

Toyota Forklift5,000 lbs

Good Condition662-287-1464

Clark Forklift8,000 lbs,

outside tiresGood Condition

$15,000

662-287-1464

2012 BansheeBighorn

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

$7200.00 OBO

662-664-0357

1994 Ford F-150

302 Auto163K Miles$3200 OBO

662-750-0199

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

2002 Saturn

4Cyl, Automatic Transmission

32 MPGAll New

Electrical System

$1500.00

662-423-8449

ASKING $7500.00CALL 662-427-9591MADE IN LOUISIANA.THIS IS WHAT SWAMP

PEOPLE USE.

ALUMINUM BOAT FOR SALE16FT./5FT.

115 HP. EVINRUDE. NEW TROLLING MOTOR

TRAILER NEWLY REWIREDALL TIRES NEW

NEW WINCH

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

1997 Mustang GTBlack

Like new on the inside and out.

Runs Great, good tires, 114K miles

$5,100.00662-664-0357

2001 FordEscapeV-6, 4 door, Automatic163K MilesGood Car!

$2500731-607-4249

Tractor For Sale!John Deere

16-30New injectors & Fuel PumpGood Tires

$6500.00662-419-1587

SOLD

SOLD

2010 Chevy Equinox LS

130K Miles, Fully Loaded

GREAT Condition!

$10,500662-415-8343 or 415-7205

$10,000

VERY SHARP TORCH RED C-4 CORVETTE

1984 MODEL W/ TARGA TOP DAILY DRIVER -

GOOD TIRES.$6500.

662-462-8391 OR 662-279-1568

1996 Honda

4 wheelerRed, Good Condition$2095.00

662-415-8731

REDUCED2006 Kawasaki

Vulcan 160013,500 Miles, Serviced in November, New Back

Tire, Cobra Pipes, Slingshot Windshield

$4295 OBO662-212-2451

06 Chevy Trailblazer

Powereverything!Good heat

and Air$3,250 OBO

662-319-7145

2007 Yamaha 1300 V-Star Bikew/removable

(three bolts) trike kit., 6400 miles,

excellent condition.$7500.00

662-808-9662 or 662-808-2020

REDUCED

01 JEEP 4.0 New top

front & rear bumper Custom Jeep radio

and CD player$9,800

662-643-3565

TAKE OVER

PAYMENTS!

662-462-8274

2008 Nissan Versa

2012

2013 NissanFrontier

Desert Runner2x4

4 door, Silver1350 Miles

$26,000662-415-8881$22,000

REDUCED

25’ Crest “Superfi sh”

Pontoon Boatw/115 four stroke Yamaha motor & Tropic Competitor

trailer. $6,000 FIRM

662-279-7011

95’CHEVYASTRO

Cargo VanGood, Sound

Van

$2700872-3070

1999 DODGE CUSTOM

CAMPER VAN4 Captain Chairs

Couch/Bed combo, new tires, runs great!

$3995662-665-5915

1990 Harley Davidson

Custom Soft-Tail$9000

1949 Harley Davidson Panhead

$9000 OBO

662-808-2994

2007 LAYTON TRAVEL TRAILER

31', queen bed, 4 bunks

Pack/Play door$10,500

662-415-1247

2009 Cadillac DTSLeather, loaded, key-less entry,

remote start, 30K actual miles

$13,800603-1290

36ft, 2 Air conditioners, Generator, 30K miles

$31,000808-0653

1999ENDEAVOUR

28’ Cougar 5th Wheel

with Superslide

Very good Condition, hitch

included.

662-284-5365

FOR SALE2005 FORD

EXPEDITION

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

$8,500.00

• 4X4 Wheel Drive• Automatic Transmission• Cruise Control

662-416-6989

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

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

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

1996 ToyotaAvalon LS316,600 miles, Runs Great!

Everything is in working condition.

$2500662-212-3883

$7500.00 OBO

2011 ChevyEquinox LT64,000 Miles

Like NewFully loaded,

Back up cameraAsking $14,000662-415-9853

Dual Max Dieselw/ Allison TransmissionVERY good condition

$14,000 OBO

662-491-2317

2007 Chevy 2500 HD

Immaculate Condition94K Miles

$6500 FIRM

415-6888

Lincoln Towncar

2007 Mercury Grand Marquis

Bought Brand New in Corinth, Original Owner, Good Tires, Good Shape,

Cream Colored

$6400

731-376-8535

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

SOLD

2011 AR-ONE Star Craft, 14ft. Fridge/AC, Stove, Microwave, Full bath, immaculate condition.

$500 + Payoff or fi nance with Trustmark.

