090513 daily corinthian e edition

16
Vol. 117, No. 212 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages 1 section Thursday Sept. 5, 2013 50 cents Today 88 Mostly sunny Tonight 63 Index On this day in history 150 years ago U.S. diplomacy in Great Britain gains a victory when two ships being built for the Confederacy are seized by English agents. The Union Army of the Cumberland crossed the Tennes- see River and President Davis fears for the loss of Chattanooga. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 9 State........ 5 Weather...... 10 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 0% chance of rain One of the oldest street scams has resurfaced in Corinth. The “pigeon drop,” normally reported to police about once a year in the city, has happened twice in the last few weeks, according to Detective Capt. Ralph Dance of the Corinth Po- lice Department. Meanwhile, Northern District Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, while visiting Corinth last week, said his of- ce is seeing a rash of reports of the Jamaican lottery scam. Dance said the most recent pigeon drop victim, an elderly woman, was taken for $900 last week. “This lady had just cashed her check, and they ended up tak- ing her wallet,” he said. Often targeting the elderly, it is usually perpetrated by a cou- ple of individuals outside busi- nesses where people are shop- ping and often near banks. “They approach the victim with what they say is a bag of money that they found or in- herited and they would like the victim to help with it,” said Dance. The victim may be asked to hold the bag but are asked to hand over some of their own money or jewelry to the per- petrator in order to show good faith until the deal is done. The victim is often left holding a bag stuffed with worthless paper ‘Pigeon drop,’ Jamaican lottery scams BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Old street scam resurfaces in Corinth, bilks woman for $900 Taffeta Memories, a Select Entertainment Production written by Rick Lewis, will be presented by staff members of the Alcorn Central Schools at Alcorn Central High School to- day and Saturday starting at 7 p.m. Twila Bridges is the producer of Senior Sounds, which is an annual end-of-year senior mu- sical revue,and Bridges has re- cruited them to show off their talent. “My exceptional staff of vocal and dance coaches and choreog- raphers plan to show off a little of their talent and plan to take viewers on a journey through the 1950s in this Off-Broadway hit,” Bridges explained. Taffeta Memories is about four sisters who performed and recorded in the 1950s and fea- tures some of the favorites from that time. They have returned to a television show, “Spotlight on Music,” 20 years later where they are looking back at the heyday of their careers. Some of the songs are “Sh-Boom,” “Mr. Sandman,” “You Belong To Me,” “I’m Sorry,” and “Where The Boys Are.” These sisters are portrayed by Leanne Williams, ACHS Span- ish and Theatre teacher; Tina Downs, Alcorn County Elemen- tary School Music teacher; Kim Lucas, a retired ACES teacher and Glendale Science teacher; along with Wendy Talley, who is the secretary for ACHS. “This has been a great op- portunity for adults to serve as role models for the students,” Williams said. “They have seen Teachers, school secretary hit stage BY JOSEPH MILLER [email protected] Members of the Taffeta Memories include (from left) Tina Downs, Leanne Williams, Wendy Talley and Kim Lucas. Proposed changes at the Pizza Grocery and JB Out- doors property came before the Corinth Historic Preserva- tion Commission on Wednes- day. The 800 Cruise Street building would see the expan- sion of Pizza Grocery into part of the retail space and a new entry to the restaurant. Owner Jimbo Bryant said the restaurant would use the additional space for a new waiting area. Work is planned in several phases, and the remaining re- tail space could see other uses in the future. The propose entry includes double doors and a canopy. The commission passed a motion approving the con- cept of the plan and autho- rizing the chairman to sign the certicate of appropriate- ness when it is submitted and found to be consistent with the conceptual drawings. The proposal will also go to the Board of Aldermen for con- sideration. The Bryant family pur- chased the 1920s Alcorn Wholesale building in 2002 and opened the pizza busi- ness and moved JB Outdoors there. Bryant, who sits on the preservation commission and abstained from the vote, said he and his wife have oper- ated JB Outdoors for 13 years. Their son, Joshua, runs the pizza business, which will be the focus going forward. Board approves building changes BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] The Alcorn County Patriots are going to show their sup- port for those who helped pass Mississippi House Bill 2. Members of the group have planned the Stand Your Ground Freedom Rally for Saturday, Sept. 21 at Cross- roads Regional Park. The event is set for 10 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. “We will be there as long as people are there,” said orga- nizer Bobby McDaniel. The Mississippi Supreme Court unanimously upheld the state’s open carry gun law on Aug. 29. The law, now in effect, had been on hold after Hinds County Circuit Judge Winston Kidd issued an in- junction blocking the gun law from taking effect for close to two months. “This court now nds that the circuit judge erred as a Patriots planning freedom meeting BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Something can be said for those who are dedicated to their passions in this life. Although everyone’s passions are different, one thing remains the same -- most people have them and pursue them in one way or another. On Dece. 24, 1909, Mary Tay- lor was born in Central Missis- sippi and she has had plenty of passions throughout her ex- tended lifetime. Taylor moved to Corinth when she was 4years old years old and she developed a love for reading the newspa- per. Not just any newspaper, but the Daily Corinthian. Taylor has been subscribing to the Daily Corinthian since she was 30 years old and the faithful reader has never looked back. “I started my subscription back in 1939 and I loved read- ing the newspaper back then. I still love reading it today,” Tay- lor said. Taylor is now 103 years old and is looking forward to her 104th birthday on Dec. 24. Tay- lor said she hasn’t missed a day of getting her Daily Corinthian newspaper for the past 74 years delivered to her wherever she has lived, and the subscriber doesn’t plan to miss getting one anytime soon. “Even though I currently live in the Shoals (Ala.) in assisted living, I still want to know the news that the Daily Corinthian newspaper is printing out and I wanted the paper to be de- livered to me here no matter what,” Taylor said. “I live in the Shoals area now because this is where my daughter (Nancy Webb) lives and she wanted me closer to her. She takes good care of me and she knows I don’t want my subscription to the Daily Corinthian canceled.” Talk about passion, Taylor’s passion for the newspaper is clearly one that cannot be de- railed. Her daughter was going to cancel her subscription when they rst moved to Alabama. However, Taylor wasn’t having any of that. “Yes, that is correct,” Webb said. “I tried to cancel that subscription when we had my 103-year-old still enjoys reading her daily newspaper BY JOSEPH MILLER [email protected] Mary Taylor was born on Dec. 24, 1909. The 103-year-old Alcorn County native has been a subscriber to the Daily Corin- thian for 74 years. Please see TAYLOR | 2 Please see RALLY | 2 Please see TAFFETA | 2 Please see SCAM | 2 Daily Corinthian 2015 Hwy 72 E. Corinth, MS. 38834 • 662-594-1877 • Mon. - Sat. 10 A.M.- 9 P.M. • www.JRwinespirit.com 1.75 L 1.75 L 1.75 L 750 ML 1.75 L 50 ML 1 Jim Beam Jim Beam $ $ 27 27 10 10 17 Crown Royal Crown Royal $ $ 45 45 99 99 1.75 L 1.75 L Captain Morgan Captain Morgan Spiced Rum Spiced Rum $ $ 23 23 99 99 Check us out for Tailgating needs 750 Jack Daniels Jack Daniels $ $ 18 18 99 99 1.75 L 1.75 L Bacardi Bacardi Light or Dark Light or Dark $ $ 19 19 99 99 M 50 M Jackson Irish Jackson Irish Whiskey (12 Pk) Whiskey (12 Pk) $ $ 15 15 65 65

description

090513 daily corinthian e edition

Transcript of 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Page 1: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 117, No. 212 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

ThursdaySept. 5, 2013

50 centsToday88

Mostly sunnyTonight

63

Index On this day in history 150 years agoU.S. diplomacy in Great Britain gains a victory when two

ships being built for the Confederacy are seized by English agents. The Union Army of the Cumberland crossed the Tennes-see River and President Davis fears for the loss of Chattanooga.

Stocks........8 Classified......14 Comics........9 State........5

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

0% chance of rain

One of the oldest street scams has resurfaced in Corinth.

The “pigeon drop,” normally reported to police about once a year in the city, has happened twice in the last few weeks, according to Detective Capt.

Ralph Dance of the Corinth Po-lice Department.

Meanwhile, Northern District Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley, while visiting Corinth last week, said his of-fi ce is seeing a rash of reports of the Jamaican lottery scam.

Dance said the most recent

pigeon drop victim, an elderly woman, was taken for $900 last week.

“This lady had just cashed her check, and they ended up tak-ing her wallet,” he said.

Often targeting the elderly, it is usually perpetrated by a cou-ple of individuals outside busi-

nesses where people are shop-ping and often near banks.

“They approach the victim with what they say is a bag of money that they found or in-herited and they would like the victim to help with it,” said Dance.

The victim may be asked to

hold the bag but are asked to hand over some of their own money or jewelry to the per-petrator in order to show good faith until the deal is done. The victim is often left holding a bag stuffed with worthless paper

‘Pigeon drop,’ Jamaican lottery scams

BY JEBB [email protected]

Old street scam resurfaces in Corinth, bilks woman for $900

Taffeta Memories, a Select Entertainment Production written by Rick Lewis, will be presented by staff members of the Alcorn Central Schools at Alcorn Central High School to-day and Saturday starting at 7 p.m.

Twila Bridges is the producer of Senior Sounds, which is an annual end-of-year senior mu-sical revue,and Bridges has re-cruited them to show off their talent.

“My exceptional staff of vocal

and dance coaches and choreog-raphers plan to show off a little of their talent and plan to take viewers on a journey through the 1950s in this Off-Broadway hit,” Bridges explained.

Taffeta Memories is about four sisters who performed and recorded in the 1950s and fea-tures some of the favorites from that time. They have returned to a television show, “Spotlight on Music,” 20 years later where they are looking back at the heyday of their careers. Some of the songs are “Sh-Boom,” “Mr. Sandman,” “You Belong To

Me,” “I’m Sorry,” and “Where The Boys Are.”

These sisters are portrayed by Leanne Williams, ACHS Span-ish and Theatre teacher; Tina Downs, Alcorn County Elemen-tary School Music teacher; Kim Lucas, a retired ACES teacher and Glendale Science teacher; along with Wendy Talley, who is the secretary for ACHS.

“This has been a great op-portunity for adults to serve as role models for the students,” Williams said. “They have seen

Teachers, school secretary hit stageBY JOSEPH MILLER

[email protected]

Members of the Taffeta Memories include (from left) Tina Downs, Leanne Williams, Wendy Talley and Kim Lucas.

Proposed changes at the Pizza Grocery and JB Out-doors property came before the Corinth Historic Preserva-tion Commission on Wednes-day.

The 800 Cruise Street building would see the expan-sion of Pizza Grocery into part of the retail space and a new entry to the restaurant.

Owner Jimbo Bryant said the restaurant would use the additional space for a new waiting area.

Work is planned in several phases, and the remaining re-tail space could see other uses in the future.

The propose entry includes double doors and a canopy.

The commission passed a

motion approving the con-cept of the plan and autho-rizing the chairman to sign the certifi cate of appropriate-ness when it is submitted and found to be consistent with the conceptual drawings. The proposal will also go to the Board of Aldermen for con-sideration.

The Bryant family pur-chased the 1920s Alcorn Wholesale building in 2002 and opened the pizza busi-ness and moved JB Outdoors there.

Bryant, who sits on the preservation commission and abstained from the vote, said he and his wife have oper-ated JB Outdoors for 13 years. Their son, Joshua, runs the pizza business, which will be the focus going forward.

Board approvesbuilding changes

BY JEBB [email protected]

The Alcorn County Patriots are going to show their sup-port for those who helped pass Mississippi House Bill 2.

Members of the group have planned the Stand Your Ground Freedom Rally for Saturday, Sept. 21 at Cross-roads Regional Park. The event is set for 10 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.

“We will be there as long as people are there,” said orga-

nizer Bobby McDaniel.The Mississippi Supreme

Court unanimously upheld the state’s open carry gun law on Aug. 29. The law, now in effect, had been on hold after Hinds County Circuit Judge Winston Kidd issued an in-junction blocking the gun law from taking effect for close to two months.

“This court now fi nds that the circuit judge erred as a

Patriots planningfreedom meeting

BY STEVE [email protected]

Something can be said for those who are dedicated to their passions in this life.

Although everyone’s passions are different, one thing remains the same -- most people have them and pursue them in one way or another.

On Dece. 24, 1909, Mary Tay-lor was born in Central Missis-sippi and she has had plenty of passions throughout her ex-tended lifetime. Taylor moved to Corinth when she was 4years old years old and she developed

a love for reading the newspa-per. Not just any newspaper, but the Daily Corinthian.

Taylor has been subscribing to the Daily Corinthian since she was 30 years old and the faithful reader has never looked back.

“I started my subscription back in 1939 and I loved read-ing the newspaper back then. I still love reading it today,” Tay-lor said.

Taylor is now 103 years old and is looking forward to her 104th birthday on Dec. 24. Tay-lor said she hasn’t missed a day

of getting her Daily Corinthian newspaper for the past 74 years delivered to her wherever she has lived, and the subscriber doesn’t plan to miss getting one anytime soon.

“Even though I currently live in the Shoals (Ala.) in assisted living, I still want to know the news that the Daily Corinthian newspaper is printing out and I wanted the paper to be de-livered to me here no matter what,” Taylor said. “I live in the Shoals area now because this is where my daughter (Nancy Webb) lives and she wanted me

closer to her. She takes good care of me and she knows I don’t want my subscription to the Daily Corinthian canceled.”

Talk about passion, Taylor’s passion for the newspaper is clearly one that cannot be de-railed. Her daughter was going to cancel her subscription when they fi rst moved to Alabama. However, Taylor wasn’t having any of that.

“Yes, that is correct,” Webb said. “I tried to cancel that subscription when we had my

103-year-old still enjoys reading her daily newspaperBY JOSEPH MILLER

[email protected]

Mary Taylor was born on Dec. 24, 1909. The 103-year-old Alcorn County native has been a subscriber to the Daily Corin-thian for 74 years.Please see TAYLOR | 2

Please see RALLY | 2Please see TAFFETA | 2

Please see SCAM | 2

Daily Corinthian

2015 Hwy 72 E. Corinth, MS. 38834 • 662-594-1877 • Mon. - Sat. 10 A.M.- 9 P.M. • www.JRwinespirit.com1.75 L 1.75 L 1.75 L750 ML1.75 L 50 ML1

Jim BeamJim Beam$$272710 10

1 7

Crown RoyalCrown Royal$$454599 99

1.75 L1.75 L

Captain MorganCaptain MorganSpiced RumSpiced Rum

$$23239999

Check us out for Tailgating needs

750

Jack DanielsJack Daniels$$18189999

1.75 L1.75 L

BacardiBacardiLight or DarkLight or Dark

$$191999 99 M50 M

Jackson Irish Jackson Irish Whiskey (12 Pk)Whiskey (12 Pk)

$$15156565

Page 2: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 5, 2013

The Wounded Warrior Project’s benefi t concert at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 5 with the band Gen-erations will be held in the Corinth Coliseum Civ-ic Center.

Correction

matter of law when he found House Bill 2 to be vague and, therefore, un-constitutional. He also

erred when he stated that a ‘reasonable per-son reading the bill could not discern what the law allows and what it pro-hibits,’” according to the

ruling signed by Justice Randy Pierce.

“Mississippi House Bill 2 defi nes our constitu-tional rights,” added Mc-Daniel. “It says what we can and can’t do.”

McDaniel said the rea-son behind the rally is to thank those who support-ed the bill.

In July, the Alcorn County Patriots sponsored the Second Amendment Firearm Freedom Day on the courthouse grounds with about 300 attending.

Judge Henry Ross, a retired Navy Command-er, is set to be the fea-tured speaker during this month’s event. Several speakers and legislators are also expected to be part of the activities dur-ing the day.

“It’s still early and we haven’t confi rmed several people who we plan to in-vite,” said McDaniel.

(For more information about the event contact McDaniel 662-415-6475 or Jay Anthony 662-286-3016.)

RALLY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

and never sees her mon-ey again.

The scam often in-volves the victim driving to the bank with the per-petrators.

“Don’t let strangers in your car,” said Dance.

The perpetrators are usually outsiders who commit the scam and quickly move on.

The prior victim in the city handed over $750.

Anyone approached with such an offer should call the police, Dance said.

The Jamaican lottery scam involves a phone call and does not fall un-der the PSC’s jurisdiction because it is not a sales pitch, but Presley said people are losing huge sums of money to the scheme.

The call often comes from an 876 number, and the recipient is told he or she has won a large sum of money that can be claimed by purchas-ing a prepaid card, such as Green Dot MoneyPak, and sending it to the caller.

“We had a gentleman down in Prentiss County that sent $354,000 to these folks, $25,000 of which was cash,” said Presley.

But the lottery jackpot never came to him.

“You might as well take that money and burn it,” said Presley.

The commissioner also warns that the perpetra-tors are persistent.

“They’ll wear you out,” he said. “What we tell people is once they start that conversation, hang the phone up. Do not get

into a long conversation with them, because they will literally worry you to death.”

The PSC can help peo-ple try to get the phone number blocked from calling them, but there may be a charge by the phone company. The per-petrators also frequently change their number.

“This thing is rampant and it is affecting people, and I will bet you there is somebody here in Alcorn County right now that is being taken advantage of,” said Presley.

The PSC is taking infor-mation on the complaints it gets and turning them over to the attorney gen-eral’s offi ce for investiga-tion. Presley said people who get the call should fi le a complaint with the Federal Trade Commis-sion at ftc.gov.

SCAM

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

us make mistakes but learn from our mistakes and take risks. It has re-minded us how it feels to perform on stage and we will be better advisors af-ter this.”

“These women are very talented and will have you tapping your toes and laughing from the moment the show starts,” added Bridges. “After the 2013 Senior Sounds production, I wanted to do something to let the students see just how talented these ladies are who work with them on their senior pro-duction and how they can also sing and dance as well as perform very well.”

Witt Lucas will play

the “Spotlight on Music” host, Briley Talley and Callie Buntin will serve as the Galaxy Beauty Products girls and the Taffetas musical combo will include Bryan Es-sary on piano, Eric Perry on bass guitar, who is the ACHS band direc-tor, along with freshman Luke Price on the drums. Many of the theatre stu-dents will be working as technical staff, box offi ce workers, intermission concessions and stage crew members.

“Senior Sounds brings kids together as they work toward a com-mon goal,” Tally ex-plained. “That’s what has happened with us as a cast. We’ve gotten to know each other by working on this show

and we have had a great time!”

Fans can come out and have a great time with the cast of Taffeta Mem-ories and tickets are $10 each for adults and $5 for children and students.

“Tickets may be bought in advance from the per-formers or the ACHS of-fi ce during school hours, or at the door the night of the event,” added Bridg-es.

All the funds raised from this production will go toward the ACHS au-ditorium improvements. Other donations will be accepted and the address for ACHS is, 8 County Road 254, Glen, Miss.

(For more informa-tion, please call 662-286-8720 from 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.)

mother moved here [Ala-bama]. But she persisted we didn’t do that, so the deliveries continued.”

Another passion she has was to make sure her legal home remained in Mississippi. Taylor still has her legal residence listed as Corinth. Taylor also has a passion for her husband, former Sheriff-Justice Court Judge of Alcorn CountyLyle Taylor of Corinth, who died 30 years ago.

Mr. and Mrs. Taylor had three children, Webb, Jimmy and Charles, who all graduated from Corinth High School.

“My mom is still do-ing well to be almost

104-years old,” Webb elaborated. “She still has a great memory and loves talking about her memo-ries of her life, and one of those memories is about her love for the Daily Co-rinthian newspaper. Her eyesight isn’t the same as it used to be and she has to have someone read the paper to her sometimes. The paper carrier has been so nice to my moth-er and has delivered the newspaper right to her door -- over the last few years -- and we appreciate it very much.”

Taylor was a stay-at-home mom. She said that should be the way it is for all the women who can do it, but she did work at the sheriff’s offi ce some with

her husband in her spare time.

“I helped [Lyle] out at the offi ce sometimes, but for the most part I just enjoyed being home with my children and raising them,” Taylor said.

“After my kids were grown and gone and my husband died, I lived by myself until I was 101 years old.”

Taylor’s biggest passion in life is serving God.

“I have been a mem-ber of Tate Street Baptist Church since I was 4 years old and I am very proud of that,” said Taylor.

Certainly, it is fair to say Taylor has lived out her passions in life and hopes to inspire others to do the same.

TAFFETA

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

TAYLOR

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

Submitted photo

Corinth Mayor Tom-my Irwin entertains youngsters JayAna Hill (left) and Averi Tidwell at the end of year celebration at Project Atten-tion. A cookout was provided by J.C. Hill to wrap up the cen-ter’s summer en-richment program.

End of year celebration

CLEVELAND — Resi-dents in the tough Cleve-land neighborhood where three women were se-cretly imprisoned for a decade reacted with scorn and grim satisfaction Wednesday after Ariel Castro hanged himself in his cell barely a month into a life sentence.

Even the prosecutor joined in.

“This man couldn’t take, for even a month,

a small portion of what he had dished out for more than a decade,” said Cuyahoga County Pros-ecutor Tim McGinty.

Castro, 53, was found hanging from a bedsheet Tuesday night at the state prison in Orient, cor-rections spokeswoman JoEllen Smith said. The coroner’s offi ce said it was suicide.

“He took the coward’s way out,” said Elsie Cin-tron, who lived up the

street from the former school bus driver. “We’re sad to hear that he’s dead, but at the same time, we’re happy he’s gone, and now we know he can’t ask for an appeal or try for one if he’s acting like he’s crazy.”

Ohio prisons director Gary Mohr announced a review of Castro’s sui-cide and whether he had received proper medical and mental health care. State police are also in-vestigating.

Cleveland man’s suicide brings little sympathyAssociated Press

Joe’s Shoes

Page 3: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 5, 2013

Today in

history

Today is Thursday, Sept. 5, the 248th day of 2013. There are 117 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlightin History:

On Sept. 5, 1972, ter-ror struck the Munich Olympics as the Palestin-ian group Black Septem-ber attacked the Israeli Olympic delegation; 11 Israelis, five guerrillas and a police officer were killed in the resulting siege.

On this date:

In 1774, the first Conti-nental Congress assem-bled in Philadelphia.

In 1793, the Reign of Terror began during the French Revolution as the National Convention in-stituted harsh measures to repress counter-revo-lutionary activities.

In 1836, Sam Houston was elected president of the Republic of Texas.

In 1913, fire devas-tated Hot Springs, Ark., destroying 60 blocks.

In 1914, the First Bat-tle of the Marne, result-ing in a French-British victory over Germany, be-gan during World War I.

In 1939, four days af-ter war had broken out in Europe, President Frank-lin D. Roosevelt issued a proclamation declaring U.S. neutrality in the conflict.

In 1945, Japanese-American Iva Toguri D’Aquino, suspected of being wartime broadcast-er “Tokyo Rose,” was arrested in Yokohama. (D’Aquino was later con-victed of treason and served six years in pris-on; she was pardoned in 1977 by President Ger-ald R. Ford.)

In 1957, the novel “On the Road,” by Jack Ker-ouac, was first published by Viking Press.

In 1961, President John F. Kennedy signed legislation making air-craft hijackings a federal crime.

In 1975, President Gerald R. Ford escaped an attempt on his life by Lynette “Squeaky” From-me, a disciple of Charles Manson, in Sacramento, Calif.

In 1986, four hijack-ers who had seized a Pan Am jumbo jet on the ground in Karachi, Paki-stan, opened fire when the lights inside the plane failed; 22 people were killed.

In 1997, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II broke the royal reticence over Princess Diana’s death, delivering a televised ad-dress in which she called her former daughter-in-law “a remarkable person.” Mother Teresa died in Calcutta, India, at age 87.

Ten years ago:

Israeli commandos killed a Hamas bomb-maker in a firefight and pulverized the West Bank apartment building where he had been hiding. Hurri-cane Fabian hit Bermuda, killing four people.

Five years ago:

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice be-came the highest-ranking American official in half a century to visit Libya, where she met Moam-mar Gadhafi. Europe’s Rosetta space probe flew by the Steins as-teroid 250 million miles from Earth.

‘Taffeta Memories’

Alcorn Central High School’s Senior Sounds is presenting “Taffeta Memories,” — “a walk through the 1950s in song ...” The musical is being performed as an auditorium fundraiser. A performance is being held tonight at 7 p.m. at the ACHS auditorium, 8 CR 254, Corinth. Tickets are $10.

Free Yoga classes

Beginning today, River of Life Worship Center (located behind the Harper Square Shop-ping Center in Corinth) is offering a three-month Yoga weight-loss class. This will be a mixed-level class focused on build-ing strength and stami-na. Classes are free and open to anyone who is able to begin moderate exercises. Class begoms at 6 p.m. For more in-formation, call Mary at 662-415-6216.

Story Hour

Pre-school Story Hour is held each Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Corinth Library. Year-round art exhibits are also on display and educa-tional non-profit groups meet in the auditorium monthly.

The Corinth Friends of the Library hold their ongoing book sale inside the library. Hardback, paperback and audio books, and VHS and DVD donations to the

library are always appre-ciated.

For more information, call 287-2441.

Fitness fun

The Team Corinth Summer Fun Series latest team activity is being held each Thurs-day night through the summer. The goal is to begin whatever activ-ity a person is into — whether running, walking or biking — and begin it in time to be back at the city parking lot near Pizza Grocery in Corinth by 7 p.m.

The fitness event is free and open to all ages. Water will avail-able at the the finish.

Activity center

Bishop Activity Center is having the following activities for the week of Sept. 2- Sept. 6: Today — Bingo, games, open discussion, quilting and Root Beer & Brats cook-out. Senior citizens, age 60 and above, are wel-come and encouraged to attend. A variety of activities is offered for everyone.

Art on display

• Alycia Stegall of Pontotoc, who enjoys capturing northeast Mississippi scenery, is the featured artist at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery. The 507 Cruise Street gallery is open Tuesday through Satur-day with summer hours

of 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Call 665-0520 for gallery in-formation.

• The paintings of Jim Tidwell and Kay Morgan will be on display at Northeast Mississippi Community College in Anderson Hall Art Gal-lery. Gallery hours are Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. - 3 p.m. Contact Terry An-derson at 662-720-7336 or [email protected] for more informa-tion.

Photo contest

The Crossroads Mu-seum is joining with the Alcorn County Fair to host the museum’s 12th Annual Photo Contest. Photos will be displayed Sept. 17-21 at the fair, Crossroads Arena, 2800 S. Harper Road, Corinth. Photos must have been taken on or after Jan. 1, 2012. The best-of-show winner will receive a $150 prize while ribbons to to the top winners in each category.

Entry fee for the first three photos is $10 per photo and $5 per entry thereafter. Entries will be accepted through Sept. 16 at the Cross-roads Museum. Photo contest entry forms are at the Crossroads Muse-um, 221 N. Fillmore St., Corinth, and at cross-roadsmuseum.com and alcornfair.com. For more information and contest rules, contact Brandy Steen at [email protected] or

662-287-3120.

Quilt raffle

The 4H Mod Squad is selling chances for a quilt for $2 for one chance or $5 for three chances. The quilt was made and donated to the club by ladies of the Piecemakers Quilt Guild and measures 76 by 94. It is done in the green and white colors that represent 4H. Proceeds from the raffle will go to help 4Hers go to the state Showdown in Jack-son in October. To pur-chase a raffle ticket, call Judy at 662-287-5527 or Elizabeth at 731-239-5539.

Cans for Kids

Everyone is encour-aged to donate their cans to help find a cure for Cystic Fibrosis. Dur-ing the month of Sep-tember, cans can be dropped off at Pioneer Machinery, 901 S. Tate St., Corinth or call Roy Cummings at 662-396-1326.

Quilt fundraiser

A quilt made by the Cross City Piecemak-ers Quilt Guild is up for grabs in support of the ongoing efforts to preserve the Verandah-Curlee House Museum. Chances will be sold and can be purchased at the Corinth Area Convention and Visitors Bureau.

Civil War exhibit

Corinth Civil War en-thusiast Larry Mangus is sharing items from his massive collection of artifacts related to the Battle of Corinth at the Corinth Civil War Inter-pretive Center.

His collection has grown to approximately 3,000 items, including 2,000 pieces of cur-rency, over 150 different autographs of Union and Confederate generals, war bonds, a couple of guns, and 54 canteens — many of which have been identified and con-nected to a specific sol-dier during the war.

Located at 501 W. Lin-den Street, the Corinth Civil War Interpretive Center is open every day except Christmas Day from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more info about the Interpretive Center call 287-9273.

Shiloh museum

A museum dedicated to the Battle of Shiloh and area veterans is open next to Shiloh National Military Park. It is located at the inter-section of state Route 22 and Route 142 in Shiloh.

The Shiloh Battlefield & World War II Museum is open Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. For more informa-tion call Larry DeBerry at 731-926-0360.

Things to do today

“Don’t throw Mr. Duncan’s watermelon away. The juice is the best part!” Those were the words of 5-year-old Jeston Johnson of Michie as he used a straw to enjoy every ounce of a watermelon purchased from Junior Duncan at the Farm-er’s Market on Fulton Drive. Jeston attends Michie Elementary School and is the son of Jason and Janelle Johnson of Michie and the grandson of Joann and David Johnson of Corinth.

‘Juice is the best part!

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

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

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

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8th Year Anniversary

September 3rd-October 31st$5.29 $5.29

Lunch SpecialMon-Fri 11:00AM - 3:30PM

All You Can EatMore Sushi Items • New Items Added

2115 S. Harper Rd • 662-287-3666 • Across From Wal-Mart • Corinth, MS

HealthFair

Thursday, September 19th

4:00 - 8:00 pm

FREEHealth Fair for Children

Alcorn County FairCrossroads Arena

All Children ages 0-18 Welcome

Free Admission to the Fair on Thursday night!!!

Page 4: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Thursday, September 5, 2013www.dailycorinthian.com

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World Wide Web: www.dailycorinthian.com Editorials represent the voice of the Daily Corinthian. Editorial columns, letters to the editor and other articles that appear on this page represent the opinions of the writers and the Daily Corinthian may or may not agree.

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Mark Boehler, editor

Mississippi’s journalism an-nuls are fi lled with stories of courage and strength under pressure. Most of those stories emanate from the civil rights era – when truth in reporting wasn’t valued in some quar-ters and thugs believed they could dictate the news with their fi sts, a burning cross or a shotgun.

There was Oliver Emmerich in McComb, Hazel Brannon Smith in Lexington, Hodding Carter in Greenville, Ira Harkey in Pasca-goula, and so many others who served their readers and their state so well. Most of them, at one point or another in the turbulent 1950s and 1960s, faced threats, intimidation, and the very real prospects of violence and bodily harm.

Perhaps none faced those dangers in a more isolated venue than did Smith, who became the fi rst woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing in 1964. Smith’s national recognition only emboldened her enemies to starve her out fi nancially and they eventually succeeded.

In modern Mississippi journalism, the ranks of independent small town newspa-pers are dwindling as new technologies and changing reader habits have combined to make the newspaper business diffi cult. Chain ownership, both Mississippi companies and out-of-state enterprises, continue to grow.

But nobody told the tubborn, feisty editor and publisher of the Deer Creek Pilot about any of the problems confronting independent community newspapers. It wouldn’t have done any good if they had.

Harold Ray Mosby Jr. is, for my money, the last of his tribe in Mississippi journalism. Ray is the quintessential independent newspaper publisher in a town that is almost too small to adequately support a newspaper.

Ray is a simply marvelous editorial writer. For a small, wiry man who smokes a pipe and mostly keeps his own counsel, Ray writes like a brawler. His columns don’t just criticize; they strip the bark from his adversaries. Ask-ing no quarter from the politicians he chal-lenges, Ray Mosby gives none. Whether it’s Gov. Phil Bryant or Rolling Fork Mayor El-dridge “Butch” Walker, Ray calls it as he sees it.

Twice, in 1999 and again in 2009, Mosby has been honored by his peers in the Mis-sissippi Press Association as the state’s best editorial writer. No one at the state’s largest daily newspapers disputed that fact, either.

What most people outside Rolling Fork haven’t known is how hard Ray’s life has been away from work. Producing an award-winning, respected community newspaper in a town the size of Rolling Fork as more-or-less a one-man show is hard enough.

But for the last decade, Ray was increas-ingly challenged by the declining health of his parents and his wife.

Ray’s had a nightmare of a year. First, his father Harold Ray Mosby Sr. passed away in February. Then a couple of weeks ago, his mother Stanley Eleanor Williamson Mosby died after a long and debilitating illness. Mrs. Mosby was an old school English teacher and her infl uence on Ray’s writing talents are un-deniable.

On Aug. 31, Ray’s wife Phyllis Trelling Mosby passed away after a long struggle with early-onset Alzheimer’s Disease.

Like Job, Ray Mosby has endured more suffering in the last year than one man ought to endure. But his troubles never stopped him from giving Rolling Fork and Sharkey County a truly great Mississippi newspaper each week.

The second time Ray won the Emmerich Award as the state’s best editorial writer, the applause lasted for two solid minutes with every hard-bitten journalist in Mississippi on their feet. Why? Because they knew how truly hard it was for the best editorial writer in Mississippi to be Ray Mosby – son, father, husband and tough old pipe-smoking Delta journalist.

(Daily Corinthian and syndicated colum-nist Sid Salter can be contacted at 601-507-8004 or [email protected].)

The state’s toughest, best editorial writer lives in Rolling Fork

Prayer for today

A verse to share

“We will smite Syria swiftly but prudently,” Good Roger said. “Ferociously but cautiously. With abandon but with restraint. And if our red line is crossed again, we have crimson, magenta and puce lines to back them up.”

“Have you been sniffi ng the printer toner again?” Bad Roger asked. “You are beginning to sound like a foreign policy wonk.”

“We must stop the need-less, senseless, indefensible murder of children,” Good Roger said. “The United States must act to stop the slaughter of the innocent.”

“You’re talking about that 1-year-old boy shot to death in his stroller in Brooklyn on Sunday night, right?” Bad Roger said. “I totally agree the United States should stop such slaughter.”

“I am talking about Syria!” Good Roger shouted. “We must protect the children of Syria.”

“Totally agree,” Bad Roger said. “But the 197 children age 12 or younger who are shot to death every year on average in America each year are worth protecting, too, aren’t they? Maybe our government ought to do something about them.”

“The Second Amend-ment gives Americans the

right to shoot other Ameri-cans!” Good Roger said, a vein pulsing in his forehead. “But Syria doesn’t have the Second Amendment. So we can kill Syrians to keep them from killing other Syrians!”

“I see you have been watching cable news again,” Bad Roger said, “because your logic has become im-peccable.”

Good Roger is the de-cent, sincere, well-meaning side of me. Nobody much likes him. Bad Roger is the snarky, sarcastic, cynical side of me. People often buy him drinks.

Good Roger starting mad-ly leafi ng through his book of quotations for a devastat-ingly apt response to Bad Roger. Good Roger has kept the book ever since he heard that George Will never goes on TV without deft and witty quotations written on his shirt sleeves.

“Sticks and stones will break my bones, but names will never hurt me,” Good Roger said. “Also: Bounc-es off rubber and sticks to glue.”

“There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action,” Bad Roger said.

“Is that a quotation?” Good Roger asked.

“Yes, from Johann Wolf-gang von Goethe,” Bad Rog-

er said.“Is he an American?”

Good Roger asked.“No, a foreigner, so you

can bomb him with impuni-ty,” Bad Roger said. “He also has been dead for 181 years.”

“Excellent,” Good Roger said. “That will make him an easier target.”

“Can we stop talking about this?” Bad Roger said. “There is a ‘Duck Dynasty’ marathon on A&E that I don’t want to miss.”

“I am not done quoting,” Good Roger said. “‘Speak softly and carry a big stick.’ Teddy Roosevelt said that 112 years ago this week.”

“But he didn’t say take your big stick to Congress, where it can be whittled down to 535 little sticks with pointy heads to match the pointy heads of our legisla-tors,” Bad Roger said.

“Congress is a cornerstone of democracy!” Good Roger said.

“Congress is an anvil around the neck of democ-racy,” said Bad Roger. “It has a lower approval rating than bad breath. And Presi-dent Obama decides to turn over his foreign policy to Congress for its approval? Pure folly.”

“Au contraire,” Good Rog-er retorted, believing that using French proves you are

an intellectual. “If Congress refuses to back the presi-dent’s attack on Syria, Con-gress will get the blame.”

“In Libya, Obama led from behind,” Bad Roger said. “In Syria, Obama is letting a bunch of behinds lead him.”

“A leader must have the support of his people,” Good Roger said. “President Obama grew very worried when the British Parliament refused to back an attack on Syria.”

“If George Washington had worried about what the British Parliament wanted, we all would be driving on the left side of the road to-day,” Bad Roger said. “And have bad teeth.”

“There is no talking to you,” Good Roger said. “Be-sides, ‘The Ed Show’ is com-ing on, and I have to get ready to take notes.”

“This decision to go to Congress has badly split this administration,” said Bad Roger. “I saw John Kerry the other day, and I said, ‘Why the long face?’”

“You can’t say a thing like that!” Good Roger sput-tered.

“I can say anything,” Bad Roger said. “I’m Bad Roger.”

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Roger Simon is Po-litico’s chief political colum-nist.)

Good Roger vs. Bad Roger on Syria

Appearing in the White House Rose Garden last Saturday, President Obama apparently experienced a revelation. He acknowl-edged there are constitu-tional limits on his power, something he has hereto-fore mostly ignored while issuing executive orders, bypassing Congress on ap-pointments and deciding which parts of the Afford-able Care Act to follow and which to delay or ignore.

The president will wait for Congress to reconvene on Sept. 9 and debate whether to grant him authority to attack Syria. It is uncertain whether he will get approv-al for what he says will be a limited -- and likely incon-sequential -- strike.

His indecisiveness sends a clear message to the Mid-dle East where dictators and mullahs respect power and consistency. They can be expected to have little fear of this president who thinks his order to Navy Seals to kill Osama bin Laden should be suffi cient proof of his strength and resolve.

The trouble with an un-certain trumpet blown by a naive and weak leader is that it can get people killed. American people.

Why should any dictator

or terrorist fear Ameri-ca? The pres-ident prom-ised to bring to justice those who attacked the U.S. mission in Benghazi nearly a year ago, killing

four Americans. He hasn’t. With Syria, he has sent a message that will almost certainly invite more at-tacks on Americans.

You know things are bad when Russian President Vladimir Putin sounds more decisive and more credible than the American president. The day after Secretary of State John Ker-ry (who looked and sound-ed more presidential than the president) delivered a ringing justifi cation for at-tacking Syria, the president undercut him by passing the buck to Congress.

Obama should have im-mediately recalled Con-gress, as British Prime Minister David Cameron reconvened Parliament. After a serious debate, a majority of MPs rejected any British military role in attacking Syria. Opposition came from all sides. Maybe that’s what the president

fears and why he wants time to lobby members of Congress before a vote.

What will the president do if Congress refuses to go along, as it well may? If Congress won’t authorize military force against Syria, the president will suffer a double blow from which he may not recover. Will he attack anyway and risk backlash from a public ex-hausted by war, or will he suspend attack plans and look emasculated as Da-mascus and others are al-ready claiming he is? Either way, he and America lose.

In view of the president’s disastrous foreign-policy performance, it is surreal to read the citation for his 2009 Nobel Peace Prize, which in a rare moment of humility he admitted was undeserved given his short time in offi ce. The citation said in part: “Obama has as president created a new cli-mate in international poli-tics. Multilateral diplomacy has regained a central posi-tion, with emphasis on the role that the United Nations and other international institutions can play. Dia-logue and negotiations are preferred as instruments for resolving even the most diffi cult international con-fl icts...”

The Nobel committee may want to consider ask-ing the president to return the prize.

Hillary Clinton was right when she said during her run for president in 2008 that Barack Obama lacked foreign-policy experience. Her claim resulted in a cam-paign commercial about which of them could better be trusted to take a 3 a.m. call to the White House.

As Foreign Policy Maga-zine recalls, “(Bill) Clinton also attacked Obama’s lack of experience in interviews with Al Hunt and Charlie Rose in the fi nal months of 2007, arguing that Obama was ill-equipped to handle foreign-policy issues like terrorism and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

The world is again wit-nessing the peril of on-the-job training. Apparently Jimmy Carter’s ineptitude taught us nothing.

The late William James said, “There is no more mis-erable human being than one in whom nothing is ha-bitual but indecision.”

The same might be said for the United States and its president.

(Readers may e-mail Daily Corinthian columnist Cal Thomas at [email protected].)

Obama’s indecisiveness reveals a weak president

Father, we thank You for the sweet glorious message that simple faith claims; that yester-day, today and forever Jesus is still the same. For still He loves to save the sinful, heal the sick and lame. He cheers the mourner and stills the tempest, we give glory to His name. Amen.

“How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth!” — Isaiah 52:7

BY ROGER SIMON

Cal Thomas

Columnist

Sid SalterColumnist

Page 5: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 5, 2013

Nation Briefs State Briefs

Many vet caregiverscut from federal aid

WASHINGTON — John Thomas Doody was in a coma and on a ventilator, but his mom refused to follow a doc-tor’s advice and put the Iraq war veteran in a nursing home.

Chris Ott quit her job, moved the family to Tampa, Fla., so her son, known as J.T., could be near the Veterans Affairs hospital. She spends most of her waking hours trying to meet his many needs.

He was shot while serving with the Ma-rines in Fallujah and suffered an infection and series of strokes during his recovery. She says he’s paralyzed and nearly blind but has made dramatic improve-ment over the years.

To ease the financial burden, Ott relies on a relatively new federal program that pays her a stipend of $2,000 per month, trains her on how to care for J.T. and provides at least 30 days of respite care each year.

The extra help has eased one family’s financial hardship. Yet there’s a question of fairness. For every fam-ily receiving the caregiv-er benefit, many more make do without.

When lawmakers cre-ated the program in 2010, it limited partici-pation to veterans who served since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

King said the move to exclude Vietnam veter-ans shows “they’re still not paying attention” in Congress.

Senate panel favors force in Syria

WASHINGTON — A Senate panel has voted to give President Barack Obama the au-thority to use military force against Syria in response to a deadly chemical weapons at-tack.

The vote Wednesday was 10-7, with one sen-ator voting present. The full Senate is expected to vote on the measure next week.

The resolution would permit Obama to or-der a limited military mission against Syria, as long as it doesn’t exceed 90 days and involves no American troops on the ground for combat operations.

The Democratic chair-man of the Foreign Re-lations Committee, Sen. Bob Menendez, and the panel’s top Republican, Sen. Bob Corker, craft-ed the resolution.

The vote marked the first time lawmakers have voted to authorize military action since the October 2002 votes giving President George W. Bush the authority to invade Iraq.

 Spies missed signsof Syrian strike

WASHINGTON — U.S. intelligence agencies did not detect the Syr-ian regime readying a massive chemical weap-ons attack in the days ahead of the strike, only piecing together what had happened after the fact, U.S. officials say.

One of the key pieces of intelligence that Secretary of State John Kerry later used to

link the attack to the Syrian government — intercepts of commu-nications telling Syrian military units to prepare for the strikes — was in the hands of U.S. intel-ligence agencies but had not yet been “pro-cessed,” according to senior U.S. officials.

That explains why the White House did not warn either the regime or the rebels who might be targeted as it had done when detecting previous preparations for chemical strikes.

“We know that for three days before the attack the Syrian re-gime’s chemical weap-ons personnel were on the ground in the area making preparations,” Kerry said as he pre-sented the evidence in a State Department speech last week.

But the Obama ad-ministration only un-covered the evidence after Syrians started posting reports of the strike from the scene of the attack, leading U.S. spies and analysts to focus on satellite and other evidence showing a Syrian chemical weap-ons unit was preparing chemical munitions be-fore the strike, accord-ing to two current U.S. officials and two former senior intelligence of-ficials.

They spoke on condi-tion of anonymity be-cause they were not au-thorized to discuss the intelligence publicly.

The spokesman for the director of national intelligence confirmed that U.S. intelligence did not detect the mas-sive chemical weapons attack beforehand.

Associated Press

Groups cool on taxhike for roads

JACKSON — A month later, business groups still aren’t ready to raise taxes to repair and build highways and bridges.

In responses to a state Senate study committee, the Mississippi Manu-facturers Association, the Mississippi Trucking Association, gas station owners and farm groups all say they want further study of the efficiency of the Mississippi Depart-ment of Transportation before discussing more revenue.

Highway officials say the state needs hun-dreds of millions of dol-lars a year to repair ex-isting roads and bridges and build new ones. That led Senate Transporta-tion Chairman Willie Simmons, a Cleveland Democrat, to propose as much as $700 million a year in new taxes last month.

 Judge won’t allowdrug test as evidence

GULFPORT — A federal judge says prosecutors can’t use the results of a pretrial drug test as evi-dence during the trial of a man charged with be-ing a user of illegal drugs in possession of a gun.

Scott Jenkins Waits was charged with three weapons violations after authorities found a pipe bomb in a car at a state prison in Leakesville.

Waits wasn’t in the car when the bomb was found June 1, but authorities say he was involved in making it. Prison officials say the bomb wasn’t intended

to be used against the facility.

Court records say Waits failed a drug test after his arrest on June 25. Prosecutors wanted to use that as evidence in his trial.

Waits argued that federal law “prohibits the use of information obtained during pretrial services for purposes of proving guilt in a criminal proceeding.”

U.S. District Judge Louis Guirola in Gulfport agreed in a ruling Tues-day.

The other defendant, John Harberson, has pleaded guilty in the case.

Authorities say Har-berson drove a woman to visit an inmate at the South Mississippi Cor-rectional Institution and forgot the bomb was in the car.

Storm shelter project shelved

OCEAN SPRINGS — The Ocean Springs Board

of Aldermen has dropped plans to pursue a $3.4 million grant to build a city storm shelter which would have doubled as a gymnasium.

Citing budget con-cerns, aldermen voted 5-1 Tuesday night to abandon the project.

The city has spent $184,000 on architec-tural fees for which it received $154,000 in reimbursement from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Officials said the remain-ing city match would have ranged somewhere between zero and $35,000.

Mayor Connie Moran and Grants Administrator Carolyn Martin said by opting out of the project, the city will now have to return the $154,000 in funds to FEMA.

Earlier operational estimates for the facility were said to have been $60,000 — $20,000 for utilities, $30,000 for in-surance, and $10,000 for coaches and supplies.

Associated Press

Legal SceneYour Crossroads Area Guide

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Page 6: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Thursday, September 5, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Man pleads guiltyto enticement charge

OXFORD — A man has pleaded guilty in north Mississippi to using the Internet and a cellphone in an attempt to entice a 15-year-old girl for sex.

El-Habib Oujihna pleaded guilty Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Oxford.

The indictment says that he tried to entice a girl for sex in March.

Court records say the offense happened in Tupelo.

He will be sentenced at a later date.

 Jones County coacharrested in Bay St. Louis

ELLISVILLE — The women’s head basketball coach at Jones County Junior College was arrest-ed Sunday in Bay St. Louis.

Police tell WDAM that Kelton Thompson was booked with DUI, possession of marijuana and care-less driving.

Thompson took over as head coach of the Lady Bobcats in April. He was named Mississippi 4A coach of the year in 2010 and was head coach of last year’s South Mississippi All Star game.

College officials say Thompson has been placed on administra-tive probation with pay pending an investigation.

 Winona aldermen waveron Sunday beer sales

WINONA — The Board of Alder-men put off a decision Tuesday night on whether to allow beer sales on Sunday after dozens of people spoke against the pro-posal.

WCBI reports about 50 people attended the public hearing, but only 4 spoke in favor of permitting Sunday sales. Three businesses submitted petitions in favor of Sunday sales.

Opponents cited safety and health issues while supporters said selling beer on Sunday would boost the local economy.

A convenience store owner last month asked the aldermen to al-low Sunday sales.

After Tuesday night’s discus-sion, aldermen said they wanted more time before making a deci-sion.

 Man sentenced to morethan 5 years in gun case

HATTIESBURG — A federal judge has sentenced a man to more than five years in prison in a south Mississippi firearms case that also snagged two of the man’s brothers.

Clarence Lee was sentenced to 63 months during a hearing Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Hattiesburg.

Authorities say Lee was arrest-ed in Covington County in 2011

and then conspired with his broth-ers to have guns and ammunition removed from his house. He was a felon and not supposed to have guns.

The indictment says Isaac and Michael Lee removed the guns from their brother’s house and concealed them from police.

Isaac and Michael Lee pleaded guilty to obstruction and were sen-tenced to probation.

Michael Lee received four years’ probation and Isaac Lee received three years’ probation.

Authorities say Lee was being held for trial on a cocaine con-spiracy charge when he notified someone in November 2011 to alert his brothers about guns in his Harrison County home.

Michael Lee and Isaac Lee ad-mitted they lied to a federal grand jury about having no knowledge of the guns.

 Nurse’s charge relatedto former cancer clinic

JACKSON — A nurse has been charged with withholding informa-tion about a felony at a former south Mississippi cancer clinic that prosecutors accused of a multimillion dollar fraud related to chemotherapy treatments.

Brittany Davis Powell is charged in U.S. District Court in Jackson with misprision of a felony, or not reporting a crime. She was charged on Aug. 22 in a criminal information, a charge that is usu-ally filed when a defendant in-tends to plead guilty.

The document says Powell didn’t report that the clinic’s founder ordered nurses in December 2010 to make retroactive entries in pa-tients’ files related to health care payments.

Powell’s attorney did not im-mediately respond to a message Wednesday.

Rose Cancer Center founder Dr. Meera Sachdeva and two oth-ers were convicted late last year. Sachdeva was sentenced to 20 years in prison and ordered her to repay nearly $8.2 million after pleading guilty to one count of health care fraud and two counts of making false statements.

At sentencing for Sachdeva, U.S. District Judge Daniel P. Jor-dan III said he was “appalled” by the treatment of the patients, but he said prosecutors didn’t prove that chemotherapy drugs were watered down as has been alleged by prosecutors. However, Jordon said that syringes were re-used at the clinic and multiple patients’ chemotherapy drugs were drawn from the same bag.

Sachdeva established the clinic in Summit in 2005. Authorities say the clinic billed Medicaid and Medicare for about $15.1 million during the scheme.

Among other things, prosecutors said the doctor submitted claims for chemotherapy services that were supposedly given while she was out of the country.

The Mississippi State Depart-ment of Health closed Rose Can-cer Center in July 2012 because of “unsafe infection control prac-tices” after 11 patients were hos-pitalized with the same bacterial infection.

The scare led officials to test nearly 300 cancer patients for infections such as HIV. The de-partment has said at the time that none of the patients tested had blood-borne viral infections re-lated to the clinic’s care. However, a civil lawsuit claimed at least one patient died about the time the clinic was shut down from HIV he contracted there.

 Gulfport shipyard willshut down by May 2014

JACKSON — Huntington Ingalls Industries will close its Gulfport, Miss., composites facility by May 2014, laying off as many as 315 of its 427 employees.

In an announcement Wednes-day morning, the Newport News, Va.-based company said the shut-down is necessary because of a reduction in work for the Navy’s Zumwalt-class destroyers.

Huntington Ingalls said it would cost $59 million to close the ship-yard, with most of that being a non-cash write-off of the value of the Gulfport assets. The company said it expects the write-off to be incurred over the next 18 months and to cut third-quarter profit by $15 million to $20 million.

At least 100 employees will transfer to the main Ingalls Ship-building yard in Pascagoula, Miss., said Huntington Ingalls spokes-woman Jerri Fuller Dickseski. She said that workers who are being laid off will be offered opportuni-ties there.

“We’re initiating what we call a pathway to Pascagoula,” she said.

The company has 9,900 work-ers in Pascagoula right now, and spokeswoman Beci Brenton said the company is “aggressively hir-ing” there to handle an increasing workload.

 Biloxi council considersrezoning for casino

BILOXI — The Biloxi City Council will hold a public hearing on Oct. 1 on a zoning change for an area west of Interstate 10 on the Back Bay for a $220 million casino.

Developers told the council Tuesday night that new flood regu-lations make the 18-acre site un-affordable for residential or small business development.

Wayne Hengen, the attorney for the developers, says the 18-acre site is controlled by local property owners.

The developers have asked that the site be rezoned as waterfront, which is required for a casino.

Hengen says the Mississippi Gaming Commission will decide once the zoning change is made whether the property is a legal casino site.

State Briefs

Associated Press

Education chief suggests later school day

WASHINGTON — A later start to the school day could help teenagers get the most from their classroom time and local districts should consider delaying the first bell, Education Secretary Arne Duncan said Wednesday.

School districts would still be free to set their own start times, Duncan insisted in a broadcast interview, but he pointed to research that backs up his comments that rested students are ready students. Duncan said he would not be telling lo-cal school leaders when their first bells should ring and said it was up to local leaders to make the decisions on their own.

“There’s lots of research and common sense that lots of teens struggle to get up ... to get on the bus,” said Duncan, the former chief of Chi-cago Public Schools.

The main reason?“Teen brains have a different biology,” said Kyla

Wahlstrom, director at the University of Minne-sota’s Center for Applied Research and Education Improvement.

For the last 17 years, Wahlstrom has studied teenagers’ sleep cycles, brains and learning. She has concluded that schools that want ready stu-dents must have students arrive rested. Absen-teeism, tardiness, depression, obesity, drop-out rates and even auto accidents all decline when students head to school after a good night of sleep.

 Feds won’t enforce same-sex vets law

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration said Wednesday it will stop enforcing a law that blocks benefits to partners of military veterans in same-sex marriages.

In a letter to congressional leaders, Attorney General Eric Holder said that a provision in federal law on benefits to veterans and their families de-fines “spouse” to mean a person of the opposite sex. He says that definition leaves out legally mar-ried same-sex couples, and runs afoul of a June Supreme Court ruling.

The court declared unconstitutional a provi-sion in the Defense of Marriage Act restricting the words marriage and spouse to apply only to heterosexual unions. Holder says that like the Defense of Marriage Act, the provision in the vet-erans benefits law has the effect of placing law-fully married same-sex couples in a second-tier marriage.

“Decisions by the Executive not to enforce fed-eral laws are appropriately rare,” Holder told Con-gress. “Nevertheless, the unique circumstances presented here warrant non-enforcement.”

He said the Supreme Court’s conclusion that DOMA imposes a stigma on everyone in same-sex marriages “would seem to apply equally” to the veterans benefits law. Holder noted that after the Supreme Court’s decision, the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group of the House of Representatives withdrew from a pending lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the veterans benefits provi-sions.

President Barack Obama directed the executive branch to cease enforcement of the provision, Holder wrote.

 General: Conditions set to win Afghan war

WASHINGTON — The No. 2 American command-er in Afghanistan said Wednesday he believes the stage has been set for winning the war, but hard fighting lies ahead for Afghan forces now suffering heavy casualties.

Army Lt. Gen. Mark Milley also told reporters by video teleconference from his headquarters in Kabul that he thinks the Taliban no longer are ca-pable of overthrowing the U.S.-backed Afghan gov-ernment. But, he said, the insurgents are resilient and capable of continuing to fight “for a fairly long period of time.”

The U.S. and its NATO allies are due to com-plete their combat mission in Afghanistan in De-cember 2014.

“Right now I would say that the conditions are set for winning this war. But it is not yet won, and it is not yet over,” Milley said.

He said the Taliban have failed to achieve their 2013 strategic goal of regaining lost ground.

Carolyn KiddyFuneral services for Carolyn Kid-

dy, 64, of Corinth are set for 1 p.m. Friday at Magnolia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial at Henry Cemetery.

Mrs. Kiddy died Sept. 3, 2013 at Magnolia Regional Health Center.

She was born Sept. 17, 1948. She was a homemaker. Mrs. Kiddy was of the Pentecostal faith and was a member of Soul’s Harbor Pentecos-tal Church.

She is survived by her husband of 47 years, Junior Kiddy of Corinth; her son, Greg Kiddy (Rogenia) of Southaven; her daughter, Sherry Holt (Aaron) of Corinth; her grand-children, Stephanie Kiddy Mathis (Raymond), Dylan Adams, Avery Holt, Bailey Holt, Aiden Holt and Chloe Mathis, all of Corinth, and Drew Kiddy, Zachary Kiddy and Justin Kiddy, all of Southaven; and her sisters, Eulene Lancaster of Corinth and Ann Craig of Horn Lake.

She was pre-ceded in death by her mother, Es-telle Thorn Mad-dox; her broth-ers, Quitman Maddox, Troy Maddox and Paul Maddox; and her sisters, Essie Cato and Eddie Ruth Hunter.

Bro. Randy Jourdan and Bro. Matthew Joshlin will offi ciate.

Visitation is tonight from 5-9 p.m. and Friday from 12 p.m. until service time at Magnolia Funeral Home.

Nona Moore

HERNANDO — Nona Blythe Moore, 82, died Monday, Sept. 2, 2013. Visitation will be Friday at 6 p.m. at Ludlam Funeral Home in Iuka. Funeral service will be Sat-urday at Ludlam Funeral Home

Chapel at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Mt. Moriah Cemetery in Iuka. Bro. Wesley Kingsley and Bro; Russ Wil-lard will offi ciate.

She is survived by her husband, James E. Moore of Hernando; her son, Relmon Terry Blythe (Cindy) of Hernando; her daughters, Phyl-lis Marie Henson (Mike) of South-aven and Tammy Jeannine Hines of Hernando; her sisters, Gaye Nell Williams of Cairo and Arvilla Hayes of Corinth; her grandchildren, Jennifer M. Palmertree, Jeffrey B. Palmertree, Jeremy A. Blythe, Sarah J. Hines, Jason Crumpton, Holt Henson; and 12 great-grand-children.

She was preceded in death by her parents, John W. Linton and Mary A. Farris Linton, her sisters, Annie Lou Linton, Jewel Linton Clark, Johnny Randolph and Jimmie Bell Linton; her brothers, Grady E. “Bunk” Linton, Homer W. “Dut” Linton and Lloyd E. Linton; and her granddaughter, Erica Henson.

Kiddy

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Page 7: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 5, 2013 • 7

Getaway, PG-13, 1⁄2*, Ethan Hawke, Selma Guny, Jon Vought; Dark Castle Entertainment; Director Courtney Solo-mon; length — 90 min-utes

With a shortage of funding, help, and tons of computer problems, the Technology Department stays busy repairing, pre-paring for online testing, and solving problems that occur constantly. All of us in the Technology De-partment enjoy our jobs, but sometimes we need a “Getaway.”

I chose to go and see the action pic “Getaway,” in part do the fact I needed one. With a shortage of funding, help and tons of

computer problems, the school’s t e c h n o l -ogy de-p a r t m e n t where I work stays busy re-p a i r i n g , preparing for online testing, and solving prob-lems. I enjoy my job but it can be frustrating at times.

Unfortunately, the movie’s star Brent Magna (Ethan Hawke) has as many problems and is-sues as I do so the movie did not help much as far as getting away from stressful situations.

In “Getaway” Brent dis-covers his wife has been kidnapped and he must steal a car and drive like a bat out of a dark cave in order to see his wife alive again. The movie’s plot should have thrown up a red herring. And, of course, there are ulterior motives in this ridiculous plan.

Brent is a former race driver living with his wife in Sofi a, Bulgaria. He be-

came too reckless and wild, so he gave up racing.

The adrenalin fl ows as Brent steals a car and has to keep the car’s owner Kid (Selena Gomez) in the car with him. He then drives like a maniac through the city of So-phia.

He has every police car in Sofi a chasing him. Of course, he is a great driv-er so they are unable to catch him.

Kid turns out to be of some help to Brent. She is savvy with technology and knows the streets of Sofi a.

As the movie progress-es, we begin to under-stand what is happening. The car he has to steal has cameras and a phone. The bad guys who kidnapped his wife are watching ev-ery move he makes. He is being spied on while he is told what to do. I know —this sounds corny.

The man with the voice, who is called, “The Voice,” talks to Brent on the phone in the car and does not show his face un-til the last scene.

I really like good car chases, but it was hard

to fi nd one in “Getaway,” due to the rapid repeti-tion of brief cuts. Some-times you can’t even see what is happening. In all honesty, by the end of the movie, I was more than ready to getaway.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Terry Burns is technology coordinator for the McNairy County School System. A life-long movie buff, he can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Terry’s movie grading scale: fi ve-plus stars — as good as it gets; fi ve stars — don’t miss; four stars — excellent; three stars — good; two stars — fair; one star — poor; no stars — don’t bother.)

Couldn’t wait to ‘Getaway’ from this movie

Terry Burns

Movie Critic

Terry Burns’ movie ratingsLee Daniels’ The Butler PG-13 ****Paranoia PG-13 ****Elysium R **1⁄22 Guns R ***1⁄2Red 2 PG-13 ***

A Harley-Davidson motorcycle might be the highest art form ever de-vised by mankind. Its engine’s deep-throated, all-American, guts-and-glory roar brings tears to my eyes.

I’ve always loved the sound of mechanical power. Many a day, for long spells, I’ve parked on dirt roads separating Mis-sissippi Delta fi elds, and let myself be hypnotized by the steady, staccato rhythm of diesel engines, walking center pivot ir-rigation systems in huge circles, pumping home-made rain to thirsty cot-

ton plants.Once this love of ma-

chines and the music they make got me in a ton of teenage trouble.

A drainage canal bor-dered Dad’s farm, and occasionally the coun-ty’s crane dredged it of silt and debris. The old Bucyrus dragline clanked clumsily on fl at tracks, its open cab offering the driver no creature com-forts. But when its huge engine swiveled the ma-chine while lifting and lowering the bucket, it snored as effortlessly and contentedly as a coon dog asleep under a shade tree after an all-night hunt.

We barefoot boys

watched as the bucket dumped reeking sludge, eels, turtles, garfi sh, and other drainage canal den-izens on the bank.

One day as Mr. Doo-little, the county’s crane operator, readied the ma-chine for a day’s work, I asked to sit in the cab and watch him operate it. He agreed, even offering to show me how to crank the engine and swing the bucket.

When a spell of heavy rains set in and fi lled the canal to its banks, Mr. Doolittle’s work was halt-ed, setting the stage for much muddy mischief.

“That crane is way out in the middle of no-

where,” I said to my eager pals. “Nobody will know if we play on it. Shoot, I’ll even show y’all how to crank it.”

Crank I did, and pushed levers and pedals until I could swing the bucket in an arc over the water. We took turns climbing in and out of the cab, riding the bucket over the canal, and fl inging ourselves outward, kicking and screaming our way down to the water. Soon we had coated the levers, pedals, seat and cab with mud.

Our errant adolescent adventure halted abrupt-ly when the county pick-up pulled up behind the crane. Mr. Doolittle’s face

was livid, and a face even more livid belonged to the man next to him: Dad.

Mr. Doolittle killed the crane’s engine, and Dad thumbed us toward the back of the pickup. We muddy, miserable musk-rats huddled hopelessly, watching two angry men’s heads in the pickup cab nodding vigorously while discussing our impending punishment.