Excellent starter for small family. 284-0138

$10,800

$7,500.00

COMMERCIAL

Reduced$12,500

Page 20: 050815 daily corinthian e edition

8B • Friday, May 8, 2015 • Daily Corinthian

AUTO/TRUCK PARTS & ACCESSORIES0848

Bring Us Your Trade-In

Y KING

662-842-5277

966 S. Gloster

Tupelo, MS 38804

662-287-8773

916 Hwy. 45 South

Corinth, MS 38834

WWW.KINGKARS.NETReaders Choice Favorite Used Car Dealer 2012, 2013, & 2014!

KING KARSFarron Gilley

“Car Guy”Mike DoranRicky King

Hurry in for the best selection because these deals won’t last!

2012 Chevy Silverado

$19,900 #18371

2014 Chevy Camaro Convertible, V6, 2 to Choose From

$26,900 #18391

2004 GMC Envoy Ext. XUV SLT, Excellent Condition, MUST SEE, MUST DRIVE!!

$6,250#18422

2011 Chevy Silverado LT4WD, 4 Dr

$28,900 #18390

2013 Chevy Cruze40K Miles

$200/mo. w.a.c.$0 Down

#18125

2011 Nissan Juke50K Miles

$15,900#18365

2013 Ford MustangConvertible, 40K Miles, 2 to

Choose From

$19,900#18364

2009 Lexus IS

$19,900#18314

2013 Chevy Silverado LT 4 Dr, 4WD, 87K Miles

$30,500 #18369

2012 Buick Enclave 51K Miles,Loaded, All the Extras!!

$29,900 #18408

Kia Sportage4wd, 47k Miles

$18,900#18377

2011 Honda CR-V57K Miles

$19,900#18367

2011 Nissan Murano SL

$19,900#18323

2013 Nissan Maxima SV51K Miles, MUST SEE!!

$20,900 #18404

2005 Chevy Equinox Leather, Sunroof, GREAT STARTER!

$5,850#18346

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Daily Corinthian

25 years ago On this day in history 150 years ago“With malice toward none; with charity for all, with firmness

in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive to finish the work we are in.” President Abraham Lincoln is inau-gurated into his second term.

Vol. 119, No. 54 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

WednesdayMarch 4, 2015

50 cents

Home & Garden

Page 3B Page 1B

Daily Corinthian Today58

CoolerTonight

22100% chance of wintry mix

Traci Stockdale earned the title of Miss Alcorn County and Sunny Wood claimed the crown as Miss Junior Alcorn County during the annual pageant competition.

Several names up for school boardBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Dressing up for good cause

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Lauren Aday, Taylor Dodd and Madison Parks practice their runway poses.

Fashion show benefits Oasis Medical

City police makebreak-in arrests

BY JEBB [email protected]

Snow, ice means careful winter car careBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Advance Auto Parts Assistant Manager Blakely Sanders was busy chang-ing wiper blades for customers on Tues-day.

Please see FASHION | 3A

Please see CARS | 2A

Annual chili cookoff needing sponsorships

BY ZACK [email protected]

Please see COOKOFF | 3A

Please see ARRESTS | 3A

Please see BOARD | 6A

Call for complete details and rates!

286.6006BROSE HWY 72 E • Corinth MS

www.brosenissan.com

Now Renting 2014 Nissans!Reserve yours now for Spring Break 2015! Call for complete detailsand rates!

286.6006BROSE

RENTAL

Vol. 119, No. 54 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

WednesdayMarch 4, 2015

50 cents

Page 3B Page 1B

Daily Corinthian Today58

CoolerTonight

22100% chance of wintry mix

Several names up for school boardBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Dressing up for good cause City police makePlease see BOARD | 6A

Vol. 119, No. 54 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

WednesdayMarch 4, 2015

50 cents

Home & Garden

Page 3B Page 1B

Daily Corinthian Today58

CoolerTonight

22100% chance of wintry mix

Several names up for school boardBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Dressing up for good cause

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Lauren Aday, Taylor Dodd and Madison Parks practice their runway poses.

Fashion show benefits Oasis Medical

City police makebreak-in arrests

BY JEBB [email protected]

Annual chili cookoff needing sponsorships

BY ZACK [email protected]

Please see ARRESTS | 3A

Please see BOARD | 6A

Vol. 119, No. 54 • Corinth, Mississippi • 20 pages • Two sections

WednesdayMarch 4, 2015

50 cents

Home & Garden

Page 3B Page 1B

Daily Corinthian Today58

CoolerTonight

22100% chance of wintry mix

Several names up for school boardBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Dressing up for good cause

BY KIMBERLY [email protected]

Staff photo by Kimberly Shelton

Lauren Aday, Taylor Dodd and Madison Parks practice their runway poses.