“Boys, Mr. Doolittle is bringing the crane to the farm shop,” Dad growled. “Here are brushes and buckets. Y’all will spit shine that machine from one end to the other, you’ll scrub his pickup, and then — and then!

— I’m going to belt your butts to frazzles while Mr. Doolittle watches.” And … that’s exactly what hap-pened.

I still love the roar of powerful engines, but I guarantee y’all this: Being a crane operator is no lon-ger a dream of us muddy buddies.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist and Oxford resi-dent Jimmy Reeds is a newspaper columnist, author and college pro-fessor. His latest collec-tion of short stories is “Boss, Jaybird And Me: Anthology Of Short Sto-ries.” He can be contact-ed at [email protected].)

Muddy buddies abandon crane operating careersBY JIMMY REED

Columnist

JACKSON — Director Tate Taylor says he wants to make his native Missis-sippi a place where people can build careers with steady work in the movie business.

He fi lmed “The Help” in the state in 2010 and an-nounced Aug. 26 that he will make a feature fi lm about the Godfather of Soul, James Brown, with the intention of shooting “every frame” in Missis-sippi.

Work is set for Novem-ber and December in and around the Mississippi River town of Natchez and for January and Feb-ruary in and around the capital city, Jackson.

Taylor, who grew up in Jackson and lives on a former plantation near Natchez, also dangled the possibility of making other movies in the state in the future.

“It’s my hope also that young Mississippians, Mississippians of all ages, will soon be able to pur-sue a career in the enter-tainment industry, but without having to go to Los Angeles, like I did,” Taylor said at the an-nouncement.

That prompted ap-plause and smiles from Gov. Phil Bryant and oth-er top offi cials who joined the director outside the Mississippi Coliseum on the state fairgrounds, where some concert scenes will be shot.

Mississippi Develop-

ment Authority offi cials said it’s too early to know how many jobs the James Brown movie will cre-ate, but they’ve been told about 7,000 to 9,000 paychecks will be issued. A paycheck could be a couple hundred dollars to a local actress who works as an extra, or thousands of dollars to people who provide services such as catering.

“I found out just enough about moviemak-ing to know that it is a business,” Bryant said.

Taylor said studios will shoot movies where it makes the most economic sense, and he believes Mississippi’s newly re-vamped fi lm incentives help make the state more attractive. Lawmakers updated the incentives earlier this year, with re-bates of up to $10 million per project for nationally distributed feature fi lms, documentaries and TV shows. The package in-cludes payroll rebates for hiring in-state residents.

Bryant said the state is providing incentives for Taylor’s project, and offi cials will put a dol-lar fi gure on the incen-tives after they know how many people will be hired and how much money the fi lmmakers will spend. The movie from Universal Pictures and Imagine En-tertainment is not yet ti-tled. Chadwick Boseman, who played Jackie Robin-son in “42,” has been cast to portray Brown.

Mississippi approved incentives for 23 fi lm projects in 2012 and about 20 projects so far in 2013, though not all of the projects that were ap-

proved have been made.Taylor pointed to New

Orleans as a successful movie-making hub. Loui-siana is known for gener-ous fi lm incentives, and Taylor said the city has a ready-made workforce of people who know how to do a variety of movie or TV production jobs.

Ward Emling, Missis-sippi’s longtime fi lm com-missioner, said someone working as a location scout for a movie might make a couple hundred dollars a day. After gain-ing experience, the same person could draw a much higher paycheck as a location manager.

“The upward mobility, for a conscientious work-er, is pretty good,” Emling said.

Natchez Mayor Butch Brown said he has met with Taylor over the past several weeks to discuss

possible sites for fi lming the James Brown movie.

“We’re trying to build a reputation here to build a good production commu-nity,” Butch Brown said.

Steve Hale, now a fi rst-term state senator, was mayor of Senatobia from 1993 to 2001, when parts of two movies were fi lmed in the north Mississippi town: “The Client” and “The People vs. Larry Flynt.” He said a few local people got on-screen jobs as extras, and fi lmmakers renovated a courtroom in the Tate County Court-house for the Flynt movie. While movie production is temporary, “it creates an air of excitement and it adds a little something to your economy,” Hale

said.Taylor said when “A

Time to Kill” was fi lmed in Mississippi in the mid-1990s, he worked as a production assistant, which he called “the low-est job on the totem pole.” After that, he moved to Los Angeles.

“And, luckily, it kind of worked out for me,” he said.

Still, Taylor said he knows there are people who live in Mississippi and want to work in mov-ies or TV but they have family and can’t just pack up and leave.

“I think with all of our hard work, we will soon see great talent rising up from our native soil,” Tay-lor said.

Director says he wants to grow film industry in stateAssociated Press

“It’s my hope also that young Mississippians, Mississippians of all ages, will soon be able

to pursue a career in the entertainment industry,but without having to go

to Los Angeles, like I did.”

Director Tate TaylorNative Mississippian

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Page 8: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 5, 2013

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

15,658.43 12,471.49 Dow Industrials 14,930.87 +96.91 +.65 +13.94 +14.436,686.86 4,838.10 Dow Transportation 6,343.95 +72.97 +1.16 +19.54 +28.13

537.86 435.57 Dow Utilities 471.86 -1.04 -.22 +4.14 +1.169,695.46 7,841.76 NYSE Composite 9,400.23 +66.75 +.72 +11.33 +17.622,509.57 2,186.97 NYSE MKT 2,298.55 +7.99 +.35 -2.42 -4.423,694.19 2,810.80 Nasdaq Composite 3,649.04 +36.43 +1.01 +20.85 +18.891,709.67 1,343.35 S&P 500 1,653.08 +13.31 +.81 +15.91 +17.79

18,157.57 14,036.94 Wilshire 5000 17,560.27 +136.24 +.78 +17.11 +19.601,063.52 763.55 Russell 2000 1,025.58 +9.32 +.92 +20.75 +24.88

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YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DADT Cp n 21 39.11 -.03AES Corp dd 12.64 -.06AK Steel dd 3.34 -.01AbtLab s ... 33.46 +.53AbbVie n 13 43.13 +.54AberFitc 13 35.12 +.19ActivsBliz 14 17.10 +.12AdobeSy 42 46.93 +1.05AMD dd 3.31 +.04Aeropostl dd 7.98 +.12Affymetrix dd 6.17 +.48Agilent 18 47.87 +.94AlcatelLuc ... 3.04 +.18Alcoa 29 7.84 +.12AlldNevG 10 4.78 +.20AllscriptH dd 14.49 -.10Allstate 11 48.24 -.22AlphaNRs dd 6.14 -.10AlteraCp lf 24 37.23 +1.35Altria 17 34.17 +.34AmBev ... 34.35 -.22Amarin ... 6.67 +.36Amazon dd 293.64 +4.84AMovilL 11 19.41 +.17ACapAgy 4 22.80 +.29AmCapLtd 7 12.81 +.13AEagleOut 13 14.66 +.29AmExp 18 73.14 +.71AmIntlGrp 27 48.29 +.62AmTower 43 69.24 +.01Amgen 19 113.02 +2.01Anadarko 27 92.16 -.55AnglogldA ... 13.63 +.02Annaly 3 11.60 +.04Apache 13 85.53 +.74Apple Inc 12 498.69 +10.11ApldMatl dd 15.62 +.51ArcelorMit dd 13.48 +.21ArchCoal dd 4.62 +.05ArchDan 18 36.10 +.70ArenaPhm dd 6.55 -.02AriadP dd 20.35 +1.15ArmourRsd 2 4.16 +.05AssuredG 8 20.36 +.38AstexPhm ... 8.27 +1.59Atmel dd 7.54 +.24AuRico g dd 4.32 +.04AutoNatn 17 47.50 +.25Autodesk 39 37.12 -.01AvanirPhm dd 5.66 +.28Avon dd 19.84 +.09B2gold g ... 2.72 +.05Baidu 28 134.49 -1.68BakrHu 20 47.73 +.88BcBilVArg ... 9.95 +.16BcoBrad pf ... 11.83 +.02BcoSantSA ... 7.19 -.04BkofAm 26 14.32 +.08BkNYMel 18 30.39 +.27Barclay ... 18.18 +.47BariPVix rs q 16.34 -.07BarrickG dd 19.41 -.10Baxter 17 69.70 +.65BedBath 16 72.36 -1.40BerkH B 15 112.08BestBuy dd 37.14 +.15BioMarin dd 69.46 +1.40BlackBerry dd 10.75 +.54Blackstone 21 22.18 +.04BlockHR 18 27.70 -.18Boeing 19 106.37 +1.36BostonSci ... 10.93 +.03BrMySq 51 41.99 +.27Broadcom 37 25.92 +.74BrcdeCm 18 7.57 +.04BrkfldOfPr 6 16.09 +.02CBS B 21 54.60 +1.10CMS Eng 17 26.00 -.16CSX 14 25.29 +.38CVS Care 17 58.62 +.10CYS Invest dd 7.71 +.18CabotOG s 69 39.43 -.50Cadence 7 13.42 +.15CampSp 26 42.92 +.17CdnSolar dd 13.47 +.25CpstnTurb dd 1.07 -.04CareFusion 21 36.32 +.59Carlisle 26 67.08 +.41Carnival 19 35.88 -.10Celgene 41 146.07 +3.06CelldexTh dd 23.90 +1.50Cemex ... 11.13 -.13CenterPnt 52 22.93 +.17CntryLink 19 32.50 +.13CheniereEn dd 28.83 +.29ChesEng dd 26.12 -.04Chicos 15 15.53 +.12Chimera ... 2.95 +.02CienaCorp dd 23.54 +2.86Cirrus 11 23.81 +1.43Cisco 13 23.77 +.29Citigroup 13 49.60 +.23CliffsNRs dd 21.54 +.22Coach 15 53.41 +.25CocaCE 26 38.74 +.40CognizTech 20 75.70 +1.21ColeREI n ... 11.16 +.05ColgPalm s 24 57.80 +.35Compuwre dd 10.81 +.11ConAgra 16 33.86 -.04ConocoPhil 11 67.66 +.87ConstellA 29 56.01 +.83Corning 11 14.18 +.26Covidien 16 60.75 +1.16CSVelIVST q 24.40 +.06CSVxSht rs q 19.17 +.01CubistPh 45 62.21 -2.25CumMed dd 5.16 -.03CypSemi cc 11.20 +.12DCT Indl cc 6.87 +.18DDR Corp dd 15.47 +.10DR Horton 14 17.83 +.03DeltaAir 9 20.31 +.47DenburyR 16 17.51 +.18DBGoldDS q 5.87 +.16DirecTV 12 58.38 -.19DirSPBr rs q 48.69 -1.28DxGldBll rs q 79.38 +1.04DxFinBr rs q 31.65 -.69DxSCBr rs q 26.39 -.72DxFnBull s q 65.43 +1.35DirDGdBr s q 26.30 -.35DxSCBull s q 54.50 +1.35Discover 10 48.33 +.57DiscComA 29 76.92 -.42Disney 18 61.11 +.18DollarGen 19 56.39 +2.51DomRescs 50 57.62 +.40DonlleyRR 12 16.48 +.05DowChm 42 37.78 +.34DryShips dd 2.49 +.16DuPont 12 57.23 +.84DukeEngy 19 64.69 -.27

E-F-G-HE-CDang dd 7.86 -.28E-House dd 7.93 +1.75E-Trade dd 15.71 +1.17eBay 25 51.45 +1.13EMC Cp 21 26.21 +.22Eaton 17 64.99 +1.91Elan dd 15.39 +.12EldorGld g 32 8.76 +.01ElectArts 70 27.99 +.63EmersonEl 22 61.33 +.63EmpDist 15 20.97 +.05EnCana g 13 17.25 +.17EndoPhrm dd 43.06 +1.23ENSCO 10 54.46 -.01Ericsson ... 12.72 +.33Exelis 10 14.91 +.12Exelixis dd 5.42 +.18Exelon 22 30.09Expedia 49 48.91 +1.64ExpScripts 29 64.56 +.06ExxonMbl 9 87.76 +.61Facebook cc 41.78 -.09FamilyDlr 19 70.29 +.76FedExCp 22 107.61 +.01FidlNFin 10 24.60 +.05FifthThird 10 18.36 +.05Finisar dd 22.50 +1.35FstHorizon 18 11.22 +.17FstNiagara 23 10.02 +.01FstSolar 10 36.47 -.40FirstEngy 16 36.78 -.16Flextrn 28 9.10 +.16FootLockr 12 32.86 +.78ForestOil 17 5.45 +.06Francesca 16 17.79 -6.23FrSea rsh ... .18 +.01

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

Microsoft 1397736 31.20 -.69NokiaCp 1296392 5.33 +.21MicronT 1084341 14.75 +.74S&P500ETF 819640 165.75 +1.36FordM 690714 16.91 +.57BkofAm 678479 14.32 +.08iShEMkts 571783 38.94 +.68iShJapan 465977 11.31 +.17Facebook 414664 41.78 -.09Intel 361862 22.64 +.57

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 2,189Declined 875Unchanged 104

Total issues 3,168New Highs 70New Lows 34

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,646Declined 864Unchanged 97

Total issues 2,607New Highs 82New Lows 24

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

RochMed 19.91 +6.10 +44.2E-House 7.93 +1.75 +28.3Repros wtB 20.89 +4.27 +25.7AstexPhm 8.27 +1.59 +23.8LiveDeal 4.07 +.75 +22.6ChinHydro 2.70 +.47 +21.1Gain Cap 9.04 +1.56 +20.9DxIndiBl rs 35.35 +5.70 +19.2AcornIntl 2.50 +.40 +19.0StdRegis rs 12.70 +1.87 +17.3

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

MiMedx 3.85 -2.21 -36.5ProspGR rs 2.15 -.90 -29.5Francesca 17.79 -6.23 -25.9Unilife 3.03 -.52 -14.6RingEngy 13.50 -2.25 -14.3AmrRlty 4.40 -.57 -11.5CS VSSlv rs91.56 -9.30 -9.2Ryanair 44.51 -4.35 -8.9ArQule 2.29 -.20 -8.0Versar 4.63 -.40 -7.9

AllianzGINFJAllCpValIns14.64 +0.11 +16.9NFJSmCVIs 35.30 +0.26 +17.9American BeaconLgCpVlInv 24.85 +0.22 +21.0LgCpVlIs 26.24 +0.23 +21.3American CenturyEqIncInv 8.64 +0.06 +11.6GrowthInv 30.82 +0.28 +14.7UltraInv 31.16 +0.28 +19.7ValueInv 7.52 +0.05 +18.9American FundsAMCAPA m 25.76 +0.20 +21.3BalA m 22.35 +0.09 +10.5BondA m 12.31 -0.02 -3.5CapIncBuA m 55.26 +0.17 +6.6CapWldBdA m19.78 ... -5.8CpWldGrIA m 40.97 +0.20 +11.8EurPacGrA m 43.77 +0.19 +6.2FnInvA m 46.93 +0.35 +15.7GrthAmA m 40.64 +0.32 +18.3HiIncA m 11.16 -0.01 +2.5IncAmerA m 19.28 +0.07 +8.6IntBdAmA m 13.36 -0.02 -2.0IntlGrInA m 33.17 +0.12 +6.3InvCoAmA m 35.16 +0.30 +17.5MutualA m 32.42 +0.24 +15.5NewEconA m 35.05 +0.22 +23.3NewPerspA m 35.01 +0.23 +12.0NwWrldA m 54.67 +0.27 +0.3SmCpWldA m 46.55 +0.33 +16.6TaxEBdAmA m12.18 ... -5.3WAMutInvA m 36.26 +0.24 +17.4AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.36 +0.01 -4.4ArtisanIntl d 27.23 +0.05 +10.7IntlVal d 35.68 +0.12 +17.4MdCpVal 25.50 +0.24 +22.7MidCap 45.93 +0.57 +22.3BBHTaxEffEq d 20.03 +0.06 +15.4BaronGrowth b 65.18 +0.59 +21.6BernsteinDiversMui 14.17 ... -2.7IntDur 13.28 -0.03 -4.0TxMIntl 15.32 +0.11 +9.6BlackRockEngy&ResA m30.81 +0.17 +6.5EqDivA m 21.97 +0.13 +11.4EqDivI 22.02 +0.13 +11.6GlobAlcA m 20.93 +0.07 +6.7GlobAlcC m 19.45 +0.07 +6.2GlobAlcI 21.03 +0.07 +6.9HiYldBdIs 8.08 +0.01 +4.1HiYldInvA m 8.08 +0.01 +3.9Cohen & SteersRealty 63.71 +0.46 -0.2ColumbiaAcornIntZ 44.20 +0.30 +9.4AcornZ 35.14 +0.34 +16.9DivIncZ 16.86 +0.11 +15.5DivOppA m 9.86 +0.07 +14.5DFA1YrFixInI 10.31 -0.01 +0.12YrGlbFII 10.04 ... +0.25YrGlbFII 10.94 -0.01 -1.5EmMkCrEqI 18.41 +0.14 -9.0EmMktValI 26.79 +0.26 -9.4IntSmCapI 18.10 +0.07 +14.8RelEstScI 25.84 +0.20 -0.8USCorEq1I 14.77 +0.12 +20.4USCorEq2I 14.66 +0.13 +21.1USLgCo 13.09 +0.11 +17.6USLgValI 28.08 +0.26 +23.5USMicroI 18.03 +0.14 +23.6USSmValI 32.10 +0.21 +22.7USSmallI 27.82 +0.23 +23.0USTgtValI 20.84 +0.16 +22.8DWS-ScudderGrIncS 21.78 +0.21 +19.9DavisNYVentA m 38.49 +0.19 +19.6NYVentY 38.95 +0.19 +19.8Dimensional InvestmeIntCorEqI 11.62 +0.09 +10.8IntlSCoI 17.75 +0.12 +12.9IntlValuI 18.00 +0.15 +10.7Dodge & CoxBal 89.55 +0.38 +15.9Income 13.42 -0.02 -1.7IntlStk 38.50 +0.35 +11.1Stock 147.73 +1.02 +22.2DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.84 ... -1.4DreyfusAppreciaInv 47.69 +0.35 +9.6DriehausActiveInc 10.75 ... +1.8FMILgCap 20.07 +0.12 +17.4FPACres d 31.67 +0.10 +13.0NewInc d 10.41 ... +0.1Fairholme FundsFairhome d 38.50 +0.45 +22.5FederatedStrValI 5.46 +0.03 +12.1ToRetIs 10.86 -0.01 -2.9FidelityAstMgr20 13.24 +0.01 +1.6AstMgr50 17.38 +0.05 +6.4Bal 22.05 +0.13 +10.1BlChGrow 60.15 +0.64 +22.6CapApr 35.01 +0.35 +19.2CapInc d 9.47 +0.01 +3.1Contra 90.27 +0.70 +17.4DivGrow 34.95 +0.28 +16.9DivrIntl d 32.89 +0.13 +9.9EqInc 54.47 +0.39 +16.9EqInc II 22.41 +0.14 +16.2FF2015 12.32 +0.03 +5.1FF2035 12.75 +0.06 +10.4FF2040 8.96 +0.04 +10.5Fidelity 38.94 +0.35 +14.5FltRtHiIn d 9.94 ... +2.3Free2010 14.78 +0.03 +4.9Free2020 15.05 +0.03 +5.9Free2025 12.72 +0.04 +7.8Free2030 15.41 +0.06 +8.5GNMA 11.16 -0.04 -3.9GrowCo 114.64 +1.22 +23.0GrowInc 25.27 +0.19 +19.9HiInc d 9.19 -0.01 +2.1IntMuniInc d 10.08 ... -3.5IntlDisc d 36.43 +0.19 +10.2InvGrdBd 7.61 -0.01 -3.5LatinAm d 36.99 +0.19 -20.1LevCoSt d 38.88 +0.34 +20.7LowPriStk d 47.46 +0.23 +20.2Magellan 87.03 +0.71 +19.3MidCap d 35.86 +0.28 +23.2MuniInc d 12.47 ... -5.8NewMktIn d 15.56 -0.04 -9.2OTC 80.23 +0.93 +32.4Puritan 21.19 +0.11 +10.0ShTmBond 8.54 -0.01 -0.2SmCapDisc d 28.51 +0.20 +22.7StratInc 10.79 -0.02 -2.6Tel&Util 20.00 +0.07 +8.5TotalBd 10.42 -0.02 -3.1USBdIdx 11.30 -0.02 -3.5USBdIdxInv 11.30 -0.03 -3.6Value 92.53 +0.74 +21.2Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 26.78 +0.19 +17.7NewInsI 27.15 +0.20 +17.9StratIncA m 12.05 -0.01 -2.8Fidelity SelectBiotech d 168.02 +3.47 +52.8HealtCar d 176.07 +1.97 +34.4Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 58.80 +0.49 +17.6500IdxInstl 58.80 +0.48 +17.6500IdxInv 58.79 +0.48 +17.5ExtMktIdAg d 48.27 +0.42 +21.8IntlIdxAdg d 37.60 +0.20 +9.7TotMktIdAg d 48.66 +0.41 +18.4First EagleGlbA m 52.43 +0.18 +7.9OverseasA m 23.17 +0.05 +5.2FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A m 11.52 ... -7.2FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 6.78 +0.01 -7.2GrowthA m 57.48 ... +13.6HY TF A m 9.64 -0.01 -9.4HighIncA m 2.04 ... +2.4Income C m 2.31 ... +6.2IncomeA m 2.29 ... +6.7IncomeAdv 2.27 ... +6.4NY TF A m 11.00 ... -6.9

Name P/E Last Chg

3,166,625,046Volume 1,774,920,730Volume

14,000

14,400

14,800

15,200

15,600

16,000

M A M J J A

14,760

14,920

15,080Dow Jones industrialsClose: 14,930.87Change: 96.91 (0.7%)

10 DAYS

RisDvA m 44.16 ... +16.8StrIncA m 10.33 ... -0.5USGovA m 6.44 -0.01 -3.0FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 32.83 ... +14.6DiscovA m 32.34 ... +14.4QuestZ 18.99 ... +14.7Shares Z 26.17 ... +16.4SharesA m 25.92 ... +16.2FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 7.77 ... +13.1GlBond C m 12.76 ... -2.8GlBondA m 12.74 ... -2.5GlBondAdv 12.70 ... -2.3GrowthA m 22.33 ... +14.9WorldA m 18.17 ... +15.4Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 12.35 ... +12.3GES&SUSEq 54.04 +0.46 +21.7GMOEmgMktsVI d 10.51 +0.06 -10.5IntItVlIV 22.89 +0.15 +10.2QuIII 24.92 +0.12 +13.4QuVI 24.94 +0.12 +13.5Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.21 ... +3.0MidCpVaIs 47.28 +0.54 +20.3ShDuTFIs 10.48 ... -0.7HarborBond 11.87 -0.05 -3.9CapApInst 50.17 +0.41 +18.0IntlInstl 66.06 +0.26 +6.3IntlInv b 65.29 +0.26 +6.1HartfordCapAprA m 42.83 +0.40 +24.5CpApHLSIA 53.37 +0.48 +23.0DvGrHLSIA 24.79 +0.18 +18.1INVESCOCharterA m 21.02 +0.14 +17.0ComstockA m 21.45 +0.15 +21.3EqIncomeA m 10.52 +0.06 +15.5GrowIncA m 25.23 +0.19 +21.2HiYldMuA m 8.93 ... -8.4IvyAssetStrA m 28.86 +0.07 +11.5AssetStrC m 28.01 +0.07 +11.0JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.52 -0.02 -2.8CoreBondA m 11.51 -0.03 -3.1CoreBondSelect11.50 -0.03 -3.0HighYldSel 8.04 ... +2.8LgCapGrA m 27.68 +0.21 +15.4LgCapGrSelect27.67 +0.21 +15.5MidCpValI 33.21 +0.26 +18.6ShDurBndSel 10.87 -0.01 -0.5USEquit 13.34 +0.12 +19.5USLCpCrPS 26.58 +0.27 +20.2JanusBalT 28.61 +0.08 +9.9GlbLfScT 41.16 +0.55 +37.5PerkinsMCVT 24.52 +0.17 +14.9John HancockLifAg1 b 14.62 +0.11 +13.4LifBa1 b 14.51 +0.06 +7.8LifGr1 b 15.00 +0.09 +11.4LazardEmgMkEqtI d 17.86 +0.03 -8.6Legg Mason/WesternAggGrowA m162.56 +2.23 +28.6CrPlBdIns 11.07 -0.03 -3.2Longleaf PartnersLongPart 30.80 +0.18 +16.7SmCap 34.51 +0.16 +19.5Loomis SaylesBdInstl 14.81 +0.06 +1.1BdR b 14.74 +0.05 +0.8Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 14.16 +0.11 +18.7BondDebA m 8.08 ... +3.1ShDurIncA m 4.54 ... +0.1ShDurIncC m 4.57 ... -0.4MFSIsIntlEq 20.61 +0.11 +7.1TotRetA m 16.50 +0.06 +10.0ValueA m 30.19 +0.24 +20.1ValueI 30.34 +0.24 +20.3MainStayHiYldCorA m 5.98 ... +2.5Manning & NapierWrldOppA 8.37 +0.01 +8.0Matthews AsianChina d 23.49 +0.07 +0.1India d 12.87 +0.33 -26.5MergerMerger b 16.09 +0.02 +1.6Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.46 -0.03 -1.8TotRtBd b 10.47 -0.02 -2.0Morgan Stanley InstlIntlEqI d 15.67 +0.09 +9.2MdCpGrI 42.37 +0.25 +22.0Munder FundsMdCpCrGrY 39.13 +0.39 +19.5NatixisLSInvBdY 11.97 +0.02 -2.3LSStratIncA m 15.58 +0.07 +3.6LSStratIncC m15.67 +0.07 +3.1Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 58.23 +0.48 +19.5NorthernHYFixInc d 7.47 ... +3.2StkIdx 20.42 ... +16.5OakmarkEqIncI 32.26 +0.24 +13.2Intl I 24.64 +0.08 +17.7Oakmark I 58.63 +0.58 +20.8Select I 36.85 +0.34 +19.0OberweisChinaOpp m 14.61 -0.01 +31.4Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 16.14 +0.10 +11.6LgCpStr 11.19 +0.08 +11.7OppenheimerDevMktA m 34.38 +0.24 -2.6DevMktY 34.05 +0.24 -2.4GlobA m 72.49 +0.61 +12.4IntlBondA m 5.96 +0.01 -7.1IntlBondY 5.96 +0.01 -6.9IntlGrY 34.79 +0.15 +13.3MainStrA m 43.04 +0.36 +16.1RocMuniA m 14.49 -0.01 -11.4SrFltRatA m 8.37 ... +4.1StrIncA m 4.08 ... -3.0OsterweisOsterStrInc d 11.84 ... +4.1PIMCOAAstAAutP 10.11 ... -7.4AllAssetI 11.94 ... -3.6AllAuthA m 10.10 ... -7.6AllAuthC m 10.08 ... -8.1AllAuthIn 10.11 ... -7.3ComRlRStI 5.81 ... -11.5DivIncInst 11.34 ... -4.4EMktCurI 9.86 ... -5.5EmMktsIns 10.92 ... -9.7ForBdInstl 10.48 ... -1.4HiYldIs 9.43 ... +1.8InvGrdIns 10.41 ... -4.0LowDrIs 10.21 ... -1.5RERRStgC m 3.45 ... -15.8RealRet 11.02 ... -9.5ShtTermIs 9.80 ... -0.1TotRetA m 10.62 ... -4.1TotRetAdm b 10.62 ... -4.0TotRetC m 10.62 ... -4.6TotRetIs 10.62 ... -3.9TotRetrnD b 10.62 ... -4.0TotlRetnP 10.62 ... -3.9PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 27.17 +0.40 +39.5ParnassusEqIncInv 34.37 +0.28 +18.4PermanentPortfolio 47.30 -0.15 -2.8PioneerPioneerA m 38.24 +0.32 +18.4PrincipalDivIntI 10.82 +0.06 +5.8L/T2020I 13.50 +0.05 +7.0L/T2030I 13.61 +0.08 +8.9LCGrIInst 11.78 +0.11 +19.4Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 37.47 +0.39 +15.6PutnamGrowIncA m 17.75 ... +20.2NewOpp 69.75 +0.75 +19.1RoycePAMutInv d 13.51 +0.15 +17.5PremierInv d 21.86 +0.27 +14.1RussellStratBdS x 10.78 -0.05 -3.4Schwab1000Inv d 45.30 +0.38 +17.8S&P500Sel d 26.08 +0.22 +17.5

ScoutInterntl 34.33 +0.12 +3.9SelectedAmerican D 46.67 +0.25 +19.1SequoiaSequoia 201.16 +1.15 +19.5T Rowe PriceBalanced 22.31 +0.11 +9.2BlChpGr 54.92 +0.54 +20.4CapApprec 25.27 +0.13 +13.6EmMktBd d 12.29 -0.05 -10.4EmMktStk d 30.01 +0.08 -11.9EqIndex d 44.69 +0.37 +17.4EqtyInc 30.69 +0.22 +17.1GrowStk 44.87 +0.43 +18.8HealthSci 55.73 +0.77 +35.2HiYield d 6.96 ... +4.0InsLgCpGr 23.21 +0.26 +22.9IntlBnd d 9.33 +0.01 -6.2IntlGrInc d 14.29 +0.07 +10.3IntlStk d 14.96 +0.09 +3.9LatinAm d 30.65 +0.15 -19.4MidCapE 37.68 +0.40 +23.1MidCapVa 28.10 +0.24 +16.9MidCpGr 69.22 +0.72 +22.6NewAsia d 15.37 +0.05 -8.6NewEra 45.06 +0.20 +7.5NewHoriz 43.47 +0.47 +31.1NewIncome 9.30 -0.01 -3.9OrseaStk d 9.31 +0.06 +9.5R2015 13.74 +0.06 +6.7R2025 14.40 +0.08 +9.8R2035 15.00 +0.10 +12.1Real d 20.66 +0.18 -0.7Rtmt2010 17.27 +0.06 +4.9Rtmt2020 19.37 +0.10 +8.3Rtmt2030 21.02 +0.13 +11.1Rtmt2040 21.51 +0.15 +12.7Rtmt2045 14.32 +0.11 +12.7ShTmBond 4.77 -0.01 -0.6SmCpStk 41.33 +0.35 +21.5SmCpVal d 45.28 +0.34 +15.6SpecGrow 22.11 +0.17 +14.0SpecInc 12.63 ... -0.6Value 32.20 +0.27 +22.1TCWEmgIncI 8.16 -0.03 -9.0TotRetBdI 9.85 -0.02 -1.3TIAA-CREFEqIx 12.79 +0.11 +18.4IntlE d 17.83 +0.12 +9.9TempletonInFEqSeS 21.01 ... +7.2ThornburgIncBldA m 19.48 +0.06 +7.1IncBldC m 19.48 +0.07 +6.6IntlValA m 28.91 +0.08 +6.0IntlValI 29.55 +0.08 +6.3Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 25.90 +0.04 +11.4VALIC Co IStockIdx 30.62 +0.25 +17.3Vanguard500Adml 152.97 +1.27 +17.6500Inv 152.94 +1.26 +17.5BalIdxAdm 25.73 +0.10 +9.3BalIdxIns 25.74 +0.11 +9.4CAITAdml 11.05 -0.01 -3.7CapOpAdml 100.01 +1.45 +28.8DevMktsIdxIP 110.92 +0.79 +10.1DivGr 19.44 +0.11 +18.0EmMktIAdm 32.07 +0.23 -11.5EnergyAdm 121.79 +0.61 +9.8EnergyInv 64.86 +0.32 +9.8EqInc 27.88 +0.18 +17.0EqIncAdml 58.44 +0.37 +17.1ExplAdml 93.48 +0.83 +26.5Explr 100.40 +0.88 +26.3ExtdIdAdm 55.84 +0.49 +21.8ExtdIdIst 55.84 +0.49 +21.8ExtdMktIdxIP 137.83 +1.22 +21.8FAWeUSIns 91.61 +0.63 +4.2GNMA 10.33 -0.04 -3.9GNMAAdml 10.33 -0.04 -3.8GlbEq 21.12 +0.14 +13.1GrthIdAdm 42.42 +0.42 +16.5GrthIstId 42.42 +0.42 +16.5GrthIstSg 39.28 +0.38 +16.5HYCor 5.90 ... +0.4HYCorAdml 5.90 ... +0.5HltCrAdml 74.61 +0.71 +26.5HlthCare 176.81 +1.68 +26.5ITBondAdm 11.09 -0.03 -5.1ITGradeAd 9.65 -0.03 -3.6ITrsyAdml 11.13 -0.03 -3.8InfPrtAdm 25.76 -0.13 -9.3InfPrtI 10.49 -0.06 -9.2InflaPro 13.12 -0.07 -9.3InstIdxI 151.97 +1.26 +17.6InstPlus 151.98 +1.26 +17.6InstTStPl 37.91 +0.32 +18.5IntlGr 20.86 +0.13 +8.3IntlGrAdm 66.39 +0.40 +8.3IntlStkIdxAdm 25.82 +0.18 +4.7IntlStkIdxI 103.23 +0.71 +4.7IntlStkIdxIPls 103.26 +0.72 +4.7IntlStkIdxISgn 30.97 +0.22 +4.7IntlVal 33.79 +0.14 +8.4LTGradeAd 9.57 -0.03 -8.6LTInvGr 9.57 -0.03 -8.6LifeCon 17.39 +0.03 +3.5LifeGro 25.48 +0.14 +10.5LifeMod 21.77 +0.08 +7.0MidCapIdxIP 134.06 +1.32 +20.7MidCp 27.09 +0.26 +20.6MidCpAdml 123.04 +1.21 +20.7MidCpIst 27.18 +0.27 +20.7MidCpSgl 38.83 +0.39 +20.7Morg 23.57 +0.23 +18.4MorgAdml 73.10 +0.71 +18.5MuHYAdml 10.32 ... -6.1MuInt 13.50 ... -4.2MuIntAdml 13.50 ... -4.1MuLTAdml 10.80 ... -6.0MuLtdAdml 10.95 ... -0.6MuShtAdml 15.82 ... +0.1PrecMtls 11.30 +0.13 -29.1Prmcp 85.31 +0.96 +22.8PrmcpAdml 88.53 +0.99 +22.8PrmcpCorI 18.23 +0.20 +22.1REITIdxAd 91.42 +0.69 -0.3STBondAdm 10.46 -0.01 -0.7STBondSgl 10.46 -0.01 -0.7STCor 10.63 -0.01 -0.5STFedAdml 10.65 -0.01 -0.9STGradeAd 10.63 -0.01 -0.4STIGradeI 10.63 -0.01 -0.4STsryAdml 10.65 -0.01 -0.5SelValu 26.16 +0.22 +24.7SmCapIdx 46.96 +0.45 +21.2SmCpIdAdm 47.02 +0.44 +21.3SmCpIdIst 47.02 +0.44 +21.3SmCpIndxSgnl 42.36 +0.40 +21.3Star 22.37 +0.08 +8.3StratgcEq 26.18 +0.24 +22.1TgtRe2010 24.99 +0.04 +3.6TgtRe2015 14.17 +0.05 +5.9TgtRe2020 25.61 +0.10 +7.5TgtRe2030 25.75 +0.14 +10.1TgtRe2035 15.71 +0.10 +11.5TgtRe2040 26.02 +0.17 +12.3TgtRe2045 16.34 +0.11 +12.3TgtRe2050 25.92 +0.18 +12.3TgtRetInc 12.28 +0.01 +1.5Tgtet2025 14.79 +0.07 +8.8TotBdAdml 10.52 -0.02 -3.4TotBdInst 10.52 -0.02 -3.4TotBdMkInv 10.52 -0.02 -3.5TotBdMkSig 10.52 -0.02 -3.4TotIntl 15.43 +0.10 +4.6TotStIAdm 41.84 +0.35 +18.5TotStIIns 41.84 +0.35 +18.4TotStISig 40.38 +0.34 +18.4TotStIdx 41.81 +0.34 +18.3TxMCapAdm 84.09 +0.73 +18.2ValIdxAdm 27.02 +0.19 +19.2ValIdxIns 27.02 +0.19 +19.2WellsI 24.59 +0.04 +3.5WellsIAdm 59.59 +0.10 +3.6Welltn 37.00 +0.17 +10.7WelltnAdm 63.90 +0.28 +10.7WndsIIAdm 60.77 +0.48 +17.8Wndsr 18.35 +0.17 +22.0WndsrAdml 61.92 +0.58 +22.1WndsrII 34.24 +0.27 +17.8VirtusEmgMktsIs 8.99 +0.02 -12.6Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 9.59 +0.08 +17.1SciTechA m 14.51 +0.22 +30.3YacktmanFocused d 24.24 +0.09 +18.1Yacktman d 22.66 +0.10 +18.5

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FMCG 11 31.10 -.02FrontierCm 45 4.45 +.08GATX 17 45.87 +.33GT AdvTc dd 6.81 +.10Gannett 13 24.87 +.59Gap 15 40.81 +.09Garmin 15 42.30 +.84GencoShip dd 3.33 +.31GenDynam dd 84.99 +.64GenGrPrp 50 18.97 -.06GenMills 18 49.10 -.09GenMotors 13 35.85 +1.71GM cvpfB ... 49.69 +1.14GenVec h dd .48 +.21Genworth 11 12.18 +.23Gerdau ... 7.47 +.13GileadSci s 34 61.11 +.19GlobusMed 25 16.92 -.66GoldFLtd ... 5.17 +.02Goldcrp g dd 30.03 +.18GoldStr g 18 .55GreenMtC 29 86.30 +1.14Groupon dd 10.30 +.10Guidewire cc 43.07 -3.41HCP Inc 21 40.50 +.01HalconRes 34 4.72 -.02Hallibrtn 18 49.08 +.78HanwhaSol dd 3.91 +.55HarmonyG ... 3.99 +.38HartfdFn 39 30.56 +.36HltMgmt 23 12.80 -.04HeclaM cc 3.46 -.06Herbalife 15 64.14 +4.24HercOffsh dd 7.42 +.15Hertz 33 25.14 +.54Hess 7 76.15 +.16HewlettP dd 22.27 -.10HimaxTch 49 7.35 +.87Hologic dd 21.20HomeDp 22 74.14 +.24HopFedBc 23 11.30 -.07HostHotls 83 17.34 +.30HovnanE dd 5.07 -.04HudsCity 23 9.34 +.10HuntBncsh 12 8.39 +.15

I-J-K-LIAMGld g 10 6.10 +.06ICICI Bk ... 26.95 +1.46ING ... 11.11 +.13iShGold q 13.53 -.18iShBrazil q 43.22 +.30iShEMU q 35.28 +.13iSh HK q 19.40 +.15iShJapan q 11.31 +.17iSMalasia q 14.48 +.17iShMexico q 62.29 +.67iShSing q 12.48 +.05iSTaiwn q 13.87 +.19iSh UK q 19.06 +.11iShSilver q 22.69 -.70iShChinaLC q 36.85 +.62iSCorSP500 q 166.59 +1.37iShEMkts q 38.94 +.68iShiBoxIG q 111.83 -.41iSh20 yrT q 103.99 -.23iS Eafe q 60.85 +.54iShiBxHYB q 90.73 +.34iShR2K q 101.95 +.89iShREst q 62.16 +.44iShHmCnst q 20.55 +.02Incyte dd 34.58 +.33IngrmM 12 22.25 +.22InovioPhm dd 2.02 +.10IntgDv dd 9.15 +.28IBM 13 183.13 -.83Interpublic 22 16.17 +.13Intuit 23 64.16 +.41InvenSense 29 18.00 +.25Invesco 18 30.99 +.40Isis dd 29.13 +2.33ItauUnibH ... 12.29 +.03JA Solar rs dd 8.67 +1.19JDS Uniph 57 13.70 +.77JPMorgCh 9 51.87 +.74JanusCap 16 8.39 +.03Jarden s 27 47.21 -.22JetBlue 20 6.23 +.13JohnJn 19 86.90 +.48JohnsnCtl 16 41.39 +.66JnprNtwk 35 20.72 +1.27KB Home dd 16.11 -.15KLA Tnc 18 58.42 +3.04KeyEngy 28 7.33 +.26Keycorp 13 11.68Kimco 45 20.29 +.40KindME 28 79.06 -2.45KindMorg 32 35.30 -2.27KindrM wt ... 5.00 -.19Kinross g dd 5.60 +.03KodiakO g 28 10.18 +.12Kohls 12 51.45 +.05KraftFGp n 17 52.94 +.58KrispKrm 59 18.99LDK Solar dd 1.58 +.10LSI Corp 55 7.74 +.25LamResrch 74 49.47 +2.62LVSands 25 58.75 +.83LeapFrog 6 8.47 -.44LennarA 17 31.82 +.23LibtyIntA 50 23.17 +.38LifeTech 31 74.62 +.04LillyEli 12 52.18 +.87LincNat 10 43.82 +1.20LinkedIn cc 238.93 -7.20LockhdM 14 124.27 +.64Lorillard s 13 42.66 +.58LyonBas A 12 69.46 -1.01

M-N-O-PMFA Fncl 9 7.28 +.08MGIC dd 7.25 +.02MGM Rsts dd 18.25 +.28Macys 13 44.80 +.52MagHRes 51 5.14 +.30MannKd dd 6.05 +.15MarathnO 16 35.50 +.33MktVGold q 28.58 +.18MktVRus q 26.28 +.42MartMM 45 94.91 -.18MarvellT 25 12.26 -.01Masco cc 19.06 -.02Mattel 18 41.13 +.31McDrmInt dd 7.45 +.06McEwenM dd 2.79 +.01MedleyCap ... 13.04 -.23Medtrnic 14 53.20 +1.11Merck 26 47.68 +.47MetLife 45 48.38 +1.29MKors 34 75.40 +.97Microchp 65 39.57 +.38MicronT dd 14.75 +.74Microsoft 12 31.20 -.69MiMedx dd 3.85 -2.21Mondelez 23 30.88 +.09Monsanto 22 100.90 +1.72MonstrBev 30 56.05 +2.03MonstrWw dd 4.44 +.03MorgStan 32 26.51 +.24Mosaic 10 42.29 +1.10MotrlaSolu 16 56.08 -.20MurphO 10 60.43 +.63MurpUSA n ... 38.43 +.92Mylan 22 35.93 +.22NII Hldg dd 6.32 +.19NQ Mobile cc 16.57 -.35NV Energy 17 23.43Nabors 36 15.59 +.21NasdOMX 17 30.00 +.22NOilVarco 14 76.09 +.41Navistar dd 33.07 -.94NetApp 29 42.07 +.25Netflix cc 292.43 +3.43Nevsun g 8 3.33 +.16NwGold g 33 6.69 -.06Newcastle ... 5.78 +.35NewellRub 20 26.02 +.30NwLead hlf ... .11 -.02NewmtM dd 31.62 +.15NewsCpA n ... 16.03 +.25NiSource 19 29.17 +.04NikeB s 24 65.13 +.84NobleCorp 17 37.65 +.61NokiaCp ... 5.33 +.21NorthropG 12 93.56 +.42NStarRlt dd 8.74 +.13Novavax dd 3.23 +.03NuanceCm 12 19.24 +.11NuverraE dd 2.49 +.07Nvidia 17 14.90 +.14OcciPet 17 89.77 +1.30Oclaro dd .92 -.14OfficeDpt dd 4.31 +.14OfficeMax 2 11.25 +.34Oi SA ... 1.54 -.02

OnSmcnd dd 7.42 +.12OpkoHlth dd 8.60 -.59Oracle 14 32.32 +.30PDL Bio 5 7.93 +.21PPG 21 158.94 +1.73PPL Corp 12 30.72 +.11PanASlv dd 12.27 -.18Pandora dd 18.21 -.61PeabdyE dd 17.42 +.10Pengrth g ... 5.87 +.17PeopUtdF 20 14.40 +.13PetrbrsA ... 14.35 -.03Petrobras ... 13.75 +.15Pfizer 15 28.37 +.36PhilipMor 16 83.85 +.45Phillips66 8 59.03 +.92PiperJaf 15 33.76 +.94PitnyBw 14 16.66 +.32PlugPowr h dd .57 +.03Potash 12 29.92 +.26PwshDB q 26.57 -.23PS SrLoan ... 24.77 +.01PSIndia q 14.84 +.95PwShs QQQ q 76.71 +.81ProShtS&P q 28.56 -.25PrUShQQQ q 20.27 -.46ProUltSP q 81.65 +1.37ProShtR2K q 19.43 -.18PrUVxST rs q 43.12 -.26ProctGam 20 77.49 -.26PrUShSP rs q 38.02 -.66PUSSP500 q 22.00 -.55PrUPShQQQ q 22.64 -.78ProspctCap ... 11.25 +.13Prudentl 27 78.19 +2.27PSEG 13 32.07 +.29PulteGrp 20 15.32 -.07

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 cc 81.79 +.24Qualcom 18 67.28 +.53Questar 18 21.82 +.16Quiksilvr dd 5.08 +.06RF MicD dd 5.13 +.20RadianGrp dd 13.73 +.11RealGSolar dd 2.02 +.17Realogy n dd 41.77 -.18ReneSola dd 5.64 +.16RiteAid dd 3.46 -.08RochMed 57 19.91 +6.10RockwllM dd 6.03 +.49RylCarb 17 37.02 +.12RuckusW n ... 14.53 +.60RymanHP cc 33.44 +.17SAIC 10 14.41 -.74SLM Cp 8 24.20 +.02SpdrDJIA q 149.18 +1.07SpdrGold q 134.66 -1.76SP Mid q 217.61 +2.51S&P500ETF q 165.75 +1.36SpdrHome q 28.70 +.13SpdrLehHY q 39.41 +.07SpdrS&P RB q 35.18 +.13SpdrRetl q 78.69 +.60Safeway 12 25.85Salesforc s dd 48.77 -.81SanDisk 20 57.14 +1.83SandRdge dd 5.25Schlmbrg 17 82.86 +.44Schwab 33 21.86 +.71SeadrillLtd 20 46.95 -.07SeagateT 8 39.22 +.55SelMedHld 8 8.20 -.27SiderurNac ... 3.94 +.15SilvWhtn g 19 26.63 -.11SmithWes 9 11.09 +.06SmithfF 27 33.83 +.15SolarCity n ... 28.63 -.86SwstAirl 25 13.01 +.19SwstnEngy dd 38.31 -.03SpectraEn 23 32.85 +.04SpectPh 31 7.38 +.09SpiritRC n dd 8.83 +.08Sprint n ... 6.65 -.03SP Matls q 41.05 +.38SP HlthC q 50.11 +.57SP CnSt q 39.73 +.25SP Consum q 58.70 +.61SP Engy q 82.62 +.45SP Inds q 44.78 +.46SP Tech q 31.74 +.30SP Util q 36.87StdPac 5 7.17 +.02Staples dd 13.88 +.05Starbucks 35 72.14 +.54Stryker 20 67.27 +.05Suncor gs 12 34.16 -.20SunEdison dd 7.35 +.13SunPower 39 22.36 +.23Suntech dd 1.00 -.01SunTrst 8 32.36 +.46SupEnrgy 13 24.76 +.15Supvalu dd 7.26 +.16Symantec 24 25.32 -.76Synovus dd 3.20Sysco 19 32.14 -.04T-MoblUS n ... 24.64 +.60TD Ameritr 24 26.53 +.59TE Connect 17 50.18 +.84TECO 19 16.33 +.04TJX 20 53.87 +.74TaiwSemi ... 16.86 -.04TalismE g ... 10.71 +.05Target 15 63.55 -.04TataMotors ... 23.50 +1.19TeckRes g ... 26.27 +.26TempurSly 40 41.96 +2.21Terex 80 28.69 +.41TeslaMot dd 170.62 +1.68Tesoro 10 46.76 -.26TexInst 24 39.37 +.733D Sys s cc 53.43 +.493M Co 18 114.55 +1.33TimeWarn 17 61.99 +.63TiVo Inc 6 11.94 +.09TollBros 10 30.50 -.01Transocn cc 45.39 +.07TrinaSolar dd 10.75 +.5221stCFoxA 11 31.95 +.24TwoHrbInv 5 9.59 +.16TycoIntl s dd 33.38 +.45Tyson 14 29.52 +.68

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUS Airwy 5 16.81 +.42Ubiquiti 36 32.52 -1.62UltraPt g dd 20.68 -.24UnilevNV ... 37.36 -.24Unilife dd 3.03 -.52UtdContl dd 29.33 +.68UPS B 60 86.55 +.59US OilFd q 38.34 -.42USSteel dd 18.37 +.17UtdTech 15 103.36 +.70UtdhlthGp 14 73.35 +.79Vale SA ... 15.33 +.09Vale SA pf ... 13.58 -.01ValeroE 9 36.88 +.58VangTSM q 85.96 +.76VangREIT q 64.49 +.55VangEmg q 38.53 +.59VangEur q 52.07 +.29VangFTSE q 37.88 +.34VeriFone cc 20.28 +.54VerizonCm 95 46.78 +.77ViacomB 19 80.10 +.19Visa 22 176.19 -.83VishayInt 18 12.27 +.22Vivus dd 11.90 -1.00Vodafone ... 32.41 +.40VulcanM dd 48.81 +.32Walgrn 22 49.49 +.75WalterEn dd 13.49 +.08WarnerCh 14 22.09 +.33WeathfIntl dd 15.21 +.22WellPoint 10 87.38 +1.10WstnUnion 11 17.80 +.27WholeFd s 37 53.81 +.50WmsCos 39 35.14 -.79Windstrm 31 8.25 +.08WiscEngy 17 40.01 -.32WTJpHedg q 46.14 +.66WT India q 14.18 +.74XcelEngy 14 27.34 -.15Xilinx 25 45.86 +1.24Yamana g 16 11.51 +.01Yandex ... 32.98 +.96Yelp dd 55.95 +3.58YingliGrn dd 5.29 +.60YumBrnds 22 69.63 -.37Zalicus dd .78 -.06Zoetis n ... 29.69 +.26Zynga dd 2.93 +.06

Today

Spotlight on unemployment aid

Though employers are cutting fewer jobs, most have yet to start hiring aggressively.

Fewer layoffs can lead to net job gains, and that’s helping to reduce the number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits. Two weeks ago, applications for unemployment benefits fell to the lowest level in more than five years. Economists project applications declined again last week. The latest numbers are due out today.

Manufacturing concerns?

Economists anticipate that companies placed fewer orders to U.S. factories in July.

Forecasts call for the Com-merce Department to report today that factory orders fell 3.4 percent from June. Orders grew in the April-June quarter. Less spending by businesses could cause fears that weak manufactur-ing will slow the economy later this year.

VeriFone update

Investors will be watching VeriFone Systems’ latest quarterly results for an update on several product delays.

The maker of terminals for electronic payments has struggled with delayed product certifications this year, a problem that’s cost the company

some of its market share. That’s one reason the company

ended up providing a lower-than-expected earnings forecast in June. VeriFone

reports third-quarter results today. Source: FactSet

Factory ordersmonthly percent change, seasonally adjusted

-6

-3

0

3

6%

JJMAMF

est.-3.4

3.9

1.3

2.9

1.6

-4.7

Source: FactSet

Initial jobless claimsweek ending total, seasonally adjusted,in thousands

26 2 9 16 23 30AugustJuly

300

325

350

est.330328

335

322

337331

Investors are on edge. Tough talk about a possible military strike in Syria has fueled uncertainty, but the stock market has proven several times that it can rise when the U.S. military is in action.

Stocks rose at least 10 percent in the three months following each of the last three U.S. military engage-ments, according to Russell Investments. After airstrikes began in Iraq on March 20, 2003, for example, the Russell 3000 index jumped 16.3 percent. The index includes both large and small stocks and represents about 90 percent of the total U.S. stock market.

Part of the climb is due to relief: The uncertainty leading up to the military conflict pushes investors to

worry about the worst-case scenario, which may not occur. “The old maxim is that markets hate uncertainty,” says Stephen Wood, chief market

strategist at Russell Investments. And war is a particularly uncertain time.

Syria isn’t a major oil producer, but it is close to Iraq and other countries that are, and investors worry a war could threaten energy supplies. President Barack Obama has asked Congress to approve a limited military strike in response to

allegations that Syrian President Bashar Assad used chemical weapons. President Obama has urged Congress to hold a prompt vote once it returns to work next week.

Military strikes

Stocks have risenin the three months following the start of the last three U.S. military engagements.

Performance of the Russell 3000 index

Stan Choe; J. Paschke • APSource: Russell Investments

Three months before Three months after

11.5%

21.7

-11.7%10.9

-1.8%16.3

Desert Storm(Jan. 17, 1991)

Afghanistan war(Oct. 8, 2001)

Iraq war(March 20, 2003)

www.edwardjones.com

Financial Advisor

1500 Harper Road Suite 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

Financial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Financial Advisor

1500 Harper Road Suite 1Corinth, MS 38834662-287-1409

Financial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

How will you pay for retirement? Let’s talk.

Member SIPC

Page 9: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

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Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

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navigate inshallow waters

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song thatinspired theBoston subway’sCharlieCard

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mer?33 Lip-__34 FDR had three of

them35 Started the day36 Like single-malt

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pass inspection?48 “When Worlds

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stage52 Jurisprudence org.53 Justice Fortas54 Drying oven56 Boring tool58 Longtime Lucci

role60 Reneged on

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leagues

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home40 Capybaras, e.g.41 Coca-Cola

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47 Ignatius of Loyolafollower

48 Garden intruder

51 Hosp. area55 Zoo primates57 ... peas in __59 Last of the

Mohicans?61 Year in Claudius’

reign

By Robin Stears(c)2013 Tribune Content Agency, LLC 09/05/13

09/05/13

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

[email protected]

Variety9 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 5, 2013

Page 10: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

10 • Thursday, September 5, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

THURSDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 5, 2013 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

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Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

Horoscopes

Staff writer/photographer Steve Beavers will be attending the United Way of Corinth and Alcorn

County Kickoff Luncheon on Thursday. See what United Way has in store for a new fundraising year

in the Friday editon.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Your sign mate Thomas Jeffer-son had it absolutely right when he said, “In matters of style, swim with the current; in matters of principle, stand like a rock.”

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You will return to the role of student with a long list of fresh ques-tions. The more you learn the more you appreciate the endless loop that is the learning process.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). For you, the glory has never been in riding on your high horse; rather, it’s in getting back on the horse after you’ve been knocked off. Today you’re something of a comeback kid.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You will politely listen to the ad-vice and philosophy of admired teachers, even though you may not be able to relate to it as of yet. The ideas will apply when you fi nd evidence of their truth in

your own life.LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Sleep is

an important part of any mam-mal’s life. Don’t lie awake wor-rying about tomorrow when you should be asleep. Instead, out-line the plan that will assuage your worries.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Your request for excellence will only be understood and acted upon if you also put it in writing. There’s something about ink and paper that makes it so.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You’ll give a gift. The presenta-tion will be crucial to its recep-tion. Some items are so perfect, they shouldn’t be packaged with things that may dilute the value.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You appreciate your family, but that doesn’t mean you need every member around you at all times. You’ll call on your kin as needed. Set boundaries to in-

state the policy.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.

21). Submitting to the judgment of others is a kind of agreement you don’t want to get into. When your friends get “judgy,” it’s time to pull back and assert your in-dependence.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You understand what you’re dealing with much better than anyone else does. What can you do to shed light on the matter so the others can see it, too?

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Your instructions will be helpful in solving a mystery. You won’t spell out the answer, but you’ll tell people where they should look for the clues.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). It’s exciting when a natural phe-nomenon unfolds before you. You’ll enjoy watching one of life’s stranger processes in detail. Pay-ing attention is its own reward.

DEAR ABBY: I am appalled at older workers who hang onto their jobs so they can live lavish lifestyles, while young workers trying to support families are left with lack of advancement or even laid off because they don’t have tenure.

I am a single mom, and when my sons are out of college I plan to take a less stressful job (and thus less pay), so a younger per-son can have my job to support a family.

I am so tired of the Me Me Me attitude of our society now. In the past, there was more of a sense of social responsibility. Now it’s every man for himself and hang everyone else! -- DISGUSTED IN COLUMBUS, OHIO

DEAR DISGUSTED: While your altruism is laudable, please try to be less judgmental. Many older people work longer these days not to live lavish lifestyles, but to survive.

Unless you have a crystal ball that enables you to see what seniors have in the bank, it’s presumptuous to say someone should retire. Many seniors are unprepared fi nancially to do so through no fault of their own. And while you may think now that you’ll take a reduction in pay when your sons are out of college, it remains to be seen if that will be feasible for you when the time comes.

DEAR ABBY: My cousin died a short time ago at a very young age and in an unnatural and dev-

astating way. As soon as people out-side the fam-ily started fi nding out, they began asking what happened . Many of these ques-tions were posted on my relatives’

Facebook pages.Is it just me or isn’t that a very

insensitive thing to do? It’s not just that they are asking ques-tions of a grieving family who lost their son only hours before, but that they did it through Face-book. -- MOURNING IN THE MID-WEST

DEAR MOURNING: Please ac-cept my sympathy for your fam-ily’s tragic loss. We live in an age in which respect for privacy has nearly disappeared, and folks routinely bare intimate and sen-sitive details about their lives on the Internet. Of course ques-tions like the ones your relatives are being asked are tasteless -- whether in person or via elec-tronic media. If a person wishes to convey this kind of informa-tion, it is usually done VOLUN-TARILY, and certainly not when feelings are raw.

DEAR ABBY: Too often we hear horrifying stories in the news about prescription drug addic-tion and overdoses. I’d like to of-

fer hope to addicts who are still using.

There is life after drugs. For 10 years I was addicted to pain pills. My poor mother tried everything. She offered me trips or help in buying a new car if I would just go to rehab. I refused because I wasn’t ready. I fi nally hit rock bot-tom and went into rehab when I realized my daughter was pulling away from me. I had been spend-ing our rent money on pills I’d buy on the streets.

After I was sober for a few days, I realized I liked the feeling. After the sixth day, I was “me” again, and I loved it.

I have been sober for two years and am now entering school to become a patient tech. It’s excit-ing because I will be helping oth-ers. I believe this is what I was meant to do in life.

Everyone keeps saying I should tell my story, but to be honest, my story isn’t fi nished yet. Thank you for letting me share. -- EN-JOYING SOBRIETY IN FLORIDA

DEAR ENJOYING SOBRIETY: You’re welcome. You’re right that your story isn’t over yet, but from where I’m sitting it looks like the next chapter will be a happy and constructive one. I wish you suc-cess in your journey.

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

Single mom rips older workers for staying on the job too long

Page 11: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 5, 2013 • 11

NEW YORK — Yankees manager Joe Girardi says he’ll talk to Mariano Ri-vera in the offseason about whether the New York Yankees closer defi nitely wants to retire.

Girardi told ESPNNew-York.com on Tuesday that he thought Rivera could still be a very effective closer next year.

Girardi said he’ll advise baseball’s career saves leader to take a month or two this winter to make sure he wants to walk

away from the game even though he’s stayed healthy all year.

The 43-year-old Rivera announced his plans to retire during spring train-ing and has been on some-thing of a farewell tour around the majors all sea-son. He insisted he’s made his decision.

“I told you guys already. I don’t know why we’re talking about this,” Rivera said.

Girardi was asked about his comments after Ri-vera earned his 40th save in New York’s 6-4 victory

over the Chicago White Sox. The manager said he’s not lobbying Rivera to return, he would simply be offering the perspective of a former player who retired at 39 because of aches and pains.

Girardi said he knows it’s diffi cult for an older player to attempt a come-back after hanging up his spikes, so he thinks it would be wise for Rivera to know for sure.

“I think it’s important that you let a player get away for a while and see what that feeling is when

you’re away from the game a month, two months, and to see if that feeling changes. Because it’s hard to come back once you leave,” Girardi said.

Rivera struck out two of his three batters Tuesday night to reach 40 saves for the ninth time. That ties Trevor Hoffman for the major league record.

“I never wanted to think that, could I have played a little bit more? And it was really evident for me because I physically couldn’t stay healthy. Mo has seemed to be pretty

healthy this year,” Girardi said. “It’s just a man who’s retired talking to another man who’s thinking about retiring. Just telling him my feelings on it, it’s not me lobbying him to come back.

“As I’ve said all along, I’ve never wanted a player to come back if he doesn’t want to come back. Be-cause I want to make sure that his heart’s right when it’s time. I believe he’s going to retire, but as I’ve said, sometimes as a player when you’re in the midst of a season

and you’re grinding it out, your mind is one thing, and when you get away for a couple of months and your body feels pretty good, your mind is anoth-er thing.”

Harper out

PHILADELPHIA — Washington outfi elder Bryce Harper sat out the Nationals’ game Wednes-day night against Philadel-phia to rest his ailing hip.

Harper will get an extra day’s rest because the Na-tionals are off today.

1 Mo year? Girardi to talk with Rivera about retirementBY MIKE FITZPATRICK

Associated Press

Todd Helton, who last week got the2,500th hit of his career, has been theRockies’ franchise leader in hits for

some time now. He is one of six activeplayers who hold the lead in career hits fora franchise. Can you name the other five?

Shane Victorino, BostonBoston’s right fielder began the week with a3-for-3, four-run, 7-RBI, two-homer perform-ance in a big win over Baltimore. His hot hit-ting continued as he batted .435 for the weekwith 11 RBIs, 10 runs and six extra-base hits.

0 Complete games for Max Scherzer of Detroit this season. With one more win, Scherzer could become just the third pitcher in history to win 20 games in a season without completing a start. The only two pitchers to accomplish that are Mike Mussina in 2008 and Roger Clemens in 2001, both with the Yankees.

2,500 Career hits for Todd Helton of the Colorado Rockies. The total ranks 96th on the all-time list and is the third-most among active players behind Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez and Ichiro Suzuki.

0.93 ERA for the Brewers’ Yovani Gallardo, who has struggled most of the season, in his last three starts. Those games just happened to be against Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, two teams battling for a playoff berth.

20 Wins for the Texas Rangers in August. That was just the fourth month in franchise history with as many as 20 wins. The first was September 1978 (21 wins), then May 2009 (20) and June 2010 (21).

50-1 Milwaukee’s record when leading after eight innings this season. A 6-5 loss to the Angels last Saturday was the club’s first such setback of the season. Prior to that loss, the Brewers were the only team this season perfect with a lead going into the ninth.

18/3 Home runs hit by Pittsburgh/St. Louis in their 16 meetings so far this season.

Andrew McCutchen Athlon Sports

Jake Peavy, BostonThe acquisition of Peavy at the trade deadlinemay prove to be the best deal of the season.Last week, Peavy pitched a complete game ina win over the Dodgers at Los Angeles, thenfollowed up with a gem over his former teamthe White Sox.

Allen Craig, St. LouisWhile many of the Cardinals’ bats were si-lenced last week by Cincinnati and Pittsburgh,Craig stayed hot. Riding a nine-game hittingstreak now, he batted .455 with six RBIs asthe Redbirds struggled to generate offense.

Craig Kimbrel, AtlantaWith strong starting pitching that still has dif-ficulty getting deep into games, and inconsis-tent hitting, the Braves rely more and more ontheir stellar bullpen. Last week, Kimbrel hadthree saves and a win while pitching 5.1 per-fect innings.