Fashion show benefits Oasis Medical

City police makebreak-in arrests

BY JEBB [email protected]

Snow, ice means careful winter car careBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Advance Auto Parts Assistant Manager Blakely Sanders was busy chang-ing wiper blades for customers on Tues-day.

Please see FASHION | 3A

Please see CARS | 2A

Annual chili cookoff needing sponsorships

BY ZACK [email protected]

Please see COOKOFF | 3A

Please see ARRESTS | 3A

Please see BOARD | 6A

C R O S S R O A D S M A G A Z I N E - M E D I C A L G U I D E

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PA G E 1

How to doCPR

Cover storyLeonard Pratt, M.D.

2015 Medical Guide

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2015 Spring Edition

Planninga perfectvacation Hot

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Fab FindsRecipesEvents

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LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE:THE LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OF MENTIEELSIE MELVIN, DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2015-0259-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE IS GIVEN thatLetters Testamentary wereon the 6th day of May, 2015granted the undersigned Ex-ecutor of the Estate of MEN-TIE ELSIE MELVIN, Deceased,by the Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi; andall persons having claimsagainst said Estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theClerk of said Court withinninety (90) days after the dateof the first publication of thisNotice, which is the 8th dayof May, 2015 or the sameshall be forever barred.

WITNESS OUR SIGNA-TURE(S), this the 6th day ofMay, 2015.

ROBERT H. MELVIN, JREXECUTOR

W . J E T T W I L S O N ,M S B # 7 3 1 6ATTORNEY FOR EXECUT-OR505 E. WALDRON STREETPOST OFFICE BOX 1257CORINTH, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

3tc5/8, 5/15, 5/22/2015

14859

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

HOME IMPROVEMENT & REPAIR

ALL-PRO Home Mainten-ance and Repair- 662-415-6646

LAWN/LANDSCAPE/TREE SVC

QUALITY LAWN CARECommercial, Residential

InsuredFree Estimates

802-9304 or 665-1531

PAINT/WALLCOVER

U.S. Savings Bonds

are gifts with a future.

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross FromWorld Color

287-1024

MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE DIRECTORY

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL AND TEST-AMENT OF DORIS LEEWOODRUFF, DECEASED

NO. 2015-0228-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE is hereby giv-en that Letters Testa-mentary have been onthis day granted to theunders igned, JoyceBarnett Cox and RickieWayne Barnett on theestate of Doris LeeWoodruff, deceased, bythe Chancery Court ofAlcorn County, Missis-sippi, and all personshaving claims againstsaid estate are requiredto have the same pro-bated and registered bythe Clerk of said courtwithin ninety (90) daysafter the date of thefirst publication of thisnotice or the same shallbe forever barred. Thefirst day of the publica-tion of this notice is the24th day of April, 2015.

WITNESS our signa-tures on this 22nd dayof April, 2015.

JOYCE BARNETT COX

RICKIE WAYNE BARNETT

JOINT EXECUTRIX - EX-ECUTOR OF THE ESTATEOF DORIS LEE WOOD-RUFF

BOBBY MAROLT CLERKWillie Justice, D.C.

Donald Ray Downs, P.A.Attorney at Law509 Waldron StreetP. O. Box 1618Corinth, Miss iss ippi38835

3tc4/24, 5/1, 5/8/2015

14842

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE:THE LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OF MENTIEELSIE MELVIN, DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2015-0259-02

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE IS GIVEN thatLetters Testamentary wereon the 6th day of May, 2015granted the undersigned Ex-ecutor of the Estate of MEN-TIE ELSIE MELVIN, Deceased,by the Chancery Court of Al-corn County, Mississippi; andall persons having claimsagainst said Estate are re-quired to have the same pro-bated and registered by theClerk of said Court withinninety (90) days after the dateof the first publication of thisNotice, which is the 8th dayof May, 2015 or the sameshall be forever barred.

WITNESS OUR SIGNA-TURE(S), this the 6th day ofMay, 2015.

ROBERT H. MELVIN, JREXECUTOR

W . J E T T W I L S O N ,M S B # 7 3 1 6ATTORNEY FOR EXECUT-OR505 E. WALDRON STREETPOST OFFICE BOX 1257CORINTH, MS 38835(662) 286-3366

3tc5/8, 5/15, 5/22/2015

14859