1. Braves Won five straight during the week, all by one or two runs.2. Red Sox Have just five games left vs. losing teams. 3. Dodgers Pitchers produced a 1.33 ERA last week.4. Tigers Boston (3) and Kansas City (6) only winning teams left on sked.5. Pirates Andrew McCutchen is the straw that stirs the Pirates.6. Cardinals Split with Reds and Pirates last week, now at it again.7. Rangers 13 of next 16 games are against contenders.8. A’s Have six shots at Texas in next two weeks.9. Reds Cardinals in town for four games this week.

10. Rays 0-9 outside Eastern Time Zone in second half.11. Orioles Chris Davis has just one homer in last nine games.12. Indians Finished 4-15 vs. Tigers, are 68-49 against everyone else.13. Yankees 14 games left with teams ahead of them in AL East.14. Nationals Next 13 games are vs. teams behind them in NL East.15. Royals Begin a 12-game stretch vs. Tigers and Indians this weekend.16. Diamondbacks Snakes produced two 20-hit games in August.17. Rockies Gave up 18 runs to Reds over the weekend, but won 2 of 3.18. Angels Won eight of nine on recent road trip.19. Giants Outhitting opponents .259 to .251, but outscored 597 to 516.20. Mariners Would be the first time in 10 years to finish ahead of Angels.21. Mets Playing for pride for the final month of a long, tough season.22. Phillies Batting .218 since the All-Star break.23. Padres Trying to avoid third last-place finish in last six years.24. Blue Jays Dickey, Buehrle and Johnson combined for just 23 wins.25. Twins Sad to see Justin Morneau leave.26. Cubs Last team to win back-to-back NL Central titles.27. Brewers Very few positives to look back on this season.28. White Sox 23 of final 27 games are against winning teams.29. Marlins Scoring just 3.2 runs per game; next worst is 3.8.30. Astros Unlikely to avoid third straight 100-loss season.

September 9, 1965Sandy Koufax of the Los Angeles Dodgers retiresall 27 Cubs he faces in a pitching duel with theCubs’ Bob Hendley for a record fourth no-hitterduring his career. Hendley allows just one hit tothe Dodgers in the tough loss.

September 8, 1998St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Mark McGwirelines a Steve Trachsel pitch just inside the left-fieldfoul pole a few feet over the fence for his 62ndhome run of the season. The clout breaks RogerMaris’ 37-year-old record. McGwire would go onto hit 70 for the season.

Compiled by Charlie Miller. Follow Charlie on Twitter @AthlonCharlie or email him at [email protected]

AP Images

To some players, baseball uniformnumbers have a deep meaning. To

others, it’s simply a number or twosewn on their backs. Some players arewilling to spend thousands of dollarsto swap numbers once they are traded.Others take numbers assigned to themand never give it a second thought.

Here are a few reasons playerschose their numbers:

Sid Fernandez wore No. 50 tohonor the lefthander’s home state ofHawaii.

Carlos May’s choice of No. 17 waspretty simple. The outfielder was bornon May 17, 1948, so fans were con-stantly reminded of his birthday.

Hall of Famer Joe Morgan broke inwith the Houston Colt 45’s and woreNos. 12 and 35 for cups of coffee in1963 and 1964 before getting a morepermanent No. 18 in 1965. When thesecond baseman was traded to Cincin-nati prior to the 1972 season, battingcoach Ted Kluszewski was No. 18, soMorgan chose No. 8 in honor of child-hood friend Willie Stargell.

Harold Reynolds, now a popularbroadcaster/analyst for MLB and Fox,selected his No. 4 because he idolizedPaul Molitor.

Dusty Baker remembers growingup in Los Angeles and watching ayoung outfielder named TommyDavis patrol the outfield at DodgerStadium. Davis won a couple of bat-ting titles and drove in 153 runs oneseason for the Dodgers. Baker thoughthe was cool and has worn Davis’ No.12 throughout his career as a playerand manager.

* * * * * * These superstars made numbers fa-

mous, but began with other digits on

their backsNo. 44 is synonymous with Hank

Aaron. But Hammerin’ Hank actuallybegan his career with the MilwaukeeBraves in 1954 wearing No. 5.

Willie Mays broke in with the NewYork Giants in 1951 wearing No. 14.When Jack McGuire was traded toPittsburgh on June 5, Mays switchedto the more familiar 24.

No. 45 has been retired in St. Louissince Bob Gibson left the game in

1975. But the former Harlem Globe-trotter made his debut in 1959 wear-ing No. 58. The following season hebegan with No. 31 before switchingmidseason to the familiar 45.

Earl Smith began the 1955 seasonwearing No. 21 for the Pittsburgh Pi-rates. After a 1-for-16 start, Smith wasquickly demoted to the minors. He wasthe last Pirate before RobertoClemente to have the No. 21 on hisback. After beginning that season wear-

ing No. 13, Clemente switched to 21and it has since become an iconic num-ber, especially among Latin players.

Chipper Jones recently was hon-ored by the Braves with the retirementof No. 10. In 1993, Jones, a formerfirst-overall draft choice, played ineight games in September with No. 16on his back. After a knee injury suf-fered in spring training in 1994 costhim an entire season, he returned in1995 as No. 10.

What’s in a Number?

TRIVIA ANSWER:Perhaps this is a bit of a trick question in thatonly two of the five are currently with the teamfor which they hold the record. The five are:David Wright of the Mets, Derek Jeter of theYankees, Carl Crawford (Rays), Ichiro Suzuki(Mariners) and Michael Young (Rangers).

AP Images

Derek Jeter (2) is the latest among Yankee greats; Stan Musial (6) amassed more than 3,600 hits; Willie Mays (24) is arguably the greatest player all-time; and Hank Aaron (44) owns 755 homers.

Current # All-timeElvis Andrus 1 Ozzie SmithDerek Jeter 2 Derek JeterCarlos Beltran 3 Babe RuthYadier Molina 4 Lou GehrigAlbert Pujols 5 Johnny BenchRyan Howard 6 Stan MusialJoe Mauer 7 Mickey MantleJustin Upton 8 Cal RipkenJean Segura 9 Ted WilliamsAdam Jones 10 Chipper JonesJimmy Rollins 11 Luis AparicioAlfonso Soriano 12 Wade BoggsHanley Ramirez 13 Alex Rodriguez

Current # All-timePaul Konerko 14 Ernie BanksDustin Pedroia 15 Thurman MunsonBrian McCann 16 Whitey FordTodd Helton 17 Todd HeltonBen Zobrist 18 Ted KluszewskiJoey Votto 19 Bob FellerIan Desmond 20 Frank RobinsonAllen Craig 21 Roberto ClementeClayton Kershaw 22 Jim PalmerAdrian Gonzalez 23 Ryne SandbergMiguel Cabrera 24 Willie MaysCarl Crawford 25 Barry BondsChase Utley 26 Billy Williams

Current # All-timeMike Trout 27 Juan MarichalPrince Fielder 28 Prince FielderAdrian Beltre 29 Rod CarewChris Tillman 30 Orlando CepedaIchiro Suzuki 31 Greg MadduxJosh Hamilton 32 Steve CarltonJames Shields 33 Eddie MurrayDavid Ortiz 34 Nolan RyanJustin Verlander 35 Frank ThomasJered Weaver 36 Gaylord PerryMax Scherzer 37 Casey StengelTyson Ross 38 Curt Schilling

Current # All-timeJason Grilli 39 Roy CampanellaMadison Bumgarner 40 Troy PercivalVictor Martinez 41 Tom SeaverMariano Rivera 42 Jackie RobinsonR.A. Dickey 43 Dennis EckersleyJake Peavy 44 Hank AaronDerek Holland 45 Bob GibsonCraig Kimbrel 46 Andy PettitteJohnny Cueto 47 Tom GlavineTorii Hunter 48 Torii HunterChris Sale 49 Ron GuidryAdam Wainwright 50 Adam Wainwright

Number Ownership

Pittsburgh at St. LouisIt just doesn’t get much bigger than this. Theloser of this series is far from out of the hunt,but the Pirates and Cardinals will meet at BuschStadium battling neck-and-neck for the NLCentral crown. Last weekend in Pittsburgh, theBucs took two of three from the Redbirds, leav-ing the teams tied for first place, just 3.5 gamesahead of Cincinnati. The Cardinals should behappy they’ll miss Francisco Liriano who hasbeen devastating to St. Louis in his three startsagainst them this season. He’s scheduled topitch Wednesday, and manager Clint Hurdleisn’t likely to move him back a couple of days.A.J. Burnett is scheduled to pitch Friday againstJoe Kelly of St. Louis. Burnett is 3-0 with a 2.59ERA vs. St. Louis this season. Rookie Kris John-son is scheduled for the Pirates on Saturdayand Charlie Morton on Sunday. Neither has en-joyed much success against the Cardinals thisseason. Adam Wainwright, with two no-deci-sions in two starts this season vs. Pittsburgh,will start Saturday. Rookie Michael Wacha willoppose Morton on Sunday.

Boston at N.Y. Yankees This isn’t over-the-top, East Coast bias hap-pening here. This series actually means some-thing this time. Boston is enjoying acomfortable 5.5-game lead over Tampa Bay inthe AL East, while the Yankees are tied withCleveland just 3.5 games behind the Rays forthe final wild card spot, with only the Oriolesbetween the Yankees and Rays.

Page 12: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 5, 2013

Local Schedule

Softball

TodayFootballJones Co. @ Northeast, 6:30SoftballTish County @ Kossuth, 5VolleyballCorinth @ New Albany, 6:30 

Friday

FootballNew Site @ Kossuth, 7Walnut @ Central, 7 (WXRZ)Corinth @ Lewisburg, 7Biggersville @ Benton Co., 7Baldwyn @ Mooreville, 7Falkner @ Ripley, 7Lexington @ McNairy,7Tish County @ Belmont, 7Open: Booneville, Thrasher 

Saturday

SoftballNew Albany TournamentKossuth (3 games)Cross CountryHickory Flat Inv., 9 a.m.Central, CorinthVolleyballCorinth @ Southaven Tourney

Shorts

Caterpillar/United Scramble

Caterpillar/United is hosting a four-person golf scramble open to the public Saturday at Shiloh Ridge. Cost is $50 per player with entry fee including green fee, cart, lunch and driving range. For more contact Allie Cerone at [email protected]

 KHS Booster Club

The Kossuth Athletic Booster Club will meet Tuesday, September 10 at 6:30 p.m. in the new gym. All mem-bers are encouraged to attend. All persons who are selling the 50/50 tickets need to bring the money for the tickets currently sold to that meeting.

 5K Run/Walk

The Soul Trot 5K Run/Walk, rais-ing money and awareness for Soles-4Souls, will be held Saturday, Oct. 5, at Selmer City Park beginning at 9 a.m. Pre-registration is $20 plus a pair of new or gently worn shoes, and includes T-shirt. Must be received prior to Sept. 21.

Mail to “Soul Trot 5k”, 31 Fairway Place, Selmer, TN 38375 or register “on-site” for $25 -- no t-shirt -- begin-ning at 8 a.m. 5K race begins. Win-ner in each age/gender division re-ceives a medal. Overall male/female winners receives a trophy. The per-son who donates the most pairs of shoes will received a trophy. All pro-ceeds and shoes go to Soles4Souls. For more info call 731-645-9432.

 Golf Tourney

The 1st Annual Whispering Pines Men’s Golf Tournament will be held on Sept. 7 with an 8 a.m. shotgun start. The format is a 2-man, 27-hole scramble with field flighted after 18 holes. Fee is $50 per player, $40 for members and cart is not included. Food will be served. For more info contact the club house (286-6151) or the men’s golf association (286-9111).

 AC Baseball Seeks Alumni

The Alcorn Central High School Baseball program is seeking contact information from all Alcorn Central Baseball Alumni. Please be sure to include your phone number and mail-ing address, as well as the position you played, the years you were a player and any honors you may have received as a player.

All former players can send re-quested information to [email protected] or by calling 662-322-7389. We look forward to hearing from you.

 Night Tennis

Come and play a little community tennis every Tuesday at 6:00 p.m. at the Corinth City Park Wear your ten-nis shoes, bring your racquet, tennis balls, and expect a great time.

Corinth 8, North Pontotoc 1@ Sportsplex

NP 000 000 1 – 1 5 1

CHS 201 320 x – 8 15 2

  WP: Allie Jacobs. LP: Abby Wilder. Multiple Hits: (C) Rebekah Williams 3, Anna Kayte Webb 2, Katie Vandiver 2, Colby Cox 2. 3B: (C) Van-diver. HR: (C) Williams 2.

STARKVILLE — Princeton Jones understands he’s not alone when he steps onto the fi eld each Friday night with the Starkville Yellowjackets.

With the thought of hav-ing teammates like Darius Grayer, Raphael Leonard, AJ Brown, Jaquez Horsley and others around him gives Jones the confi dence that he doesn’t have to do everything by himself.

Jones has started two games at quarterback as a se-nior for the Yellowjackets and he has found out real quick who his friends are out on the fi eld.

“I’ve got weapons around me so I don’t have to do a lot,” Jones said. “All I have to do is get them the ball and I know it will be a touchdown. It’s all about execution and if we don’t turn the ball over, this offense is dangerous and we can put more than 28 points on the board in a game.”

Jones has completed 25-of-49 pass attempts for 316 yards in two games with three touchdowns. Grayer, Leonard and Brown have caught one scoring pass each from Jones.

Offensive coordinator Pres-ton Leathers likes to see play-ers like Grayer, who leads the team with 11 catches for 125 yards, step up for Jones.

“We’ve got players that can help (Jones) out,” Leathers said. “He’s done a good job of getting the ball to a lot of places and that will be a good thing.”

After being the quarterback during his 9th grade season, Jones started at receiver dur-ing his sophomore and junior years. He moved back to sig-nal caller in the spring fol-lowing the departure of Gabe Myles.

Leathers said it has been a plus for Jones to have been the 9th grade quarterback and starting receiver for two years. The offense is not strange to him.

“I can’t overemphasize the

9th-grade playing position,” Leathers said. “Combined with the knowledge of the of-fense in being the 10th and 11th grade starter at receiver, it makes the transition a little easier.

“I’ve been real proud of him. He’s doing a lot of little things well and he’s running our of-fense. (If you) cut out a couple of sailed footballs, which can happen to anybody, I’ve been extremely happy with the way he’s played so far.”

Jones said being behind center again is starting to “come back to him,” but he knows it’s at another level.

Jones’ offensive options plentifulDANNY P. SMITHStarkville Daily News

Please see JONES | 13

ATLANTA — Kameron Loe’s long wait for another start in the majors didn’t go as planned.

Loe gave up fi ve runs in 4 1-3 innings and the Atlanta Braves lost to Dillon Gee and the New York Mets 5-2 on Wednesday to end an other-wise strong homestand.

The NL East-leading Braves were 7-2 in the homestand

while winning two of three against the Mets.

The Mets had 12 hits, in-cluding 11 against Loe (0-2).

Lucas Duda had three hits, including a home run, and Andrew Brown added a tow-ering two-run shot for the Mets, who took a 5-0 lead in the third.

Freddie Freeman homered off Mets reliever Vic Black with two outs in the eighth, but that was the end of the

comeback.Loe fi lled in for Julio Tehe-

ran, who was given a rest. It was a possible sign of things to come this month as the Braves, who began the day 15 games ahead of second-place Washington, move closer to the postseason.

“We were hoping he’d give us fi ve or six innings and he was just an out or two short of that,” Braves manager Fredi Gonzalez said.

At least two Mets hitters reached base in each of Loe’s innings.

“It’s a disappointment,” Loe said. “I battled out there and gave it everything I had but I fell short today. I’ll defi nitely improve on that.

“I’ve been pitching much better than I did today lately. I know I’m better than that.”

Loe, 33-43 in nine seasons

Loe struggles as Braves fall to Gee, Mets BY CHARLES ODUM

Associated press

Please see BRAVES | 13

DENVER — John Elway has been down this lonely road before, trudging through the tunnel in deafening silence after a stunning loss at home as the AFC’s prohibitive Su-per Bowl favorite following a 13-3 regular season.

It happened to Elway the quarterback after the 1996 season when Denver lost to Jacksonville 30-27. It oc-curred again for Elway the ex-

ecutive in January when the Broncos were beaten 38-35 by Baltimore in the divisional round.

Elway rebounded the fi rst time to win back-to-back Su-per Bowls.

He said the pain of that pratfall against the Jaguars was the impetus to make them into champions.

“It was a great incentive for us to come back and have an even better year the following year,” Elway said.

After engineering a $125 million offseason spending spree and acquiring wide receiver Wes Welker and massive right guard Louis Vasquez — to help new center Manny Ramirez fend off the likes of Ravens nose tackle Haloti Ngata — Elway is aim-ing for history to repeat itself after this latest heartbreak.

Joe Flacco looms larger than life in Denver, and not just because he engineered the stunning playoff upset

with his 70-yard touchdown throw to Jacoby Jones that tied it at 35 with 31 seconds left in regulation.

The NFL’s marketing ma-chine put up gigantic banners of Flacco alongside Peyton Manning on the Broncos’ sta-dium to promote the league’s fi rst game of the 2013 season.

Fans are furious, Manning is miffed and Flacco is fl um-moxed.

Still, Flacco reasoned, “be-ing hated is not a bad thing.”

Broncos, Ravens meet again to restart NFL seasonBY ARNIE STAPLETON

Associated press

The NFL’s concussion set-tlement may not have settled anything.

On Wednesday, two former Super Bowl champions — Troy Aikman and John Lynch, now Fox Sports broadcasters — contended the league has more work to do.

Aikman wants the NFL to

divulge more details about what it knew regarding the long-term impact of repeated blows to the head, and when it knew it. Lynch said he expects even more litigation after the league tentatively agreed last week to pay out $765 million to a group of former players.

“What I’m happy about is that there are players that need it (the money) and need

it now, and they’re going to be taken care of,” Lynch said. “But I think the notion that this is done now and we can move on is not really the re-ality. A new lawsuit was fi led today, and from talking with Scott (Fujita) I think there are more to come.”

It wasn’t immediately clear which lawsuit Lynch was re-ferring to, though one was

fi led Sunday in New Orleans. Former NFL players Jimmy Williams, Rich Mauti, Jimmy Keyes and Nolan Franz claim the league hid information about the dangers of brain injury.

While neither Lynch nor Aikman were part of the origi-nal lawsuit, both know a thing

NFL’s concussion legal battle may not be overBY MICHAEL MAROT

Associated Press

Please see NFL | 13

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Back Home Kossuth running back Blaine Mitchell (10) and the Aggies return home to the friendly confines Friday night. The Aggies will be looking for their first win when they host New Site at Larry B. Mitchell Stadium at 7 p.m.

Please see SHORTS | 13

Page 13: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Scoreboard Daily Corinthian • 13Thursday, September 5, 2013

Auto racing

Sprint Cup leadersPoints

1, Jimmie Johnson, 837. 2, Clint Bowyer, 809. 3, Kevin Harvick, 795. 4, Carl Edwards, 795. 5, Kyle Busch, 786. 6, Matt Kenseth, 768. 7, Dale Earnhardt Jr., 750. 8, Joey Logano, 729. 9, Greg Biffl e, 727. 10, Kurt Busch, 719.

11, Jeff Gordon, 713. 12, Kasey Kahne, 709. 13, Martin Truex Jr., 704. 14, Ryan Newman, 699. 15, Brad Ke-selowski, 691. 16, Jamie McMurray, 680. 17, Paul Menard, 658. 18, Aric Almirola, 640. 19, Juan Pablo Mon-toya, 628. 20, Marcos Ambrose, 621.

Money1, Jimmie Johnson, $6,852,284.

2, Kyle Busch, $5,136,762. 3, Matt Kenseth, $4,864,775. 4, Brad Ke-selowski, $4,628,744. 5, Kevin Harvick, $4,613,502. 6, Carl Ed-wards, $4,264,454. 7, Dale Earn-hardt Jr., $4,200,308. 8, Jeff Gor-don, $4,188,683. 9, Joey Logano, $4,159,749. 10, Ryan Newman, $4,134,113.

11, Martin Truex Jr., $4,046,254. 12, Clint Bowyer, $4,023,693. 13, Kasey Kahne, $3,972,773. 14, Ricky Stenhouse Jr., $3,877,763. 15, Tony Stewart, $3,710,624. 16, Kurt Busch, $3,675,248. 17, Aric Almi-rola, $3,667,030. 18, Greg Biffl e, $3,644,764. 19, Juan Pablo Montoya, $3,585,589. 20, Jamie McMurray, $3,511,978.

Nationwide leadersPOINTS

Through Aug. 311. Sam Hornish Jr., 842. 2. Austin

Dillon, 832. 3. Elliott Sadler, 816. 4. Regan Smith, 813. 5. Justin Allgaier, 795. 6. Brian Vickers, 790. 7. Kyle Larson, 775. 8. Brian Scott, 775. 9. Trevor Bayne, 771. 10. Parker Kliger-man, 724.

11. Nelson Piquet Jr., 641. 12. Alex Bowman, 638. 13. Mike Bliss, 599. 14. Travis Pastrana, 566. 15. Reed Sorenson, 466. 16. Jeremy Clements, 464. 17. Mike Wallace, 438. 18. Mi-chael Annett, 422. 19. Eric McClure, 380. 20. Joe Nemechek, 359.

Truck leadersPOINTS

Through Sep. 11. Matt Crafton, 532. 2. James Bue-

scher, 485. 3. Ty Dillon, 469. 4. Jeb Burton, 467. 5. Miguel Paludo, 464. 6. Timothy Peters, 462. 7. Ryan Blaney, 450. 8. Brendan Gaughan, 444. 9. Darrell Wallace Jr., 426. 10. Johnny Sauter, 425.

11. Ron Hornaday Jr., 422. 12. Joey Coulter, 417. 13. Dakoda Armstrong, 407. 14. German Quiroga, 385. 15. John Wes Townley, 375. 16. Max Gresham, 343. 17. Ryan Sieg, 297. 18. Brennan Newberry, 297. 19. Ross Chastain, 256. 20. Tim George Jr., 252.

College football

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with fi rst-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 2, total points based on 25 points for a fi rst-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Prv1. Alabama (58) 1-0 1,497 12. Oregon 1-0 1,355 33. Ohio St. (1) 1-0 1,330 24. Clemson (1) 1-0 1,304 85. Stanford 0-0 1,277 46. South Carolina 1-0 1,181 67. Texas A&M 1-0 1,085 78. Louisville 1-0 1,073 99. LSU 1-0 971 1210. Florida St. 1-0 953 1111. Georgia 0-1 894 512. Florida 1-0 875 1013. Oklahoma St. 1-0 780 1314. Notre Dame 1-0 707 1415. Texas 1-0 674 1516. Oklahoma 1-0 612 1617. Michigan 1-0 583 1718. UCLA 1-0 387 2119. Northwestern 1-0 320 2220. Washington 1-0 315 NR21. Wisconsin 1-0 287 2322. Nebraska 1-0 219 1823. Baylor 1-0 150 NR

24. TCU 0-1 148 2025. Southern Cal 1-0 135 24

Others receiving votes: Miami 127, Mississippi 50, Arizona St. 48, Michigan St. 42, Cincinnati 27, N. Illinois 27, Fresno St. 22, Virginia Tech 12, Bowling Green 9, Georgia Tech 8, Arizona 6, Penn St. 4, Boise St. 3, Virginia 2, Arkansas 1.

Top 25 scheduleSaturday

No. 2 Oregon at Virginia, 2:30 p.m.No. 3 Ohio St. vs. San Diego State,

2:30 p.m.No. 4 Clemson vs. South Carolina

State, 11:30 a.m.No. 5 Stanford vs. San Jose State,

10 p.m.No. 6 South Carolina at No. 11 Geor-

gia, 3:30 p.m.No. 7 Texas A&M vs. Sam Houston

State, 6 p.m.No. 8 Louisville vs. Eastern Ken-

tucky, 11 a.m.No. 9 LSU vs. UAB, 6 p.m.No. 12 Florida at Miami, 11 a.m.No. 13 Oklahoma St. at UTSA, 11

a.m.No. 14 Notre Dame at No. 17 Michi-

gan, 7 p.m.No. 15 Texas at BYU, 6 p.m.No. 16 Oklahoma vs. West Virginia,

6 p.m.No. 19 Northwestern vs. Syracuse,

5 p.m.No. 21 Wisconsin vs. Tennessee

Tech, 11 a.m.No. 22 Nebraska vs. Southern

Miss., 5 p.m.No. 23 Baylor vs, Buffalo, 2:30 p.m.No. 24 TCU vs. SE Louisiana, 11

a.m.No. 25 Southern Cal vs. Washington

State, 9:30 p.m.

Baseball

NL standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBAtlanta 85 54 .612 —Washington 70 68 .507 14½New York 63 75 .457 21½Philadelphia 63 76 .453 22Miami 52 86 .377 32½

Central Division W L Pct GBPittsburgh 81 57 .587 —St. Louis 79 59 .572 2Cincinnati 78 61 .561 3½Milwaukee 59 79 .428 22Chicago 59 80 .424 22½

West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 83 55 .601 —Arizona 70 68 .507 13Colorado 65 75 .464 19San Diego 62 76 .449 21San Francisco 61 77 .442 22

___Tuesday’s Games

Washington 9, Philadelphia 6Atlanta 3, N.Y. Mets 1Cincinnati 1, St. Louis 0Miami 6, Chicago Cubs 2Pittsburgh 4, Milwaukee 3L.A. Dodgers 7, Colorado 4Toronto 10, Arizona 4San Diego 3, San Francisco 2

Wednesday’s GamesN.Y. Mets 5, Atlanta 2Chicago Cubs 9, Miami 7Arizona 4, Toronto 3, 10 inningsSan Francisco at San DiegoWashington at Philadelphia,St. Louis at CincinnatiPittsburgh at MilwaukeeL.A. Dodgers at Colorado

Today’s GamesSt. Louis (Lynn 13-9) at Cincinnati

(Cingrani 6-3), 6:10 p.m.Arizona (Cahill 5-10) at San Francis-

co (Vogelsong 3-4), 9:15 p.m.Friday’s Games

Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 1:20 p.m.

Atlanta at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati, 6:10

p.m.Washington at Miami, 6:10 p.m.Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.Colorado at San Diego, 9:10 p.m.Arizona at San Francisco, 9:15 p.m.

A.L. standings, scheduleEast Division

W L Pct GBBoston 83 57 .593 —Tampa Bay 76 61 .555 5½

New York 74 64 .536 8Baltimore 73 64 .533 8½Toronto 64 76 .457 19

Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 81 58 .583 —Cleveland 73 65 .529 7½Kansas City 72 66 .522 8½Minnesota 61 77 .442 19½Chicago 56 81 .409 24

West Division W L Pct GBOakland 80 59 .576 —Texas 80 59 .576 —Los Angeles 64 73 .467 15Seattle 62 76 .449 17½Houston 46 93 .331 34

___Tuesday’s Games

Cleveland 4, Baltimore 3N.Y. Yankees 6, Chicago White Sox 4Boston 2, Detroit 1Minnesota 9, Houston 6, 12 inningsKansas City 4, Seattle 3Toronto 10, Arizona 4Tampa Bay 7, L.A. Angels 1Texas 5, Oakland 1

Wednesday’s GamesHouston 6, Minnesota 5Oakland 11, Texas 4Arizona 4, Toronto 3, 10 inningsBaltimore at Cleveland,Chicago White Sox at N.Y. YankeesDetroit at BostonSeattle at Kansas CityTampa Bay at L.A. Angels

Today’s GamesSeattle (J.Saunders 11-13) at Kan-

sas City (Guthrie 13-10), 1:10 p.m.Boston (Peavy 11-5) at N.Y. Yankees

(Nova 8-4), 6:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox (Quintana 7-5)

at Baltimore (Mig.Gonzalez 8-7), 6:05 p.m.

Houston (Peacock 3-5) at Oakland (Gray 2-2), 10:05 p.m.

Tampa 9 (Price 8-6) at L.A. Angels (Williams 5-10), 9:05 p.m.

Friday’s GamesBoston at N.Y. Yankees, 6:05 p.m.Chicago White Sox at Baltimore,

6:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Cleveland, 6:05 p.m.Detroit at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m.Toronto at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.Houston at Oakland, 9:05 p.m.Texas at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.Tampa Bay at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

Pro basketball

WNBA standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

W L Pct GBz-Chicago 21 8 .724 —Atlanta 15 13 .536 5½Washington 14 15 .483 7Indiana 13 15 .464 7½New York 11 19 .367 10½Connecticut 7 22 .241 14

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBx-Minnesota 22 7 .759 —x-Los Angeles 21 9 .700 1½Phoenix 15 13 .536 6½x-Seattle 15 15 .500 7½San Antonio 11 19 .367 11½Tulsa 10 20 .333 12½

x-clinched playoff spotWednesday’s Games

Indiana at AtlantaLos Angeles at Minnesota

Today’s GamesNo games scheduled

Friday’s GamesWashington at Connecticut, 6 p.m.Atlanta at New York, 6:30 p.m.Los Angeles at Tulsa, 7 p.m.Indiana at Chicago, 7:30 p.m.San Antonio at Phoenix, 9 p.m.

Pro football

NFL scheduleToday’s Game

Baltimore at Denver, 7:30 p.m.Sunday, Sept. 8

Atlanta at New Orleans, NoonCincinnati at Chicago, NoonNew England at Buffalo, NoonTennessee at Pittsburgh, NoonTampa Bay at N.Y. Jets, NoonKansas City at Jacksonville, NoonSeattle at Carolina, NoonMiami at Cleveland, NoonMinnesota at Detroit, NoonOakland at Indianapolis, NoonGreen Bay at San Francisco, 3:25

p.m.Arizona at St. Louis, 3:25 p.m.N.Y. Giants at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.

Monday, Sept. 9Philadelphia at Washington, 6:10

p.m.Houston at San Diego, 9:20 p.m.

Thursday, Sep. 12N.Y. Jets at New England, 7:25 p.m.

Sunday, Sep. 15Dallas at Kansas City, NoonTennessee at Houston, NoonWashington at Green Bay, NoonMinnesota at Chicago, NoonSt. Louis at Atlanta, NoonSan Diego at Philadelphia, NoonMiami at Indianapolis, NoonCleveland at Baltimore, NoonCarolina at Buffalo, NoonDetroit at Arizona, 4:05 p.m.New Orleans at Tampa Bay, 3:05

p.m.Jacksonville at Oakland, 3:25 p.m.Denver at N.Y. Giants, 3:25 p.m.San Francisco at Seattle, 7:30 p.m.

Monday, Sep. 16Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 7:40 p.m.

Tennis

U.S. Open Tuesday at The USTA Billie Jean

King National Tennis Center, New York. Purse: $34.3 million (Grand Slam). Surface: Hard-Outdoor

SINGLESMen’s quarterfi nals

Richard Gasquet (8), France, def. David Ferrer (4), Spain, 6-3, 6-1, 4-6, 2-6, 6-3.

Women quarterfi nalsFlavia Pennetta, Italy, def. Roberta

Vinci (10), Italy, 6-4, 6-1.DOUBLES

Men’s quarterfi nalsIvan Dodig, Croatia, and Marcelo

Melo (10), Brazil, def. Treat Huey, Phil-ippines, and Dominic Inglot (16), Brit-ain, 7-5, 6-3.

Women’s Third RoundSerena and Venus Williams, United

States, def. Anastasia Pavlyuchen-kova, Russia, and Lucie Safarova (11), Czech Republic, 6-1, 7-6 (3).

Quarterfi nalsSania Mirza, India, and Zheng Jie

(10), China, def. Hsieh Su-wei, Taiwan, and Peng Shuai (4), China, 6-4, 7-6 (5).

Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hra-decka (5), Czech Republic, def. Nadia Petrova, Russia, and Katarina Srebot-nik (3), Slovenia, 4-6, 6-4, 7-5.

Ashleigh Barty and Casey Dellacqua (8), Australia, def. Ekaterina Makarova and Elena Vesnina (2), Russia, 6-2, 6-3.

Television

Today’s lineupCOLLEGE FOOTBALL

6:30 p.m. (FS1) – FAU at East Caro-lina

GOLF9 a.m. (TGC) – European PGA Tour,

European Masters, fi rst round, at Crans sur Sierre, Switzerland (same-day tape)

2 p.m. (TGC) – Web.com Tour, Chiq-uita Classic, fi rst round, at Davidson, N.C.

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL6 p.m. (MLB) – Regional coverage,

Boston at N.Y. Yankees or Chicago White Sox at Baltimore

NFL FOOTBALL7:30 p.m. (NBC) – Baltimore at Den-

verTENNIS

11 a.m. (ESPN2) – U.S. Open, men’s quarterfi nal, at New York

7 p.m. (ESPN) – U.S. Open, men’s quarterfi nal, at New York

Transactions

Wednesday’s dealsBASEBALL

Major League BaseballMLB — Suspended St. Louis minor

league 2B Brett Wiley (State College-NY Penn) 50 games after testing posi-tive for an amphetamine.

American LeagueBALTIMORE ORIOLES — Named Amy

Tuten manager of sponsorship sales,

Kirsten Ladendorf manager of catering and suites, and Scott Moudry manager of ticket operations for the Sarasota spring training facility. Promoted Trevor Markham to director of operations at Sarasota.

National LeagueCHICAGO CUBS — Selected the

contract of RHP Chang-Yong Lim from Iowa (PCL). Designated RHP Michael Bowden for assignment. Claimed RHP Daniel Bard off waivers from Boston. Designated OF Cole Gillespie for as-signment.

American AssociationAMARILLO SOX — Exercised the

2014 contract options on RHP Erik Draxton, RHP Freddy Flores, RHP Josh Giles, RHP Cephas Howard, RHP Ja-son Johnson, RHP Matt Larkins, LHP Kristhiam Linares, RHP Jason Mitchell, RHP Ryan Mitchell, RHP Joe Newby, RHP Andrew Romo, RHP Brad Wilson, C Chris Grossman, INF Adam DeLaGar-za, INF Jorge Delgado, INF Trey Ford, INF Jermel Lomack, INF Josh Miller, INF Kyle Nichols, INF KC Serna, INF Joe Weik, OF Jason Martin, OF Cory Patton and OF Chris Valencia.

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

MILWAUKEE BUCKS — Named Jim Cleamons and Scott Williams assis-tant coaches and Josh Oppenheimer assistant coach/player development.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

CHICAGO BEARS — Signed G Derek Dennis to the practice squad. Termi-nated the practice squad contract of QB Jerrod Johnson.

CINCINNATI BENGALS — Placed WR Andrew Hawkins on the injured reserve/return list. Signed OT Dennis Roland. Signed QB Greg McElroy to the practice squad.

MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed RB Bradley Randle to the practice squad. Released RB Joe Banyard from the practice squad.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Re-signed OL Josh Kline to the practice squad. Released LB Jeff Tarpinian from the practice squad.

NEW YORK GIANTS — Placed RB Andre Brown on the injured reserve/return list. Signed DE Adewale Ojomo from the practice squad. Signed OL Sam Baker to the practice squad.

Pro Football Hall of FameHOF — Announced the retirement of

president Stephen A. Perry.Canadian Football League

EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Signed WR Jamal Miles to the practice roster.

WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Signed QB Levi Brown to the practice roster.

HOCKEYNational Hockey League

CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Agreed to terms with D Niklas Hjalmarsson on a fi ve-year contract extension through the 2018-19 season.

ST. LOUIS BLUES — Promoted general manager Doug Armstrong to president of hockey operations and Bruce Affl eck to president of business operations.

WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Signed F Andre Burakovsky to a three-year, entry-level contract. Promoted Olie Kol-zig to goaltender coach. Named Scott Murray associate goaltender coach.

ECHLREADING ROYALS — Agreed to

terms with F David Toews.SOUTH CAROLINA STINGRAYS —

Agreed to terms with F Tory Allan and D Tom Janosz.

SOCCERMajor League Soccer

SPORTING KANSAS CITY — Loaned F Dom Dwyer Orlando City SC (USL Pro) for one game.

COLLEGENCAA — Granted men’s basketball

G Michael Dixon’s waiver to play this season at Memphis after transferring from Missouri.

NEW JERSEY ATHLETIC CONFER-ENCE — Named Katherine Clawson assistant to the commissioner.

LA SALLE — Named Nora McGurkin women’s assistant lacrosse coach.

LIMESTONE — Named Erik Schwa-ger assistant strength & conditioning coach.

MINNESOTA STATE (MANKATO) — Named Marc Harwood assistant wres-tling coach.

He has thrown four intercep-tions, so Jones plans to get in a better rhythm to best help the Jackets.

“There’s more that goes into high school football than junior high,” Jones said. “You learn more. Footwork is important and I learned that the fi rst day I came up.”

From spring practice, summer conditioning, preseason prac-tice and now the fi rst two games of the season, Leathers has watched Jones progress nicely.

“He is 20 times more comfort-able today than he was the fi rst day of practice,” Leathers said. “(In) changing positions, he was a little nervous the fi rst couple of weeks, but with the little things, he seems way more comfortable. It should get better and bet-ter and we’re going to be hard to deal with later on down the road.”

Starkville travels to West Point Friday for its third strong non-conference test in as many weeks.

Each game presents its own little rivalry situation for the Jackets, but Jones considers the Green Wave special.

“We’ve got West Point this week and I’m ready for that one,” Jones said. “I always have been and always will be with it being a rivalry, so you better be ready. They will bring it. We will bring it. Whoever makes the least mis-takes will win.”

 50/50 TicketsThe Kossuth Athletic Booster

Club will be having a 50/50 fundraiser. Tickets for the fund-raiser are $100 each and only three hundred tickets will be sold. Every 50th ticket drawn will receive $1,000 and the final ticket will win $10,000 if all tickets are sold. Tickets may be purchased from any booster club member or at home foot-ball games. The drawing will be held at the last regular season home game on October 25 and you do not have to be pres-ent to win. All proceeds go to benefit all sports programs at Kossuth High School. Please contact Jeff Bobo at 665-2858 or Christy Dickson 665-2179 to purchase tickets.

with Texas, Milwaukee, Seattle, the Cubs and Braves, had pitched only in relief since making his last start with Texas in 2007. He was recalled from Triple-A Gwinnett on Monday and struggled in every inning against the Mets.

By contrast, Gee (11-9) rarely was threatened. He allowed one run on four hits and one walk.

“My main goals coming

out of spring training this year were to get to 200 in-nings and take the ball ev-ery time it was my turn,” Gee said.

“I’ve done that so far and want to do it some more. I’ve just got to stay focused.”

Braves third baseman Elliot Johnson said Gee’s control made him diffi cult to beat.

“He’s got four pitches that he’s throwing in the strike zone whenever he feels like it,” Johnson said.

“If you’ve got four pitches that you can command, it’s going to be a tough day at the plate.”

LaTroy Hawkins gave up a double to Elliot John-son to lead off the ninth. Dan Uggla and pinch-hit-ter Andrelton Simmons popped up and Hawkins earned his seventh save when pinch-hitter Chris Johnson struck out.

With one out in the fi rst, Daniel Murphy tripled and Brown hit a homer that landed about halfway

up the lower level of seats in left fi eld.

Duda’s homer was the start of the Mets’ three-run third inning.

The low point for Atlan-ta in the inning came when center fi elder B.J. Upton and left fi elder Evan Gattis watched Gee’s fl y ball fall to the ground in the gap. The ball dropped closer to Upton, who stopped run-ning and then looked at Gattis.

Juan Lagares scored on the play.

JONES

SHORTS

BRAVES

CONTINUED FROM 12

CONTINUED FROM 12

CONTINUED FROM 12

or two about concussions.Lynch was one of the

league’s hardest hitting safeties in Tampa Bay and Denver from 1993 through 2007. Though Lynch has said he was never offi cially diagnosed with a concus-sion, he told a Tampa col-umnist in 2011 that there were times he was “woozy” and asked a teammate to take his spot closer to the

line of scrimmage while he recovered.

Aikman won three Su-per Bowls with the Cow-boys during the 1990s, but his 12-year career ended prematurely in part be-cause of repeated concus-sions.

Today, Lynch and Aik-man say they feel “great” and have shown no symp-toms of long-term dam-age.

In fact, Aikman said he

recently was tested in Dal-las. Doctors, Aikman said, told him Tuesday that the tests were all clear.

While Aikman believes the settlement will help the former players with the most immediate need, he called the settlement a “win” for the NFL.

“It’s a lot of money, but I think in terms of what could have been paid, it’s not that much,” Aikman said. “I think probably in

the big scheme of things, it’s a real positive. These guys will be able to ben-efi t some and some money will be put into research, which will help. The one thing I’m disappointed about is that the NFL didn’t have to acknowl-edge what they knew about (the long-term im-pact) and when they knew about it. I think full disclo-sure would have been the best way to go, but that’s

not going to happen now.”Until then, the two will

continue calling games on Fox Sports, where they have a new teammate in Randy Moss. The former receiver has rarely held his tongue, which is ex-actly what Fox executives wanted.

“He’s being himself,” Fox Sports executive pro-ducer John Entz said. “He’s being very natural and organic, which is what

we love about him.”Moss acknowledged

that he hasn’t settled on a style, and he may show a certain penchant for teams he played with dur-ing his career.

When asked to pick which NFC North team he thought would pose the biggest challenge to Green Bay’s reign, he fi rst said he was “biased” before blurt-ing out the expected: The Minnesota Vikings.

NFL

CONTINUED FROM 12

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SAMI J. EVETTS

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HOUSE FOR SALEBY OWNER - Largem u l t i - l e v e l f a m i l yhome on 2 acres (withadditional acres avail-able), 4-5 BR's, 3 BA's,f inished basement,game room, shop,pond, lots of room togrow. 8 CR 522. Big-gersville/Kossuth area.662-284-5379, by appt.only.

PICKWICK AREA 2 BR, 2BA. Will Rent. 731-689-5616 Leave Msg.

DUPLEX/APTS0720PICKWICK AREA . 2BR,2BA. 731-689-5616 Msg.

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

1. 1999 16X80 Belmont 3bed 2 bath, Won't beatthis deal! Only $11,900.Must be moved. 662-401-10932. Double wide 3 bed 2bath, al l appliances,central heat & air, mustbe moved. Need to sellasap. $19900. Call 662-401-10933. 16X72 2 bed 1.5 bathmobile home for sale,n e w c a r p e t & l i n othroughout, new coun-tertops, new s inks ,100% ready to move in-to. Delivery and set up$16500. Call-397-93394. 28X70 4 bed 2 bathnew tin roof, l ivingroom, separate denwith f i replace, realwood cabinets. Mustsell! $27000. with deliv-er & set up on yourproperty. 662-397-93395. You will have to seeto believe, It is a triplewide & it is like new,home has all appliances,a/c unit, very large kit-chen, lots of real woodcabinets, real woodfloors thru out, totalelectric, vinyl sidingshingle roof, too manyother options to list.Will deliver and set upfor $44,900. call 662-296-59236. Very nice 16x80 3 bed2 bath, vinyl siding, newhouse type metal roof,all appliances included,home is clean and readyfor someone to moveinto, large open kit-chen with dining area,master bath has largetub & separate shower.Deliver & set up. $18,900call 662-296-59237. I pay top dollar forused mobile homes. call662-296-5923

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

2 BR, 1 BA, Glen area,W&D incl. $375 mo., $200dep. 662-415-1397.

LOFT APT., 1 BR, $150wk. util. incl,662-594-1860, Corinth Area

UPDATED, 2BR , 1BA,$425 mo., $300 dep. Sec8 Accpt. 662-603-4127.

WEAVER APTS. 504 N.Cass, 1 BR, scr.porch,w/d. $375+util, 284-7433.

HOMES FOR RENT0620

2 BR, 1 Ba, Rockhill Area,stove/refrig furnished$365 mo. 662-212-4102.

3 BR, 2 BA, Central Sch.Dist. $475. mo,$250 dep.662-837-8575.

3 BR, 2 BA, CHA, CentralSchool District, CR268#10, $550mo/$250dep.662-284-8396

4 BR, 2 1/2 BA, Corinthcity limits, $850 mo.,$850 dep. Lease & ref.req'd. No TVRHA 662-415-1838.

IN CITY, Smoke free, NoAlcohol, No pets. QuietArea. 662-286-3266

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

3 BR, 2 BA trailer, Strick-land comm. 286-2099 or808-2474.

TRUCKING0244

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FARM MARKET0410COUNTRY EGGS, BROWNO R W H I T E . $ 2 . P E RDOZEN. 662-287-3339

PURPLE HULL PEAS,Shelled, $20 bushel.662-416-0893 or 662-416-2078

WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE0554

M&M. CASH for junk cars& trucks. We pick up.6 6 2 - 4 1 5 - 5 4 3 5 o r731-239-4114.

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

MOVING OUT OF COUN-TRY SALE! See pictures@ http://gradygun-tharp.com

SAT 7-1. 1903 PrincessAnn Dr. Student desk,Jr/Ms clothes, dishes,end tables, Misc.

SAT ONLY, 7a-'til, 72 W, 4CR607, furn, clths, h/hitems, nic-naks, air con-ditioner, lots more.

THURS-FRI , 7am-'t i l ,Across f rom ShadyGrove Meth. Church,baby furn, h/h, clths,comforter sets, toys

THURS-SAT, 883 CR 750( p a s t H o s p i t a l )bunkbeds, chairs, barstools, h/h items, wo-man clths & scrubs,sz2X, 3X & up, purses,shoes,misses/kids clths

TWO FAMILIES!!! Lots ofEverything. Th, Fr & Sattill Noon. House # 57, CR216

GENERAL HELP0232M U S I C O P E N I N G S ,Ripley,MS; First UMCseeks person(s) for parttime positions of musicdirector & organistand/or p ianist . Re-sponsibilities includedirection of sanctuarychoir & leadership forgrowing church-widemusic ministry. ContactRev. Jason Harms atr i p l e y f u m c @ d i x i e -net.com or 662-587-7183for more info.

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

FRIDAY ONLY, 7am-'til,610 Scale St, 1 blockfrom Nat'l Cemetery.

FRIDAY-SATURDAY, 2007Gaines Rd, 7a-'til, mi-crowaves, drills, mech-anics tools, etc

FUNDRAISER, PINECRESTW'end Snack Packs forKids, Th & Fri, 7am-'til,313 Pinecrest Rd, clths,toys, shoes, electronics

HUGE ESTATE Sale. SatOnly. 3637 CR100. 7a-4:30p. Furn, small kit ap-pl , fabric , trophies,glassware, 70+ yrs stuff

HUGE YARD SALE. Fri. &Sat. 296 CR 512 (Wheel-er Grove Rd. ) Toys,furn., lots of clothes.

MONA LISA's Thrift Sale,25 cents on all clths,shoes & nic-naks; 50% allother, 1007 Hwy 72 E,ac.from Pizza Hut 603-5870

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

CROSSROADS CLOSET .Going Out of BusinessSale! Fri-Sat. 8a-5p. 502Tate St. Inside & Out.Everything Must Go!

ESTATE SALE Fri 6 & Sat7 , 8am. Furn . W/D,Tools , Toys , & lotsmore!!! 991 Old Hwy 45S. Guys, TN. N. of st. line.

FRI-SAT (6th/7th) 706Hwy. 45 So., 7am-'til,furniture, clothes, odds& ends

FRI-SAT, 30 CR713, baby& tot items, hi-chair,strollers, treadmill,H/H,oak vanity, sink topDVDs(P90X, Insanity)

FRI-SAT, 7am-'til, 1238Hwy 356E, Jacinto area,B/ball goal, ant piano,2005 Maxima, h/h items

FRIDAY ONLY, 2004 W.Borroum Circle, 7a-?, 2Family Sale, Lots ofMisc. Tools, furn,kidsitems , H/h items

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

2 FAMILIES YARD SALE,SATURDAY ONLY, 8a-'til,1316 Tate,

3 FAMILY Sale. Thurs-Sat. 8a-3p, Clothes, Misc.TOO MUCH TO LIST!6 CR330 . Str ick landCommunity

4 FAMILY SALE, THURS-SAT, 8a-'til. 1531 CruiseSt. Furn, H/H, fish cook-er complete.

SPECIAL NOTICE0107

BUTLER, 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 est. 731-239-8945 or 662-284-6146.

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Page 15: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 5, 2013 •15

1-662-728-4462 WEBUYCARS

1101 N. 2nd Street • Booneville, MS • www.courtesyautoms.com

2008 Dodge Avenger SXTBlue, 75K

$11,950

2008 Chevy Colorado Crew CabOnly 40K

$17,900

2006 GMC SierraCrew Cab Z-71, Charcoal

$18,950

2008 Saturn Aura XEV6, 71k, Blue

$11,950

2009 Dodge Crew Cab98k, Super Clean$19,950

2012 Dodge Journey SXT21K, White

$21,950

2010 Hyundai Santa FeDark Red, 33K

$18,950

2009 Silverado Crew Cab 4X4Red, New Tires

$22,950

2009 Pontiac Vibe70K, White

$11,950

2012 Chevy Malibu LT25K, White

$18,950

2012 Nissan Altima 2.5SBlue, 28k

$19,950

2012 Traverse LTZWhite, 17K

$33,950

2008 Chevy Malibu LT LTRHeated Seats, Moonroof, 34K

$14,950

2007 Ford F150 Lariat 4x470K

$22,950

2011 Chevy Impala LTWhite, 33K, Remote Start

$15,950

3 toChoosefrom

Nights & Weekends662-424-1271

2009 Dodge Caravan SXTStow-N-Go, White, Power Sliding Doors.

$11,950

2008 Saturn Vue XRSilver, 89 K Mi.

ONLY$13,950

2012 GMC SierraCrew Cab, SLE Z71, 13K, Red

$32,950

2012 Dodge AvengerSilver, 34K

$16,950

2012 Chrysler Town & CountryWhite, Leather, DVD

$22,950

$30,950

2012 Toyota CamryWhite, 32K

$18,950

$16,975

2013 Kia SoulGray, 28K

$16,950

2012 Nissan Altima15K, 1-Owner, Saharan Gold

$17,950

2007 Chevy Suburban LTLeather, Moon Roof, DVD, Silver

$18,950

2010 Dodge Nitro SXT Leather/Sunroof, 76K, Blue

$16,950

2013 Dodge Ram 1500 Quad CabWhite, 15K

$24,950

2003 Buick Lasabre LTZOne Owner, Leather, 70K

$7,950

2013 Ford Edge LimitedGray, 18K, Leather, Heated Seats

$27,900

2013 Chevy Captiva LTSilver, 19K

$19,950

2012 Dodge JourneyGray, 30k

$19,950

2008 Honda AccordSilver

$13,950

Fall In Love With Our Savings!

Absolute AuctionAndy’s Auto Sales

Saturday, September 7,2013 @ 10a.m.27 CR 5061 ~ Booneville, MS

Inspection of Property September 6th 10am ~ 2pm or by appointmentInspection of Merchandise ~ 8am Day of Sale

-------------------------------------------------------Also property will be offered by

Childers Realty with Bid ApprovalTravis W. Childers, Broker 662-728-7694

Property offered @ 11 a.m.5 Shops, 2 Houses & Approx. 15 Acres of Property***************************************************

Terms Of Sale:Cash. Business Check or Bank Letter Of Credit

***************************************************EDGE AUCTION SALES, INC.

[email protected] ~ 662-728-0743 ~ Perry Edge ~ MS Lie. #295Check our website for listings:

www.edgeauctions.com or www.auctionzip.com

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on 30th day ofMay, 1997, Willie B.Mitchell, Jr. (The Es-tate of) and Brenda J.Mitchell executed a cer-tain Deed of Trust to Don-ald R. Downs, Trustee forthe benefit of The PeoplesBank & Trust Company,The State Mississippi,which Deed of Trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inBook/Instrument No.462 at Page 93-102; and

Whereas said Deed of Trustwas assigned at Deed Book462, Page 103, on June 2,1997 to Chase ManhattanMortgage Corporation filed inthe office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk; and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, NationalA s s o c i a t i o n s / b / mChase Home FinanceLLC s/b/m Chase Man-hattan Mortgage Cor-poration, has heretoforesubstituted Philip L. Mar-tin as Trustee in lieu and inplace of Donald R. Downsby instrument dated 6/1/2012,and recorded in Book/In-strument # 201202825at Page 1-2; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Land Deedof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trustand the legal holder of said in-debtedness, having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land, property,and all fixtures in accordancewith the terms of said LandDeed of Trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney’s fees, Substi-tute Trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE , I ,Philip L. Martin, Substi-tuted Trustee in said Deed ofTrust, will on 10/1/2013offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at600 Waldron Street,Corinth, MS - SouthFront Door of AlcornCounty Courthouse State ofMississippi, to the highest andbest bidder for cash the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit: TractNo. 1: Beginning at theSoutheast corner of theNortheast Quarter ofSection 18, Township 2South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thenceNorth 12 degrees 19minutes West 945 feetand 10 inches; thenceSouth 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet to the Southw-est corner of the JimmyPhelps lot or known asLot 15 in the Caldwell &Mattox Subdivision, andthis being the truepoint of beginning;thence North 16 de-grees 22 minutes West181.9 feet along theWest boundary line ofthe Phelps lot to afence; thence West193.2 feet along saidfence to an iron pin anda large fence post ;thence South 15 de-grees 17 minutes West200 feet to the Northside of a proposed road;thence North 86 de-grees 13 minutes Eastalong the North side ofsaid road 298.3 feet tothe true point of begin-ning. Containing 1.05acres, more or less.Less and except fromTract No. 1 the follow-ing described property:.03 acres, more or less,located in the North-east Quarter of Section18, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, more par-ticularly described asfollows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes West 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30m i n u t e s 1 3 0 f e e t ;thence run South 88degrees 30 minutesWest 130 feet for thepoint of beginning;thence run South 86degrees 13 minutesWest 27 feet; thencerun North 0 degrees 43minutes East 89.7 feet;thence run South 16degrees 22 minutesEast 91.6 feet to thepoint of beginning.Tract No. 2: .03 acres,more or less, located inthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East, more particularlydescribed as follows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes west 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 22minutes West 91.6 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North16 degrees 22 minutesWest 91.9 feet to an oldfence; thence run East27 feet; thence runSouth 0 degrees 43minutes West 88.2 feetto the point of begin-ning.

Title to said property is be-lieved to be good but I WILLCONVEY only such title as isvested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,on July 26, 2013

/s/ Philip L. MartinMartin & BrunavsAttorneys At Law2800 North Druid Hills RoadAtlanta, GA 30329(404) 982-0088 or (877) 740-0883- PhoneM&B File # 12-13921MSPublication Dates: Septem-ber 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013?THIS LAW FIRM ISACTING AS A DEBTC O L L E C T O R , A T -TEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT.ANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE.#14358

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on 30th day ofMay, 1997, Willie B.Mitchell, Jr. (The Es-tate of) and Brenda J.Mitchell executed a cer-tain Deed of Trust to Don-ald R. Downs, Trustee forthe benefit of The PeoplesBank & Trust Company,The State Mississippi,which Deed of Trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inBook/Instrument No.462 at Page 93-102; and

Whereas said Deed of Trustwas assigned at Deed Book462, Page 103, on June 2,1997 to Chase ManhattanMortgage Corporation filed inthe office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk; and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, NationalA s s o c i a t i o n s / b / mChase Home FinanceLLC s/b/m Chase Man-hattan Mortgage Cor-poration, has heretoforesubstituted Philip L. Mar-tin as Trustee in lieu and inplace of Donald R. Downsby instrument dated 6/1/2012,and recorded in Book/In-strument # 201202825at Page 1-2; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Land Deedof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trustand the legal holder of said in-debtedness, having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land, property,and all fixtures in accordancewith the terms of said LandDeed of Trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney’s fees, Substi-tute Trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE , I ,Philip L. Martin, Substi-tuted Trustee in said Deed ofTrust, will on 10/1/2013offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at600 Waldron Street,Corinth, MS - SouthFront Door of AlcornCounty Courthouse State ofMississippi, to the highest andbest bidder for cash the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit: TractNo. 1: Beginning at theSoutheast corner of theNortheast Quarter ofSection 18, Township 2South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thenceNorth 12 degrees 19minutes West 945 feetand 10 inches; thenceSouth 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet to the Southw-est corner of the JimmyPhelps lot or known asLot 15 in the Caldwell &Mattox Subdivision, andthis being the truepoint of beginning;thence North 16 de-grees 22 minutes West181.9 feet along theWest boundary line ofthe Phelps lot to afence; thence West193.2 feet along saidfence to an iron pin anda large fence post ;thence South 15 de-grees 17 minutes West200 feet to the Northside of a proposed road;thence North 86 de-grees 13 minutes Eastalong the North side ofsaid road 298.3 feet tothe true point of begin-ning. Containing 1.05acres, more or less.Less and except fromTract No. 1 the follow-ing described property:.03 acres, more or less,located in the North-east Quarter of Section18, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, more par-ticularly described asfollows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes West 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30m i n u t e s 1 3 0 f e e t ;thence run South 88degrees 30 minutesWest 130 feet for thepoint of beginning;thence run South 86degrees 13 minutesWest 27 feet; thencerun North 0 degrees 43minutes East 89.7 feet;thence run South 16degrees 22 minutesEast 91.6 feet to thepoint of beginning.Tract No. 2: .03 acres,more or less, located inthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East, more particularlydescribed as follows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes west 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 22minutes West 91.6 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North16 degrees 22 minutesWest 91.9 feet to an oldfence; thence run East27 feet; thence runSouth 0 degrees 43minutes West 88.2 feetto the point of begin-ning.

Title to said property is be-lieved to be good but I WILLCONVEY only such title as isvested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,on July 26, 2013

/s/ Philip L. MartinMartin & BrunavsAttorneys At Law2800 North Druid Hills RoadAtlanta, GA 30329(404) 982-0088 or (877) 740-0883- PhoneM&B File # 12-13921MSPublication Dates: Septem-ber 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013?THIS LAW FIRM ISACTING AS A DEBTC O L L E C T O R , A T -TEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT.ANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE.#14358

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on 30th day ofMay, 1997, Willie B.Mitchell, Jr. (The Es-tate of) and Brenda J.Mitchell executed a cer-tain Deed of Trust to Don-ald R. Downs, Trustee forthe benefit of The PeoplesBank & Trust Company,The State Mississippi,which Deed of Trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inBook/Instrument No.462 at Page 93-102; and

Whereas said Deed of Trustwas assigned at Deed Book462, Page 103, on June 2,1997 to Chase ManhattanMortgage Corporation filed inthe office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk; and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, NationalA s s o c i a t i o n s / b / mChase Home FinanceLLC s/b/m Chase Man-hattan Mortgage Cor-poration, has heretoforesubstituted Philip L. Mar-tin as Trustee in lieu and inplace of Donald R. Downsby instrument dated 6/1/2012,and recorded in Book/In-strument # 201202825at Page 1-2; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Land Deedof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trustand the legal holder of said in-debtedness, having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land, property,and all fixtures in accordancewith the terms of said LandDeed of Trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney’s fees, Substi-tute Trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE , I ,Philip L. Martin, Substi-tuted Trustee in said Deed ofTrust, will on 10/1/2013offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at600 Waldron Street,Corinth, MS - SouthFront Door of AlcornCounty Courthouse State ofMississippi, to the highest andbest bidder for cash the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit: TractNo. 1: Beginning at theSoutheast corner of theNortheast Quarter ofSection 18, Township 2South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thenceNorth 12 degrees 19minutes West 945 feetand 10 inches; thenceSouth 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet to the Southw-est corner of the JimmyPhelps lot or known asLot 15 in the Caldwell &Mattox Subdivision, andthis being the truepoint of beginning;thence North 16 de-grees 22 minutes West181.9 feet along theWest boundary line ofthe Phelps lot to afence; thence West193.2 feet along saidfence to an iron pin anda large fence post ;thence South 15 de-grees 17 minutes West200 feet to the Northside of a proposed road;thence North 86 de-grees 13 minutes Eastalong the North side ofsaid road 298.3 feet tothe true point of begin-ning. Containing 1.05acres, more or less.Less and except fromTract No. 1 the follow-ing described property:.03 acres, more or less,located in the North-east Quarter of Section18, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, more par-ticularly described asfollows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes West 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30m i n u t e s 1 3 0 f e e t ;thence run South 88degrees 30 minutesWest 130 feet for thepoint of beginning;thence run South 86degrees 13 minutesWest 27 feet; thencerun North 0 degrees 43minutes East 89.7 feet;thence run South 16degrees 22 minutesEast 91.6 feet to thepoint of beginning.Tract No. 2: .03 acres,more or less, located inthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East, more particularlydescribed as follows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes west 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 22minutes West 91.6 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North16 degrees 22 minutesWest 91.9 feet to an oldfence; thence run East27 feet; thence runSouth 0 degrees 43minutes West 88.2 feetto the point of begin-ning.

Title to said property is be-lieved to be good but I WILLCONVEY only such title as isvested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,on July 26, 2013

/s/ Philip L. MartinMartin & BrunavsAttorneys At Law2800 North Druid Hills RoadAtlanta, GA 30329(404) 982-0088 or (877) 740-0883- PhoneM&B File # 12-13921MSPublication Dates: Septem-ber 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013?THIS LAW FIRM ISACTING AS A DEBTC O L L E C T O R , A T -TEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT.ANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE.#14358

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on orabout the 23rd day ofFebruary, 2006, DennisBearman and spouse,Deana Bearman, ex-ecuted a Deed of Trustto Mark Segars, Trustee,and First American Na-tional Bank, Beneficiary,which Deed of Trustwas filed for record onMarch 3, 2006, 10:00a.m., as Instrument No.200601238, in the landrecords in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County at Cor-inth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS, on orabout the 20th day ofMarch, 2009, DennisBearman and spouse,Deana Bearman, ex-ecuted a Deed of Trustto Mark Segars, Trustee,and First American Na-tional Bank, Beneficiary,which Deed of Trustwas filed for record onApril 1, 2009, 10:00 a.m.,a s I n s t r u m e n t N o .200901544, in the landrecords in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County at Cor-inth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS, on orabout the 11th day ofMay 2012, Deana Bear-man, executed a Deedof Trust to Mark Segars,Trustee, and First Amer-ican National Bank, Be-neficiary, which deed ofTrust was filed for re-cord on May 24, 2012,12:50 p.m., as Instru-ment No. 201202444, inthe land records in theoffice of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn Countyat Corinth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS , FirstAmerican National Bankof Iuka, Mississippi, isthe legal holder andowner of said Deeds ofTrust and the indebted-ness secured thereby,substituted Lisa A. Koonas Trustee by instru-ment dated August 8,2013, and recorded asInstrument Number201303361, on August14, 2013, as of 12:48p.m., of the land re-cords of Alcorn County,Mississippi ; and ex-ecuted a Corrected Ap-pointment of Substi-tuted Trustee dated Au-gust 23, 2013, and filedfor record at 9:39 a.m.on August 26, 2013, asI n s t r u m e n t N o .2 0 1 3 0 3 5 9 4 , i n s a i dC l e r k ' s O f f i c e .

WHEREAS, defaulthaving been made inthe terms and condi-tions of said Deeds ofTrust, and default hav-ing been made on thePromissory Notes se-cured thereby, and theremaining balance ofthe original indebted-ness secured by saidDeeds of Trust, havingbeen declared to bedue and payable pursu-ant to the terms of saidDeeds of Trust, andFirst American NationalBank of Iuka, Mississippi,t h e h o l d e r o f t h ePromissory Notes andDeeds of Trust havingrequested the under-s igned Subst i tutedTrustee so to do, I will,on the 27th day ofSeptember, 2013,. offerfor sale at public, out-cry between the hoursof 11:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.,at the South Main doorof the county court-house of Alcorn County,at Corinth, Mississippi,for cash to the highestand best bidder, the fol-lowing described landand property lying andbeing situated in Al-corn, County, Missis-sippi, and being moreparticularly describedas follows, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit:

Commencing at theSouthwest corner ofthe Southeast Quarterof Section 22, Township3 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North300 feet to the Northside of a public road(gravel); thence runNorth 46 deg. 05 min.East along the Northside of said public road239.9 feet; thence runNorth 79 deg. 29 min.East along said Northright of way line 40 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North11 deg. 58 min. East341.7 feet; thence runEast 349.3 feet; thencerun South 34 deg. 20min. West 395 feet tothe North right of wayline of said public road;thence run North 82deg. 20 min. West alongsaid North right of wayline 90 feet; thence runSouth 79 deg. 29 min.West along said Northright of way line 110feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 2.0acres, more or less.

SALE WILL BE MADE,AND TITLE WILL BE CON-VEYED, SUBJECT TO THEA F O R E M E N T I O N E DDEEDS OF TRUST IN FA-VOR OF FIRST AMERICANNATIONAL BANK OF IUKARECORDED IN THE LANDRECORDS IN THE OFFICEO F T H E C H A N C E R YC L E R K O F A L C O R NCOUNTY IN CORINTH,MISSISSIPPI.

I Will convey onlysuch title as is vested inm e a s S u b s t i t u t e dT r u s t e e .

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,t h i s t h e 3 d a y o fS e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 3 .

Lisa A. Koon, Esq.Substituted Trustee1231 First America DrivePost Office Box 1109Iuka, Mississippi 38852601-423-1006MS State Bar No. 100087

4t's9/5, 9/12, 9/19, 9/26#14377

NOTICE OF PRO-POSED ACQUISITION

OF BRANCHES

Notice is hereby giventhat Farmers and MerchantsBank, whose main office islocated in Baldwyn, Missis-sippi, has made applicationwith the Federal Deposit In-surance Corporation, Wash-ington, D.C. 20429, for itswritten consent to acquirecertain assets and assume theliabilities for three branch of-fices of SouthBank, a FederalSavings Bank, whose main of-fice is in Huntsville, Alabama.The branches are located asfollows: 2222 Harper Streetand 515 Fillmore Street, Cor-inth, Mississippi 38834 and904 Mu l b e r r y Avenue ,Selmer, Tennessee 38375. Itis contemplated that all theoffices of the above-namedbanks will continue to be op-erated. This notice is publishedpursuant to Section 18(c) ofthe Federal Deposit Insur-ance Act. Any person wish-ing to comment on this ap-plication may file his/her com-ments in writing with the Re-gional Director of the Feder-al Deposit Insurance Corpor-ation at its Area Office at6060 Primacy Parkway, Suite300, Memphis, Tennessee38119 no later than October5, 2013, the 30th day follow-ing September 5, 2013. Thenonconfidential portion of theapplication file is on file in theregional office and is availablefor public inspection duringregular business hours. Pho-tocopies of information in thenonconfidential portion of theapplication file will be madeavailable upon request.

Farmers and MerchantsBankBaldwyn, MS

SouthBank, a FederalSavings BankHuntsville, AL

9/5, 9/19, 10/3#14376

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on 30th day ofMay, 1997, Willie B.Mitchell, Jr. (The Es-tate of) and Brenda J.Mitchell executed a cer-tain Deed of Trust to Don-ald R. Downs, Trustee forthe benefit of The PeoplesBank & Trust Company,The State Mississippi,which Deed of Trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inBook/Instrument No.462 at Page 93-102; and

Whereas said Deed of Trustwas assigned at Deed Book462, Page 103, on June 2,1997 to Chase ManhattanMortgage Corporation filed inthe office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk; and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, NationalA s s o c i a t i o n s / b / mChase Home FinanceLLC s/b/m Chase Man-hattan Mortgage Cor-poration, has heretoforesubstituted Philip L. Mar-tin as Trustee in lieu and inplace of Donald R. Downsby instrument dated 6/1/2012,and recorded in Book/In-strument # 201202825at Page 1-2; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Land Deedof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trustand the legal holder of said in-debtedness, having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land, property,and all fixtures in accordancewith the terms of said LandDeed of Trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney’s fees, Substi-tute Trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE , I ,Philip L. Martin, Substi-tuted Trustee in said Deed ofTrust, will on 10/1/2013offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at600 Waldron Street,Corinth, MS - SouthFront Door of AlcornCounty Courthouse State ofMississippi, to the highest andbest bidder for cash the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit: TractNo. 1: Beginning at theSoutheast corner of theNortheast Quarter ofSection 18, Township 2South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thenceNorth 12 degrees 19minutes West 945 feetand 10 inches; thenceSouth 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet to the Southw-est corner of the JimmyPhelps lot or known asLot 15 in the Caldwell &Mattox Subdivision, andthis being the truepoint of beginning;thence North 16 de-grees 22 minutes West181.9 feet along theWest boundary line ofthe Phelps lot to afence; thence West193.2 feet along saidfence to an iron pin anda large fence post ;thence South 15 de-grees 17 minutes West200 feet to the Northside of a proposed road;thence North 86 de-grees 13 minutes Eastalong the North side ofsaid road 298.3 feet tothe true point of begin-ning. Containing 1.05acres, more or less.Less and except fromTract No. 1 the follow-ing described property:.03 acres, more or less,located in the North-east Quarter of Section18, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, more par-ticularly described asfollows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes West 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30m i n u t e s 1 3 0 f e e t ;thence run South 88degrees 30 minutesWest 130 feet for thepoint of beginning;thence run South 86degrees 13 minutesWest 27 feet; thencerun North 0 degrees 43minutes East 89.7 feet;thence run South 16degrees 22 minutesEast 91.6 feet to thepoint of beginning.Tract No. 2: .03 acres,more or less, located inthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East, more particularlydescribed as follows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes west 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 22minutes West 91.6 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North16 degrees 22 minutesWest 91.9 feet to an oldfence; thence run East27 feet; thence runSouth 0 degrees 43minutes West 88.2 feetto the point of begin-ning.

Title to said property is be-lieved to be good but I WILLCONVEY only such title as isvested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,on July 26, 2013

/s/ Philip L. MartinMartin & BrunavsAttorneys At Law2800 North Druid Hills RoadAtlanta, GA 30329(404) 982-0088 or (877) 740-0883- PhoneM&B File # 12-13921MSPublication Dates: Septem-ber 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013?THIS LAW FIRM ISACTING AS A DEBTC O L L E C T O R , A T -TEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT.ANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE.#14358

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on orabout the 23rd day ofFebruary, 2006, DennisBearman and spouse,Deana Bearman, ex-ecuted a Deed of Trustto Mark Segars, Trustee,and First American Na-tional Bank, Beneficiary,which Deed of Trustwas filed for record onMarch 3, 2006, 10:00a.m., as Instrument No.200601238, in the landrecords in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County at Cor-inth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS, on orabout the 20th day ofMarch, 2009, DennisBearman and spouse,Deana Bearman, ex-ecuted a Deed of Trustto Mark Segars, Trustee,and First American Na-tional Bank, Beneficiary,which Deed of Trustwas filed for record onApril 1, 2009, 10:00 a.m.,a s I n s t r u m e n t N o .200901544, in the landrecords in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County at Cor-inth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS, on orabout the 11th day ofMay 2012, Deana Bear-man, executed a Deedof Trust to Mark Segars,Trustee, and First Amer-ican National Bank, Be-neficiary, which deed ofTrust was filed for re-cord on May 24, 2012,12:50 p.m., as Instru-ment No. 201202444, inthe land records in theoffice of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn Countyat Corinth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS , FirstAmerican National Bankof Iuka, Mississippi, isthe legal holder andowner of said Deeds ofTrust and the indebted-ness secured thereby,substituted Lisa A. Koonas Trustee by instru-ment dated August 8,2013, and recorded asInstrument Number201303361, on August14, 2013, as of 12:48p.m., of the land re-cords of Alcorn County,Mississippi ; and ex-ecuted a Corrected Ap-pointment of Substi-tuted Trustee dated Au-gust 23, 2013, and filedfor record at 9:39 a.m.on August 26, 2013, asI n s t r u m e n t N o .2 0 1 3 0 3 5 9 4 , i n s a i dC l e r k ' s O f f i c e .

WHEREAS, defaulthaving been made inthe terms and condi-tions of said Deeds ofTrust, and default hav-ing been made on thePromissory Notes se-cured thereby, and theremaining balance ofthe original indebted-ness secured by saidDeeds of Trust, havingbeen declared to bedue and payable pursu-ant to the terms of saidDeeds of Trust, andFirst American NationalBank of Iuka, Mississippi,t h e h o l d e r o f t h ePromissory Notes andDeeds of Trust havingrequested the under-s igned Subst i tutedTrustee so to do, I will,on the 27th day ofSeptember, 2013,. offerfor sale at public, out-cry between the hoursof 11:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.,at the South Main doorof the county court-house of Alcorn County,at Corinth, Mississippi,for cash to the highestand best bidder, the fol-lowing described landand property lying andbeing situated in Al-corn, County, Missis-sippi, and being moreparticularly describedas follows, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit:

Commencing at theSouthwest corner ofthe Southeast Quarterof Section 22, Township3 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North300 feet to the Northside of a public road(gravel); thence runNorth 46 deg. 05 min.East along the Northside of said public road239.9 feet; thence runNorth 79 deg. 29 min.East along said Northright of way line 40 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North11 deg. 58 min. East341.7 feet; thence runEast 349.3 feet; thencerun South 34 deg. 20min. West 395 feet tothe North right of wayline of said public road;thence run North 82deg. 20 min. West alongsaid North right of wayline 90 feet; thence runSouth 79 deg. 29 min.West along said Northright of way line 110feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 2.0acres, more or less.

SALE WILL BE MADE,AND TITLE WILL BE CON-VEYED, SUBJECT TO THEA F O R E M E N T I O N E DDEEDS OF TRUST IN FA-VOR OF FIRST AMERICANNATIONAL BANK OF IUKARECORDED IN THE LANDRECORDS IN THE OFFICEO F T H E C H A N C E R YC L E R K O F A L C O R NCOUNTY IN CORINTH,MISSISSIPPI.

I Will convey onlysuch title as is vested inm e a s S u b s t i t u t e dT r u s t e e .

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,t h i s t h e 3 d a y o fS e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 3 .

Lisa A. Koon, Esq.Substituted Trustee1231 First America DrivePost Office Box 1109Iuka, Mississippi 38852601-423-1006MS State Bar No. 100087

4t's9/5, 9/12, 9/19, 9/26#14377

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 6th day ofMarch, 2013, Ralph Witt, Jr.and Elizabeth Witt, executeda Deed of Trust to Recon-Trust Company, N. A., Trust-ee for the use and benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc., whichDeed of Trust is on file and ofrecord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in Deedof Trust records as Instru-ment No. 200601567 thereof;and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was ultimately assignedto Green Tree Servicing, LLC,by assignment on file and ofrecord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, as Instru-ment No. 201303301 thereof;and

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201303302 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 12th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

The following described prop-erty lying and being in theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi, more particularlydescribed as follows:

Tract #1: Commencing at theSouthwest Corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi, thence run East1900 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of a paved pub-lic road (Alcorn County Road#512); thence run along saidcenterl ine the fol lowing:North 1 degree 16 minutesEast 676.80 feet; North 0 de-grees 21 minutes West442.00 feet; North 17 de-grees 41 minutes West105.20 feet; North 33 de-grees 42 minutes West249.00 feet; thence leavingsaid centerline run South 58degrees 41 minutes West20.00 feet to an iron pin onthe West right-of-way of saidpaved public road; thence runSouth 58 degrees 41 minutesWest 378.60 feet to an ironpin and the Point of Begin-ning; thence run North 59 de-grees 19 minutes West563.60 feet; thence run Southfor 211.92 feet; thence runSouth 46 degrees 26 minutesEast for 137.83 feet; thencerun North 87 degrees 08minutes East for 385.31 feetto the Point of Beginning,containing 1.62 acres, moreor less.

Tract #2: Commence at theSouthwest Corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run East1900 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of a publicroad; thence run along saidcenterl ine the fol lowing:North 1 degree 16 minutesEast 676.8 feet; North 0 de-grees 21 minutes West 442feet; North 17 degrees 41minutes West 105.2 feet;North 33 degrees 42 minutesWest 249 feet; thence runSouth 58 degrees 41 minutesWest 20 feet to a point onthe West right-of-way line ofa public road for the Point ofBeginning; thence run South58 degrees 41 minutes West378.6 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 59 degrees19 minutes West 563.6 feet;thence run North 215 feet;thence run North 89 degrees42 minutes East 288.6 feet toan iron pin at a fence line pro-jection running North; thencecontinue North 89 degrees42 minutes East 454.66 feetto the West right-of-way lineof a public road; thence runalong the West right-of-wayline of said public road thefollowing: South 2 degrees 59minutes East 184.6 feet; South16 degrees 14 minutes East62 feet; South 29 degrees 52minutes East 76 feet to thePoint of Beginning, containing6.79 acres, more or less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 15th day of August,2013. ________________ BRADLEY P. JONES SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENS POST OFFICE BOX 400 BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI 39043 (601) 825-9508 A&E File #13-02052

P U B L I S H : 0 8 / 2 2 / 2 0 1 3 ,08 /29 /2013 , 09 /05 /201314355

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on orabout the 23rd day ofFebruary, 2006, DennisBearman and spouse,Deana Bearman, ex-ecuted a Deed of Trustto Mark Segars, Trustee,and First American Na-tional Bank, Beneficiary,which Deed of Trustwas filed for record onMarch 3, 2006, 10:00a.m., as Instrument No.200601238, in the landrecords in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County at Cor-inth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS, on orabout the 20th day ofMarch, 2009, DennisBearman and spouse,Deana Bearman, ex-ecuted a Deed of Trustto Mark Segars, Trustee,and First American Na-tional Bank, Beneficiary,which Deed of Trustwas filed for record onApril 1, 2009, 10:00 a.m.,a s I n s t r u m e n t N o .200901544, in the landrecords in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County at Cor-inth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS, on orabout the 11th day ofMay 2012, Deana Bear-man, executed a Deedof Trust to Mark Segars,Trustee, and First Amer-ican National Bank, Be-neficiary, which deed ofTrust was filed for re-cord on May 24, 2012,12:50 p.m., as Instru-ment No. 201202444, inthe land records in theoffice of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn Countyat Corinth, Mississippi;

WHEREAS , FirstAmerican National Bankof Iuka, Mississippi, isthe legal holder andowner of said Deeds ofTrust and the indebted-ness secured thereby,substituted Lisa A. Koonas Trustee by instru-ment dated August 8,2013, and recorded asInstrument Number201303361, on August14, 2013, as of 12:48p.m., of the land re-cords of Alcorn County,Mississippi ; and ex-ecuted a Corrected Ap-pointment of Substi-tuted Trustee dated Au-gust 23, 2013, and filedfor record at 9:39 a.m.on August 26, 2013, asI n s t r u m e n t N o .2 0 1 3 0 3 5 9 4 , i n s a i dC l e r k ' s O f f i c e .

WHEREAS, defaulthaving been made inthe terms and condi-tions of said Deeds ofTrust, and default hav-ing been made on thePromissory Notes se-cured thereby, and theremaining balance ofthe original indebted-ness secured by saidDeeds of Trust, havingbeen declared to bedue and payable pursu-ant to the terms of saidDeeds of Trust, andFirst American NationalBank of Iuka, Mississippi,t h e h o l d e r o f t h ePromissory Notes andDeeds of Trust havingrequested the under-s igned Subst i tutedTrustee so to do, I will,on the 27th day ofSeptember, 2013,. offerfor sale at public, out-cry between the hoursof 11:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.,at the South Main doorof the county court-house of Alcorn County,at Corinth, Mississippi,for cash to the highestand best bidder, the fol-lowing described landand property lying andbeing situated in Al-corn, County, Missis-sippi, and being moreparticularly describedas follows, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit:

Commencing at theSouthwest corner ofthe Southeast Quarterof Section 22, Township3 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North300 feet to the Northside of a public road(gravel); thence runNorth 46 deg. 05 min.East along the Northside of said public road239.9 feet; thence runNorth 79 deg. 29 min.East along said Northright of way line 40 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North11 deg. 58 min. East341.7 feet; thence runEast 349.3 feet; thencerun South 34 deg. 20min. West 395 feet tothe North right of wayline of said public road;thence run North 82deg. 20 min. West alongsaid North right of wayline 90 feet; thence runSouth 79 deg. 29 min.West along said Northright of way line 110feet to the point of be-ginning, containing 2.0acres, more or less.

SALE WILL BE MADE,AND TITLE WILL BE CON-VEYED, SUBJECT TO THEA F O R E M E N T I O N E DDEEDS OF TRUST IN FA-VOR OF FIRST AMERICANNATIONAL BANK OF IUKARECORDED IN THE LANDRECORDS IN THE OFFICEO F T H E C H A N C E R YC L E R K O F A L C O R NCOUNTY IN CORINTH,MISSISSIPPI.

I Will convey onlysuch title as is vested inm e a s S u b s t i t u t e dT r u s t e e .

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,t h i s t h e 3 d a y o fS e p t e m b e r 2 0 1 3 .

Lisa A. Koon, Esq.Substituted Trustee1231 First America DrivePost Office Box 1109Iuka, Mississippi 38852601-423-1006MS State Bar No. 100087

4t's9/5, 9/12, 9/19, 9/26#14377

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 6th day ofMarch, 2013, Ralph Witt, Jr.and Elizabeth Witt, executeda Deed of Trust to Recon-Trust Company, N. A., Trust-ee for the use and benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc., whichDeed of Trust is on file and ofrecord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in Deedof Trust records as Instru-ment No. 200601567 thereof;and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was ultimately assignedto Green Tree Servicing, LLC,by assignment on file and ofrecord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, as Instru-ment No. 201303301 thereof;and

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201303302 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 12th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

The following described prop-erty lying and being in theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi, more particularlydescribed as follows:

Tract #1: Commencing at theSouthwest Corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi, thence run East1900 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of a paved pub-lic road (Alcorn County Road#512); thence run along saidcenterl ine the fol lowing:North 1 degree 16 minutesEast 676.80 feet; North 0 de-grees 21 minutes West442.00 feet; North 17 de-grees 41 minutes West105.20 feet; North 33 de-grees 42 minutes West249.00 feet; thence leavingsaid centerline run South 58degrees 41 minutes West20.00 feet to an iron pin onthe West right-of-way of saidpaved public road; thence runSouth 58 degrees 41 minutesWest 378.60 feet to an ironpin and the Point of Begin-ning; thence run North 59 de-grees 19 minutes West563.60 feet; thence run Southfor 211.92 feet; thence runSouth 46 degrees 26 minutesEast for 137.83 feet; thencerun North 87 degrees 08minutes East for 385.31 feetto the Point of Beginning,containing 1.62 acres, moreor less.

Tract #2: Commence at theSouthwest Corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run East1900 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of a publicroad; thence run along saidcenterl ine the fol lowing:North 1 degree 16 minutesEast 676.8 feet; North 0 de-grees 21 minutes West 442feet; North 17 degrees 41minutes West 105.2 feet;North 33 degrees 42 minutesWest 249 feet; thence runSouth 58 degrees 41 minutesWest 20 feet to a point onthe West right-of-way line ofa public road for the Point ofBeginning; thence run South58 degrees 41 minutes West378.6 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 59 degrees19 minutes West 563.6 feet;thence run North 215 feet;thence run North 89 degrees42 minutes East 288.6 feet toan iron pin at a fence line pro-jection running North; thencecontinue North 89 degrees42 minutes East 454.66 feetto the West right-of-way lineof a public road; thence runalong the West right-of-wayline of said public road thefollowing: South 2 degrees 59minutes East 184.6 feet; South16 degrees 14 minutes East62 feet; South 29 degrees 52minutes East 76 feet to thePoint of Beginning, containing6.79 acres, more or less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 15th day of August,2013. ________________ BRADLEY P. JONES SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENS POST OFFICE BOX 400 BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI 39043 (601) 825-9508 A&E File #13-02052

P U B L I S H : 0 8 / 2 2 / 2 0 1 3 ,08 /29 /2013 , 09 /05 /201314355

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

1. 1999 16X80 Belmont 3bed 2 bath, Won't beatthis deal! Only $11,900.Must be moved. 662-401-10932. Double wide 3 bed 2bath, al l appliances,central heat & air, mustbe moved. Need to sellasap. $19900. Call 662-401-10933. 16X72 2 bed 1.5 bathmobile home for sale,n e w c a r p e t & l i n othroughout, new coun-tertops, new s inks ,100% ready to move in-to. Delivery and set up$16500. Call-397-93394. 28X70 4 bed 2 bathnew tin roof, l ivingroom, separate denwith f i replace, realwood cabinets. Mustsell! $27000. with deliv-er & set up on yourproperty. 662-397-93395. You will have to seeto believe, It is a triplewide & it is like new,home has all appliances,a/c unit, very large kit-chen, lots of real woodcabinets, real woodfloors thru out, totalelectric, vinyl sidingshingle roof, too manyother options to list.Will deliver and set upfor $44,900. call 662-296-59236. Very nice 16x80 3 bed2 bath, vinyl siding, newhouse type metal roof,all appliances included,home is clean and readyfor someone to moveinto, large open kit-chen with dining area,master bath has largetub & separate shower.Deliver & set up. $18,900call 662-296-59237. I pay top dollar forused mobile homes. call662-296-5923

LEGALS0955SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE’S NOTICEOF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 30th dayof April, 2010, a Deed ofTrust was executed by Harp-er Medical Complex, LLC toB. Sean Akins as Trustee forCB&S Bank, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the Of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, at Corinth,Mississippi, as Instrument201002377, andWHEREAS, the legal holderof the Deed of Trust and thenote secured thereby substi-tuted Charles E. Winfield asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument201300222 thereof; and WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Charles E. Winfield, Substi-tuted Trustee, by virtue ofthe authority conferred uponme in said Deed of Trust, willoffer for sale and will sell atpublic sale and outcry to thehighest and best bidder forcash, during the legal hours(between the hours of 11o’clock a.m. and 4 o’clockp.m.), at the South main doorof the County Courthouse ofAlcorn County, State of Mis-sissippi, on the 12th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, Mississippi, to-wit:Commence at the Northw-est corner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 7, Town-ship 2, South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi,said point being in the right-of-way of Proper Street {apublic street}; thence runSouth 30.00 feet o the Southof right-of-way line of ProperStreet; thence run South483.976 feet to the point ofbeginning; thence continueSouth 159.00 feet; thence runSouth 89 degrees 20 minutes16 seconds East 197.590 feetto a point on the West ofr i g h t - o f - w a y o f P r a t tdrive{public}; thence runNorth 00 degrees 39 minutes36 seconds East 158.990 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence leaving the Westright-of-way of said PrattDrive run North 89 degrees20 minutes 16 seconds West199.406 feet to the point ofbeginning, containing 0.724acres, more or less.

Together with a 14 foot by100 foot easement for thepurpose of parking vehicleson, over and across the fol-lowing described property:

Commence at Northwestcorner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 7, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run South 30.00 feetto point on the South right-of-way line of Proper Street{public}; thence run South642.978 feet; thence runSouth 89 degrees 20 minutes16 seconds East 34.00 feet tothe point of beginning of ease-ment; thence run South 14.0feet; thence run North 89 de-grees 20 minutes 16 secondsWest 100.0 feet to the pointof beginning of easement.

SUBJECT TO: Existing ease-ments and/or right-of-ways.

Title to the above de-scribed property is believedto be good, but I will conveyonly such title as is vested inme as Substituted Trustee. WITNESS my signature, onthis the 14th day of August,2013.

Charles E.Winfield SubstitutedTrusteeThis instrument prepared by:Charles E. Winfield (MB#10588)Perry, Winfield & Wolfe, P.A.224 E. Main StreetPost Office Box 80281Starkville, MS 39759(662) 323-3984 – Tel3 t'sPUBLISH: August 22, 2013 August 29, 2013 September 5, 2013#14354

SUBSTITUTETRUSTEE'S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 6th day ofMarch, 2013, Ralph Witt, Jr.and Elizabeth Witt, executeda Deed of Trust to Recon-Trust Company, N. A., Trust-ee for the use and benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc., whichDeed of Trust is on file and ofrecord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in Deedof Trust records as Instru-ment No. 200601567 thereof;and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was ultimately assignedto Green Tree Servicing, LLC,by assignment on file and ofrecord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, as Instru-ment No. 201303301 thereof;and

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201303302 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 12th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

The following described prop-erty lying and being in theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi, more particularlydescribed as follows:

Tract #1: Commencing at theSouthwest Corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi, thence run East1900 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of a paved pub-lic road (Alcorn County Road#512); thence run along saidcenterl ine the fol lowing:North 1 degree 16 minutesEast 676.80 feet; North 0 de-grees 21 minutes West442.00 feet; North 17 de-grees 41 minutes West105.20 feet; North 33 de-grees 42 minutes West249.00 feet; thence leavingsaid centerline run South 58degrees 41 minutes West20.00 feet to an iron pin onthe West right-of-way of saidpaved public road; thence runSouth 58 degrees 41 minutesWest 378.60 feet to an ironpin and the Point of Begin-ning; thence run North 59 de-grees 19 minutes West563.60 feet; thence run Southfor 211.92 feet; thence runSouth 46 degrees 26 minutesEast for 137.83 feet; thencerun North 87 degrees 08minutes East for 385.31 feetto the Point of Beginning,containing 1.62 acres, moreor less.

Tract #2: Commence at theSouthwest Corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 35, Township 2 South,Range 6 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run East1900 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of a publicroad; thence run along saidcenterl ine the fol lowing:North 1 degree 16 minutesEast 676.8 feet; North 0 de-grees 21 minutes West 442feet; North 17 degrees 41minutes West 105.2 feet;North 33 degrees 42 minutesWest 249 feet; thence runSouth 58 degrees 41 minutesWest 20 feet to a point onthe West right-of-way line ofa public road for the Point ofBeginning; thence run South58 degrees 41 minutes West378.6 feet to a fence corner;thence run North 59 degrees19 minutes West 563.6 feet;thence run North 215 feet;thence run North 89 degrees42 minutes East 288.6 feet toan iron pin at a fence line pro-jection running North; thencecontinue North 89 degrees42 minutes East 454.66 feetto the West right-of-way lineof a public road; thence runalong the West right-of-wayline of said public road thefollowing: South 2 degrees 59minutes East 184.6 feet; South16 degrees 14 minutes East62 feet; South 29 degrees 52minutes East 76 feet to thePoint of Beginning, containing6.79 acres, more or less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 15th day of August,2013. ________________ BRADLEY P. JONES SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENS POST OFFICE BOX 400 BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI 39043 (601) 825-9508 A&E File #13-02052

P U B L I S H : 0 8 / 2 2 / 2 0 1 3 ,08 /29 /2013 , 09 /05 /201314355

Page 16: 090513 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Thursday, September 5, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

LEGALS0955

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

ALCORN COUNTY DE-PARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES, BY MARGIESHELTON AND JENNIFERLEANN EDERS, A MINOR,BY AND THROUGH HERNEXT FRIEND, MARGIESHELTON PETITIONERS

CIVIL ACTION, FILE NO.2013-0449-02-L

VS.

MARGIE ANN WATKINS,CHESTER EDERDS ANDUNKNOWN PUTATIVEFATHERRESPONDENTS

CHANCERY COURTSUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: Unknown PutativeFather, and ChesterEderds, who is not tobe found in the State ofMississippi on diligentinquiry and whose postoffice address is 5047H o l l y G r o v e R o a d ,Br ighton, TN 38011

You have been madea Respondent in thesuit filed in this Courtby the Alcorn CountyDepartment of HumanServ ices by Marg ieShelton, Social ServicesRegional Director, and,Jennifer Leann Ederds, aminor, seeking to ter-minate your parentalrights as those rightsrelate to said minor anddemanding that the fullcustody, control andauthority to act on be-half of said minor beplaced with the AlcornCounty Department ofHuman Services. Re-spondents other thanyou in this action areMargie Ann Watkins.

YOU ARE SUMMONEDTO APPEAR AND DE-FEND AGAINST THE PETI-TION FILED AGAINST YOUIN THIS ACTION AT 9:30A.M. ON THE 21ST DAYOF NOVEMBER, 2013, INTHE COURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTY CHAN-CERY COURTHOUSE ATCORINTH, MISSISSIPPI,AND IN CASE OF YOURFAILURE TO APPEAR ANDDEFEND, A JUDGMENTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THERELIEF DEMANDED INTHE PETITION.

You are not requiredto file an answer or oth-er pleading, but youmay do so if you desire.

ISSUED under myhand and seal of saidCourt, this 3rd day ofSeptember, 2013.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPICORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

38835-0069BY: KAREN BURNS, D.C.

DEPUTY CLERK

3t's9/5, 9/12,9/19#14378

I N T H E C H A N C E R YC O U R T O F A L C O R NC O U N T Y , M I S S I S S I P P I

RE: THE LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OFPAUL D. WATKINS,CAUSE NO. 2013-0474-02DECEASED

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE IS GIVEN thatLetters Testamentary wereon the 26 day of August,2013 granted the under-signed Executrix of the Es-tate of PAUL D. WATKINS,Deceased, by the ChanceryCourt of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi; and all persons hav-ing claims against said Estateare required to have the sameprobated and registered bythe Clerk of said Court with-in ninety (90) days after thedate of the first publication ofthis Notice, which is the 29day of August , 2013 or thesame shall be forever barred.

WITNESS OUR SIGNA-TURE(S), this the 26 day ofAugust, 2013.

CLYSTER WATKINSEXECUTRIX

3t's 8/29, 9/5, 9/1214369

HANDYMAN

HANDYMAN'S H o m ecare, anything. 662-643-6892.

STORAGE, INDOOR/OUTDOOR

5 POINT Mini StorageGreat deal first 3 mths

662-284-6848

AMERICANMINI STORAGE

2058 S. TateAcross fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUMMINI-STORAGE

286-3826.

LEGALS0955

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

ALCORN COUNTY DE-PARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES, BY MARGIESHELTON AND JENNIFERLEANN EDERS, A MINOR,BY AND THROUGH HERNEXT FRIEND, MARGIESHELTON PETITIONERS

CIVIL ACTION, FILE NO.2013-0449-02-L

VS.

MARGIE ANN WATKINS,CHESTER EDERDS ANDUNKNOWN PUTATIVEFATHERRESPONDENTS

CHANCERY COURTSUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: Unknown PutativeFather, and ChesterEderds, who is not tobe found in the State ofMississippi on diligentinquiry and whose postoffice address is 5047H o l l y G r o v e R o a d ,Br ighton, TN 38011

You have been madea Respondent in thesuit filed in this Courtby the Alcorn CountyDepartment of HumanServ ices by Marg ieShelton, Social ServicesRegional Director, and,Jennifer Leann Ederds, aminor, seeking to ter-minate your parentalrights as those rightsrelate to said minor anddemanding that the fullcustody, control andauthority to act on be-half of said minor beplaced with the AlcornCounty Department ofHuman Services. Re-spondents other thanyou in this action areMargie Ann Watkins.

YOU ARE SUMMONEDTO APPEAR AND DE-FEND AGAINST THE PETI-TION FILED AGAINST YOUIN THIS ACTION AT 9:30A.M. ON THE 21ST DAYOF NOVEMBER, 2013, INTHE COURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTY CHAN-CERY COURTHOUSE ATCORINTH, MISSISSIPPI,AND IN CASE OF YOURFAILURE TO APPEAR ANDDEFEND, A JUDGMENTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THERELIEF DEMANDED INTHE PETITION.

You are not requiredto file an answer or oth-er pleading, but youmay do so if you desire.

ISSUED under myhand and seal of saidCourt, this 3rd day ofSeptember, 2013.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPICORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

38835-0069BY: KAREN BURNS, D.C.

DEPUTY CLERK

3t's9/5, 9/12,9/19#14378

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'SNOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 21st dayof December, 2007, DanSloan and wife, Rachael Sloanaka Rachel Mitchell, executeda Deed of Trust to DeberaBridges, Trustee for the useand benefit of CitifinancialReal Estate Services, Inc.,which Deed of Trust is on fileand of record in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi, inDeed of Trust Book as Instru-ment No. 200708251 thereof;and

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201302763 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 26th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

The following described prop-erty; situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mississippi,to-wit: Commencing at theNortheast corner of theNorthwest quarter of Sec-tion 9, Township 3 South,Range 7 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run South1414 feet; thence run West609.6 feet; thence run South87 degrees 30 minutes East180 feet along the Northright-of-way line of a publicroad; thence run South 84 de-grees 15 minutes East 25 feetalong said right-of-way line;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 58 degrees43 minutes West 912 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun North 31 degrees 17minutes East 196.3 feet to theSouth right-of-way line of aroad; thence run along saidright-of-way line North 58degrees 43 minutes West276.2 feet; thence run South0 degrees 56 minutes West211.8 feet; thence run East92.7 feet; thence run South 0degrees 22 minutes West74.75 feet, more or less tothe Point of Beginning, con-taining 0.89 acre, more orless and commencing at theNortheast corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 9, Township 3 South,Range 7 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run South1414 feet; thence run West609.6 feet; thence run South87 degrees 30 minutes East180 feet along the Northright-of-way line of a publicroad; thence run South 84 de-grees 15 minutes East 25 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 58 degrees43 minutes West 762 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun North 31 degrees 17minutes East 196.3 feet to theSouth right-of-way line of aproposed public road; thencerun North 58 degrees 43minutes West 150 feet alongsaid right-of-way; thence runSouth 31 degrees 17 minutesWest 196.3 feet; thence runSouth 58 degrees 43 minutesEast 150 feet to the Point ofBeginning. Containing 0.67acres, more or less.

Being the same propertyconveyed from William D.Sloan and Rachel (Sloan)Mitchell to William D. Sloanand Rachel Mitchell recorded11/14/1980, in Book 201,Page 366. Being the same feesimple property conveyed bywarranty deed from C.D.Carpenter and Mary E. Car-penter, wife, to Dan Sloanand Rachel Sloan, aka RachelMitchell, wife, tenancy by en-tirety, dated 06/01/1984 re-corded on 06/28/1984 inBook 218, Page 366 in Al-corn County records, State ofMS.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 28th day of August,2013.

BRADLEY P. JONES SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #13-01583

P U B L I S H : 0 9 / 0 5 / 2 0 1 3 ,09 /12 /2013 , 09 /19 /20133 t's#14374

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

ALCORN COUNTY DE-PARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES, BY MARGIESHELTON AND JENNIFERLEANN EDERS, A MINOR,BY AND THROUGH HERNEXT FRIEND, MARGIESHELTON PETITIONERS

CIVIL ACTION, FILE NO.2013-0449-02-L

VS.

MARGIE ANN WATKINS,CHESTER EDERDS ANDUNKNOWN PUTATIVEFATHERRESPONDENTS

CHANCERY COURTSUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: Unknown PutativeFather, and ChesterEderds, who is not tobe found in the State ofMississippi on diligentinquiry and whose postoffice address is 5047H o l l y G r o v e R o a d ,Br ighton, TN 38011

You have been madea Respondent in thesuit filed in this Courtby the Alcorn CountyDepartment of HumanServ ices by Marg ieShelton, Social ServicesRegional Director, and,Jennifer Leann Ederds, aminor, seeking to ter-minate your parentalrights as those rightsrelate to said minor anddemanding that the fullcustody, control andauthority to act on be-half of said minor beplaced with the AlcornCounty Department ofHuman Services. Re-spondents other thanyou in this action areMargie Ann Watkins.

YOU ARE SUMMONEDTO APPEAR AND DE-FEND AGAINST THE PETI-TION FILED AGAINST YOUIN THIS ACTION AT 9:30A.M. ON THE 21ST DAYOF NOVEMBER, 2013, INTHE COURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTY CHAN-CERY COURTHOUSE ATCORINTH, MISSISSIPPI,AND IN CASE OF YOURFAILURE TO APPEAR ANDDEFEND, A JUDGMENTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THERELIEF DEMANDED INTHE PETITION.

You are not requiredto file an answer or oth-er pleading, but youmay do so if you desire.

ISSUED under myhand and seal of saidCourt, this 3rd day ofSeptember, 2013.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPICORINTH, MISSISSIPPI

38835-0069BY: KAREN BURNS, D.C.

DEPUTY CLERK

3t's9/5, 9/12,9/19#14378

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'SNOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 21st dayof December, 2007, DanSloan and wife, Rachael Sloanaka Rachel Mitchell, executeda Deed of Trust to DeberaBridges, Trustee for the useand benefit of CitifinancialReal Estate Services, Inc.,which Deed of Trust is on fileand of record in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi, inDeed of Trust Book as Instru-ment No. 200708251 thereof;and

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201302763 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 26th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

The following described prop-erty; situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mississippi,to-wit: Commencing at theNortheast corner of theNorthwest quarter of Sec-tion 9, Township 3 South,Range 7 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run South1414 feet; thence run West609.6 feet; thence run South87 degrees 30 minutes East180 feet along the Northright-of-way line of a publicroad; thence run South 84 de-grees 15 minutes East 25 feetalong said right-of-way line;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 58 degrees43 minutes West 912 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun North 31 degrees 17minutes East 196.3 feet to theSouth right-of-way line of aroad; thence run along saidright-of-way line North 58degrees 43 minutes West276.2 feet; thence run South0 degrees 56 minutes West211.8 feet; thence run East92.7 feet; thence run South 0degrees 22 minutes West74.75 feet, more or less tothe Point of Beginning, con-taining 0.89 acre, more orless and commencing at theNortheast corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 9, Township 3 South,Range 7 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run South1414 feet; thence run West609.6 feet; thence run South87 degrees 30 minutes East180 feet along the Northright-of-way line of a publicroad; thence run South 84 de-grees 15 minutes East 25 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 58 degrees43 minutes West 762 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun North 31 degrees 17minutes East 196.3 feet to theSouth right-of-way line of aproposed public road; thencerun North 58 degrees 43minutes West 150 feet alongsaid right-of-way; thence runSouth 31 degrees 17 minutesWest 196.3 feet; thence runSouth 58 degrees 43 minutesEast 150 feet to the Point ofBeginning. Containing 0.67acres, more or less.

Being the same propertyconveyed from William D.Sloan and Rachel (Sloan)Mitchell to William D. Sloanand Rachel Mitchell recorded11/14/1980, in Book 201,Page 366. Being the same feesimple property conveyed bywarranty deed from C.D.Carpenter and Mary E. Car-penter, wife, to Dan Sloanand Rachel Sloan, aka RachelMitchell, wife, tenancy by en-tirety, dated 06/01/1984 re-corded on 06/28/1984 inBook 218, Page 366 in Al-corn County records, State ofMS.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 28th day of August,2013.

BRADLEY P. JONES SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #13-01583

P U B L I S H : 0 9 / 0 5 / 2 0 1 3 ,09 /12 /2013 , 09 /19 /20133 t's#14374

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'SNOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 5th day ofNovember, 2004, Marvin T.Lancaster and Amy E. Lan-caster, executed a Deed ofTrust to Wilson, Hinton &Wood, Trustee for the useand benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registration Systems,Inc., which Deed of Trust ison file and of record in theoffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi,in Deed of Trust Book 668 atPage 286 thereof; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrus t was a s s i gned toCitiMortgage, Inc., by assign-ment on file and of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.200905351 thereof; and

WHEREAS, the terms of saidDeed of Trust were modifiedby that instrument on file andof record in the office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument No. 201202218thereof;

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Lem Adams, III, asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.200905350 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Lem Adams, III, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 26th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

Lying and being in the South-west Quarter of Section 34,Township 1 South, Range 8East, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, more particularly de-scribed as follows: Commen-cing at the Southeast cornerof the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 34, Township 1South, Range 8 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi; thencerun West 165 feet, more orless, to the centerline of aditch at the Southeast cornerof the property conveyed byW. C. Sweat, Jr. et al to OrbaJones and C. L. Jones by deeddated June 11, 1971, and re-corded in the ChanceryClerk`s off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in DeedBook 155 at pages 454-456;thence run North 12 degrees45 minutes East along saidcenterline 30 feet, more orless, to the North right ofway line of Pittman Road andthe Point of Beginning; thencerun South 89 degrees 07minutes West along theNorth right of way line ofPittman Road 404.5 feet;thence run North 2 degrees34 minutes East 340 feet;thence run North 1 degree00 minutes West 229 feet;thence run North 1 degree00 minutes West 59.3 feet tothe centerline of a ditch;thence run in an Easterly dir-ection along the meanderingsof the centerline of said ditch615.5 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of the firstditch referred to above;thence run in a southerly dir-ection along the centerline ofsaid ditch 673.8 feet, more orless, to the beginning point,containing 6.94 acres, moreor less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 27th day of August,2013.

LEM ADAMS, IIISUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #12-00138

PUBLISH: 09/05/2013,09/12/2013, 09/19/20133t's#14373

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'SNOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 21st dayof December, 2007, DanSloan and wife, Rachael Sloanaka Rachel Mitchell, executeda Deed of Trust to DeberaBridges, Trustee for the useand benefit of CitifinancialReal Estate Services, Inc.,which Deed of Trust is on fileand of record in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi, inDeed of Trust Book as Instru-ment No. 200708251 thereof;and

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Bradley P. Jones,as Trustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.201302763 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Bradley P. Jones, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 26th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

The following described prop-erty; situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mississippi,to-wit: Commencing at theNortheast corner of theNorthwest quarter of Sec-tion 9, Township 3 South,Range 7 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run South1414 feet; thence run West609.6 feet; thence run South87 degrees 30 minutes East180 feet along the Northright-of-way line of a publicroad; thence run South 84 de-grees 15 minutes East 25 feetalong said right-of-way line;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 58 degrees43 minutes West 912 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun North 31 degrees 17minutes East 196.3 feet to theSouth right-of-way line of aroad; thence run along saidright-of-way line North 58degrees 43 minutes West276.2 feet; thence run South0 degrees 56 minutes West211.8 feet; thence run East92.7 feet; thence run South 0degrees 22 minutes West74.75 feet, more or less tothe Point of Beginning, con-taining 0.89 acre, more orless and commencing at theNortheast corner of theNorthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 9, Township 3 South,Range 7 East, Alcorn County,Mississippi; thence run South1414 feet; thence run West609.6 feet; thence run South87 degrees 30 minutes East180 feet along the Northright-of-way line of a publicroad; thence run South 84 de-grees 15 minutes East 25 feeta long sa id r ight -o f -way ;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 327.26 feet;thence run North 58 degrees43 minutes West 762 feet tothe Point of Beginning; thencerun North 31 degrees 17minutes East 196.3 feet to theSouth right-of-way line of aproposed public road; thencerun North 58 degrees 43minutes West 150 feet alongsaid right-of-way; thence runSouth 31 degrees 17 minutesWest 196.3 feet; thence runSouth 58 degrees 43 minutesEast 150 feet to the Point ofBeginning. Containing 0.67acres, more or less.

Being the same propertyconveyed from William D.Sloan and Rachel (Sloan)Mitchell to William D. Sloanand Rachel Mitchell recorded11/14/1980, in Book 201,Page 366. Being the same feesimple property conveyed bywarranty deed from C.D.Carpenter and Mary E. Car-penter, wife, to Dan Sloanand Rachel Sloan, aka RachelMitchell, wife, tenancy by en-tirety, dated 06/01/1984 re-corded on 06/28/1984 inBook 218, Page 366 in Al-corn County records, State ofMS.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 28th day of August,2013.

BRADLEY P. JONES SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #13-01583

P U B L I S H : 0 9 / 0 5 / 2 0 1 3 ,09 /12 /2013 , 09 /19 /20133 t's#14374

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'SNOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 5th day ofNovember, 2004, Marvin T.Lancaster and Amy E. Lan-caster, executed a Deed ofTrust to Wilson, Hinton &Wood, Trustee for the useand benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registration Systems,Inc., which Deed of Trust ison file and of record in theoffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi,in Deed of Trust Book 668 atPage 286 thereof; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrus t was a s s i gned toCitiMortgage, Inc., by assign-ment on file and of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.200905351 thereof; and

WHEREAS, the terms of saidDeed of Trust were modifiedby that instrument on file andof record in the office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument No. 201202218thereof;

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Lem Adams, III, asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.200905350 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Lem Adams, III, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 26th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

Lying and being in the South-west Quarter of Section 34,Township 1 South, Range 8East, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, more particularly de-scribed as follows: Commen-cing at the Southeast cornerof the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 34, Township 1South, Range 8 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi; thencerun West 165 feet, more orless, to the centerline of aditch at the Southeast cornerof the property conveyed byW. C. Sweat, Jr. et al to OrbaJones and C. L. Jones by deeddated June 11, 1971, and re-corded in the ChanceryClerk`s off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in DeedBook 155 at pages 454-456;thence run North 12 degrees45 minutes East along saidcenterline 30 feet, more orless, to the North right ofway line of Pittman Road andthe Point of Beginning; thencerun South 89 degrees 07minutes West along theNorth right of way line ofPittman Road 404.5 feet;thence run North 2 degrees34 minutes East 340 feet;thence run North 1 degree00 minutes West 229 feet;thence run North 1 degree00 minutes West 59.3 feet tothe centerline of a ditch;thence run in an Easterly dir-ection along the meanderingsof the centerline of said ditch615.5 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of the firstditch referred to above;thence run in a southerly dir-ection along the centerline ofsaid ditch 673.8 feet, more orless, to the beginning point,containing 6.94 acres, moreor less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 27th day of August,2013.

LEM ADAMS, IIISUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #12-00138

PUBLISH: 09/05/2013,09/12/2013, 09/19/20133t's#14373

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on 30th day ofMay, 1997, Willie B.Mitchell, Jr. (The Es-tate of) and Brenda J.Mitchell executed a cer-tain Deed of Trust to Don-ald R. Downs, Trustee forthe benefit of The PeoplesBank & Trust Company,The State Mississippi,which Deed of Trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inBook/Instrument No.462 at Page 93-102; and

Whereas said Deed of Trustwas assigned at Deed Book462, Page 103, on June 2,1997 to Chase ManhattanMortgage Corporation filed inthe office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk; and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, NationalA s s o c i a t i o n s / b / mChase Home FinanceLLC s/b/m Chase Man-hattan Mortgage Cor-poration, has heretoforesubstituted Philip L. Mar-tin as Trustee in lieu and inplace of Donald R. Downsby instrument dated 6/1/2012,and recorded in Book/In-strument # 201202825at Page 1-2; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Land Deedof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trustand the legal holder of said in-debtedness, having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land, property,and all fixtures in accordancewith the terms of said LandDeed of Trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney’s fees, Substi-tute Trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE , I ,Philip L. Martin, Substi-tuted Trustee in said Deed ofTrust, will on 10/1/2013offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at600 Waldron Street,Corinth, MS - SouthFront Door of AlcornCounty Courthouse State ofMississippi, to the highest andbest bidder for cash the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit: TractNo. 1: Beginning at theSoutheast corner of theNortheast Quarter ofSection 18, Township 2South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thenceNorth 12 degrees 19minutes West 945 feetand 10 inches; thenceSouth 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet to the Southw-est corner of the JimmyPhelps lot or known asLot 15 in the Caldwell &Mattox Subdivision, andthis being the truepoint of beginning;thence North 16 de-grees 22 minutes West181.9 feet along theWest boundary line ofthe Phelps lot to afence; thence West193.2 feet along saidfence to an iron pin anda large fence post ;thence South 15 de-grees 17 minutes West200 feet to the Northside of a proposed road;thence North 86 de-grees 13 minutes Eastalong the North side ofsaid road 298.3 feet tothe true point of begin-ning. Containing 1.05acres, more or less.Less and except fromTract No. 1 the follow-ing described property:.03 acres, more or less,located in the North-east Quarter of Section18, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, more par-ticularly described asfollows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes West 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30m i n u t e s 1 3 0 f e e t ;thence run South 88degrees 30 minutesWest 130 feet for thepoint of beginning;thence run South 86degrees 13 minutesWest 27 feet; thencerun North 0 degrees 43minutes East 89.7 feet;thence run South 16degrees 22 minutesEast 91.6 feet to thepoint of beginning.Tract No. 2: .03 acres,more or less, located inthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East, more particularlydescribed as follows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes west 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 22minutes West 91.6 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North16 degrees 22 minutesWest 91.9 feet to an oldfence; thence run East27 feet; thence runSouth 0 degrees 43minutes West 88.2 feetto the point of begin-ning.

Title to said property is be-lieved to be good but I WILLCONVEY only such title as isvested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,on July 26, 2013

/s/ Philip L. MartinMartin & BrunavsAttorneys At Law2800 North Druid Hills RoadAtlanta, GA 30329(404) 982-0088 or (877) 740-0883- PhoneM&B File # 12-13921MSPublication Dates: Septem-ber 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013?THIS LAW FIRM ISACTING AS A DEBTC O L L E C T O R , A T -TEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT.ANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE.#14358

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'SNOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 5th day ofNovember, 2004, Marvin T.Lancaster and Amy E. Lan-caster, executed a Deed ofTrust to Wilson, Hinton &Wood, Trustee for the useand benefit of Mortgage Elec-tronic Registration Systems,Inc., which Deed of Trust ison file and of record in theoffice of the Chancery Clerkof Alcorn County, Mississippi,in Deed of Trust Book 668 atPage 286 thereof; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrus t was a s s i gned toCitiMortgage, Inc., by assign-ment on file and of record inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, as Instrument No.200905351 thereof; and

WHEREAS, the terms of saidDeed of Trust were modifiedby that instrument on file andof record in the office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk asInstrument No. 201202218thereof;

WHEREAS, the legal holderof the said Deed of Trust andthe note secured thereby,substituted Lem Adams, III, asTrustee therein, as author-ized by the terms thereof, byinstrument recorded in theoffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk as Instrument No.200905350 thereof; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the perform-ance of the conditions andstipulations as set forth bysaid Deed of Trust, and hav-ing been requested by the leg-al holder of the indebtednesssecured and described by saidDeed of Trust so to do, no-tice is hereby given that I,Lem Adams, III, SubstituteTrustee, by virtue of the au-thority conferred upon me insaid Deed of Trust, will offerfor sale and will sell at publicsale and outcry to the highestand best bidder for cash, dur-ing the legal hours (betweenthe hours of 11 o'clock a.m.and 4 o'clock p.m.) at theSouth front door of theCounty Courthouse of Al-corn County, at Corinth, Mis-sissippi, on the 26th day ofSeptember, 2013, the follow-ing described land and prop-erty being the same land andproperty described in saidDeed of Trust, situated in Al-corn County, State of Missis-sippi, to-wit:

Lying and being in the South-west Quarter of Section 34,Township 1 South, Range 8East, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, more particularly de-scribed as follows: Commen-cing at the Southeast cornerof the Southwest Quarter ofSect ion 34, Township 1South, Range 8 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi; thencerun West 165 feet, more orless, to the centerline of aditch at the Southeast cornerof the property conveyed byW. C. Sweat, Jr. et al to OrbaJones and C. L. Jones by deeddated June 11, 1971, and re-corded in the ChanceryClerk`s off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in DeedBook 155 at pages 454-456;thence run North 12 degrees45 minutes East along saidcenterline 30 feet, more orless, to the North right ofway line of Pittman Road andthe Point of Beginning; thencerun South 89 degrees 07minutes West along theNorth right of way line ofPittman Road 404.5 feet;thence run North 2 degrees34 minutes East 340 feet;thence run North 1 degree00 minutes West 229 feet;thence run North 1 degree00 minutes West 59.3 feet tothe centerline of a ditch;thence run in an Easterly dir-ection along the meanderingsof the centerline of said ditch615.5 feet, more or less, tothe centerline of the firstditch referred to above;thence run in a southerly dir-ection along the centerline ofsaid ditch 673.8 feet, more orless, to the beginning point,containing 6.94 acres, moreor less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstitute Trustee.

WITNESS my signature, onthis the 27th day of August,2013.

LEM ADAMS, IIISUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE

PREPARED BY:ADAMS & EDENSPOST OFFICE BOX 400BRANDON, MISSISSIPPI39043(601) 825-9508A&E File #12-00138

PUBLISH: 09/05/2013,09/12/2013, 09/19/20133t's#14373

LEGALS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE’S NOTICE

OF SALE

WHEREAS, on 30th day ofMay, 1997, Willie B.Mitchell, Jr. (The Es-tate of) and Brenda J.Mitchell executed a cer-tain Deed of Trust to Don-ald R. Downs, Trustee forthe benefit of The PeoplesBank & Trust Company,The State Mississippi,which Deed of Trust is of re-cord in the office of theChancery Clerk of AlcornCounty, State of Mississippi inBook/Instrument No.462 at Page 93-102; and

Whereas said Deed of Trustwas assigned at Deed Book462, Page 103, on June 2,1997 to Chase ManhattanMortgage Corporation filed inthe office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk; and

WHEREAS, JPMorganChase Bank, NationalA s s o c i a t i o n s / b / mChase Home FinanceLLC s/b/m Chase Man-hattan Mortgage Cor-poration, has heretoforesubstituted Philip L. Mar-tin as Trustee in lieu and inplace of Donald R. Downsby instrument dated 6/1/2012,and recorded in Book/In-strument # 201202825at Page 1-2; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the terms andconditions of said Land Deedof Trust and the entire debtsecured thereby having beendeclared to be due and pay-able in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trustand the legal holder of said in-debtedness, having requestedthe undersigned SubstituteTrustee to execute the trustand sell said land, property,and all fixtures in accordancewith the terms of said LandDeed of Trust and for thepurpose of raising the sumsdue thereunder, togetherwith attorney’s fees, Substi-tute Trustee’s fees and ex-penses of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE , I ,Philip L. Martin, Substi-tuted Trustee in said Deed ofTrust, will on 10/1/2013offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours(being between the hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at600 Waldron Street,Corinth, MS - SouthFront Door of AlcornCounty Courthouse State ofMississippi, to the highest andbest bidder for cash the fol-lowing described propertysituated in Alcorn County,Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the Countyof Alcorn, State of Mis-sissippi, to wit: TractNo. 1: Beginning at theSoutheast corner of theNortheast Quarter ofSection 18, Township 2South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Missis-sippi; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thenceNorth 12 degrees 19minutes West 945 feetand 10 inches; thenceSouth 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet to the Southw-est corner of the JimmyPhelps lot or known asLot 15 in the Caldwell &Mattox Subdivision, andthis being the truepoint of beginning;thence North 16 de-grees 22 minutes West181.9 feet along theWest boundary line ofthe Phelps lot to afence; thence West193.2 feet along saidfence to an iron pin anda large fence post ;thence South 15 de-grees 17 minutes West200 feet to the Northside of a proposed road;thence North 86 de-grees 13 minutes Eastalong the North side ofsaid road 298.3 feet tothe true point of begin-ning. Containing 1.05acres, more or less.Less and except fromTract No. 1 the follow-ing described property:.03 acres, more or less,located in the North-east Quarter of Section18, Township 2 South,Range 7 East, more par-ticularly described asfollows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes West 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30m i n u t e s 1 3 0 f e e t ;thence run South 88degrees 30 minutesWest 130 feet for thepoint of beginning;thence run South 86degrees 13 minutesWest 27 feet; thencerun North 0 degrees 43minutes East 89.7 feet;thence run South 16degrees 22 minutesEast 91.6 feet to thepoint of beginning.Tract No. 2: .03 acres,more or less, located inthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East, more particularlydescribed as follows:Commencing at theSoutheast Corner ofthe Northeast Quarterof Section 18, Town-ship 2 South, Range 7East; thence run North86 degrees 30 minutesWest 361 feet; thencerun North 12 degrees19 minutes west 945feet 10 inches; thencerun South 87 degrees 30minutes West 130 feet;thence South 88 de-grees 30 minutes West130 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 22minutes West 91.6 feetfor the point of begin-ning; thence run North16 degrees 22 minutesWest 91.9 feet to an oldfence; thence run East27 feet; thence runSouth 0 degrees 43minutes West 88.2 feetto the point of begin-ning.

Title to said property is be-lieved to be good but I WILLCONVEY only such title as isvested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,on July 26, 2013

/s/ Philip L. MartinMartin & BrunavsAttorneys At Law2800 North Druid Hills RoadAtlanta, GA 30329(404) 982-0088 or (877) 740-0883- PhoneM&B File # 12-13921MSPublication Dates: Septem-ber 5, 12, 19, 26, 2013?THIS LAW FIRM ISACTING AS A DEBTC O L L E C T O R , A T -TEMPTING TO COL-LECT A DEBT.ANY INFORMATIONOBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PUR-POSE.#14358

Advertise 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. Auto Sales

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1500 Goldwing

Honda 78,000 original

miles,new tires.

$4500662-284-9487

1977 ChevyBig 10 pickup,

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

work.$1500

662-664-3958

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

GUARANTEED

868AUTOMOBILES

868AUTOMOBILES

804BOATS

Excaliber made by

Georgi Boy 1985 30’ long motor home,

new tires, Price negotiable.

662-660-3433

$10,500

2000 Custom Harley

Davidson Mtr. & Trans.,

New Tires, Must See

$12,000 662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

$9,000

2002 Chevrolet Z-71,4-dr.,

4W.D., Am.Fm cass./CD, pewter in color, $6200.

662-643-5908 or662-643-5020

2012 STARCRAFT CAMPER

Fiberglass 18’ bunk house, gray &

black water tanks, cable ready w/TV.

$9,000662-396-1390

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $3250 obo.

340-626-5904.

1984 CHRYSLER LEBARON

convertible, antique tag,

39,000 actual miles.

$3950. 286-2261

Cruisemaster Motorhome by

Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000

miles with white Oak interior. $19,500.

$14,999 662-808-7777 or

662-415-9020

MAKE OFFER

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

19,800 miles, garage kept w/all service records, 38 mpg, tinted windows & XM radio. Asking

$17,500. 662-594-5830.

2002 DODGE 1500only 42,000 miles!

v-8, auto, new tires, cold ac, cd player, bright red,

like new!!

$7,450.00

662-665-1995

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

REDUCED

1984 CORVETTE383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum.

heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt

w/new paint job (silver fl eck paint). $9777.77

Call Keith662-415-0017.

REDUCED

2004 MERCURYMONTEREYfully loaded, DVD/

CD system, new tires, mileage 80,700, climate controlled air/heat, heat/

cool power seats.

$7,000 OBOCall or text

956-334-0937

1987 GMC PICK UP

350 V8 4 Wheel Drive

Long Wheel BaseAutomatic & Air662-287-4528

2008 Jeep Wrangler Sahara

V-6, auto., power windows, hard top, Sirius radio w/nav cd, dvd, very clean & well maintained. 49,400k mi.

$21,300. O.B.O.662-396-1705or 284-8209

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

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

High Five stainless prop,

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

Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr.,

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

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

1989 FordCrown Victoria

Rare fi nd, Garage Kept. 33K actual miles, Looks new in/out, 302, great gas mileage,

new tires, fresh belts/hoses, original books and

stickers, Rides like a dream.

$8800Call 662-424-0226

2000 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT

228k miles.$2500 obo.

662-643-6005

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECKBOOMS, CHAINS

AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO731-453-5031

1989 FORD F350

DIESEL MOVING VAN

WITH TOMMY GATE

RUNS GOOD$3800

731-607-3173

2004 Ford F350 work truck, V10, underbed tool boxes, towing package, DVD.

$8600 obo. Truck is in daily use. Please call for appt. to see,

340-626-5904.

1990 ISUZU PICKUP

New engine 2.3 liter, (old engine

included),custom paint job,

54,000 miles!$2800

CALL PICO:662-643-3565

1976 Ford Ranger XLTRuns great, new

tires, original interior.$2000

CALL PICO:662-643-3565

1999 Dodge Regency Van

Raised Roof Custom Interior,

Extra Clean !!! 130,000 Miles

$3000 FIRM662-415-0811

2011 CANYON SLE PICKUP

Almost every option avail, new topper & tow pkg,

like new, all maintenance records, original window

sticker. luka resident

$18,000256-577-1349

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc.

drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical

condition”. $7400.

662-664-3538

REDUCED

1991 Ford Econoline

Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one

owner, serious interest. $6500

287-5206.

1983NISSAN DATSUN280 ZX

Turbo, exc. cond.

$5000.662-415-1482

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

1991 Mariah 20’ ski boat, 5.7 ltr.

engine, new tires, $6700.

662-287-5893, leave msg. & will

return call.

2004 Nissan Murano,

black, 120k miles, loaded, adult driver, garage kept, Bose, leather,

exc. cond., $10,500.

662-284-6559.

2000 Jeep Grand

Cherokee 4x4 $3200

V-8 with Tow Package

180,000 MilesCold A/C, Cruise

Control, All power, All Leather, Great Stereo, Very Clean

Burgundy ColorCall or Text

770-367-4615Corinth Resident

804BOATS

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1997 Ford New Holland

TractorModel 3930, diesel,excellent condition!,

8-speed with forward, reverse transmission.

800 hrs. Power Steering, Wet Brakes.

Independent PTO $8,900.

731-926-0006.

2001 Chevy Venture

mini-van, exc. mech. cond.

$2500.

731-239-4108

REDUCED

2000 TOYOTA COROLLA CE

4 cylinder, automatic

Extra Clean136,680 miles

$4200662-462-7634 or

662-664-0789Rienzi

2007 YAMAHA ROADSTAR

SILVERADO 170020,000 Miles. Never Been

Laid Down. Trunk has been taken off & sissy bar put back on. Lots ox extra add-ons. $5,500. Firm. 731-727-6602 or

731-727-6665

Caterpillar 3208 Engine

& Allilson Automatic

trasmission.both in good

condition.$1800.

662-415-0084 or 396-2114

868AUTOMOBILES

2006 Volvo XC90 V8 AWD

Leather-Sun Roof-New Tires- Show Room New - One

Owner - 148K Miles

$9850662-808-2105

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER,

RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP,

24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW

BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER

LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$6,400. 662-808-0113.

‘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

1974 VW SUPER BEETLE

1600CC ENG, NEW TIRES, RUNS GOOD, MOSTLY RESTORED,

EXTRA PARTS.

$4800662-424-0226